Top Stories

2577 to 2592 of about 3317 News
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U. S. Tests System that Beats Internet Censorship by Dictatorships

The next time an authoritarian regime cuts off all news and Internet communications with the outside world, the United States can do something about it.   At the request of the federal Broadcasting Board of Governors, the U.S. government now h...   read more

House Republicans Try to Redefine “Rape”

In their efforts to curb federal funding for abortions, pro-life Republicans in the U.S. House have introduced legislation that would create a new definition of rape.   Since the mid-1970s, the government has been prevented from funding aborti...   read more

Loan Modification Program Backfired Badly on Homeowners

The program that was supposed to help millions of Americans gain relief from their mortgage payments has turned out to assist considerably fewer in number—while causing many to lose their homes altogether.   The Home Affordable Modification Prog...   read more

WikiLeaks Milestone: 1% of State Department Cables Released

For all the hoopla about the huge dump of State Department cables by WikiLeaks, you’d think that they had flooded the Internet with hundreds of thousands of unedited material. In fact, as of January 29, WikiLeaks had released a mere 1% of the ca...   read more

Arizona Declares Judicial Emergency due to Shortage of Judges

Things had already reached a state of critical mass with the overloaded federal courts in Arizona when Jared Lee Loughner shot U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords and 19 others, including John Roll, the state’s senior judge, who died. But the...   read more

Unlike Other Nations, in U.S. Corporate Profits Have Recovered, but Jobs Have Not

The Great Recession is over for corporate America, but will still be felt by working Americans for years to come.   The most recent data available shows profits for Big Business are 12% above what they were in late 2007, demonstrating that cor...   read more

Bill to Give Obama (and Future Presidents) Right to Shut Down Internet is Back in Congress

The Internet “kill switch” is coming back for consideration in the U.S. Senate. Having first been introduced last summer, the legislation, reintroduced by Sens. Joseph Lieberman (I-Connecticut) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), would give the preside...   read more

Coming to a Neighborhood Near You…Drones You Can’t See

Drones, a mainstay in modern warfare for the American military, may soon become equally commonplace in U.S. law enforcement efforts.   The unmanned, remote-controlled aircraft widely used in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan are now utilized, in ...   read more

Wall Street More to Blame for Mortgage Mess than Fannie and Freddie

Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were not the lead culprits that brought the financial and housing sectors to their knees, as many politicians and critics claim.   The two government-chartered mortgage underwriters played second fidd...   read more

Doctors Alarmed by Military’s Use of Mind Drugs on Troops

Medical professionals have expressed serious concerns about the U.S. military’s dispensing of antipsychotic drugs to combat soldiers and other personnel.   The U.S. Central Command allows, under its drug formulary, for troops struggling from s...   read more

Florida Tomato Pickers Finally Win Long Struggle for Penny-a-Pound Pay Raise

A farmworkers’ union, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, and the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange, a trade association representing 90% of Florida’s tomato growers, agreed to a comprehensive agreement that includes paying pickers a penny more fo...   read more

JPMorgan Chase Agrees to Pay Troops for Mortgage Interest Overcharging

Americans serving their country in the armed forces are supposed to catch a break from banks when it comes to mortgage rates. But JPMorgan Chase somehow lost sight of this federal requirement, and not only overcharged thousands of military perso...   read more

Did Cyber Attack on Iran’s Nuclear Program Launch a New Era of Non-Violent Warfare?

Unable to attack Iran’s secret, fortified nuclear weapons program with conventional means, Israel and the United States may have turned to a new form of computer warfare to achieve what used to be left to military air strikes.   Experts believ...   read more

Obama Justice Dept. Defends Marriage for Man and Woman Only

The Obama administration is continuing its defense of the federal law banning gay marriage, claiming the controversial statute is consistent with the U.S. Constitution.   Last July, a district court in Massachusetts struck down the Defense of ...   read more

U.S. Starts to Call in Loans to States for Unemployment Benefits

Things are not getting any easier for cash-strapped state governments. On top of the $82 billion deficit that states collectively face, more than half of them will soon have to pay interest on billion-dollar loans from the federal government to ...   read more

WikiLeaks Helps Overthrow Dictator in Tunisia

For the first time in history, an Arab dictator has been overthrown by a popular revolution. On Saturday, January 15, Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was forced to flee to Saudi Arabia—another Arab dictatorship—after a widespread upri...   read more
2577 to 2592 of about 3317 News
Prev 1 ... 160 161 162 163 164 ... 208 Next

