Top Stories

2289 to 2304 of about 3314 News
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Leaving Iraq, U.S. Plans to Send Troops to Kuwait, Drones to Turkey and Texas

Withdrawing from Iraq has meant new missions for U.S. combat units and military hardware.   American commanders are negotiating with Kuwait to allow about 3,500 troops to redeploy to the Gulf emirate. The country already hosts 20,000 U.S. servic...   read more

Foreclosure Crisis…Is the Worst Yet to Come?

The U.S. housing market may be in for yet another crush of foreclosures, according o the Center for Responsible Lending.   About 2.7 million households that took out mortgages between 2004 and 2008 have already lost their homes to foreclosure. N...   read more

Scalia and Thomas Agree to Hear Challenge to Health Care Law…and Then Appear at Dinner Funded by Pfizer

U.S. Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas have come under criticism for agreeing to hear the legal challenge to President Barack Obama’s healthcare law and then appearing as the featured guests of a conservative banquet that i...   read more

Federal Government Backs Away From Financial Fraud Prosecutions

The U.S. Department of Justice under President Barack Obama is prosecuting fewer banks for fraud than it did under George W. Bush.   To date, the Justice Department, during the first eleven months of fiscal year 2011, has reported 1,251 new pros...   read more

U.S. Murder Rate Drops to 47-Year Low

Homicides in the U.S. have fallen significantly over the past 20 years, based on the latest statistics from the Justice Department.   In 1993, there were 9.5 murders per 100,000 Americans. By 2010, that rate had been cut in half, down to 4.8—the...   read more

Middle-Income Neighborhoods Disappearing in U.S. as Rich and Poor Divide

The United States is experiencing an increase in income segregation, according to a new study produced by Stanford University.   Forty years ago 65% of families were lived in middle-income neighborhoods. By 2007, that percentage had fallen to 44...   read more

U.S. Set to End 20 Years of Bombing Iraq

With the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq, the United States will finally conclude the longest air war in world history.   For 20 years, beginning with the 1991 Gulf War and now ending in December, the U.S. carried out almost continuous a...   read more

Number of Uninsured (and Untreated) Americans Grows

Americans are continuing to lose health insurance coverage and to struggle paying for serious medical conditions, according to two separate surveys.   A Gallup poll found the proportion of adults with no health insurance has been above 17% for t...   read more

Obama Administration Pushes Ahead with $6 Billion Plutonium Lab in New Mexico

Despite lacking what critics say is a clear purpose or mission, the Department of Energy is planning to invest $6 billion in building a new plutonium facility at the nation’s leading scientific lab.   Los Alamos National Laboratory wants to have...   read more

Obama Too Occupied to Listen to “Occupy” Protest Song during Summit Dinner

Chosen to perform at a dinner hosted by President Barack Obama, and attended by Chinese President Hu Jintao, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev, Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and other world leade...   read more

The Militarization of Your Local Police

Local law enforcement agencies in the U.S. have increasingly become more militaristic in tactics and look in response to the wars on drugs and terror.   Writing in The Atlantic, Arthur Rizer and Joseph Hartman note “a proliferation in incidents ...   read more

New York Town, Unable to Trust Regulators, Tested Air Pollution Itself

Until recently, the air above the blue-collar town of Tonawanda, New York, was often a “toxic blue haze” featuring odors like ammonia, sulfur and other fumes. If left up to government regulators, townsfolk might still be wondering what the cause w...   read more

CNN, FOX and CNBC Push Romney as Republican Nominee

There’s something about Mitt Romney the networks can’t get enough of. Over the last five Republican presidential debates, Romney has scored far more speaking time than his rivals, according to statistics compiled by Smart Politics. He’s logged 73 ...   read more

Can Hackers Unlock Prison Doors?

Officials with the Federal Bureau of Prisons have been informed that U.S. penitentiaries could be vulnerable to cyber attacks that would help prisoners escape.   Most American prisons are operated by industrial control systems (ICS) that also ar...   read more

Bank of America and Citigroup Lead Title Race for Banks with Most Fraud Violations

Promises can be hard to keep. Just ask Citigroup and Bank of America.   The two behemoths of banking have repeatedly claimed that they would stop defrauding customers, after having been busted multiple times by the Securities and Exchange Commis...   read more

Most U.S. Jobless Don’t Receive Unemployment Benefits

A majority of jobless Americans are no longer receiving unemployment benefits because they’ve been out of work too long to qualify.   The percentage of unemployed still getting checks from the government is now down to 48%—a significant drop fro...   read more
2289 to 2304 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 142 143 144 145 146 ... 208 Next

Top Stories

2289 to 2304 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 142 143 144 145 146 ... 208 Next

Leaving Iraq, U.S. Plans to Send Troops to Kuwait, Drones to Turkey and Texas

Withdrawing from Iraq has meant new missions for U.S. combat units and military hardware.   American commanders are negotiating with Kuwait to allow about 3,500 troops to redeploy to the Gulf emirate. The country already hosts 20,000 U.S. servic...   read more

Foreclosure Crisis…Is the Worst Yet to Come?

