Earlier this year the US government seized MegaUpload founder Kim Dotcom's assets after his website was accused of facilitating copyright infringement. The New Zealander's home was raided, his website taken down and he was taken into custody. However, New Zealand courts have ruled that the raid was illegal and search warrants were too vague. RT's Web Producer, Andrew Blake, brings us more on Dotcom's case.
Egg Implant Allows Post-Menopause Pregnancy
Older women can now get pregnant after menopause with the help of a method of test-tube fertilization that bypasses one of the seemingly absolute barriers of biology.
With this technique, doctors remove eggs from a healthy donor, fertilize them in a lab dish with sperm and then implant them in the infertile woman's womb.
Egg Implant Allows Post-Menopause Pregnancy
The scoop is dead and deserves to be
I was just asked about CNN’s, Fox’s, and others’ screw-ups with the announcement of the Supreme Court health decision in the context of process journalism. I disagreed with the characterization.
The scoop is dead and deserves to be
The Cost of US Police Brutality During Protests
Major US cities have paid $55 million for police criminality against activists.
The Cost of US Police Brutality During Protests
Julian Assange of WikiLeaks gets extradition letter from British police
Julian Assange, whose WikiLeaks website angered American officials by releasing official U.S. documents, on Thursday received a letter demanding his presence at a London police station the following day to begin the process of extradition.
Julian Assange of WikiLeaks gets extradition letter from British police
A New Zealand judge has ruled that the search warrants against Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom were invalid, and that data shouldn't have been handed to the FBI.
Dotcom search warrants ruled illegalA New Zealand judge has ruled that the search warrants against Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom were invalid, and that data shouldn’t have been handed to the FBI.
Obamacare's Insurance Rule Is Upheld by Supreme Court
The Supreme Court, in a landmark ruling Thursday, upheld PresidentObama's health care overhaul, including the controversial requirement that most Americans have health insurance.
Obamacare’s Insurance Rule Is Upheld by Supreme Court
Future My Love is a unique love story challenging our collective and personal utopias in search of freedom.
Future My Love
Who is Bankrolling the Fight Against "Obamacare?"
The lead plaintiff in the U.S. Supreme Court challenge to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the National Federation for Independent Business (NFIB), is a highly partisan front group masquerading as the "nation's leading small business association," critics say. The nation's highest court is expected to rule on the federal health care law Thursday.
Who is Bankrolling the Fight Against “Obamacare?”
With spending from interest groups up 1,100 percent since the last presidential campaign, the emerging fact checking industry has been busy.