Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

World

Mexico threatens to sue Google over 'Gulf of America' name change

Mexico on Thursday threatened to sue Google over its changing the Gulf of Mexico's name to "Gulf of America" for Maps users in the United States to comply with President Donald Trump's executive order.

"We do have a dispute with Google at the moment," President Claudia Sheinbaum said at her morning news conference. "And if necessary, we will file a civil suit."

Keep reading... Show less

'So wrong and so scary!' Hegseth battered for 'faux-alpha-male bluster' NATO speech

A Thursday press conference at NATO by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth left some viewers commenting that they were "embarrassed to be an American."

So far this week, Hegseth has announced he will block Ukraine from NATO membership and announced that full liberation from Russia was unrealistic for the country.

Keep reading... Show less

'Patience paid off': Putin out of shadow after Trump call

Russian President Vladimir Putin has been largely shunned by the West since his troops attacked Ukraine in February 2022, triggering the biggest conflict in Europe since World War II.

That era of isolation came to an abrupt end on Wednesday, when U.S. President Donald Trump picked up the phone.

Keep reading... Show less

'The rules have changed': America's allies signal panic after latest 'stunning shift'

On the eve of the Munich Security Conference, when defense leaders meet from around the globe to discuss strengthening alliances, European leaders are more concerned than ever about the reliability of the Trump administration, according to a report.

Since he took office, Trump has "insisted NATO members massively boost their defense spending, dismissed the U.S. military’s role in Europe, frozen foreign aid, advocated taking over Greenland, treated Russia as a negotiating partner and threatened to pull support from Ukraine," wrote Paul McLeary and Jacopo Barigazzi in a piece for Politico Thursday.

Keep reading... Show less

'Not true': Conservative warns GOP's 'top priority' could destroy Trump's appeal to voters

A faction of Republicans demanding a "budget-busting tax cut" could threaten the Trump administration's entire agenda, argued the chief economist for a conservative economic think tank in a new article.

Oren Cass wrote in Thursday's New York Times that one group in particular — a free-enterprise advocacy group called The Club for Growth — was pushing the administration to prioritize maintaining the huge tax cut that became law during President Donald Trump's first term.

Keep reading... Show less

'Terrified' families seek justice in Italy 'forever chemicals' trial

by Ella IDE

Managers of a chemical plant accused of knowingly contaminating the water of hundreds of thousands of people are on trial in Italy, in one of Europe's biggest environmental disaster lawsuits.

Keep reading... Show less

U.S. denies Trump peace push a 'betrayal' of Ukraine

by Max DELANY

Donald Trump's defense chief denied Thursday the US president was betraying Ukraine by opening talks with Russia's Vladimir Putin, as blindsided European powers insisted they and Kyiv must have a seat at the table.

Keep reading... Show less

New York, Paris, Berlin to mark anniversaries of iconic Christo art

by Ana FERNÁNDEZ

New York, Paris and Berlin are celebrating the anniversaries this year of iconic art installations that saw some of their most prominent landmarks wrapped in fabric by the late artists known as Christo and Jeanne-Claude.

Keep reading... Show less

Grenade blast in French bar wounds 12

Twelve people were wounded when a grenade exploded in a bar in France's southeastern city of Grenoble on Wednesday, officials said.

"Someone came in and threw a grenade, apparently without saying a word, and ran away," prosecutor Francois Touret-de-Courcy told journalists at the scene, where emergency workers had cordoned off the area.

Keep reading... Show less

Tens of thousands go hungry in Sudan after Trump aid freeze

by Bahira AMIN

For the first time in nearly two years of war, soup kitchens in famine-stricken Sudan are being forced to turn people away, with U.S. President Donald Trump's aid freeze gutting the life-saving schemes.

Keep reading... Show less

Saudi art biennale seeks to modernize Islamic tradition

by Sofiane Alsaar

Under a vast canopy of tents in the Saudi city of Jeddah, religious artifacts are on display alongside contemporary art pieces, part of the kingdom's bid to transform its ultraconservative image.

Keep reading... Show less

South Korea's Yoon back in court for impeachment hearing

by Hieun SHIN

South Korea's suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol will get another hearing next week before judges decide on whether to formally remove him from office over his martial law decree, the country's Constitutional Court said Thursday.

Keep reading... Show less

Suspected gas explosion kills four at Taiwan department store

by Akio Wang and I-Hwa Cheng with Amber Wang in Taipei

A suspected gas explosion in a Taiwan department store killed at least four people and injured 26, authorities said on Thursday, with the force of the blast spraying large pieces of debris over the street below.

Keep reading... Show less