Serge Onik, 'So You Think You Can Dance' alum, dead at 33: ‘He will be truly missed’

celebrity-news” target=”_blank”>Serge Onik< Serge Onik, a professional dancer and Top 10 contestant on season 11 of ‘So You Think You Can Dance,’ has died, his manager told Fox News. He was 33.  (Photo by FOX Image Collection via Getty Images) Additional details regarding Onik’s death were not disclosed. The Ukraine-born performer, who moved to the…

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Mainstream media steps up questioning of mask mandates in schools: 'Give children their childhood back'

A flood of recent news articles and opinion pieces at mainstream and progressive outlets have aggressively questioned the policy of universal masking in schools.  What was once media orthodoxy – and is still recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – has gotten a surge of media pushback, with authors calling for removing masks…

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FLASHBACK: FDR's attempt to 'pack the court' in 1937

Decades before joe-biden” target=”_blank”>President Biden< President Franklin Delano Roosevelt made his own push to “pack the court” in the midst of the Great Depression. Roosevelt pushed for Supreme Court reforms shortly after he won a landslide victory in the 1936 election. FDR had faced pushback from the judicial branch on elements of his “New Deal”…

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FDA authorizes AstraZeneca COVID antibody treatment for emergency use

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday issued emergency use authorization for AstraZeneca’s Evusheld.  The infectious-disease infectious-disease healthy-living is for people with serious health problems or a history of respiratory-health to a COVID-19 vaccine who are unable to get adequate protection from vaccination.  ASTRAZENECA TRIALS SHOW ANTIBODY DRUG MORE THAN 80% EFFECTIVE AT PREVENTING…

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More than 30,000 American veterans, service members have died by suicide in post-9/11 wars, report says

A staggering 30,177 American active military” target=”_blank” rel=”noreferrer noopener”>military< – a joint research effort between Brown University and Boston University.  “Unless the U.S. government and U.S. society makes significant changes in the ways we manage the mental health crisis among our service members and veterans, suicide rates will continue to climb,” the paper warns. “That is a cost…

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