(DIR) Back to FloodFeeds
        
       The original content of Democracy Now! Headlines appears under
       the Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 3.0 License (United States).
 (HTM) Democracy Now! (WWW)
        
       Headlines are current as of the date listed.
        
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan Soared in 2008
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Holbrooke: India, Pakistan Face Serious Threat
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Pakistan Condemns US Drone Attacks
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Obama to Sign $787 Billion Stimulus Bill in Denver
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Layoff Notices for 20,000 California Workers Sent Out
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Kansas May Be Unable to Pay State Workers
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Clinton Says Don’t Blame Him for the Economic Crisis
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Senior Military Officers Probed for Corruption in Iraq
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: US Soldier Court-Martial Begins in Germany
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Law Panel: US War on Terror Has Eroded Human Rights Worldwide
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Newsweek: Report Will Blast Bush Lawyers on Torture Opinions
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Israel Seizes 425 Acres in West Bank for New Settlement Homes
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: British Lawmakers Accuse Israel of Committing War Crimes
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Trial of Khmer Rouge Leader Begins in Cambodia
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: UN Calls for “Global Green New Deal”
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Scientists: Carbon Emissions Growing Faster than Projected
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: Two Arrested at Mountaintop Coal Removal Site in West Virginia
 (TXT) Democracy Now! Headlines February 17, 2009: 400 Stations to Shut Off Analog Signals Tonight