The First Major Overhaul of Public Lands Grazing Regulations in a Generation Looks to Cut Out Public Involvement

For the first time since 1995, the Bureau of Land Management is rewriting its grazing regulations. The new rule, which governs ranching across 155 million acres of public lands in the West, would heavily favor the livestock industry.

A guide to your final carbon decision

It may still be far in the future, but one day, someone will have to decide what happens to your body when you leave this earth – ideally you. For a l

Our air is better, but still deadly

Europe's air quality is slowly improving, according to the latest report by the EU’s Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service . Since 2015, the

Trickle-Down Suppression: Local Cops Echo Trump’s “Terrorist Org” Attacks on Antifa

Local police accused the same legal assistance group targeted by Joseph McCarthy of being part of a vast antifa conspiracy.

FIFA Gives Trump Exactly What He Wants

Reversing a red card against U. S. soccer star Folarin Balogun isn’t FIFA’s only unusual concession to Trump.

The plan to make climate science harder to erase

As climate information disappears from federal websites, scientists are rebuilding it elsewhere.

Putin May Escalate, but Ukraine Is Winning

In the ongoing battle of narratives, Kyiv’s supporters have every reason to hold the course.

Iran Is Still Fighting a War Against Dissidents Abroad

Iranians in Europe say governments aren’t taking threats from Tehran seriously.