Top Stories
Is Obama Telling the Truth about the NSA’s Favorite Terrorist, Khalid al-Mihdhar?
The president claimed that prior to the attacks, Mihdhar made a phone call from San Diego to a known al-Qaeda safe-house in Yemen. But back then, the president insisted, the NSA couldn’t identify the origin of the call. Had the agency been able to do just that, it could have helped stop the attacks.
But both the NSA and the Central Intelligence Agency knew Mihdhar was part of al-Qaeda, that he was in San Diego. read more
Congress Moves to Keep Drone Warfare in Hands of CIA Instead of Pentagon
The administration wanted the Pentagon to take over drone missions so that the CIA could refocus on intelligence gathering. President Barack Obama also felt that the change would lend more transparency to such missions by pulling them from the highly secretive intelligence agency.
But lawmakers objected to the switch, fearing the Defense Department would have trouble duplicating the CIA success in killing terrorists while minimizing civilian casualties.
read more
Of the 56 Laws Enacted by Congress in 2013, only 16 were Introduced by Democrats
The 2013 session was clearly not a productive one, not with only 56 bills becoming law. But of those measures signed by President Barack Obama, only 16 were introduced by Democrats. The other 40 pieces of enacted legislation were sponsored by Republican lawmakers. read more
Obama and NSA Surveillance: What Won’t Change
Obama promised to move metadata out of government hands and into private ones. No specifics were provided, except that Obama called on the Department of Justice to work with the NSA and devise a plan within 60 days. The NSA will still be able to access the phone records, even after their move. But, going forward, any search of the metadata will require approval by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC)—unless ”a true emergency” requires the NSA to act first without a judicial okay.
read more
Obama’s Secret International Trade Treaty Caving on Environmental Protections
Environmentalists, who have been particularly nervous over the closed-door negotiations, had their fears confirmed by WikiLeaks, which obtained draft documents from TPP meetings. The leaked materials indicate the U.S. has demanded stronger environmental rules, including calls for sanctions against participating countries that pollute. But those positions are opposed by most or all of the other Pacific Rim nations working on the deal. read more
Surgeon General Report Accuses Cigarette Smoking of Causing Diabetes, Arthritis and Erectile Dysfunction
The list of health problems caused by smoking now includes diabetes, colorectal and liver cancers, erectile dysfunction, ectopic pregnancies (those occurring outside the womb), vision loss, tuberculosis, rheumatoid arthritis, impaired immune function and cleft palates. The report concludes that “The tobacco epidemic was initiated and has been sustained by the aggressive strategies of the tobacco industry, which has deliberately misled the public on the risks of smoking cigarettes.” read more
Bipartisan Senate Report Says Benghazi Attacks were Preventable, Blames CIA Secrecy and State Dept.
The State Department was criticized for not improving security at its diplomatic mission despite warnings of growing violence in the city. The CIA was faulted for not sharing information about the existence of its outpost with the U.S. military. Both offices were admonished for not working out of the same building, which often is the case at U.S. diplomatic missions in other countries.
read more
Ominous Ruling by Federal Appeals Panels Overrules FCC and Threatens “Net Neutrality”
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) lost a major legal battle this week when Verizon successfully challenged portions of the government’s net neutrality rules aimed at forcing Internet providers like Verizon, AT&T, Comcast and Time Warner to allow access to all web sites at an equal speed.
The ruling means ISPs can cut deals with large companies like Netflix or Amazon to offer “express lanes” on the Internet to stream video. read more
With 1,200 Deaths a Day, Tobacco Companies Finally Agree to Publish Ads Admitting They Lied about Dangers of Smoking
Each corrective ad will be prefaced by a statement that a federal court concluded that the companies “deliberately deceived the American public.”
The statements will also say that smoking kills more people than homicides, AIDS, suicide, drugs, car crashes and alcohol combined, that “secondhand smoke kills over 38,000 Americans a year,” that the industry “intentionally designed cigarettes to make them more addictive,” and that nicotine “changes the brain,” making it harder to quit.
read more
Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Case Regarding Right to Lie in Political Ads
The anti-abortion Susan B. Anthony List wanted to put up a billboard criticizing Democratic U.S. Representative Steven Driehaus for supporting the Affordable Care Act (ACA, or Obamacare). They wanted to “shame” Driehaus for his decision, contending that a vote for Obamacare amounted to a vote for taxpayer-funded abortions.
However, the ACA states abortions must be paid for through non-ACA accounts. In addition, previously passed federal law prohibits taxpayer money from funding abortions.
read more
Ohio Rapist Released after 10 Months in Prison; Activist who Exposed Him Faces 10 Years
Ma’Lik Richmond, one of two teens convicted in the August 2012 rape of a 16-year-old girl in Steubenville, Ohio, was released last week after 10 months of incarceration.
