Summit News – by Paul Joseph Watson

Democratic Mayor Sylvester Turner has signed off on a new study that will see city employees visit randomly selected homes in Houston to collect blood samples for COVID-19 antibody testing.

The study is being conducted by the Houston Health Department in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Household members will be asked to answer a survey and give a blood sample. For some households, all members of the household will be asked to participate. Continue reading “Mayor Launches Study That Will Collect Blood Samples From Randomly Selected Houston Homes”

CapRadio – by Sammy Caiola

Dr. Aimee Sisson, Public Health Officer and Public Health Director for Placer County, said Wednesday that she will leave her post later this month.

The announcement comes shortly after the Placer County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to terminate the local health emergency they passed regarding COVID-19 on March 3.  Continue reading “Placer County Health Officer Resigns After Board Terminates COVID-19 Emergency Declaration”

Antonius Aquinas

Traditional Catholic Bishop Richard Williamson’s latest missive should be a wake- up call for those who naively believe that the worst is behind for the US and Western economies after the March financial sell off and the long-anticipated implosion of the bubble economy.  His Excellency asserts that the US and much of the world are on a financial precipice: Continue reading “A Warning of Economic Collapse”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

What happens when your state or city has massive unfunded pension liabilities, no direct access to the Fed’s money printer and can’t tax your state any further because you’re driving people out in droves?

You take on more debt, using whatever you can think of as collateral.
Continue reading “California Cities Using Their Streets As Collateral To Pay Down Pension Liabilities With Debt”

Mint Press News – by Raul Diego

Alleged Russian interference in the 2020 presidential election is headline news, once again, as a Ukrainian lawmaker is charged by the Trump administration “in a sweeping plot to sow distrust in the American political process,” reports the Associated Press. Microsoft also made claims that it detected “hacking attempts targeting U.S. political campaigns, parties and consultants” by agents from Russia, China, and Iran. In a September 10 blog post, Microsoft’s Tom Burt, Corporate Vice President of Customer Security & Trust, listed three groups from each region that Microsoft “observed” carrying out their cyber operations. Continue reading “How a Senate Inquiry Revealed the Israeli Surveillance Industry’s Role in Orchestrating Russiagate”

OPB

A Clackamas County sheriff’s deputy was placed on administrative leave Saturday after a video was posted online of the deputy claiming anti-fascist activists had been starting fires in the area.

The patrol deputy’s statements in the video are in direct conflict with efforts by law enforcement to dispel false rumors that antifa is responsible for wildfires burning in Clackamas County.  Continue reading “Clackamas County deputy placed on leave after sharing antifa wildfire rumors in online video”

OP-V

We will try to make this as brief and easy as possible. We know that many, many people will hate this report. They will do anything within their power to trash it and make it disappear from the internet. Regardless, the truth must be revealed because the world will be a better place because of it. Continue reading “COVID-19: The Hegelian Dialectic is the Supreme and Only Rule on the World’s Geopolitical Chess Board”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

Just days after Amazon published a scathing letter slamming President Trump for not allowing the American multinational tech company to get the $10 billion Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) contract, which instead was awarded to Microsoft, Amazon’s board has just appointed former NSA head and retired general of the US Army Keith B. Alexander as a directorContinue reading “NSA Chief Who Oversaw Sweeping Domestic Phone Surveillance Joins Amazon Board As Director”

Singularity Hub – by Jason Dorrier

A famous image of inventor Nikola Tesla shows him casually sitting on a chair, legs crossed, taking notes—oblivious to the profusion of artificial lightning rending the air meters away. By then, Tesla and raw electricity were like an old married couple.

The experiments, conducted in Colorado, led to one of Tesla’s most audacious proposals: To power the world without wires. He made headlines with plans for a “world wireless system,” and won funding from JP Morgan to build the first of several huge transmission towers.  Continue reading “New Zealand Is About to Test Long-Range Wireless Power Transmission”

Forbes – by David Hambling

I recently described how a swarm of drones flew in a restricted area at Palo Verde Nuclear Power Plant on two successive nights last September. A new cache of documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act (FoIA) reveals how 24 nuclear sites suffered at least 57 drone incursions from 2015 to 2019 – and Palo Verde itself was overflown again in December, despite new security measures. Continue reading “Dozens More Mystery Drone Incursions Over U.S. Nuclear Power Plants Revealed”

Forbes – by Thomas Brewster

Whether it’s an invisible Aston Martin or an exploding pen, whenever James Bond needs a high-tech edge, he heads right for Q and his secretive MI6 lab. In the real world, American agents often rely on a less clandestine, but far better-funded group. Armed with 8,000 employees and an annual budget of between $1 billion and $2 billion of taxpayers’ money, Mitre Corp., a government-linked Skunk Works, has been making bleeding-edge breakthroughs for U.S. agencies for more than six decades. With its HQ housed in four towers atop a hill in McLean, Virginia, Mitre’s research centers employ some of the nation’s leading computer scientists and engineers to build digital tools for America’s top military, security and intelligence organizations. Continue reading “Inside America’s Secretive $2 Billion Research Hub – Collecting Fingerprints From Facebook, Hacking Smartwatches And Fighting Covid-19”

AL.com

Spanish Fort police say a man who fired up to 50 rounds at the Bass Pro Shops in Spanish Fort Saturday had eight firearms and was wearing body armor at the time he was taken into custody.

Spanish Fort Police Chief John Barber said Robert Smith, 38, of Grove Hill, was the man who fired the shots Saturday at around 12:30 p.m. A woman was also taken into custody at the time but it is not believed she was assisting the man. Continue reading “Spanish Fort shooting suspect had multiple guns, body armor”