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The Senate Homeland Security Committee said the Secret Service's "lack of structured communication was likely the greatest ...
Italy's Jannik Sinner defeated defending champion Carlos Alcaraz to win his first Wimbledon title. Sinner is the first ...
Nigeria's former president Muhammadu Buhari — who once ruled as a military dictator before returning decades later as an ...
A trial is set to begin Monday in Florida in a lawsuit against Tesla and its popular driver-assistance feature known as Autopilot. The case stems from a 2019 crash that killed a 22 year-old woman and ...
As the death toll continues to increase from the horrific July 4 flash flood in central Texas, the magnitude of the disaster is coming into clearer focus with renewed questions about preparations.
Scott Detrow speaks with KERA's James Hartley about his reporting on how people gathered at church services Sunday to reflect after the deadly flash floods which killed more than 120 people in central ...
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Katherine Keneally, who researches political violence, about whether we're seeing more of it in American politics.
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe talks to Yun Sun, director of the China Program at the Stimson Center, about how Beijing will view Taiwan's large-scale military drills.
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks to Wired magazine reporter Reece Rogers about the problems plaguing AI Chatbots and how they can be fixed.
More and more voices, including politicians, say that cloud seeding — or man-made ways of increasing precipitation — caused the deadly floods in Texas. Experts say this is damaging public trust.
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Robin Rudowitz vice-president of the health policy organization KFF about the Trump administration idea that Medicaid enrollees could replace migrant farmworkers.
We look at the tariff letters President Trump sent out this past week, as well as what polling tells us about how Americans feel about the increasingly violent immigration raids.