Top Stories

1905 to 1920 of about 3314 News
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U.S. Military Still Considers Attempted Suicide a Crime

Lazzaric T. Caldwell admitted to his superiors that he slit his wrists in January 2010 while stationed in Okinawa, Japan. He pleaded guilty to attempting suicide and was sentenced to 180 days in the brig. He also received a bad-conduct discharge, which bars him from receiving mental health benefits. His lawyers contend that his guilty plea be thrown out, on grounds that it is wrong to punish troops whose mental problems cause them to attempt suicide.   read more

Obama Team Made Attempt to Solidify Drone Policy in Event of Romney Win

Within the administration there are disagreements over how often drones should be utilized. The Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency favor “greater latitude to carry out strikes,” wrote Scott Shane in the Times, while the Department of Justice and the State Department, as well as the president’s counterterrorism adviser, John O. Brennan, prefer more restraint.   read more

CEOs Use Smokescreen of Federal Debt to Promote Corporate Tax Breaks

Among the provisions advocated by the Campaign to Fix the Debt is a territorial tax system, which would allow corporations to bring home overseas profits and pay little or no tax on them. In all, the savings could amount to $134 billion for the 63 publicly-held companies that have joined the Bowles-Simpson group. The biggest winners would be General Electric ($35.7 billion), Microsoft ($19.4 billion), Merck ($15.5 billion) and Cisco Systems ($14.5 billion).   read more

Can U.S. Repeat Reagan’s Tax Reform…Matching Income Tax and Capital Gains Tax?

The key income tax reforms in 1986 raised the maximum tax rate on long-term capital gains to 28% from 20% while reducing the maximum rate on ordinary income to 28% from 50%. Capital gains are income arising from investments, while ordinary income arises from work. Thus the 1986 reform taxed income from work and from investment equally, ending the discrimination against work and in favor of investments that had favored the wealthy.   read more

As Big Agricultural Companies Exploit Growing Biofuel Market, Emergency Food Pantries See Loss of Stocks

For corn growers, the vast majority of their yields don’t even go to feeding Americans. About 40% of the corn crop gets turned into ethanol, and another 40% is used as animal feed, leaving only 20% for people to eat. But with so many farmers exporting their crops this year, nonprofits have experienced a significant drop in food stocks.   read more

Unregulated “Shadow Banking” Industry Grows to $23 Trillion in U.S.

Described as a parallel universe consisting of hedge funds, money market funds, finance companies and securities lenders, “shadow banking” continues to grow in the United States and beyond. What distinguishes shadow banking from regular investment banking is that it is unregulated. This shady aspect of the financial industry now controls $23 trillion in U.S. assets, giving the United States the distinction of having the largest shadow banking system in the world.   read more

15,890 Americans Victims of Violent Crime Every Day

Last year, 15,890 Americans became victims of violent crime each day. The rate of violent victimization increased 17% in urban areas from 2010 to 2011. According to Justice Department statistics, aggravated and simple assault accounted for the entire rise in total violence. There was also an 11% jump in property crimes during the same period.   read more

Multi-Millionaire Goldman Sachs CEO Blankfein Says Americans Should Work Longer and Receive Fewer Benefits

Blankfein, who owns $210 million worth of Goldman Sachs stock, defended his suggestions by claiming that “Social Security wasn’t devised to be a system that supported you for a 30-year retirement after a 25-year career.” This remark prompted a big “huh” among many who saw Blankfein’s interview. A 25-year career? If most Americans only worked 25 years, that would mean they were retiring in their forties.   read more

Army and Navy Set Suicide Records

Military suicide researcher David Rudd told USA Today that suicides are still rising, even though the war in Iraq is over and the Afghanistan conflict is winding down. “The reason you’re going to see record numbers is because these wars are drawing down and these young men and women are returning home,” Rudd said. “When they return home, that’s where the conflicts surface.” Almost 85% if the suicides were associated with failed relationships.   read more

On the Horizon: Real Killer Robots

The use of killer robots also calls into question who would be legally responsible if one of them committed an illegal act, such as targeting civilians. The robots themselves could not be sued or otherwise punished and it is unlikely that any action would be taken against military commanders, manufacturers or programmers, so that, in the end, no one would be accountable.   read more

Why do U.S. Taxpayers Have to Repeatedly Pay to Rebuild Storm-Damaged Island in Alabama?