Deric Lostutter, 26, is the computer hacker who blew the lid off the cover-up by focusing the attention of the online collective known as “Anonymous” on the rape case. He now faces up to ten years in prison for his role in obtaining tweets and social media posts that exposed details of the rape read more
Coal-Related Toxic Tap Water Emergency in West Virginia
Area residents reported a foul, licorice-like odor in the air, which DEP and firefighters traced to a 35,000-gallon storage tank along the Elk River that had overflowed its containment area and migrated over land and through the soil into the river.
The chemical that leaked, 4-methylcyclohexane methanol (sometimes called “Sextol”), is used by the coal industry to wash coal of impurities. read more
For the First Time, Half of Members of Congress are Millionaires…Democrats Worth more than Republicans
Of 534 current members of Congress, at least 268 were millionaires, according the Center for Responsive Politics’ review of financial disclosure reports filed last year. The center also found that Democrats overall were a little wealthier than Republicans in Congress, $1.04 million versus $1 million. Both groups saw their collective net worth go up, from $990,000 for Democrats and $907,000 for Republicans in the previous year. read more
Congressional Oversight of NSA…Blink and You’ll Miss It
“Despite being a member of Congress possessing security clearance, I've learned far more about government spying on me and my fellow citizens from reading media reports than I have from ‘intelligence’ briefings,” Grayson wrote in The Guardian.
Grayson says that when he has asked for classified information and meetings with the NSA, the House intelligence committee has refused to provide either.
read more
Americans Identifying as Independents Hits Record High as Republican ID Drops to 30-Year Low
Gallup says 42% of Americans identified as political independents in 2013. That’s the highest rate since the longtime survey company switched to phone interviews in 1989.
The GOP’s popularity declined last year, with only 25% of respondents claiming to be Republican. Gallup’s Jeffrey Jones wrote that the last time the party’s ID was lower was 1983, when it dipped to 24% amid President Ronald Reagan’s struggle to bring the country out of recession.
read more
Is Obsession with Bioterrorism Leaving U.S. Vulnerable to “Normal” Deadly Viruses?
Funding includes $8.4 billion allocated to Project Bioshield, created in 2004, which purchases vaccines for use following an attack involving smallpox, anthrax, and other weaponized pathogens.
Meanwhile, critical resources are being diverted away from public health initiatives designed to protect Americans against natural outbreaks of serious viruses. The result has been failures to fully respond to life-threatening pandemics, such as the 2009 swine flu.
read more
Top Stories
Is Obama Telling the Truth about the NSA’s Favorite Terrorist, Khalid al-Mihdhar?
The president claimed that prior to the attacks, Mihdhar made a phone call from San Diego to a known al-Qaeda safe-house in Yemen. But back then, the president insisted, the NSA couldn’t identify the origin of the call. Had the agency been able to do just that, it could have helped stop the attacks.
But both the NSA and the Central Intelligence Agency knew Mihdhar was part of al-Qaeda, that he was in San Diego. read more
Congress Moves to Keep Drone Warfare in Hands of CIA Instead of Pentagon
The administration wanted the Pentagon to take over drone missions so that the CIA could refocus on intelligence gathering. President Barack Obama also felt that the change would lend more transparency to such missions by pulling them from the highly secretive intelligence agency.
But lawmakers objected to the switch, fearing the Defense Department would have trouble duplicating the CIA success in killing terrorists while minimizing civilian casualties.
read more
Of the 56 Laws Enacted by Congress in 2013, only 16 were Introduced by Democrats
The 2013 session was clearly not a productive one, not with only 56 bills becoming law. But of those measures signed by President Barack Obama, only 16 were introduced by Democrats. The other 40 pieces of enacted legislation were sponsored by Republican lawmakers. read more
Obama and NSA Surveillance: What Won’t Change
Obama promised to move metadata out of government hands and into private ones. No specifics were provided, except that Obama called on the Department of Justice to work with the NSA and devise a plan within 60 days. The NSA will still be able to access the phone records, even after their move. But, going forward, any search of the metadata will require approval by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC)—unless ”a true emergency” requires the NSA to act first without a judicial okay.
read more
Obama’s Secret International Trade Treaty Caving on Environmental Protections
Environmentalists, who have been particularly nervous over the closed-door negotiations, had their fears confirmed by WikiLeaks, which obtained draft documents from TPP meetings. The leaked materials indicate the U.S. has demanded stronger environmental rules, including calls for sanctions against participating countries that pollute. But those positions are opposed by most or all of the other Pacific Rim nations working on the deal. read more
Surgeon General Report Accuses Cigarette Smoking of Causing Diabetes, Arthritis and Erectile Dysfunction
The list of health problems caused by smoking now includes diabetes, colorectal and liver cancers, erectile dysfunction, ectopic pregnancies (those occurring outside the womb), vision loss, tuberculosis, rheumatoid arthritis, impaired immune function and cleft palates. The report concludes that “The tobacco epidemic was initiated and has been sustained by the aggressive strategies of the tobacco industry, which has deliberately misled the public on the risks of smoking cigarettes.” read more
Bipartisan Senate Report Says Benghazi Attacks were Preventable, Blames CIA Secrecy and State Dept.
