Controversies

3985 to 4000 of about 4795 News
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Army Reverses Punishment for Officers in Firefight Deaths of 9 U.S. Soldiers

As far as the U.S. Army is concerned, no one in a position of command should be held accountable for the mistakes that resulted in one of the deadliest battles of the Afghanistan war.   In July 2008, a platoon of soldiers manning an outpost nea...   read more

Oklahoma Police Taser Bedridden 86-Year-Old Woman

Bedridden and on oxygen, Lona Varner of El Reno, Oklahoma, was zapped by police using Taser guns after she acted in an “aggressive” manner in her bed. Officers showed up at Varner’s residence after her grandson, Lonnie Tinsley, called 911 seeking ...   read more

BP Avoids Offshore Drilling Halt in Alaska by Building Artificial Island

BP’s oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico prompted the federal government to call for a moratorium on all offshore drilling—and yet the company is still moving ahead, with regulators’ blessings, to tap a potentially huge undersea petroleum reserve o...   read more

Judge Who Ruled against Oil Drilling Moratorium Owns Oil Industry Stock

In throwing out the Obama administration’s moratorium on offshore oil drilling, U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman of Louisiana said halting production would negatively impact the industry and local economy. The ban also might have impacted Feldma...   read more

Where is FEMA in the Gulf Oil Crisis?: Rich Galen

During the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, Americans have heard from or about the U.S. Coast Guard, the Minerals Management Service, and even President Barack Obama. But the one agency that has not made an appearance—the one whose mission is ...   read more

80% of Drugs Approved in U.S. Are Tested Abroad

There’s “made in the USA,” but rarely can pharmaceutical companies claim to have “tested” their medications and therapies in the United States.   Daniel Levinson, inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services, has found that ...   read more

Shareholder Sues Archer Daniels Midland over Misleading Executive Pay

Agricultural giant Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) failed to inform its shareholders that senior executives would receive $1.3 billion in compensation for last year—an amount representing 74% of the company’s 2009 net earnings, according to a lawsui...   read more

Long Island Indians Finally Win Recognition and Casino

After struggling for three decades to win recognition, the Shinnecock Indians last week were officially declared a federally-sanctioned tribe by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The legal status means the relatively impoverished tribe of 1,292 member...   read more

Supreme Court Invalidates 500 Government Labor Decisions

Two years’ worth of work, amounting to about 500 cases, will have to be reconsidered by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), as ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court in a split decision that crossed ideological lines. The five-member NLRB tried ...   read more

Is It Time to Limit Nicotine Levels in Cigarettes?

The Food and Drug Administration should use the expanded powers given to it by Congress and crackdown on the level of nicotine in cigarettes, argues David Kessler, former head of the FDA during the Clinton administration. Kessler, who tried to reg...   read more

17 Afghan Soldiers Go AWOL from Language School in Texas; 10 Still Missing

A U.S. Air Force Base in Texas lost track of 17 military personnel visiting from Afghanistan to study English at a language school. Of the 17 who went AWOL over a period of 18 months from the Defense Language Institute English Language Center at L...   read more

Obama Administration Moves to Protect Small Ranchers against Big Meatpackers

Seeking to address concerns that big meat processors have too much power over market prices, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has proposed new regulations designed to open up commercial opportunities for small farmers supplying chicken an...   read more

Jailed for Debt in the U.S. in the 21st Century

More than a hundred and fifty years ago, Americans were thrown into jail for not paying their debts, until the country did away with so-called debtors’ prisons in 1833. Today, similar punishments have returned for those in over their heads in debt...   read more

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
3985 to 4000 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 248 249 250 251 252 ... 300 Next

Controversies

3985 to 4000 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 248 249 250 251 252 ... 300 Next

Army Reverses Punishment for Officers in Firefight Deaths of 9 U.S. Soldiers

As far as the U.S. Army is concerned, no one in a position of command should be held accountable for the mistakes that resulted in one of the deadliest battles of the Afghanistan war.   In July 2008, a platoon of soldiers manning an outpost nea...   read more

Oklahoma Police Taser Bedridden 86-Year-Old Woman

Bedridden and on oxygen, Lona Varner of El Reno, Oklahoma, was zapped by police using Taser guns after she acted in an “aggressive” manner in her bed. Officers showed up at Varner’s residence after her grandson, Lonnie Tinsley, called 911 seeking ...   read more

BP Avoids Offshore Drilling Halt in Alaska by Building Artificial Island

BP’s oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico prompted the federal government to call for a moratorium on all offshore drilling—and yet the company is still moving ahead, with regulators’ blessings, to tap a potentially huge undersea petroleum reserve o...   read more

Judge Who Ruled against Oil Drilling Moratorium Owns Oil Industry Stock

In throwing out the Obama administration’s moratorium on offshore oil drilling, U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman of Louisiana said halting production would negatively impact the industry and local economy. The ban also might have impacted Feldma...   read more

Where is FEMA in the Gulf Oil Crisis?: Rich Galen

During the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, Americans have heard from or about the U.S. Coast Guard, the Minerals Management Service, and even President Barack Obama. But the one agency that has not made an appearance—the one whose mission is ...   read more

80% of Drugs Approved in U.S. Are Tested Abroad

There’s “made in the USA,” but rarely can pharmaceutical companies claim to have “tested” their medications and therapies in the United States.   Daniel Levinson, inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services, has found that ...   read more

Shareholder Sues Archer Daniels Midland over Misleading Executive Pay

Agricultural giant Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) failed to inform its shareholders that senior executives would receive $1.3 billion in compensation for last year—an amount representing 74% of the company’s 2009 net earnings, according to a lawsui...   read more

Long Island Indians Finally Win Recognition and Casino

After struggling for three decades to win recognition, the Shinnecock Indians last week were officially declared a federally-sanctioned tribe by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The legal status means the relatively impoverished tribe of 1,292 member...   read more

Supreme Court Invalidates 500 Government Labor Decisions

Two years’ worth of work, amounting to about 500 cases, will have to be reconsidered by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), as ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court in a split decision that crossed ideological lines. The five-member NLRB tried ...   read more

Is It Time to Limit Nicotine Levels in Cigarettes?

The Food and Drug Administration should use the expanded powers given to it by Congress and crackdown on the level of nicotine in cigarettes, argues David Kessler, former head of the FDA during the Clinton administration. Kessler, who tried to reg...   read more

17 Afghan Soldiers Go AWOL from Language School in Texas; 10 Still Missing

A U.S. Air Force Base in Texas lost track of 17 military personnel visiting from Afghanistan to study English at a language school. Of the 17 who went AWOL over a period of 18 months from the Defense Language Institute English Language Center at L...   read more

Obama Administration Moves to Protect Small Ranchers against Big Meatpackers

Seeking to address concerns that big meat processors have too much power over market prices, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has proposed new regulations designed to open up commercial opportunities for small farmers supplying chicken an...   read more

Jailed for Debt in the U.S. in the 21st Century

More than a hundred and fifty years ago, Americans were thrown into jail for not paying their debts, until the country did away with so-called debtors’ prisons in 1833. Today, similar punishments have returned for those in over their heads in debt...   read more

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
3985 to 4000 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 248 249 250 251 252 ... 300 Next