Top Stories

2577 to 2592 of about 3317 News
Prev 1 ... 160 161 162 163 164 ... 208 Next

U. S. Tests System that Beats Internet Censorship by Dictatorships

The next time an authoritarian regime cuts off all news and Internet communications with the outside world, the United States can do something about it.   At the request of the federal Broadcasting Board of Governors, the U.S. government now h...   read more

House Republicans Try to Redefine “Rape”

In their efforts to curb federal funding for abortions, pro-life Republicans in the U.S. House have introduced legislation that would create a new definition of rape.   Since the mid-1970s, the government has been prevented from funding aborti...   read more

Loan Modification Program Backfired Badly on Homeowners

The program that was supposed to help millions of Americans gain relief from their mortgage payments has turned out to assist considerably fewer in number—while causing many to lose their homes altogether.   The Home Affordable Modification Prog...   read more

WikiLeaks Milestone: 1% of State Department Cables Released

For all the hoopla about the huge dump of State Department cables by WikiLeaks, you’d think that they had flooded the Internet with hundreds of thousands of unedited material. In fact, as of January 29, WikiLeaks had released a mere 1% of the ca...   read more

Arizona Declares Judicial Emergency due to Shortage of Judges

Things had already reached a state of critical mass with the overloaded federal courts in Arizona when Jared Lee Loughner shot U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords and 19 others, including John Roll, the state’s senior judge, who died. But the...   read more

Unlike Other Nations, in U.S. Corporate Profits Have Recovered, but Jobs Have Not

The Great Recession is over for corporate America, but will still be felt by working Americans for years to come.   The most recent data available shows profits for Big Business are 12% above what they were in late 2007, demonstrating that cor...   read more

Bill to Give Obama (and Future Presidents) Right to Shut Down Internet is Back in Congress

The Internet “kill switch” is coming back for consideration in the U.S. Senate. Having first been introduced last summer, the legislation, reintroduced by Sens. Joseph Lieberman (I-Connecticut) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), would give the preside...   read more

Coming to a Neighborhood Near You…Drones You Can’t See

Drones, a mainstay in modern warfare for the American military, may soon become equally commonplace in U.S. law enforcement efforts.   The unmanned, remote-controlled aircraft widely used in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan are now utilized, in ...   read more

Wall Street More to Blame for Mortgage Mess than Fannie and Freddie

Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were not the lead culprits that brought the financial and housing sectors to their knees, as many politicians and critics claim.   The two government-chartered mortgage underwriters played second fidd...   read more

Doctors Alarmed by Military’s Use of Mind Drugs on Troops

Medical professionals have expressed serious concerns about the U.S. military’s dispensing of antipsychotic drugs to combat soldiers and other personnel.   The U.S. Central Command allows, under its drug formulary, for troops struggling from s...   read more

Florida Tomato Pickers Finally Win Long Struggle for Penny-a-Pound Pay Raise

A farmworkers’ union, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, and the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange, a trade association representing 90% of Florida’s tomato growers, agreed to a comprehensive agreement that includes paying pickers a penny more fo...   read more

JPMorgan Chase Agrees to Pay Troops for Mortgage Interest Overcharging

Americans serving their country in the armed forces are supposed to catch a break from banks when it comes to mortgage rates. But JPMorgan Chase somehow lost sight of this federal requirement, and not only overcharged thousands of military perso...   read more

Did Cyber Attack on Iran’s Nuclear Program Launch a New Era of Non-Violent Warfare?

Unable to attack Iran’s secret, fortified nuclear weapons program with conventional means, Israel and the United States may have turned to a new form of computer warfare to achieve what used to be left to military air strikes.   Experts believ...   read more

Obama Justice Dept. Defends Marriage for Man and Woman Only

The Obama administration is continuing its defense of the federal law banning gay marriage, claiming the controversial statute is consistent with the U.S. Constitution.   Last July, a district court in Massachusetts struck down the Defense of ...   read more

U.S. Starts to Call in Loans to States for Unemployment Benefits

Things are not getting any easier for cash-strapped state governments. On top of the $82 billion deficit that states collectively face, more than half of them will soon have to pay interest on billion-dollar loans from the federal government to ...   read more

WikiLeaks Helps Overthrow Dictator in Tunisia

For the first time in history, an Arab dictator has been overthrown by a popular revolution. On Saturday, January 15, Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was forced to flee to Saudi Arabia—another Arab dictatorship—after a widespread upri...   read more
2577 to 2592 of about 3317 News
Prev 1 ... 160 161 162 163 164 ... 208 Next