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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
  • Obama-Appointed Judge Gives Potentially Breakthrough Ruling Giving Drug Companies the Right to Market Drugs for Uses not Approved by FDA

    Monday, August 17, 2015
    Physicians have long prescribed drugs for “off-label” uses, but drug companies have been forbidden to market their products for those purposes. The case hinged on a 2012 New York City federal appeals court decision that found a pharmaceutical sales rep had not violated FDA rules in promoting off-label use for a narcolepsy drug, Xyrem.   read more
  • Defense Dept. Inspector General Criticized as Worse than Useless

    Monday, August 17, 2015
    The Lead Inspector General for Overseas Contingency Operations’ reports are so lacking in content that Anthony H. Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies compares the group to Monty Python’s “Ministry of Silly Walks.” He added that the Lead IG report “reads more like a public relations exercise than anything else. It also follows a pattern within the Executive Branch of steadily reducing reporting that has any negative content…”   read more
  • The Cost of the “Good Deal” Jeb Bush Says Americans Got for Ousting Saddam Hussein

    Monday, August 17, 2015
    Jeb Bush said Thursday that his brother George W. Bush’s efforts in “taking out Saddam Hussein turned out to be a pretty good deal.” The cost of taking out Saddam Hussein, who was found to have no weapons of mass destruction, was staggering. --More than 4,424 American lives were lost fighting in Iraq. Those numbers don’t include veterans suffering from PTSD who killed themselves after returning home. Thousands more American service members were seriously wounded.   read more
  • Black Students Less Likely to Attend White Majority Schools than in 1968

    Monday, August 17, 2015
    The percentage of black students in majority white schools has fallen to a level not seen since 1968, according to U.S. Department of Education statistics. In 2011, majority white schools had an average of 23.2% black students. That compares to a high of 43.5% in 1988.   read more
  • Bitterly Divided Federal Appeals Panel Halts 22-Year-Old Lawsuit by Farm Workers Exposed to Toxic Chemicals

    Sunday, August 16, 2015
    Dole and Chiquita used the pesticide dibromochloropropane (DBCP), manufactured by Dow Chemical and others, on their banana farms in Central and South America. The plaintiffs who had worked on those farms claimed in their suit that they were exposed to the chemical in the 1970s and ’1980s, but illnesses such as kidney problems, infertility and an increased risk of cancer did not appear until later. Their lawsuit also claimed that Dole has known about DBCP’s toxic properties since 1958.   read more
  • EPA Civil Rights Investigations Drag on for Years

    Sunday, August 16, 2015
    The EPA is supposed to acknowledge a claim within five days, decide within 20 days whether it will be investigated and complete any investigation within 180 days. But that’s not how it works in the real world. A list on the EPA website shows all the Title VI complaints and some of the claims are old enough to vote.   read more
  • Global Warming Nurtures Infectious Disease Outbreaks

    Sunday, August 16, 2015
    Salmonella is another disease that will benefit from climate change. Extreme weather, particularly along coastlines, can lead to contaminated water and to salmonella poisoning. A study, published in Environment International, showed a 4.1% increase in the incidence of salmonella with an uptick in extreme temperature events, and 5.6% increase connected with extreme precipitation. In both cases, coastal areas had a higher risk of increased salmonella poisoning.   read more
  • $4.1 Million Settlement Vindicates Nuclear Waste Plant Whistleblower

    Sunday, August 16, 2015
    Tamosaitis was one of the group developing a technique for turning toxic and radioactive sludge into glass, which theoretically could be buried for thousands of years. However, Tamosaitis began to believe that the process was flawed and would result in a buildup of hydrogen gas and clumps of plutonium which could start a nuclear reaction.   read more
  • Huge Increase Seen in Close Encounters between Drones and U.S. Aircraft

    Sunday, August 16, 2015
    The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) reported that there have been more than 650 reports by pilots of drones flying near their aircraft so far this year. That’s a huge increase from the 238 such incidents reported in all of 2014.   read more
  • Share of Income Used to Pay Rent Reaches Highest on Record

    Saturday, August 15, 2015
    Rents have risen steadily since the housing crisis, so much so that the share of income people spent on rent reached 30.2% during the second quarter this year. That rate is the highest recorded by real estate company Zillow, which has been tracking such data since 1979. The percentage was 29.5% during the second quarter of 2014. The median rent nationwide also is up from last year, by 4.3%.   read more
  • Was DeKalb County, Georgia the most Corrupt County in the U.S.?

    Saturday, August 15, 2015
    Georgia’s DeKalb County, near Atlanta, is struggling with its reputation after a top official was convicted of corruption and a special investigation found numerous misappropriations of taxpayer money. Interim CEO Lee May hired two independent investigators to audit the county government. The investigators, Richard L. Hyde and Michael J. Bowers, concluded DeKalb’s government was “rotten to the core.”   read more
  • Federal Appeals Panel Rejects 24-Year-Old South Carolina Law Outlawing Political Robocalls

    Saturday, August 15, 2015
    A panel of judges with the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals sided with Republican consultant Robert Cahaly, who ran afoul of the state’s 1991 anti-robocall law. The law banned computerized cold calls “of a political nature including, but not limited to, calls relating to political campaigns,” according to Courthouse News Service. Violators were subject to 30 days in jail and a $500 fine.   read more
  • Homeland Security and FBI Struggle to Investigate Smuggling of…Cuban Baseball Players

    Saturday, August 15, 2015
    When a $42 million deal was agreed to, it was faxed to Mexico City, signed by Puig and forwarded to Puig’s putative agent, Jaime Torres, for his signature. All that money wasn’t going to Puig though—smugglers are paid for their work by taking a percentage of a player’s first contract, often a 20% to 30% cut. Some of the smugglers are connected with Mexican drug gangs and other criminals.   read more
  • California First State to Ban Secret Grand Juries in Deadly Police Encounters

    Saturday, August 15, 2015
    An unnamed grand juror in the Ferguson case sued in federal court (pdf) for the right to speak out about the decision not to indict Darren Wilson, the officer who shot and killed Michael Brown. And St. Louis County prosecutor Bob McCulloch even admitted that he allowed false testimony to be presented before that grand jury, revealing after the fact that he knew that alleged eyewitness Sandra McElroy wasn’t actually present at the shooting and based her testimony instead on news reports.   read more
  • Chinese Air Pollution “Exported” to U.S. Cancels Progress Made in American Emissions

    Friday, August 14, 2015
    Lead researcher Willem Verstraeten said “the dominant westerly winds blew this air pollution straight across to the United States. In a manner of speaking, China is exporting its air pollution to the West Coast of America." The study relied on satellite observations and computer models of airborne molecules traveling in the lower atmosphere. This research revealed that China expanded its ozone levels by about 7% from 2005 to 2010--enough to counter the 20% reductions in the U.S.   read more
  • Why Does the Defense Dept. War Manual Refer to Journalists as “Unprivileged Belligerents”?

    Friday, August 14, 2015
    According to the manual, a correspondent who engages in “relaying of information” can be considered as “engaging in hostilities” and may be punished appropriately. The manual also says “reporting on military operations can be very similar to collecting intelligence or even spying." American journalists have been reporting from war zones for years with none found to have given away information to an enemy.   read more
2913 to 2928 of about 15033 News
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