Portal

4145 to 4160 of about 15028 News
Prev 1 ... 258 259 260 261 262 ... 940 Next
  • Trump Deports JD Vance and His Wife

    Tuesday, April 29, 2025
    According to aides who were present when Trump discussed the issue, but who choose to remain anonymous for fear of retribution, Trump said he was sick of Vance and wanted to fire him. “I wanted him to be my attack dog,” said Trump, “but he appears foolish on television. He dropped the college football trophy. He met with Pope Francis and the next day the pope died. Vance is toxic, and I don’t want him to come near me. He just doesn’t look as good on television as I thought he would.”   read more
  • Banks with Armed Guards more likely to Experience Violent Robberies

    Thursday, December 11, 2014
    After reviewing 31,000 bank “incidents” from 2007 to 2011, CIR determined “guards with guns” were “the strongest factor in whether the situation turned violent, and this held true even when controlling for other factors.” Most of the violence was focused on the guards themselves as those carrying firearms had an injury rate of 64 for every 1,000 incidents, “compared with less than 1 injury per 1,000 incidents when they were unarmed.”   read more
  • 10 Governors Elected in 2014 with Less than 50% of Vote

    Thursday, December 11, 2014
    Winning isn’t always pretty, as 10 governors who won their races last month can attest. Five Democrats, four Republicans and one independent were victorious in their gubernatorial campaigns without the support of a majority of voters in their states. This group in 2014 represented only the third time in the last 100 years that 10 or more governors came out on top with a plurality of the vote.   read more
  • 1% of Lawyers Filing Appeals to Supreme Court Account for 43% of Accepted Cases; Most Represent Corporations

    Wednesday, December 10, 2014
    “The results: a decided advantage for corporate America, and a growing insularity at the court,” according to the Reuters investigation. “Some legal experts contend that the reliance on a small cluster of specialists, most working on behalf of businesses, has turned the Supreme Court into an echo chamber – a place where an elite group of jurists embraces an elite group of lawyers who reinforce narrow views of how the law should be construed.”   read more
  • Taliban Using Jihadist Textbooks…Supplied by the U.S.

    Wednesday, December 10, 2014
    As part of the U.S. campaign to undermine Soviet control over Afghanistan, USAID provided school books in local Afghan languages that taught children how to become jihadists. The books are “filled with talk of jihad and featured drawings of guns, bullets, soldiers and mines, [and] have served since then as the Afghan school system’s core curriculum,” said the Post in 2002. Not only did many of the books survive, but the Taliban is reprinting the books to help those who want to destroy the U.S.   read more
  • New Mexico Fines U.S. over Nuclear Waste Violations

    Wednesday, December 10, 2014
    The leak exposed at least 20 workers to radiation. Citing 37 violations of hazardous waste permits, the state has thus far levied $54 million in penalties against the DOE and its contractor. It is expected to take years to clean up the facility at an estimated cost of more than half a billion dollars. Fifty WIPP staff employees have been at work in the underground facility to make an assessment of the degree of contamination and to draft a cleanup plan.   read more
  • Republicans in Congress Fight to Keep White Bread and Extra Salt in School Lunches

    Wednesday, December 10, 2014
    First Lady Michelle Obama’s signature policy achievement—improving the menus of school lunches—is coming under attack from Republicans who want to use complaints from school officials to derail the program.Some school districts have said the changes have proven costly to their budgets, leading GOP lawmakers to push for suspending the new rules for up to a year. Republicans slipped the legislation into a $1-trillion spending bill, making it more difficult to kill.   read more
  • First College to Offer Scholarships for Competitive Video Gamers

    Wednesday, December 10, 2014
    At Robert Morris University, gamers now are on the same level as football players: both receive scholarships from the school’s athletic department. The numbers demonstrate just how big e-sports has become: The largest collegiate gaming league has 10,000 students. Diehard gamers can also win scholarship money through gaming competitions. Those funds are provided by game companies, which see it as a valuable public relations maneuver that serves to deepen their relationship with the players.   read more
  • Energy Companies Contribute to Republican State Attorneys General who then Fight Pollution Regulation

