
Alon Ben-Meir: Two infamous rulings by the Supreme Court put America to shame
Over the past two weeks the Supreme Court passed two rulings that history will recall as the most infamous and extremely dangerous for the American people.

Over the past two weeks the Supreme Court passed two rulings that history will recall as the most infamous and extremely dangerous for the American people.

Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced administration appointments in the area of education on Thursday.

The Statler Brothers continued the July 4th tradition in Staunton for 25 years, with the celebration drawing as many as 100,000 to the Queen City to see country music legends like Johnny Cash, Tammy Wynette, Reba McIntyre, Charley Pride, Neal McCoy and Conway Twitty.

Welcoming the leaders of Finland and Sweden to Washington on May 19, President Biden said that “what makes NATO strong isn’t just our enormous military capacity, but our commitment to each other, to its values. NATO is an alliance of choice, not coercion.”

Jan. 6 wasn’t standalone, but was rather the end piece of years of planning by Donald Trump and his loyalists to stage a coup.

This month, the FDA authorized Moderna and Frizer vaccines for the remaining age group of kids, meaning now that everyone in the United States over the age of six months can get vaccinated.

“In a closed society where everybody’s guilty, the only crime is getting caught.”—Hunter S. Thompson

The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons has been ratified by 65 governments, known in diplomatic circles as States Parties.

The United States Supreme Court, in a 6-3 decision, has overturned Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenhood vs. Casey, overturning five decades of judicial precedent that had guaranteed a woman’s right to an abortion.

Hanley Energy announced today that it will invest $8 million to expand its Hanley Energy Electrical division in Loudoun County.
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