Carrot Recall Update As FDA Sets Highest Risk Level
Hail or fail: Mariota magic sends Commanders to season-ending victory
Backup QB Marcus Mariota spurred another comeback to close out the regular season. Here are the highlights and takeaways from Washington’s win over Dallas.
washingtonpost.com
US Steel, Nippon sue Biden over move to block $14B deal: ‘Shameful and corrupt’
The lawsuit, filed in a federal court in Washington, accused Biden and senior administration officials of corrupting the deal’s review process, and harming American steel workers by blocking the deal.
nypost.com
El papa nombra a la primera mujer al frente de importante dependencia del Vaticano
El papa Francisco nombró el lunes a la primera mujer en dirigir una importante oficina del Vaticano, nombrando a una monja italiana, la hermana Simona Brambilla, prefecta del departamento responsable de todas las órdenes religiosas de la Iglesia católica.
latimes.com
Zoe Saldaña called out for awkwardly storming Golden Globes 2025 stage — blames champagne at table
Zoe Saldaña confirmed she wasn't supposed to get on stage for the Best Original Song award at the 2025 Golden Globes.
nypost.com
Congress to finalize Trump's victory as lawmakers count electoral votes
Congress will convene to count the votes of the Electoral College and formally cement President-elect Donald Trump's victory in the 2024 presidential election.
cbsnews.com
Biden bans new offshore oil and gas drilling in most U.S. coastal waters
President Biden is taking executive action to protect more than 625 million acres of the American ocean from offshore drilling, the White House announced.
cbsnews.com
Here are the new state labor laws that may affect your workplace
The new laws aim to better protect workers from anti-union intimidation, artificial intelligence and more.
latimes.com
Massive winter storm impacts millions from the Midwest to the East Coast
More than 30 million people are under winter storm warnings and at least eight states have declared states of emergency for a massive winter storm impacting millions from the Midwest to the East Coast. CBS News' Rob Marciano has the latest.
cbsnews.com
New Orleans attacker visited city in months leading up to deadly rampage, officials say
Investigators say Shamsud-Din Jabbar traveled to New Orleans at least twice before the deadly attack on Bourbon Street on New Year's Day. Investigators also shared video, recorded by a camera in Jabbar's glasses, that shows him on Bourbon Street months before the attack.
cbsnews.com
Eye Opener: Massive winter storm hits middle America
Parts of the U.S. could see their biggest snowfall totals in more than a decade as a massive winter storm barrels through the middle of the country. Also, Congress is set to certify President-elect Donald Trump's victory today. All that and all that matters in today's Eye Opener.
cbsnews.com
Lo que hay que saber sobre la próxima investidura presidencial en Venezuela
El inicio del próximo mandato presidencial en Venezuela está previsto para el viernes, cuando el congreso controlado por el partido gobernante organice una ceremonia de juramentación para el presidente Nicolás Maduro a pesar de serias dudas sobre la validez de los resultados oficiales de las elecciones del año pasado.
latimes.com
Nippon, US Steel file suit after Biden administration blocks $15 billion deal
Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel are filing a federal lawsuit challenging the Biden administration’s decision to block a proposed nearly $15 billion deal for Nippon to acquire Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel
latimes.com
What to know about warning of link between alcohol and cancer
The U.S. surgeon general is calling for cancer warning labels for beverages with alcohol, similar to the ones seen on cigarette packs. CBS News medical contributor Dr. Celine Gounder explains what to know.
cbsnews.com
Demi Moore wins first major acting award for "The Substance" at Golden Globes
Demi Moore delivered an emotional acceptance speech after winning a Golden Globe Sunday for her performance in "The Substance." Katey Rich, awards editor for The Ankler, joined CBS News to discuss Moore's win and some of the other highlights from the ceremony.
cbsnews.com
Americans celebrate the life of former President Jimmy Carter
Former President Jimmy Carter is being honored in his home state of Georgia before his remains are taken to Washington D.C. On Tuesday and Wednesday, the 39th president will lie in state in the Capitol rotunda. CBS News' Mark Strassmann shows how Carter is being remembered.