Since 1979, Dauphin Island has been hit by nearly a dozen hurricanes and major storms, including Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Most recently, it was blasted by Hurricane Isaac in August of this year. The community of 1,300 has received at least $80 million in federal tax dollars has been given to Dauphin Island over the decades. This amount—more than $60,000 for every resident—does not include another $72 million provided to homeowners from the federal flood insurance program.   read more

Clarifying Federal Law on Marijuana…U.S. Can Insist that it is Illegal, but Can’t Force States to Enforce the Law

The problem for the federal government is that it does not have the resources to fight a war on pot possession by itself, not in two medium size states and certainly not nationwide, given that there are about 750,000 marijuana possession arrests in the U.S. every year. With respective populations of 5.1 and 6.8 million, Colorado and Washington annually see about 12,000 and 16,000 pot arrests.   read more

BP Slithers away with Light Penalty for Gulf Explosion and Oil Spill Disaster

Uhlmann told the Corporate Crime Reporter. “It also is curious that the Justice Department agreed that BP could have five years to pay the penalties, since criminal fines are supposed to be paid immediately unless there are ability to pay issues.” In addition, the fine represents only a small portion of BP’s 2011 profits of $27.5 billion.   read more

Most People in U.S. Jails have not yet been Tried

Before the mid-1990s, jail populations historically were evenly split between pretrial and sentenced prisoners. Since 1996, however, pretrial inmates have grown in numbers and at a faster rate than sentenced inmates, even though crime rates have been falling. Today, 61% of inmates have not been convicted, while 39% are serving sentences. Arrestees who are able to post bond are less likely to be convicted than those who cannot.   read more

Kentucky Supreme Court Case Questions whether Students Deserve the Right to Remain Silent

According to the 1966 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Miranda v. Arizona, suspects who are arrested must be informed that they have the right to remain silent and that anything they say may be used against them. The question is whether Miranda rights extend to students at school. The issue stems from a case involving a high school student who was caught with a prescription painkiller on campus and giving some of it to two students.   read more

Why did FBI Use Taxpayer Time and Money to Do Socialite Jill Kelley a Favor?

Greenwald add that "the FBI traced all of Broadwell's physical locations, learned of all the accounts she uses, ended up reading all of her emails, investigated the identity of her anonymous lover (who turned out to be Petraeus), and then possibly read his emails as well. They dug around in all of this without any evidence of any real crime…and, in large part, without the need for any warrant from a court.”   read more
1905 to 1920 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 118 119 120 121 122 ... 208 Next

Top Stories

1905 to 1920 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 118 119 120 121 122 ... 208 Next

U.S. Military Still Considers Attempted Suicide a Crime

Lazzaric T. Caldwell admitted to his superiors that he slit his wrists in January 2010 while stationed in Okinawa, Japan. He pleaded guilty to attempting suicide and was sentenced to 180 days in the brig. He also received a bad-conduct discharge, which bars him from receiving mental health benefits. His lawyers contend that his guilty plea be thrown out, on grounds that it is wrong to punish troops whose mental problems cause them to attempt suicide.   read more

Obama Team Made Attempt to Solidify Drone Policy in Event of Romney Win

Within the administration there are disagreements over how often drones should be utilized. The Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency favor “greater latitude to carry out strikes,” wrote Scott Shane in the Times, while the Department of Justice and the State Department, as well as the president’s counterterrorism adviser, John O. Brennan, prefer more restraint.   read more

CEOs Use Smokescreen of Federal Debt to Promote Corporate Tax Breaks

Among the provisions advocated by the Campaign to Fix the Debt is a territorial tax system, which would allow corporations to bring home overseas profits and pay little or no tax on them. In all, the savings could amount to $134 billion for the 63 publicly-held companies that have joined the Bowles-Simpson group. The biggest winners would be General Electric ($35.7 billion), Microsoft ($19.4 billion), Merck ($15.5 billion) and Cisco Systems ($14.5 billion).   read more

Can U.S. Repeat Reagan’s Tax Reform…Matching Income Tax and Capital Gains Tax?

The key income tax reforms in 1986 raised the maximum tax rate on long-term capital gains to 28% from 20% while reducing the maximum rate on ordinary income to 28% from 50%. Capital gains are income arising from investments, while ordinary income arises from work. Thus the 1986 reform taxed income from work and from investment equally, ending the discrimination against work and in favor of investments that had favored the wealthy.   read more

As Big Agricultural Companies Exploit Growing Biofuel Market, Emergency Food Pantries See Loss of Stocks

For corn growers, the vast majority of their yields don’t even go to feeding Americans. About 40% of the corn crop gets turned into ethanol, and another 40% is used as animal feed, leaving only 20% for people to eat. But with so many farmers exporting their crops this year, nonprofits have experienced a significant drop in food stocks.   read more

Unregulated “Shadow Banking” Industry Grows to $23 Trillion in U.S.

