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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
  • Court Orders Federal Election Commission to Stop Stonewalling Information Requests

    Tuesday, April 09, 2013
    FEC officials, supported by the Department of Justice, turned over 835 pages to CREW, but refused to specify what documents were still in its possession, and said it would keep the matter open indefinitely, which they claimed prevented CREW from filing an appeal with an administrative body that handles FOIA matters.   read more
  • Secretary of Labor: Who Is Thomas Perez?

    Tuesday, April 09, 2013
    Perez has served in the Department of Justice as assistant attorney general for Civil Rights, the nation’s top civil rights enforcer, since 2009. In January 2007, he entered Maryland state government, when he was appointed acting secretary of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation, a position that became permanent in March 2007, and which he held until his appointment to the Justice Department in 2009.   read more
  • Study of 440,000+ Shows Eating Processed Meat Leads to Increase in Death from Heart Disease and Cancer

    Tuesday, April 09, 2013
    More than 448,000 men and women from ten European countries age 35-70 were included in the study, which tracked the participants long enough to note that 26,344 had died by 2009. The researchers concluded that their “analysis support a moderate positive association between processed meat consumption and mortality, in particular due to cardiovascular diseases, but also to cancer.”   read more
  • New Small Business Health Insurance Program Put on Hold

    Monday, April 08, 2013
    Under pressure from large health insurance companies, the Obama administration last week announced it would delay implementation of a key aspect of its signature health reform law. Although the federal and some state governments must still set up Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) exchanges to allow small business employees access to lower rates, the mandate will be pushed back by one year.   read more
  • Judge Slams FDA for Delaying Emergency Contraception to Girls under 17

    Monday, April 08, 2013
    Appointed by President Reagan in 1985, Korman squarely rejected the rationale behind the administration veto. Sharpening his critique to a razor's edge, Korman accused the administration of acting in “bad faith” and stated that “the F.D.A. has engaged in intolerable delays in processing” the request for OTC access, which “could accurately be described as an administrative agency filibuster.”   read more
  • Indiana Supreme Court Rules Tax Money Can be Used to Support Religious Schools; Voucher System Proceeds

    Monday, April 08, 2013
    Although school voucher opponents, including the teachers’ union and parents, argued that the program was unconstitutional because nearly all the voucher money has gone to religious schools, the court held that that was irrelevant as long as the money makes a brief stop in the hands of parents before arriving at the religious school or madrasa of their choice.   read more
  • Obama Plans $195 Million in Renovation and New Construction at Guantánamo

    Monday, April 08, 2013
    General John F. Kelly, Commander of the U.S. Southern Command, requested $150 million to $170 million for renovations to the prison complex, including $99 million for two barracks facilities, $12 million for a new mess hall, and millions more for consolidating scattered legal, medical and communications facilities. Lt. Cmdr. Ron Flanders, a Southcom spokesman, admitted that Southcom also needed an additional $49 million to build a new building at Guantánamo for so-called “high-value” detainees   read more
  • After Avoiding Prosecution of Wall Street Firms, Obama Officials are Rewarded with Wall Street Jobs

    Monday, April 08, 2013
    Even more insidious than outright corruption, argue such critics, is the fact that the continually revolving door between Wall Street and its regulators creates a financial industry culture shared by both bankers and their regulators, who come to see themselves as part of the financial system—and hope eventually to be rewarded by the profit-making companies they are supposed to regulate and prosecute.   read more
  • Director of the United States Secret Service: Who Is Julia Pierson?

    Sunday, April 07, 2013
    Literally caught with its pants down in last year's prostitution scandal—in which 13 Secret Service employees brought women, including prostitutes, back to their hotel in Cartagena, Colombia—the U.S. Secret Service for the first time has a woman as its leader, tasked with restoring the agency's tarnished reputation. A career law enforcement executive with more than 30 years of experience with the Secret Service, Julia A. Pierson was sworn in as its 23rd Director on March 27, 2013.   read more
  • Competition for Pentagon Contracts Declines

    Sunday, April 07, 2013
    The Government Accountability Office (GAO) said in a new report that the Pentagon’s use of competitively-bid contracts has declined steadily for the past five years, decreasing from 62% to 57%. “Competition is the cornerstone of a sound acquisition process and a critical tool for achieving the best return on investment for taxpayers,” the GAO wrote. Someone should tell that to the U.S. Air Force, which had the lowest competition rate among the services: 37%.   read more
  • Pentagon Spent $900 Million for Obsolete Fighter Vehicle Spare Parts

    Sunday, April 07, 2013
    Another blunder: The Army spent more than half a million dollars to buy 9,179 small replacement gears called pinions to temporarily rectify a Stryker suspension problem that surfaced between 2007 and 2009. The Army fixed the problem in 2010, but kept buying pinions. As a result, only 15 of the pinions were ever used.   read more
  • Largest Oil Refinery in U.S. is Owned by Saudi Royal Family and Anglo-Dutch

    Sunday, April 07, 2013
    Since Barack Obama became president of the United States, Saudi exports to the U.S. have more than doubled. U.S. exports to Saudi Arabia have also hit record highs. Lawrence J. Goldstein, a director of the Energy Policy Research Foundation, said Motiva “guarantees the Saudis an important but subtle footprint in the United States, and they want to have some negotiating strength when geopolitical issues in the Middle East and elsewhere arise.”   read more
  • Ambassador to Libya: Who Is Deborah Jones?

    Sunday, April 07, 2013
    Jones served her first ambassadorship from April 2008 to June 2011, as ambassador to Kuwait. She has been a scholar-in-residence at the Middle East Institute in Washington, DC, since July 2011. Jones is married to fellow Foreign Service officer Richard G. Olson, who has been ambassador to Pakistan since September 2012.   read more
  • Majority of Senators Now Support Same-Sex Marriage

    Saturday, April 06, 2013
    So many members of the U.S. Senate have jumped on the same-sex marriage bandwagon in recent weeks that a majority now supports the right of homosexuals to marry. This week alone three Democratic senators publicly said they now back gay marriage: Bill Nelson of Florida, Joe Donnelly of Indiana and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota. Nelson told the Tampa Bay Times: “Simply put, if The Lord made homosexuals as well as heterosexuals, why should I discriminate against their civil marriage?”   read more
  • Only Conservative Republicans Still Oppose Legalizing Marijuana

    Saturday, April 06, 2013
    Overall, a majority of Americans (52%) are okay with marijuana becoming legal, marking the first time this has happened in the U.S, according to Pew. Support for legalization has jumped 11 points since 2010, driven largely by increased support from those aged 30-64. The only age group in which a majority still opposes legalization is the 65 and older cohort.   read more
  • America’s Most Expensive Disease: Dementia

    Saturday, April 06, 2013
    The study, financed by the federal government and carried out by the RAND Corporation, found that direct health care costs for dementia, including nursing home care, were $109 billion in 2010—more than the total for heart disease ($102 billion) or for cancer ($77 billion). The study also determined that the cost of informal care for dementia, usually borne by families, ranged from $50 billion to $106 billion.   read more
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