cbsnews.com
Suit claims Fox Sports ex-host offered hairstylist $1.5 million for sex
Attorneys for Noushin Faraji are seeking unspecified damages from Skip Bayless, Fox Sports and Fox Corporation, according to the lawsuit.
cbsnews.com
How the winter storm impacted travelers returning from New Year's holiday
The end of a record-breaking holiday travel stretch is being met with the first major winter storm of the year. Snow, ice and frigid temperatures wreaked havoc on roads across the Midwest over the weekend. The storm also canceled 1,800 flights, mostly to and from the Midwest.
cbsnews.com
Biden to visit New Orleans as FBI releases new video of attacker
President Biden and first lady Jill Biden are set to visit New Orleans Monday in the wake of the New Year's Day terrorist attack that killed at least 14 people and injured dozens more. The visit comes after the FBI released new footage showing attacker Shamsud-Din Jabbar placing multiple improvised explosive devices around Bourbon Street early on New Year's Day. CBS News national reporter Kati Weis has more.
cbsnews.com
Prep Rally: The Intuit Dome is the place to be for high school basketball this week
League play in high school basketball picks up steam with a huge chance for fans to make their first trip to the recently opened Inuit Dome.
latimes.com
Hacked Chrome extensions put 2.6 million users at risk of data leak
Tech expert Kurt “CyberGuy" Knutsson says hackers are embedding dangerous code in Chrome extensions to steal your data.
foxnews.com
25 movies for 2025
Los Angeles Times columnist Glenn Whipp on the year's most anticipated movies. Plus: The Envelope roundtables with directors and actresses.
latimes.com
US Spends $300 Million Bracing For Bird Flu
"While the risk to humans remains low, we are always preparing for any possible scenario that could arise," HSS's Xavier Becerra said.
newsweek.com
Face the Nation: Pelosi, Homan
Missed the second half of the show? The latest on...As Congress readies for the joint session to count the Electoral College votes four years after President-elect Donald Trump's supporters stormed U.S. Capitol, House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi says the violence "didn't end that day," noting the attack on her husband in their home that followed the next year, and Tom Homan, set to be President-elect Donald Trump's "border czar," reiterated on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" that the incoming administration will concentrate on "public safety threats and national security threats" in its plans for mass deportations starting on "day one."
cbsnews.com
Blinken expresses confidence that Gaza ceasefire talks are in homestretch
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is once again showing optimism that a deal is on the horizon to secure the release of hostages and a ceasefire in Gaza. CBS News foreign correspondent Ramy Inocencio has more.
cbsnews.com
The Global Outrage Machine Skips the Uyghurs
China has exploited the crisis in Gaza to present itself as a defender of the Palestinians and a champion of the oppressed. That posture appears to be benefiting China in its geopolitical competition with the United States—even though Beijing is guilty of human-rights abuses against a Muslim community within its own territory. The Uyghurs of China suffer mass detention, population suppression, and cultural assimilation under a brutal authoritarian regime. Yet few protests on university campuses demand their freedom, nor do major diplomatic efforts seek to alleviate their misery.How does China get away with it? The widespread indifference to the Uyghurs’ predicament exposes double standards, not only among today’s prevailing political ideologies, but also within the international politics of human rights. And it flags the danger that China presents to the very principle of universal values.The issue is not a matter of which group—Palestinians or Uyghurs—is more worthy of the world’s concern. Both suffer, and their suffering is awful. The Palestinian cause is important and deserves the attention it receives. Yet the Uyghurs could use some outrage, too. Isolated in remote Xinjiang, their historic homeland in China’s far west, the Uyghurs have no hope of defending themselves against Beijing’s repression without support from the international community.[Read: One by one, my friends were sent to the camps]The United States has tried to pressure China’s leadership to end the Uyghurs’ mistreatment—for instance, by barring companies from importing products that originate in Xinjiang into the U.S. But most world leaders have ignored the Uyghurs’ plight. Many of the same diplomats who oppose Israel at the United Nations then vote in favor of China when the Uyghurs come up for debate. Even Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the Palestinian Authority, took Beijing’s position on Xinjiang during a visit to China in 2023. In a joint statement he issued with China’s leader, Xi Jinping, Abbas asserted that Beijing’s policies toward Muslims in Xinjiang have “nothing to do with human rights and are aimed at excising extremism and