EDITORIAL: Trump reaches too far with health care executive order
President Donald Trump has resorted to executive overreach to achieve his administration’s goals on health care policy.
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President Donald Trump has resorted to executive overreach to achieve his administration’s goals on health care policy.
Parisian Mayor Anne Hidalgo has been waging a war on air pollution, planning to eliminate diesel-powered cars from the French capital by 2024, and expanding that ban to all vehicles with other traditional combustion engines by 2030.
Indiana state lawmaker Rep. Jim Lucas, R-Seymour, has drafted a bill that would require journalists to obtain a state-issued license to write professionally. The bill is very similar to Indiana’s concealed carry handgun legislation, and it is likely Lucas is trying to skewer gun control laws rather than actually limit the press.
Most people who spend time on the internet are familiar with the famous adult cartoon "Rick and Morty."
Former Vice President Joe Biden has recently become the focal point of much media speculation concerning his potential entrance into the 2020 presidential race.
Bloomington officials want to implement a 1 percent food and beverage tax in Monroe County to help pay for a new convention center.
Roy Lee Ward, an inmate on death row in Indianapolis, is contesting the legality of Indiana’s lethal injection process to the Indiana Supreme Court after the Court of Appeals of Indiana ruled that Indiana prisons were unable to follow through with their executions.
Cornell Iral Haynes Jr., better known as the rapper Nelly, was arrested early Saturday morning by police in Auburn, Washington, following a report of second-degree rape. His lawyer, Scott Rosenblum, later released a statement saying that Nelly had not been charged and had been released from custody.
In an act of charity undertaken previously by First Ladies before her, Melania Trump recently gifted a set of Dr. Seuss books to one school from every state.
In a heavy-handed attempt to cut health care costs, Indianapolis-based insurance giant Anthem will no longer cover outpatient medical imaging and scanning at hospital facilities, which includes MRI and CT scans.
Pregnant teenagers in Ohio are being forced to endure unnecessary pain during childbirth.
Except perhaps in cases such as Heinz’s dilemma – stealing medicine to save a sick wife, which seems excusable – theft is not that a difficult crime to judge.
President Trump announced a new tax plan last week that would simplify the personal and corporate tax code and, on the whole, lower taxes.
Bloomington will be unveiling Indiana’s first driverless shuttle system Friday at the Fast Forward Bloomington event. The EZ10, manufactured by the French tech startup EasyMile, is completely electric and can transport up to twelve passengers at a time.
The FBI deemed in 2011 the Juggalos, a term used to describe Insane Clown Posse fans, known for their spidery hairstyles and love of Faygo, a “loosely organized hybrid gang”.
With the Little 500 race on campus and bike lanes on many streets in town, Indiana University and Bloomington are generally thought of as a bike-friendly community.
The Senate has until Sept. 30 to pass budgetary legislation with a simple majority vote. That’s less than one week, just enough time to squeeze in another repeal-and-replace Obamacare effort.
A famous rapper is raking in the money and climbing the Billboard Top 100 despite charges of aggravated assault against his girlfriend. Which rapper is this? The fact that we had to ask, and that multiple men could fit this description, is the issue.
Although most Hoosiers are Christian, many young Indiana residents are losing interest in organized religion. Roughly 10 percent fewer people identify as Christians in Indiana compared to 2007, according to Pew Research Center, and far fewer than that are actually attending church.
In its most recent list of visiting fellows, Harvard University included famed WikiLeaks whistleblower Chelsea Manning. In 2013, Manning, a former Army private, was sentenced to 35 years in a military prison under the Espionage Act for releasing more than 700,000 documents exposing U.S. war crimes in Iraq.