AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Mar 18 2024
News
IU researcher to discuss how racism creates environmental injustice
An Indiana University researcher is studying how racism creates environmental inequities, exploring how environmental contamination can affect communities' health and safety. Ben Clark, also a public historian, will explain the findings of his study of environmental racism in Indy during “The Slow Violence of Environmental Racism in Indianapolis” program March 29. Here’s what you need to know
IndyStarApr 10 2024
News
Radical Left Group Demands Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge To Be Renamed Over Racism Claims
Radical Left Group Demands Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge To Be Renamed Over Racism Claims Far-left group Caucus of African American Leaders of Anne Arundel County (CAAL), which has been on a multi-year rampage across Maryland, removing controversial statues (read: here) and pushing reparations resolutions (read: here) in Annapolis, has called on state officials to rename the recently
ZeroHedgeApr 18 2024
News
Early barbs in key House race
With help from Irie Sentner NEW YORK MINUTE: Three of the 10 budget bills were introduced late Wednesday, as lawmakers hammer out the final details and, yes, deal with a cyberattack that slowed progress. The Senate and Assembly are poised to vote on them as early as today with the hope of wrapping up the $237 billion spending plan before they head out for a two-week break Monday. So enjoy
PoliticoApr 24 2024
News
Silicon Valley House Seat Race Gets a Recount
A full transcript will be available 1–2 workdays after the episode’s publication.
Ballots are being recounted in the race for California’s 16th Congressional house seat, which ended in a tie for second between Assemblymember Evan Low and Santa Clara County Supervisor Joe Simitian. One or both of them will move on to face former San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo in November.
KQED’s Guy
KQEDApr 21 2024
News
Biden Maintains Strong Lead in Cash Race
President Joe Biden’s money machine holds a more than $77 million advantage over former President Donald Trump in terms of cash on hand. The most complete financial picture presented thus far in the 2024 presidential race shows that President Joe Biden is the man to beat when it comes to cash. The Biden campaign continues to enjoy a significant cash advantage in the race for the White House.
The Epoch TimesApr 23 2024
News
Mackenzie leading the Republican race for Pennsylvania's 7th
Pennsylvania is already in the thick of campaign season for November's presidential and U.S. Senate races, but Democrats and Republicans in the Keystone State still need to choose their candidates in a slate of other consequential races down the ballot this fall. It'll all go down in the state's April 23 primaries. Among the key races to watch: a couple of incumbent House members — one
ABC News (Online)Apr 16 2024
News
Utah’s Senate race gets dirty
Signs are posted at the U.S. Senate candidate debate at the Scera Theatre in Orem on Wednesday, April 10, 2024. A shadowy political action committee bombarded state GOP delegates with negative ads over the last week. The flurry of direct mail and text messages attacked U.S. Senate candidates Rep. John Curtis and Riverton Mayor Trent Staggs with tabloid-ready headlines emphasizing disloyalty to
Yahoo NewsApr 25 2024
News
Famine-threatened Sudan's 'race against time' to plant crops
A year of devastating war in Sudan has driven hundreds of farmers from their once-bountiful lands, imperilling harvests and heightening the risk of famine, the United Nations has warned. “We’ve been displaced with no prospect of returning,” lamented Saleh Abdel Majid, a farmer from Al-Jazira state. But even for those who remained on their land, the challenges are daunting, with some expressing
Breitbart NewsApr 05 2024
News
A Black couple defied racism by renting to a Chinese family. Now comes $5 million in thanks
Lloyd Dong Sr. and his wife, Margaret Dong, sit for a family photo taken in their Coronado home in the 1980s. Every morning, Lloyd Dong Sr. would take the ferry from San Diego to Coronado, where he worked as a gardener for wealthy homeowners. And every night, he would retreat back home across the bay, barred by racially restrictive housing practices in the early 1900s from renting or buying
Los Angeles Times