Why would healthy young people want services they won’t use in the near future?
Why does Elon Musk have to be the center of everyone's attention every day? Has he no hobbies? Is running an industrial empire less than a full-time job?
Commentary: Building social infrastructure leads to stronger relationships, less isolation.
🎧 The hosts discuss why such places help us build stronger communities.
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg launched his latest social media platform, Threads, one day after a federal judge in Louisiana ruled the Biden administration likely colluded with Facebook and other such sites to censor unfavorable views during the pandemic.
After evil acts, our leaders won't do good
A white gunman who killed 23 people in a racist attack on Hispanic shoppers at a Walmart in Texas has been sentenced to 90 consecutive life sentences in federal prison. Patrick Crusius pleaded guilty this year to nearly 50 federal hate crime charges in the 2019 mass shooting in the border ci…
Does Joe Biden want to be remembered as the president who lost Ukraine?
Chicago Tribune: Government should not suppress speech on social media; the price is always too high
A Louisiana federal judge ruled recently that the Biden administration could not quietly contact social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook to remove protected free speech.
Meta's new microblogging app reports 100 million signups less than a week after launching. CNN's John Vause speaks to The Atlantic's Nick Thompson about how Threads is taking on Twitter.
Mark Zuckerberg's industry labeled "Twitter killer" has already amassed 100 million users within its first week.
With the end of the Supreme Court’s 2022 term, what have we learned about the most junior justice? To some, Ketanji Brown Jackson has been a reliable vote for the liberal coalition. Ohers contend she’s a swing vote with a tendency to surprise her fans by joining the court’s conservatives.
President Joe Biden on Friday defended what he said was a “difficult decision” to provide cluster munitions to Ukraine, a move that has led to allies including the UK, Germany and Spain to speak out against the use of the controversial weapons.
U.S. President Joe Biden stops in London to meet with the British Prime Minister before heading to Lithuania for the NATO summit. The summit comes days after his controversial decision to send cluster bombs to Ukraine. Michael O'Hanlon, author and senior fellow in Foreign Policy at the Brook…
The friction is classic: Progress and societal good versus tradition and individual rights.
Spending to influence Nebraska lawmakers and shape state laws hit record levels again last year.
State Sen. Dave Murman has scheduled a July 31 hearing as part of an interim legislative study of controversial subjects -- like critical race theory -- in K-12 classrooms.
Lincoln Public Schools is planning its biggest property tax levy drop in more than 20 years, but Lincoln residents will likely see their property taxes go up under the proposed 2023-2024 budget now being considered by the Board of Education.
Why would healthy young people want services they won’t use in the near future?
Why does Elon Musk have to be the center of everyone's attention every day? Has he no hobbies? Is running an industrial empire less than a full-time job?
Commentary: Building social infrastructure leads to stronger relationships, less isolation.
🎧 The hosts discuss why such places help us build stronger communities.
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House Republicans recently passed a bill that would injure our most vulnerable. Their Blazing Saddles' hostage tactic: Hold a gun, the threat of a federal credit default, to their own heads. Well, everyone's, since this was more of a nuclear device.
I was born and raised in Nebraska. I left Nebraska in 1981 after receiving my B.A. from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln because economic opportunities were greater in larger metropolitan areas.
Some governors and state legislators, including Nebraska’s, have conflated civic duty with moral certitude to create a spate of codified self-righteousness. Their sanctimonious overreach brings to mind an evangelist’s holier-than-thou homily and subsequent down-to-earth humbling.
In a legislative session dominated by multi-bill packages, LB753 (Opportunity Scholarship Act) was one of the few single-topic bills passed. The bill does one thing and one thing only: it diverts public dollars to private and parochial schools through tax credits.