OPINION: President Trump shouldn’t use the word ‘lynching’ because he’s white
By Christine M. FlowersPhiladelphia Daily News
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By Christine M. FlowersPhiladelphia Daily News
By Kadhem Al-Attabi and Ziad HarisdpaBAGHDAD – Sixty-three protesters have been killed in clashes across Iraq with security forces during two days of protests against corruption and economic woes, a rights watchdog said on Saturday.
By Taryn Luna, Anita Chabria, Jack Dolan and Maura DolanLos Angeles TimesHEALDSBURG, Calif. – Northern California braced for historically powerful winds and widespread power outages as the Kincade fire in Sonoma County raged on, forcing the evacuation of more than 90,000 people.
By Caroline SimonCQ-Roll CallWASHINGTON — Once, American colleges and universities enjoyed bipartisan support, and Republicans and Democrats alike believed in the value of higher education.
By John T. BennettCQ-Roll CallWASHINGTON – Conjuring memories of violent racially motivated murders and drawing an immediate bipartisan backlash, President Donald Trump on Tuesday described House Democrats' impeachment inquiry as a "lynching."Trump made the statement in a morning tweet that began with a warning that "if a Democrat becomes President and the Republicans win the House, even by a tiny margin, they can impeach the President, without due process or fairness or any legal rights."
By Nancy ClantonThe Atlanta Journal-Constitution
By Susanne RustLos Angeles TimesTwo days before ExxonMobil goes to court Wednesday, facing New York state accusations the oil company misled investors about climate change, a team of researchers released a report Monday outlining the company and the broader fossil fuel industry's decadeslong campaign of deception, and its success at confusing the American public.
By Tim Ross and Ian WishartBloomberg NewsBoris Johnson is sending the letter to Brussels he never wanted to write.
By Alex WigglesworthLos Angeles TimesLOS ANGELES – Southern California is back on fire watch this weekend amid winds and warm temperatures, with Southern California Edison warning of possible preventive power outages.
By Ella Joyner And Helen MaguireGerman Press Agency
By Gordon Dickson and Luke RankerFort Worth Star-TelegramFORT WORTH, Texas — Some in Fort Worth, particularly those in the black community, believe their security is in peril.
By Jennifer Emily and Cassandra JaramilloThe Dallas Morning NewsFORT WORTH, Texas — The Fort Worth officer who shot and killed Atatiana Jefferson over the weekend likely relied on police training that overemphasized the risk to an officer's life while ignoring basic patrol guidelines every cop learns, law enforcement experts said.
By Melody GutierrezLos Angeles TimesSACRAMENTO, Calif. — California will become the first state to require public universities to provide access to abortion pills on campus under a bill signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday.
By Mark NiquetteBloomberg NewsPresident Donald Trump has directed a deliberate withdrawal of U.S. troops from northern Syria in advance of an expected increase in military action in the region, to keep them out of harm's way, U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said.
By Leila Miller, Benjamin Oreskes, Sonali Kohli and Richard WintonLos Angeles Times
CHICAGO – Rosaries in hand, a small group of abortion opponents gathered outside a medical facility to pray for the unborn.
By Tyrone Beason Los Angeles Times
By Nabih Bulos and David S. Cloud Los Angeles Times
By Richard ReadLos Angeles TimesSEATTLE — Trump administration officials broke the law when they reversed course and gave a green light to a proposed copper and gold mine near Alaska's Bristol Bay, mining opponents said in a lawsuit filed Tuesday.
By Graham MacGillivrayCQ-Roll CallWASHINGTON — Mark Morgan, the acting commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, told reporters at the White House on Tuesday that it is "absolutely unacceptable" for his officers to stop a journalist "because they're a journalist." He was responding to a question, based in part, on an Oct. 3 incident between Defense One editor Ben Watson and a CBP officer at Dulles International Airport. Defense One's report on the exchange alleged that "A U.S. passport screening official held a Defense One journalist's passport until he received an affirmative answer to this repeated question: 'You write propaganda, right?'" and characterized the officer's actions as harassment.