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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
  • Mozambique’s Ambassador to the United States: Who Is Carlos Dos Santos?

    Sunday, July 03, 2016
    Dos Santos took his first ambassadorial post in 1996 as his country’s permanent representative to the United Nations. While there, he was named secretary general of a convention to ban landmines, an issue close to his heart because of the millions of mines planted in Mozambique during the civil war. He also worked to stop small arms proliferation, another vital issue in his country.   read more
  • Obama’s Disclosure of Civilian Death Tally from U.S. Drone Strikes “Far Removed from Reality,” Say Critics

    Saturday, July 02, 2016
    The White House is to disclose the casualties with numbers indicating an estimated 100 civilians have been inadvertently killed by 500 drone strikes since 2009. Reprieve claims Obama's previous drone statements have been proven false even by the U.S. government's own internal documents. "But more importantly, it has to be asked what bare numbers will mean if they omit even basic details such as the names of those killed and the areas, even the countries, they live in," said Reprieve.   read more
  • Vermont First State to Require GMO Food Labeling, But Preemptive Weaker Federal Bill Looms

    Saturday, July 02, 2016
    Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders joined other Vermont leaders Friday to celebrate the state's newly implemented law requiring labels on genetically modified food. Sanders sharply criticized the compromise bill in Congress that called for less stringent regulations. "Perhaps most shockingly...this bill imposes no penalties whatsoever for violating the labeling requirement, making the legislation essentially meaningless," Sanders said.   read more
  • Navy SEAL Becomes First Fatality in a Self-Driving Car

    Saturday, July 02, 2016
    The car's cameras failed to distinguish the white side of a turning tractor-trailer from a brightly lit sky and didn't automatically activate its brakes. The technology relies on multiple cameras, radar, laser and computers to sense objects and determine if they are in the car's way. Systems like Tesla's "aren't sophisticated enough to overcome blindness from bright or low contrast light," said Harley. He noted that more deaths can be expected as the autonomous technology is refined.   read more
  • Foreign Politicians Want Trump to Stop Sending Emails Asking for Campaign Donations

    Saturday, July 02, 2016
    Politicians in Iceland, Australia, Britain and Scotland have received such missives. Sir Roger Gale appealed to the speaker of the British House of Commons on Tuesday to block Trump's campaign appeals. "Members of Parliament are being bombarded with electronic communications from Team Trump on behalf of somebody called Donald Trump," said Gale. "I am all in favor of free speech, but I do not see why colleagues on either side of the House should be subjected to intemperate spam."   read more
  • Australia’s Ambassador to the United States: Who Is Joe Hockey?

    Saturday, July 02, 2016
    Hockey was made treasurer.but ran into trouble when he presented his first budget. It called for cuts to family payments, punitive measures for unemployed young people, a Medicare co-payment, removal of caps on university fees, and $80 billion (Australian) in long-term cuts to health and education funding. He also announced an unpopular increase in fuel taxes. He defended the increase, saying “the poorest people either don’t have cars or actually don’t drive very far in many cases.”   read more
  • Obama Signs Expansion of Freedom of Information Act

    Friday, July 01, 2016
    President Barack Obama signed into law Thursday measures to give the public greater access to government documents and records under the nearly half-century-old Freedom of Information Act. The new law will require federal agencies to consider releasing records under a “presumption of openness” standard, instead of presuming that the information is secret. Supporters say the shift will make it harder for agencies to withhold information.   read more
  • Federal Government Allowed 1,200 Gulf of Mexico Fracking Operations

    Friday, July 01, 2016
    Federal regulators quietly gave the green light to more than 1,200 oil company fracking operations in the Gulf of Mexico between 2010 and 2014, according to documents environmentalists obtained under the Freedom of Information Act. At least 630 wells were fracked along the coasts of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama during that four-year period, and more than 76 billion gallons in fracking waste were dumped into the Gulf in 2014 alone, the documents show.   read more
  • Portland Police Chief Resigns After Pulling a “Cheney”

    Friday, July 01, 2016
    Portland’s police chief resigned Monday, two months after he shot a friend during a hunting trip and allegedly told sheriff’s deputies that the friend had shot himself. Police Chief Larry O’Dea was on a camping trip in Harney County on April 21 when he shot his friend, Robert Dempsey, in the lower back. O’Dea, Dempsey and two other retired Portland police officers were reportedly shooting ground squirrels.   read more
  • North Carolina to Spend Half a Million Dollars Defending LGBT Discrimination

    Friday, July 01, 2016
    North Carolina lawmakers took steps Thursday to set aside a half-million dollars for the legal defense of a law limiting protections for LGBT people as a judge sought to streamline a cluster of lawsuits it has inspired. Republicans showed no appetite to change the provision requiring transgender people to use restrooms corresponding to the sex on their birth certificate in schools, universities and many other public buildings.   read more
  • Border Patrol Agents Cleared in Shooting Deaths

    Friday, July 01, 2016
    U.S. Customs and Border Protection found that employees acted properly when they fired guns in four incidents dating back to 2012 — including two that left two people dead. The reviews are the board’s first under its mandate to review uses of lethal force and other serious incidents once federal, state and local prosecutors decline to pursue criminal charges. It has opened investigations into 14 other cases.   read more
  • European Court Told CIA Paid Romanian Government Millions to Host Secret Prisons

    Thursday, June 30, 2016
    The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) paid Romania “millions of dollars” to host secret prisons, a rights lawyer said Wednesday as the European Court of Human Rights heard accusations that Romania allowed the agency to torture terrorism suspects in a secret renditions program under President George W. Bush.   read more
  • Bank Fined for Discriminating Against Minority Customers in Tennessee

    Thursday, June 30, 2016
    BancorpSouth deliberately avoided building branches in minority neighborhoods in Memphis, Tennessee from at least 2011 to 2013. The bank also denied more loans to African Americans and other minorities when compared to neighborhoods with smaller minority populations, the Justice Department and CFPB said Wednesday, and minorities who were approved for loans were given higher interest rates when compared to non-minorities.   read more
  • Cleveland to Allow Expanded Convention Protests After ACLU Suit

    Thursday, June 30, 2016
    The city of Cleveland agreed Wednesday to allow protests closer to the site of the Republican National Convention, approving rule changes that increases the amount of space demonstrators can occupy and allows for longer events. A federal judge ruled last week that Cleveland’s regulations on protests and marches during the convention infringed on the right of free expression and ordered city officials and the ACLU to negotiate new rules.   read more
  • EU to Allow Sale of Roundup Herbicide an Extra 18 Months

    Thursday, June 30, 2016
    The European Commission said Wednesday that it has no choice but to extend approval of the herbicide glyphosate through 2017, after EU member states failed to either approve or ban the chemical. The European Union’s current approval of glyphosate was set to expire on June 30. However, a lack of consensus left the commission with a single choice as the EU’s executive body: extend glyphosate’s license for another 18 months in hopes that the member states will make a unified decision.   read more
  • GOP Congressman Wants Action on Tainted Water—Now That It’s Found in the Capitol

    Thursday, June 30, 2016
    Congressional officials have found lead in the drinking water of a House office buildings. The office of the Architect of the Capitol informed lawmakers Tuesday that lead levels in the drinking water of the Cannon Building “are slightly above the EPA standard.” Republican Rep. Dennis Ross dashed off an irate letter to House officials on Wednesday demanding to know how much lead is in the water and asking for free tests to measure lead in the people who’ve been drinking the water.   read more
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