NEO – by Gordon Duff

Though Russia doesn’t consider herself a superpower, other than the US, and just perhaps China, Russia is as close as we come. A very real problem is that Russia has a very poor understanding of America, how politics work, what Americans think and, more than anything else, Russia still thinks America is a democracy.

You see, at the same time America was tearing the Soviet Union apart, the same thing was being done to America. Neither nation survived, it wasn’t just the Soviet Union that fell to the New World Order, it was America as well. Let me explain as succinctly as possible.   Continue reading “America, the World’s Most Dangerous Dictatorship”

Pokomon Go appears to be a mere Cell Phone Game that also takes-over a Users Cell Phone Camera as they take pictures of various different Real Properties, Public or Private, as it directs other Players to physically go to that location to look for Pokomon or to find supplies needed for their search.

Thus, those who play this game are easily, and perhaps unwitting, sent to TRESPASS upon the real property of innocent Third-parties and hence under the guise, pretense, pretext or ruse of playing a Game massive numbers of people can be sent to a particular location to snoop and spy on the Property of others with their ‘Cameras running’ which gather first-hand images and information that are being sent back to the Owners / Creators of the game for their own personal, political, ideological or economic interest and use!   Continue reading “WARNING — Pokomon Go”

It looks like they once had Borders, a common Language and Culture before Hillary, the Bummer and TPTB had their way with them … bet your Bippy they want to do the very same to America!

Bored Panda

20 photos of the same places, before and after the Syrian war of the city of Aleppo. One of the oldest inhabited cities in the world.
Continue reading “Before-And-After Pics Reveal What War Did To The Largest City In Syria”

NOTICE the Drone Airplanes in the video from 1946!

ArsTechnica – by Sean Gallagher

In July of 1946, the US military conducted a pair of nuclear weapons tests on the previously inhabited island of Bikini, a coral atoll in the Marshall Islands chain. Advertised as a “defensive” test to see how ships would withstand a nuclear blast, the tests—code-named “Crossroads”—were described by the Manhattan Project team as “the most publicly advertised secret test ever conducted.”   Continue reading “Tropic Fallout: a look back at the Bikini nuclear tests, 70 years later”

This Post is hereby dedicated and directed to our dear and trusted Brother, Mark Schumacher, who has apparently failed to understand the long-accepted concepts known as Liberty of Conscience and Equality of Right as applied to frank and sincere Differences of Opinion … there being no Trespass that I can see and no Common Judge among us at this time!

Accordingly, when Mark can die for us then he can demand or compel all to yield to his Opinions … if he must pick up his Shovel and Pail, run away and refuse to play in this Sandbox then he effectively admits to his own immaturity, or insecurity (in my Humble Opinion and without Dishonor)!   Continue reading “FEAR Is The Prison Of The Mind”

Daily Mail

The idea that people can interfere with others’ thoughts and implant things in their minds was made famous by the 2010 film ‘Inception’.

But the concept is not completely science fiction, according to a group of researchers at Brown University.

The scientists have discovered a way to implant associations in people’s brains, without the subjects being aware of it happening.   Continue reading “Scientists use unnerving trick to plant false experiences into people’s brains”

Civil law. This term is used principally in the civil law; it is defined to be a right which a creditor has over a thing belonging to another, and which consists in the power to cause it to be sold, in order to be paid his claim out of the proceeds. There are two species of hypothecation, one called pledge, pignus, and, the other properly denominated hypothecation. Pledge is that species of hypothecation which is contracted by the delivery of the debtor to the creditor, of the thing hypothecated. Hypothecation, properly so called, is that which is contracted without delivery of the thing hypothecated. 2 Bell’s Com. 25, 5th ed. Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, 6th Ed. (C.&P. 1856);   Continue reading “Hypothecation”

US History

The American Crisis: PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 12, 1777

THOSE who expect to reap the blessings of freedom, must, like men, undergo the fatigues of supporting it. The event of yesterday was one of those kind of alarms which is just sufficient to rouse us to duty, without being of consequence enough to depress our fortitude. It is not a field of a few acres of ground, but a cause, that we are defending, and whether we defeat the enemy in one battle, or by degrees, the consequences will be the same.   Continue reading “The Crisis – by Thomas Paine (1777)”

SuperStation 95

A strong magnitude 5.5 earthquake has just struck in the Pacific Ocean directly off the coast of the Fukushima Nuclear Disaster Site.  The quake is reported to have done additional damage to the spent fuel pools in the damaged reactor buildings.

According to the US Geological Survey, the quake struck at 18:57 Eastern US Time about 60 miles east of the Fukushima Nuclear Disaster site. Adding to the trouble is the Depth of the quake, only about 11 miles deep. Thus, the shallow shaking shockwaves from the quake traveled quickly and very clearly struck the damaged nuclear plant with its three melted-down reactors.   Continue reading “Magnitude 5.5 Earthquake Strikes Off Fukushima – Additional Damage To Nuke Plant”

Oregon Live – by Maxine Bernstein

The federal investigation into an FBI agent’s apparent firing of gunshots at Robert “LaVoy” Finicum and the alleged FBI tampering with evidence at the scene has gone to a grand jury.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles Gorder Jr.revealed the grand jury hearing in court papers Thursday explaining the government’s desire to keep its memorandum about the inspector general’s investigation into the FBI’s handling of the Jan. 26 shooting out of the hands of defense lawyers.   Continue reading “Oregon standoff: Case of possible misconduct by FBI in LaVoy Finicum shooting now before grand jury”

Daily Caller – by Ethan Barton

Nearly two decades and $108 million worth of “disturbing” data manipulation with “serious and far ranging” effects forced a federal lab to close, a congressman revealed Thursday.

The inorganic section of the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Energy Geochemistry Laboratory in Lakewood, Colo. manipulated data on a variety of topics – including many related to the environment – from 1996 to 2014. The manipulation was caught in 2008, but continued another six years.   Continue reading “Federal Lab Forced To Close After ‘Disturbing’ Data Manipulation”

Bloomberg

Global markets buckled as Britain’s vote to leave the European Union drove the pound to the lowest in more than 30 years and European banks to their steepest losses on record.

Why Britain Voted to Leave the EU

“It’s scary, and I’ve never seen anything like it,” said James Butterfill, 41, head of research and investments at ETF Securities in London. “A lot of people were caught out, and many investors will lose a lot of money.”   Continue reading “Brexit Upends Global Markets as Stocks, Pound Plunge; Yen Soars”

Washington Free Beacon – by Elizabeth Harrington

There are now more non-military government employees who carry guns than there are U.S. Marines, according to a new report.

Open the Books, a taxpayer watchdog group, released a study Wednesday that finds domestic government agencies continue to grow their stockpiles of military-style weapons, as Democrats sat on the House floor calling for more restrictions on what guns American citizens can buy.   Continue reading “There Are Now More Bureaucrats With Guns Than U.S. Marines”