To the editor: I've lived in the L.A. area since 2007 and have been a champion of public transit. Yet, in the last five years, I've seen the degradation throughout the system as reported in your recent articles on Metro safety. Yes, we have to make our bus drivers and other personnel safe. But we're also dealing with a problem occasioned by our nation's failure to deal with poverty. As more and more people become homeless, drug-addicted, frightened and broken, violence grows. We can't make life...
When President Biden warned Iran not to attack Israel with the single word “Don’t,” he was setting himself up to look foolish and weak.
White House deputy press secretary Andrew Bates called the recent student protests on college campuses in America “blatantly antisemitic” and then condemned them “in the strongest terms” as “despicable.” Well, the Democrat Party ought to know. It’s the Democrat Party that created this madness.
In this op-ed, Nadia Schadlow calls for an end to the "mind-numbing cycle of far too many studies coming out of the Pentagon and the US government as a whole — with little progress on implementation."
Democrats are attacking "the entire American system of justice" in their targeting of Donald Trump, former Gov. Eric Greitens said.
The UCP has big plans for high-speed rail and other transit advances in
Four types of cancer represented half of the 1.96 million cancer cases in 2023. These are breast cancer, prostate cancer, lung and bronchus and colorectal. READ MORE: Mother diagnosed with
Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs (D) vetoed a bipartisan bill to protect property rights by taking a stronger approach to squatters. The issue of squatting has become a part of the national conversation on crime and property rights.
The high costs and limited availability of quality child care are holding back American moms without college degrees.
America’s child care crisis is holding back moms without college degrees
By MORIAH BALINGIT and SHARON LURYE of The Associated Press and DANIEL BEEKMAN of The Seattle Times AUBURN, Wash. (AP) — After a series of lower-paying jobs, Nicole Slemp finally landed one she loved. She was a secretary for Washington’s child services department, a job that came with her own cubicle, and she had a
By MORIAH BALINGIT and SHARON LURYE of The Associated Press and DANIEL BEEKMAN of The Seattle Times AUBURN, Wash. (AP) — After a series of lower-paying jobs, Nicole Slemp finally landed one she loved. She was a secretary for Washington’s child services department, a job that came with her own cubicle, and she had a