Controversies
 
                                    Major Egg Producer Accused of False Claims about Animal Welfare
                                        Following up on its investigation of factory farms that produce millions of eggs for American consumers, The Humane Society of the United States has filed a complaint against Rose Acre Farms with the Federal Trade Commission. Rose Acre, the nation...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Why Are So Many Returning Veterans So Angry?
                                        The trick to helping veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars struggling with anger issues may lie in focusing on certain symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), say researchers with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    U.S.-Born Citizen Blocked by Obama Administration from Returning to U.S.
                                        Yahya Wehelie, a U.S. citizen born to immigrants from Somalia, spent 18 months in Yemen. He says he was there to learn Arabic and look for a bride before deciding to return to the United States. But Wehelie’s trip home was interrupted in Egypt, wh...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Pentagon Ignores Congressional Order on Brain Tests for Returning Troops
                                        The Department of Defense was told by Congress in 2008 to administer tests to soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan in order to check for possible brain injuries. But more than half a million troops have not received such screening upon com...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Congressional Ethics Office Investigates 8 Members for Fundraising on Eve of Wall Street Reform Vote
                                        Forty-eight hours before the House voted in December on a reform plan affecting the financial industry, at least eight lawmakers held fundraisers or received substantial contributions from special interests that had a stake in the legislation. Tho...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    BP Hires Private Security to Keep Away Media
                                        Acting as though it has martial-law authority, BP has hired private security to guard beaches contaminated by the oil spill—and in the process prevented journalists from interviewing clean-up crews.
 
For two days in a row, news anchor Scott Wal...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Are Drones Coming to U.S. Skies?
                                        It likely is just a matter of time before unmanned aircraft, including the type being used in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, are flying over America’s friendly skies. State and federal officials, especially the Department of Homeland Security, ar...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Somali Militants Kill Two for Watching World Cup on TV
                                        Watching the World Cup can be bad for your help, if you live in Somalia. On June 12, Islamic fundamentalists of the Hezbal Islam rebel group killed two Somalis who were watching the soccer match between Argentina and Nigeria in a home near Mogadis...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Oil Spill Forces Shutdown of 134-Year-Old Oyster Supplier
                                        It survived Hurricane Camille in 1969. It survived Hurricane Katrina in 2005. It survived more than a century’s worth of economic recessions and depressions. But P&J Oyster Company couldn’t withstand the oil spill of 2010.
 
First opened for bus...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Japan Accused of Trading Money and Sex for Whaling Votes
                                        Japan’s effort to overturn the moratorium on commercial whaling may have hit a snag following an investigation by the Sunday Times of London that found Japanese officials are bribing officials on the International Whaling Commission (IWC).
 
Pos...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Arizona Immigration Law Succeeds in Driving Hispanics out of State
                                        Hispanics are exiting Arizona before the state’s controversial immigration law goes into effect in July. Citing anecdotal evidence, USA Today reported that schools in Hispanic neighborhoods are experiencing unusual declines in enrollment and busin...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    5 New Orleans Police Officers Indicted in Henry Glover Murder Case
                                        Federal prosecutors filed indictments on Friday against five current or former New Orleans police officers for the killing of Henry Glover days after Hurricane Katrina in September 2, 2005. The U.S. Department of Justice claims rookie officer Davi...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Coast Guard Puts Out Call for Private Sector Solutions to Oil Spill
                                        Perhaps bowing to public pressure to stop the oil spill, the U.S. Coast Guard has decided to reverse its earlier position to not reach out to the private sector for solutions to the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster. The Coast Guard Research and Develop...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Mississippi Man Tried for Sixth Time for Same Crime
                                        So much for double jeopardy. The provision in law that forbids an individual from being tried twice for the same crime has not applied to Curtis Flowers. The African-American man is now facing his sixth trial for allegedly killing four people at a...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    211 Bodies Misplaced and Misidentified at Arlington Cemetery
                                        At least 211 graves at Arlington National Cemetery have been mishandled, provoking scorn and promises of investigation by lawmakers in Congress. The discovery was made by the inspector general for the U.S. Army who found remains interred at the hi...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    FTC Cracks Down on Another Dubious Claim by Kellogg
                                        The Federal Trade Commission is not letting up on the Kellogg Company, the world’s largest cereal producer. Executives have agreed to stop marketing Rice Krispies as a food that boosts the immune systems of children after FTC regulators filed a co...    read more
                                    
