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Republican Presidential Candidates Battle to Outdo Each Other in Opposing Women’s Issues

If you watched the Republican presidential debate on Thursday, you learned one thing: The GOP is a man’s world. The last time a majority of women voted for a Republican presidential candidate was 1988…seven elections ago. The 10 candidates on the stage seemingly tried to outdo each other on taking away women’s abortion rights. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker repeated his view that abortion bans should have no exception for the health of the mother.   read more

FBI is Still Hiding 58-Year-Old Documents about Eleanor Roosevelt, who is Now the Favorite to Appear on the $10 Bill

Roosevelt was a particular target of former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, who believed she was a Communist sympathizer. He amassed a 3,000-page file on Roosevelt, most of which has been released. However there are still 12 pages of the file, dealing with Roosevelt’s trips to the Soviet Union in 1957 and 1958, which the FBI has not made available.   read more

Republican Debates Ignore Homegrown Right-Wing Extremist Attacks, Focusing Instead on Lesser Domestic Threat of Islamic Terrorism

Not once did the moderators ask the candidates about plots by white supremacists and other right-wing threats. The recent shooting of parishioners of a predominantly black Charleston church never came up. In the 10 years that followed Sept. 11, right-wing extremists carried out an average of 337 attacks annually in the U.S., with 254 people killed, according to ThinkProgress. American Muslims, on the other hand, are responsible for 20 plots in 13 years that resulted in 50 deaths.   read more

SEC Votes to Require Public Companies to Reveal Pay Ratio between CEO and Employees

The SEC had dragged its heels because of stiff opposition from corporations. It’s possible that some executives don’t want to reveal the ratio between their pay and those working under them because the gaps in many cases will be huge. One think tank reported that CEOs were paid 300 times more than their employees in 2013. The ratio 50 years ago was only 20 to 1. “We have middle-class Americans who have gone years without seeing a pay raise, while CEO pay is soaring,” said Sen. Robert Menendez   read more

Homeland Security Joins Civil Libertarians in Seeing Privacy Threat from Cybersecurity Bill

Civil liberties groups have said the CISA bill could weaken privacy protections for Americans. DHS reported that CISA would allow tech companies to share the data they’d collected on their users with the government. “CISA’s vague language and expansive definitions will give the government new ways to collect and use the personal information and communications of innocent Americans, all without a warrant or any review by an independent court or overseer,” wrote ACLU's Nathaniel Turner.   read more

Mitch McConnell Had Voted to Legalize Fetal Tissue Donations before Leading Charge to Defund Planned Parenthood

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) led Republicans this week in an effort to defund Planned Parenthood for a practice he supported and voted for in Congress. In 1993, Congress approved the National Institutes of Health Revitalization Act, which authorized the donating of fetal tissue for research, including samples from legal abortion procedures. McConnell, along with other Republicans, voted for that bill and others that allowed fetal tissue research.   read more

FDA Issues its First-Ever Cybersecurity Alert

In what may be a first for the agency, the FDA has issued a cybersecurity alert to hospitals using computer-controlled pumps to administer drugs to patients. Certain Hospira pumps contain vulnerabilities that could allow a hacker to adjust the dosage of a drug. With their communications modules used for updating, "you can make the pump do whatever you like,” Rios said. A hacker would need no physical access to the pump.   read more

Federal Court Rules 2-1 that Florida can Punish Doctors for Talking to Patients about Guns

Public health experts urge doctors to ask about gun ownership, in part so they may recommend safety measures if children are in the home or if there is someone mentally ill present. Doctors also ask about household chemicals and swimming pools, but those don’t have the National Rifle Association making contributions to politicians on their behalf.   read more

Because Homeland Security Allows Chemical Plants to Self-Report Toxic Releases, 44% are Wrong

A study from the Government Accountability Office has found that hundreds of chemical plants are incorrectly reporting the “Distance of Concern” which defines how large an area may be subject to toxic effects of a chemical release. The GAO report estimated that more than 2,700 of the estimated 6,400 facilities, or 44%, misreported the Distance of Concern.   read more

U.S. Psychologists Group, Linked to Bush-Era Torture Program, May Prohibit Role in Future Interrogations

The new standard could get in the way of the Obama administration’s interrogations of detainees that still involve the use of psychologists, such as the High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group, which has been sent overseas to interrogate terror suspects or those associated with them. The administration also uses psychologists at the American military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, where they oversee voluntary interrogations requested by a detainee.   read more

Facebook Expands Political Footprint, Eyeing Major Role in 2016 Presidential Campaigns

"Most users really have no idea how much information Facebook collects about them or how Facebook is able to infer from even a post...what their political orientation might be,” said EPIC's Rotenberg. “Facebook knows everything you’ve said, everything you’ve posted, everything you’ve clicked on.” Said Rand Paul strategist Vincent Harris: “Think about how powerful this is. It’s a fundraising tool [and] a persuasion tool... Facebook is actually everything. And this is what scares people.”   read more

