Top Stories

1265 to 1280 of about 3314 News
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Militarization of the Police…Ferguson Edition

Until Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon (D) ordered the state highway patrol to take charge of security in Ferguson, the police officers patrolling the city’s streets were carrying 5.56-mm rifles similar to the M4 carbine employed by the U.S. Army. They also had sidearms, body armor, multiple ammunition clips, and they rode around in armored vehicles reminiscent of the kind used to shuttle soldiers through Iraq.   read more

Equal Rights Amendment Back 32 Years after States’ Approval Fell Short

The passage of the amendment, which would have guaranteed that equal rights could not be denied on account of gender, was passed by 35 states by the 1982 deadline, leaving it three short of ratification. To get the effort going again, two measures have been introduced in Congress. One would erase the 1982 deadline but keep intact the ratification by 35 states, so backers would have to get only three more states to sign on.   read more

Despite Opposition from Majority of Americans, Obama Fast Tracks Deportation of Children

A new Reuters/Ipsos poll revealed 51% of respondents said the children coming to the U.S. from Central America should be permitted to remain in the country, at least temporarily. Only 32% said the children should be immediately deported, indicating Obama is bending to the will of the minority by ordering immigration courts to fast track the children’s hearings.   read more

Why is Obama Still Hiding the 28-Page Report on Saudi Royal Family Involvement in the 9/11 Attacks?

In a court filing produced two years ago for a lawsuit brought by 9/11 victims against the Saudi government, Graham said: “I am convinced that there was a direct line between at least some of the terrorists who carried out the September 11th attacks and the government of Saudi Arabia.”   read more

10 States with Highest Uninsured Rates are all Run by Republicans

The 10 states with the highest uninsured rates in the country, all run by Republican governors or legislatures or both, have all refused to accept the expansion of Medicaid and have declined to participate in the state exchanges. Those states are Texas, Mississippi, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Montana, Arizona, Oklahoma, Alaska, and New Mexico.   read more

Louisiana Government Tricked Hospital into Supplying Execution Drug

“We assumed the drug was for one of their patients, so we sent it. We did not realize what the focus was,” Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, a board member of Lake Charles Memorial Hospital, a private, nonprofit institution and chief judge of the Third Circuit Court of Appeal, told The Lens. “Had we known of the real use,” he said, “we never would have done it.” The hospital sold the drug to Elayn Hunt Correctional Center.   read more

Texas Leads the Nation in Voter Discrimination

A new report says despite the assertions of the U.S. Supreme Court that voting discrimination isn’t a major problem anymore, hundreds of such cases have been documented in the South, particularly Texas. The report says there were 332 cases between 1995 and 2014 of voting rights lawsuits or the U.S. Department of Justice preventing a state or county from changing their voting laws that were submitted for preclearance in compliance with the now-void terms of the Voting Rights Act.   read more

Economy Grows Faster under Democratic Presidents…and Corporations Make more Profits

Blinder and Watson also pointed out in their paper that under Democratic presidents, there were fewer quarters of recession, more job creation, better unemployment figures and more earnings for big business. “The corporate profit share of gross domestic income was also higher under Democrats: by 5.6% versus 4.7%,” the report said. “Though business votes Republican, it prospers more under Democrats.”   read more

Senators Complain about Obama Administration Censorship of Torture Report

Some of the redactions imposed by the administration addressed phony names that the committee gave to CIA officers to protect their identity. Officials insisted that the pseudonyms had to be excised to secure the identities of agents. However, the sections considered most controversial are said to have concluded that the torture techniques used by the CIA were more brutal than previously admitted and that their effectiveness in obtaining useful information was greatly exaggerated.   read more

Vicious Cycle: Deport Criminals to Central America, Gangs Grow and Children and Others Flee the Region to the U.S.

The immigration crisis started in Washington, when the Obama administration decided to deport thousands of convicts, many of them gang members, back home, which helped turn Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala into crime centers that prompted families to send their children on a perilous trek to the United States.   read more

Law Enforcement Personnel Now View Sovereign Citizens as Bigger Terrorist Threat than Islamic Extremists

The National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism says Islamic jihadists were considered the No. 1 threat when law enforcement officers were surveyed in 2006-2007. But as of 2013-2014, Islamic extremists had fallen to No. 2 because of the leap in concern about sovereign citizens. Defined as those individuals who believe federal, state, and local governments have no legal authority over them, sovereign citizens now occupy the top spot.   read more

