Before It’s News – by Danser

Some Common Uses of Colloidal Silver

Natural health practitioners have for years recommended taking one tablespoon daily, for four days, to establish a level, then one teaspoon daily for maintenance (proportional to body weight for children).After six weeks, a pause of several weeks has also been recommended by some natural healing artsdoctors. Also, colloidal silver can be applied directly to cuts, scrapes, and open sores, or on a bandage for warts. It can be applied on eczema, itches, acne or bug bites. To purify water, add one tablespoonper gallon, shake well and wait six minutes. Mixed this way, it’s tasteless. It is not an allopathic poison.   Continue reading “Incredibly Creative Uses For Colloidal Silver”

An NYPD logo is pictured on wall above makeshift memorial at the site where two police officers were shot in the head in the Brooklyn borough of New York, December 22, 2014.   REUTERS/Carlo AllegriReuters

Two more men have been arrested for threatening New York police, including one who called the precinct headquarters of two officers killed as they sat in their patrol car and asked to speak to one of them, a police spokesman said on Thursday.

The arrests bring to six the number of those detained for threats against the New York Police Department since officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu were shot on Saturday by a gunman seeking revenge for unarmed black men killed by police.   Continue reading “Two more NY men arrested for threatening police after officers killed”

Reuters

Three people were injured, two of them critically, after a gunman opened fire in a Chicago train station on Wednesday night, police said.

The suspect, who has not been apprehended, pulled a gun during an argument with a 41-year-old woman on the mezzanine level of a south side Chicago train station around 10:45 p.m. local time, Chicago Police news affairs officer Amina Greer said.   Continue reading “Three injured, two critically, in shooting at Chicago train station”

Jon Rappoport

The case is Michelle Richard v. Whole Foods, as reported by the Food Navigator (12/5/14) and other press outlets.

The plaintiff’s claim? Whole Foods advertised and sold Blue Diamond Almond Breeze Almond Milk and Vanilla Almond Milk with non-GMO labels, when these products hadn’t been verified as such by the Non-GMO Project.   Continue reading “Whole Foods sued for false non-GMO labeling”

Truth Revolt – by Sarah Fisher

A passenger at La Guardia Airport “flipped out” because airline employees wished him a Merry Christmas.

The man was waiting to board American Airlines Flight 1140 to Dallas when a cheerful gate agent began welcoming everyone with the Yuletide greeting while checking boarding passes.

Continue reading “Angry Passenger Tossed Off Plane after Crew Wishes Him ‘Merry Christmas’”

policestateGlobal Research – by Prof. James F. Tracy

As mass shooting events become ever more common throughout the United States, so too has their direct coordination under Department of Justice and FBI auspices.

Aggressively publicized by a submissive corporate news media, the continuum of such incidents over weeks, months and years is an essential socialization process for the public’s unquestioning acceptance of the growing police state.   Continue reading “The Militarization of Police in America: “Active Shooter Training” Now Massively Federalized”

Rice farmerHealth Impact News – by konfrontasi.com

Excerpts:

After 15 years of testing and implementation across the planet, “Green Super Rice,” developed jointly by the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences and the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines, is beginning to have a dramatic effect on crop yields.

The target is to have 20 million hectares under cultivation in another 10 years, according to Dr Jauhar Ali, a senior scientist and regional project coordinator at IRRI in Los Banos, south of Manila. It is in effect another green revolution with the potential to make an enormous contribution to feeding the world’s poor in Asia and Africa.   Continue reading “Rice Revolution: Non-GMO Super Strains Developed in Asia Require no Pesticides and Can Feed the World’s Poor”

The canal wiill have 172-mile (278-km) canal, due to be operational by around 2020,Merco Press

Nicaragua on Monday announced the start of work on shipping canal designed to rival Panama’s waterway and revamp the economy of the second-poorest country in the Americas, behind Haiti. The project is backed by China as it attempts to reshape its influence in the region currently dominated by the United States, which built the Panama Canal a century ago.   Continue reading “Groundbreaking of Chinese-backed Nicaragua Canal commences”

breathCollective Evolution – by Arjun Walia

“Children today are sicker than they were a generation ago. From childhood cancers to autism, birth defects and asthma, a wide range of childhood diseases and disorders are on the rise. Our assessment of the latest science leaves little room for doubt; pesticides are one key driver of this sobering trend.” October 2012 report by Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA) (source)(source)   Continue reading “What parents need to know about Monsanto: “By 2025 one in two children will be autistic””

Kevin shooting5AmmoLand – by Kevin Reese

It’s no secret, stories of home invasions, car-jackings, armed robberies, murders, assaults and even domestic violence are never-ending and the themes, eerily familiar, as they relate to the victims’ inability to protect themselves in one way or another; often, for gun owners, the shortcoming is a lack of effective defensive training. This New Year’s I challenge you to a resolution. Rather than focusing as much as we do on weight, finances or the next big promotion, try something a bit more selfless and impactful. Resolve to be the protector… and survivor your family may come to depend upon. For me, this critical commitment was launched by Rob Pincus’ life-changing Combat Focus Shooting program; in fact, consider CFS, as it relates to ending threats and surviving, the gift that keeps on giving.   Continue reading “Combat Focus Shooting: Resolve to Protect… and Survive”

Wikimedia CommonsNew Zeal – by Renee Nal

The beloved holiday classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” was released in 1946. Despite it’s popularity today, it did not fare well at the box office, and it was given poor reviews by cynical movie critics at the time.

