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  • Trump to Stop Deportations If…

    Monday, November 03, 2025
    President Donald Trump invited the Dodgers to the White House. Many of their fans feared that the team, by accepting, would humiliate themselves and betray the team’s large Latino, Asian and African-American fan base. Dodgers controlling owner Mark Walter, along with co-owner Magic Johnson, have proposed a solution. Trump has promised that if he can keep the championship trophy, the Commissioner’s Trophy, he will end all seizures and deportations of immigrants.   read more
  • International Aid Group Blasts Pentagon for Shifting Stand on Afghan Hospital Air Assault

    Wednesday, October 07, 2015
    Doctors Without Borders contacted the U.S. military to urge them to stop the attack, but it went on for 30 minutes.The Pentagon first denied it even happened, then said it did but that the Taliban could have been using it as a base; then blamed it on Afghan forces that requested help from the U.S. while fighting the Taliban. Gen. John F. Campbell, American commander in Afghanistan, is said to believe U.S. troops broke rules of engagement by calling in the airstrike on behalf of Afghan forces.   read more
  • As Always, U.S. Wastes Billions Funding Failed Foreign Military Forces

    Wednesday, October 07, 2015
    These failures often occur because local armies are being asked to put their lives on the line for regimes that lack legitimacy and fail to inspire people to fight for their country. “The question is can we put a government in place that’s worthy of their sacrifice?” said Richard Armitage. “And if we can’t do that, they won’t die for their country, and all the training in the world won’t get you anywhere.” Also, U.S. forces are trained to fight wars, not train others to do so.   read more
  • School Books to Get Rewrite after Outcry over Slavery Whitewash

    Wednesday, October 07, 2015
    Calling slaves “workers” alarmed former English teacher Dean-Burren because it suggested that they were compensated for their labor. The passage was contained in a section called “Patterns of Immigration,” which implied the slaves weren’t forced against their will to come to the U.S. Texas authorities have an outsized effect on what goes into U.S. textbooks. Publishers defer to Texas’ wishes because their statewide market is huge, leading conservatives to push their ideas into the books.   read more
  • Most of $20.8 Billion BP Penalty Is Tax Deductible as a Cost of Doing Business

    Wednesday, October 07, 2015
    The Justice Dept. didn't point out how much of the settlement BP can write off come tax time. Advocacy group US PIRG said not only can BP deduct more than $15 billion from its income, it can expect a tax windfall of $5.35 billion from it. “This not only sends the wrong message,” said PIRG’s Michelle Surka, “but it also hurts taxpayers by forcing us to shoulder the burden of BP’s tax windfall in the form of higher taxes, cuts to public programs, and more national debt.”   read more
  • Federal Judge Rules “National Security” is too Vague to Justify Hiding Documents in Immigration Case

    Wednesday, October 07, 2015
    Judge Chutkan wrote that it was “particularly puzzling” that for some documents there was “no explanation of how the information, if released, could risk circumvention of the law, no explanation of what laws would purportedly be circumvented, and little detail regarding what law enforcement purpose is involved (other than vague references to ‘national security concerns.’) This is not enough to justify withholding records under the FOIA.”   read more
  • Obama Justice Dept. Says Yemeni Whose Relatives were Killed by Americans by Mistake can’t Sue and It Won’t Apologize

    Tuesday, October 06, 2015
    “It is appalling that Faisal was deemed worthy of meetings in Washington D.C. with White House and National Security Council officials, but that the U.S. is trying its level best to avoid apologizing, and to block his quest for justice by kicking him out of the courts,” said his attorney, Cori Crider. “There is no good reason that the president stood up in front of the world with the Lo Porto and Weinstein families to say sorry for the U.S.’s tragic mistake, but can’t do so for a Yemeni man.”   read more
  • VW Cheating Scandal Repercussions Spread to Tennessee

