The NYPD estimates that there were roughly 40 to 50 people still there when they arrived. Most protestors had already left of their own volition.
Fifteen people were injured after a mass shooting broke out outside a funeral home on Chicago's South Side
A high school teacher and coach in Michigan was fired for tweeting "Trump is our president" on Twitter.
In an interview with The Post Millennial, Folk said that the announcement that King County Executive Dow Constantine was closing downtown jail facilities "came like a bolt from the blue."
Twitter Safety tweeted out a series of tweets laying out an update to their policy against posts that have the potential to lead to harm offline, but managed to avoid addressing Antifa and Black Lives Matter in the update.
Seattle's King County is planning on closing the county jail in Seattle and has no plan to replace it. There are additional plans to end all youth detention by 2025.
Portland rioters attacked a federal officer last night in the middle of an arrest outside the Hatfield Courthouse, allowing the suspect to escape.
Dave Chappelle makes no bones about it: he is a friend, fan and supporter of Kanye West through and through.
Washington State agencies are using segregation to enforce racial equity and adhere to the new social justice norms of anti-racism.
Contract tracers assessing coronavirus transmission are directed to ask people if they've been out drinking, but are still instructed not to ask if they've been out protesting.
US Congressman Matt Gaetz called for Liz Cheney to resign as the chair of the House Republican Conference, after an acrimonious meeting that took place on Tuesday.
House speaker Nancy Pelosi said that Trump would be "fumigated out" of the White House if he would not leave.
China was the first country to produce tests for coronavirus, though they have been heavily criticized for their transparency throughout the pandemic.
The public was warned by the media that Trump supporters might stage a coup. Instead it is the militants on the left that have taken up arms against the public and its government officers.
Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt took to social media on Monday indicating that he intended to enter the case of Mark and Patricia McCloskey in an effort to have all charges against them dropped.