Controversies
 
                                    The Government Program that Kills Wild Animals
                                        A little-known office within the U.S. Department of Agriculture has come under scrutiny for killing thousands of animals in the name of helping ranchers and the environment.
 
Over the past dozen years, Wildlife Services, which has an annual bud...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Study Links Brain Abnormalities to Dow Chemical Pesticide
                                        A pesticide used on farms and golf courses has been linked to brain abnormalities in babies, according to a group of researchers.
 
The chemical chlorpyrifos, found in Dow Chemical’s pesticide Dursban, can impact the development of the cortex, w...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Is the FBI Encouraging Terrorist Plots In Order to Stop Them and Boost Their Success Rate?
                                        Since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has praised its agents numerous times for thwarting terrorist plots. Some of these conspiracies, however, have been aided, if not encouraged, by FBI agents ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    OSHA Averages One Workplace Safety Regulation a Year
                                        Labor leaders and some Democrats are unhappy with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and its glacial pace of implementing new standards for protecting workers.
 
A 30-year review of OSHA safety rules revealed the agency put...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Maryland Law Enforcement in Limbo as State High Court Rules DNA Sampling of Suspects is Prohibited
                                        Some law enforcement departments in Maryland may not obey an appellate court ruling that forbids police from taking DNA samples from criminal suspects without a warrant.
 
Since 2009, police have routinely collected DNA samples when arresting su...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    7 Million Birds Die in U.S. and Canada Each Year because of Communication Towers
                                        In Alfred Hitchcock’s 1963 film The Birds, a California town is besieged by thousands of attacking seagulls, crows and other feathery foes, whose murderous ire toward humanity goes unexplained. If not an avian protest against DDT use (chronicled i...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Florida Judge Rules Gov. Scott’s Random Drug Testing of State Employees Unconstitutional
                                        Florida Governor Rick Scott’s mandatory drug-testing program for state workers, created by executive order, has been thrown out by a federal judge.
 
District Judge Ursula Ungaro found no compelling justification for the plan, which amounted to ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Corn Cartel Battles other Farmers over Dow Herbicide
                                        Corn farmers are battling other farmers, as well as environmentalists, over a new strain of genetically modified corn that’s resistant to a powerful herbicide suspected of causing cancer.
 
At the center of the controversy is 2,4-D, a chemical u...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Insurers Prepare for Climate Change…Except in U.S.
                                        Insurance company executives are aware of the future risks posed by climate change. And yet they have been slow to prepare for the coming wave of weather-related accidents and litigation spawned by global warming changes.
 
In a survey conducted...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    TSA Agents Give 4-Year-Old Pat-Down Because She Hugged Her Grandmother
                                        Lacking what critics said was common sense and compassion, Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers at the Wichita, Kansas, airport treated a 4-year-old child like a terrorist.
 
Isabella Brademeyer and her 6-year-old brother, Olive...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Whistleblower Exposes Tree Poisoning in Billboard Business
                                        Lamar Advertising Co. in Florida is being sued and faces criminal prosecution for illegally killing thousands of trees for the sake of making roadside billboards more visible.
 
The controversy came to light after a company employee, Robert Barn...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Ex-CIA Officer Defends Destruction of Torture Videos
                                        In his memoir coming out this month, the Central Intelligence Agency officer who ordered the destruction of the CIA’s torture tapes defends his actions, saying he was erasing “some ugly visuals.”
 
Jose A. Rodriguez Jr., the former director of t...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Medical Debt Collectors Accused of Bullying Emergency Room Patients and Others
                                        Patients in Minnesota and possibly other hospitals have been greeted with the unpleasant sight of bill collectors seeking payments for medical services.
 
The unethical and possibly illegal practice belongs to one of the nation’s largest collect...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Justice Dept. Charges First Small Fry in BP Oil Spill Disaster
                                        In what some legal analysts characterized as a small catch aimed at snaring a larger fish, the Obama administration filed criminal charges this week against a BP engineer who was involved in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill cleanup.
 
Kurt Mix, who ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Just One Black Juror Can Reduce Chance of Conviction of Blacks and Increase Convictions of Whites
                                        African-Americans facing trial in Florida need to hope for one thing: A black person on the jury.
 
After examining more than 700 non-capital felony criminal cases in Sarasota and Lake Counties over a 10-year period, researchers at Duke Universi...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Dow Chemical Uses PBS to Push Corporate Agenda
                                        A new multi-part series on PBS discusses four major economic issues affecting the United States and, it just so happens, the interests of the program’s corporate sponsor.
 
