Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

U.S. News

Real estate firms and landlords using loophole to rake in millions in COVID-19 federal aid: WSJ

According to a report at the Wall Street Journal, landlords and real estate firms are reaping millions in federal coronavirus aid -- that should have been off-limits to them -- by using a legal loophole.

Keep reading... Show less

Obama official explains how big corporations are perverting science in the age of Trumpism

In a new book, former Obama administration official David Michaels takes a look at how big corporations fund studies that promote pseudoscience in order to avoid regulations.He spoke to Vox's Sean Illing about why the practice has become more prominent in recent years.

Keep reading... Show less

'I don’t even listen to him anymore': Older Florida voters revolt over Trump's COVID-19 response

Recent polling from Florida has shown older voters flocking away from President Donald Trump and toward former Vice President Joe Biden amid the president's widely criticized handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less

‘No bigger fraud than Trump’: President blasted for tweets warning ‘this will be a rigged election’

President Donald Trump on Tuesday continued his campaign of voter suppression in his public battle against the state of California's decision to allow voters to vote by mail in the November election.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump has promoted two of the top five COVID-19 conspiracy theories: report

Coronavirus conspiracy theories are bleeding into real-world actions, thanks in no small part to President Donald Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

'Lot of scam artists in the water': CNN financial expert gives tips for surviving the COVID-19 economy

A financial expert on Tuesday gave CNN viewers a crash course in how to handle their personal finances in the middle of the COVID-19 economy.

Keep reading... Show less

The coronavirus pandemic moved life online – a surge in website defacing followed

One consequence of the public’s compliance with social distancing and quarantines during the COVID-19 pandemic is a sharp decline in most types of crime. It looks like people staying home made communities less conducive to crime.

Keep reading... Show less

Is your neighborhood raising your coronavirus risk? Redlining decades ago set communities up for greater danger

Vicente Arenas moved to the edge of Denver’s Valverde neighborhood, attracted by low housing prices and proximity to his downtown job just three miles away.

Keep reading... Show less

Alabamians defend hitting the beach despite COVID-19: 'I don't want to die, but if that's what God has in store then that's okay'

Reporting on the decision by officials in the state of Alabama to move toward fully re-open despite the rising tide of coronavirus infections, CNN sent cameras down to a beach in the state where crowds packed the sand over the Memorial Day weekend and many beachgoers they interviewed were dismissive of the possibility they could become infected by the deadly virus.

Keep reading... Show less

Families at home could overwhelm the power grid this summer -- and set off blackouts

The coronavirus pandemic could trigger widespread blackouts this summer as millions of workers stay home cranking their air conditioners.

Keep reading... Show less

WATCH: Black man pleads that he can't breathe while cop keeps a knee on his neck -- and dies shortly after

A video posted on social media this week shows a police officer keeping his knee planted on the neck of a black man who pleaded that he couldn't breathe and subsequently died shortly afterward.

Keep reading... Show less

America the 'pitiful': Irish author explains the 'suspension of disbelief' that made Trump's destruction of America possible

Once again, the coronavirus pandemic has shown American exceptionalism to be a myth now turned into a nightmare. Writing at the Atlantic, George Packer describes this state of affairs:
When the virus came here, it found a country with serious underlying conditions, and it exploited them ruthlessly. Chronic ills — a corrupt political class, a sclerotic bureaucracy, a heartless economy, a divided and distracted public — had gone untreated for years. We had learned to live, uncomfortably, with the symptoms. It took the scale and intimacy of a pandemic to expose their severity — to shock Americans with the recognition that we are in the high-risk category.

Donald Trump is the monster in that nightmare. He is a political version of Freddy Krueger — but with less charm and wit — from the "Nightmare on Elm Street" horror movies.

Keep reading... Show less

Husband of deceased Scarborough staffer pens heartbreaking letter detailing pain Trump has caused with his incendiary tweets

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough addressed President Donald Trump's speculation about his alleged involvement in the death of his former staffer decades ago.

Keep reading... Show less