The State Department was criticized for not improving security at its diplomatic mission despite warnings of growing violence in the city. The CIA was faulted for not sharing information about the existence of its outpost with the U.S. military. Both offices were admonished for not working out of the same building, which often is the case at U.S. diplomatic missions in other countries.
read more
Ominous Ruling by Federal Appeals Panels Overrules FCC and Threatens “Net Neutrality”
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) lost a major legal battle this week when Verizon successfully challenged portions of the government’s net neutrality rules aimed at forcing Internet providers like Verizon, AT&T, Comcast and Time Warner to allow access to all web sites at an equal speed.
The ruling means ISPs can cut deals with large companies like Netflix or Amazon to offer “express lanes” on the Internet to stream video. read more
With 1,200 Deaths a Day, Tobacco Companies Finally Agree to Publish Ads Admitting They Lied about Dangers of Smoking
Each corrective ad will be prefaced by a statement that a federal court concluded that the companies “deliberately deceived the American public.”
The statements will also say that smoking kills more people than homicides, AIDS, suicide, drugs, car crashes and alcohol combined, that “secondhand smoke kills over 38,000 Americans a year,” that the industry “intentionally designed cigarettes to make them more addictive,” and that nicotine “changes the brain,” making it harder to quit.
read more
Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Case Regarding Right to Lie in Political Ads
The anti-abortion Susan B. Anthony List wanted to put up a billboard criticizing Democratic U.S. Representative Steven Driehaus for supporting the Affordable Care Act (ACA, or Obamacare). They wanted to “shame” Driehaus for his decision, contending that a vote for Obamacare amounted to a vote for taxpayer-funded abortions.
However, the ACA states abortions must be paid for through non-ACA accounts. In addition, previously passed federal law prohibits taxpayer money from funding abortions.
read more
Ohio Rapist Released after 10 Months in Prison; Activist who Exposed Him Faces 10 Years
Ma’Lik Richmond, one of two teens convicted in the August 2012 rape of a 16-year-old girl in Steubenville, Ohio, was released last week after 10 months of incarceration.
Deric Lostutter, 26, is the computer hacker who blew the lid off the cover-up by focusing the attention of the online collective known as “Anonymous” on the rape case. He now faces up to ten years in prison for his role in obtaining tweets and social media posts that exposed details of the rape read more
Coal-Related Toxic Tap Water Emergency in West Virginia
Area residents reported a foul, licorice-like odor in the air, which DEP and firefighters traced to a 35,000-gallon storage tank along the Elk River that had overflowed its containment area and migrated over land and through the soil into the river.
The chemical that leaked, 4-methylcyclohexane methanol (sometimes called “Sextol”), is used by the coal industry to wash coal of impurities. read more
For the First Time, Half of Members of Congress are Millionaires…Democrats Worth more than Republicans
Of 534 current members of Congress, at least 268 were millionaires, according the Center for Responsive Politics’ review of financial disclosure reports filed last year. The center also found that Democrats overall were a little wealthier than Republicans in Congress, $1.04 million versus $1 million. Both groups saw their collective net worth go up, from $990,000 for Democrats and $907,000 for Republicans in the previous year. read more
Congressional Oversight of NSA…Blink and You’ll Miss It
“Despite being a member of Congress possessing security clearance, I've learned far more about government spying on me and my fellow citizens from reading media reports than I have from ‘intelligence’ briefings,” Grayson wrote in The Guardian.
Grayson says that when he has asked for classified information and meetings with the NSA, the House intelligence committee has refused to provide either.
read more
Americans Identifying as Independents Hits Record High as Republican ID Drops to 30-Year Low
Gallup says 42% of Americans identified as political independents in 2013. That’s the highest rate since the longtime survey company switched to phone interviews in 1989.
The GOP’s popularity declined last year, with only 25% of respondents claiming to be Republican. Gallup’s Jeffrey Jones wrote that the last time the party’s ID was lower was 1983, when it dipped to 24% amid President Ronald Reagan’s struggle to bring the country out of recession.
read more
Is Obsession with Bioterrorism Leaving U.S. Vulnerable to “Normal” Deadly Viruses?
Funding includes $8.4 billion allocated to Project Bioshield, created in 2004, which purchases vaccines for use following an attack involving smallpox, anthrax, and other weaponized pathogens.
Meanwhile, critical resources are being diverted away from public health initiatives designed to protect Americans against natural outbreaks of serious viruses. The result has been failures to fully respond to life-threatening pandemics, such as the 2009 swine flu.
read more