Dow Chemical underwrote the series “America Revealed,” whose four instal...    read more
                                    
                                Controversies
 
                                    The Government Program that Kills Wild Animals
                                        A little-known office within the U.S. Department of Agriculture has come under scrutiny for killing thousands of animals in the name of helping ranchers and the environment.
 
Over the past dozen years, Wildlife Services, which has an annual bud...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Study Links Brain Abnormalities to Dow Chemical Pesticide
                                        A pesticide used on farms and golf courses has been linked to brain abnormalities in babies, according to a group of researchers.
 
The chemical chlorpyrifos, found in Dow Chemical’s pesticide Dursban, can impact the development of the cortex, w...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Is the FBI Encouraging Terrorist Plots In Order to Stop Them and Boost Their Success Rate?
                                        Since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has praised its agents numerous times for thwarting terrorist plots. Some of these conspiracies, however, have been aided, if not encouraged, by FBI agents ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    OSHA Averages One Workplace Safety Regulation a Year
                                        Labor leaders and some Democrats are unhappy with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and its glacial pace of implementing new standards for protecting workers.
 
A 30-year review of OSHA safety rules revealed the agency put...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Maryland Law Enforcement in Limbo as State High Court Rules DNA Sampling of Suspects is Prohibited
                                        Some law enforcement departments in Maryland may not obey an appellate court ruling that forbids police from taking DNA samples from criminal suspects without a warrant.
 
Since 2009, police have routinely collected DNA samples when arresting su...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    7 Million Birds Die in U.S. and Canada Each Year because of Communication Towers
                                        In Alfred Hitchcock’s 1963 film The Birds, a California town is besieged by thousands of attacking seagulls, crows and other feathery foes, whose murderous ire toward humanity goes unexplained. If not an avian protest against DDT use (chronicled i...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Florida Judge Rules Gov. Scott’s Random Drug Testing of State Employees Unconstitutional
                                        Florida Governor Rick Scott’s mandatory drug-testing program for state workers, created by executive order, has been thrown out by a federal judge.
 
District Judge Ursula Ungaro found no compelling justification for the plan, which amounted to ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Corn Cartel Battles other Farmers over Dow Herbicide
                                        Corn farmers are battling other farmers, as well as environmentalists, over a new strain of genetically modified corn that’s resistant to a powerful herbicide suspected of causing cancer.
 
At the center of the controversy is 2,4-D, a chemical u...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Insurers Prepare for Climate Change…Except in U.S.
                                        Insurance company executives are aware of the future risks posed by climate change. And yet they have been slow to prepare for the coming wave of weather-related accidents and litigation spawned by global warming changes.
 
In a survey conducted...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    TSA Agents Give 4-Year-Old Pat-Down Because She Hugged Her Grandmother
                                        Lacking what critics said was common sense and compassion, Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers at the Wichita, Kansas, airport treated a 4-year-old child like a terrorist.
 
Isabella Brademeyer and her 6-year-old brother, Olive...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Whistleblower Exposes Tree Poisoning in Billboard Business
                                        Lamar Advertising Co. in Florida is being sued and faces criminal prosecution for illegally killing thousands of trees for the sake of making roadside billboards more visible.
 
The controversy came to light after a company employee, Robert Barn...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Ex-CIA Officer Defends Destruction of Torture Videos
                                        In his memoir coming out this month, the Central Intelligence Agency officer who ordered the destruction of the CIA’s torture tapes defends his actions, saying he was erasing “some ugly visuals.”
 
Jose A. Rodriguez Jr., the former director of t...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Medical Debt Collectors Accused of Bullying Emergency Room Patients and Others
                                        Patients in Minnesota and possibly other hospitals have been greeted with the unpleasant sight of bill collectors seeking payments for medical services.
 
The unethical and possibly illegal practice belongs to one of the nation’s largest collect...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Justice Dept. Charges First Small Fry in BP Oil Spill Disaster
                                        In what some legal analysts characterized as a small catch aimed at snaring a larger fish, the Obama administration filed criminal charges this week against a BP engineer who was involved in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill cleanup.
 
Kurt Mix, who ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Just One Black Juror Can Reduce Chance of Conviction of Blacks and Increase Convictions of Whites
                                        African-Americans facing trial in Florida need to hope for one thing: A black person on the jury.
 
After examining more than 700 non-capital felony criminal cases in Sarasota and Lake Counties over a 10-year period, researchers at Duke Universi...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Dow Chemical Uses PBS to Push Corporate Agenda
                                        A new multi-part series on PBS discusses four major economic issues affecting the United States and, it just so happens, the interests of the program’s corporate sponsor.
 
Dow Chemical underwrote the series “America Revealed,” whose four instal...    read more
                                    
                                 
        


