10 facts about Americans and coronavirus vaccines
As the drive to inoculate more people continues, here are 10 facts about Americans and COVID-19 vaccines.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
As the drive to inoculate more people continues, here are 10 facts about Americans and COVID-19 vaccines.
Americans in 2022 find themselves in an environment that is at once greatly improved and frustratingly familiar.
As the debate over the future of Title 42 unfolds, here are answers to key questions about the immigration policy.
The biggest takeaway may be the extent to which the decidedly nonpartisan virus met with an increasingly partisan response.
Black men are now on par with American Indian or Alaska Native men as the demographic groups most likely to die from overdoses.
A third of U.S. adults say they changed their Thanksgiving plans “a great deal,” while roughly a quarter changed their plans “some.”
Americans give their country comparatively low marks for its handling of the pandemic – and people in other nations tend to agree.
If one takeaway from the election is historic voter participation, another may be the political polarization that has come to define the U.S.
Democrats are more concerned than Republicans about the ease of voting and the broader integrity of the 2020 presidential election.
Here’s a closer look at public opinion on the death penalty, as well as key facts about the nation’s use of capital punishment.
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