Author: GrayRider
Activist Post – by Peter A. Kirby
Today’s chemtrail spraying operations necessarily require a massive fleet of specialized jumbo jet airliners operating covertly. The volume and frequency of chemtrail reports from all over the world, the author’s own observations and the massive task of controlling Earth’s weather in the fashion of the New Manhattan Project suggest that these planes number over 1000. If you do not know what the New Manhattan Project is, please see the author’s previous article “A History of the New Manhattan Project.” Continue reading “Death from Above: the New Manhattan Project Chemtrail Fleet”
NEWPORT – Axial Seamount, an active underwater volcano located about 300 miles off the coast of Oregon and Washington, appears to be erupting.
Two scientists, including one from OSU’s Hatfield Marine Science Center had forecast that such an event would take place there in 2015.
Geologists Bill Chadwick of Oregon State University and Scott Nooner of the University of North Carolina Wilmington made their forecast last September during a public lecture and followed it up with blog posts and a reiteration of their forecast just last week at a scientific workshop.
Continue reading “Undersea Volcano Appears to be Erupting off the Coast of Oregon and Washington”
Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday proposed granting new enforcement powers to local agencies in California’s ongoing drought, including penalties of as much as $10,000 for the most egregious violations of conservation orders.
Brown said he will also propose legislation to speed environmental permitting for local water supply projects, though not – significantly – for dams. Continue reading “Jerry Brown urges fines of up to $10,000 for water waste in California drought”
Gov. Jerry Brown, touting what he called a “high bar” on climate change, on Wednesday issued an ambitious new greenhouse gas reduction target for the state.
The target, contained in an executive order and expected to be folded into pending legislation, seeks to reduce emissions in California 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030.
The goal is in line with one adopted by the European Union last year, and proponents characterized it as the most aggressive in North America. Continue reading “Jerry Brown issues a more ambitious greenhouse gas reduction target”
TODAY I decide to water my garden. As I turn on the hose in the driveway, I look over at my car and decide it needs washing. As I start toward the garage, I notice mail on the porch table that I brought up from the mail box earlier.
I lay my car keys on the table, put the junk mail in the garbage can under the table, and notice that the can is full. So, I decide to put the bills back on the table and take out the garbage first. Continue reading “At the end of the day”
Curry Coastal Pilot – by Jayati Ramakrishnan
Passing through the north end of Brookings, Oregon, it’s hard not to notice Ira Tozer. He’s the one waving at cars as they go past — with a big, beaming smile on his face.
Parked at the corner of Highway 101 and Parkview Drive, Tozer sits on a bright blue scooter adorned with ribbons and flags, grinning and waving excitedly at passersby. He tips his hat at some, and throws a salute to all police officers.
Tozer, 72, became a community icon about 15 years ago, when he started walking up and down Highway 101. Though hip troubles prevent him from walking and waving like he used to, Tozer continues to spread positive energy. Continue reading “The waving, riding man”
Four years after losing her job to outsourcing, bus driver Stephanie Hicks will get a second chance to challenge the Central Point School District’s decision to lay off its own employees and hire a private contractor.
The Oregon Court of Appeals ruled April 22 that the Medford-area school district violated state law by using an inadequate and improper process for evaluating potential cost savings. The ruling overturns a decision by the Jackson County Circuit Court and orders the lower court to reconsider the case “consistent with this opinion.” Continue reading “Laid-off school bus driver wins Oregon court ruling over outsourcing”
In recent days, Columbia University’s School of Journalism announced its 2015 Pulitzer Prize winners, and the list contained many of the usual suspects.
The New York Times picked up a couple more awards for a political corruption story, Ebola coverage and international reportage; The Wall Street Journal won for an investigative hit piece against healthcare providers who manipulate Medicare; the Los Angeles Times won for reporting how the state’s extreme drought has affected the “human condition”; a smaller South Carolina paper won a prize for reporting violence against women; the St. Louis Post-Dispatch picked up a Pulitzer for photography during the Ferguson riots; some guy won the Poetry Pulitzer for revealing the “scope of African-American experience” through poems that drew from “slave narratives.” Continue reading “Why does Washington Post, USA Today, NPR and the AP get its ‘science’ talking points from a convicted felon who went to prison for Medicaid fraud?”
An elderly couple were on a cruse to Greenville, North Carolina when they stopped down in Lawrenceville, Virginia …
The elderly man said that he noticed the car was starting to run a little hot and rough in the last few miles but they had not known why until they stopped at McMuck’s. Continue reading “When is it time to turn in their drivers license?”
Russia increased its gold holdings by one million ounces in March, bringing its total reserves to nearly 40 million ounces or 1,238 metric tonnes. The Russian one million ounce gold purchase is a large one even by Russian standards as in recent years they have consistently been buying roughly 300,000 ounces per month.
It followed a two month break from the gold market which had led to erroneous speculation that Russia was not interested in increasing its gold reserves any further. Continue reading “Currency Wars Back As Russia Buys One Million Ounces of Gold in March”
The Daily Sheeple – by Lilly Dane
Two years ago, Linda McLean, a teacher at Pine Eagle Charter School in Halfway, Oregon, was sitting at her desk when a man dressed in a black hoodie and goggles suddenly burst into her classroom.
The man pointed a gun at McLean’s face and pulled the trigger.
McLean heard gunfire and smelled smoke, and felt her heart racing. Continue reading “Oregon Teacher Sues School District for Trauma Caused by Active Shooter Drill”
Legal and illegal immigrants will hit a record high of 51 million in just eight years and eventually account for an astounding 82 percent of all population growth in America, according to new U.S. Census figures.
A report from the Center for Immigration Studies that analyzed the statistics said that by 2023, one in seven U.S. residents will be an immigrant, rising to one in five by 2060 when the immigrant population totals 78 million. Continue reading “Census: Record 51 million immigrants in 8 years, will account for 82% of U.S. growth”
Register Gaurd – by Jack Moran
A Coquille pastor and his wife may be on the run from federal authorities who want to see them imprisoned in a $1.2 million tax evasion case.
Two federal judges today issued arrest warrants for Ronald and Dorothea Joling after they failed to show up for scheduled court appearances in Eugene.
Attorneys for the couple told Chief U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken that they had no information regarding the Jolings’ whereabouts. Aiken had been scheduled to make sentencing decisions in the couple’s case. Instead, she issued warrants for their arrests. Continue reading “Arrest warrants issued for Coquille pastor and wife convicted of tax evasion”
In ancient Israel, it came to pass that a trader by the name of Abraham Com did take unto himself a healthy young wife by the name of Dottie. Dot Com was a comely woman, large of breast, broad of shoulder and long of leg. Indeed, she was often called Amazon Dot Com.
And she said unto Abraham, her husband, “Why dost thou travel so far from town to town with thy goods when thou canst trade without ever leaving thy tent?”
Abraham did look at her as though she were several saddle bags short of a camel load, but simply said, “How, dear?” Dot replied, “I will place drums in all the towns and drums in between to send messages and sale can be made on the drums and delivery made by Uriah’s Pony Stable (UPS).” Continue reading “How Computers Came to Pass”