Month: October 2020

Despite Majority Opposition, Japan About to Hit 'Go' on Nuclear Restart

Despite widespread public opposition and lingering safety concerns, Japan on Tuesday will switch on a nuclear reactor for the first

US Provides Cover for Use of Banned Cluster Bombs in Yemen

UNITED NATIONS – The United States is providing a thinly-veiled cover virtually legitimizing the use of cluster bombs – banned

CENTCOM Document Reveals Coalition's Hidden Civilian Carnage in Syria and Iraq

A newly-declassified CENTCOM document – published by Airwars and international media partners for the first time on Thursday –  reveals that by early May of this year,

US Government Accused of Stifling Medical Marijuana Research

Government bias and schizophrenic marijuana policy in the U.S. are stifling research into its medical uses, charges a new paper

Former Obama official campaigns for Dem in Georgia special election

Julián Castro, the former secretary of Housing and Urban Development during the Obama administration, is campaigning for the Democratic frontrunner

Arrest of Undocumented Woman at Gynecologist Visit Sparks Outrage, Protest

The arrest and possible deportation of undocumented woman Blanca Borrego from a Texas clinic where she was receiving gynecological treatment

As Cities Give Columbus the Boot, Indigenous Peoples Day Spreads Across US

While the annual celebration of Christopher Columbus has fueled years of outrage, satire, and resistance, this year an alternative holiday

Health Experts Applaud New Guidelines for Global HIV Treatment

All HIV patients should have immediate access to treatment, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared Wednesday—a historic call that was

Americans Win Right to Challenge Inclusion on Government's Secret 'No Fly List'

A federal court on Monday ruled that a Michigan man can challenge his inclusion on the government’s “No Fly List,”

Only Three States Score Higher Than D+ in State Integrity Investigation; 11 Flunk

In November 2014, Arkansas voters approved a ballot measure that, among other reforms, barred the state’s elected officials from accepting