A man enters Madrid's Bourse May 30, 2012. REUTERS/Sergio Perez

World slowdown fears hit shares and commodities

LONDON - The uncertain worldwide growth outlook flushed investors out of riskier assets, sending shares and commodities lower, despite signs that a drive by Europe's leaders to tackle the region's debt crisis was gathering momentum.  Full Article 

Indonesia's Java island hit by 6.1 magnitude quake 7:46am EDT

JAKARTA - An earthquake of magnitude 6.1 struck off the Sukabumi district in West Java in the western part of Indonesia, 24 km (15 miles) below the surface of the sea, the state meteorology agency said on Monday.

An honour guard unfurls the Chinese national flag as it is raised in front of the giant portrait of former Chinese chairman Mao Zedong on Beijing's Tiananmen Square June 4, 2012. REUTERS/David Gray

Debt risks curb China stimulus firepower

BEIJING - Investors counting on China to repeat its huge 2008-09 stimulus to backstop global economic growth are failing to recognize Beijing's limited scope to deliver another major spending surge.  Full Article 

Ernest Montgomery, the only African American Calera city council member, poses for a picture at the New Mount Moriah Missionary Baptist Church in Calera, Alabama May 15, 2012. REUTERS/Marvin Gentry

From Alabama, a challenge to voting rights

CALERA, Alabama - Shelby County is challenging a redistricting ruling by the Justice Department in a case that could come before the Supreme Court and pose the biggest challenge in years to the Voting Rights Act of 1965.  Full Article 

Somali patients wait for medicine at a Turkish run hospital in Howlwadaag district, southern Mogadishu, May 20, 2012. REUTERS/Feisal Omar

Turkey tries out soft power in Somalia

MOGADISHU - Across the Somali capital, a bombed-out shell after two decades of fighting, residents say Turkey has done more in eight months to shatter the perception that Mogadishu is a no-go zone than the international community has achieved in twenty years.  Full Article 

Iran's chief negotiator Saeed Jalili addresses a news conference after a meeting in Baghdad, May 24, 2012. REUTERS/Thaier al-Sudani

IAEA, Iran to hold nuclear talks on June 8

VIENNA - The U.N. atomic watchdog and Iran will hold a new round of talks this week to try to reach an agreement to resume a long-stalled investigation into suspected nuclear weapons research in the Islamic Republic, IAEA chief Yukiya Amano said on Monday.  Full Article 

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission logo adorns an office door at the SEC headquarters in Washington, June 24, 2011. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

SEC investigator previously pushed to carry gun

WASHINGTON - The lead internal investigator at the Securities and Exchange Commission, who is on leave after employees complained he wanted to carry a gun at work, was previously denied a gun permit when he worked for another government agency.  Full Article 

Four-year-old Will Rouillard receives craniosacral therapy, following surgery on his back to remove recurring cysts caused by chronic cystic hygroma, in Rochester, New Hampshire April 16, 2010. Will's parents worry that without the health insurance overhaul he would certainly be refused health insurance as an adult due to his pre-existing condition.     REUTERS/Brian Snyder

Americans with health woes eye court ruling

WASHINGTON - As the Supreme Court prepares to rule on whether to overturn the Obama administration's signature healthcare law, Americans with pre-existing medical conditions worry that they may lose access to insurance coverage.  Full Article | Factbox 

Lawrence Summers

Breaking the negative feedback loop

With the past week’s dismal U.S. jobs data, signs of increasing financial strain in Europe, and discouraging news from China, the proposition that the global economy is returning to a path of healthy growth looks highly implausible. But there is a path out of the vicious cycle.  Commentary 

David Rohde

An Afghan town, an American dream and the folly of for-profit war

When I arrived in Lashkar Gah, I was instantly gripped by "Little America" and a sweeping but failed U.S. Cold War effort to ease the destitution there. I desperately hoped America could do better. But over the next eight years, an epic tragedy unfolded.   Commentary 

David Cay Johnston

How corporate socialism destroys

Nationwide state and local subsidies for corporations totaled more than $70 billion in 2010. In a country of 311 million, that's $900 taken on average from each family of four in 2010. A mall project in upstate New York shows just how foolish this system is.   Commentary 

Nancy Scola

Why cell phones are ripe for spam texts in 2012

Special interest groups are planning to text your phone to influence your vote in the 2012 election. According to various laws, this should be illegal. But as always, there are loopholes.  Commentary 

Jack Shafer

Drug panics, bath salts, and face-eating zombies

To assist the press in its coverage I offer this brief bath-salts primer. I don't want to overstate its worth—any skeptical journalist with access to the scientific literature could produce such a primer in an afternoon. That the press hasn't bothered to produce such a primer speaks volumes about how serious they are in covering the drug beat.  Full Article 

Chrystia Freeland

Should government lead, follow - or reinvent?

Instead of arguing over whether to shrink the state or expand it, or whether money is better spent by the private sector or by the state, maybe we should be focusing more on reinventing the state for the 21st century.  Commentary 

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