SHTF Plan – by Mac Slavo

After countless reports about the potential for nuclear or radioactive weapons of mass destruction being smuggled into the United States, the State of Texas is has begun to take the threat seriously.

Via Houston Public Media:

Up and down the Texas Gulf Coast, the state’s game wardens are on the water, looking for people fishing or hunting illegally.  But as we’ve reported, they sometimes come across things like illegal chemical dumpsites and more says Texas Parks and Wildlife’s Tom Harvey.
Continue reading “Nuke Threat On Southern Border: Texas Game Wardens Issued Radiation Detectors”

Reuters

A high-ranking New York City police officer who was reportedly questioned as part of a wide-ranging corruption probe took his own life on Friday, police said.

Inspector Michael Ameri was found dead inside his vehicle with an “apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound” in Babylon, a town on Long Island in New York, according to a statement from the city’s police department.   Continue reading “New York officer linked to corruption probe dies in apparent suicide”

Free Thought Project – by Claire Bernish

Bayer AG, a company that knowingly infected thousands of children with HIV, is exploring purchasing its competitor, agrichemical giant Monsanto, unidentified and unverified individuals told Bloomberg. Uniting two of the world’s most hated companies, the deal could potentially be a boon for Monsanto, whose sales have tanked significantly recently as the global market continues to scoff at its pesticide, herbicide, and genetically-engineered seed empire.   Continue reading “Mega-corp Who Knowingly Infected Thousands of Children With HIV Wants to Purchase Monsanto”

Free Thought Project – by Jay Syrmopoulos

Last year the veil of invincibility seemingly came off the secretive Rothschild banking empire, as Baron David de Rothschild and his company the Rothschild Financial Services Group were indicted by French prosecutors for allegedly defrauding British pensioners in a scheme that saw large sums of money embezzled.

Only two months ago, we reported on the Swiss branch of the Edmond de Rothschild Group announcing that they were the target of a French criminal probe “regarding a business relationship managed by a former employee.”   Continue reading “Rothschild Bank Now Under Criminal Investigation Over Missing $4 Billion in Global Corruption Probe”

Reuters

A state trooper from Massachusetts and another from New Hampshire were relieved of duty on Thursday for their involvement in the beating of a motorist that their commanders called “disturbing,” officials said.

A video obtained by Reuters and taken from a helicopter showed officers drawing their weapons at the end of a high-speed chase that began in Massachusetts and ended in New Hampshire. The video shows a man getting out of a truck and dropping to his knees and then to his stomach, before he is punched several times by at least two officers and handcuffed.   Continue reading “Troopers in ‘disturbing’ New Hampshire motorist beating suspended”

Reuters

Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, the military facility in suburban Washington where the presidential aircraft Air Force One is based, was put on lockdown on Thursday after a woman claiming to have a bomb strapped to her chest arrived at the visitor’s center.

The woman was apprehended by emergency personnel, and an explosives team determined there was no bomb.   Continue reading “Maryland’s Joint Base Andrews locked down after bomb threat”

SHTF Plan – by Mac Slavo

Every summer, Hollywood seems to release another batch of disaster and hero films full of action and end of the world scenarios.

But this film hits much closer to home.

It’s the scenario that could happen here, but Hollywood won’t dare to get behind. Nevertheless, it is coming to (select) theaters.   Continue reading ““Banned in Hollywood”: This Film Dares to Show Martial Law and Civil War Coming to America”

Reuters

U.S. immigration officials are planning a month-long series of raids in May and June to deport hundreds of Central American mothers and children found to have entered the country illegally, according to sources and an internal document seen by Reuters.

The operation would likely be the largest deportation sweep targeting immigrant families by the administration of President Barack Obama this year after a similar drive over two days in January that focused on Georgia, Texas, and North Carolina.   Continue reading “U.S. plans new wave of immigrant deportation raids”

Reuters

The United States switched on an $800 million missile shield in Romania on Thursday that it sees as vital to defend itself and Europe from so-called rogue states but the Kremlin says is aimed at blunting its own nuclear arsenal.

To the music of military bands at the remote Deveselu air base, senior U.S. and NATO officials declared operational the ballistic missile defense site, which is capable of shooting down rockets from countries such as Iran that Washington says could one day reach major European cities.   Continue reading “U.S. activates Romanian missile defense site, angering Russia”

Of Two Minds – by Charles Hughs

If we understand property taxes as a “lease from the local government for the right to gamble on another housing bubble arising,” we see “ownership” in a different light.

We’re constantly told ours is an ownership society in which owning a home is the foundation of household wealth. The concept of ownership may appear straightforward, but consider these questions:   Continue reading “Dear Homeowner: If You’re Paying $260,000 in Property Taxes Over 20 Years, What Exactly Do You “Own”?”

