Portal

4753 to 4768 of about 15030 News
Prev 1 ... 296 297 298 299 300 ... 940 Next
  • Donald Trump Has a Mental Health Problem and It Has a Name

    Tuesday, September 09, 2025
    Donald Trump has a mental health condition known as narcissistic personality disorder. Here are some of the symptoms of narcissistic personality disorder. React with rage or contempt and try to belittle other people to make themselves appear superior. Have an unreasonably high sense of self-importance and require constant, excessive admiration. Make achievements and talents seem bigger than they are. Behave in an arrogant way, brag a lot and come across as conceited.   read more
  • Credit Scores to Change as FICO Discounts Paid Debts and Medical Debt

    Tuesday, August 12, 2014
    FICO announced last week that it would give less weight to medical debts when factoring credit scores—a significant move considering the debts account for about half of all unpaid collections on consumers’ credit reports. The company also said paid collections would no longer cause scores to be downgraded. . It might take a year or more for the changes to be adopted by lending institutions.   read more
  • 10 States with Highest Uninsured Rates are all Run by Republicans

    Monday, August 11, 2014
    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
  • Obama Administration Limits Public Disclosure of 8 Categories of “Hospital Acquire Conditions” for Medicare and Medicaid so the Public can’t Compare Hospitals

    Monday, August 11, 2014
    The controversy centers around policy changes made at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which issues reports on so-called “hospital acquired conditions (HACs),” such as when surgeons accidentally leave sponges inside a patient’s body or a nurse causes air bubbles inside a person’s bloodstream. CMS has decided it will no longer disclose eight types of HACs that patient-safety advocates and consumers used to access.   read more
  • Inspectors General Complain to Congress that Justice Dept., Chemical Safety Board and Peace Corps Refuse to Share Documents Needed for Audits

    Monday, August 11, 2014
    A group of 47 inspectors general (IGs) informed Congress that the Department of Justice, the Peace Corps and the Chemical Safety Board have at different times stymied the audits by IGs by not turning over important internal documents. With the Peace Corps, the agency reportedly withheld records of sexual assaults against its volunteers.   read more
  • Medicare Use of Expensive Pig Gland Drug Grows, while Military System and others Limit Use

    Monday, August 11, 2014
    Medicare, which accounts for about a quarter of Acthar prescriptions, pays an average of $41,763 per prescription for the drug and spent $141.5 million on it in 2012. The 2013 bill may reach $220 million. Despite the growing use of Acthar, there are no scientific studies showing that the drug works any better than cheaper alternatives for the conditions for which it’s prescribed.   read more
  • U.S. Ambassador to France: Who Is Jane Hartley?

    Monday, August 11, 2014
    Hartley and Schlosstein have been active in Democratic politics. In the 2012 campaign, Hartley is credited with bundling at least $500,000, and possibly up to $1.4 million, for Obama’s re-election effort. In 2011 she and Schlosstein hosted a $71,600-per-couple fundraiser for Obama. She has also contributed to the campaigns of numerous Democratic Congressional candidates.   read more
  • Louisiana Government Tricked Hospital into Supplying Execution Drug

    Sunday, August 10, 2014
    “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
  • Iceland Retains Most Peaceful Nation Title; U.S. drops to 101st

    Sunday, August 10, 2014
    Last year, the United States was ranked 99th most peaceful country in the world, out of 162. The U.S. has slipped two places in this year’s survey to 101st, nestled between Benin and Angola. Canada did much better in the rankings, coming in seventh in the world. To the south, Mexico landed at 138.   read more
  • Nevada Wildlife Dept. Saves Thousands of Fish from Drought…by Hand

    Sunday, August 10, 2014
    Nevada Department of Wildlife personnel are gathering fish from ditches usually fed by the Truckee River near Reno to a hydroelectric generating station. Because of the drought, water is not being diverted into the ditches, which would normally result in a fishkill. But last week about 25 people waded into the ditches, electrically stunning then gathering fish to be transplanted back to the Truckee or into a nearby pond.   read more
  • U.S. Ambassador to Turkey: Who Is John R. Bass?

    Sunday, August 10, 2014
    When Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) confronted Bass with details of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s crackdowns on free speech, Bass proved reluctant to criticize Erdoğan. McCain asked, “Do you believe...that is a drift towards authoritarianism?” Finally, when McCain threatened to withhold Bass’s nomination if he didn’t get a direct answer, Bass conceded that “It’s a drift in that direction, yes.”   read more
  • U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam: Who Is Ted Osius?

    Sunday, August 10, 2014
    In 1996, Osius was among the first U.S. diplomats to work in Vietnam since the end of the U.S. war there. The following year, he helped set up the U.S. consulate in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon). While there, he travelled 1,200 miles by bicycle from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City. Osius told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that the time is coming to consider lifting U.S. restrictions on arms sales to Vietnam, which currently buys most of its weaponry from Russia.   read more
  • Texas Leads the Nation in Voter Discrimination

    Saturday, August 09, 2014
    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
  • Proposed $16 Billion Mortgage Loan Settlement against Bank of America not so Bad for BofA as it Appears

    Saturday, August 09, 2014
    Obama administration officials are trumpeting a penalty levied against Bank of America for peddling bad mortgages last decade. But the settlement announced by the Department of Justice may not be nearly as tough on the bank as officials claim, because it will be able to write-off a substantial portion of the cost. Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan agreed to the settlement after months of stalling.   read more
  • Chinese Communists Create their own Version of Christianity

    Saturday, August 09, 2014
    With a growing population of tens of millions of Christians on its hands, China has decided to compete with established religions and create a socialist version of Christianity. Government officials intend to establish a “Chinese Christian theology” that they hope will compete with Protestant sects and the Catholic Church in China. There are reportedly 23 million to 40 million Protestants and about 12 million Catholics in the country.   read more
  • U.S. Ambassador to Algeria: Who Is Joan Polaschik?

    Saturday, August 09, 2014
    A year later, on September 11, 2012, the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, was attacked. Four people, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, were killed. Before the attacks, Polaschik had gone to Washington to urge more security for the diplomatic facilities in Libya. Her pleas were ignored, but she drew praise after the attack for having made the effort.   read more
  • U.S. Ambassador to Paraguay: Who Is Leslie Bassett?

    Saturday, August 09, 2014
    According to an article Bassett wrote for Foreign Service Journal in 2010, she was shot at and took part in an embassy evacuation in El Salvador; her house was ransacked during her time in Nicaragua and she narrowly escaped a mob; and she served in Israel during the second intifada.   read more
4753 to 4768 of about 15030 News
Prev 1 ... 296 297 298 299 300 ... 940 Next