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Oct 11 2021
News
Days After Forcing COVID Shot On Workers, Southwest Airlines Cancels 1,800 Flights
Southwest Airlines canceled at least 1,800 domestic flights and delayed another 1,500 flights over the weekend, leaving thousands of U.S. travelers stranded and scrambling to find new transportation.
The widespread operational staffing shortage, which resulted in the termination of nearly 28 percent of the airline’s scheduled flights for the day, come less than a week after the company
The FederalistMay 14 2022
News
Texas Court Reinstates Transgender ‘Child Abuse’ Policy
Texas government officials can continue to investigate parents who transition their children to the opposite sex for possible child abuse, the state’s supreme court ruled Friday.
The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) determined that child sex change surgeries constituted child abuse in August 2021 upon prompting by Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, and the DFPS
The Daily CallerApr 23 2020
Headline Roundup
26 Million Americans Seek Unemployment Benefits
A record 26 million Americans have sought unemployment benefits over the last five weeks, as the coronavirus pandemic continues.
The Labor Department reported that 4.4 million more people filed jobless claims for the first time last week, down from 5.2 million the week before.
NPR (Online News) Breitbart News Washington PostOct 07 2016
News
Disappointing 156,000 jobs added in September
Payroll growth was disappointing for a second straight month in September as employers added 156,000 jobs, which raised questions about the health of an economy that was expected to perk up from a prolonged slump in the second half of the year.
The unemployment rate rose to 5% from 4.9%, the Labor Department said Friday, as a rise in employment was more than offset by a sharp increase
USA TODAYMar 29 2021
Analysis
Amazon started a Twitter war because Jeff Bezos was pissed
Amazon has long been at odds with Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) over their criticisms of the company’s labor and business practices. But the discord reached new heights last week when Amazon aggressively went after both senators on Twitter in an unusual attack for a large corporation. With each new snarky tweet from an Amazon executive or the company’s official
VoxAug 21 2022
News
NYPD issues emergency rules for receiving a concealed carry handgun license
NEW YORK - The NYPD unveiled emergency rules Friday that will let people carry concealed weapons in the city.
The Supreme Court ruled that the "proper cause" requirement the NYPD uses to determine if someone is eligible to receive a carry permit is unconstitutional and restricts their Second Amendment right to bear arms.
As CBS2's Alecia Reid reports, in New York, carry permits
CBS News (Online)May 13 2022
News
New Biden Administration Rules for Charter Schools Spur Bipartisan Backlash
New rules proposed by the Education Department to govern a federal grant program for charter schools are drawing bipartisan backlash and angering parents, who say the Biden administration is seeking to stymie schools that have fallen out of favor with many Democrats but maintain strong support among Black and Latino families.
The proposal would add requirements to the application
New York Times (News)Dec 24 2020
Opinion
Prosperity After Brexit
Brexit came down to the wire but it arrived Thursday, with a new trade deal between the United Kingdom and European Union. Arguments about whether this is a good or bad deal for either side matter less than the fact that British voters have finally received what they voted for in 2016.
Britain left the European Union on Jan. 31 and has been in a transitional period applying most EU
Wall Street Journal (Opinion)Aug 27 2021
News
Powell’s benign view on inflation is getting pushback at the Fed, and elsewhere
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s conviction that the inflation winds whipping through the U.S. economy this year soon will subside is not universally shared.
In fact, a growing contingent within the Fed’s virtual halls is raising concern that the supply chain disruptions, burgeoning demand and shortages of labor and supplies could push the current trend well into 2022 and beyond
CNBC