CIA Admits it Spied on Senate Intelligence Committee and Lied about It

The CIA denied the spying. But the agency’s inspector general (IG), David Buckley, revealed on Thursday that the CIA, indeed, had spied on the committee while it carried out its probe. The IG also reported that when the CIA requested the Department of Justice to prosecute some of Feinstein’s staffers for allegedly removing classified information from the agency’s possession, it did so based on false information.   read more

Average American’s Net Worth has Dropped One-Third in 10 Years

We’re told that the Great Recession that kicked off in 2008 is finally over, but to many Americans it doesn’t seem as though they’re back where they were before the crash. They’re probably right: the net worth of average Americans is only 57% of what it was in 2007, according to a new report. By mid-2013 the average value of a single-family home was still 20% less than it had been in 2007.   read more

Obama Administration Sells Israeli Military Extra Grenade and Tank Rounds to Use in Attack on Gaza

The concerns weren’t enough for U.S. officials to turn down Tel Aviv’s request for more military assistance, specifically 120mm tank rounds and 40mm illumination rounds for grenade launchers. Washington received the request on July 20 and three days later approved the munitions release from a special stockpile in Israel known as the War Reserve Stockpile Ammunition-Israel. The U.S. set up the little-known arsenal several years ago in case of need by U.S. or Israeli forces.   read more

Labor Board Rules McDonald’s May Be Joint Employer of Its Franchise Operations and Liable for Labor Violations

The nation’s most famous fast-food chain may now become infamous for being held responsible for the operations of its franchises and even liable for labor violations involving minimum-wage workers. McDonald’s found itself on the losing end of a ruling by the National Labor Relations Board, whose legal counsel rejected the company’s—not to mention the industry’s—longstanding defense that individual franchise owners are at fault for any legal or labor troubles, not the parent corporation.   read more

U.S. Faces Uphill Task in Connecting With New Government in India

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is in Delhi this week as Washington tries to reset ties with India. When Prime Minister Narendra Modi was elected in May, the U.S. found it had to do business with a leader to whom it had denied a visa in 2005 over anti-Muslim riots. So the U.S. finds itself in an awkward position. This is unfortunate since both countries are natural allies: both are democracies, targets of Islamic terrorism, and worried about China’s rise.   read more
1265 to 1280 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 78 79 80 81 82 ... 208 Next

Top Stories

1265 to 1280 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 78 79 80 81 82 ... 208 Next

Militarization of the Police…Ferguson Edition

Until Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon (D) ordered the state highway patrol to take charge of security in Ferguson, the police officers patrolling the city’s streets were carrying 5.56-mm rifles similar to the M4 carbine employed by the U.S. Army. They also had sidearms, body armor, multiple ammunition clips, and they rode around in armored vehicles reminiscent of the kind used to shuttle soldiers through Iraq.   read more

Equal Rights Amendment Back 32 Years after States’ Approval Fell Short

The passage of the amendment, which would have guaranteed that equal rights could not be denied on account of gender, was passed by 35 states by the 1982 deadline, leaving it three short of ratification. To get the effort going again, two measures have been introduced in Congress. One would erase the 1982 deadline but keep intact the ratification by 35 states, so backers would have to get only three more states to sign on.   read more

Despite Opposition from Majority of Americans, Obama Fast Tracks Deportation of Children

A new Reuters/Ipsos poll revealed 51% of respondents said the children coming to the U.S. from Central America should be permitted to remain in the country, at least temporarily. Only 32% said the children should be immediately deported, indicating Obama is bending to the will of the minority by ordering immigration courts to fast track the children’s hearings.   read more

Why is Obama Still Hiding the 28-Page Report on Saudi Royal Family Involvement in the 9/11 Attacks?

In a court filing produced two years ago for a lawsuit brought by 9/11 victims against the Saudi government, Graham said: “I am convinced that there was a direct line between at least some of the terrorists who carried out the September 11th attacks and the government of Saudi Arabia.”   read more

10 States with Highest Uninsured Rates are all Run by Republicans

The 10 states with the highest uninsured rates in the country, all run by Republican governors or legislatures or both, have all refused to accept the expansion of Medicaid and have declined to participate in the state exchanges. Those states are Texas, Mississippi, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Montana, Arizona, Oklahoma, Alaska, and New Mexico.   read more

Louisiana Government Tricked Hospital into Supplying Execution Drug

“We assumed the drug was for one of their patients, so we sent it. We did not realize what the focus was,” Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, a board member of Lake Charles Memorial Hospital, a private, nonprofit institution and chief judge of the Third Circuit Court of Appeal, told The Lens. “Had we known of the real use,” he said, “we never would have done it.” The hospital sold the drug to Elayn Hunt Correctional Center.   read more

