A.M. Links: U.S. Sends Troops to Iraq, Supreme Court Considers Facebook Threats, Alabama Decriminalizes Blow Jobs

  • Annnd we’re back: Hundreds
    of U.S.
    troops have been sent to Iraq
     “to provide support and
    security for U.S. personnel and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad,”
    President Obama announced late Monday. Secretary of State Secretary
    of State John Kerry said that drone strikes on militant targets are
    under consideration. 
  • The U.S.
    Supreme Court is mulling
     whether threats made online must
    actually be serious in order for the threat-maker to go to jail,
    rather than merely perceived as seriously threatening by a
    reasonable person.
  • The Food and Drug Administration has decided to tackle the
    least of our nutritional worries by issuing
    new salt guidelines
     for food manufacturers. 
  • Doctors without borders without sense? A group of 129 medical
    professionals from 31 countries is urging
    the World Health Organization
     to more strictly regulate
    e-cigarettes.
  • The Alabama
    Court of Criminal Appeals has
     overturned part of a state
    sexual misconduct law under which oral and anal sex were
    technically banned.
  • A
    transgender rights group is
    pressuring South Carolina to allow
    16-year-old Chase Culpepper to retake his driver’s license photo
    while wearing makeup. “The Department of Motor Vehicles should not
    have forced me to remove my makeup simply because my appearance
    does not meet their expectations of what a boy should look like,”
    Culpepper said. 

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