On Wednesday a federal judge gave approval for a settlement worth $626 million which would offer compensation for victims of the tainted water crisis in Flint, Michigan.
A dispute over patent rights to the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine is headed to court.
On the brisk autumn evening of Friday, November 10, 1775, a group of men of varied ages and occupations assembled together in the rooms of a candle-lit Philadelphia bar to learn about a new initiative in the fight to establish American independence from Britain.
A recent survey of Air Force and Space Force personnel showed that more than 50% of respondents were victims of interpersonal violence (IPV) in the past.
Republicans are pushing back against Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg’s assertion that the roadways in the United States are inherently racist.
The Oklahoma Supreme Court on Tuesday overturned a $465 million judgment against drug manufacturer Johnson & Johnson for its alleged role in the state’s opioid crisis.
With the fallout from the botched U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan continuing to this day, the Defense Department admitted to the presence of “immediate family members” still in the Middle-Eastern nation in a memo sent on November 4.
In June the FDA approved the first oral blood thinner medication for children.
The Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide, an organization whose aim is to fight against modern attempts at genocide, has released a stern report in which it criticizes China for that nation’s treatment of ethnic Turkish Muslims living in Xinjiang.
TV and radio host Dan Celia discusses a recent experience at the gas pumps that highlights how inflation matters to the American people, despite the fact that the Biden administration continues to try to downplay its impact.