Controversies

3121 to 3136 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 194 195 196 197 198 ... 300 Next

Missouri Library Blocks Access to Websites about Wicca, Native American Religion

The city of Salem, Missouri, is being sued by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) for blocking access at its library to websites about minority religions.   Using the Netsweeper filtering program, library officials had classified informati...   read more

Is Heroism of 9/11 Police Cadet being Slighted because of His Muslim Name?

The legacy of Mohammad Salman Hamdani is filled with both acknowledgments and overt slights, demonstrating how an individual’s religious and cultural identity can obscure their heroism in the wake of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.   ...   read more

TSA Spreads to Trains, Subways, Bus Terminals and Ferries

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) wants it to be clear that it is not the “Airport Security Administration.”   These days, special teams of TSA officials can be seen appearing randomly at the country’s train stations, bus depots a...   read more

SEC Tricks Judge to Help Citigroup

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is fast making itself an enemy of Judge Jed Rakoff.   The SEC previously filed a settlement with Rakoff to resolve a billion-dollar securities fraud case involving Citigroup—which the judge rejected b...   read more

Montana Reaffirms Ban on Corporate Election Spending; Sets up Clash with Citizens United Ruling

Montana’s century-old ban on corporate spending in elections has been restored by a 5-2 vote of the state Supreme Court, bucking the Citizens United ruling from two years ago by the U.S. Supreme Court.   Since 1912, Montana had prohibited corpor...   read more

Federal Court Gives Go-Ahead to NSA Illegal Surveillance Case

The civil case against the George W. Bush administration’s warrantless wiretapping program by the National Security Agency (NSA) has been resurrected by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Seattle because the federal government may have conducte...   read more

NYC Mayor Bloomberg Claims Felony Crime Down…Thanks to Redefining Strangulation (and Just not Reporting)

Major felony crimes went up slightly this year in New York City. But Mayor Michael Bloomberg begs to differ.   At a news conference this week, Bloomberg claimed violent felonies have gone down 21 years in a row, including 2011. The mayor believe...   read more

FCC Bends to Telecoms on Broadband Internet Development

As telecom analyst Bruce Kushnick sees it, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is catering to the demands of companies like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast.   “There has been a series of recent events in telecom, broadband, Internet–cable, wir...   read more

Arizona Judge Rules that Mexican-American Studies Program is Illegal

Tucson, Arizona’s 13-year-old Mexican-American studies program has been deemed illegal by an administrative law judge who ruled that it violated a new state law designed to eliminate ethnic studies in public schools.   In issuing his decision, J...   read more

Obama Signing Statement Says He isn’t Bound by 20 Provisions of General Spending Bill

Regardless of what Congress says, President Barack Obama intends to do otherwise, according to the latest signing statement released by the White House on the Friday before Christmas.   Obama responded to the 2012 Consolidated Appropriations Act...   read more

Federal Courts Still Struggling with Whether White Bosses can Call Black Employees “Boy”

A federal appellate court based in the South has gone back and forth over the expression “boy” as it pertains to African-Americans.   In September 2010 the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Alabama, Florida and Georgia, overturned a lo...   read more

Drug-Related Deaths Reach Level of Motor Vehicle Deaths

After three decades of soaring numbers, drug-related fatalities have become nearly as common as deaths resulting from car crashes.   The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported that poisoning deaths in 2008 exceeded the tot...   read more

Scientists Trying to Study Extreme Weather Events Hampered by Funding and Politics

For two years in a row, the United States has been subjected to an abnormal amount of extreme weather events, raising the question of global warming’s impact on the earth. But government scientists have struggled to gain approval from Congress for...   read more

Capital One Accused of Illegally Suing Bankrupt Americans

Filing and completing bankruptcy proceedings is supposed to free consumers from paying any outstanding debt to credit card companies. But that hasn’t stopped Capital One, one of the leading credit card lenders, from going after bankrupt Americans....   read more

What Is the U.S. Losing as Autopsies Die Off?

Once commonly performed by hospitals, autopsies are rarely conducted these days, depriving doctors and the medical profession of vital information. Fifty years ago, about half of patients who died in hospitals received autopsies. Now that number h...   read more

Wal-Mart Employees Killed Accused Shoplifter

The Wal-Mart in Dunwoody, Georgia, is being sued by the mother of a shoplifter who was killed by employees two years ago. On December 19, 2009, 38-year-old Marty Jerome Bridges put about $300 worth of sporting goods inside his clothing and was hea...   read more
3121 to 3136 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 194 195 196 197 198 ... 300 Next

Controversies

3121 to 3136 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 194 195 196 197 198 ... 300 Next

Missouri Library Blocks Access to Websites about Wicca, Native American Religion

The city of Salem, Missouri, is being sued by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) for blocking access at its library to websites about minority religions.   Using the Netsweeper filtering program, library officials had classified informati...   read more

Is Heroism of 9/11 Police Cadet being Slighted because of His Muslim Name?

