Controversies

2865 to 2880 of about 4795 News
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University Researchers Hack into Active Drones

The federal government’s plan to allow potentially thousands of drones to fly through U.S. airspace in the coming years could result in disaster, unless a “gaping hole” in the unmanned aircraft’s navigation system is corrected.   A team of res...   read more

Deputy Who Arrested Mel Gibson to be Fired

Six years after Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Deputy James Mee arrested actor Mel Gibson on a drunk driving charge, endured an anti-Semitic rant by the star, clashed with his superiors over removal of the rant from the arrest report, d...   read more

Coast Guard Protects Oil Drilling Ships from Environmentalists

The U.S. Coast Guard has come to the rescue of oil companies planning to drill off the coast of Alaska by declaring environmentalists must stay away from company ships.   As 19 Arctic oil-drilling ships head through Puget Sound, groups like Gr...   read more

DEA Chief’s Bizarre Defense of Marijuana Prohibition

The Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) top official has come under considerable scrutiny for recent remarks defending the illegality of marijuana.   During her testimony before Congress, DEA Director Michele Leonhart argued that keeping m...   read more

Tombstone Sues Forest Service over Access to Damaged Water Pipeline

With its water supplies dwindling, the legendary Wild West town of Tombstone, Arizona (population 1,562), is suing the federal government over refusing to allow local residents to use heavy equipment to repair a pipeline that runs through protec...   read more

Supreme Court to Take Case of Federal Government Suing Georgia over Hospital Monopoly

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to consider an appeal from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which has been stymied in its attempts to challenge a hospital merger in Georgia.   Phoebe Putney Health System announced in 2010 that it would me...   read more

Military Judge Orders Obama Administration to Turn over Proof that WikiLeaks Documents Damaged National Security

If the Obama administration wants Private Bradley Manning convicted for releasing classified documents to WikiLeaks, federal prosecutors first must disclose proof that the soldier’s action did harm to national security.   This week Col. Denise...   read more

Media Coverage of Obama Health Care Act: Emphasizing the Negative

Regardless of how the U.S. Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, the Obama administration’s federal healthcare reform law, most Americans probably assume the lower courts have decided against the controversial ...   read more

Justice Scalia Contradicts Himself on Immigration to Get the Result He Wants

Yesterday’s Supreme Court decision in the case of Arizona v. United States, which struck down three key provisions in Arizona’s immigration enforcement statute known as S.B. 1070 for conflicting with federal immigration law and policy, provoked ...   read more

U.S. High Court Rules It’s Not Their Cross to Bear . . . for Now

A towering cross on federal property atop Mount Soledad in San Diego may have to come down after the U.S. Supreme Court decided to let stand without comment an appeals court ruling that the memorial illegally conveys a religious message. But it ...   read more

U.S. Companies Have Dumped 30 Trillion Gallons of Toxic Liquids into the Earth…Are They Coming Back to Haunt Us?

The water Americans drink is threatened from below. For the past half-century or so, U.S. corporations have injected more than 30 trillion gallons of toxic liquid waste deep into the earth, believing that multiple layers of rock would prevent th...   read more

Is the Roberts Supreme Court in the Pocket of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce?

Although during his 2005 confirmation hearing Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts tried to reassure the Senate that he would be unbiased because “Judges are like umpires,” he and his fellow Republican justices seem to have a strike zone tha...   read more

Same-Sex Couple Sues Blue Cross and Catholic Hospital

Two unnamed women are suing Blue Cross and St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Westchester County in New York state over the Catholic hospital’s refusal to grant benefits to same-sex couples. One of the women is an employee of the hospital.   The l...   read more

Tax-Exempt Churches Plan to Engage in Illegal Electioneering

On October 7, 2012, hundreds of conservative political activists will intentionally violate federal law by engaging in illegal electioneering despite the presence of a law on the books since 1954 that forbids them to do so. They believe, apparen...   read more

NFL Players Sue League and Helmet Maker over Hidden Brain Injury Test Results

Facing a potentially costly class-action lawsuit, the National Football League stands accused of hiding the dangers of head injuries and long-term health problems associated with them.   More than 2,000 former players are giving up their indiv...   read more

Pizza Cartel Fights Calorie Count Disclosure

Many of the nation’s largest pizza chains are fighting Washington over a proposed requirement to disclose how many calories are in the food they sell.   Banding together as the recently formed American Pizza Community, companies including Domi...   read more
2865 to 2880 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 178 179 180 181 182 ... 300 Next

