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  • Trump Deports JD Vance and His Wife

    Tuesday, April 29, 2025
    According to aides who were present when Trump discussed the issue, but who choose to remain anonymous for fear of retribution, Trump said he was sick of Vance and wanted to fire him. “I wanted him to be my attack dog,” said Trump, “but he appears foolish on television. He dropped the college football trophy. He met with Pope Francis and the next day the pope died. Vance is toxic, and I don’t want him to come near me. He just doesn’t look as good on television as I thought he would.”   read more
  • Ambassador to El Salvador: Who Is Jean E. Manes?

    Sunday, May 15, 2016
    Manes was principal officer in the consulate in Azores, where she helped negotiate the U.S. military presence in those islands. She then was named cultural affairs officer in an embassy in Brazil, where she helped develop an English teaching strategy in the run-up to the World Cup and Olympic Games. She returned to Washington in 2010 as staff director in the Office of Policy, Planning and Resources for Public Affairs. In 2012, she served a tour as counselor for public affairs in Afghanistan.   read more
  • White House Directive Clarifies Transgender Rights in Schools

    Saturday, May 14, 2016
    Public schools must permit transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms consistent with their chosen gender identity, according to an Obama administration directive issued amid a court fight between the federal government and North Carolina. The guidance from leaders at the departments of Education and Justice says public schools are obligated to treat transgender students in a way that matches their gender identity.   read more
  • Congress Takes Preliminary Steps to Curb Prescription Drug Abuse

    Saturday, May 14, 2016
    The House approved three bills Thursday setting up federal grants and taking other steps to battle the drug epidemic, the last of 18 measures on the issue the chamber overwhelmingly passed this week. Members of both parties hailed the measures, though Democrats complained that none provided any money for the programs and anti-drug advocates called the bills a needed but modest first step.   read more
  • Farmers Say Monsanto’s Roundup Gave Them Cancer

    Saturday, May 14, 2016
    Despite Monsanto’s claim that its Roundup weed-killer is “safe enough to drink,” four Nebraska farmers say the widely used herbicide gave them non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. All four of the plaintiffs say they were diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma after being exposed to Roundup year after year. They claim, among other things, that Monsanto mislabeled the product, in defiance of the “body of recognized scientific evidence linking the disease to exposure to Roundup.”   read more
  • Senate Proposal Would Allow Video Access to Civilian Courts by Guantánamo Detainees

    Saturday, May 14, 2016
    Detainees at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, could plead guilty to criminal charges in civilian court via remote videoconference under a provision being considered by the Senate that could open a new avenue to whittling down the prison’s remaining population. The Senate Armed Services Committee announced late Thursday that it had included the provision in the annual National Defense Authorization Act.   read more
  • White House Kicks Off Expanded Research Into Microbes

    Saturday, May 14, 2016
    The Obama administration is beginning a major project to better understand microbes, and even control them. The National Microbiome Initiative announced by White House science officials Friday aims to bring together scientists who study the microbes that live in the human gut and in the oceans, in farm soil and in hospitals — to speed discoveries that could bring big payoffs.   read more
  • Republicans Look to Repeat with Zika Virus Their Wrongheaded Approach to Ebola

    Friday, May 13, 2016
    Remember how scathing Republicans were about President Obama’s handling of Ebola? Yet Obama’s approach was spectacularly successful. Republicans are now again trying to block a sensible effort to address a public health crisis, this time a Zika virus outbreak that is steadily moving to the continental U.S., bringing with it calamitous birth defects. In February, Obama urgently requested more than $1.8 billion to address Zika, and Congress since then has done nothing but talk.   read more
  • U.S. Court Grapples with Abu Ghraib Torture Question: Who Was Responsible—the Torturers or U.S. Military?