More Problems for the Trillion-Dollar F-35: It’s not Good at Close Combat

A test pilot who flew an F-35 said 17 dogfights demonstrated that the plane could not compete with the F-16, which was introduced in the 1970s and is the plane the F-35 is supposed to replace. The F-35 program, which will cost more than $1 trillion if fully produced, has had other serious problems exposed: vulnerability to lightning strikes, and an inaccurate and unstable software system   read more

Justice Dept. Refuses to Release---or even Talk About—Secret 12-Year-Old Memo on Cybersecurity

The Senate may be about to take up cybersecurity legislation and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) wants to make sure his colleagues put the subject in the proper context. To do that, Wyden wants a memo produced by the George W. Bush administration on the subject to be made public. So far, Wyden has been unsuccessful in getting the memo released before the Senate considers the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA).   read more

Obama Disgusts Human Rights Advocates by Calling Ethiopian Government “Democratically Elected”

Obama’s own State Dept. reported that U.S. diplomats were prevented from observing the elections, saying it was “troubled” that opposition party observers were kept out. And Obama’s national security advisor, Susan E. Rice, told reporters that the result of the election was not credible. “The prime minister of Ethiopia was just elected with 100 percent of the vote, which I think suggests...some concern for the integrity of the electoral process,” she said.   read more

Federal Judge Blasts Obama Administration for Refusing to Release Detained Children and Mothers despite 1997 Court Settlement

Judge Gee ruled that children had been held in “widespread deplorable conditions” in Border Patrol stations after being caught, and that the government had “wholly failed” to provide the “safe and sanitary” conditions. “I think this spells the beginning of the end for the Obama administration’s immigrant family detention policy,” said human rights lawyer Peter Schey. “A policy that just targets mothers with children is not rational and it’s inhumane.”   read more

North Carolina’s Messy Voting Laws Restrict Voting and Support Gerrymandering

At the start of this decade, North Carolina’s voting laws were a model of inclusion. The state allowed 17 days of early voting, teenagers who were approaching voting age could pre-register to vote, there was same-day registration and voters could even cast ballots outside their assigned precinct. The state’s Department of Motor Vehicles was also required to contact drivers about being registered when they reported an address change.   read more
913 to 928 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 56 57 58 59 60 ... 208 Next

Top Stories

913 to 928 of about 3314 News
Prev 1 ... 56 57 58 59 60 ... 208 Next

Republican Presidential Candidates Battle to Outdo Each Other in Opposing Women’s Issues

If you watched the Republican presidential debate on Thursday, you learned one thing: The GOP is a man’s world. The last time a majority of women voted for a Republican presidential candidate was 1988…seven elections ago. The 10 candidates on the stage seemingly tried to outdo each other on taking away women’s abortion rights. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker repeated his view that abortion bans should have no exception for the health of the mother.   read more

FBI is Still Hiding 58-Year-Old Documents about Eleanor Roosevelt, who is Now the Favorite to Appear on the $10 Bill

Roosevelt was a particular target of former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, who believed she was a Communist sympathizer. He amassed a 3,000-page file on Roosevelt, most of which has been released. However there are still 12 pages of the file, dealing with Roosevelt’s trips to the Soviet Union in 1957 and 1958, which the FBI has not made available.   read more

Republican Debates Ignore Homegrown Right-Wing Extremist Attacks, Focusing Instead on Lesser Domestic Threat of Islamic Terrorism

Not once did the moderators ask the candidates about plots by white supremacists and other right-wing threats. The recent shooting of parishioners of a predominantly black Charleston church never came up. In the 10 years that followed Sept. 11, right-wing extremists carried out an average of 337 attacks annually in the U.S., with 254 people killed, according to ThinkProgress. American Muslims, on the other hand, are responsible for 20 plots in 13 years that resulted in 50 deaths.   read more

SEC Votes to Require Public Companies to Reveal Pay Ratio between CEO and Employees

The SEC had dragged its heels because of stiff opposition from corporations. It’s possible that some executives don’t want to reveal the ratio between their pay and those working under them because the gaps in many cases will be huge. One think tank reported that CEOs were paid 300 times more than their employees in 2013. The ratio 50 years ago was only 20 to 1. “We have middle-class Americans who have gone years without seeing a pay raise, while CEO pay is soaring,” said Sen. Robert Menendez   read more

Homeland Security Joins Civil Libertarians in Seeing Privacy Threat from Cybersecurity Bill

Civil liberties groups have said the CISA bill could weaken privacy protections for Americans. DHS reported that CISA would allow tech companies to share the data they’d collected on their users with the government. “CISA’s vague language and expansive definitions will give the government new ways to collect and use the personal information and communications of innocent Americans, all without a warrant or any review by an independent court or overseer,” wrote ACLU's Nathaniel Turner.   read more

