Controversies

4305 to 4320 of about 4795 News
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Three Big Bankers Miss Meeting with Obama

In a move described as “pretty nervy” by one White House official, the leaders of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup did not show up in person on Monday for a meeting with President Barack Obama. The three bank executives said their fligh...   read more

Found: 22 Million Missing Bush White House E-Mails

Six years after the problem was first discovered, computer experts have located 22 million emails that became lost during the Bush administration. The discovery followed lawsuits filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW)...   read more

Judge Rules Dept. of Defense in Contempt for Not Taping Guantánamo Testimony

When detainee Mohammed Al-Adahi testified via secure video link in June from Guantánamo Bay, the Department of Defense was supposed to record his testimony, on orders from U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler. Al-Adahi was testifying remotely for hi...   read more

Health Insurance Group Pays Facebook Gamers to Send Anti-Health Care Reform Emails

First there was “astroturfing”—the creation of phony grass roots movements that give politicians the impression of popular feelings on an issue. Now, there’s “virtual-turfing,” in which the health insurance industry is using online games to get Fa...   read more

NBC Continues to Highlight DynCorp Gen. Barry McCaffrey

Since NBC doesn’t bother to point out the conflicts of interest held by oft-used military analyst Barry McCaffrey, Huffington Post and others have. McCaffrey has appeared on the network’s cable subsidiary, MSNBC, no less than 10 times in the past ...   read more

Interned Japanese-Americans Receive University Degrees 67 Years Later

Acknowledging a wrong committed at the outbreak of World War II that cost hundreds of Americans their college education, the University of California system has awarded honorary degrees this month to Japanese-Americans who were forcefully relocate...   read more

Critics Try to Remove North Carolina City Councilman for Being Atheist

States have not been allowed to ban politicians from public office on religious grounds for almost 50 years, but that’s not stopping residents in Asheville, North Carolina, a town of 75,000, from trying to unseat a newly-elected atheist from the c...   read more

KBR Accused in Cancer Death of Indiana National Guardsman

If a group of Indiana National Guardsmen win their legal battle against defense contractor KBR Inc., Jim Gentry will not be one to enjoy the victory. Gentry, a former commanding officer and plaintiff in the case, died last week from a rare form of...   read more

49 Million Americans Drink Unsafe Tap Water

One out of every six Americans in recent years has been exposed to contaminated drinking water, according to an investigation by The New York Times. A review of government records found numerous water districts throughout the United States have fa...   read more

Credit Rating Agencies, Guilty in Meltdown, Avoid Reform

Between uncertainty over what to change and an unwillingness to impose serious reforms, Congress is expected to leave the credit ratings industry largely untouched, even though its role in the economic collapse was paramount. At the heart of the p...   read more

The Mysterious Deaths of 3 Guantánamo Prisoners

On June 10, 2006, three Saudi prisoners at Guantánamo Bay were found hanging in their separate cells—hands and feet tied, gags in their mouths—but the U.S. military ruled the deaths a well-coordinated group suicide intended to make the United Stat...   read more

U.S. Power Plant Pollution Equals 450 Million Cars

Estimates of the number of cars in the United States today vary from 140 million to 250 million. But in order for the U.S. to spew as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as it does from coal-burning power plants, the nation would have to run n...   read more

Obama Administration Hosts Workshop on Openness…Closed to the Public

Proving to cynics that “government openness” is an oxymoron, the Department of Justice decided to prevent the public from attending a workshop on Monday dedicated to the subject of accessing federal information. Employees from various government a...   read more

Fired By Congressional Research Service after Criticizing Guantánamo Policy

Reflecting what critics have called a paranoid attitude, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) has fired its top expert on Afghanistan after he published an Op-Ed critical of the Obama administration’s plans for trying Guantánamo detainees in c...   read more

Unemployment for Black Male College Graduates Almost Double That of Whites

President Barack Obama’s breaking of the color barrier in presidential politics notwithstanding, many African-American men continue to struggle against racial inequalities in the job market, even for graduating from the nation’s top colleges. Acco...   read more

Florida Dominates List of Most Dangerous Cities for Walking

Cities throughout the South, and especially in Florida, are danger zones for pedestrians—not because of local crime, but because of how streets are designed. A new study by transportation planning experts examined fatalities on foot across the U.S...   read more
4305 to 4320 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 268 269 270 271 272 ... 300 Next

