WND – by Bob Unruh

It’s not like the FBI isn’t under fire already, with its unwillingness to refer charges against Hillary Clinton amid evidence she mishandled classified information and the investigation by mostly Clinton-supporting investigators into allegations the Trump campaign colluded with Russia in the 2016 election.

Now, there’s another issue: Two men acquitted of charges in the 2014 Bunkerville, Nevada, standoff involving rancher Cliven Bundy are suing the FBI and former Director James Comey for “malicious prosecution,” claiming the bureau presented false evidence in their case and destroyed exculpatory evidence.   Continue reading “Bundy Case Defendants Turn Tables On FBI, Demand Compensation”

Press TV

Eighty homeless people have died on the streets in the Portland last year, adding to more than 350 people who have disappeared while homeless in the past six years.

The number marks a 70 percent increase in homeless deaths in Multnomah County, home to Portland, local authorities said Thursday.

This is since officials first began tracking the homeless in 2011 and is in line with similar significant increase in homeless deaths in other large West Coast cities where the homelessness has surged.   Continue reading “Eighty homeless people died on Portland streets in 2016: Report”

Vigilant Citizen

Disturbing paintings depicting various scenes of ritual abuse are on display near the entrance of the Lloyd George Federal Courthouse in Las Vegas. 

The official website of the United States District Court of Nevada states:

“The cornerstone of the Amercian judicial system is the trial courts … in which witnesses testify, juries deliberate and justice is done.”
– William H. Rehnquist, Chief Justice of the United States

Continue reading “Why Are There Paintings Depicting Ritual Abuse On Display at the Las Vegas Courthouse?”

Business Insider – by Melina Robinson

In San Francisco, autonomous crime-fighting robots that are used to patrol parking lots, sports arenas, and tech company campuses are now being deployed to keep away homeless people.

The San Francisco Business Times reported last week that the San Francisco SPCA, an animal advocacy and pet adoption group, put a security robot to work outside its facilities in the gentrifying Mission neighborhood. The robot’s presence is meant to deter homeless people from setting up camps along the sidewalks.   Continue reading “Robots are being used to deter homeless people from setting up camp in San Francisco”

Sputnik

Yale Law School students have requested a US court to permit a class-action lawsuit on behalf of US Air Force veterans who responded to the catastrophic 1966 hydrogen bomb accident in the Mediterranean Sea, but who have been denied disability benefits.

The 1966 accident occurred when a USAF B-52 carrying four hydrogen bombs collided with a USAF KC-135 tanker aircraft during a mid-flight refueling exercise. The refueling nozzle hit the fuselage and caused a major explosion seen by another B-52 pilot a mile away. All four airmen on the FC-135 were killed along with three of the four airmen on board the B-52.
Continue reading “‘Absolutely Ignored’: US Veterans Who Cleaned Up H-Bomb Accident Seek Benefits”

Shanghaiist – by Alex Linder

On Saturday evening, a fire broke out inside a two-story building in Beijing’s southern Daxing District, leaving 19 people dead in a tragedy that is becoming all too familiar on the outskirts of China’s booming mega-cities.

Of the 19 killed, 17 were migrants who had come to Beijing from other parts of the country for work. The blue-collar workers lived in unsafe, cramped conditions on the second floor of a rundown building just inside the capital’s Sixth Ring Road that was a fire hazard waiting to happen.   Continue reading “After fire kills 19 in Beijing shanty town, migrant workers flee ahead of forced demolitions”

Free Thought Project – by Jay Syrmopoulos

Beijing, China – Revealing the extreme direness of the situation on the Korean Peninsula, a state-run Chinese media outlet based in a province bordering North Korea and Russia — the Jilin Daily — published a “common sense” guide for surviving a nuclear war, according to Reuters.

Although the full-page article of guidelines doesn’t specifically mention North Korea, the warning was clearly a result of the increasing tensions between a nuclear-armed DPRK, and the United States.   Continue reading “Time to Pay Attention: China Now Building Refugee Camps, Prepping for Nuclear War”

AL.com – by Conner Sheets

Alabama is allowed to destroy digital voting records created at the polls during today’s U.S. Senate election after all.

