Hmmm... the page you're looking for isn't here. Try searching above.- U.S.People
Naya Rivera's Ex-Husband Ryan Dorsey Makes Emotional Visit to Lake Piru as Search for Actress Continues
Naya Rivera has been missing since July 8
110110 reactions - U.S.INSIDER
A YouTuber and her friend who got sick at Disney World's reopening are being criticized for ignoring medical advice to go to the hospital after 'violently vomiting'
The women insisted that the health scare was an allergic reaction — and not the result of COVID-19 — but commenters remained concerned.
- BusinessBusiness Insider
Caribbean countries are selling citizenship for as low as $100,000 — here's how the ultra-wealthy are cashing in to avoid pandemic travel restrictions
Travel restrictions on Americans and US passport backlogs have helped fuel demand for secondary passports and citizenship this year.
- U.S.Los Angeles Times Opinion
California is back on coronavirus lockdown. And we have no one to blame but ourselves
No tattoos. No touch ups. No Pilates. No God. It's Lockdown 2.0, SoCal style.
- PoliticsReuters
Judge seeks clarity on the scope of Trump's clemency order for Roger Stone
A U.S. judge on Monday asked the Justice Department to explain whether President Donald Trump's order commuting Roger Stone's prison term means the veteran Republican operative does not need to be supervised by probation officers as many convicted felons are after being freed. Congressional Democrats and other critics accused Trump of abuse of power and an assault on the rule of law after the Republican president on Friday gave executive clemency to Stone, his longtime friend and adviser. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who presided over Stone's trial, set a July 14 deadline to receive a copy of Trump's clemency order along with an explanation about whether it also commutes the period that Stone was meant to be supervised after leaving prison.
- SportsHuffPost
UFC Fighter Chokes Out Opponent, Helps To Revive Him In 'Classy' Move
Makwan Amirkhani was lauded for the actions he took right after he defeated Danny Henry.
- ScienceThe Conversation
Here's how scientists know the coronavirus came from bats and wasn't made in a lab
One of the conspiracy theories that have plagued attempts to keep people informed during the pandemic is the idea that the coronavirus was created in a laboratory. But the vast majority of scientists who have studied the virus agree that it evolved naturally and crossed into humans from an animal species, most likely a bat. How exactly do we know that this virus, SARS-CoV-2, has a “zoonotic” animal origin and not an artificial one?








