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Showing results for: shutdown (page 22)

Russia bounty shocker: Trump never cared about the troops — only racism and re-election

Amanda Marcotte
Trump harangued NFL players for kneeling, but did nothing about Russia paying bounties to kill American soldiers

John Oliver warns of a “full-blown homelessness crisis” due to COVID eviction tsunami

Eoin Higgins
"The situation is looking really dire."

Why coronavirus cases vary wildly between U.S. states

Matthew Rozsa
As the federal government throws its hands up, state leaders wield tremendous power to save lives (or not)

“Exploitation of a pandemic”: Trump’s executive order expanding visa restrictions sparks outrage

Andrea Germanos
"The latest travel ban is a new season of the same racist, xenophobic show put on by Trump and Stephen Miller"

The affluent are consuming the planet to death: study

Matthew Rozsa
A study argues that it is not enough to invest in green technologies; the world's affluent must stop overconsuming

So much for the “Death Star”: After Tulsa and West Point, wheels are coming off Trump campaign

Bob Cesca
After the epic disaster in Tulsa and his nonsensical battle with John Bolton, Trump may have no way to save himself

The costs of safely reopening a high-end restaurant

John M. Glionna
Many restaurants are reopening, but not without anguish, deliberation, and many tough decisions.

Philippines convicts Maria Ressa, Rappler editor, of cyber libel

Patrick Frater
“We are going to stand up against any kind of attacks against press freedom," said Ressa

Trump golf club seeks rent relief from Palm Beach County

Travis Gettys
The pandemic had a "significant impact" on income, the finance director for Trump International Golf Club says

One city moves to forgive overdue rent — economist sees “a system falling apart”

Matthew Rozsa
Ithaca, N.Y., may be first city to cancel rent. Economist Richard Wolff says the issue is much larger than that

Can people without symptoms spread coronavirus? Answering that question has gotten complicated

Matthew Rozsa
The World Health Organization suggests asymptomatic carriers are unlikely to spread the virus — then walks it back

Shutdowns prevented 60 million coronavirus infections in the United States

Matthew Rozsa
18% of the U.S. population would have contracted coronavirus if not for public health measures, models show

Trump is celebrating a slight dip in unemployment. Here’s why that’s a mistake

Matthew Rozsa
Economists say the slight drop in unemployment rate may be temporary and not indicative of deeper trends

Trump hides out in the White House as Washington burns

Sarah K Burris
Biden goes to meet protesters while Trump hides in the White House

Dozens of cities impose overnight curfews — historic unrest continues unabated

Roger Sollenberger
Protests have exploded into chaos, amid a vacuum of leadership and a social order destabilized by the pandemic

The Great Depression, coronavirus style

Nomi Prins
Economic crashes, then and now

Why some restaurants are keeping their doors closed in states that have reopened, despite backlash

Ashlie D. Stevens
“I have a huge problem with people choosing profit over people. And I would rather go bankrupt"

Anti-intellectualism is back — because it never went away. And it’s killing Americans

David Masciotra
Richard Hofstadter's famous 1964 diagnosis of America has reached its apotheosis with Donald Trump and the pandemic

Former Minneapolis cop charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter in death of George Floyd

Roger Sollenberger
Derek Chauvin was charged Friday in the death of Floyd, an unarmed black man who died in police custody

Trump economic task force member once called minimum wage law the “Black Teenage Unemployment Act”

Roger Sollenberger
Art Laffer was named to Trump's coronavirus economic task force after Sean Hannity called for the move on Fox News

Trump leaves GOP “completely blindsided” with threat to pull RNC convention out of North Carolina

Alex Henderson
Trump ‘completely blindsided’ Republican officials by threatening to pull GOP convention out of Charlotte

Fundamentalist pandemics: What evangelicals could learn from the Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyam

Juan Cole
Given the unpredictable nature of our world, nothing, secularization included, is a one-way street

60 million people will be driven into extreme poverty due the pandemic

Matthew Rozsa
The World Bank predicts that the pandemic will cause the first global increase in poverty since 1998

Like a dictator, Trump keeps chopping away at democracy

David Cay Johnston
Trump is targeting our government’s inspectors general — the internal watchdogs uncovering his corruption
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