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  • Trump Renames National Football League National Trump League

    Monday, February 02, 2026
    Trump announced that from now on the NFL will be known as the NTL: The National Trump League. The Super Bowl will be renamed the Trump Bowl, and professional players must be called Trumpball Players. Anyone, on any level, who refuses to comply with Trump’s orders will be arrested and charged with being a threat to national security.   read more
  • Austria’s Ambassador to the United States: Who Is Wolfgang Waldner?

    Saturday, July 16, 2016
    He joined the Foreign Service in 1981 and his first U.S. assignment came in 1983, when he was named cultural attaché at the embassy in Washington. Waldner then served briefly as personal secretary to Foreign Minister Alois Mock before being named in 1988 to lead the Austrian Cultural Institute in New York, a post he held until 1999. Waldner did take time out to work on the successful 1992 and 1998 presidential campaigns of Thomas Klestil.   read more
  • U.S. Congressional Committees Move to Rein in Civil Liberties Watchdog

    Friday, July 15, 2016
    Sen. Leahy described the provisions as “completely unacceptable” and “misguided.” He deplored what he called an emerging pattern of efforts by the intelligence panels to undermine the oversight board’s independence and authority. “The lesson from Snowden is how critical it is to have democratic debate and oversight of our intelligence community...” said Medine. “Now we have the intelligence committees trying to undercut that and push the intelligence community back into the shadows again.”   read more
  • Wall Street Profits from Tax Avoidance Deals that Harm Danish Taxpayers

    Friday, July 15, 2016
    Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Merrill Lynch and other banks have profited for years by arranging short-term loans of stock in Danish companies, a maneuver that has deprived Denmark of substantial tax revenues. With the banks’ help, stock owners avoid paying Danish authorities the dividend taxes they would otherwise owe. The lost revenue is significant: It equals roughly 1.1% of the budget deficit of the Danish government last year, or about 70 Danish crowns ($10) for each resident.   read more
  • State Laws Target Life Insurance Companies that Soak Up Money Earmarked for Beneficiaries

    Friday, July 15, 2016
    State actions are forcing companies to locate heirs and pay them the money they are owed. The laws follow years-long audits and multi-state investigations of the top 40 insurance companies that revealed many of them held on to benefits, even when they knew the person insured had died. "This is something that shocked me," said Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs, whose office pushed for legislation. "We think it's important that the last wishes of the deceased are honored."   read more
  • Hawaii’s Growing Solar Energy Incentive Program Derailed by State-Imposed Limits

    Friday, July 15, 2016
    Hawaii is a national leader in rooftop solar power, but despite the state's ambitious goal of using only renewable energy by 2045, people are being shut out of solar incentive programs because of limits set by the state. The cap likely will be reached on Oahu — the state's most populated island — by the end of summer, experts say. "Folks have gone out of business," Reed said. "There's some walking zombie companies that are barely squeaking along."   read more
  • NSA Claims Olympics Spying Allegation is “Implausible”… but No Denial

    Friday, July 15, 2016
    The NSA argues the claims are implausible speculation about a program that may never have existed. "These plaintiffs allege willful, intentional, unlawful conduct in violation of constitutional rights by our elected representatives at the highest levels and by our government," Judge Shelby said. Former Mayor Rocky Anderson said he confirmed the spying program with a source who worked for the NSA during the Olympics. "They have not denied these allegations," he said.   read more
  • EU Adopts Rules for U.S. Data Sharing, But Critics Say U.S. Surveillance Threat Remains

    Thursday, July 14, 2016
    Critics argue the new framework, which comes into force Aug. 1, doesn't go far enough, that consumer protections are not strong enough and that the possibility of blanket surveillance from U.S. agencies remains. Concerns over data transfers had been stoked by the spying revelations made by Edward Snowden. Snowden's revelations prompted the complaint to the court from Max Schrems, an Austrian law student. "This deal is bad for users, which will not enjoy proper privacy protections..." he said.   read more
  • For First Time in 50 Years, Federal Bill Seeks Limits on Debt Collection Seizures