At 1:36 p.m. Monday, a Montgomery County Circuit Court judge issued an order directing Alabama election officials to preserve all digital ballot images created at polling places across the state today.   Continue reading “In final-hour order, court rules that Alabama can destroy digital voting records after all”

Omnisense

Being completely blindsided by malicious US targeting programs lead to myself researching the science of mind control. This has lead me on a path of researching whistleblowers, perusing the internet for this information, searching social media for testimonies and many other modalities of obtaining knowledge. This quest for truth has lead me to a possibility that cell phone towers have been very likely double rigged as directed energy weapons.   Continue reading “Cell Phone Towers Rigged as Mind Influencing Directed Energy Weapons”

Washington Free Beacon – by Adam Kredo

A wealthy ally of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has placed a bounty on the heads of two former U.S. military and intelligence officials as part of what U.S. officials told the Washington Free Beacon is an effort by the Turkish government to threaten and intimidate Americans who they believe are working to undermine Erdogan.

A bounty of three million Turkish lira, or nearly $800,000, was placed on the heads of former Pentagon official Michael Rubin and former top CIA official Graham Fuller for what Erdogan’s allies claim is their role in a 2016 failed coup that nearly toppled Erdogan’s ruling government.  Continue reading “Turkey Places Bounty on Two Former U.S. Government Officials”

CBS SF Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee, who became the city’s first Asian-American mayor when he was named to serve out the remainder of Gavin Newsom’s term in Jan. 2011, died suddenly early Tuesday morning, city officials said.

He was 65.

In accordance with the City Charter, Board of Supervisors President London Breed became Acting Mayor of San Francisco, effectively immediately. Breed becomes San Francisco’s first female African American mayor in any capacity.   Continue reading “San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee Dead At 65”

Orrazz

America may be the land of 2,600-square-foot starter homes with massive walk-in closets, but many people living in the United States will go to sleep tonight without a roof over their heads. Although the total homeless population has fallen almost 14% since 2010, there are still close to 550,000 people in the U.S. who don’t have a fixed abode, according to estimates from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Unsurprisingly, larger metros, such as New York and Los Angeles, had bigger populations of homeless people than smaller cities, but homelessness is a problem in towns of all sizes. In Honolulu, with a population of less than 400,000, there were nearly 5,000 homeless. Orange County, California; Nassau and Suffolk Counties on New York’s Long Island; and Monterey, California, all had homeless populations above 3,000. In Wyoming, the state with the smallest population, there are 857 homeless men and women.   Continue reading “Poverty: 10 Cities With the Most Homeless People”

NPR

Like many Portland residents, Satish and Arlene Palshikar are serious recyclers. Their house is coated with recycled bluish-white paint. They recycle their rainwater, compost their food waste and carefully separate the paper and plastic they toss out. But recently, after loading up their Prius and driving to a sorting facility, they got a shock.

“The fellow said we don’t take plastic anymore,” Satish says. “It should go in the trash.”

The facility had been shipping its plastic to China, but suddenly that was no longer possible.   Continue reading “Recycling Chaos In U.S. As China Bans ‘Foreign Waste’”

Health Nut News – by Erin Elizabeth

It is with a heavy heart that we announce that Dr Dean Lorich was found dead this afternoon, Sunday, December 10th in his Park Avenue, Upper East Side home. He was 54 years old.

Police instantly began treating the death as suicide and said the doctor was under “some personal stress,” so that was likely the reason he put a knife through his torso    (not his heart) knowing his 11-year-old daughter would find him on the floor, bleeding out.  Continue reading “81st doctor found dead in Park Avenue Home by 11 y/o daughter w/ knife in torso, cops instantly rule “suicide””

Natural News – by Frances Bloomfield

Are you doing senior citizens more harm than good by offering them your seat on the bus? According to one Oxford professor, you most definitely are. Instead of giving a seat to the elderly, you should be encouraging them to stand up and become more physically active, claimed Sir Muir Gray, clinical adviser to Public Health England.

We need to be encouraging activity as we age — not telling people to put their feet up,” said Gray. He further stated that senior citizens need to “play their part” and “understand their role” in remaining healthy and physically fit.   Continue reading “Being polite to the elderly is bad for their health; they need to stand up, walk further, carry their own packages, expert claims”

Sputnik

The Israel Air Force (IAF) has become the second air force in the world to declare the F-35 stealth fighter jet an operational aircraft – which IAF leaders claim has given Israel air superiority in the Middle East for the next 40 years.

“The announcement of the operationalization of the [F-35] Adir aircraft comes at a time in which the IAF is operating on a large scale on a number of fronts in a dynamic Middle East,” said IAF commander Brig-Gen. Amikam Norkin. He added that the F-35s will equip Israel to handle “constantly evolving and complex challenges” in the region. Continue reading “Israel Declares ‘Air Superiority’ for the Next 40 Years in Middle East”