New research indicates the internet doesn't make people act like jerks, but it sure gives the jerks a big megaphone.
The move comes in light of the Taliban taking control of Afghanistan.
Trump may be out of office, but the money orgy never ends.
The bottle was a gift from Japan, but it's illegal for U.S. officials to accept anything over $390 from a foreign government.
Asa Hutchinson now says he wishes a bill banning mask mandates hadn't become law, but he doesn't actually support repealing it in full.
Senate Republicans are demanding extensive access to Maricopa County records, but key rats are jumping the audit ship.
The park was careful to note that Trump's bot won't be leaving the stage when Biden takes its place.
Biden called for federal agencies to scrutinize mergers, crack down on anticompetitive practices, restrict non-compete agreements, and restore net neutrality.
The agency says it found no records of a plan to secure White House pets, like President Biden's dog, Major, during a significant emergency.
GETTR, the social media site recently launched by longtime Trump aide Jason Miller, is so filled with hentai even QAnon is disgusted.
Gab's CEO, Andrew Torba, immediately spun up an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory to explain why Donald Trump joined video site Rumble instead.
The documentary, "The Deep Rig," was directed by a man whose prior credits include a film claiming aliens did 9/11.
Right-wing pundit Dan Bongino promised to quit Twitter for Parler forever, but he's come slinking back.
Republican lawyer William Braddock claimed to have "Russian mafia" trained in "close-battle combat" ready to assassinate other Republicans.
Project Veritas's latest video is underwhelming even by its own miserable standards.
An attorney for Richard "Bigo" Barnett wrote that classic cars are his "lifelong hobby," not that other thing he's being tried for.
One DOJ official referred to the allegations as "pure insanity."
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last, Slouches towards Mar-a-Lago to be born?
Pre-clicked boxes automatically opt donors into sending the ex-president's PAC money on a monthly basis, and also on his birthday.
The effort comes amid calls for wealthier countries to pitch in on the pandemic response worldwide.