GOProud leader: Hayes' appeal to include them in CPAC 'the right thing'

The executive director of conservative LGBT group GOProud told The Raw Story on Saturday that MSNBC host Chris Hayes had contacted the group before calling for their inclusion in a leading conservative conference, but that the situation had not changed.

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Harborside Heath Center general manager: Medical marijuana advocates are like rebels in 'Star Wars'

Medical marijuana activists gathered at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C. on Saturday to talk about resistance to federal law. It's clear that these activists view themselves as performing civil disobedience, risking jail time, legal fees and stigma. One activist and medical marijuana dispensary worker even compared the movement to the rebels in "Star Wars," saying that finding legal weaknesses in the federal case is like "finding the weakness in the Death Star."

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Consumer protection bureau asks for public comment on predatory private student lenders

On Thursday Obama's consumer protection bureau announced it would begin "gathering information" on how to reorganize private student loan repayment.

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10 things the FBI won't fire you for

A year-in-review email recently circulated to employees at the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) that leaked online this week (PDF) reveals a series of disciplinary actions taken against agents during 2012.

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Liberal Super PAC: Death to Super PACs!

A liberal group hopes to convince voters in California to rebuke the Supreme Court's controversial Citizens United ruling, which paved the way for the outside campaign spending groups known as Super PACs. There is only one problem, the group is itself a Super PAC.

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Washington state bill would forgive all minor marijuana convictions

Washington state Rep. Joe Fitzgibbon (D) has a novel idea: now that marijuana is legal in the state, he wants people convicted of minor, state-level marijuana offenses to get a clean slate.

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Students denied financial aid after drug convictions often never go to college

Young people convicted of drug charges are at higher risk of never attending college at all, thanks in part to a law blocking federal financial aid following a drug conviction, according to research published by the National Bureau of Economic Research this month.

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Call for tolerance training in Minneapolis schools after spat becomes 300-person brawl

A Minnesota-based Muslim group called for authorities to intervene in a Minneapolis high school with mediation and tolerance training, days following cafeteria spat between two girls that erupted into a 300-person brawl largely divided along racial lines.

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Proposed bill would make full benefits to same sex military spouses a federal law

Two Democratic congressmen have co-sponsored H.R. 683, the Military Spouses Equal Treatment Act (MSET) of 2013, a bill that enshrine into law recent changes in Defense Department policy toward same sex spouses of service members. Bill author Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA) and co-sponsor Rep. Mark Pocan (D-WI) introduced the legislation on Thursday, which would include the benefits named under Defense Secretary Leon Pannetta's policy, announced Monday, and additional benefits not included under current policy.

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Judge dismisses City of Oakland lawsuit defending nation's largest pot shop

A U.S. district court judge ruled Thursday that the City of Oakland had no standing to sue the federal government in defense of Harborside Health Center, the nation's largest medical marijuana dispensary, which is now facing property seizure proceedings.

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Increasing numbers of colleges cover health care for transgender students

Last week, the student newspaper the Brown Daily Herald reported that Brown University would be eliminating a discriminatory rider in its student health insurance plan that banned transgender-specific health care coverage. The plan will now cover up to $50,000 worth of treatment, including sex reassignment surgery, hormone therapies and other treatments.

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New York bill finally expands legal definition of 'rape' to include any forced sexual contact

Advocates are praising a newly revised version of New York's "Rape is Rape" bill that classifies any vaginal contact as "rape," bringing the legal definition of that form of sexual assault in line with the standards for forced anal and oral contact.

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Veterans Administration again accused of covering up the causes of 'Gulf War Syndrome'

The federal Institute of Medicine to much fanfare recently reported that "preliminary data" suggest that veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq suffer from the same disease -- commonly called Gulf War Syndrome or Illness -- that has plagued veterans of Desert Storm for over two decades. Meanwhile, an alarming but widely-ignored report by a federal panel of high-level scientists charged with advising the government on the disease accused the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs of covering up the true nature and cause of a profound systemic illness that medical scientists have traced to wartime exposures -- including neurotoxins, depleted uranium, and microbes, among others.

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