(The Post)
Passage marked a major achievement for Democrats, after more than a year of wrangling over a centerpiece of President Biden’s economic agenda. The legislation now awaits a vote in the House.
By Tony Romm
The blast killed a retired couple from Wisconsin and a bank official from California. A woman raising money for refugees was badly wounded but survived.
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Past, Rediscovered
Past, Rediscovered
Forty-seven years after his father was injured in a mass shooting, John Elmore is helping the victims from Tops grocery store.
By Eli Saslow
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A photographer traveled to Afghanistan three times since the Taliban returned to power. Here's what he saw.
By Lorenzo Tugnoli
Opinion by Max Boot
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Opinion by Michele Booth Cole, Ashley Harrell and Jordan Barksdale
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The unwillingness to punish President Vladimir Putin for a killing in Berlin ordered by Moscow added to the Kremlin’s sense of impunity before the Ukraine war.
By Souad Mekhennet and Loveday Morris
The breakthrough came as conditions inside Gaza are becoming increasingly dire, with electricity supplies dwindling and hospitals warning that vital services are close to collapse.
By Shira Rubin, Steve Hendrix and Hazem Balousha
Let’s put aside the brain-boggling size and possible infinitude of the universe for one moment. The successful launch, deployment and early scientific returns from the Webb are a big deal in astronomy. But make no mistake: The universe is not about to reveal all its secrets.
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As the warming atmosphere fuels once-unthinkable amounts of rain in single bursts, the problem of so much water arriving so quickly is posing serious challenges in a nation where the built environment is outdated and increasingly outmatched.
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By The WayPerspective
Nothing feels more selfish than planning a vacation as the world faces climate change.
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(Stef Wong for The Post)
Researchers say the water may temporarily warm the climate.
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Outfitted with roof solar panels and a battery pack, the lighthouses store energy to help people who are especially vulnerable during extended power outages.
By Rebecca Santana | AP
The department is proposing to update airline refund and credit rules based on consumer complaints during the pandemic.
By Ian Duncan
It’s complicated. Be forewarned: Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are nuanced and a little confusing.
By Lena H. Sun and Joel Achenbach
With abortion rights overturned, are Republicans ready to change the way they think about federal support for families?
By Jeff Stein and Leigh Ann Caldwell
Trump-backed candidate Matthew DePerno was allegedly “one of the prime instigators” of an effort to gain unauthorized access to voting machines.
Extreme heat is paralyzing Iraq, forcing power shutdowns as authorities extend public holidays to protect employees from 125-degree temperatures.
By Louisa Loveluck and Mustafa Salim
Today’s WorldViewAnalysis
As hundreds of millions around the world bore the brunt of surging prices at the pump, five oil giants — BP, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell and TotalEnergies — made $55 billion this past quarter.
By Ishaan Tharoor1 hour ago
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Some of the state’s biggest employers objected to the restrictions passed by the GOP-controlled legislature.
By Amber Phillips and Tom Hamburger
A new system allows grass-roots groups to order naloxone directly from an online store at a discount, thanks to agreements with drugmakers.
(Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Data from the College Board indicates students should be given more of a challenge, rather than less.
By Jay Mathews
Local, state and federal police are exploring possible connections in the deaths of four men.
Families are trying to undo a deferred prosecution deal between Boeing and the Justice Department they say lets the company evade accountability.
A healthy economy is not one that requires officials to be constantly adjusting macroeconomic to keep things going. Rather, it is one that relies more on the self-correcting mechanisms of open, competitive and well-regulated markets.
(Washington Post illustration; iStock)
Email, text, DM or Facebook? Inviting friends to a party has gotten complicated.
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(Allison Shelley for The Post)
Since July 6, they have parked their American flag-draped vehicles on the National Mall protesting what they say is America’s abandonment of the Constitution.
By Joe Heim
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The Australian beat upset-minded Yoshihito Nishioka in straight sets to take the D.C. hard-court title again.
By Liz Clarke
(Andrea Sachs/The Post)
The lodge where the 1980s movie was partly filmed holds themed weekends. All Babys and Johnnys are welcome.
By Andrea Sachs
By Sarah Lyon
A parent of three children has one favorite — and wonders whether that's rare, because other parents don't discuss this, "EVER."
Monday, August 8
Monday, August 8
Monday, August 8
(Sela Shiloni)
The ink-black comedy “I Love My Dad” showcases the director’s affinity for screenplays with “a taboo embedded in them.”
By Ty Burr
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