    Thursday, July 14, 2016
    “Every day, some Americans are having every penny in their paychecks garnished,” Cummings said. “Congress should not sit on the sidelines and watch our constituents be kept in a cycle of poverty.” “It really does put people into complete turmoil,” said Martha Bergmark, executive director of the nonprofit Voices for Civil Justice. “It’s a rolling disaster” with potential consequences in every aspect of a low-income debtor’s life, she said.   read more
  • Palm Beach Mosque Withdrawn as Polling Site after Anti-Islamic Voter Backlash

    Thursday, July 14, 2016
    Bucher said she received about 50 complaints, including threats of violence, from people who don't want to vote in a mosque. "If we are going to use places of worship as polling places, we should not discriminate," Deutch said. "People of religion need to understand that we all have a common enemy -- those who do violent acts in the name of religion," said CAIR's Omar Saleh. "...By removing the polling place you let the terrorists win. They want to instill fear and this is one way to do it."   read more
  • Measure Protecting Privacy of Employees’ Social Media Passwords Vetoed by Hawaii Governor

    Thursday, July 14, 2016
    Marlow said the bill has been a model for legislation in other states. "Remember where we are right now," he said. "A private employer can say 'I want to see your Facebook account or you're fired.' It happens all the time. Google it. There are hundreds of cases; not just employees or potential employees, but students, tenants who are required by landlords to hand over their passwords. Social media has no First Amendment protection."   read more
  • Texas University Allows Professors Gun-Free Zone in Their Offices, Not Classrooms

    Thursday, July 14, 2016
    At UT Austin, faculty have been especially vocal against the new law. Their lawsuit was filed assuming UT professors would be able to keep guns out of their offices. The professors want the right to keep them out of their classrooms, too, said attorney Renea Hicks. "The challenge...was in the ability to exercise the option to keep guns out of the classroom," she said. "The issue is...Do individual professors have a right to exclude guns from the classroom?"   read more
  • Federal Judge Decries DEA Warrantless Cell Phone Tracking

    Wednesday, July 13, 2016
    “Absent a search warrant,” wrote the judge, “the government may not turn a citizen’s cellphone into a tracking device.” Lawyer Nathan Wessler said the ruling was the first by a federal judge to suppress evidence obtained through the warrantless use of a cell-site simulator. “A federal court has finally held the authorities to account,” Wessler said, adding that the opinion “strongly reinforces the strength of our constitutional privacy rights in the digital age.”   read more
  • Culture of Secrecy in Federal Government Increasingly Undermines Freedom of Information Act

    Wednesday, July 13, 2016
    "FOIA has become a tool of secrecy," Cullier said. "Agencies are gaming the system, hiding information from the public, like information on unsafe drinking water, and unnecessary spending. The Obama administration has set new records on secrecy. They are stamping 'No' more frequently, even as they process requests faster. Seventy-seven percent of the time, people are told 'No,' or that the government can't find it."   read more
  • Ireland, Beneficiary of U.S. Corporate “Inversion” Deals, Celebrates Huge Jump in GDP

    Wednesday, July 13, 2016
    In the U.S., officials have derided “inversion deals,” which allow a U.S. company to move its headquarters overseas to cut its tax bills. In Ireland, they are celebrating them. The Irish government Tuesday revised the country’s economic growth rate in 2015 to 26.3% from a preliminary estimate of 7.8%. Ireland’s economy has been on the upswing since the country repaid its bailout, and at play was the magic of those inversion deals and other sleights of finance.   read more
  • Washington State Found Guilty of Violating Civil Rights of Mentally Ill Inmates

    Wednesday, July 13, 2016
    In a harshly worded opinion, Judge Pechman said the state is not taking "all of the steps necessary to protect the rights of some of our most vulnerable citizens." She wrote: "The people of Washington deserve to have their mental health needs and the needs of their spouses, parents, children, and friends attended to with the same urgency and dignity our society expects hospitals to respond with when presented with a broken bone or a cancerous tumor."   read more
  • Future of U.S. Coal Ash Disposal Hinges on Virginia Court Ruling

    Wednesday, July 13, 2016
    The lawsuit, according to industry and legal experts, is the first of its kind to go to trial in the U.S., and its outcome could help shape future fights over coal ash ponds and the extent to which certain federal regulations apply. Whichever way he rules, experts said, Gibney's decision is likely to be appealed. But the case could lead to a definitive ruling that affects coal ash disposal around the country. "This has Supreme Court written all over it," said Professor Patrick Parenteau.   read more
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