The U.S. housing market may be in for yet another crush of foreclosures, according o the Center for Responsible Lending.   About 2.7 million households that took out mortgages between 2004 and 2008 have already lost their homes to foreclosure. N...   read more

Scalia and Thomas Agree to Hear Challenge to Health Care Law…and Then Appear at Dinner Funded by Pfizer

U.S. Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas have come under criticism for agreeing to hear the legal challenge to President Barack Obama’s healthcare law and then appearing as the featured guests of a conservative banquet that i...   read more

Federal Government Backs Away From Financial Fraud Prosecutions

The U.S. Department of Justice under President Barack Obama is prosecuting fewer banks for fraud than it did under George W. Bush.   To date, the Justice Department, during the first eleven months of fiscal year 2011, has reported 1,251 new pros...   read more

U.S. Murder Rate Drops to 47-Year Low

Homicides in the U.S. have fallen significantly over the past 20 years, based on the latest statistics from the Justice Department.   In 1993, there were 9.5 murders per 100,000 Americans. By 2010, that rate had been cut in half, down to 4.8—the...   read more

Middle-Income Neighborhoods Disappearing in U.S. as Rich and Poor Divide

The United States is experiencing an increase in income segregation, according to a new study produced by Stanford University.   Forty years ago 65% of families were lived in middle-income neighborhoods. By 2007, that percentage had fallen to 44...   read more

U.S. Set to End 20 Years of Bombing Iraq

With the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq, the United States will finally conclude the longest air war in world history.   For 20 years, beginning with the 1991 Gulf War and now ending in December, the U.S. carried out almost continuous a...   read more

Number of Uninsured (and Untreated) Americans Grows

Americans are continuing to lose health insurance coverage and to struggle paying for serious medical conditions, according to two separate surveys.   A Gallup poll found the proportion of adults with no health insurance has been above 17% for t...   read more

Obama Administration Pushes Ahead with $6 Billion Plutonium Lab in New Mexico

Despite lacking what critics say is a clear purpose or mission, the Department of Energy is planning to invest $6 billion in building a new plutonium facility at the nation’s leading scientific lab.   Los Alamos National Laboratory wants to have...   read more

Obama Too Occupied to Listen to “Occupy” Protest Song during Summit Dinner

Chosen to perform at a dinner hosted by President Barack Obama, and attended by Chinese President Hu Jintao, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev, Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and other world leade...   read more

The Militarization of Your Local Police

Local law enforcement agencies in the U.S. have increasingly become more militaristic in tactics and look in response to the wars on drugs and terror.   Writing in The Atlantic, Arthur Rizer and Joseph Hartman note “a proliferation in incidents ...   read more

New York Town, Unable to Trust Regulators, Tested Air Pollution Itself

Until recently, the air above the blue-collar town of Tonawanda, New York, was often a “toxic blue haze” featuring odors like ammonia, sulfur and other fumes. If left up to government regulators, townsfolk might still be wondering what the cause w...   read more

CNN, FOX and CNBC Push Romney as Republican Nominee

There’s something about Mitt Romney the networks can’t get enough of. Over the last five Republican presidential debates, Romney has scored far more speaking time than his rivals, according to statistics compiled by Smart Politics. He’s logged 73 ...   read more

Can Hackers Unlock Prison Doors?

Officials with the Federal Bureau of Prisons have been informed that U.S. penitentiaries could be vulnerable to cyber attacks that would help prisoners escape.   Most American prisons are operated by industrial control systems (ICS) that also ar...   read more

Bank of America and Citigroup Lead Title Race for Banks with Most Fraud Violations

Promises can be hard to keep. Just ask Citigroup and Bank of America.   The two behemoths of banking have repeatedly claimed that they would stop defrauding customers, after having been busted multiple times by the Securities and Exchange Commis...   read more

Most U.S. Jobless Don’t Receive Unemployment Benefits

A majority of jobless Americans are no longer receiving unemployment benefits because they’ve been out of work too long to qualify.   The percentage of unemployed still getting checks from the government is now down to 48%—a significant drop fro...   read more
2289 to 2304 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 142 143 144 145 146 ... 208 Next