The Michigan Supreme Court will decide if Indigenous treaty rights and environmental safety or oil interests rule beneath the Straits of Mackinac.
Browsing: Politics
A federal judge dismissed Trump’s $15 billion lawsuit against The New York Times, calling out its excessive length and overt political posturing. What does this mean for press freedom and accountability in America?
MI6’s outgoing leader says there’s no evidence Putin seeks peace—only Ukraine’s surrender. What does this mean for Western strategy and democratic values?
Mark Welsh’s resignation from Texas A&M exposes how partisan pressure can upend university leadership and academic independence.
A fired Iowa teacher’s lawsuit over a controversial social media post is forcing the state—and the nation—to reckon with free speech in education.
Trump’s new health aid strategy upends decades of humanitarian policy, replacing multilateral efforts with transactional deals. Vulnerable populations and U.S. global standing may pay the price.
The UAE threatens to downgrade ties with Israel over West Bank annexation plans, exposing the fragile reality behind the Abraham Accords and the harsh costs of conditional peace.
America’s religious privilege in immigration policy raises difficult questions about fairness and equal dignity for all migrants. Communities of faith, from grassroots activists to Church leadership, are reinterpreting sacred stories and stepping into the arena—calling not just for charity, but for justice.
Satire’s power lies in holding everyone accountable, but recent outrage over a pulled South Park episode parodies deeper battles over free speech and political divisiveness.
Venezuela’s latest military exercises in the Caribbean mark a perilous escalation as Washington and Caracas clash over security, sovereignty, and the cost of armed posturing.