Top Stories

2657 to 2672 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 165 166 167 168 169 ... 208 Next

Obama Breaks Record for Gay Appointments

It’s taken President Barack Obama less than two years to do what President Bill Clinton did in two terms in office: set a new record for the most openly gay appointments in an administration. To date, President Obama has selected more than 150 s...   read more

Child Soldier Cuts Deal with Obama Administration in Murder Case

In an attempt to avoid political embarrassment, the Obama administration has reached a deal with Guantánamo detainee Omar Khadr that will keep the former child soldier from being the subject of the government’s first military tribunal.   Khadr...   read more

Obama Administration Ignored Torture Warnings and Transferred Detainees to Iraqi Authorities

American military commanders knew of more than a thousand reports of Iraqi security forces torturing prisoners, but this didn’t stop officials in the Obama administration from deciding to hand over detainees to the Iraq government.   According...   read more

Foxes Guarding Chicken Coops (and Other Food) Leads to Disease

What’s good for business isn’t always good for public health, which sums up the problem with the food inspection system in the United States.   Making sure poultry farms or meatpacking plants are clean isn’t completely a job that is being perf...   read more

Executives Don’t Escape Financial Responsibility in Inferior Body Armor Case

Executives in charge of a controversial body-armor manufacturer have lost another ruling in court.   Last month, former CEO David Brooks and former chief operating officer Sandra Hatfield of DHB Industries were convicted of orchestrating a $19...   read more

Obama to End Aid to Pakistan’s Death Squad Army Units

In a highly unusual foreign policy move, the Obama administration has decided to sever all assistance to certain units of Pakistan’s army. The move comes in response to the airing of gruesome video footage on the Internet showing Pakistani soldier...   read more

Obama Administration Settles Native American Farm Loan Case

Native American farmers rejoiced this week as the Obama administration settled an 11-year legal battle involving allegations of discrimination by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). In addition to USDA officials conceding the government u...   read more

Two Active-Duty Soldiers Investigated for Handcuffing Journalist

Republican and Tea Party candidate Joe Miller of Alaska got some unwanted publicity when two off-duty soldiers working as bodyguards tried to arrest a journalist asking questions of the U.S. Senate candidate.   Providing security at the town-h...   read more

Banks and Hedge Funds Move into the Property Tax Collection Business

Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and other Wall Street powerhouses have moved into the tax-collecting business, setting up new entities that press struggling Americans for late property tax payments.   The Huffington Post Investigative Fund unc...   read more

JPMorgan Chase Plays Pension Funds for Suckers

Securities lending is a great deal for banks like JPMorgan Chase, but not so good for the pension funds that handled the future retirements of private and public employees.   Pension funds turned over millions of dollars to JPMorgan and other ...   read more

FDA Hints at Prosecution of Drug Executives

Because major drug companies keep breaking the law with regard to illegal marketing of pharmaceuticals, officials with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are finally thinking about prosecuting executives of the companies.   In recent years...   read more

Special Ops/DIA Prison in Afghanistan Denies Red Cross Access to Detainees

At the United States’ main detention facility at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, the Defense Intelligence Agency and Joint Special Operations Command operate a secret “black prison,” known as Tor Prison, that members of the International Committee...   read more

CVS Fined $77 Million for Selling Meth Ingredients to Criminals

When Mexico banned the sale of pseudoephedrine, the key ingredient in methamphetamine, in 2007, drug rings turned to the nation’s largest retail pharmacy chain, CVS, for help. Unlike other drug outlets, CVS allowed customers to make multiple purch...   read more

Families and Veterans Object to “Propaganda” on Arlington Headstones

Unlike headstones at the other military graveyards around the United States, those at Arlington National Cemetery now are featuring titles like “Operation New Dawn” instead of “Iraq War” to indicate in which conflict a particular soldier died. Som...   read more

Jobs Available: Foreclosure Expert, No Experience Needed

To speed up the process of evicting Americans from their homes, mortgage companies hired thousands of new employees in recent years who not only had no experience in foreclosures, but also did not know what they were doing. The percentage of bor...   read more

Nobel Prize Winner Peter Diamond Deemed “Unqualified” by Sen. Shelby

Peter Diamond, a professor of economics at MIT, is not qualified to serve on the board of governors for the Federal Reserve, says U.S. Senator Richard Shelby (R-Alabama), who is holding up the nominee’s confirmation.   Diamond is an authority on...   read more
2657 to 2672 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 165 166 167 168 169 ... 208 Next

