Wall Street Wants to Kill the Agency Protecting Americans From Financial Scams
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has become a fast-moving agency that actually chalks up wins for average Americans. Republicans have sworn to kill it.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has become a fast-moving agency that actually chalks up wins for average Americans. Republicans have sworn to kill it.
As Montana's voters decide who will represent them in Congress, their choice will be heavily informed by their local newspapers. That bodes well for Republican Gianforte.
A new report by Amnesty International and research by Forensic Architecture shows U.S. personnel were regularly near where detainees say torture occurred.
Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz argues that the Second Amendment should be repealed. Novelist Mat Johnson talks about guns, “Black Panther,” and growing up biracial.
U.S. media outlets have repeatedly been caught publishing exaggerations and falsehoods about Moscow. That behavior is dangerous.
Lobbyists for Comcast and Verizon framed this week's rollback of privacy regulations as a boon for privacy. What?
Documents reveal the role of an FBI informant on the night law enforcement sprayed nonviolent protesters at Standing Rock with water and rubber bullets.
An Intercepted podcast bonus: James Risen's full interview with Jeremy Scahill.
While the media overwhelmingly focuses on Trump and Russia, Yemen is dying, covert ops are spreading, and war is raging.
The company, which helps people manage their email subscriptions, says “we can do better” after reportedly selling anonymized emails to Uber.
This is not a paywall.
By signing up, I agree to receive emails from The Intercept and to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.