I recently spent $6,500 on a young registered Black Angus bull. I put him out with the herd but he just ate grass and wouldn’t even look at a cow. I was beginning to think I had paid more for that bull than he was worth. 

Anyhow, I had the Vet come and have a look at him. He said the bull was very healthy, but possibly just a little young, so he gave me some pills to feed him once per day.    Continue reading “My Farm Bull”

Casting Lead BulletsPreparing for SHTF

With ammo prices rising and the recent attempt to shutdown the last lead smelter in the USA by the EPA, you might want to think about making your own bullets. In this excellent three part video series by Tacticalreview he shows you the process of taking lead tire weights, that you can usually get for free, and turns them into lead ingots for use in casting and making your own bullets. So check out the video series below and hit up a few tire shops and start stockpiling some lead to making your own bullets.   Continue reading “How to Cast Bullets From Lead Tire Weights”

Supermarket chicken BrazilThe Guardian – by Felicity Lawrence

Frozen chicken breasts on sale in leading supermarkets are being pumped up with water and additives that make up nearly a fifth of the meat to the point where consumers are paying about 65p a kilo for water, the Guardian can reveal.

The legality of the industrial process, in which cheap imported chicken is “tumbled” in cement mixer-like machines, has also been called into question, but the products are available in discount ranges sold in high street retailers.   Continue reading “Food safety Supermarkets selling chicken that is nearly a fifth water”

Veterans Today – by Jim Fetzer,  Leuren Moret, and  Christopher Busby

HEAVY FIRE POWER WAS USED IN FALLUJAH IN 2004: U.S. Marines fire Nov. 11, 2004, on Fallujah with a 155 mm Howitzer.

One of the weapons originally designed for this artillery piece was a tactical nuclear weapon (that could include a neutron warhead) designed by Samuel Cohen, to be fired in eastern Europe on Soviet troops during President Ronald Reagan’s term in office. [Photo: Lance Cpl. Samantha L. Jones]   Continue reading “Scientists Insist Iraq Nuked by US”

RBS said there had been a "deliberate" surge in internet traffic aimed at its NatWest websiteBT.com

Royal Bank of Scotland said its websites were the victim of a cyber attack that left some customers unable to access their accounts in the group’s second computer crash in less than a week.

The group’s sites went down for about an hour today and yesterday evening after a “deliberate” surge in internet traffic aimed at its NatWest website, according to the lender.

It said sites were now back up and running and there was no risk to customers.   Continue reading “Cyber attack on RBS websites”

Breitbart – by AWR Hawkins

A Congressional Research Service (CRS) report shows that while gun ownership climbed from 192 million firearms in 1994 to 310 million firearms in 2009, crime fell—and fell sharply.

According to the report, the “firearm-related murder and non-negligent homicide” rate was 6.6 per 100,000 Americans in 1993. Following the exponential growth in the number of guns, that rate fell to 3.6 per 100,000 in 2000.   Continue reading “Congressional Study: Murder Rate Plummets as Gun Ownership Soars”

NORL-39 octopus logo.jpgFox News

The U.S. National Reconnaissance Office launched a new spy satellite Thursday evening on mission NROL-39 — and the new logo and tagline are quite an eye opener.

The new logo features a giant, world-dominating octopus, its sucker-covered tentacles encircling the planet while it looks on with determination, a steely glint in its enormous eye. The logo carries a five-word tagline: “Nothing is beyond our reach.”   Continue reading “‘Nothing is beyond our reach,’ National Reconnaissance Office’s new logo claims”

microwave oven 263x164 Microwave Cooking: Cancer for Convenience?Natural Society – by Paul Fassa

It’s a bit controversial, but you should know that using a microwave oven could be damaging your health. Swiss scientist Hans Hertel did independent research on microwave cooking that was once banned from publication by a court gag order demanded by an industry association. He was told to recant or be arrested. His findings were not favorable for microwave-oven users.

Hertel’s research corroborated early Soviet Russian research that led to a ban on microwave ovens, which was lifted after the “iron curtain” fell to increase microwave oven sales.   Continue reading “Microwave Cooking: Cancer for Convenience?”

SHTF Plan – by Mac Slavo

With the Holiday shopping season off to a slow start according to preliminary retail sales numbers and with the stock market sitting near all time highs, one can’t help but wonder what will happen when investors realize the economy isn’t really doing as well as we’ve been told by the experts.

The evidence suggests that we can expect devastating global economic changes in 2014 as a result of our national debt, further impoverishment of the working class, and massive new tax burdens resulting from President Obama’s health care legislation. The fundamentals, by most accounts, are indicative of an economy on the cusp of atotal detonation within the next year.   Continue reading “Stunning Chart: Today’s Stock Market is Eerily Reminiscent of 1929…”

Michelle Aldrich says her life was saved by cannabis oil, which she credits for her swift recovery from lung cancer. “I always knew it was medicine,” the lifelong marijuana advocate says, “and now I’ve proved it. I’m living proof.”SF Weekly – by Chris Roberts

First it was a cough. Then it was bronchitis. Then it was time to say goodbye to Michelle Aldrich.

The year 2011 was supposed to be a good one for the 66-year-old. That June, she and her husband, Michael, were feted with a lifetime achievement award by High Times magazine for their four decades of work on marijuana legalization. Yet something was off. She was smoking a lot, maybe more than ever.

And she couldn’t get high.   Continue reading ““Miracle” Cannabis Oil: May Treat Cancer, But Money and the Law Stand in the Way of Finding Out”

dandelionNatural News – by P. Simard

So many people can’t wait to get rid of them once they start growing on their lawn, since dandelions are often seen as unwelcome weeds. Some of you may also recall the Rolling Stones song named “Dandelion” that came out during the summer of 1967. It was possibly the last time that dandelion was truly put into the spotlight, but new hope has now emerged that could very well make it the most wanted weed around.  Continue reading “Dandelion has unsuspected health benefits such as inhibiting cancer cell growth”

FlagStory Leak – by Mikael Thalen

A Northwood, Iowa man charged with violating a city ordinance that bans raising chickens within city limits is set to face trial late next week.

Leo Hendrick, war veteran, father and owner of Spartan Arms, moved his family to Northwood five years ago in hopes to live a more healthy and self-sufficient life. Through hunting, gardening and raising small animals like chickens and rabbits, Hendrick has become almost completely food independent.   Continue reading “City Takes Veteran To Trial For Raising Backyard Chickens”