Opinion: Sheryl Swoopes is right: Black people can't be racist WNBA legend Sheryl Swoopes has come under an avalanche of criticism for saying that Black people can’t be racist. Last month ... the Kerner Commission. If we don’t talk about race in this ... 03/9/2024 - 11:00 am | View Link
In a 2020 interview with CNN, Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington criticized the manner of President Donald Trump's visit to St. John's Episcopal Church amid protests over the death of George Floyd.
A Republican state representative in Michigan, Rep. Matt Maddock, claimed on social media that he had photo evidence of "illegal invaders" arriving at Detroit Metro Airport. CNN's Daniel Dale explains that it only took a few minutes to find out it was the Gonzaga men's college basketball team arriving for their March Madness game.
We already knew that Wisconsin Speaker Robin Vos is putting party before the people of his district, his state, his country or is own dignity by endorsing Trump despite Trump repeatedly shitting on him.
That said, don't expect Vos to appear in a Trump commercial anytime soon, not after what he said in an interview earlier this week:
Because again, this is where the policies that he believes in are more important than anything else.
Killer Kyle Rittenhouse is doing a tour of campuses around the country, sponsored by the Turning Point USA with Charlie Kirk.. Last week, when stopping at the University of Memphis, they were ready for him. A group of people were able to play the reserved seating to a tee and so there were several Black students present for his little speech.
LONDON, Ohio — Within 24 hours of buying his red Ford Mustang Mach-E, Liam Sawyer set off on a camping trip.
Sawyer, who bought the electric SUV “because I think the technology is cool and the range is just long enough,” searched ahead of time for convenient charging stations between his home in Indianapolis and Allegheny National Forest in western Pennsylvania.
About 175 miles (282 kilometers) into his journey, he stopped at a new public charging station at the Pilot Travel Center along Interstate 70 outside Columbus, Ohio.
NEW YORK — When No Labels’ critics got the loudest, it was Joe Lieberman who came to the group’s defense.
The former Connecticut senator was a founding chairman of the centrist organization that focused, above all, on promoting bipartisanship in national politics. Despite its benign stated mission, No Labels inflamed many people across politics by working to recruit a third-party presidential candidate that some fear might tilt the 2024 election in Donald Trump’s favor.
At almost every major turn, Lieberman served as the group’s chief public defender.