Wednesday, just two days after President Biden referred to Russian leader Vladimir Putin as a war criminal, important departments within the U.S. government intensified their allegations as the Departments of State and Defense echoed the president’s claims.
Countries representing more than half of the world’s gross domestic product will meet today to discuss continued deterrence efforts in response to Russia’s war on Ukraine.
Taliban leaders in Afghanistan abruptly walked back their promise to open schools to girls after 6th grade, announcing Wednesday that high schools would remain closed to females until the Islamic extremist group develops a reopening strategy that aligns with Islamic law, according to Reuters.
The state of Michigan has agreed to pay a Catholic adoption and foster care ministry $250,000 in legal fees for trying to force the nonprofit to place children in LGBTQ homes in violation of the group’s First Amendment privileges.
Vice President Kamala Harris reportedly felt snubbed when White House staffers didn’t automatically stand when she entered a room, according to a report by Business Insider.
The LAPD announced on Twitter in August that over 1,900 citations had been written, 433 vehicles impounded, and 437 arrests related to street racing and takeovers.
Republican governor Spencer Cox vetoed a bill in Utah that would have banned biologically male, transgender students from participating in female sports.
Swiss and German researchers have created an implantable device that has helped patients with locked-in syndrome regain the ability to communicate with others.
Social media giant Twitter has been taking action against users who are openly questioning the praise received by transgender figures, labeling it as “hate speech.”
President Biden’s U.S. Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson defended her record of lenient sentencing in child pornography cases during intense questioning by Republican senators Tuesday on the second day of her Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing.