Despite his influence on gambling disorder research, Robert Custer is not as well-known today as some drug and alcohol addiction researchers.
https://t.co/f7o7m9IQ6d
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement is arresting people in front of their kids during school drop-offs, on the way to church, and at routine check-ins at immigration offices.
Communities are pushing back, leading to clashes with police and protests.
These raids are remaking the country. https://t.co/kXioGOqpew
Residents of Budapest line up for food distributed by a charity on a cold day in December. These lines are a barometer of Hungary's stagnating economy, and a dead weight on President Viktor Orban heading into a springtime election https://t.co/bsfCIyYatT
Shortages. Blackouts. Soaring prices. Why are more Cubans leaving, and why isn’t the government stopping them?
🎧#TheTake's guest host, @kdhirten, speaks with historian @ASPertierra on our latest episode: https://t.co/qok5EWW9x2
CBS News suddenly shelved a “60 Minutes” segment featuring the accounts of Venezuelan men deported by the Trump administration to a notorious maximum-security prison in El Salvador. Now one of its own correspondents fears the program is being “dismantled,” and some employees are threatening to quit.
The correspondent who reported the story, Sharyn Alfonsi, said in an internal memo that “the public will correctly identify this as corporate censorship.”
One of the main issues CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss raised was the lack of a response from the Trump administration to the reporting. https://t.co/OPwGj50m7K
Many patients who’ve been released from involuntary mental health treatment are not yet ready to live on their own. Washington state is trying to fill the gap. https://t.co/GAQOxDDB5W
Israel’s approval of 19 new illegal settlement outposts stands to redraw the occupied West Bank, undermining the formation of a viable Palestinian state.
How Israel is redrawing the West Bank with its illegal settlement expansion https://t.co/Tc6ukzvGrW
An online review system for military family housing only shows 45 posts in the year since it launched, triggering a senator to write to the Pentagon for plans to better promote the accountability tool.
https://t.co/Is9luQ5W6A
Amtrak will probably have to idle some of the new trains it is rolling out because the railroad’s maintenance facilities won’t be upgraded in time https://t.co/o05hQRzskU
After tariffs rose to the highest levels in centuries, the U.S. lost tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs this year. WSJ's Gavin Bade takes us to Detroit to learn why—and to meet the winners of the new trade paradigm. https://t.co/EoZVvciQRf
A year after Assad's fall, Syrians are disappearing into the system of prisons and lockups that defined the dictator’s rule, including detention without charge. Reuters documented at least 829 names of detainees and 11 deaths. Read our full investigation: https://t.co/epcYzBxuyq
Seeing a summons for grand jury duty in your mailbox may seem like an unwelcome time-suck, but participation in the system has perhaps never been more important.
It’s an opportunity to stand for justice as other protections against autocracy—the Constitution, the Supreme Court, traditional media—erode or fracture under pressure. https://t.co/jqUR20nc5i