Controversies

4545 to 4560 of about 4795 News
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Florida: More Deaths from Oxycodone than Cocaine

Despite a noticeable drop in cocaine-related overdoses, Florida law enforcement officials are not celebrating. Prescription drug abuse has now become the leading cause of drug-related overdoses, primarily from the powerful pain killer oxycodone,...   read more

Fatter and Fatter

The American waistline continues to expand at an alarming rate, according to a new report, which found in 2008 not a single U.S. state reported a decline in adult obesity—while nearly half the country experienced an increase. The study, produced b...   read more

Germany Set to Pardon Anti-Nazi Citizens Convicted of Treason

Germany’s governing parties came to an agreement on Wednesday on a blanket measure involving the overturning of Nazi-era rulings convicting about 30,000 individuals of desertion or treason. These convictions carried with them the death penalty and...   read more

Can Automatic Registration Improve U.S. Democracy?

It is estimated that between one-quarter and one-third of all Americans eligible to vote are not registered to participate in elections—which is why the Brennan Center for Justice is calling for a radical change in the way voters are signed up. In...   read more

EPA Finally Releases List of Dangerous Coal Ash Sites

Almost two weeks after Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) publicly questioned its need for secrecy, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released on Monday a list of 44 coal-fired power plant waste sites in 10 states that pose a “high hazard” risk t...   read more

U.S. Government Formally Apologizes for 1957 Firing of Gay Astronomer

When the federal government fired Franklin Kameny in 1957 for being a homosexual, it unknowingly launched the young astronomer into a new career as a leading gay rights activist. After losing his civilian job for the U.S. Army’s mapping service, K...   read more

Racial Inequalities in Conviction and Sentencing

Even after decades of public discourse on the inequality of the criminal justice system, the United States continues to punish minorities, especially African Americans, who are arrested at rates far higher than Caucasians who are arrested. A new s...   read more

Is the Electoral College Distorting Obama Policy?

In another demonstration of President Barack Obama’s preference for the tried-and-true ways of Washington, the new president has focused his domestic travel so far on those states that are likely to be battlegrounds in the 2012 election. Of the 16...   read more

Supreme Court Shifts Alaska Waste Dumping to Congress

The battle is not yet over, insist environmentalists, following a decision on June 22 by the U.S. Supreme Court that allows mining companies to dump waste into lakes and waterways. The court case stemmed from efforts by Coeur d'Alene Mines Corp. t...   read more

Air Marshal Fired for Revealing Info Deemed “Sensitive” After He Revealed It

In a ruling that has major ramifications for government whistleblowers, an obscure federal employment review board decided this week that the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) was justified in firing a veteran air marshal for revealing ...   read more

Rotate Regulators and Have Congress Fund Them: Richard A. Posner

There are two major flaws in the Obama administration’s plan for reorganizing the federal government’s oversight of the financial industry, according to Richard Posner, a judge on the seventh circuit court of appeals. First, the 88-page report pro...   read more

EPA Pinpoints Neighborhood with Highest Cancer Risk from Air Pollution

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, any community that averages less than 100 cases of cancer for every 1 million people is doing okay. Once the rate goes above a hundred, EPA considers the situation unacceptable. Which begs the...   read more

Army Bans Stars and Stripes Reporter from Covering Iraq Combat Team

Pop quiz time. Recently, the U.S. military banned a reporter from embedding with an Army unit because of his unfavorable coverage of the war in Iraq. Was the reporter from: A) New York Times; B) Washington Post; or C) Stars and Stripes? The answer...   read more

Good News for Factory Farms; Bad News for Environment

Officials at the Environmental Protection Agency have said they want to require the mandatory reporting of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) by large agricultural operations, or factory farms, to monitor the release of such contributors to global war...   read more

Siemens and Nokia Helped Iran Dictatorship with Web Spying

When the government of Iran bought a new mobile phone network last year from two European telecommunications giants, it got a great two-for-one deal: expanded Internet and wireless coverage for its citizens…and the capability to spy on them.   A...   read more

VA Hospital Botched 92 of 116 Prostate Cancer Treatments

Almost 80% of prostate cancer treatments at the VA hospital in Philadelphia were performed badly over a six-year period, found The New York Times, which uncovered a “rogue” cancer unit that routinely failed to properly treat patients. Of 116 prost...   read more
4545 to 4560 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 283 284 285 286 287 ... 300 Next

