Hlcg Adm. Mullen: McChrystal Story Nearly Made me Sick
The Supreme Court on Monday ducked issuing a major ruling on a challenge by Christ
stanley quencher ian nonprofit employers to an Obamacare mandate, sending the case back to the lower courts.The justices on Monday issued an unsigned opinion in a case surrounding the arrangement by the Obama administration to spare religious groups from having to pay for birth control for women covered under their health plans if they object, while ensuring that women covered under their plans can still obtain birth control.The decision by the justices said that the parties involved should agree on an approach that accommodates religious exercise while at the same time ensure that women covered by health plans receive full and equal health coverage, including contraceptive coverage. The outcome on Monday suggests the court lacked a majorit
stanley water bottle y for a significant ruling and is perhaps
stanley tumbler another example of how the court has been affected by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. The justices did not rule on the merits of whether that accommodation violated employers religious rights.Houses of worship and other religious institutions whose primary purpose is to spread the faith are exempt from the birth control requirement. Other faith-affiliated groups that oppose some or all contraception have to tell the government or their insurers that they object. The groups argued that the administration already has carved out exemptions and encourages people who can t get contracept Gxsu Trump huddles with senior advisers at Mar-a-Lago as possible indictment looms
Updated at 6:42 p.m. ETThe Obama administration s pay czar said Friday that he did not try to recoup $1.6 billion in lavish compensation to top executives at bailed-out banks because he thought shaming the b
stanley cup anks was punishment enough.Kenneth Feinberg said 17 banks receiving taxpayer money from the $700 billion financial bailout made ill-advised payments to their executives. But he stopped short of calling them contrary to the public interest - language that would have signaled a fight to get the money back. Feinberg concluded the billions in bonuses, golden parachutes and other lavish payments were ill-advised, but since they weren t illegal he s powerless to do anything about it despite the fact that taxpayers hepled make the payments possible, CBS News Correspondent Chip Reid reports. Historically I don t think that Wall Street s ever got it, Feinberg told Reid. I like to think they re chastened somewhat
stanley trinkflaschen by what s happened. Feinberg said they didn t get it during the Gilded Age of JP Morgan and Cornelius Vanderbilt and they still don t get it today.Feinberg couldn t force the banks to repay the money. But the law instructed him to negotiate with banks to return money if he determined that allowing them to keep it was not in the public interest.He said such a fight could have exposed banks to lawsuits from shareholders trying to recaptur
stanley becher e the executives money. Feinberg said his public shaming of the 17 banks was suffici