A federal judge says migrants can sue the company that flew them to Martha's Vineyard (www.npr.org)
How anti-vaccine activists and the far right are trying to build a parallel economy (www.npr.org)
A Florida activist creates safe spaces as laws and rhetoric turn against trans rights (www.npr.org)
'Oppenheimer' finally premieres in Japan to mixed reactions and high emotions (www.npr.org)
Robert Kennedy Jr. taps a wealthy California attorney as his running mate (www.npr.org)
Anti-vaxx, conspiracy theorist spoiler candidate with no chance of winning sucking up to the wealthy and elite, to the surprise of no one.
The Francis Scott Key bridge in Baltimore collapses after a ship crashed into it (www.npr.org)
A cargo ship crashed into one of two main supports for the 2.5km long bridge at around 1:30AM EDT....
It's easy to tune out politics. Biden's campaign is using an app to get around that (www.npr.org)
Israel Attacking West Bank Farms (www.npr.org)
The U.N. humanitarian affairs office has recorded 650 attacks by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank since Oct. 7, harming residents and property. It says settlers have killed at least nine Palestinians in the territory and Israeli security forces have killed more than 400 Palestinians in that time.
Tennessee becomes the first state to protect musicians and other artists against AI (www.npr.org)
The Ensuring Likeness Voice and Image Security Act, or ELVIS Act, is an updated version of the state’s old right of publicity law. While the old law protected an artist’s name, photograph or likeness, the new legislation includes AI-specific protections....
First human transplant of a genetically modified pig kidney performed (www.npr.org)
Rupert Murdoch and new 'Washington Post' CEO accused of cover-up in hacking scandal (www.npr.org)
Gov. Ron DeSantis' war on 'woke' appears to be losing steam in Florida (www.npr.org)
68 orphans were evacuated from Gaza to the West Bank, enraging Israel's far right (www.npr.org)
Airbnb bans all indoor security cameras (www.npr.org)
An Israeli responder's work on Oct. 7 shows the challenges of investigating atrocities (www.npr.org)
Newsroom at 'New York Times' fractures over story on Hamas attacks (www.npr.org)
The Times Guild, the newsroom union representing nearly 1,500 journalists at the paper, filed a formal grievance yesterday with the paper, saying The Times had violated the terms of its contract. The guild accused top news executives of “targeted interrogation” of journalists of Middle Eastern descent in an investigation of...
Alabama passes IVF immunity law (www.npr.org)
Hypocrites being hypocritical about their own hypocritical beliefs....
A new satellite will track climate-warming pollution. Here's why that's a big deal (www.npr.org)
Unanimous Supreme Court restores Trump to Colorado ballot (www.npr.org)
U.S. begins airdropping food in Gaza, but it's a less-than-ideal means of aid delivery (www.npr.org)
TEL AVIV, Israel - The U.S. military on Saturday said it began dropping food over the Gaza Strip, a war-torn enclave desperate for humanitarian aid....
What could Biden's Israel-Gaza stance mean for his campaign? Michigan is an early test (www.npr.org)
Ex-FBI source charged with Biden lies is tied to Russian intelligence, prosecutors say (www.npr.org)
What layoffs in the video game industry mean for developers and the games we love (www.npr.org)
Poland's new government deprograms its once far-right public media (www.npr.org)
WARSAW, Poland — It’s 7:30 in the evening in Warsaw, and public news broadcaster TVP Info is about to broadcast live to millions of viewers across Poland. Producers in a crowded control room scurry in and out, sometimes stopping to peer through a narrow window into a studio where the host reads from a teleprompter....