                                Controversies
 
                                    Major Egg Producer Accused of False Claims about Animal Welfare
                                        Following up on its investigation of factory farms that produce millions of eggs for American consumers, The Humane Society of the United States has filed a complaint against Rose Acre Farms with the Federal Trade Commission. Rose Acre, the nation...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Why Are So Many Returning Veterans So Angry?
                                        The trick to helping veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars struggling with anger issues may lie in focusing on certain symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), say researchers with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    U.S.-Born Citizen Blocked by Obama Administration from Returning to U.S.
                                        Yahya Wehelie, a U.S. citizen born to immigrants from Somalia, spent 18 months in Yemen. He says he was there to learn Arabic and look for a bride before deciding to return to the United States. But Wehelie’s trip home was interrupted in Egypt, wh...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Pentagon Ignores Congressional Order on Brain Tests for Returning Troops
                                        The Department of Defense was told by Congress in 2008 to administer tests to soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan in order to check for possible brain injuries. But more than half a million troops have not received such screening upon com...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Congressional Ethics Office Investigates 8 Members for Fundraising on Eve of Wall Street Reform Vote
                                        Forty-eight hours before the House voted in December on a reform plan affecting the financial industry, at least eight lawmakers held fundraisers or received substantial contributions from special interests that had a stake in the legislation. Tho...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    BP Hires Private Security to Keep Away Media
                                        Acting as though it has martial-law authority, BP has hired private security to guard beaches contaminated by the oil spill—and in the process prevented journalists from interviewing clean-up crews.
 
For two days in a row, news anchor Scott Wal...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Are Drones Coming to U.S. Skies?
                                        It likely is just a matter of time before unmanned aircraft, including the type being used in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, are flying over America’s friendly skies. State and federal officials, especially the Department of Homeland Security, ar...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Somali Militants Kill Two for Watching World Cup on TV
                                        Watching the World Cup can be bad for your help, if you live in Somalia. On June 12, Islamic fundamentalists of the Hezbal Islam rebel group killed two Somalis who were watching the soccer match between Argentina and Nigeria in a home near Mogadis...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Oil Spill Forces Shutdown of 134-Year-Old Oyster Supplier
                                        It survived Hurricane Camille in 1969. It survived Hurricane Katrina in 2005. It survived more than a century’s worth of economic recessions and depressions. But P&J Oyster Company couldn’t withstand the oil spill of 2010.
 
First opened for bus...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Japan Accused of Trading Money and Sex for Whaling Votes
                                        Japan’s effort to overturn the moratorium on commercial whaling may have hit a snag following an investigation by the Sunday Times of London that found Japanese officials are bribing officials on the International Whaling Commission (IWC).
 
Pos...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Arizona Immigration Law Succeeds in Driving Hispanics out of State
                                        Hispanics are exiting Arizona before the state’s controversial immigration law goes into effect in July. Citing anecdotal evidence, USA Today reported that schools in Hispanic neighborhoods are experiencing unusual declines in enrollment and busin...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    5 New Orleans Police Officers Indicted in Henry Glover Murder Case
                                        Federal prosecutors filed indictments on Friday against five current or former New Orleans police officers for the killing of Henry Glover days after Hurricane Katrina in September 2, 2005. The U.S. Department of Justice claims rookie officer Davi...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Coast Guard Puts Out Call for Private Sector Solutions to Oil Spill
                                        Perhaps bowing to public pressure to stop the oil spill, the U.S. Coast Guard has decided to reverse its earlier position to not reach out to the private sector for solutions to the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster. The Coast Guard Research and Develop...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Mississippi Man Tried for Sixth Time for Same Crime
                                        So much for double jeopardy. The provision in law that forbids an individual from being tried twice for the same crime has not applied to Curtis Flowers. The African-American man is now facing his sixth trial for allegedly killing four people at a...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    211 Bodies Misplaced and Misidentified at Arlington Cemetery
                                        At least 211 graves at Arlington National Cemetery have been mishandled, provoking scorn and promises of investigation by lawmakers in Congress. The discovery was made by the inspector general for the U.S. Army who found remains interred at the hi...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    FTC Cracks Down on Another Dubious Claim by Kellogg
                                        The Federal Trade Commission is not letting up on the Kellogg Company, the world’s largest cereal producer. Executives have agreed to stop marketing Rice Krispies as a food that boosts the immune systems of children after FTC regulators filed a co...    read more
                                    
                                 
        