Mitch McConnell Had Voted to Legalize Fetal Tissue Donations before Leading Charge to Defund Planned Parenthood

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) led Republicans this week in an effort to defund Planned Parenthood for a practice he supported and voted for in Congress. In 1993, Congress approved the National Institutes of Health Revitalization Act, which authorized the donating of fetal tissue for research, including samples from legal abortion procedures. McConnell, along with other Republicans, voted for that bill and others that allowed fetal tissue research.   read more

FDA Issues its First-Ever Cybersecurity Alert

In what may be a first for the agency, the FDA has issued a cybersecurity alert to hospitals using computer-controlled pumps to administer drugs to patients. Certain Hospira pumps contain vulnerabilities that could allow a hacker to adjust the dosage of a drug. With their communications modules used for updating, "you can make the pump do whatever you like,” Rios said. A hacker would need no physical access to the pump.   read more

Federal Court Rules 2-1 that Florida can Punish Doctors for Talking to Patients about Guns

Public health experts urge doctors to ask about gun ownership, in part so they may recommend safety measures if children are in the home or if there is someone mentally ill present. Doctors also ask about household chemicals and swimming pools, but those don’t have the National Rifle Association making contributions to politicians on their behalf.   read more

Because Homeland Security Allows Chemical Plants to Self-Report Toxic Releases, 44% are Wrong

A study from the Government Accountability Office has found that hundreds of chemical plants are incorrectly reporting the “Distance of Concern” which defines how large an area may be subject to toxic effects of a chemical release. The GAO report estimated that more than 2,700 of the estimated 6,400 facilities, or 44%, misreported the Distance of Concern.   read more

U.S. Psychologists Group, Linked to Bush-Era Torture Program, May Prohibit Role in Future Interrogations

The new standard could get in the way of the Obama administration’s interrogations of detainees that still involve the use of psychologists, such as the High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group, which has been sent overseas to interrogate terror suspects or those associated with them. The administration also uses psychologists at the American military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, where they oversee voluntary interrogations requested by a detainee.   read more

Facebook Expands Political Footprint, Eyeing Major Role in 2016 Presidential Campaigns

"Most users really have no idea how much information Facebook collects about them or how Facebook is able to infer from even a post...what their political orientation might be,” said EPIC's Rotenberg. “Facebook knows everything you’ve said, everything you’ve posted, everything you’ve clicked on.” Said Rand Paul strategist Vincent Harris: “Think about how powerful this is. It’s a fundraising tool [and] a persuasion tool... Facebook is actually everything. And this is what scares people.”   read more

More Problems for the Trillion-Dollar F-35: It’s not Good at Close Combat

A test pilot who flew an F-35 said 17 dogfights demonstrated that the plane could not compete with the F-16, which was introduced in the 1970s and is the plane the F-35 is supposed to replace. The F-35 program, which will cost more than $1 trillion if fully produced, has had other serious problems exposed: vulnerability to lightning strikes, and an inaccurate and unstable software system   read more

Justice Dept. Refuses to Release---or even Talk About—Secret 12-Year-Old Memo on Cybersecurity

The Senate may be about to take up cybersecurity legislation and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) wants to make sure his colleagues put the subject in the proper context. To do that, Wyden wants a memo produced by the George W. Bush administration on the subject to be made public. So far, Wyden has been unsuccessful in getting the memo released before the Senate considers the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA).   read more

Obama Disgusts Human Rights Advocates by Calling Ethiopian Government “Democratically Elected”

Obama’s own State Dept. reported that U.S. diplomats were prevented from observing the elections, saying it was “troubled” that opposition party observers were kept out. And Obama’s national security advisor, Susan E. Rice, told reporters that the result of the election was not credible. “The prime minister of Ethiopia was just elected with 100 percent of the vote, which I think suggests...some concern for the integrity of the electoral process,” she said.   read more

Federal Judge Blasts Obama Administration for Refusing to Release Detained Children and Mothers despite 1997 Court Settlement

Judge Gee ruled that children had been held in “widespread deplorable conditions” in Border Patrol stations after being caught, and that the government had “wholly failed” to provide the “safe and sanitary” conditions. “I think this spells the beginning of the end for the Obama administration’s immigrant family detention policy,” said human rights lawyer Peter Schey. “A policy that just targets mothers with children is not rational and it’s inhumane.”   read more

North Carolina’s Messy Voting Laws Restrict Voting and Support Gerrymandering

At the start of this decade, North Carolina’s voting laws were a model of inclusion. The state allowed 17 days of early voting, teenagers who were approaching voting age could pre-register to vote, there was same-day registration and voters could even cast ballots outside their assigned precinct. The state’s Department of Motor Vehicles was also required to contact drivers about being registered when they reported an address change.   read more
913 to 928 of about 3314 News
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