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  • Trump Goes on Renaming Frenzy

    Monday, May 12, 2025
    Trump ordered that the term Homo sapiens be changed to Hetero sapiens. In history books and on websites, the airplane from which the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima will no longer be identified as the Enola Gay, but rather the Enola Straight. Trump also ordered billionaire Mark Cuban, who supported Kamala Harris in the 2024 election, to change his name to Mark American. If he does not do so, he will be charged with terrorism.   read more
  • Argentinian Farmers Say Monsanto Abusing its Position in Market

    Monday, February 15, 2016
    Argentina’s main farm group on Friday took complaints against Monsanto to local regulators, accusing the company of abusing its dominant position in the market by ordering exporters to inspect soy cargos for second-generation genetically modified seeds. The Argentine Rural Society filed the complaint before the National Commission for the Defense of Competition, or CNDC. The SRA argues that under local law farmers must pay for Monsanto technology only at the time they originally buy seeds.   read more
  • CIA Sued for Records on Waterboarding Whistleblower

    Monday, February 15, 2016
    In a federal complaint filed Thursday in Washington, the James Madison Project and reporter Ken Dilanian say they are seeking documents that could shed light on the extent to which the agencies may have targeted John Kiriakou, a CIA agent from 1990 to 2004, after he disclosed to a reporter the agency’s use of waterboarding, which many believe is a form of torture.   read more
  • Energy Department Considers Burying Nuclear Waste in 3-Mile-Deep Holes

    Monday, February 15, 2016
    The federal government plans to spend $80 million assessing whether its hottest nuclear waste can be stored in 3-mile-deep holes, a project that could provide an alternative strategy to a Nevada repository plan that was halted in 2010. The five-year borehole project was tentatively slated to start later this year on state-owned land in rural North Dakota, but it has already been met with opposition from state and local leaders.   read more
  • Severe Water Shortages Affect 4 Billion People

    Monday, February 15, 2016
    About 4 billion people face severe water shortages during at least one month every year, far more than was previously thought, according to new research. Half of the 4 billion people who experience conditions of severe water scarcity at least one month of the year live in either China or India. Of the remaining 2 billion, the majority live mostly in Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nigeria, Mexico and the western and southern parts of the United States, such as California, Texas and Florida.   read more
  • Navy Might Put Electric Gun on New Destroyer

    Monday, February 15, 2016
    Development of a futuristic weapon depicted in video games and science fiction is going well enough that a Navy admiral wants to skip an at-sea prototype in favor of installing an operational unit aboard a destroyer planned to go into service in 2018. The Navy has been testing an electromagnetic railgun and could have an operational unit ready to go on one of the new Zumwalt-class destroyers under construction at Bath Iron Works.   read more
  • Federal Rules Don’t Require Hospitals to Be Prepared for Disasters

    Monday, February 15, 2016
    The evacuations of more than 6,400 hospital and nursing-home patients in New York City after Hurricane Sandy reinforced concern about the readiness of health care providers during emergencies. However, federal rules do not require that critical medical institutions make even minimal preparations for major emergencies, from hurricanes, earthquakes and tornadoes to bioterrorist attacks and infectious epidemics such as Ebola and Zika.   read more
  • Government Asks Judge to Toss NSA Surveillance Lawsuits

    Sunday, February 14, 2016
    The D.C. Circuit is considering whether the passage of the USA Freedom Act renders moot the injunction issued against the National Security Agency’s bulk collection program in November. The USA Freedom Act modified several provisions of the Patriot Act and purported to end the NSA’s bulk collection of metadata, though this is disputed by activist Larry Klayman, who currently has three cases against the NSA and other government agencies pending in Leon’s court.   read more
  • Flint Official Warned Against Water Switch

    Sunday, February 14, 2016
    As the city of Flint, Michigan, prepared to begin drawing its drinking water from the Flint River, an official with the municipal water plant said his superiors were prodding him to move too quickly, an email released by the governor’s office Friday shows. “If water is distributed from this plant in the next couple weeks, it will be against my direction,” Mike Glasgow wrote to officials with the state Department of Environmental Quality.   read more
  • Federal Elections Official Sued Over Voter Registration Restrictions

    Sunday, February 14, 2016
    A coalition of voting rights groups on Friday sued a federal elections official who decided that residents of Alabama, Kansas and Georgia can no longer register to vote using a national form without providing proof of U.S. citizenship. Their complaint contends the action by executive director Brian Newby will hurt voter registration drives and deprive eligible voters of the right to vote in the presidential primary elections.   read more
  • Utah Taking Legal Action Against EPA Over Mine Waste Spill

    Sunday, February 14, 2016
    Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes said Friday he plans to take legal action against the Environmental Protection Agency following reports that it didn’t alert the state to river contamination after a massive mine waste spill. Reyes said it’s critical the agency be held responsible for damage from the spill that contaminated rivers in three Western states last year and he will file a notice of claim, the first step toward a lawsuit. He didn’t set a deadline for the action.   read more
  • Bacteria Found in Home Change With Urbanization

    Sunday, February 14, 2016
    Scientists traveled from remote villages in Peru to a large Brazilian city to begin tracking the effects of urbanization on the diversity of bacteria in people’s homes. Researchers found that as people living in the Amazon rainforest become more urbanized, the kinds of bacteria in their homes change from the bugs mostly found in nature to those that typically live on people   read more
  • Congress Approves Bill Banning Imported Products Produced by Slave Labor

    Saturday, February 13, 2016
    A bill headed for President Barack Obama this week includes a provision that would ban U.S. imports of fish caught by slaves in Southeast Asia, gold mined by children in Africa and garments sewn by abused women in Bangladesh, closing a loophole in an 85-year-old tariff law that has failed to keep products of forced and child labor out of America.   read more
  • Air Force Replaces Acquisition Chief For Disclosure Failure

    Saturday, February 13, 2016
    The U.S. Air Force said on Thursday it had replaced its acting acquisition chief, Richard Lombardi, after he disclosed that he had failed to report his wife’s Northrop Grumman retirement account on his annual financial disclosure form. Air Force Secretary Deborah James removed Lombardi from his acquisition duties on Feb. 4 and reassigned him to another position after learning of his voluntary disclosure, Karns said. She referred the matter to the Pentagon’s inspector general.   read more
  • Civil Rights Groups Say U.S. May Be Paying Mexico to Arrest, Deport Asylum Seekers

    Saturday, February 13, 2016
    The Center for Human Rights & Constitutional Law asked the State Department in September 2015 for records on the “type and amount” of financial aid it provides to Mexico’s immigration agency, the Instituto Nacional de Migración. Center for Human Rights president/attorney Peter Schey said that anecdotal evidence indicates that about 97% of asylum-seekers detained at the Mexico-Guatemala border are deported.   read more
  • Texas Officials Urge Ban on Bite Mark Evidence

    Saturday, February 13, 2016
    Texas has become the first state to call for a ban on allowing bite mark evidence, which legal experts say is likely to reverberate in courtrooms across the U.S. The Texas Forensic Science Commission formally recommended Friday that judges stop accepting bite mark analysis until the technique is supported by better research. There’s currently no scientific proof that teeth can be definitively matched to human skin.   read more
  • Composer Sues Super PAC for Using Song in Commercial

    Saturday, February 13, 2016
    A conservative Super PAC that parodied a Paul Anka song to mock U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold, a Wisconsin Democrat, faces a federal complaint from the ballad’s composer. Club for Growth Action spent $700,000 in September 2014 to air its 30-second commercial, set to the tune of the 1975 song “Times of Your Life.”   read more
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