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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
  • Under the Radar, Payroll Tax Increase Hits the Working Poor

    Sunday, February 10, 2013
    A Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan survey of consumers revealed an unusual divergence of financial change among different income groups in January, with 32% of those with household incomes of less than $75,000 a year reporting that their income had dropped, compared with 23% of those with incomes of more than $75,000. Only 13% of lower-income households reported an increase income, whereas 38% of upper-income households did so.   read more
  • Texas Pays for Private Prisons while Thousands of Beds in Public Prisons are Empty

    Sunday, February 10, 2013
    Thousands of beds sit empty in Texas state prisons, while the state pays $123 million a year to lease beds from private prisons, including Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), the biggest of the private prison operators. Specifically, there are as many as 10,000 empty beds in Texas’s 111 state prisons, and hundreds of empty slots at the state’s six detention centers for teens, according to Texas state Senate Criminal Justice Committee Chairman John Whitmire (D-Houston).   read more
  • Pentagon and VA End Billion-Dollar Electronic Health Records Project

    Sunday, February 10, 2013
    Despite several years’ worth of positive progress reports and more than $1 billion, the Department of Defense (DoD) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced they are abandoning their attempt to create a unified, shared electronic health-records system for service members and veterans. Now, DoD and VA say merging the existing systems presents a faster, cheaper path toward eventual integration of medical records.   read more
  • More and More Americans Going to ER for Dental Care

    Saturday, February 09, 2013
    Over a four-year period (2006-2009), the number of dental-related ER visits increased 16%, rising from 874,000 to 936,432 visits. In 2009 nearly 13,000 hospital inpatient stays were related to dental problems. Dental abscess was the principal diagnosis for 63% of the inpatient stays, while 42% of ER visits were related to cavities.   read more
  • Edison and Mitsubishi Implicated in Radioactive Leak at Nuclear Power Plant

    Saturday, February 09, 2013
    The lawmakers cited a 2012 Mitsubishi document, entitled “Root Cause Analysis Report for Tube Wear Identified in the Unit 2 and Unit 3 Steam Generators of San Onofre Generating Station,” which, they maintain, shows the two companies knew about the problems and “rejected enhanced safety modifications” to avoid “triggering a more rigorous license amendment and safety review process.”   read more
  • Iowa Republicans Introduce Bill Criminalizing “Murder” of Zygotes

    Saturday, February 09, 2013
    GOP Representative Rob Bacon and eight other Republicans introduced legislation that would amend the definition of a person in murder cases to “an individual human being, without regard to age of development, from the moment of conception, when a zygote is formed, until natural death.” The term “zygote” refers to a cell that is created when a sperm fertilizes an egg.   read more
  • 46 Members of Congress Owe Money on Student Loans

    Saturday, February 09, 2013
    Freshman Representative Raul Ruiz (D-California) has the distinction of owing the most, between $115,001 and $300,000. The son of migrant farmworkers, Ruiz graduated from Harvard Medical School. Four other House members also owe at least $100,000: Republicans James Bridenstine of Oklahoma, John Carter of Texas and Tom Rooney of Florida, and Democrat Grace Meng of New York.   read more
  • Studies Show Minorities and Democrats had to Wait in Line Longer to Vote in 2012

    Friday, February 08, 2013
    The research also revealed that Florida had the nation’s longest lines (45 minutes), followed by the District of Columbia (33.8), Maryland (28.8), South Carolina (24.8) and Virginia (23.6). In Vermont, on the other hand, the average wait was just two minutes, and in Alaska and Maine 3.7 minutes. In addition, a study by Ohio State University professor Theodore Allen and The Orlando Sentinel concluded that more than 200,000 voters in Florida “gave up in frustration” without voting.   read more
  • Arkansas Set to Impose Nation’s Most Restrictive Abortion Law

    Friday, February 08, 2013
    Legislation introduced by Senator Jason Rapert would prevent an abortion if a heartbeat can be detected using an abdominal ultrasound. Originally, Rapert wanted to ban the procedure after six weeks, but then changed it to 10-12 weeks. The proposal includes exemptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother. Even with the amendment, the plan would still be the strictest abortion ban in the U.S.   read more
  • Virginia Voter ID Rules: Concealed Gun Permit OK; Social Security Card Not OK

    Friday, February 08, 2013
    The legislation would eliminate the use of utility bills, pay stubs, bank statements, government checks and Social Security cards as acceptable ID’s when voting. Voters would still be able to show a voter identification card, concealed handgun permit, driver’s license and student ID card.   read more
  • Marine Corps Failed to Conduct Legally Required Water Tests at Camp Lejeune

    Friday, February 08, 2013
    Marine Corps officials at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina have long insisted they were not required by federal law to test the base’s water supply, which has been the subject of much controversy due to decades of chemical contamination. But it turns out the Corps’ own rules dating back five decades mandated regular water testing that might have revealed the danger posed to thousands living on the base.   read more
  • Google Ads more likely to be Arrest-Related on Pages with Black Names

    Friday, February 08, 2013
    Her conclusion: “black-identifying names” (such as Aaliyah, Lakisha and DeShawn) were much more likely than “white-identifying names” (Jill, Emma and Geoffrey) to generate ads that included the word “arrest” (60% vs. 48%). According to Sweeney, the odds are less than 1 in 1,000 that the disparity was a result of random chance.   read more
  • These 54 Governments Secretly Supported the CIA’s Kidnap-and-Torture Program

    Thursday, February 07, 2013
    Rendition is the practice of bypassing due process to seize a suspect in a foreign country and transport him to another country where there is a warrant for his arrest. Extraordinary rendition is the practice of seizing a suspect and transporting him to another country for interrogation, even though he is not wanted for a crime. At least 54 countries co-operated with the CIA’s kidnapping, detaining and torturing operation.   read more
  • Democrats May Sell Voters’ Political Data to Retailers and Credit Card Firms

    Thursday, February 07, 2013
    “Much of the data the co-op sells comes from the government and is already part of the public record—information such as voters' names, addresses and party affiliation,” writes Lois Beckett of ProPublica. But other information for sale would include voters’ views and preferences that could be helpful to businesses looking for new marketing opportunities.   read more
  • Biggest U.S. Market for Drones May Be…Farmers

    Thursday, February 07, 2013
    “Spraying, watering—there’s a whole market for precision agriculture, and when you put that cost-benefit together, farmers will buy [drones].” Companies are ready to meet this new demand if it develops. CropCam manufactures lightweight GPS-driven gliders (for $7,000) for farmers to obtain aerial views of crop fields. Others say drones could help farmers identify crop diseases and locate lost livestock.   read more
  • U.S. Pulls Strings to Halt Tainted Appointment of Mexico’s Next Defense Minister

    Thursday, February 07, 2013
    He had met secretly with U.S. intelligence officials in Texas and provided names of military and civilian officials he suspected of providing protection to drug traffickers. Nevertheless, DEA and defense officials had compiled “a troubling portfolio of allegations against the general,” according to the newspaper, referring to him as “Mr. Ten Percent,” in honor of his handling of defense contracts.   read more
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