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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
  • Lawsuits Accuse Obama Administration of Abandoning Americans Stuck in Yemen

    Monday, April 13, 2015
    State Department officials say there are no plans to rescue Americans in Yemen. An official told McClatchy. “Sending in military assets, even for an evacuation operation, could put U.S. citizen lives at greater risk.” Other countries have rescued their citizens though. India, for instance, was able to move about 5,600 people, including almost a thousand from 41 other nations, out of Yemen. China, Russia and Ethiopia also evacuated their citizens.   read more
  • The Shady Practice of “Investigatory” Police Stops

    Monday, April 13, 2015
    The police killing of a South Carolina man has brought attention to the use of traffic stops, particularly of black men, as an excuse to investigate drivers and vehicles. Unlike routine safety-related traffic stops, such as those for speeding or driving erratically, investigatory stops are often for minor equipment-related matters, but can lead to vehicle searches, interrogations of motorists and sometimes arrests. Research has shown that black men are overwhelmingly the targets of such stops.   read more
  • Republicans Push Bill to Grant Asylum to Foreign Homeschooling Families

    Monday, April 13, 2015
    The bill would grant asylum to up to 500 families a year who come to the United States because they can’t homeschool their children in their home countries. Many of these families come from Germany and Sweden, where children must attend regular schools. “The Republicans have put homeschooling as a priority for asylum in the United States ahead of murder, rape, child abuse,” Rep. Luis Gutiérrez (D-Illinois) told McClatchy.   read more
  • Social Security Considers Puerto Ricans Living in Spanish-Speaking Puerto Rico “Disabled” if they don’t Speak English

    Monday, April 13, 2015
    Although Puerto Rico is an American territory, the predominant language there is Spanish. This fact appears to have been lost on the Social Security Administration (SSA), which has declared some Puerto Ricans who don’t speak English to be disabled for the purpose of receiving government payments.SSA’s inspector general found 218 cases in Puerto Rico from 2011 to 2013 in which disability status had been given to those because of their limited English skills.   read more
  • Video Game Publishers want to Stop Museums and Collectors from Making Defunct Games Playable Again

    Monday, April 13, 2015
    When you buy something, you’d like to keep it as long as it’s useful to you. With videogames, however, you get to keep them only as long as the manufacturer lets you. Game manufacturers often cut off server access for games they no longer want to support. stuck in legal limbo by server shutdowns are groups such as the Internet Archive, museums like Oakland, California’s Museum of Art and Digital Entertainment, and researchers who study video games as a cultural and historical medium.   read more
  • U.S. has Military Bases in at least 38 Countries and Sent Weapons to 94 Countries in Last 5 Years

    Sunday, April 12, 2015
    The most recent Department of Defense report lists buildings in 38 foreign nations and territories. The U.S. has 179 bases in Germany and 109 installations in Japan. Even where the U.S. doesn’t send military personnel, the U.S. does send weapons. The United States is the world largest arms exporter. From 2010 to 2014, Americans sent weapons to at least 94 countries.   read more
  • U.S. Forest Service Tries again to Allow Coal Mining in Roadless Areas

    Sunday, April 12, 2015
    Give the Forest Service credit—they’re persistent. The agency in 2012 allowed Arch Coal—the nation’s second largest oil company—to exploit an exemption in the Colorado Roadless Rule designed to protect wilderness areas in the state from mining. Environmental groups sued. A judge last year blocked Arch’s plans. Now, the Forest Service is trying again to allow Arch to put six miles of road, along with 48 vent pads, in 19,000 acres in the southwestern part of the state. .   read more
  • Study Suggests Connection between Fracking and Indoor Exposure to Lung Cancer-Causing Radon Gas

    Sunday, April 12, 2015
    The research showed that buildings hooked up to well water had a 21% higher radon concentration than those connected to municipal supplies. In addition, buildings in townships, where there is more fracking, had 39% higher concentrations of the gas than those in cities.   read more
  • Since 2000, 97 Counties have Switched from Majority Non-Hispanic White to Majority Minority

    Sunday, April 12, 2015
    The largest of the flipped counties is California’s San Diego County, which was 55.4% non-Hispanic white in 2000. By 2013, only 47.2% of its 3,211,252 residents were in that category. The next largest is neighboring Orange County, California, long seen as a bastion of white privilege and power. The greatest percentage shift was seen in Rockdale County, Georgia. That county, which is east of Atlanta, went from 72.8% non-Hispanic white in 2000 to only 37.8% in 2013.   read more
  • Should Bikini Baristas be Regulated as Sex Workers?

