Telesur

At the start of this year, an estimated 40,000 tons of salmon and some 8,000 tons of sardines washed up the Chilean coast as a result of El Niño.

Heaps of dead whales, salmon and sardines blamed on the El Niño freak weather phenomenon have clogged Chile’s Pacific beaches in recent months.
Continue reading “Thousands of Tons of Dead Creatures Hit Chile’s Beaches”

The Anti-Media – by Claire Bernish

Ontario, Canada — If you woke to find someone in your four-year-old daughter’s bedroom who refused to identify themselves to you or explain their presence in your house, what would you do? In the case of Cheryl Yurkowski — who lives in Ontario, Canada — you attempt to defend your child, your home, and yourself.

Cheryl’s ordeal began after having an argument with her husband and his mother at a restaurant. Tired from the disagreement and wishing to avoid further conflict with the intoxicated man, she left separately to go home and go to bed. Not realizing his wife had already arrived at home and was asleep, Cheryl’s husband began yelling on a phone call — but his raised voice concerned neighbors, who then summoned the Kawartha Lakes Police.  Continue reading “This Woman Woke Up To An Unidentified Cop Creepily Sitting on Her 4-Year-Old’s Bed”

Natural News – by Sarah Landers

According to a heartbreaking report by All Self Sustained, an elderly man was threatened with a knife last month by a man and a woman in a home invasion – the pair were looking to steal food.

71-year-old Luis Rosales answered the door of his New Jersey apartment in the afternoon and was confronted by a man and woman who were armed with an eight-inch kitchen knife. The pair forced themselves inside, threatening Rosales with death if he made too much noise.   Continue reading “As the economic collapse accelerates, home invasions for FOOD start appearing in the press… hungry people raiding homes incite NJ chaos”

WLFI 18 News

OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — Caterpillar Inc. says it will close five more factories — including an Oxford, Mississippi, plant — as the Peoria, Illinois-based heavy equipment maker reacts to slowing demand for construction and mining equipment worldwide by cutting capacity.

The Oxford plant, with 240 employees stamping metal hose couplings, will continue work into 2017, then shift some production to Caterpillar’s plant in Menominee, Michigan, and some work to outside suppliers.   Continue reading “Caterpillar closing 5 more plants amid low demand”

USA Today

(NEWSER) – It’s what every young child desperately saves his or her allowance for: the chance to go to the supermarket and buy a delicious Hershey’s … blueberry barbecue beef bar. Yes, that’s a meat bar, though “we aren’t going out there saying it is a meat bar,” a Hershey’s marketing VP tells the Wall Street Journal. “We’re saying it is a Krave bar.”

For any non-dried-meat aficionados, Krave currently exists, it being a beef jerky line Hershey acquired in 2015 that turns out jazzed-up flavors like pineapple orange. The chocolate king’s line of Krave protein bars, which debut in August, are geared toward the health-minded. “It is a very low-calorie, high-protein choice,” Shane Chambers, the GM of Krave Pure Foods, told Food Business News last month.   Continue reading “Hershey’s is going to start selling meat bars”

Natural News – by J.D. Heyes

There is a little-known fact about one of the top treatments for cancer, and it is this: It is so deadly that not even warfare has managed to top its body count.

Since 2000, according to the tracking site Pharma Death Clock, more than 16.3 million people have died from chemotherapy – more than wars, terrorism and suicide, combined.

“While drug companies profit billions, people are dying by the millions,” the site notes.   Continue reading “Chemotherapy kills far more Americans than all acts of war, suicide and terrorism combined”

New York Times

SAN FRANCISCO — Intel, the world’s largest maker of semiconductors, said on Tuesday that it was laying off 12,000 people, about 11 percent of its work force, as it continues to reel from a long downturn in global demand for personal computers.

The company’s chief executive, Brian Krzanich, announced the layoffs as part of a larger corporate restructuring, which will result in a $1.2 billion charge. Intel also reported lower-than-expected first-quarter earnings and reduced its projected revenue for the year.  Continue reading “Intel to Slash 12,000 Jobs as PC Demand Plummets”

Phys Org – by Matt Shipman

Composite metal foams (CMFs) are tough enough to turn an armor-piercing bullet into dust on impact. Given that these foams are also lighter than metal plating, the material has obvious implications for creating new types of body and vehicle armor – and that’s just the beginning of its potential uses.

Afsaneh Rabiei, a professor of mechanical and at NC State, has spent years developing CMFs and investigating their unusual properties. The video seen here shows a composite armor made out of her composite metal foams. The bullet in the video is a 7.62 x 63 millimeter M2 armor piercing projectile, which was fired according to the standard testing procedures established by the National Institute of Justice (NIJ). And the results were dramatic.   Continue reading “Metal foam obliterates bullets – and that’s just the beginning”

Indy Star – by Michael Anthony Adams

The militia movement is growing. See what drives members to join and train with one of Indiana’s largest militias.

