
From banning tech to ending sister-city ties, US states have at least 240 anti-China proposals
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — State lawmakers across the U. S. have introduced at least 240 anti-China proposals this year, aiming to ensure public funds don't buy Chinese technology or even T-shirts, coffee mugs and key chains for tourists. They're also targeting sister-city relationships between American and Chinese communities. After years celebrating trade ties with China, states don't want police to buy Chinese drones, government agencies to use Chinese apps, software or parts, or public pension...
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- From banning tech to ending sister-city ties, US states have at least 240 anti-China proposals
- July Fourth parade mass shooting survivors remember victims as gunman skips sentencing hearing
- Texas man is executed for the 2004 strangling and stabbing death of a young mother
- Federal judge temporarily halts order for details on any efforts to return Abrego Garcia to US
- Head of NAACP disinvited from speaking to Texas state bar over suit against Trump administration
Department of Homeland Security points to another agency when asked about court-barred deportations
Attorneys for the Department of Homeland Security say the agency didn't violate a judge's order detailing when people may be deported to countries other than their own because it was the Defense Department — not DHS officials — doing the deporting. Justice Department attorney Mary Larakers made the argument in a court document filed Wednesday, suggesting that U. S. District Judge Brian E. Murphy's order wasn't violated because the Defense Department isn't a defendant in the lawsuit. order,...
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- Department of Homeland Security points to another agency when asked about court-barred deportations
- Trump will hold a rally in Michigan next week to mark his first 100 days in office
- Trump signs executive orders targeting colleges, plus schools' equity efforts
- Days before Canada's election, Trump insists that Canada needs the US more than the US needs it
- Republican Nancy Mace fields concerns over university funding during South Carolina town hall
A magnitude 6.2 quake shakes Istanbul and injures more than 230 people
ISTANBUL (AP) — An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6. 2 shook Istanbul and other areas of Turkey on Wednesday, prompting widespread panic and scores of injuries in the city of 16 million people, though there were no immediate reports of serious damage. At least 236 people were treated for injuries they suffered while trying to jump from buildings or for panic attacks — most of them in Istanbul, where residents are on tenterhooks because the city is considered at high risk for a...
Read MoreScience News
- A magnitude 6.2 quake shakes Istanbul and injures more than 230 people
- 84% of the world's coral reefs hit by worst bleaching event on record
- NASA's Lucy spacecraft beams back pictures of an asteroid shaped like a lumpy bowling pin
- A green comet likely is breaking apart and won't be visible to the naked eye
- An Asian elephant calf was born at Zurich Zoo and its name will start with the letter Z