

Mary F. Calvert/The Washington Times
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa P. Jackson heads to news conference at EPA headquarters to declare that greenhouse gases threaten public health and the environment.COPENHAGEN (AP) — The head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says she will take common-sense steps to regulate carbon emissions to protect the health of Americans.
EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said her newly declared power to regulate greenhouse gases will be used to complement legislation pending in Congress, not replace it.
She said that “this is not an either-or moment. It’s a both-and moment.”
EPA declared Monday that carbon emission could endanger human health and would be subject to federal regulation.
Jackson spoke Wednesday at the 192-nation climate conference in Copenhagen, which is trying to forge an international treaty to control the gases causing the Earth’s temperature to rise.
By Richard W. Rahn
Budget fantasy won't help us cope with coming fiscal disaster

By Ben Wolfgang - The Washington Times
If some Arizona lawmakers get their way, George Carlin’s “Seven Words” routine could be updated ...

By Stephen Dinan - The Washington Times
The FDA has won its two-year fight to shut down an Amish farmer who was ...

By Anthony McCartney - Associated Press
Whitney Houston was under water and apparently unconscious when she was pulled from a Beverly ...
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

Children around the globe are too often silent. From victims of abuse - physical, mental, and sexual to those whose lives embrace joy, their stories are many and need to be heard.

Join along as a George Washington University student immerses himself into Madrid’s food, arts, cultural and social life as he quests for total Spanish enculturation.

The “Silver Tsunami” created by aging Baby Boomers is hitting America. Let’s explore how we adjust to it, enjoy it and defy negative expectations about age.