Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Covid-19

Colleges are defying the Trump administration's COVID-19 guidelines -- with disastrous results

Even though the White House Coronavirus Task Force is telling colleges to keep students who contract the novel coronavirus quarantined on campus, many colleges are sending the students back home anyway.

Keep reading... Show less

India overtakes Brazil for world's second most coronavirus cases

India overtook Brazil on Monday as the country with the second highest number of confirmed coronavirus cases, even as key metro train lines re-opened as part of efforts to boost the South Asian nation's battered economy.

Keep reading... Show less

China shows off COVID-19 vaccines for first time

China has put its homegrown coronavirus vaccines on display for the first time, as the country where the contagion was discovered looks to shape the narrative surrounding the pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less

Face masks with a gun pocket is the new right-wing couture

The latest in right-wing couture is a coronavirus mask with a pocket for your handgun.

Keep reading... Show less

No, there will be no COVID-19 vaccine before Election Day -- and it'll take two years to vaccinate the US: doctor

President Donald Trump desperately needs a COVID-19 vaccine to help him get through the election in November. The problem, however, is that it's never going to happen, no matter how hard he tries.

Keep reading... Show less

Northeastern University kicks out 11 students over small party -- keeps their $36,000 semester tuition

Does 11 people hanging out count as a “party?”Northeastern University dismissed 11 students Friday after they held a small party in a hotel room Wednesday, the school announced in a news release. The 11 students “are no longer part of the Northeastern community for the fall semester.”All 11 kids were first-years and part of a special one-semester program that cost $36,500, The Boston Globe reported. Northeastern is not refunding their money.The students were enrolled in a study abroad program, but because of the coronavirus pandemic, “abroad” became the Westin Hotel in downtown Boston, about a...

Keep reading... Show less

Staff at nursing home where 19 died told masks would scare patients: COVID lawsuits

DETROIT — Dennis Williams is haunted by the memory of his mother, Wanda Parker, through the window at the nursing home in Lapeer County, Mich.He said she was begging for help.It was the last time he saw his 68-year-old mother alive. She died of COVID-19 on April 7, two days after she was transported to a hospital from the Villages of Lapeer Nursing & Rehabilitation.Williams said he remembers seeing employees of the facility not wearing masks, gloves or other personal protective equipment (PPE) during his through-the-window visits with his mother before she died. And he’s aware of the significa...

Keep reading... Show less

Pope says gossip and chatter are 'a plague more awful than Covid-19'

Gossip and chatter are a "plague more awful than Covid-19," the pope said during his Sunday Angelus prayers, delivered from the window of the Vatican on St Peter's Square."When we see a brother or sister make a mistake or with a defect, the first thing we do is go tell others about it. We gossip," the pope said.He said that gossip hurts the community of the church, comparing it to the devil, the liar "who wants to divide the church."The pope called on the faithful to make an effort and to avoid gossip.He called instead for people to follow church guidelines on fraternal correction and discreet...

Keep reading... Show less

What’s actually stopping next coronavirus relief package?

The second coronavirus stimulus package should have come by now, but it hasn’t. Democrats and Republicans have been unable to reach a consensus on several provisions. The one biggest roadblock that is stopping the next coronavirus relief package is the aid to state and local governments.  What do the two sides want? According to Mark Meadows, White House chief of staff, the biggest obstacle to the relief deal is the differences between the two sides over aid to state and local governments. The chief of staff says ...

Keep reading... Show less

Florida's COVID-19 deaths top 12,000

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Florida’s much-watched coronavirus numbers stayed on a downward trend Sunday, with the state reporting 2,564 new cases and another 38 deaths in advance of the Labor Day holiday. State officials have reported 12,001 deaths since the pandemic began, including 152 non-residents who died in Florida. The state has tallied 646,431 COVID-19 cases so far. The numbers reported Sunday represent a sharp decline from the record coronavirus deaths reported just four weeks ago: 277 on Aug. 11.  Another record was set on July 12, when the state reported 15,300 new cases.Data reports rele...

Keep reading... Show less

Job insecurity can alter a person’s political attitudes: new research

A study published in Applied Psychology: An International Review offers evidence that job insecurity can disrupt a person’s identity and ultimately affect their political attitudes. Job insecurity poses numerous psychological consequences, affecting a person’s well-being and also their job performance. Some theorists have further speculated a link between job insecurity and political attitudes. “As a work-psychologist I am interested in the meaning of work for people. Work is the place we spent most of our life at, so to me it is natural to presume that the experience of working will also affect...

Keep reading... Show less

China tries to flip the pandemic script starring a 'reborn' Wuhan

China is recasting Wuhan as a heroic coronavirus victim and trying to throw doubt on the pandemic's origin story as it aims to seize the narrative at a time of growing global distrust of Beijing.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's new COVID-19 adviser cornered on CNN for pushing 'herd immunity' that could lead to more deaths

On CNN Saturday, Michael Smerconish grilled Trump's new COVID-19 strategist, Dr. Scott Atlas, on whether he believes it's appropriate to fight the pandemic by letting more people get sick.

Keep reading... Show less