    Tuesday, October 06, 2015
    The VW plant employs more than 3,200 workers. “I am very concerned as to the financial impact these violations could present to the state of Tennessee,” wrote State Senator Watson. “Some people are going to lose jobs, at least temporarily,” Hutchinson said. The number of VW vehicles potentially involved in the scandal ranges from 500,000 in the United States to 11 million worldwide. The Chattanooga plant makes the Passat, whose diesel models have the cheating software.   read more
  • National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Lowballs Number of Police Car Chase Deaths

    Tuesday, October 06, 2015
    NHTSA failed to include at least 101 vehicle deaths in 2013 related to police chases. The agency’s total was 322, which was off by 31%. The undercount may go back to 1979, meaning the total of police chase-related deaths is not 11,506, as reported by NHTSA, but more than 15,000. “The findings expose potentially major flaws in how the federal government tracks motor-vehicle fatalities and...how police document high-speed chases, which often result in innocent people being killed," said Frank.   read more
  • Poor White School Districts Receive Better Funding than Poor Minority Districts

    Tuesday, October 06, 2015
    The Atlantic’s Gillian White explained this “means that no matter how rich or poor the district in question, funding gaps existed solely based on the racial composition of the school. Just the increased presence of minority students actually deflated a district’s funding level.” Mosenkis’ research showed districts that “have a few more students of color get lower funding than the ones that are 100 percent or 95 percent white.”   read more
  • Millions Wasted Building Oversized Prisons in Navajo Nation

    Tuesday, October 06, 2015
    The jails, which are largely empty, cost the federal government $70 million to build, but should have cost less than $40 million The prisons are not only bigger than what’s needed, they’re also too big to operate. The Bureau of Indian Affairs can afford only 40% of the staffing for prisons that size. It can pay for just 25 of the 63 full-time correction officers needed to staff the Tuba City jail, which is 82% vacant for want of funding to pay corrections officers.   read more
  • Congress Ends Program Providing Medical Care for 9/11 Responders and Survivors

    Monday, October 05, 2015
    The World Trade Center Health Program, serving more than 70,000 first responders to the 9/11 attacks, was allowed to expire on Oct. 1. Funding will continue for about a year, with services being gradually phased out. Eventually, these heroes, sickened by the work they did, will be turned away.   read more
  • Duke Energy Amnesty and Reduced Fine for N. Carolina Coal Ash Pollution Trigger Outrage

    Monday, October 05, 2015
    The Department of Environmental Quality in North Carolina handed Duke Energy a sweet deal in recently reducing a $25 million fine over the company’s coal ash pollution to $7 million. Part of the deal granted Duke amnesty for coal ash dumps at its 14 plants. Environmentalists were outraged at the deal.   read more
  • Federal Judge Issues Rare Sanctions against Border Patrol for Destroying Video Evidence

    Monday, October 05, 2015
    U.S. Border Patrol destroyed videotapes sought in a suit that charges immigrants are kept in cold, dirty and inhumane cells for extended lengths of time. The Border Patrol was ordered to allow inspections of their Tucson Sector facilities and retain videotapes made there. But some tapes were destroyed despite the order. The judge sanctioned the agency.   read more
  • Killing and Wounding of People in Mass Shootings Is a Weekly American Ritual

    Monday, October 05, 2015
    Statistically, there is a mass shooting in the United States every week. Since November 2012, there have been 993 mass shooting events in the country. The tragedy at Umpqua Community College on Oct. 1 was No. 994. In 2015 alone, there have been 294 mass shootings, which is defined as four or more people killed or injured by gunfire.   read more
  • Federal Agency In Charge of Protecting Whistleblowers Caught Punishing In-House Whistleblower

    Monday, October 05, 2015
    Timothy Korb, an attorney with the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB), which helps protect federal whistleblowers, told of the board’s own backlog of cases and foot dragging. Korb was ordered suspended 21 days without pay and stripped of some duties. A judge sided with Korb and the MSPB backed down before the suspension took effect.   read more
  • Alabama, a Voter ID State, Closes Driver License Offices in Heavily Democratic Counties

    Sunday, October 04, 2015
    Alabama enacted a voter identification law in 2011 and allowed it to take effect after the U.S. Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act. Now it is closing eight of 10 driver license bureaus in counties with the highest percentages of African-American citizens.   read more
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