The US Coast Guard is poised to change some of its language and policies surrounding the display of hate symbols like swastikas and nooses as well as how personnel report hate incidents.
A United States Coast Guard operation offloaded nearly 50,000 pounds of cocaine at Fort Lauderdale in Florida.
The U.S. Coast Guard in new materials reviewed by USA TODAY called swastikas and nooses "potentially divisive symbols." ...
A Washington Post report that the U.S. Coast Guard will no longer classify the swastika as a hate symbol under a new policy ...
Mississippi State women's basketball blew an early 15-point lead to lose at Texas Tech, dropping its first game of the season ...
If you find yourself in Hortonville or anywhere within driving distance, make the pilgrimage to Black Otter Supper Club. Come hungry, both for exceptional prime rib and for an authentic experience ...
The shift will now classify the symbols as "potentially divisive.” Displaying them had previously been called “a potential ...
A new servicewide policy recasts swastikas and nooses as merely “politically divisive” and deletes protections for ...
The Armed Forces branch said it will review an upcoming policy change on swastikas and nooses after a Washington Post exposé ...
The U.S. Coast Guard is poised to change some of its language and policies surrounding the display of hate symbols like ...
The military service, which falls under the Department of Homeland Security, has drafted a new policy that classifies such ...