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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
  • U.S. Army Admits to Software Piracy, Pays $50 Million

    Saturday, November 30, 2013
    The Army decided to expand the deal and purchased licenses for five servers and several thousand workstations, as well as annual maintenance. But by 2008, company officials realized the Army was using the software on more servers and workstations than it had paid for. In total, the service had installed the programming on at least 98 servers and 11,000 computers.   read more
  • Lawsuit Charges Chicago with Responding more Slowly to 911 Calls from Non-White Neighborhoods

    Saturday, November 30, 2013
    The Central Austin Neighborhood Association and the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois filed suit two years ago claiming the city violated the Illinois Civil Rights Act by not providing consistent emergency response service to all Chicago neighborhoods. The groups claimed that this problem has persisted for two decades.   read more
  • Man Charged with Murdering U.S. Diplomat 13 Years Ago Captured in Mali

    Saturday, November 30, 2013
    Bultemeier, a Department of Defense employee assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Niger, was shot to death in the capital city of Niamey as he left a restaurant with colleagues in December 2000. Armed with a handgun and an AK-47 assault rifle, Cheibani and an accomplice accosted the group. Bultemeier was shot by Cheibani, and again by the accomplice, after Cheibani demanded the keys to his U.S. Embassy SUV   read more
  • Congress has Passed Barely One Law a Week in 2013

    Friday, November 29, 2013
    Of the 52 measures that cleared both houses this year, just 44 are considered “substantive,” with the other eight being commemorative or ceremonial—like naming a subsection of federal tax code after former Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas) and naming a bridge across the Mississippi River between Illinois and Missouri after baseball legend Stan Musial.   read more
  • Lawsuit Accuses Louisiana of Racial Gerrymandering

    Friday, November 29, 2013
    Iulia Filip of Courthouse News Service described the district’s shape as looking “something like a mutant salamander.” “Congressional District 2’s tortured shape further contorts the districts around it,” the complaint states. “Congressional District 6 surrounds Congressional District 2 on three sides, appearing to shoot Congressional District 2 out of its cragged jaws like a crooked tongue.”   read more
  • 4 Companies Accused of Price-Fixing Key Ingredient of White Paint

    Friday, November 29, 2013
    DuPont, along with Huntsman International, Kronos Worldwide and Millennium Inorganic Chemicals allegedly worked together to set the price of titanium dioxide, a key ingredient of white paint, paper, plastics and cosmetics. The four companies control 90% of the titanium dioxide market in the country.   read more
  • Robert Levinson Now the Longest-Held American Hostage Ever

    Friday, November 29, 2013
    Levinson disappeared on March 9, 2007, while working as a private investigator looking into cigarette smuggling on the Iranian resort island of Kish. On November 27, his captivity hit 2,455 days, one more than journalist Terry Anderson, who was held by Hezbollah in Lebanon until 1991. U.S. officials suspect that Iranian intelligence services are holding Levinson. His family last received photos of him in April 2011.   read more
  • Mostly Forgotten, Black Lung Still Causes Two Deaths a Day

    Friday, November 29, 2013
    advances in coal mining technology have both increased productivity and—since the late 1990s— and clouds of “disease-causing dust” in mines, making them no more safe for workers when it comes to black lung than they were for their fathers and grandfathers.   read more
  • Obama Administration Seeks to Limit Non-Profits’ Political Activity

    Thursday, November 28, 2013
    The Obama administration has decided to limit the scope of big-money campaign operations that until now have enjoyed tax exemptions while doling out enormous sums in recent elections. New regulations crafted by the Department of the Treasury would prevent prominent nonprofit groups like Crossroads GPS, created to support Republicans, and the Democratic-allied League of Conservation Voters from claiming some of their activities as part of their work as “social welfare” organizations.   read more
  • Secret Government Program Trained Guantanamo Detainees as Double Agents for CIA

    Thursday, November 28, 2013
    Two years after 9/11, the U.S. government tried to flip members of al-Qaeda held in Guantanamo and turn them into agents for the Central Intelligence Agency. The CIA operated the secret program in a special wing of Guantanamo named “Penny Lane.” Participants lived in cottages equipped with plush beds, private kitchens, patios, showers and televisions. They were also provided with money and pornography as long as they agreed to serve as CIA spies once released from the prison.   read more
  • U.N. Privacy Resolution Proceeds after Dilution by U.S. and “Five Eyes” Allies

    Thursday, November 28, 2013
    The United Nations is close to adopting a resolution that calls for the end of excessive government surveillance and reaffirms the “human right to privacy.” The resolution was introduced by representatives of Germany and Brazil, following revelations of NSA spying on those countries, as well as on the phone calls of their two leaders, respectively, Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Dilma Rousseff. The resolution was amended under pressure from U.S. officials.   read more
  • NSA Monitored Online Sexual Activity of Targets to Discredit Them

    Thursday, November 28, 2013
    The National Security Agency (NSA) has collected information on the online pornography habits and other sexual activity of individuals considered potential threats or problems to U.S. security. The spy agency considered discrediting half a dozen Muslims with details of porn websites they visited. None of the targeted individuals were accused of being involved in terror plots, according to the document.   read more
  • Chevron and ExxonMobil Top List of 90 Biggest Industrial-Age Polluters

    Thursday, November 28, 2013
    Ninety corporations have been identified as the biggest producers of greenhouse gas emissions over the last two centuries, with oil giants Chevron and ExxonMobil topping the list. Fifty-six of the 90 polluters were oil and gas businesses, 37 were coal companies, and seven were cement producers. Together those companies bear responsibility for 914 billion tons of greenhouse gas pollution. Half of those industrial emissions were released only during the last three decades.   read more
  • Pentagon Launches Bio-Defense Drug Program, Defying Expert Advice and Wasting Billions

    Wednesday, November 27, 2013
    The Pentagon has decided to launch its own costly bio-defense drug program, despite a similar effort already underway at another federal agency and despite the recommendations of a panel of experts to avoid taking such action. Defense officials are financing the construction by diverting monies from other military equipment designed to combat chemical or biological weapons.   read more
  • U.S. Methane Emissions May be 50% Higher than EPA Estimates

    Wednesday, November 27, 2013
    The United States may be belching 50% more methane gas into the atmosphere than what the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has estimated, according to a new academic study. In oil-producing areas, like the south-central U.S., methane emissions may be nearly three times higher than EPA figures, university researchers found. “It will be important to resolve that discrepancy in order to fully understand the impact of these industries on methane emissions,” said lead author Scot Miller.   read more
  • Too Few Job Safety Inspectors, Too Many Dangers

    Wednesday, November 27, 2013
    Here’s the task facing the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA): It has about 2,000 employees devoted to inspecting 8 million workplaces throughout the United States. Two thousand inspectors for 8 million locations means 4,000 workplaces per OSHA specialist. No wonder more than 4,300 people lost their lives at work in 2012.   read more
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