based on current reporting and expert analysis: The Washington Post AP News Reuters Boundless 📉 1. Significant Reduction in Legal Immigration Numbers Because the policy could affect hundreds of thousa...
When the world teeters on the edge of catastrophe—nuclear war, cyber‑enabled attacks on infrastructure, or the collapse of ground‑based command systems—the United States has a final line of defense th...
Since 2012, Florida’s controversial law has not only remained intact but has been bolstered by further legislative changes. As of January 2026, the state of self-defense law reflects a broader nationa...
Living in 2025, Zimmerman’s existence is defined by a paradox of notoriety and invisibility. According to those who have tracked his trajectory, he remains a “marked man,” a term his forme...
Nicolás Maduro Moros is a Venezuelan politician who rose to power under late President Hugo Chávez’s Bolivarian Revolution, serving as foreign minister and vice-president before Chávez’s death in 2013...
Kindness used to be dangerous, especially in the 1960s when being kind in public meant risking arrest, assault, or death, because kindness during the Civil Rights era was not passive behavior but a de...
DIAMOND KING: The Uncut Story of Martin Rapaport From the bustling streets of New York City’s Diamond District, one name shines brighter than most: Martin Rapaport. A visionary, a disruptor, and...
Overview The selection lists Senate Bills (SB 2–SB 90) from the Florida Senate. Bills span claim bills, insurance, health care, criminal justice, housing, education, elections, and public records. Mos...
As of January 2025, COVID-19 continues to circulate globally, having transitioned from a pandemic to an endemic status. This means the virus persists at manageable levels, similar to other common resp...