NewsPronto

 
Times Advertising


.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Nearly 54% of extreme conservatives say the federal government should use violence to stop illegal immigration

  • Written by William McCorkle, Assistant Professor of Education, College of Charleston
imageImmigrant families wait to be processed by U.S. border authorities after crossing the U.S.-Mexico border on Dec. 5, 2023, in Lukeville, Ariz.Photo by John Moore/Getty Images

Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric has been a staple of his political career, but his attacks on undocumented migrants turned more ominous during his 2024...

Read more: Nearly 54% of extreme conservatives say the federal government should use violence to stop illegal...

More Articles ...

  1. Plants that evolved in Florida over millennia now face extinction and lack protection
  2. Microbes can colonize space, produce drugs and create energy − researchers are simulating their inner workings to harness how
  3. What is a war crime?
  4. Here’s what happens when teachers tailor their lessons to students’ individual learning styles
  5. Relentless warming is driving the water cycle to new extremes, the 2024 global water report shows
  6. Mainstream media faces a credibility crisis – my journalism research shows how the news can still serve the public
  7. Will AI revolutionize drug development? Researchers explain why it depends on how it’s used
  8. Is the American Dream achievable? These students are examining its promises and pitfalls
  9. Tech law in 2025: a look ahead at AI, privacy and social media regulation under the new Trump administration
  10. Afghanistan shows what investing in women’s education – or divesting – can do to an economy
  11. Can science be both open and secure? Nations grapple with tightening research security as China’s dominance grows
  12. New Orleans attacker’s apparent loyalty to Islamic State group highlights persistent threat of lone wolf terrorism
  13. Mindfulness is about ‘remembering’ − a practice of coming back to the now
  14. Selling fear: Marketing for cybersecurity products often leaves consumers less secure
  15. Righting a wrong, name by name − the Irei monument honors Japanese Americans imprisoned by the US government during World War II
  16. How effective is tutoring in the United States? – 4 essential reads
  17. Brain implants, agentic AI and answers on dark matter: what to expect from science in 2025 – podcast
  18. Faced with Trump’s tariffs − and crackdowns on migration and narcotrafficking − Mexico is weighing retaliatory options
  19. NASA’s micro-mission Lunar Trailblazer will make macro-measurements of the lunar surface in 2025
  20. Transform the daily grind to make life more interesting – a philosopher shares 3 strategies to help you attain the good life
  21. What if you could rank food by ‘healthiness’ as you shopped? Nutrient profiling systems use algorithms to simplify picking healthy groceries
  22. 5 elections to watch in 2025
  23. New Year’s Eve celebrates St. Silvester – the 4th-century pope whose legend shaped ideas of church and state
  24. What are macros? An exercise and nutrition scientist explains
  25. What does 2025 hold for interest rates, inflation and the American consumer?
  26. From new commercial Moon landers to asteroid investigations, expect a slate of exciting space missions in 2025
  27. 3 years after the Marshall Fire: Wildfire smoke’s health risks can linger long-term in homes that escape burning
  28. Wildfire smoke’s health risks can linger in homes that escape burning − as Colorado’s Marshall Fire survivors discovered
  29. Whales can live way longer than scientists had thought, with potential lifespans as much as double previous estimates
  30. Octopuses and their relatives are a new animal welfare frontier − here’s what scientists know about consciousness in these unique creatures
  31. Bob Dylan and the creative leap that transformed modern music
  32. After Hurricane Helene, survivors have been in a race against time to protect family heirlooms, photographs and keepsakes
  33. In Disney’s ‘Moana,’ the characters navigate using the stars, just like real Polynesian explorers − an astronomer explains how these methods work
  34. Climate change is making plants less nutritious − that could already be hurting animals that are grazers
  35. The ‘choking game’ and other challenges amplified by social media can come with deadly consequences
  36. Language AIs in 2024: Size, guardrails and steps toward AI agents
  37. 2 populations of dark comets in the solar system could tell researchers where the Earth got its oceans
  38. Detroit’s reparations task force now has until 2025 to make its report, but going slow with this challenging work may not be a bad thing
  39. Climate of fear is driving local officials to quit – new study from California finds threats, abuse rampant
  40. What does the US attorney general actually do? A law professor explains
  41. 3D-printed guns, like the one allegedly used to kill a health care CEO, are a growing threat in the US and around the world
  42. Colorado now has one of the nation’s most liberal abortion access laws, but ballot measures to restrict abortion have a long history in the state
  43. A nation exhausted: The neuroscience of why Americans are tuning out politics
  44. How should we look to history to make sense of Luigi Mangione’s alleged murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson?
  45. The Wanamaker organ has been part of a treasured holiday tradition in Philly for over 100 years − a historian explains its illustrious past and uncertain future
  46. What are pharmacy benefit managers? A health economist explains how lack of competition drives up drug prices for everyone
  47. How a small Brazilian town became an unlikely battleground over Confederate memory
  48. The moral dimension to America’s flawed health care system
  49. How to avoid the latest generation of scams this holiday season
  50. Federal protection for monarch butterflies could help or harm this iconic species, depending on how it’s carried out