If you go to the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) website, you will find a list of over 150 drugs that are either in a current shortage or have been in a shortage that was resolved some time over the past six months.
Former “Empire” actor Jussie Smollett took the stand in his trial on Monday to refute the claim that his alleged attack in January 2019 was a hoax.
A Pennsylvania school teacher and board member of the National Education Association (NEA) has attracted attention after a violent rant in which she advocated her hope that those who receive a religious exemption should lose their jobs, die from this virus, or be shot.
Dan Celia, president and CEO of Financial Issues Stewardship Ministries, discusses the importance of Dec. 7, 1941 and how Americans today should reflect on and learn from the events of that day.
The Biden administration has failed to comply with a congressionally-mandated order to provide a detailed account of Afghan refugees in the U.S. and its overseas military bases by Dec. 1, according to a Free Beacon report.
The Justice Department is suing the State of Texas in federal court over the state’s redrawn state and congressional maps.
Jerome Powell, Chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve, warned last week that the new COVID variant, Omicron, could exacerbate the supply-chain disruptions and possibly lead U.S. inflation to its highest level in 30 years.
In an encouraging update on the troubling situation involving the group of kidnapped Christian missionaries in Haiti, three more missionaries have been released, according to a statement from Christian Aid Ministries on Monday. The three missionaries were released sometime on Sunday night.
China is eyeing Equatorial Guinea as the site of its first military base on the Atlantic Ocean, in a move that has US officials concerned.
The phones of at least nine U.S. State Department employees were hacked by an unknown person using sophisticated Israeli spyware. Four sources “familiar with the matter” reported that the unknown attacker, using Israeli NSO Group spyware, targeted the iPhones of state officials either working in Uganda or involved, in some official capacity, with the East African country, according to Reuters.