The U.S. State Department has once again revised its fact sheet on Taiwan, now stating that it does “not support” formal independence of the self-governed island nation.
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The U.S. State Department has once again revised its fact sheet on Taiwan, now stating that it does “not support” formal independence of the self-governed island nation.
Rather than unifying the nation Biden’s speech has already proven divisive amongst conservatives who have pushed back against his renewed calls for an assault weapon ban and what they saw as a disregard for the Second Amendment.
Harini Logan, 14, of San Antonio won the 2022 Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday after a first-ever “spell-off” was required for a champion to emerge in the extremely close competition.
President Biden is reportedly angry with his staff for not doing enough to address the nation’s forty-year-high inflation as his approval ratings remain firmly under water.
A shocking new U.S. intelligence report states that Russian President Vladimir Putin underwent treatment for advanced cancer in April, according to an exclusive Newsweek report.
U.S. jobs gains of 390,000 in May and still strong wage growth leave the Federal Reserve on track for half-point interest rate increases in June and July as the U.S. economy continued to show little evidence it is buckling under the pressure of high inflation and rising interest rates.
In a move long called for by conservatives, the Ohio statehouse has passed a bill that would allow faculty and staff to carry concealed firearms on school campuses.
Today marks 100 days since Russia invaded Ukraine in a war that has gripped the world with near-daily images and reports of death, destruction, and displacement.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has a “super bad feeling” about the economy and needs to cut about 10% of jobs at the electric carmaker, he said in an email to executives seen by Reuters.
Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin has signed House Bill 1063 into law.