President Biden uses State of the Union to make his case for four more years
President Biden didn’t have a high bar to have to clear, thanks to Republicans prattling on and on about his supposed cognitive impairment.
President Biden didn’t have a high bar to have to clear, thanks to Republicans prattling on and on about his supposed cognitive impairment.
U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., told reporters today it’s important for President Biden to “show energy” in tonight’s State of the Union speech.
If you want to know why Republicans seem, at the moment, poised to take back the White House, with a disgraced indicted insurrectionist ex-president as their standard-bearer, well, I’ve got a story for you.
This year’s presidential election, much like every other election in recent years, is what historian Daniel Boorstin referred to as a “pseudo-event.”
New research finds that the oceans are hotter than they’ve ever been in modern times—having smashed previous heat records for at least seven years in a row.
Congressman Ben Cline has been a frequent subject of her unchallenging “interviews” about alleged Biden criminality and other topics.
It’s always interesting to find out what Ben Cline has to say when he is talking exclusively to a group of fellow Republicans and doesn’t feel a need to disguise his hyper-partisan far-right views.
It’s come to this. A Trump-appointed special counsel questioned the President of the United States and concluded that Biden wouldn’t be convicted because he’s “an elderly man with a poor memory.”
A reader writes to ask: Could you please tell me why UVA fans are so vitriolic, nasty, and critical in their social media comments? Isn’t it painful enough to have to endure these losses?
For some time, it’s been apparent that the world’s nations are not meeting the growing challenges to human survival.
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