    Sunday, April 12, 2015
    Servers are required to wear at least bikini bottoms and pasties, so they’re not so much X-rated as a hard R. In addition, partitions are placed between the building and the street to protect children and others who don’t want to see the servers. Coffee stands whose workers wear regular clothing often declare themselves to be “family friendly.”   read more
  • Did you Hear about the Navy Bribery Scandal Involving a Dozen Admirals, “Yummy” Prostitutes and “Fat Leonard”?

    Saturday, April 11, 2015
    One of the U.S. Navy’s biggest embarrassments continues to produce serious fallout for top military personnel. The scandal has unearthed stories of “yummy” prostitutes, Spanish suckling pigs, and spa treatments. Three admirals have been censured for accepting “lavish gifts from Leonard Francis, known as Fat Leonard for his corpulent profile and grandiose lifestyle,” wrote Katherine Peters. Navy Capt. Dusek admitted to passing along classified information in exchange for prostitutes and cash.   read more
  • Mexican Ex-Cop Sought Asylum Claiming he could be Killed if He Was Deported…and He Was

    Saturday, April 11, 2015
    After arriving in the U.S. five years ago, Morales became a community leader on immigration issues in Iowa. He applied for asylum, explaining that he would be in danger if he were deported, but the petition was denied by an immigration judge. He sought help from Iowa politicians, including U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley (R), asking them to help him remain in the U.S. The efforts failed, and he was deported to Mexico on September 2, 2014. On April 5, Morales was shot to death.   read more
  • Michigan Town that Banned Charity Collection Bins Loses in Federal Court

    Saturday, April 11, 2015
    Judge Richard Griffin wrote that St. Johns’ ban “implies, without any evidence, that charities would be negligent in failing to conduct timely pickups of donated goods, in maintaining the appearance of the bins, etc.” Charity bins are a form of communication, said the court. “A passer-by who sees a donation bin may be motivated by it to research the charity to decide if he wants to donate [and] will gain new information about the social problem the charity seeks to remedy."   read more
  • Organic Food Groups Sue Dept. of Agriculture for Lowering Standard for Including Non-Organic Materials in Foods Labeled Organic

    Saturday, April 11, 2015
    There are some non-organic ingredients allowed in foods labeled organic. These are permitted because they are judged to be not harmful and there are no organic alternatives. Those ingredients are removed from the list after five years unless the National Organic Standards Board votes to retain them. But USDA changed its policy in 2013, allowing such ingredients to remain on the National List of Allowed and Prohibited Substances unless the board specifically votes to remove them.   read more
  • Should a Woman Replace Andrew Jackson on the $20 Bill?

    Saturday, April 11, 2015
    The group Women on 20s says Andrew Jackson is the perfect candidate to be replaced on paper money. Although he was a great military leader, Jackson was also a slave trader and responsible for the forced resettlement of Native Americans from the Southeast United States to Oklahoma on the “Trail of Tears.” Coincidentally, he also favored the use of gold and silver over paper money, which makes his presence on U.S. currency somewhat ironic.   read more
  • Pentagon Reactivates Communications Site Inside Rocky Mountains

    Friday, April 10, 2015
    First built in the 1960s, Cheyenne Mountain was set up as a critical communications center deep inside Colorado's Rocky Mountains, where it was believed Air Force personnel could survive a nuclear attack from the Soviet Union. The Air Force had since largely pulled out of Cheyenne Mountain, believing there was no longer a nuclear threat. Military officials haven't explained why they are now upgrading the complex, for which defense contractor Raytheon won a $700 million contract.   read more
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