AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Apr 26 2024
News
12 Natural Appetite Suppressants
Popular weight loss medications that curb the appetite like Ozempic can cost $1,000 a month. They may also cause side effects like nausea, vomiting and constipation, along with more serious issues such as pancreatitis and kidney damage, says Medical News Today. But there are effective ways to stay satiated while losing weight that are safer and cheaper. Foods that suppress the appetite are
Newsmax (News)Apr 16 2024
News
A ‘Nature School’ Meets in Brooklyn
Nature is all around us, even in New York City. Though it can be difficult to appreciate the magnolia and ginkgo trees when running to catch the subway, we are in fact surrounded. Field Meridians, an artist collective in Brooklyn, wants to help harried New Yorkers stop and smell the Callery pears. The group recently started a six-week program called Nature School that aims to help New Yorkers
New York Times (News)Apr 22 2024
News
Chicagoans speak out to support immunization efforts
On World Immunization Week, local voices like restaurateur and author Ina Pinkney are reminding folks about the importance of vaccines. Why it matters: Low vaccination rates have driven more measles cases in Illinois in 2024 than in the last decade combined, while tuberculosis is hitting local migrant shelters and polio has returned to some areas. Zoom in: Pinkney is a global advocate for
AxiosApr 25 2024
News
On presidential immunity, a riveting national civics lesson - SCOTUSblog
Today is the last day of argument for the 2023-24 term, and – as everyone in the courtroom knows – we are here to see what is probably the biggest case of the term: Trump v. United States. Yesterday, after an intense argument over abortion and emergency care in Moyle v. United States, Chief Justice John Roberts popped over to Georgetown University Law Center’s annual end-of-arguments reception
SCOTUSblogApr 25 2024
News
Supreme Court to Hear Trump’s Claim to ‘Absolute Immunity’
The Supreme Court, in its last argument of the term, will consider on Thursday whether former President Donald J. Trump must face trial on charges that he plotted to subvert the 2020 election.
The court’s answer to that question will be a major statement on the scope of presidential power. Depending on its timing and content, the decision will also help determine whether Mr. Trump’s
New York Times (News)Apr 25 2024
News
At this national park in Hawaiʻi, a natural paradise and a medical purgatory
On the north side of Molokaʻi — the least-visited Hawaiian Island — a piece of land called the Kalaupapa Peninsula juts out from the rest of the island. Lay eyes on it for the first time, and your reaction might be to call it a paradise. About 17 square miles (44 square kilometers) in size, the peninsula emerges from the base of sea cliffs that tower thousands of feet above it. A seemingly
CNN (Online News)Apr 27 2024
News
Composition and metabolism of microbial communities in soil pores - Nature Communications
Soil samples were collected from the Cellulosic Biofuel Diversity Experiment located at the Kellogg Biological Station Long-term Ecological Research Site76, Hickory Corners, Michigan. The studied soil is a mesic Typic Hapludalf with 52% sand, 39% silt, and 9% clay77. The experiment is a randomized complete block (RCB) design established in 2008. For this study, we selected three plant
Nature.comApr 22 2024
Opinion
Why Are Women Naturally Drawn To Toxic Leftist Beliefs?
Recently, I wrote a piece at The Federalist titled “Hell Hath No Fury Like A Single Liberal Woman,” based on my own experience as a former liberal, and offered some explanation as to why single women make up such a large proportion of the Democrat Party. And why, as Jesse Kelly commented, many of those women seem to be somewhat mentally unstable. Based on comments in my inbox and on social
The FederalistApr 25 2024
News
Supreme Court justices skeptical of sweeping immunity claims by Trump
Justices on the Supreme Court voiced skepticism Thursday to assertions from former President Trump’s attorneys that presidential immunity could extend to an attempted coup or the assassination of a political rival, even as they seemed ready to offer some protections from criminal prosecution.
Such a ruling could create a new cycle of legal battles that in turn could delay Trump’s
The HillApr 25 2024
News
Supreme Court seems open to middle ground on Trump immunity
The Supreme Court on Thursday appeared open to a middle-ground approach to a bid by former President Donald Trump to invoke presidential immunity to shake off his criminal charges.
The nine justices asked Trump’s attorney, D. John Sauer, pointed questions about whether presidents had “absolute immunity” from prosecution as they weighed Trump’s argument that he was protected under the
Washington Examiner