opposing terrorism and separatism.”Some advocates of the Uyghurs have tried to get attention by drawing parallels between Gaza and Xinjiang. “The suffering of Palestinians reverberates with a familiar pain,” Rayhan Asat, a Uyghur human-rights lawyer, recently wrote on the website of Dawn, an organization dedicated to human rights in the Middle East. “The dehumanization of the Palestinian people and the collective punishment they endure from Israel’s war have shattered the very fabric of their society, much like what China has inflicted upon my people.” The Georgetown scholars Nader Hashemi and James Millward, in a recent essay on the same site, weave a parallel narrative of colonization, repression, (sometimes violent) resistance, and more repression. That world leaders deny the true brutality of one group’s repression or the other—depending on their geopolitical perspective—“reveals the hole at the heart of the supposedly rules-based international order,” they wrote.This viewpoint overlooks some fundamental differences. Israel was formed by Jews who saw the region as their historic homeland and who were fleeing persecution, pogroms, and the Holocaust in Europe, and persecution throughout the Middle East and North Africa. The map of the area today has been drawn by a convoluted history of interstate wars, outside interference, contentious politics within both the Israeli and Palestinian communities, and aborted attempts at a peaceful resolution. By contrast, Xinjiang was conquered in the mid-18th century by the Qing dynasty (around the same time the British were marching on India) and then claimed by the current People’s Republic of China after its formation in 1949. Now the Communist Party insists that Xinjiang is an integral part of China. Beijing has imposed its political system and Chinese language and culture on the Uyghurs, who are a Central Asian people and speak a language related to Turkish. The community of less than 12 million is also under pressure from an influx of migrants (you could call them “settlers”) from the dominant Han Chinese ethnic group. Official census data from 2020 show that the Han population in Xinjiang expanded by 25 percent over the preceding decade, while the number of Uyghurs grew by only 16 percent.At the moment, the most obvious difference between the Palestinians and the Uyghurs is that Xinjiang is not at war. But there is also no Hamas in Xinjiang to start a war. Rather, Xi has greatly intensified repression of the Uyghurs in recent years in an effort to tighten his control of the region. A million or more Uyghurs were arbitrarily detained in “reeducation camps” and then imprisoned or pressed into a system of forced labor. The Israelis keep the Palestinians something of a people apart; Xi seeks to assimilate the Uyghurs into a broader “Chinese” identity by suppressing their language, history, and religious life. The Australian Strategic Policy Institute described the strategy as a “systematic and intentional campaign to rewrite the cultural heritage” of the community. Perhaps the most chilling element of Beijing’s program is a concerted effort to curtail the growth of the Uyghur population through forced sterilization and other means. The pressure has contributed to a sharp reduction in the number of Uyghur births. The goal of these policies, as one Chinese official put it, is to “break their lineage, break their roots.”[Listen: A Uyghur teen’s life after escaping genocide]The Chinese government denies that it commits these human-rights abuses in Xinjiang and insists that it is merely rooting out terrorism. A concerted propaganda campaign on state-owned media platforms presents Xinjiang as a model of peaceful economic development. Meanwhile, Beijing has erected a police state that has effectively sealed off the region from international scrutiny. With journalists, activists, and officials from international agencies unable to freely investigate or monitor conditions, the stream of stories and images that might fuel anger is limited, and the Uyghurs’ plight is kept largely out of sight. Beijing’s “slow, horrifying obliteration of cultures and peoples,” Hannah Theaker, a historian of Xinjiang at the University of Plymouth, explained to me, “does not produce images of destruction that are likely to seize attention in a crowded news environment.” By contrast, she said, “the horror of Gaza is unfolding in real time to the international public eye.”Still, the evidence of Chinese abuses is substantial, and the reasons for ignoring it run deep into ideologies about the injustices of a postcolonial world, at least among some elements of the political left. Israel, from this viewpoint, is an outgrowth of European colonialism; it represses and displaces a local people, with the backing of the United States, which is seen as the successor to the empires of the West. China doesn’t fit neatly into this narrative. As a socialist state (or so many believe) also victimized by Western imperialism, China is perceived by elements of the left as less malign than Israel, however terrible its human-rights abuses might be.In this