Jimmy Stewart said that out of all the movies he had made, “It’s a Wonderful Life” was his favorite. The Director, Frank Capra described the film’s theme as “the individual’s belief in himself” and that he made it “to combat a modern trend toward atheism.”   Continue reading “The amazing story behind the Christmas classic, ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’”

IMRA

GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — The Ministry of the Interior in the Gaza Strip is deploying security forces on the border with Israel and intensifying its presence in the area in order to prevent Palestinians from crossing into Israel from Gaza without documents.

The statement from the interior ministry comes just hours after a gunfight
erupted on the border with Israeli soldiers, after the Israeli military said
a soldier was wounded by sniper fire from inside Gaza.   Continue reading “Gaza security forces deployed at border to prevent illegal crossing”

Ben Swann – by Zach McAuliffe

A man in Sycamore, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati, has been told to remove his zombie-themed Nativity scene from his front yard after complaints were filed against him.

Jasen Dixon is the owner of the zombie Nativity scene as well as a haunted house, called 13 Rooms of Doom, in Indiana.  Rather than go out and buy a whole new Nativity scene, Dixon told FOX 19 he wanted to work with what he had available.  The end result is a manger complete with a pale baby Jesus and skeletal Mary, Joseph, and wise men.   Continue reading “An Ohio homeowner has been told to remove his unconventional Nativity scene”

UPI – by Ed Adamczyk

WASHINGTON, Dec. 24 (UPI) — Alan Gross, freed from imprisonment in Cuba last week, will receive a $3.2 million settlement from a U.S. government agency.

Gross, 65, was arrested in 2009 and accused of subversion for providing communications equipment to Cuba’s Jewish population. He was working for a company contracted to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). The U.S. government maintained he was helping Cubans access the Internet in a democracy-building effort.   Continue reading “Freed from Cuban prison, Alan Gross to get $3.2 million settlement”

Reuters

A gunman opened fire inside a New Orleans-area mall still busy with shoppers on Christmas eve, killing a man before he was taken into custody, police said on Wednesday.

Gary François, 25, fired multiple shots at 24-year-old James Vaughn, who had just made a purchase at a Foot Locker store inside the Oakwood Center in Gretna on Wednesday afternoon, the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office said in a statement.   Continue reading “Shooter kills man in Louisiana mall on Christmas Eve”

Reuters

A shooting at a downtown St. Louis convenience store on Wednesday left one person dead and three others badly wounded, police said.

Police said no suspects were in custody some five hours after the shooting, which was reported shortly after 5:30 p.m. local time.

A St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department spokeswoman, Schron Jackson, said she was unable to provide any details about the victims, any assailants or circumstances of the shooting.   Continue reading “Four shot, one fatally, in downtown St. Louis”

Yahoo News – by Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK (AP) — Police have increased security at some station houses and made at least four arrests over threats made since the deadly shootings of two officers last weekend, and the mayor vowed Wednesday to protect officers.

Emergency Services Unit officers were providing additional protection at two Brooklyn precincts, where they were stationed starting Tuesday. Police said Wednesday they were remaining vigilant while investigating the origin of the threats, which they didn’t detail.   Continue reading “Threats to NYPD prompt arrests, precinct security”

Two men were shot and killed and two others were injuredWFAA 8 News – by Monica Hernandez

DENTON — Two people were shot and killed and two others were wounded when gunfire erupted during a home invasion at a Denton student apartment complex Sunday evening.

“When we arrived, the officers determined that there was five individuals involved in some sort of altercation,” said police spokesman, Officer Orlando Hinojosa.   Continue reading “Police: Victims may have killed suspects in Denton shooting”

Image source: Businessweek.comOff the Grid News – by Daniel Jennings

Gun controllers suffered a major defeat in a US Court of Appeals in mid-December when a three-judge panel struck down a federal law that barred persons with a history of mental illness from gun ownership.

The 3-0 decision could impact the gun rights of millions of Americans – particularly if the ruling’s logic is applied to other gun restrictions.   Continue reading “This New Court Ruling Could Impact The Gun Rights Of Millions”

Anti-Media – by John Vibes

This week, Obama announced a renewed push for tighter internet regulations in congress, citing the need for additional cyber-security in light of the recent hack on Sony.

The White House has been taking this opportunity to initiate strategies that had already been planed for years. Many internet freedom activists actually expected for these types of suggestions to be coming out of the White House after any type of internet incident or irregularity.   Continue reading “Obama Urges Congress To Renew Push For “CISPA-style” Internet Laws After Sony Hack”