David Nantz carefully pushed aside a grouping of bare branches at the tree line of Echo Lake Park, then stood still. He listened for movement, playing the role of the enemy attempting to infiltrate a base that had been forged by his men.   Continue reading “Well Regulated: Inside an Indiana Militia”

Free Thought Project – by Matt Agorist

In a devasting blow to its megabank creditors, Puerto Rico’s Legislature approved a bill on Wednesday that suspended the US territory’s debt payments until at least January 2017.

Since 2000, Wall Street has conned the Puerto Rican government into a massive black hole of debt. After Puerto Rico handed them control of their federal bond sales, Wall Street executives tacked on hundreds of millions in fees for their “services,” greasing the skids for the island’s financial dismay.   Continue reading “Puerto Rico Deals Horrendous Blow to Wall Street — Suspends All Payments On Public Debt”

Star Telegram

In another sign of the fallout of low energy prices, BNSF Railway says it has furloughed about about 4,600 of its employees nationwide over the past several months.

The furloughs amount to about 10 percent of the Fort Worth-based company’s workforce, matching the layoffs made by the railroad in 2007 and 2008, according to statements made by Matthew Rose, executive chairman of BNSF at an energy conference in Billings, Montana.
Continue reading “BNSF furloughs have hit 4,600 employees nationwide”

Activist Post – by James Corbett

The Panama Papers are out and the Panama Papers propaganda is out right along with it. So why does this new mega-leak seemingly only expose those in the State Department crosshairs or expendable others and not a single prominent American politician or businessman? And what does this have to do with the OECD’s plan for a global taxation grid?   Continue reading “Panama Papers: Are Strategic Leaks A New Form Of Geopolitical Warfare?”

Free Thought Project – by Jay Syrmopoulos

A German historian has unearthed an extremely troubling formal relationship between the Associated Press (AP) and the Nazi party in the 1930’s, in which propaganda produced by the Hitler regime was supplied to American newspapers in exchange for continued access to Germany

After the Nazi party came to power in 1933, they began a campaign of strict image control, which encompassed the banning of almost all international media within Germany. By 1935 most media outlets were forced to close their German bureaus after persistent persecution due to their continued employment of Jews within their agencies.   Continue reading “World’s Largest News Agency Worked with Hitler to Feed Americans Nazi Propaganda”

Mad World News – by Robert Rich

While marking trees to be harvested for the first time in 30 years, a forest ranger stumbled across quite the odd sight. Although he didn’t see it until he was just 12 feet away, he found an eerie cabin hidden in the woods – and that’s when he discovered the creepy mystery inside.

Mark Andre, now an Environmental Services director in Arcata, California, was marking trees in the forest when he looked up and saw something out of place. “I didn’t see it until I was 12 feet from it,” he said. “It’s in the perfect out-of-the-way spot where it wouldn’t be detected.”   Continue reading “Forest Ranger Spots Hidden Cabin In Woods, Finds Creepy Mystery Inside”

Juan Matus

You’re sick. Your nose is stuffy. Your body aches, You’re sweaty, coughing, sneezing and you don’t have enough energy to get out of bed.

It’s not the flu according to Dr. Len Horowitz. His opinion is not based on conspiracy theory but on conspiracy fact. Over the past 10 years, Horowitz has become America’s most controversial medical authority. A university-trained medical researcher, Horowitz, 48, charges that elements of the United States government are conspiring with major pharmaceutical companies to make large segments of the population sick.   Continue reading “Chemtrail Flu: Have You Got It Yet?”

St. Louis Dispatch – by Robert Patrick

Marty L. Rainey, a former Gasconade County law enforcement officer facing state and federal charges involving a series of assaults on women, was found dead in his cell in the Ste. Genevieve County jail Saturday morning.

Ste. Genevieve County Sheriff’s Major Jason Schott said the Missouri State Highway Patrol was investigating an “in-custody death,” which is standard procedure. “At this point, it appears to be a suicide, but the investigation is ongoing,” he said.   Continue reading “Former Gasconade County deputy accused of sex crimes found dead in jail”

Gov’t Slaves

(AMTV)  Hundreds of emergency workers from four countries took part in Europe’s largest disaster drill that came weeks before the recent terror attack.

Seven Tube carriages have been partially buried under thousands of tonnes of rubble that poured into a station when a building collapsed.   Continue reading “42 Actual Graphic Photos Of The DRILL Before The Recent Terror Attack At Brussels”

Washington’s Blog – by Carl Herman

Forward

Tell Ambassador Noah Bryson Mamet He Can’t Deny Americans Our Passports

Written in 1789, year of the French Revolution that beheaded the king and queen of France, the American Bill of Rights was accepted as law of the new land called the United States on December 15, 1791.   Much has happened since then. Both the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence were inspired by Oliver Cromwell’s Glorious Revolution and the Magna Carta. In 1215, the Magna Carta was issued by King John and established the precedent that no monarch was above the law. The rule of law has been a core concept of Anglo-Saxon civilization ever since. Colonists born in British America felt entitled to the same rights as Englishmen in England.   Continue reading “The Updated Bill of Rights”