Controversies

2865 to 2880 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 178 179 180 181 182 ... 300 Next

University Researchers Hack into Active Drones

The federal government’s plan to allow potentially thousands of drones to fly through U.S. airspace in the coming years could result in disaster, unless a “gaping hole” in the unmanned aircraft’s navigation system is corrected.   A team of res...   read more

Deputy Who Arrested Mel Gibson to be Fired

Six years after Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Deputy James Mee arrested actor Mel Gibson on a drunk driving charge, endured an anti-Semitic rant by the star, clashed with his superiors over removal of the rant from the arrest report, d...   read more

Coast Guard Protects Oil Drilling Ships from Environmentalists

The U.S. Coast Guard has come to the rescue of oil companies planning to drill off the coast of Alaska by declaring environmentalists must stay away from company ships.   As 19 Arctic oil-drilling ships head through Puget Sound, groups like Gr...   read more

DEA Chief’s Bizarre Defense of Marijuana Prohibition

The Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) top official has come under considerable scrutiny for recent remarks defending the illegality of marijuana.   During her testimony before Congress, DEA Director Michele Leonhart argued that keeping m...   read more

Tombstone Sues Forest Service over Access to Damaged Water Pipeline

With its water supplies dwindling, the legendary Wild West town of Tombstone, Arizona (population 1,562), is suing the federal government over refusing to allow local residents to use heavy equipment to repair a pipeline that runs through protec...   read more

Supreme Court to Take Case of Federal Government Suing Georgia over Hospital Monopoly

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to consider an appeal from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which has been stymied in its attempts to challenge a hospital merger in Georgia.   Phoebe Putney Health System announced in 2010 that it would me...   read more

Military Judge Orders Obama Administration to Turn over Proof that WikiLeaks Documents Damaged National Security

If the Obama administration wants Private Bradley Manning convicted for releasing classified documents to WikiLeaks, federal prosecutors first must disclose proof that the soldier’s action did harm to national security.   This week Col. Denise...   read more

Media Coverage of Obama Health Care Act: Emphasizing the Negative

Regardless of how the U.S. Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, the Obama administration’s federal healthcare reform law, most Americans probably assume the lower courts have decided against the controversial ...   read more

Justice Scalia Contradicts Himself on Immigration to Get the Result He Wants

Yesterday’s Supreme Court decision in the case of Arizona v. United States, which struck down three key provisions in Arizona’s immigration enforcement statute known as S.B. 1070 for conflicting with federal immigration law and policy, provoked ...   read more

U.S. High Court Rules It’s Not Their Cross to Bear . . . for Now

A towering cross on federal property atop Mount Soledad in San Diego may have to come down after the U.S. Supreme Court decided to let stand without comment an appeals court ruling that the memorial illegally conveys a religious message. But it ...   read more

U.S. Companies Have Dumped 30 Trillion Gallons of Toxic Liquids into the Earth…Are They Coming Back to Haunt Us?

The water Americans drink is threatened from below. For the past half-century or so, U.S. corporations have injected more than 30 trillion gallons of toxic liquid waste deep into the earth, believing that multiple layers of rock would prevent th...   read more

Is the Roberts Supreme Court in the Pocket of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce?

Although during his 2005 confirmation hearing Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts tried to reassure the Senate that he would be unbiased because “Judges are like umpires,” he and his fellow Republican justices seem to have a strike zone tha...   read more

Same-Sex Couple Sues Blue Cross and Catholic Hospital

Two unnamed women are suing Blue Cross and St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Westchester County in New York state over the Catholic hospital’s refusal to grant benefits to same-sex couples. One of the women is an employee of the hospital.   The l...   read more

Tax-Exempt Churches Plan to Engage in Illegal Electioneering

On October 7, 2012, hundreds of conservative political activists will intentionally violate federal law by engaging in illegal electioneering despite the presence of a law on the books since 1954 that forbids them to do so. They believe, apparen...   read more

NFL Players Sue League and Helmet Maker over Hidden Brain Injury Test Results

Facing a potentially costly class-action lawsuit, the National Football League stands accused of hiding the dangers of head injuries and long-term health problems associated with them.   More than 2,000 former players are giving up their indiv...   read more

Pizza Cartel Fights Calorie Count Disclosure

Many of the nation’s largest pizza chains are fighting Washington over a proposed requirement to disclose how many calories are in the food they sell.   Banding together as the recently formed American Pizza Community, companies including Domi...   read more
2865 to 2880 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 178 179 180 181 182 ... 300 Next