view, China’s “ethnic policy may be misguided at some points, it may be imperfect, it may be worth improving,” but it “cannot be worse than what the former Western colonial powers have done or are doing,” Adrian Zenz, the director of China studies at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation and a leading expert on the Uyghurs, told me. Gaining greater empathy for the Uyghurs “would require a total reversal of ideological categories that would crumble the left-wing ideological world.”In this respect, the Uyghurs are treated differently from another oppressed people of China, the Tibetans. The appeal of Buddhism, and admiration for the Dalai Lama, once helped make “Free Tibet” a rallying cry that Richard Gere, the Beastie Boys, and other Western celebrities could embrace. Some parts of the far left did adopt Beijing’s line that China had “liberated” the Tibetans from feudal “serfdom.” But for the most part, Tibetans have enjoyed a sympathy that the Muslim Uyghurs, who lack a charismatic, internationally recognized leader—or a comparably long history of activism, given the recency of the campaign against them—do not.The Uyghurs do receive attention from some members of the political right, including President-Elect Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of state, Marco Rubio. But such conservative backing may hurt the Uyghur cause in the eyes of activists on the left, who view U.S.-government support with particular suspicion. Within certain activist circles on the far left, “there is a hesitancy to want to recognize that what’s happening to the Uyghurs is a type of genocide,” Sang Heae Kil, a justice-studies professor at San Jose State University, told me. She surmised that some activists believe that “what’s happening to the Uyghurs might be overblown,” based on “suspicions that the U.S. media is just trying to kind of knock down China as a Communist country.”[Read: ‘I never thought China could ever be this dark’]The Uyghur cause is also hampered by the hard realities of Chinese global wealth and power. Unlike Israel, which is largely diplomatically isolated beyond a handful of major supporters, China is a growing force in international diplomacy. Many world leaders’ silence about Xinjiang has, in effect, been purchased. These governments know that China could cut off the gravy train of aid, investment, and financing if they publicly criticized Beijing’s mistreatment of the Uyghurs. Imran Khan, the former prime minister of Pakistan, admitted as much in a 2021 interview. Asked why he criticizes the West’s attitude toward Muslims but not China’s abuse of the Uyghurs, he responded, “Whatever issues we have with the Chinese, we speak to them behind closed doors. China has been one of the greatest friends to us in our most difficult times. When we were really struggling, our economy was struggling, China came to our rescue.”For its part, China has aimed to capitalize on the turmoil in Gaza in order to win international support in its geopolitical competition with the United States, especially in the global South. Beijing’s diplomats have vociferously supported the Palestinians throughout the Gaza conflict and carefully avoided criticism of Hamas and its October 7 atrocities against Israeli civilians, in sharp contrast to Washington’s backing of Israel, which is widely unpopular around the world. The strategy has succeeded in bolstering China’s image. A survey of public views in the Middle East by Arab Barometer found that China’s standing in the region has risen since the Gaza crisis began, while the U.S. is seen less favorably. (China’s boost seems to be more a reaction to U.S. policy than a response to anything Beijing has actually done. At most, 14 percent of respondents in the Arab Barometer survey believed China was committed to defending Palestinian rights.)The fact that China’s leaders even attempt to champion the Palestinians while treating Muslims in their own country as enemies of the state is an indication of how steep the Uyghurs’ climb will be to win international support and sympathy. For now, advocates for the Uyghurs will find it hard to overcome this combination of ideological certainties and raw Chinese political and economic power. The Uyghurs will remain outsiders to the global outrage machine, and some injustices will be considered less unjust than others.
theatlantic.com
Toddler Wakes Mom at 5:45AM, She's Unprepared for What She Finds
Reuben the 2-year-old appeared in his parents' room undetected, with a "menacing" grin across his face, his mom told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
Jaguars Have Fired Head Coach Doug Pederson, GM Trent Baalke to Stay
The Jacksonville Jaguars have fired head coach Doug Pederson, but have decided to surprisingly retain general manager Trent Baalke.
newsweek.com
Democrats' new Senate campaign committee chair reveals keys to winning back majority
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, in a Fox News interview as she takes over steering the Senate Democrats campaign committee for the 2026 midterm elections, details her plans to win back majority.