Controversies

4545 to 4560 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 283 284 285 286 287 ... 300 Next

Florida: More Deaths from Oxycodone than Cocaine

Despite a noticeable drop in cocaine-related overdoses, Florida law enforcement officials are not celebrating. Prescription drug abuse has now become the leading cause of drug-related overdoses, primarily from the powerful pain killer oxycodone,...   read more

Fatter and Fatter

The American waistline continues to expand at an alarming rate, according to a new report, which found in 2008 not a single U.S. state reported a decline in adult obesity—while nearly half the country experienced an increase. The study, produced b...   read more

Germany Set to Pardon Anti-Nazi Citizens Convicted of Treason

Germany’s governing parties came to an agreement on Wednesday on a blanket measure involving the overturning of Nazi-era rulings convicting about 30,000 individuals of desertion or treason. These convictions carried with them the death penalty and...   read more

Can Automatic Registration Improve U.S. Democracy?

It is estimated that between one-quarter and one-third of all Americans eligible to vote are not registered to participate in elections—which is why the Brennan Center for Justice is calling for a radical change in the way voters are signed up. In...   read more

EPA Finally Releases List of Dangerous Coal Ash Sites

Almost two weeks after Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) publicly questioned its need for secrecy, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released on Monday a list of 44 coal-fired power plant waste sites in 10 states that pose a “high hazard” risk t...   read more

U.S. Government Formally Apologizes for 1957 Firing of Gay Astronomer

When the federal government fired Franklin Kameny in 1957 for being a homosexual, it unknowingly launched the young astronomer into a new career as a leading gay rights activist. After losing his civilian job for the U.S. Army’s mapping service, K...   read more

Racial Inequalities in Conviction and Sentencing

Even after decades of public discourse on the inequality of the criminal justice system, the United States continues to punish minorities, especially African Americans, who are arrested at rates far higher than Caucasians who are arrested. A new s...   read more

Is the Electoral College Distorting Obama Policy?

In another demonstration of President Barack Obama’s preference for the tried-and-true ways of Washington, the new president has focused his domestic travel so far on those states that are likely to be battlegrounds in the 2012 election. Of the 16...   read more

Supreme Court Shifts Alaska Waste Dumping to Congress

The battle is not yet over, insist environmentalists, following a decision on June 22 by the U.S. Supreme Court that allows mining companies to dump waste into lakes and waterways. The court case stemmed from efforts by Coeur d'Alene Mines Corp. t...   read more

Air Marshal Fired for Revealing Info Deemed “Sensitive” After He Revealed It

In a ruling that has major ramifications for government whistleblowers, an obscure federal employment review board decided this week that the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) was justified in firing a veteran air marshal for revealing ...   read more

Rotate Regulators and Have Congress Fund Them: Richard A. Posner

There are two major flaws in the Obama administration’s plan for reorganizing the federal government’s oversight of the financial industry, according to Richard Posner, a judge on the seventh circuit court of appeals. First, the 88-page report pro...   read more

EPA Pinpoints Neighborhood with Highest Cancer Risk from Air Pollution

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, any community that averages less than 100 cases of cancer for every 1 million people is doing okay. Once the rate goes above a hundred, EPA considers the situation unacceptable. Which begs the...   read more

Army Bans Stars and Stripes Reporter from Covering Iraq Combat Team

Pop quiz time. Recently, the U.S. military banned a reporter from embedding with an Army unit because of his unfavorable coverage of the war in Iraq. Was the reporter from: A) New York Times; B) Washington Post; or C) Stars and Stripes? The answer...   read more

Good News for Factory Farms; Bad News for Environment

Officials at the Environmental Protection Agency have said they want to require the mandatory reporting of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) by large agricultural operations, or factory farms, to monitor the release of such contributors to global war...   read more

Siemens and Nokia Helped Iran Dictatorship with Web Spying

When the government of Iran bought a new mobile phone network last year from two European telecommunications giants, it got a great two-for-one deal: expanded Internet and wireless coverage for its citizens…and the capability to spy on them.   A...   read more

VA Hospital Botched 92 of 116 Prostate Cancer Treatments

Almost 80% of prostate cancer treatments at the VA hospital in Philadelphia were performed badly over a six-year period, found The New York Times, which uncovered a “rogue” cancer unit that routinely failed to properly treat patients. Of 116 prost...   read more
4545 to 4560 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 283 284 285 286 287 ... 300 Next