In an interview with Jack Nicas of The New York Times, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva rejected President Trump’s demands for Brazil. Here’s how the United States and Brazil reached this point.
Read More »Man found with 10 kilos of cocaine, thousands of fentanyl pills: Mobile Co. Sheriff
MOBILE, TX. (WKRG) — The US Marshall said they arrested a “significant drug trafficker” on Tuesday a…
Recent Posts
Ozzy Osbourne’s Coffin Will Be Taken Through His Hometown’s Streets Before Funeral
On Wednesday, a cortege will take the singer’s coffin through the streets of his hometown, Birmingham, England.
Read More »Football’s Brain Injuries
We explain what we know about the disease after the shooting in Manhattan.
Read More »President Lula on His Feud With Trump, Brazil’s Tariff Strategy and More
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva issued a fierce rejection of President Trump’s demands for Brazil, but said he was ready for dialogue.
Read More »Brazil’s President Lula Voices Frustration With Trump Amid Tariff Battle
Faced with threats of 50 percent tariffs and demands to end a criminal case, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said he wouldn’t take orders from President Trump.
Read More »Tsunami Warning Issued for Northern California
Waves were reported along a wide swath of the Northern California coast, including in San Francisco. The rest of the state was under a lesser tsunami advisory.
Read More »Russia’s Far East Suffers Some Damage From Earthquake and Tsunami
Regional authorities in one region declared an emergency after a tsunami hit the Kuril Islands, and the Kamchatka Peninsula was watching for volcanic activity.
Read More »Tsunami Reaches U.S., and Trump’s Former Lawyer Confirmed as Judge
Plus, how people are helping discover new species with their phones.
Read More »8.8-Magnitude Earthquake Off Russia Could Be One of the Largest on Record
It is the most powerful quake since the 2011 earthquake off the coast of Japan that triggered a 50-foot tsunami and the nuclear disaster at Fukushima.
Read More »Senate Democrats Try to Force Release of Epstein Files With Little-Known Law
The move is part of an effort by Democrats to draw Senate Republicans into the debate over the release of the Epstein files, which has bitterly divided the House G.O.P. and wrought havoc in that chamber.
Read More »Federal Investigators Set to Begin Hearings on D.C. Plane Crash
The National Transportation Safety Board is also expected to release a trove of documents related to the fatal midair collision in January between an Army helicopter and a regional jet at Reagan National Airport.
Read More »What to Watch at the Federal Reserve’s July Meeting
The U.S. central bank is widely expected to hold interest rates steady for a fifth straight meeting despite badgering from President Trump to lower borrowing costs.
Read More »Democrats, This Is Our Moment to Lead. We Can’t Blow It.
This is the moment Democrats have been talking about for years.
Read More »They Saw Their Neighbors Taken Away by ICE. Then They Made a Plan.
The movement against ICE in Los Angeles — one that is starting to take root across the country — demonstrates a shift from symbolic protest to direct action.
Read More »Trump’s Tax Bill Expands Farm Subsidies. Not All Farmers Will Benefit.
A $60 billion boost to farm subsidies will be a lifeline to some. But the way the funding will be distributed could worsen disparities between farms in an industry already struggling with consolidation.
Read More »Here Are the Best Rides at Universal’s New Epic Universe Theme Park in Orlando
A roller coaster aficionado tested all the rides at the new Universal theme park in Orlando and ranks them, from must-dos to mehs in a ride-by-ride guide.
Read More »How Conservative Christians Cracked a 70-Year-Old Law
The I.R.S. recently said that churches could endorse candidates from the pulpit, a shift from a longstanding interpretation of American nonprofit law.
Read More »Palm Beach Billionaires Battle for Oceanfront Land
Before building the beachfront homes of their dreams, the superrich keep tearing down perfectly good mansions.
Read More »Midtown Manhattan Becomes America’s Stage for Acts of Violence
A small part of the nation’s largest city has drawn people bent on killing to draw attention to their causes. The man who shot four people at a Park Avenue office tower was the latest.
Read More »An Evening at the Office, and Four Lives Ended by Gunfire
A police officer. A security guard. An executive. An associate. They were remembered for their “light,” for their passion and commitment.
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