The legacy of Mohammad Salman Hamdani is filled with both acknowledgments and overt slights, demonstrating how an individual’s religious and cultural identity can obscure their heroism in the wake of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.   ...   read more

TSA Spreads to Trains, Subways, Bus Terminals and Ferries

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) wants it to be clear that it is not the “Airport Security Administration.”   These days, special teams of TSA officials can be seen appearing randomly at the country’s train stations, bus depots a...   read more

SEC Tricks Judge to Help Citigroup

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is fast making itself an enemy of Judge Jed Rakoff.   The SEC previously filed a settlement with Rakoff to resolve a billion-dollar securities fraud case involving Citigroup—which the judge rejected b...   read more

Montana Reaffirms Ban on Corporate Election Spending; Sets up Clash with Citizens United Ruling

Montana’s century-old ban on corporate spending in elections has been restored by a 5-2 vote of the state Supreme Court, bucking the Citizens United ruling from two years ago by the U.S. Supreme Court.   Since 1912, Montana had prohibited corpor...   read more

Federal Court Gives Go-Ahead to NSA Illegal Surveillance Case

The civil case against the George W. Bush administration’s warrantless wiretapping program by the National Security Agency (NSA) has been resurrected by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Seattle because the federal government may have conducte...   read more

NYC Mayor Bloomberg Claims Felony Crime Down…Thanks to Redefining Strangulation (and Just not Reporting)

Major felony crimes went up slightly this year in New York City. But Mayor Michael Bloomberg begs to differ.   At a news conference this week, Bloomberg claimed violent felonies have gone down 21 years in a row, including 2011. The mayor believe...   read more

FCC Bends to Telecoms on Broadband Internet Development

As telecom analyst Bruce Kushnick sees it, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is catering to the demands of companies like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast.   “There has been a series of recent events in telecom, broadband, Internet–cable, wir...   read more

Arizona Judge Rules that Mexican-American Studies Program is Illegal

Tucson, Arizona’s 13-year-old Mexican-American studies program has been deemed illegal by an administrative law judge who ruled that it violated a new state law designed to eliminate ethnic studies in public schools.   In issuing his decision, J...   read more

Obama Signing Statement Says He isn’t Bound by 20 Provisions of General Spending Bill

Regardless of what Congress says, President Barack Obama intends to do otherwise, according to the latest signing statement released by the White House on the Friday before Christmas.   Obama responded to the 2012 Consolidated Appropriations Act...   read more

Federal Courts Still Struggling with Whether White Bosses can Call Black Employees “Boy”

A federal appellate court based in the South has gone back and forth over the expression “boy” as it pertains to African-Americans.   In September 2010 the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Alabama, Florida and Georgia, overturned a lo...   read more

Drug-Related Deaths Reach Level of Motor Vehicle Deaths

After three decades of soaring numbers, drug-related fatalities have become nearly as common as deaths resulting from car crashes.   The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported that poisoning deaths in 2008 exceeded the tot...   read more

Scientists Trying to Study Extreme Weather Events Hampered by Funding and Politics

For two years in a row, the United States has been subjected to an abnormal amount of extreme weather events, raising the question of global warming’s impact on the earth. But government scientists have struggled to gain approval from Congress for...   read more

Capital One Accused of Illegally Suing Bankrupt Americans

Filing and completing bankruptcy proceedings is supposed to free consumers from paying any outstanding debt to credit card companies. But that hasn’t stopped Capital One, one of the leading credit card lenders, from going after bankrupt Americans....   read more

What Is the U.S. Losing as Autopsies Die Off?

Once commonly performed by hospitals, autopsies are rarely conducted these days, depriving doctors and the medical profession of vital information. Fifty years ago, about half of patients who died in hospitals received autopsies. Now that number h...   read more

Wal-Mart Employees Killed Accused Shoplifter

The Wal-Mart in Dunwoody, Georgia, is being sued by the mother of a shoplifter who was killed by employees two years ago. On December 19, 2009, 38-year-old Marty Jerome Bridges put about $300 worth of sporting goods inside his clothing and was hea...   read more
3121 to 3136 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 194 195 196 197 198 ... 300 Next