AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Jun 23 2023
News
Easterseals NH gets ready to build veterans housing, services campus in Franklin
With $23 million in unused pandemic relief funds, Easterseals NH unveiled plans to develop a new 15-acre veterans campus in Franklin, which it envisions as a central hub for providing housing and a range of services to former members of the military in New Hampshire. The campus – the first of its kind in New Hampshire – will feature 30 units of affordable housing, a retreat center with event
Portsmouth HeraldJun 22 2023
News
U.S. Navy Says They Detected Implosion Sounds Hours After 'Titan' Submersible Went Missing
New details are being shared about the discovery of the missing Titan submersible. After the reported deaths of its five passengers were announced on Thursday, U.S. Navy officials shared with The Wall Street Journal that a top-secret military acoustic detection system heard what is believed to be the Titan submersible implosion hours after the submersible began its voyage on Sunday. “The U.S.
PeopleJun 20 2023
News
Oregon lawmakers allocate $1 billion at last minute for pet projects, priorities
Oregon lawmakers on Tuesday tucked $1.1 billion into an end-of-session budget bill, a move that will pump cash into purposes ranging from natural disaster planning to helping people seeking citizenship. The proposal, called the “Christmas tree bill” by Capitol observers because it’s loaded with spending like a tree with ornaments, serves a purpose: Lawmakers, state agencies and lobbyists get
The OregonianJun 28 2023
News
Anger and division roil Russian fighters after mercenary rebellion
Wagner mercenary group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin trafficked in fury to cultivate his status as a public champion of the legions of hard-line pro-war voices who were disillusioned with Russia’s military leadership. But now the explosion of his bitter feud into a fast-aborted rebellion has fueled fury of its own.
Some who backed the mutiny were dismayed at Prigozhin's decision to turn back
NBC News (Online)May 08 2023
News
Texas shooting suspect had brief Army stint
The man who police say shot and killed eight people and injured seven others at an outlet mall in Allen, Texas, had entered the Army in 2008 but was kicked out three months later, the Army confirmed Monday. Mauricio Garcia, 33, entered military service in June 2008, but he was terminated three months later without completing initial entry training or receiving a military occupational specialty
The HillJun 26 2023
News
Alaska fines political group with ties to new UA regent and state attorney general
The Alaska Public Offices Commission has fined a group active in last year’s legislative elections $2,525 for failing to properly disclose its financial dealings. The group, Alaska Policy Partners, attacked moderate Republican and Democratic candidates during the election, spending $210,000 with a Utah-based firm called Massey Political Consulting that wasn’t licensed to work in Alaska. Gov.
Alaska Public MediaJul 10 2023
Opinion
Biden Is Right on Cluster Bombs for Ukraine
No sooner had the Biden Administration announced that cluster bombs will be included as part of its $800 million package of military aid to Ukraine than President Biden was attacked by members of his own party and even some allies. Our only criticism is that the decision could have done more good earlier.
Mr. Biden says it was a “very difficult decision.” Cluster bombs are anti-
Wall Street Journal (Opinion)Jun 25 2023
News
House Intel chair: Wagner rebellion "really does hurt Putin"
Washington — House Intelligence chair Rep. Mike Turner said Sunday that the Wagner mercenary group's armed rebellion against the Russian military makes President Vladimir Putin look weak and could have ramifications for the war in Ukraine. "This really does hurt Putin, and not only just politically and in his leadership in Russia and his presidency, but in his efforts to continue the war in
Yahoo NewsJun 25 2023
News
A ballot language mix-up, a debate in Columbus and the national stakes for abortion rights: State Issue 1 recap
COLUMBUS, Ohio — The first wave of early voting has begun in the Aug. 8 special election for State Issue 1, although not without last-minute complications. County boards of elections mailed absentee ballots to military and other overseas voters on Friday. But on Tuesday, Secretary of State Frank LaRose ordered a last-minute change to ballot language after his office realized that a previous
Cleveland Plain DealerJul 05 2023
News
IAEA has seen no sign of explosives at Zaporizhzhia yet, more access needed
Experts from the U.N. nuclear watchdog based at the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine have yet to observe any indications of mines or explosives at the plant, but they need more access to be sure, the agency said on Wednesday.
Russia and Ukraine on Tuesday accused each other of plotting to stage an attack on Europe's biggest nuclear power plant, where the
Reuters