Viewing November 14, 2025, 12 found
Browse imported news and rate the entities behind it to shape their Social Credit scores.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is facing scrutiny after court records showed that only 16 of 607 people detained in the Chicago area were labeled high public safety risks because of criminal histories.

Zhu Rikun canceled the first IndieChina Film Festival in New York after he said filmmakers and their families were being harassed by Chinese authorities.
A Georgia judge officially dropped three charges in the election interference case against President Donald Trump, while most of the indictment remains in place.
Released emails between Jeffrey Epstein and journalists Michael Wolff and Landon Thomas Jr. show how close source relationships can blur journalistic boundaries, with Landon Thomas Jr. later facing ethics issues tied to Epstein.

Netflix’s new Selena Quintanilla-Pérez documentary uses rare family footage and interviews to tell her story as a Latina artist, with help from her siblings Suzette Quintanilla and AB Quintanilla III.
A federal appeals court upheld the hate crime convictions tied to Ahmaud Arbery’s killing, keeping the ruling against the men who chased him in Georgia.
Researchers at the University of Virginia say a New Jersey man likely died from alpha-gal syndrome, a tick-bite meat allergy, in what appears to be the first documented death from the condition.

Doug McMillon helped turn Walmart into an even stronger retail giant by keeping prices low, pushing technology, and guiding the company through major economic and political pressure.
The Trump administration plans to expand Border Patrol immigration enforcement to Charlotte and New Orleans as part of its nationwide crackdown.
Anferny Freeman has been charged with murder in a South Carolina bar shooting that killed four people and left 15 others injured.

A BASE jumper was rescued in Utah after crashing into a cliff and hanging from his parachute, with Grand County EMS leading the response.

A federal bankruptcy judge said he will approve Purdue Pharma’s new opioid settlement, which would make the Sackler family pay up to $7 billion and could end years of legal fights.
Showing 12 of 12 articles.
BBC News
0 interactionsNBC News
0 interactionsAssociated Press
0 interactionsBBC News
0 interactionsAssociated Press
0 interactions
Comments 0