Described as a parallel universe consisting of hedge funds, money market funds, finance companies and securities lenders, “shadow banking” continues to grow in the United States and beyond. What distinguishes shadow banking from regular investment banking is that it is unregulated. This shady aspect of the financial industry now controls $23 trillion in U.S. assets, giving the United States the distinction of having the largest shadow banking system in the world.   read more

15,890 Americans Victims of Violent Crime Every Day

Last year, 15,890 Americans became victims of violent crime each day. The rate of violent victimization increased 17% in urban areas from 2010 to 2011. According to Justice Department statistics, aggravated and simple assault accounted for the entire rise in total violence. There was also an 11% jump in property crimes during the same period.   read more

Multi-Millionaire Goldman Sachs CEO Blankfein Says Americans Should Work Longer and Receive Fewer Benefits

Blankfein, who owns $210 million worth of Goldman Sachs stock, defended his suggestions by claiming that “Social Security wasn’t devised to be a system that supported you for a 30-year retirement after a 25-year career.” This remark prompted a big “huh” among many who saw Blankfein’s interview. A 25-year career? If most Americans only worked 25 years, that would mean they were retiring in their forties.   read more

Army and Navy Set Suicide Records

Military suicide researcher David Rudd told USA Today that suicides are still rising, even though the war in Iraq is over and the Afghanistan conflict is winding down. “The reason you’re going to see record numbers is because these wars are drawing down and these young men and women are returning home,” Rudd said. “When they return home, that’s where the conflicts surface.” Almost 85% if the suicides were associated with failed relationships.   read more

On the Horizon: Real Killer Robots

The use of killer robots also calls into question who would be legally responsible if one of them committed an illegal act, such as targeting civilians. The robots themselves could not be sued or otherwise punished and it is unlikely that any action would be taken against military commanders, manufacturers or programmers, so that, in the end, no one would be accountable.   read more

Why do U.S. Taxpayers Have to Repeatedly Pay to Rebuild Storm-Damaged Island in Alabama?

Since 1979, Dauphin Island has been hit by nearly a dozen hurricanes and major storms, including Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Most recently, it was blasted by Hurricane Isaac in August of this year. The community of 1,300 has received at least $80 million in federal tax dollars has been given to Dauphin Island over the decades. This amount—more than $60,000 for every resident—does not include another $72 million provided to homeowners from the federal flood insurance program.   read more

Clarifying Federal Law on Marijuana…U.S. Can Insist that it is Illegal, but Can’t Force States to Enforce the Law

The problem for the federal government is that it does not have the resources to fight a war on pot possession by itself, not in two medium size states and certainly not nationwide, given that there are about 750,000 marijuana possession arrests in the U.S. every year. With respective populations of 5.1 and 6.8 million, Colorado and Washington annually see about 12,000 and 16,000 pot arrests.   read more

BP Slithers away with Light Penalty for Gulf Explosion and Oil Spill Disaster

Uhlmann told the Corporate Crime Reporter. “It also is curious that the Justice Department agreed that BP could have five years to pay the penalties, since criminal fines are supposed to be paid immediately unless there are ability to pay issues.” In addition, the fine represents only a small portion of BP’s 2011 profits of $27.5 billion.   read more

Most People in U.S. Jails have not yet been Tried

Before the mid-1990s, jail populations historically were evenly split between pretrial and sentenced prisoners. Since 1996, however, pretrial inmates have grown in numbers and at a faster rate than sentenced inmates, even though crime rates have been falling. Today, 61% of inmates have not been convicted, while 39% are serving sentences. Arrestees who are able to post bond are less likely to be convicted than those who cannot.   read more

Kentucky Supreme Court Case Questions whether Students Deserve the Right to Remain Silent

According to the 1966 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Miranda v. Arizona, suspects who are arrested must be informed that they have the right to remain silent and that anything they say may be used against them. The question is whether Miranda rights extend to students at school. The issue stems from a case involving a high school student who was caught with a prescription painkiller on campus and giving some of it to two students.   read more

Why did FBI Use Taxpayer Time and Money to Do Socialite Jill Kelley a Favor?

Greenwald add that "the FBI traced all of Broadwell's physical locations, learned of all the accounts she uses, ended up reading all of her emails, investigated the identity of her anonymous lover (who turned out to be Petraeus), and then possibly read his emails as well. They dug around in all of this without any evidence of any real crime…and, in large part, without the need for any warrant from a court.”   read more
1905 to 1920 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 118 119 120 121 122 ... 208 Next