Latest Headlines

'What's up with Jackson?' Senator shares theory on justice's scathing dissents

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is doing something unusual this year amid rulings from the court, a U.S. senator observed.

In a thread on X, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) noticed that Justice Jackson's dissents aren't normal, and he thinks there's a reason for it.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump asks head of English-speaking country why he speaks 'such good English'

President Donald Trump praised Liberian President Joseph Boakai for speaking "such good English," apparently unaware that it was the official language of his country.

During a White House event with African leaders on Wednesday, Boakai noted that Liberia was a "long-time friend of the United States."

Keep reading... Show less

Ted Cruz slammed for 'protecting Big Oil' while Texans are 'dead and grieving'

According to The Washington Post, the death count from the flash floods that ravaged central Texas over the 4th of July Weekend has reached 109. But 161 people are missing, which, the Post reports, is "raising the possibility that the death toll could surpass 200."

During the flooding, Texans in the area were warned to "move to higher ground." But The Atlantic's Zoë Schlanger, in an article published on July 8, stressed that the flooding came so rapidly that many people didn't have time to heed that warning.

Keep reading... Show less

'Idiot': Guns pulled as Proud Boys and antifascists clash in park

Militant leftists and Proud Boys clashed on a soccer field in a public park in western Kentucky over the Fourth of July weekend, escalating to members of the two opposing groups drawing firearms, according to video and a police incident report.

The armed confrontation took place on July 5 after antifascist protesters assembled in a parking lot at Thompson Berry Park in Owensboro, Kentucky, and walked towards a double chain-link fence separating the park from the backyard of a private residence where the Proud Boys were gathering.

Keep reading... Show less

'We're toast': Federal workers panic after 'life-altering' Supreme Court ruling

Federal employees are scrambling now that the Supreme Court has ruled in favor of President Donald Trump's desire to slash the government workforce.

Although it's currently on summer break, the Court lifted an order Tuesday blocking Trump from firing federal workers in nearly two dozen agencies, including the State Department and the Social Security Administration.

Keep reading... Show less

'I would know': Trump contradicts himself after playing dumb on Ukraine arms

President Donald Trump contradicted himself after initially saying he didn't know who halted U.S. arms shipments to Ukraine.

The president snapped at CNN's Kaitlin Collins on Tuesday when she first asked who had paused the shipments.

Keep reading... Show less

'Vote for your favorite coward': Award launched to shame leaders aiding Trump

A network of former intelligence, military, and national security officials on Tuesday launched the Profiles in Cowardice Award and urged the public to vote for nominees who are "silent in the face of the country's descent into fascism," a march led by U.S. President Donald Trump.

"We are in a constitutional crisis," says the Eisenhower Media Network's (EMN) website for the award. "Trump is amassing power in the executive branch, ignoring Congress and the courts. Meanwhile, leaders who have sworn an oath to support and defend the Constitution are sitting on their hands."

Keep reading... Show less

Legal experts torch Supreme Court for relying on literal 'witch burner' judge

In a scathing legal analysis published Wednesday by Slate, legal experts and journalists tore into the conservative-controlled Supreme Court for “cherry-picking historical evidence” in making its decisions, including its past reliance on an actual “witch burner” and pro-rape judge.

“You’ve got the conservative majority doing history and tradition – what they call ‘originalism’ – in a totally illegitimate way: butchering the historical record, cherry-picking historical evidence that supports their position, starting with the outcome they want and just working backward,” wrote Mark Stern, who covers courts and law for Slate.

Keep reading... Show less

'Secretary chaos’: Critics slam 'absolute clown show' being run by Pete Hegseth

Last week, reportedly without consulting the White House, U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth unilaterally approved the decision to halt critical weapons shipments to Ukraine, which has been the target of increased attacks in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s illegal war against the sovereign nation.

President Trump on Tuesday claimed he had no knowledge of who ordered the halt in weapons shipments. That pause came just after his July 3 call with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Hours later, Russia launched a massive bombing campaign against Ukraine.

Keep reading... Show less

'Go a little bit quicker': Trump scolds African leaders for talking too much

President Donald Trump scolded the leaders of several African nations because he said they were talking too much.

At a luncheon with the leaders on Wednesday, Trump spoke at length about his accomplishments before handing the floor over to the president of Mauritania. Within minutes, however, the U.S. president lost his patience and signaled for the leader to wrap up his remarks.

Keep reading... Show less

​'Cannot pretend': Dems demand to know Trump admin's effect on Texas horror

With at least 111 people confirmed dead and more than 150 still missing in Texas' catastrophic flooding as of Wednesday, Democrats in Congress are demanding answers about whether the Trump administration's cuts to federal weather monitoring and emergency management agencies may have hampered the response.

Since President Donald Trump retook office, his administration has unilaterally introduced cuts that have substantially reduced the number of employees at the National Weather Service (NWS) and its parent agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which forecast weather and collect environmental data. It has done the same to the Federal Emergency Management System (FEMA), which coordinates responses to natural disasters.

Keep reading... Show less

'Scathing' probe unearths uncounted ballots in key swing state in 2024 election

The Wisconsin Elections Commission issued a scathing report accusing the former Madison city clerk of failing to count all ballots during the 2024 election.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported Wednesday that an investigation uncovered nearly 200 ballots went uncounted due to the lack of proper tracking of absentee ballots and other violations.

Keep reading... Show less

'Phantom money': Gamblers could be hit hard by 'obscure' piece of GOP tax bill

An obscure provision tucked into the Republican megabill could wipe out professional gamblers and drive many bettors back into illegal operations.

Lawmakers, professional poker players and sports bettors alike are demanding a change to the GOP tax and spending bill signed into law last week by president Donald Trump, which lowers the deduction on gambling losses from 100 percent to 90 percent – and thus requiring them to pay taxes on so-called "phantom" winnings, reported CNN.

Keep reading... Show less