Controversies

4305 to 4320 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 268 269 270 271 272 ... 300 Next

Three Big Bankers Miss Meeting with Obama

In a move described as “pretty nervy” by one White House official, the leaders of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup did not show up in person on Monday for a meeting with President Barack Obama. The three bank executives said their fligh...   read more

Found: 22 Million Missing Bush White House E-Mails

Six years after the problem was first discovered, computer experts have located 22 million emails that became lost during the Bush administration. The discovery followed lawsuits filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW)...   read more

Judge Rules Dept. of Defense in Contempt for Not Taping Guantánamo Testimony

When detainee Mohammed Al-Adahi testified via secure video link in June from Guantánamo Bay, the Department of Defense was supposed to record his testimony, on orders from U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler. Al-Adahi was testifying remotely for hi...   read more

Health Insurance Group Pays Facebook Gamers to Send Anti-Health Care Reform Emails

First there was “astroturfing”—the creation of phony grass roots movements that give politicians the impression of popular feelings on an issue. Now, there’s “virtual-turfing,” in which the health insurance industry is using online games to get Fa...   read more

NBC Continues to Highlight DynCorp Gen. Barry McCaffrey

Since NBC doesn’t bother to point out the conflicts of interest held by oft-used military analyst Barry McCaffrey, Huffington Post and others have. McCaffrey has appeared on the network’s cable subsidiary, MSNBC, no less than 10 times in the past ...   read more

Interned Japanese-Americans Receive University Degrees 67 Years Later

Acknowledging a wrong committed at the outbreak of World War II that cost hundreds of Americans their college education, the University of California system has awarded honorary degrees this month to Japanese-Americans who were forcefully relocate...   read more

Critics Try to Remove North Carolina City Councilman for Being Atheist

States have not been allowed to ban politicians from public office on religious grounds for almost 50 years, but that’s not stopping residents in Asheville, North Carolina, a town of 75,000, from trying to unseat a newly-elected atheist from the c...   read more

KBR Accused in Cancer Death of Indiana National Guardsman

If a group of Indiana National Guardsmen win their legal battle against defense contractor KBR Inc., Jim Gentry will not be one to enjoy the victory. Gentry, a former commanding officer and plaintiff in the case, died last week from a rare form of...   read more

49 Million Americans Drink Unsafe Tap Water

One out of every six Americans in recent years has been exposed to contaminated drinking water, according to an investigation by The New York Times. A review of government records found numerous water districts throughout the United States have fa...   read more

Credit Rating Agencies, Guilty in Meltdown, Avoid Reform

Between uncertainty over what to change and an unwillingness to impose serious reforms, Congress is expected to leave the credit ratings industry largely untouched, even though its role in the economic collapse was paramount. At the heart of the p...   read more

The Mysterious Deaths of 3 Guantánamo Prisoners

On June 10, 2006, three Saudi prisoners at Guantánamo Bay were found hanging in their separate cells—hands and feet tied, gags in their mouths—but the U.S. military ruled the deaths a well-coordinated group suicide intended to make the United Stat...   read more

U.S. Power Plant Pollution Equals 450 Million Cars

Estimates of the number of cars in the United States today vary from 140 million to 250 million. But in order for the U.S. to spew as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as it does from coal-burning power plants, the nation would have to run n...   read more

Obama Administration Hosts Workshop on Openness…Closed to the Public

Proving to cynics that “government openness” is an oxymoron, the Department of Justice decided to prevent the public from attending a workshop on Monday dedicated to the subject of accessing federal information. Employees from various government a...   read more

Fired By Congressional Research Service after Criticizing Guantánamo Policy

Reflecting what critics have called a paranoid attitude, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) has fired its top expert on Afghanistan after he published an Op-Ed critical of the Obama administration’s plans for trying Guantánamo detainees in c...   read more

Unemployment for Black Male College Graduates Almost Double That of Whites

President Barack Obama’s breaking of the color barrier in presidential politics notwithstanding, many African-American men continue to struggle against racial inequalities in the job market, even for graduating from the nation’s top colleges. Acco...   read more

Florida Dominates List of Most Dangerous Cities for Walking

Cities throughout the South, and especially in Florida, are danger zones for pedestrians—not because of local crime, but because of how streets are designed. A new study by transportation planning experts examined fatalities on foot across the U.S...   read more
4305 to 4320 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 268 269 270 271 272 ... 300 Next