connecticut

Vermont Legalizes Marijuana Today, and Makes History Along the Way

Vermont made history today as Gov. Phil Scott (R) signed a marijuana legalization bill into law. With his signature, Vermont becomes the first state to have freed the weed via the legislative process, as opposed to through a voter initiative.

Keep reading...Show less

How Many States Will Legalize Marijuana This Year? It's Not a Pretty Number

In the euphoric aftermath of marijuana legalization victories in California, Maine, Massachusetts, and Nevada last November, the marijuana blogosphere was alive with predictions about which states would be next to free the weed. Extract listed 10 states, MerryJane went big with 14 states, the Joint Blog listed five states, Leafly homed in on six states,  and Weed News went with seven states. AlterNet got into the act, too, with "The Next 5 States to Legalize Marijuana."

Keep reading...Show less

The Next 5 States to Legalize Marijuana

Four states, including California, the nation's most populous, voted to legalize marijuana on November 8. That doubles the number of legal states to eight, and more than quadruples the number of people living in legal marijuana states, bringing the number to something around 64 million.

Keep reading...Show less

Backstabbing 'Progressive' Dem Gov Unleashes a Heartless Austerity Agenda on Disabled Residents

During Connecticut's 2016 budget session, Governor Dannel Malloy waived off calls for the third tax increase in six years and doubled down on austerity. The governor proposed $569 million in cuts and layoffs for over 2,500 public sector workers. 

Keep reading...Show less

'Kill the Jew!' 12-Year-Old Boy Brutally Beaten at School in Shocking Hate-Filled Attack

New Haven, Connecticut schoolboy and his family are accusing his classmates of targeting him for physical and verbal attacks because he is Jewish, the New Haven Register reports.

Keep reading...Show less

America's Marijuana Legalization Hotbed Ain't on the West Coast, It's in ... New England?

No state east of the Mississippi has legalized marijuana, but that's very likely to change this year, and New England will be leading the way. Two of the six New England states will likely let the voters make the call in November, while the others all have legalization bills pending.

Keep reading...Show less

'Reckless Gamble': Obama's Atlantic Drilling Plan

More than 300 businesses along the East Coast sent a letter to President Obama this week urging his administration to drop the Atlantic from the proposed plan for offshore oil and gas drilling through 2022.

Keep reading...Show less

March Is a Big Month for Marijuana! 5 States Move Toward Legalization

The legislative season is in full swing at statehouses around the country, and pot is hot.  And we're not even talking about medical marijuana or decriminalization bills, we're talking about outright legalization bills.

Keep reading...Show less

One Connecticut Public School Student Was Restrained Over 700 Times in One Year

Connecticut public schools are far too quick to restrain or isolate unruly children against their will, leaving hundreds with injuries and many others with unmet educational needs, a state report released last week found.

Keep reading...Show less

8 Facts About Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. That Will Surprise You

One could make the case that the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was the most significant American of the 20th century. He is only the third American whose birthday is commemorated as a federal holiday, a distinction not even granted Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, or FDR. Although King is one of U.S. history's most widely chronicled individuals, there are aspects of his life that are less well-known than the pivotal speeches, the campaigns against Jim Crow city halls from Montgomery in 1955 to Memphis in 1968, and the dalliances that for some, tainted his personal life. King was as complex a figure as exists in our social narrative. He was a man conflicted by his commitment to a movement into which he was drafted against his better judgement and by the overwhelming demands to fulfill the role of human rights spokesperson. He was a husband and father who belonged to a people and a revolution, and the nation's most prominent advocate of nonviolence at a time when violence burned on urban streets, college campuses and in Southeast Asia.

Keep reading...Show less

Fourteen states raised the minimum wage in 2014

The federal minimum wage will not be budging from an absurdly low $7.25 an hour anytime soon—not with Republicans controlling the House and taking control of the Senate. But despite that, 2014 was a big year for minimum wage increases, many of which will be taking effect in 2015 and beyond. That's because, where congressional Republicans said no, state and local governments and voters said yes to raising the minimum wage. It's a lesson in organizing and not giving up on important legislation just because Congress isn't going to happen.

Keep reading...Show less
@2026 - AlterNet Media Inc. All Rights Reserved. - "Poynter" fonts provided by fontsempire.com.