Showing results for: group (page 250)
Report from Ukraine: Tension rises as Russian war crimes revealed — what’s Putin’s next move?
Brian Karem
Putin may be targeting journalists — probably because he's about to push this war to a new level of bloodshed
Kremlin propaganda disrupted by anti-Putin printer attack
Tom Boggioni
Hacking group "Anonymous" is sending statements that encouraging resistance to unsecured printers in the Kremlin
15 breakfast casserole recipes worth rolling out of bed for
Kelly Vaughan
Don't hit the snooze button on these family-friendly recipes
“Classic GOP hypocrisy”: Mark Meadows’ wife may have committed voter fraud too
Igor Derysh
Debbie Meadows, whose PAC backs Marjorie Taylor Greene and Lauren Boebert, reportedly filed three false voter forms
Pfizer CEO pushes yearly Covid shots while experts hesitate
Arthur Allen
Assertions by pharmaceutical company executives have created pressure for scientists and politicians to take action
Elie Mystal: Our Constitution is “actually trash” — but the Supreme Court can be fixed
Dean Obeidallah
Author and scholar Elie Mystal on our deeply flawed Constitution and the long, dark history of legal racism
Russia’s war is an inexcusable crime — but the U.S. is not a credible force for peace
Norman Solomon
Russia bears sole responsibility for this ghastly tragedy — but decades of U.S. policy helped make it possible
Inside a years-long neo-Nazi plot to attack the U.S. power grid
Jordan Green
Two members of a neo-Nazi terror network accused of plotting to attack the power grid have plead guilty
The power of Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons
Alison Stine
Is the real-life couple, both nominated for their first Oscars, next in line for Hollywood royalty?
Are “doomsday gardens” here to stay?
Eric Schank
With little to do, Americans spent more on gardening during the pandemic. Was it a fad?
“The Julia Child Challenge” and the mystique of one of America’s most iconic chefs
Julie Powell
Does this cooking competition engage in some exploiting and some pussy-footing around? Absolutely
Do we all need a fourth vaccine dose? Why doctors are not convinced — yet
Nicole Karlis
Vaccine-makers are seeking approval for a second booster. Some doctors don’t think the evidence is strong
Duke and Duchess of Cambridge forced to answer for colonialism while touring Caribbean nations
Jon Skolnik
The royal couple, William and Kate, cancel trip to Belizean village after protests of colonial legacy
Alexei Navalny, Russian opposition leader, quotes “The Wire” after 9-year sentence in “sham” trial
Igor Derysh
Dissident's trial was overseen by a judge who received numerous calls from Putin's PR chief before getting promoted
Ukraine’s kids and adoption: Will an ugly history repeat itself?
Kathryn Joyce
A far-right Christian pastor just showed up in Poland with 63 Ukrainian kids. That may be just the beginning
Ashley Biden’s diary, Project Veritas, the Trump campaign and the New York Times
Igor Derysh
A tangled tale: Prosecutors say Ashley Biden's "stolen" diary was sold to Project Veritas after a Trump event
When the war in Ukraine isn’t about you: The narcissistic tendency to co-opt tragedy, explained
Mary Elizabeth Williams
The impulse to see ourselves in every story is profoundly human, understandable — and often tone deaf
Are Putin’s oligarchs plotting to topple him?
Stanislav Markus
The Russian oligarchs who have profited from Putin's presidency
Biden must prepare: Republicans plan to exploit Ukraine for political gain — again
Heather Digby Parton
Biden's leadership has been steady and stalwart but "Democrats are a bunch of weak-kneed wimps" is a powerful meme
Pro-Trump group sent armed members door-to-door in Colorado to “intimidate” voters: Lawsuit
Igor Derysh
Lawsuit accuses Colorado group linked to Mike Lindell of violating the Ku Klux Klan Act and voting rights laws
Lockheed Martin’s deep-sea mining gets backlash
Brett Wilkins
"Mining the deep sea is as destructive as strip mining the mountains of Appalachia, extinguishing whole ecosystems with a single blow."
How “weaponized incompetence” is killing marriages
Mary Elizabeth Williams
"How do we reach the men? I think they have to hurt": Author Matthew Fray on divorce and relationships
A plastic chemical you can’t escape is linked to cancer in children
Matthew Rozsa
Phthalates, common in plastics, have been linked to infertility and other mass public health issues
The weird reason symmetry abounds in nature may have to do with our genes striving for efficiency
Eric Schank
"The beautiful symmetry that we see everywhere is primed to appear," one scientist told Salon
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