Texas Leads the Nation in Voter Discrimination

A new report says despite the assertions of the U.S. Supreme Court that voting discrimination isn’t a major problem anymore, hundreds of such cases have been documented in the South, particularly Texas. The report says there were 332 cases between 1995 and 2014 of voting rights lawsuits or the U.S. Department of Justice preventing a state or county from changing their voting laws that were submitted for preclearance in compliance with the now-void terms of the Voting Rights Act.   read more

Economy Grows Faster under Democratic Presidents…and Corporations Make more Profits

Blinder and Watson also pointed out in their paper that under Democratic presidents, there were fewer quarters of recession, more job creation, better unemployment figures and more earnings for big business. “The corporate profit share of gross domestic income was also higher under Democrats: by 5.6% versus 4.7%,” the report said. “Though business votes Republican, it prospers more under Democrats.”   read more

Senators Complain about Obama Administration Censorship of Torture Report

Some of the redactions imposed by the administration addressed phony names that the committee gave to CIA officers to protect their identity. Officials insisted that the pseudonyms had to be excised to secure the identities of agents. However, the sections considered most controversial are said to have concluded that the torture techniques used by the CIA were more brutal than previously admitted and that their effectiveness in obtaining useful information was greatly exaggerated.   read more

Vicious Cycle: Deport Criminals to Central America, Gangs Grow and Children and Others Flee the Region to the U.S.

The immigration crisis started in Washington, when the Obama administration decided to deport thousands of convicts, many of them gang members, back home, which helped turn Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala into crime centers that prompted families to send their children on a perilous trek to the United States.   read more

Law Enforcement Personnel Now View Sovereign Citizens as Bigger Terrorist Threat than Islamic Extremists

The National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism says Islamic jihadists were considered the No. 1 threat when law enforcement officers were surveyed in 2006-2007. But as of 2013-2014, Islamic extremists had fallen to No. 2 because of the leap in concern about sovereign citizens. Defined as those individuals who believe federal, state, and local governments have no legal authority over them, sovereign citizens now occupy the top spot.   read more

CIA Admits it Spied on Senate Intelligence Committee and Lied about It

The CIA denied the spying. But the agency’s inspector general (IG), David Buckley, revealed on Thursday that the CIA, indeed, had spied on the committee while it carried out its probe. The IG also reported that when the CIA requested the Department of Justice to prosecute some of Feinstein’s staffers for allegedly removing classified information from the agency’s possession, it did so based on false information.   read more

Average American’s Net Worth has Dropped One-Third in 10 Years

We’re told that the Great Recession that kicked off in 2008 is finally over, but to many Americans it doesn’t seem as though they’re back where they were before the crash. They’re probably right: the net worth of average Americans is only 57% of what it was in 2007, according to a new report. By mid-2013 the average value of a single-family home was still 20% less than it had been in 2007.   read more

Obama Administration Sells Israeli Military Extra Grenade and Tank Rounds to Use in Attack on Gaza

The concerns weren’t enough for U.S. officials to turn down Tel Aviv’s request for more military assistance, specifically 120mm tank rounds and 40mm illumination rounds for grenade launchers. Washington received the request on July 20 and three days later approved the munitions release from a special stockpile in Israel known as the War Reserve Stockpile Ammunition-Israel. The U.S. set up the little-known arsenal several years ago in case of need by U.S. or Israeli forces.   read more

Labor Board Rules McDonald’s May Be Joint Employer of Its Franchise Operations and Liable for Labor Violations

The nation’s most famous fast-food chain may now become infamous for being held responsible for the operations of its franchises and even liable for labor violations involving minimum-wage workers. McDonald’s found itself on the losing end of a ruling by the National Labor Relations Board, whose legal counsel rejected the company’s—not to mention the industry’s—longstanding defense that individual franchise owners are at fault for any legal or labor troubles, not the parent corporation.   read more

U.S. Faces Uphill Task in Connecting With New Government in India

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is in Delhi this week as Washington tries to reset ties with India. When Prime Minister Narendra Modi was elected in May, the U.S. found it had to do business with a leader to whom it had denied a visa in 2005 over anti-Muslim riots. So the U.S. finds itself in an awkward position. This is unfortunate since both countries are natural allies: both are democracies, targets of Islamic terrorism, and worried about China’s rise.   read more
1265 to 1280 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 78 79 80 81 82 ... 208 Next