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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
  • Kansas and Arizona Ready Plans to Keep Voters from Voting in State Elections

    Monday, October 14, 2013
    Threatening to upend a tradition of equality that dates back to the founding of the country, Republican political leaders in Kansas and Arizona are discussing plans to establish a multi-tier voting rights system for their states if they lose a voting rights case currently in federal court. The net effect would be to bar some U.S. citizens—mostly immigrants, racial minorities, the elderly, and the poor—from voting in state and local elections even as they cast ballots in federal contests.   read more
  • Home Buyers Kept in Dark as Builders Retain Mineral Rights with Eye on Fracking Revenue

    Monday, October 14, 2013
    Reuters examined county property records in 25 states and found thousands of cases where people purchased homes not knowing that a developer had retained all underlying mineral rights. Homebuilders have been motivated to secretly keep mineral rights because of the booming fracking industry, hoping that someday energy companies will show up wanting to drill underneath the properties.   read more
  • Federal Government Clashes with Commercial Drone Industry

    Monday, October 14, 2013
    The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) took legal action for the first time against a drone pilot. The drone operator, Raphael Pirker, got into trouble over a video he made from a drone flying over the University of Virginia, with the citation alleging that the video records a series of aviation violations, including flying too low over vehicles, buildings, people, streets and structures, and even aiming the craft at a person, who Pirker says was his spotter.   read more
  • Obama’s War on Leaks Found to be the “Most Aggressive since Nixon”

    Monday, October 14, 2013
    Obama inherited a culture of secrecy from the George W. Bush administration. But rather than change it, Obama became “more aggressive” by increasing the use of the 1917 Espionage Act to pursue those accused of leaking classified information. Under Obama, the Espionage Act has been used to go after six government employees and two contractors accused of revealing secrets to the press. In all previous administrations, there had been just three such prosecutions.   read more
  • Ambassador to the Netherlands: Who Is Timothy Broas?

    Monday, October 14, 2013
    Obama fundraiser Timothy Broas is getting a do-over. Despite an embarrassing late night arrest for drunk driving and resisting arrest in June 2012 that killed his nomination to be the next ambassador to the Netherlands, Broas was re-nominated by Obama on July 18 of this year to be his man in The Hague.   read more
  • Conservative Co-Author of Patriot Act Readies Bipartisan Bill to Curb NSA Overreach

    Sunday, October 13, 2013
    Sensenbrenner’s bill would do the following: • Limit the collection of phone records to known terrorist suspects • End “secret laws” by making courts disclose surveillance policies • Create a special court advocate to represent privacy interests • Allow companies to disclose how many requests for users’ information they receive from the government • Restrict a loophole involving overseas surveillance that has allowed the NSA to target Internet and email activities of Americans.   read more
  • Life Expectancy for American Females Has Mysteriously Shortened

    Sunday, October 13, 2013
    Research published in March by University of Wisconsin researchers David Kindig and Erika Cheng found that female mortality rates went up in nearly half of U.S. counties between 1992 and 2006. For men, only 3% of counties witnessed increases in male mortality over the same period.   read more
  • 145 Top Web Sites Track Users despite “Do Not Track” Restrictions

    Sunday, October 13, 2013
    According to the study report, a team of researchers based in Europe found that 145 of the Internet’s top 10,000 websites use Flash-based fingerprinting, and that 404 of the top 1 million sites use JavaScript-based fingerprinting to track non-Flash devices. But the researchers found the websites used device fingerprinting to track visitors even when they explicitly request not to be tracked by enabling the Do Not Track HTTP header, and that few sites informed visitors of the practice.   read more
  • Ambassador to South Africa: Who Is Patrick Gaspard?

    Sunday, October 13, 2013
    Gaspard signed on as Obama’s national political director in June 2008 and after the election served as associate personnel director of President-elect Obama’s transition team. He then worked in the White House as assistant to the president and director of the Office of Political Affairs from 2009 to 2011. As the re-election effort loomed, he moved over to the Democratic National Committee, where he was executive director from 2011 to 2013.   read more
  • $4.2 Billion in Military Hardware Donations Fuels Militarization of U.S. Police Forces

    Saturday, October 12, 2013
    In South Carolina, the sheriff of Richland County acquired a tank (dubbed “the Peacemaker) with 360-degree rotating machine gun turrets. In Jefferson County in upstate New York, the sheriff’s department guarding a community of about 120,000 people now has a 20-ton Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicle, which was developed for the U.S. military to survive roadside bomb attacks. It was given to the county sheriff by the Pentagon.   read more
  • New California Law Gives Journalists 5-Day Warning of Records Seizure by State

    Saturday, October 12, 2013
    The five-day notice is intended to give journalists and publishers time to challenge the subpoena or narrow the scope of information the third party would be required to disclose. The new law, which was drafted by Democratic state Sen. Ted Lieu of Torrance, also requires the notice to include an explanation of why the government wants the records and why it can’t obtain the information through alternate sources.   read more
  • Judge Explains to Ohio Man that he is Legally Dead

    Saturday, October 12, 2013
    Donald Eugene Miller Jr. of Ohio was declared legally dead nearly 20 years ago after he walked out on his life and disappeared. But Miller never died, and now he’s struggling to convince the legal system that he should live again. Judge Davis refused to reverse the original decree, citing the three-year legal limit for changing a death ruling.   read more
  • Oil Prices Rise Based on Tweet about 40-Year-Old Yom Kippur War

    Saturday, October 12, 2013
    Despite the fact that the message included the date 1973 and a reference to the long-gone Soviet Union, traders mistook the Twitter post as indication Israel had just attacked Syria. This mistaken assumption led them to worry that the supply of petroleum might shrink, which prompted a buying spree that raised the barrel price of oil by $1. But even after traders realized the tweet wasn’t about a current event, oil prices went up even higher.   read more
  • Ambassador to Belize: Who Is Carlos Moreno?

    Saturday, October 12, 2013
    Moreno became a federal judge when he was nominated by President Bill Clinton to the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, where he served from February 1998 to mid-2001. Nominated by Gov. Gray Davis (D), Moreno served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of California from October 18, 2001 until his retirement on February 28, 2011.   read more
  • Most Americans in 74 Years Consider Government Nation’s Worst Problem; Approval of Republican Party Plunges to All-Time Low

    Friday, October 11, 2013
    A new Gallup poll found 33% of Americans said dissatisfaction with government and elected representatives was the nation’s top issue. Not since 1939, when Gallup began keeping track, have so many people put government at the top of the fix-this list. The economy came in a distant second, at 19%, . The situation in Syria, which last month was rated as the country’s top problem by 8% of Americans, has now fallen nearly out of sight at 1%.   read more
  • If Syria Can Destroy its Chemical Weapons, Shouldn’t the U.S. do the Same?

    Friday, October 11, 2013
    A Pentagon spokesperson stated that the U.S. government is reviewing Panama’s request and will resolve it “in a timely manner.” In negotiations this year at The Hague over Panama’s petition to have the U.S. clean up the munitions, U.S. officials reportedly requested one change to the document. They insisted that it say the U.S. did not “abandon” the weapons in Panama, but rather that it had “forgotten” about them.   read more
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