foxnews.com
Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez 'Iconic' Golden Globes Moment Takes Off Online
Swift may not have been at this year's ceremony, but that did not stop fans getting excited about a viral moment.
newsweek.com
Women Decide to Hike a Volcano—Doesn't Go to Plan: 'Comedy of Errors'
Apart from wearing hiking boots, "we weren't ready for the reality" of the trip, one of the women told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
New York Giants Make Decision on Future of Brian Daboll and Joe Schoen
The New York Giants have decided on the future of both head coach Brian Daboll and general manager Joe Schoen.
newsweek.com
Winter Storm Snowfall Forecast for Each State
Snowfall has been forecast by meteorologists for a swathe of the country spanning from the Midwest to the East Coast.
newsweek.com
Jimmy Carter lying in repose for final day in Atlanta before services move to Washington
Former President Jimmy Carter is lying in repose at the Carter Center in Atlanta for a final day before traveling to Washington D.C. Tuesday where he will lie in state at the Capitol. CBS News' Cristian Benavides has more.
cbsnews.com
Jaguars fire Doug Pederson after dismal season
He failed to develop former No. 1 pick Trevor Lawrence into the franchise-altering quarterback many hoped he would become.
nypost.com
New York Yankees Could Trade for $49 Million Gold Glove Third Baseman
The New York Yankees are continuing to sort out their infield. Could this Gold Glove third baseman be the answer they are looking for at the hot corner?
newsweek.com
Jaguars fire Doug Pederson after 3 seasons
The Jacksonville Jaguars on Monday fired head coach Doug Pederson after three seasons with the team. Jacksonville finished the 2024 season 4-13.
foxnews.com
Putin Sends Top General to Kursk as Ukraine's NATO Tanks Roll In
Yunus-Bek Yevkurov—who played a key role in negotiations during a 2023 mutiny attempt led by Yevgeny Prigozhin—arrived in the Kursk region on Sunday.
newsweek.com
Nolan Arenado Prefers Red Sox Trade, Will Not Block Deal, New Report Says
St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Nolan Arenado, a potential Hall of Famer, would approve a trade to the Boston Red Sox, new media reporting says.
newsweek.com
Biden issues sweeping offshore oil, gas drilling ban in 625M acres of federal waters ahead of Trump transition
President Biden banned offshore oil and gas drilling on over 625 million acres of federal waters, making it a reversal for President-elect Donald Trump difficult.
foxnews.com
NATO Ally Green-Lights Dozens of Troops To Join Ukraine War
The president of the Czech Republic has let 40 citizens join the fight in Ukraine, just after Kyiv launched an offensive in Kursk.
newsweek.com
U.S. Steel, Nippon Steel sue Biden administration for blocking deal
The steel companies allege White House decision to black takeover was political and violated their right to due process.
cbsnews.com
13 prisoners escape after drunk detective opens cells, police say
All but two of the 15 suspects in the jail at the time escaped when the cells were opened on the morning, police said.
cbsnews.com
US Steel and Nippon Steel sue Biden administration over blocked merger
The Biden administration blocked the deal over alleged national security concerns.
abcnews.go.com
NASCAR Legend Jeff Gordon Announces Return to 'Super Bowl of Midget Racing'
Jeff Gordon will return as grand marshal for the 2025 Chili Bowl Midget Nationals.
newsweek.com
Aaron Rodgers addresses NFL future following possible final game with Jets
New York Jets star quarterback Aaron Rodgers showed he could still perform at a high level, but whether he wants to be back playing is still up in the air.
foxnews.com
Congress to certify Trump's election win, 4 years after Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection
Vice President Kamala Harris will preside over the joint session of Congress Monday to tally all electoral votes and certify President-elect Donald Trump's election win. The certification comes four years after Trump's supporters attacked the Capitol to try to prevent the certification of Joe Biden's victory in the 2020 election. CBS News' Naomi Ruchim and Olivia Rinaldi have more.
cbsnews.com
MAGA Rejoices at Justin Trudeau Resignation Reports—'Make Canada Great Again'
The Canadian prime minister is reported to be stepping down this week.
newsweek.com