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TikTok was gone. It's back with a Trump lifeline
At the stroke of midnight on Sunday, TikTok users in the United States were momentarily silenced, after the Supreme Court unanimously upheld a new law, which requires the social media app's Chinese owner to sell off TikTok's U.S. business or face a nationwide ban.
Within hours of the shutdown however, President-elect Donald Trump announced that...Read more
News analysis: Once again, the world sizes up a Trump presidency
As Donald Trump takes the oath of office Monday for the second time, the world is watching with a mix of fascination, curiosity, elation or dread — and a sense that this time around, those outside the United States perhaps have a better idea of what to expect from his presidency.
Even before Inauguration Day, the 2 1/2 months of transition ...Read more
Can Donald Trump follow through on deportation threats under California law?
As President-elect Donald Trump takes office and gains the power to enact a threatened mass deportation of undocumented immigrants, officials who run Bay Area jails say they will uphold state laws that keep them out of immigration enforcement actions.
Citing state laws passed during Trump’s first term, several law enforcement leaders over the...Read more
For first responders, trauma could linger long after L.A. County wildfires are out
Mike McGrew estimates his family has more than 320 years of cumulative experience in police and firefighting work.
His dad was chief of the Santa Barbara Fire Department. His grandfather was with the L.A. city fire department. He was a police officer for 31 years.
"I've got a long line over three generations," the retired homicide and major ...Read more
Completing the comeback: After vowing revenge, Trump retakes the presidency in a very different world
Seven months ago, presidential candidate Donald Trump narrowly escaped a would-be assassin’s bullet at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. The bullet grazed Trump’s ear and forced him to duck for cover, but the former — and ultimately future — president was back on his feet moments later with a defiant, fist-pumping message for thousands of...Read more
TikTok restores service after Trump vows to extend deadline
TikTok started restoring service in the U.S. on Sunday, after a whipsaw of events that saw the video app make good on a threat to go dark, only to have President-elect Donald Trump halt enforcement of the law and announce he would give its owners another three months to find a buyer.
“We thank President Trump for providing the necessary ...Read more
Washington lobbyists turn to Elon Musk's DOGE to influence Trump
The legions of lobbyists who have long worked the halls of Congress and federal agencies to secure their policy priorities have a new target: A shadow federal department run by the world’s richest man, Elon Musk.
The Musk-run initiative, dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency, is supposed to advise President-elect Donald Trump on ...Read more
Worsening wind forecast brings new L.A.-area fire risk beginning Monday: 'This is a time to act'
The Santa Ana wind forecast for Southern California has worsened, and forecasters now expect to issue a red flag fire weather warning starting Monday, with the "risk of large fire growth" should ignitions occur.
"This is now a strong Santa Ana wind event and extreme fire weather," said Rose Schoenfeld, meteorologist with the National Weather ...Read more
Washington lobbyists turn to Elon Musk's DOGE to influence Trump
The legions of lobbyists who have long worked the halls of Congress and federal agencies to secure their policy priorities have a new target: A shadow federal department run by the world’s richest man, Elon Musk.
The Musk-run initiative, dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency, is supposed to advise President-elect Donald Trump on ...Read more
Trump vows executive order aiding TikTok after app goes dark
President-elect Donald Trump asked technology companies to “not let TikTok stay dark” and announced he would extend a deadline to sell the company after the video platform suspended its services in the U.S. and Apple Inc. and Google removed the platform from their app stores.
“I will issue an executive order on Monday to extend the period...Read more
Supporters of South Korea's Yoon storm courthouse. Some see hope in Trump's return
As South Korean authorities extended President Yoon Suk Yeol's detention Sunday, his supporters stormed the courthouse that issued the warrant, smashing windows with police shields and using fire hydrants to spray officers.
"Whether the communists die or I die, I'm going to see this to the end," shouted one as he climbed over a wall.
Some ...Read more
First three Israeli hostages freed in Gaza under ceasefire
Three female Israelis have been freed by Hamas, the first of several dozen hostages set to be released under a new ceasefire deal in Gaza.
The three women — Romi Gonen, Doron Steinbrecher and Emily Damari, who’s also a British national — were transferred by the Red Cross to the Israel Defense Forces in the Gaza strip, according to a ...Read more
TikTok goes dark for US users, disappears from app stores
TikTok suspended its services for U.S.-based users while Apple Inc. and Google removed the platform from their mobile app stores to avoid penalties under a new law, as the social media company awaits a possible reprieve from President-elect Donald Trump to continue operations.
“A law banning TikTok has been enacted in the U.S.,” TikTok said...Read more
Church without God: How secular congregations fill a need for some nonreligious Americans
Shared testimonies, collective singing, silent meditation and baptism rituals – these are all activities you might find at a Christian church service on a Sunday morning in the United States. But what would it look like if atheists were gathering to do these rituals instead?
Today, almost 30% of adults in the United States say they ...Read more
Why taking fever-reducing meds and drinking fluids may not be the best way to treat flu and fever
As flu season progresses, so does the chorus of advice, professional and otherwise, to drink plenty of fluids and take fever-reducing medications, like acetaminophen, ibuprofen or aspirin.
These recommendations, well-intentioned and firmly entrenched, offer comfort to those sidelined with fever, flu or vaccine side effects. But you ...Read more
Baltimore's 'Highway to Nowhere' took their homes. Can $85.5 million fix the damage?
BALTIMORE — Once, it was somewhere.
“If you drive there, you’re driving through my backyard,” Rochelle Atkins said. “I tell my grandchildren, that’s where I used to live, by the lamp post.”
Her childhood home at 1916 W. Mulberry St. is long gone, demolished, along with nearly 1,000 others, to construct a highway meant to extend ...Read more
Samaritan scofflaws: They broke the law to stay inside the fire zone, but saved houses and helped neighbors
LOS ANGELES — The fire refugees arrive with regularity at the checkpoint on Pacific Coast Highway. They come alone or in pairs, lining up behind the clutch of police cruisers and a National Guard Humvee, pleading to get back to homes inside the Palisades wildfire perimeter.
They want medicines and other necessities, sure. But they also want a...Read more
Las Vegas police have option to use 'less-lethal' force, but it isn't always effective
LAS VEGAS — When a man wielding a metal bat charged at police officers outside a southeast Las Vegas Valley apartment complex in September, Metropolitan Police Department officers deployed an electronic control device — some of these are more popularly known as Tasers — in an effort to stop him.
It didn’t work, police said. When the man...Read more
US TikTok users lose access to app ahead of Sunday deadline
TikTok was unavailable for U.S.-based users late Saturday after the company failed to thwart a nationwide shutdown required under a new national security law that takes effect Sunday.
“A law banning TikTok has been enacted in the U.S.,” according to an in-app pop-up message. “Unfortunately, that means you can’t use TikTok for now.”
...Read more
AJC poll: Most Georgia voters reject mass deportations
ATLANTA — With Donald Trump just days away from returning to the White House — and getting started on a promised immigration crackdown of historic proportions — a majority of Georgia voters said they believe that most immigrants living in the country illegally should be given a chance to remain.
That’s according to a new poll by The ...Read more
Popular Stories
- Baltimore's 'Highway to Nowhere' took their homes. Can $85.5 million fix the damage?
- Church without God: How secular congregations fill a need for some nonreligious Americans
- Why taking fever-reducing meds and drinking fluids may not be the best way to treat flu and fever
- First three Israeli hostages freed in Gaza under ceasefire
- Spade tattoo revealed in LA deputy's plea revives questions about Lakewood station gang