MINA

Apr 24 2026HEALTH

Rethinking HIV Laws: Are Strict Rules Really the Best Defense?

Public health debates often clash over how to handle diseases like HIV. Russia once took a hard stance, making it a crime to spread HIV through actions like unprotected sex or needle sharing. The idea was simple: punish those who put others at risk to slow the epidemic. But over time, experts began

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Apr 22 2026CELEBRITIES

Housekeeper Takes Legal Action Against Kylie Jenner’s Staff Over Workplace Claims

A former housekeeper has filed a lawsuit against Kylie Jenner, accusing the reality star’s household staff of religious and national origin discrimination. Angelica Vasquez, who worked for Jenner’s Beverly Hills home before transferring to Hidden Hills, says she faced persistent bullying and exclusi

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Apr 21 2026HEALTH

Cancer in Keyport: A Neighborhood’s Growing Concern

A local man began tracking cancer cases on his old street, noticing a disturbing pattern. He marked each affected home with an X and eventually mapped 28 cases on First Street alone, plus another 41 across the town. The numbers sparked alarm among residents and health experts who said the rate se

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Apr 18 2026OPINION

Alaska’s New Criminal‑Justice Plan: A Call for Action

The state legislature has spent the last two years listening to people who have suffered. They gathered stories of loss, abuse and injustice, and turned those voices into a set of laws aimed at stopping similar harm in the future. The result is House Bill 239, a single bill that bundles many reforms

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Race and Health: A California Woman’s Legal Fight

A woman in California has filed a lawsuit against the Pasadena Public Health Department, its director, and two other agencies after being turned away from a state program that helps Black infants. The lawsuit claims the denial was because she is not Black, violating equal‑rights laws. The plaintiff

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Apr 18 2026CRIME

When family turns against you on your wedding day

A bride nearly walked down the aisle in black paint after her sister-in-law ambushed her just steps before saying "I do. " The attack wasn’t random—it came from a years-long feud that started when the bride tried to help calm tensions during her sister-in-law’s own wedding. That day, the bride had l

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Apr 18 2026ENVIRONMENT

Saltwater Creeping Into Drinking Water – Could It Affect Your Heart?

Rising sea levels aren’t just flooding beaches—they’re quietly changing what comes out of your faucet. In coastal towns worldwide, fresh water supplies are getting saltier as ocean water mixes with underground reservoirs. Scientists found that people drinking this slightly saltier water tend to have

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Apr 15 2026CRIME

Mental Health Crisis Claims Back‑Charge in Molotov Attack Case

A man from Spring, Texas faces state charges for an attempt to kill OpenAI chief Sam Altman by hurling a Molotov cocktail at his San Francisco house. The defendant, Daniel Moreno‑Gama, appeared in court on Tuesday for the first time. A judge ordered him to be held without bail and set his arraignmen

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Apr 15 2026HEALTH

Virginia makes a quiet but meaningful change after a decade of grief

Ten years after a Fairfax County firefighter was found in Shenandoah National Park, her family sees a small but significant shift in how the state views suicide. A bill signed this week removes suicide as a crime under Virginia law, even though no one was ever actually punished for it. The change wo

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Apr 14 2026OPINION

Revisiting a law and rethinking how Native housing gets built

Thirty years ago, a law changed how Native communities handle their own housing needs. Instead of waiting for distant agencies to decide what to build, tribes gained control over planning, budgets, and priorities. That shift led to more homes, quicker repairs, and local jobs. But progress didn’t sol

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