    Friday, May 13, 2016
    The former detainees sued CACI in 2008. They claim employees of the company, which was hired to conduct interrogations at the U.S. prison in Iraq, conspired to have soldiers torture them. The plaintiffs say they were subjected to electrical shocks, sexual violence and forced nudity, and were deprived of food, water and oxygen. In the appeals hearing, Judge Keenan asked O'Connor why the private contractor should get more protection than the military for clear violations of laws against torture.   read more
  • Lawsuit Seeking CIA Drone Strike Data Gets Shot Down by Court Ruling against Parallel Lawsuit

    Friday, May 13, 2016
    "My interest, first and foremost, is transparency," said Leopold. "My case before the District Court was the best chance of ensuring this information would be revealed. That's a fact. It's too bad the ACLU didn't agree. Ultimately, it's the public who ends up shortchanged." Said ACLU's Jaffer: "We have invested more than five years in this suit, and in two related suits in New York, because we continue to believe that the government owes the public a fuller account of its drone policies."   read more
  • Kansas to Enact One of Nation’s Toughest Policies Forbidding Transgender Birth Certificate Changes

    Friday, May 13, 2016
    Three transgender rights advocates called on the department to abandon its proposed changes. Only Idaho, Ohio and Tennessee have legal policies against changing gender listings on birth certificates. "It really stands against where most of the country is on updating identity documents to accurately reflect who people are," said Arli Christian. Stephanie Mott predicted that the changes will cause more transgender youth to attempt suicide because the state will be rejecting their identities.   read more
  • Google Employees Propose Emojis of Women in Professional Roles

    Friday, May 13, 2016
    When it comes to emojis, women can be brides or princesses, paint their fingernails and go dancing in a red dress. If those sound like roles determined by the patriarchy, well, it’s not a new complaint. But it may be changing. “Isn’t it time that emoji also reflect the reality that women play a key role in every walk of life and in every profession?” said a Google proposal. The proposed emojis include women in business and health care roles, at factories and on farms, among other things.   read more
  • Obama Pressed to Rescind Bush Memo Allowing Discrimination by Religious Charities

    Thursday, May 12, 2016
    As Obama prepares to leave office, a group of lawyers is calling on Obama to revoke the Bush legal memo, which they argue has been used by religious groups to refuse services, including contraception for trafficking victims, that conflict with their beliefs. As a presidential candidate in 2008, Obama criticized the Bush Justice Dept. for drafting it, but as president failed to follow through. “Leaving it in place tarnishes the civil rights record of the Obama administration,” Garrett said.   read more
  • Government Accused of Secretly Destroying Evidence Requested by Defense in 9/11 Trial

    Thursday, May 12, 2016
    The defense lawyers said they were not permitted to say what the evidence was, or what exactly happened to it, because the underlying issue was classified. But they characterized it as “favorable” to the defendants and “important or even critical” to any eventual trial. The defense said it was informed that Pohl had approved a plan by the government to give the defendants a government-prepared “summary of a substitute” for the original, classified evidence that is no longer available.   read more
  • Milestone Reached as a Million Texans Now Have Licenses to Carry Handguns

    Thursday, May 12, 2016
    Texas now has one of the biggest citizenries in the country authorized to carry concealed and unconcealed firearms. The 1 million are made up of 268,200 women and 749,418 men, according to the Department of Public Safety. Most of those men and women — 873,166 — are white. Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, is one of them. More people are licensed to be armed in Harris County, Texas, than in the entire state of Louisiana.   read more
  • Top Three Republican Leaders in Three Branches of Alabama Government Embroiled in Scandal or Wrongdoing

    Thursday, May 12, 2016
    All in all, it's some of the worst of times for Republicans who promised to clean up state government after seizing control from Democrats. "I never recall when the top leaders of all three branches of government were simultaneously accused of improper behavior," said retired political scientist Bill Stewart. It's hard for state government to concentrate on issues like Medicaid or the prison system when so many officials are fighting for their jobs, he said. "It's definitely a traumatic time."   read more
  • What is “Healthy”? FDA is trying to Figure that out.

    Thursday, May 12, 2016
    The move to rethink "healthy" comes as dietary trends have shifted, with more people expressing concern about sugar and questioning low-fat or low-calorie diets. But any change in the term's regulatory definition could take years. The FDA's final rule on gluten-free labeling, for instance, took more than six years to complete. In a statement Tuesday, the FDA also noted that foods that do not meet all the current regulatory criteria for the term "healthy" are not necessarily unhealthy.   read more
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