Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Covid-19

Inventor of Israel's Iron Dome seeks coronavirus 'game-changer'

Tel Aviv (AFP) - Daniel Gold, who led the team that invented Israel's Iron Dome missile defence system, has a history of safeguarding the country against what he identifies as existential threats. With the nation facing surging coronavirus cases amid a pandemic that has triggered unprecedented economic hardship, Gold is trying to replicate his Iron Dome breakthrough in protecting Israel against the virus. Gold, who heads Israel's Defence Research and Development Directorate and holds PhDs in electronic engineering and business management, has become a celebrated figure in the Jewish state. Iro...

Keep reading... Show less

Biden rips Trump as a threat to democracy: ‘The most corrupt president in modern American history’

Former Vice President Joe Biden on Saturday blasted President Donald Trump for corruption as the 2020 presidential race goes on despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump fears his base will turn on him if he flips and calls for nationwide mask guidelines: CNN

On CNN Saturday, analyst Ron Brownstein outlined the key reason President Donald Trump is struggling to adapt his message to proper public health guidance on the coronavirus pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump campaign workers ducking wearing masks over fears of mockery: 'You get made fun of'

According to Politico, Trump campaign officials at the re-election headquarters in Arlington, Virginia are too embarrassed to follow the president's own CDC guidelines about wearing masks and practicing physical distancing — because the president himself has done so much to politicize the coronavirus pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less

'I think I made a mistake': Patient who thought pandemic was a 'hoax' dies after going to 'COVID party'

According to WOAI, a patient in San Antonio, Texas in their 30s has died after going to a "COVID party" — a gathering of people who intentionally expose themselves to coronavirus to see for themselves whether the virus is real.

Keep reading... Show less

Pandemic parties rage on across South Florida despite growing coronavirus crisis

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Pulsing parties in swanky South Beach mansions. Raging raves in Miami warehouses. Backyard bashes in Palm Beach manors where teenagers drink late into the night. South Florida is a world epicenter of coronavirus infections, but some irrepressible revelers insist on trying to live out the subtropical promise of fun, sin and sun — COVID-19 or not. Experts say the pandemic parties could cost them their life.A review of police records, social media accounts, and interviews with professional event planners who refuse to let COVID-19 kill the music shows that South Florida’s wo...

Keep reading... Show less

'Fed up' Republicans fleeing Trump as his unpopularity cripples their re-election hopes: report

According to a GOP campaign consultant, Republicans across the country are increasingly pushing back at Donald Trump and want nothing to do with him as November's election nears, fearing his tumbling approval numbers will hurt their re-election chances.

Keep reading... Show less

Republicans in revolt over Trump's plan to force schools to reopen during pandemic: report

According to a report from Politico, Donald Trump's rush to force schools to reopen is getting pushback not only from teachers but also from Republican allies who worry that he is putting kids at risk when the coronavirus pandemic is on the rise again.

Keep reading... Show less

Parents face dilemma as US schools seek to reopen

With the start of the US school year only weeks away, Marina Avalos still has no idea how or where her 7-year-old daughter will attend classes.

Keep reading... Show less

WHO urges aggressive virus measures as flare-ups spark new closures

The World Health Organization has urged countries grappling with coronavirus to step up control measures, saying it is still possible to rein it in, as some nations clamp fresh restrictions on citizens.

Keep reading... Show less

California to release 8,000 more prisoners over virus fears

California will release up to 8,000 more prisoners to reduce the spread of the coronavirus in its crowded jails, according to authorities in the US state, one of the hardest hit by the pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less