Overall, 56% of U.S. adults now say they have a lot of or some trust in the information they get from national news organizations – down 11 percentage points since March 2025.
Those who report often encountering inaccurate news are more likely than those who rarely or never do to say it’s hard to know what is true (59% vs. 31%).
American foreign and defense policies have long been distorted by the notion that Taiwan constitutes a vital U.S. national security interest. It doesn’t.
As climate risks escalate, the battle for public opinion increasingly includes the look and feel of scientific credibility.
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As Berkshire Hills Regional School District voters decide the fate of Monument Mountain Regional High School, The Eagle urges a “yes” vote on both ballot questions. A new, energy-efficient building ...
The response to Mamdani's speech from U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance was telling. He responded on X by mocking Mamdani’s ...
With the 2025 election season now wrapping up and 2026 midterms approaching, Democrats are searching for ways to reconnect ...
In crafting Indiana’s new high school diploma requirements, the state Department of Education identified only one of the two ...
Padma Lakshmi discusses her new cookbook, Padma's All American, with Newsweek and how it celebrates immigrant food culture.