Unpopular People’s Convoy Truckers Pelted With Eggs In Oakland
“The ‘people’s convoy’ making friends and getting breakfast served in Oakland,” quipped one area resident.
“The ‘people’s convoy’ making friends and getting breakfast served in Oakland,” quipped one area resident.
“The fuse … went with him. He started insulting me, called me a fool 7 times,” said Morgan, who stood by his claim that Trump walked out of their interview.
In taking on Disney, Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is testing the limits of his combative leadership style while sending an unmistakable message to his rivals.
The key player in a North Carolina absentee ballot fraud probe that led to a do-over congressional election has died.
“That is really the illness that pervades the Republican leadership right now. That they say one thing to the American public and something else in private,” she said.
We continue our Earth Day special by looking at how Indigenous peoples are protecting the Earth. We follow the journey of Ivey Camille Manybeads Tso, an award-winning queer Navajo filmmaker whose new film “Powerlands” shows how corporations like Peabody, the world’s largest private coal company, have devastated her homeland. She also connects with Indigenous communities in Colombia, the Philippines, Mexico and Standing Rock facing the same struggle.
On Earth Day, we look at how the war in Ukraine gives the United States a new chance to break free of emissions-heavy steel production. Russia and Ukraine supplied over 60% of the pig iron the U.S. imported last year to make steel, some of it produced at the Azovstal Iron and Steel Works plant in Mariupol where thousands of civilians and soldiers are now blockaded.
We get an update on the Donbas region of Ukraine, where Russian forces are now focused. Russia has backed a separatist movement in the Donbas since 2014 and used protecting the Russian-speaking population there as a justification for its invasion in February. We speak with Brian Milakovsky, who lived in the Donbas town of Severodonetsk before he evacuated to Croatia in January and is now fundraising for people trying to flee Russian attacks.
Russians are weathering the fallout of President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine with no sign of a negotiated peace deal soon. Economic sanctions have driven up food prices, and there has been repression of political dissent within the country. We speak with author Tony Wood, a member of the New Left Review editorial board, who says the crushing Western sanctions are unlikely to end Putin’s rule and are only hardening attitudes.
And God wants Mitt Romney out of the Senate, Stone insists God very specifically told him.
The former president didn’t seem too jazzed about Vance, who wasn’t one of his early supporters.
He was the longest serving Republican senator in history and had a reputation of working across the aisle.
Democratic lawmaker said he has warned some far-right colleagues that if they don’t snap out of it, they’ll be selling “incense and flowers at Dulles Airport.
But Donald Trump marched ahead anyway.
We get an update on the Donbas region of Ukraine, where Russian forces are now focused. Russia has backed a separatist movement in the Donbas since 2014 and used protecting the Russian-speaking population there as a justification for its invasion in February. We speak with Brian Milakovsky, who lived in the Donbas town of Severodonetsk before he evacuated to Croatia in January and is now fundraising for people trying to flee Russian attacks.
Russians are weathering the fallout of President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine with no sign of a negotiated peace deal soon. Economic sanctions have driven up food prices, and there has been repression of political dissent within the country. We speak with author Tony Wood, a member of the New Left Review editorial board, who says the crushing Western sanctions are unlikely to end Putin’s rule and are only hardening attitudes.
The “coup” attempt was “most heinous and dastardly political offense ever organized by a president, his followers and his entourage,” said Raskin.
Many critics noted the same thing to Donald Trump’s son.
The Georgia Republican couldn’t recall much during questioning in court over a constitutional challenge to her right to run for Congress again.
“I think it’s all a big compliment, frankly,” Trump told The Wall Street Journal. “They realized they were wrong and supported me.
The Justice Department’s bankruptcy watchdog called the Infowars host’s move a potential “abuse” of the system after he lost Sandy Hook defamation suits.
We continue our Earth Day special by looking at how Indigenous peoples are protecting the Earth. We follow the journey of Ivey Camille Manybeads Tso, an award-winning queer Navajo filmmaker whose new film “Powerlands” shows how corporations like Peabody, the world’s largest private coal company, have devastated her homeland. She also connects with Indigenous communities in Colombia, the Philippines, Mexico and Standing Rock facing the same struggle.
On Earth Day, we look at how the war in Ukraine gives the United States a new chance to break free of emissions-heavy steel production. Russia and Ukraine supplied over 60% of the pig iron the U.S. imported last year to make steel, some of it produced at the Azovstal Iron and Steel Works plant in Mariupol where thousands of civilians and soldiers are now blockaded.
Calls are growing for Texas to stop the approaching execution of Melissa Lucio, who says she was wrongfully convicted of killing her toddler Mariah in 2007. We speak to one of Lucio’s attorneys, Vanessa Potkin of the Innocence Project, who says Lucio was coerced into making a false confession within hours of her daughter’s death and deserves a new trial based on new evidence and misleading expert testimony.
President Joe Biden hopes his moves to support Ukraine against Putin’s war, to ease the pain of high gas prices and inflation will help draw a contrast with Republicans.
In yet another segment destined for Russian airwaves, the Fox News host pitched an audit of Ukraine’s wartime president.
The House minority leader got busted after new audio shows what he really said about the former president behind the scenes.
Black women are three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than white women, the vice president noted.
We get an update on the Donbas region of Ukraine, where Russian forces are now focused. Russia has backed a separatist movement in the Donbas since 2014 and used protecting the Russian-speaking population there as a justification for its invasion in February. We speak with Brian Milakovsky, who lived in the Donbas town of Severodonetsk before he evacuated to Croatia in January and is now fundraising for people trying to flee Russian attacks.