    Tuesday, December 09, 2014
    An investigation uncovered “the unprecedented, secretive alliance” between numerous state attorneys general and “some of the nation’s top energy producers to push back against the Obama regulatory agenda.” Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt appears to be one of those having his strings pulled. His office copied a three-page letter from Devon Energy, which had backed Pruitt’s campaign, changed a few words, put it on official stationary and sent it to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.   read more
  • The Most Violent Police Force in U.S.: Albuquerque, New Mexico

    Tuesday, December 09, 2014
    “There’s no accountability here. There’s no justice. There’s no respect,” resident Mike Gomez told AlterNet. “There’s no humanity here. There’s nothing. It’s so disgusting that they get away with it.” Gomez has reason to be angry at the police department. An off-duty officer shot and killed his son, Alan, who was holding nothing more than a spoon at the time. Alan Gomez is one of 27 people killed by Albuquerque police in just four years. Forty more have been wounded in that period.   read more
  • 7 States Still Prohibit Atheists from Holding Public Office

    Tuesday, December 09, 2014
    “If it was on the books that Jews couldn’t hold public office, or that African-Americans or women couldn’t vote, that would be a no-brainer,” Todd Stiefel, chairman of Openly Secular, told The New York Times. “You’d have politicians falling all over themselves to try to get it repealed. Even if it was still unenforceable, it would still be disgraceful and be removed. So why are we different?”   read more
  • Majority of Children in Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo Live in Poverty

    Tuesday, December 09, 2014
    “Many Americans—even policymakers—seem unaware of the shocking prevalence of child poverty in many of our nation’s most important and iconic cities,” Curtis Skinner, director of Family Economic Security at the NCCP, a research center based at the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, said in a press release. “Reducing child poverty is critical to the social and economic health of cities, now and in the future.”   read more
  • Montana Legislature Warns Women Members to Watch their Necklines and Skirt Lengths…and No Jeans

    Tuesday, December 09, 2014
    The chamber’s new dress code informs women appearing on the House floor to be “sensitive to skirt lengths and necklines.” Furthermore, they must only wear “business formal” attire, defined as “a suit or dress slacks, skirt, jacket, and dress blouse or suit-like dress and appropriate shoes (flip flops, tennis shoes, and open-toe sandals are not considered appropriate).” And forget about leggings because they “are not considered dress pants.”   read more
  • Bill to Halt NSA Warrantless Surveillance, Passed by House, Quietly Dropped before Going to Senate

    Monday, December 08, 2014
    The House passed a government funding bill that included an amendment that would have ended the ability of the National Security Agency to conduct “backdoor” warrantless surveillance of the content of Americans’ electronic communications. The bipartisan amendment passed with a veto-proof 293 votes. However, it was stripped from the bill by House leadership before it was sent to the Senate.   read more
  • When Cops Lose Civil Rights Violation Judgments, They Don’t Pay the Damages

    Monday, December 08, 2014
    Joanna Schwartz, an assistant professor at UCLA law school, Schwartz reviewed data on police civil rights settlements from 44 large and 37 small or midsized police departments from 2006 to 2011. In 9,225 cases from large cities, officers paid only .02% of the settlements, or $171,300 out of $735 million. In the small or midsized cities, officers didn’t pay any of the $9.4 million awarded to victims.   read more
  • Some E-Cigarettes Contain 10 Times the Carcinogens as Regular Cigarettes

    Monday, December 08, 2014
    A study conducted by Japan’s National Institute of Public Health showed that at least one unnamed e-cigarette brand contains 10 times the level of carcinogens found in a regular cigarette. The substances found in e-cigarette vapor include formaldehyde and acetaldehyde. Two studies conducted in the United States came up with similar results. They focused on “tank” cigarettes, which contain batteries and are refillable.   read more
  • 70 Years Later, France, under U.S. Pressure, Agrees to Compensate Jews Transported to Nazi Death Camps by French Railway

    Monday, December 08, 2014
    France will put $60 million into a fund to be administered by the United States that will go to survivors, their spouses and their estates who were transported via SNCF railway to German death camps. Between March 1942 and August 1944, SNCF transported about 76,000 Jews and others to the Nazi camps. Fewer than 3% survived.   read more
4145 to 4160 of about 15028 News
Prev 1 ... 258 259 260 261 262 ... 940 Next