The Latest Immigration Immigrant communities develop new rules of the road amid deportation fears Immigration enforcement in some states now includes highway stops. The Trump administration says local police partnerships are vital for mass deportations, forcing migrants to change travel methods. Jasmine Garsd National At a Massachusetts cafe, helping the community is on the menu A couple transformed a neglected storefront in Fall River, Mass., into a cheery cafe where they organize food pantries, neighborhood cleanups and a community fund for those who can't afford a meal. Jeanette Woods National Guantánamo plea deals for accused 9/11 plotters are canceled by federal appeals court A federal appeals court has canceled plea deals with three men accused of orchestrating the 9/11 attacks, deepening the legal morass surrounding the long-stalled case. Sacha Pfeiffer Environment The hidden cost of oil: Communities fractured by a pipeline project As the 900-mile-long East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project takes shape in Uganda, led by French energy giant Total and Chinese partners. The project promises economic benefits but threatens to displace approximately 100,000 people from their homes and livelihoods. Environment Bolder efforts needed to save Northwest's endangered orcas, report finds Efforts to save the Northwest’s endangered orcas are not working on either side of the U.S.-Canada border, according to an international panel of scientists. John Ryan World Nigeria says it won't accept U.S. deportees: "We have enough problems of our own" Nigeria's government is pushing back against U.S. efforts to send them migrants and foreign prisoners, with Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar quoting Public Enemy to drive home his point. Emmanuel Akinwotu Environment Megabill’s elimination of tax credits for clean energy projects could cost WA $8.7 billion Officials are warning that the megabill passed last week will likely raise Washington households’ electricity costs and eliminate thousands of jobs in Washington’s clean energy and manufacturing sectors. Emily Fitzgerald/Washington State Standard Economy How tariffs could impact French wine imports Winemakers in Burgundy are worried they will lose U.S. customers. Prophets of Technology: The OG influencers Manoush Zomorodi reports on the latest and revisits her favorite conversations with the minds crafting our digital world: what they’ve gotten right—and wrong—and where they think we’re headed next. From hippies to techies, Stewart Brand is the 20th century's top "influencer" Stewart Brand inspired a generation of hippies and coders, including Steve Jobs. With his finger on the pulse, Brand helped build the future we live in. Sanaz Meshkinpour Prev 1308 of 1648 Next Sponsored
Immigration Immigrant communities develop new rules of the road amid deportation fears Immigration enforcement in some states now includes highway stops. The Trump administration says local police partnerships are vital for mass deportations, forcing migrants to change travel methods. Jasmine Garsd
National At a Massachusetts cafe, helping the community is on the menu A couple transformed a neglected storefront in Fall River, Mass., into a cheery cafe where they organize food pantries, neighborhood cleanups and a community fund for those who can't afford a meal. Jeanette Woods
National Guantánamo plea deals for accused 9/11 plotters are canceled by federal appeals court A federal appeals court has canceled plea deals with three men accused of orchestrating the 9/11 attacks, deepening the legal morass surrounding the long-stalled case. Sacha Pfeiffer
Environment The hidden cost of oil: Communities fractured by a pipeline project As the 900-mile-long East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project takes shape in Uganda, led by French energy giant Total and Chinese partners. The project promises economic benefits but threatens to displace approximately 100,000 people from their homes and livelihoods.
Environment Bolder efforts needed to save Northwest's endangered orcas, report finds Efforts to save the Northwest’s endangered orcas are not working on either side of the U.S.-Canada border, according to an international panel of scientists. John Ryan
World Nigeria says it won't accept U.S. deportees: "We have enough problems of our own" Nigeria's government is pushing back against U.S. efforts to send them migrants and foreign prisoners, with Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar quoting Public Enemy to drive home his point. Emmanuel Akinwotu
Environment Megabill’s elimination of tax credits for clean energy projects could cost WA $8.7 billion Officials are warning that the megabill passed last week will likely raise Washington households’ electricity costs and eliminate thousands of jobs in Washington’s clean energy and manufacturing sectors. Emily Fitzgerald/Washington State Standard
Economy How tariffs could impact French wine imports Winemakers in Burgundy are worried they will lose U.S. customers.
Prophets of Technology: The OG influencers Manoush Zomorodi reports on the latest and revisits her favorite conversations with the minds crafting our digital world: what they’ve gotten right—and wrong—and where they think we’re headed next.
From hippies to techies, Stewart Brand is the 20th century's top "influencer" Stewart Brand inspired a generation of hippies and coders, including Steve Jobs. With his finger on the pulse, Brand helped build the future we live in. Sanaz Meshkinpour