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Braver Angels
Braver Angels (formerly Better Angels) is an organization working to restore civic trust in the USA. Braver Angels has a Mixed bias. According to its website, "Better Angels is a national citizens’ movement to reduce political polarization in the United States by bringing liberals and conservatives together to understand each other beyond stereotypes, forming red/blue community alliances, teaching practical skills for communicating across political differences, and making a strong public argument for depolarization."
Jun 24 2022
News
What does overturning Roe v. Wade mean? Supreme Court decision's implications
The Supreme Court delivered a dramatic change to abortion jurisprudence in a Mississippi abortion case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, by overturning Roe v. Wade.
A leaked February draft opinion indicated that the court may move in that direction. The final opinion was released Friday, June 24.
Overturning Roe v. Wade, the landmark ruling that limited government
Fox News DigitalAug 04 2022
News
After A Disappointing Summer Of Air Travel, US Proposes Stricter Rules For Airlines
The U.S. Department of Transportation proposed a new rule on Wednesday which will help travelers who are seeking refunds for airline tickets.
This new rule comes after a busy and chaotic year for airlines that had trouble meeting demand. Over the summer, airlines also struggled to find workers, including flight attendants and pilots.
Effectively, they could not meet consumers’
International Business TimesJan 26 2022
News
Stocks wipe out gains after Fed signals rate hike in March
Stocks staged another late-day reversal Wednesday, giving up their gains and adding to the week’s breathtaking volatility after the Federal Reserve signaled that interest hikes are indeed around the corner.
After trading higher most of the day, the Dow Jones industrial average shed more than 600 points following the Fed’s policy announcement. It cut some of its losses to settle at 34,
Washington PostNov 18 2022
Opinion
Iran-Backed Militias in Baghdad Present a Test for Biden
Stephen Troell, a U.S aid worker from Tennessee, was shot dead by unknown assailants while he drove through Baghdad last week with his wife and daughter in the car. A little-known militia claimed responsibility for the murder, calling it revenge for the U.S. airstrike that killed Iranian Maj. Gen. Qassem Suleimani more than two years ago. Troell’s death is a test of whether President Joe Biden
The DispatchApr 15 2022
News
‘That was my beloved son’: family of Patrick Lyoya say police killed their son in an ‘execution’
The grief-stricken parents of the Black man shot in the back of the head by a white Michigan police officer have described their son’s death as an “execution”.
Patrick Lyoya, a 26-year-old Congolese refugee, was killed after a traffic stop in Grand Rapids on 4 April.
“I didn’t believe that … there’s a genocide in this country,” said his father, Peter Lyoya, on Thursday through an
The GuardianAug 23 2022
News
New York takes center stage in fight for control of the House
Democrats began the year clinging to New York state as a bulwark against GOP gerrymandering and a potentially brutal midterm. Instead, it’s become a giant headache.
A redistricting mishap and President Joe Biden’s lingering toxicity upended Democratic hopes of creating a seawall of deep-blue seats that could offset House losses elsewhere. They started the cycle thinking they could net
PoliticoJun 07 2019
News
Job growth sputters in May, but Wall Street rallies as investors bank on Fed rescue
Hiring cooled in May, the Labor Department reported Friday, as firms appeared more hesitant to bring on new employees amid the uncertainty and concern over President Trump escalating the trade war with China.
The U.S. economy added 75,000 jobs in May, a significant pullback from 224,000 jobs added in April that is likely to heighten fears that the trade war is taking a greater toll. The
Washington PostJun 02 2022
Analysis
Government Employees Got $872 Million in Bonuses Out of COVID Aid Cash
Federal funds intended to be used for pandemic relief efforts were used instead to pad the paychecks of government employees from coast to coast.
In San Diego, California, for example, some 9,595 county workers were awarded bonuses funded with more than $27 million in federal COVID aid, according to a Treasury Department program set up to track the $350 billion in pandemic funds
ReasonMay 29 2019
News
Trump and Biden escalate their fight
President Donald Trump and Democratic rival Joe Biden are becoming the best of enemies as their escalating head-to-head clash helps both accomplish early political goals on the road to the 2020 election.
The President and the former vice president are feuding on foreign policy, character issues and long ago political wars a year before the Democratic race produces a presumptive nominee
CNN Digital