Top Stories

2657 to 2672 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 165 166 167 168 169 ... 208 Next

Obama Breaks Record for Gay Appointments

It’s taken President Barack Obama less than two years to do what President Bill Clinton did in two terms in office: set a new record for the most openly gay appointments in an administration. To date, President Obama has selected more than 150 s...   read more

Child Soldier Cuts Deal with Obama Administration in Murder Case

In an attempt to avoid political embarrassment, the Obama administration has reached a deal with Guantánamo detainee Omar Khadr that will keep the former child soldier from being the subject of the government’s first military tribunal.   Khadr...   read more

Obama Administration Ignored Torture Warnings and Transferred Detainees to Iraqi Authorities

American military commanders knew of more than a thousand reports of Iraqi security forces torturing prisoners, but this didn’t stop officials in the Obama administration from deciding to hand over detainees to the Iraq government.   According...   read more

Foxes Guarding Chicken Coops (and Other Food) Leads to Disease

What’s good for business isn’t always good for public health, which sums up the problem with the food inspection system in the United States.   Making sure poultry farms or meatpacking plants are clean isn’t completely a job that is being perf...   read more

Executives Don’t Escape Financial Responsibility in Inferior Body Armor Case

Executives in charge of a controversial body-armor manufacturer have lost another ruling in court.   Last month, former CEO David Brooks and former chief operating officer Sandra Hatfield of DHB Industries were convicted of orchestrating a $19...   read more

Obama to End Aid to Pakistan’s Death Squad Army Units

In a highly unusual foreign policy move, the Obama administration has decided to sever all assistance to certain units of Pakistan’s army. The move comes in response to the airing of gruesome video footage on the Internet showing Pakistani soldier...   read more

Obama Administration Settles Native American Farm Loan Case

Native American farmers rejoiced this week as the Obama administration settled an 11-year legal battle involving allegations of discrimination by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). In addition to USDA officials conceding the government u...   read more

Two Active-Duty Soldiers Investigated for Handcuffing Journalist

Republican and Tea Party candidate Joe Miller of Alaska got some unwanted publicity when two off-duty soldiers working as bodyguards tried to arrest a journalist asking questions of the U.S. Senate candidate.   Providing security at the town-h...   read more

Banks and Hedge Funds Move into the Property Tax Collection Business

Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and other Wall Street powerhouses have moved into the tax-collecting business, setting up new entities that press struggling Americans for late property tax payments.   The Huffington Post Investigative Fund unc...   read more

JPMorgan Chase Plays Pension Funds for Suckers

Securities lending is a great deal for banks like JPMorgan Chase, but not so good for the pension funds that handled the future retirements of private and public employees.   Pension funds turned over millions of dollars to JPMorgan and other ...   read more

FDA Hints at Prosecution of Drug Executives

Because major drug companies keep breaking the law with regard to illegal marketing of pharmaceuticals, officials with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are finally thinking about prosecuting executives of the companies.   In recent years...   read more

Special Ops/DIA Prison in Afghanistan Denies Red Cross Access to Detainees

At the United States’ main detention facility at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, the Defense Intelligence Agency and Joint Special Operations Command operate a secret “black prison,” known as Tor Prison, that members of the International Committee...   read more

CVS Fined $77 Million for Selling Meth Ingredients to Criminals

When Mexico banned the sale of pseudoephedrine, the key ingredient in methamphetamine, in 2007, drug rings turned to the nation’s largest retail pharmacy chain, CVS, for help. Unlike other drug outlets, CVS allowed customers to make multiple purch...   read more

Families and Veterans Object to “Propaganda” on Arlington Headstones

Unlike headstones at the other military graveyards around the United States, those at Arlington National Cemetery now are featuring titles like “Operation New Dawn” instead of “Iraq War” to indicate in which conflict a particular soldier died. Som...   read more

Jobs Available: Foreclosure Expert, No Experience Needed

To speed up the process of evicting Americans from their homes, mortgage companies hired thousands of new employees in recent years who not only had no experience in foreclosures, but also did not know what they were doing. The percentage of bor...   read more

Nobel Prize Winner Peter Diamond Deemed “Unqualified” by Sen. Shelby

Peter Diamond, a professor of economics at MIT, is not qualified to serve on the board of governors for the Federal Reserve, says U.S. Senator Richard Shelby (R-Alabama), who is holding up the nominee’s confirmation.   Diamond is an authority on...   read more
2657 to 2672 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 165 166 167 168 169 ... 208 Next