Reuters

A group of North Carolina public school students and their parents is asking a U.S. court to block two federal agencies from withholding education funding in a dispute over a state law mandating bathroom access according to birth sex.

The conservative Alliance Defending Freedom filed the complaint on Tuesday on behalf of a group called “North Carolinians for Privacy.” It is the fifth lawsuit to seek judicial input on the law enacted in March.   Continue reading “North Carolina students sue U.S. over stance on bathroom access”

Reuters

A former police officer caught on video as he shot dead a man fleeing a traffic stop in South Carolina last year has been charged with a federal civil rights offense that could send him to prison for life, U.S. prosecutors said on Wednesday.

Ex-North Charleston patrolman Michael Slager, 34, used excessive force and had no legal justification when he fired eight times at Walter Scott’s back on April 4, 2015, a federal grand jury found.   Continue reading “Former South Carolina officer used excessive force in fatal shooting: indictment”

Breitbart

JERUSALEM (AFP) –  US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump will visit Israel “soon”, he told an Israeli newspaper in an interview published on Wednesday.

“Yes, I will be coming soon,” Trump said without giving further details in response to a question from the Israel Hayom newspaper, a freesheet considered close to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.   Continue reading “Report: Trump Says To Visit Israel ‘Soon’”

Huffington Post – by Michael McLaughlin

Police officers beat a suspect on television following a car chase through Massachusetts and New Hampshire on Wednesday.

As news helicopters circled overhead, the driver of the pickup truck involved in the pursuit opened the driver’s door and crawled on his hands and knees in Hudson, New Hampshire. About eight officers closed in on him, some with their guns drawn, and at least two officers struck the man. One of the officers pummeled the man with repeated blows.   Continue reading “Televised Police Chase Ends With Officers Beating Suspect”

Ammoland

Behold this leading-bleeding scream piece from BMJ, formerly the British Medical Journal and formerly a respected source of scientific information for your doctor.

The journal has a history of free-wheeling condemnation of American gun owners, going so far as to advocate attacking their very culture.  Throwing fuel on their own fire, BMJ editors evidently have now resorted to an old if not exactly honorable practice of hack journalism—printing the shocking and the scandalous, even if the truth gets roughed up in the process.   Continue reading “Doctors Kill 23 Times More People Than Guns Kill”

American Intelligence Report – by Kristan T. Harris

Police departments across the United States are beginning to operate state-of-the-art crime fighting equipment that could lead to live-streaming surveillance from virtually everywhere.

Today, when police departments in Fresno, New York, and Seattle receive a high-priority call of an in-progress crime, that call is immediately filtered through a hi-tech computer system that will assign a threat score to the individual and home involved in the incident. This will contribute to local law enforcement’s assessment on how to tackle top-priority scenarios.   Continue reading “Police Surveillance System Downloads Your Cellphone Images, Sends Them to Investigators”

Freedom Outpost – by Tim Brown

Reporter Pete Santilli had his hearing in Nevada on Monday on trumped up charges he is facing for his reporting on the Bundy Ranch Siege in 2014. As he left the courtroom in chains, he cried out, “I’m a journalist. This is what they do in Communist China!”

The Law Vegas Review Journal reports:   Continue reading “Bundy Ranch Political Prisoner to Court after denying His Release: “I’m a Journalist. This is what they do in Communist China!””

Reuters

The man who proclaimed himself a “warrior for the babies” after a fatal shooting spree at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado last year was due back in court on Tuesday for the continuation of a hearing on his mental state.

During a daylong hearing last month, two state psychologists testified that their evaluation of Robert Lewis Dear, 58, found him delusional and unfit to stand trial for the Colorado Springs rampage that left three dead and nine wounded.   Continue reading “Competency hearing to resume for accused Colorado clinic gunman”

Reuters

A man accidentally shot himself in the arm while cleaning his gun but did not notice until two days later, according to Florida police.

Michael Blevins, 37, of Deltona, said he did not feel pain from the bullet, which pierced skin and muscle before exiting his body, according to an incident report from the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office.   Continue reading “Florida man accidentally shoots himself, notices two days later”

Ammoland – by Laura Burgess

Murfreesboro, Tenn. (Ammoland.com) St. George Arms, designer of the first American-made .50 BMG semi-automatic, gas-operated bullpup rifle will be exhibiting at the 2016 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits held in Louisville, Kentucky, May 20 – 22, 2016, at booth 6613.   Continue reading “St. George Arms .50 BMG Semi-Auto, Gas-Operated Bullpup Rifle Debuts at the NRA Show”