Business Insider – by Christopher Bodeen, AP

New small explosions rocked a disaster zone in the Chinese port of Tianjin on Saturday, as authorities pulled out an additional survivor and began evacuating the area to clean up chemical contamination nearly three days after massive explosions touched off the crisis.

Angry relatives of missing firefighters stormed a government news conference to demand any information on their loved ones, who have not been found since a fire and rapid succession of blasts late Wednesday at a warehouse for hazardous chemicals.   Continue reading “More explosions have rocked a disaster zone in China”

Dollar Vigilante – by Paul Seymour

For all I know, this simple sharing of the truth may put me on a terrorist watch list, if I wasn’t already one of millions on such a list. Recently I’ve been noticing a series of events which make me realize that the financial system end game, which has been brewing for a very long time, may be close at hand.   Continue reading “The US Government Has Gone Full Rogue”

Cop Block

This is an update to the story I brought to you earlier in the week about the Alabama officer that was knocked out after a fight with a suspect and the bystanders took pictures instead of helping.  Fed Up Citizens Taunt and Take Pictures of Injured Officer.

According to a report by New York Daily News, the still unidentified officer has stated that he did not shoot the suspect out of fear of being the next vilified cop making national headlines for shooting an unarmed black man.  It is reported that the suspect exited his car and moved in on the officer, sucker punched him; knocking him to the ground, before gaining control of his pistol and striking him in the head numerous times.   Continue reading “Update: Pistol Whipped Cop Was Afraid of Making Headlines”

The Hill – by Julian Hattem

A former CIA officer who contested the spy agency’s intelligence about Iraq and authored controversial emails about the 2012 attack on Benghazi, Libya, has passed away.

Tyler Drumheller died on Aug. 2 from complications from pancreatic cancer, The Washington Post reported on Thursday evening. He was 63 years old.

After a 26-year career with the CIA that included time as the head of covert actions in Europe, Drumheller became a prominent critic of some of the agency’s intelligence in the run-up to the Iraq War.   Continue reading “Author of Benghazi memos sent to Clinton dies after cancer battle”

Cop Block

The United States Postal Service has been compiling a database of every Americans’ mail records into a dragnet being made available to law enforcement agencies on command.

Information buried in the United States Postal Service’s annual audit, gleaned last year, revealed that the USPS’ ‘mail covers‘ surveillance program has grown exponentially over the past several years.   Continue reading “Unredacted Postal Service Audit Reveals Extent Of Mail Surveillance”

The Guardian – by Paul Lewis

Political dissidents in Cuba will not be permitted to attend the ceremonial opening of the US embassy in Havana on Friday, a move that signals the lengths Washington is prepared to go to nurture its emerging rapprochement with the communist state.

The US secretary of state, John Kerry, is to raise the flag over the building for the first time in 54 years. He conceded that Cuban dissidents, who for decades have been at the heart of US foreign policy toward Cuba, have not been invited.   Continue reading “Cuban dissidents not invited to US embassy ceremonial opening in Havana”

True Activist – by John Vibes

Researchers have recently developed a visor that can actually block facial recognition technology. The new glasses called “Privacy Visor,” can trick facial recognition technology, and prevent cameras from tracing your identity.

The development took place at Japan’s National Institute of Informatics where researchers placed infrared LED’s inside of glasses so they would trick facial recognition cameras.   Continue reading “New Glasses Will Trick Facial Recognition Technology And Protect Your Identity”

The Guardian – by Murithi Mutiga

A senior CNN executive has flown to Nairobi to apologise for coverage calling the country a “hotbed of terror” ahead of Barack Obama’s visit in July.

Many Kenyans were outraged by the report, which suggested Obama was likely to be attacked during his historic visit to the land of his father’s birth.    Continue reading “CNN executive flies to Kenya to apologise for ‘hotbed of terror’ claim”

Health Wyze – by C. Thomas Corriher

This topic has been more requested than any that we have previously written about, for it catalogs the most potent of the pain-relieving herbs which are still legal at most locations. The information about these natural medicines has been sparsely distributed, but there is an underground movement of freedom fighters who are beginning to share it. This article is an attempt to unify this critically important information, and to make it easily accessible for those needing serious pain relief.   Continue reading “The Potent and Natural Painkillers That Are Still Legal”

Health Wyze – by C. Thomas Corriher

Shingles (herpes zoster) is a secondary outbreak of the chicken pox virus. It can happen decades after the original infection. It is usually less severe the second time. It may occur for people who have had either chicken pox or the chicken pox vaccination. It is often caused by the vaccine, and people who get the vaccine strain years after a vaccination get a much worse version of shingles. It is an opportunistic virus that will strike whenever the immune system is sufficiently impaired. Those who have never contracted chicken pox are at risk of contracting it from people with shingles. When it first occurs, shingles usually appears in circular patterns.   Continue reading “How To Eliminate Shingles Quickly and Naturally Using Alternative Holistic Methods”

TASS

MOSCOW, August 13. /TASS/. Russia’s Defense Ministry is reinforcing the 20th combined army in the Western Military District. As a source at the General Staff told TASS, the army being reformatted will be complemented with more units and troops from other military districts.

“The General Staff and the Western Military District’s command have been working tightly on determining and specifying the personnel and hardware of the 20th combined army,” the source said. “In particular, questions are being decided of complementing the army with units from other military districts and forming more mechanized infantry, armour, artillery, missile, reconnaissance and other brigades,” he said.   Continue reading “Large troop contingents being redeployed to Russia’s western regions”

AllGov – by Noel Brinkerhoff

A Texas family is suing several companies involved in fracking after their water well exploded, injuring all four of them.

In August 2014, Cody Murray and his father, Jim, went to inspect the family’s pump house after seeing pressurized water spraying from it. Upon entering the building and turning on a switch, a fireball erupted from inside the well. Cody sustained serious burns on his arms, upper back, neck, forehead and nose after pulling his father away from the explosion, which caused serious injuries to Jim, Cody’s wife and his 4-year-old daughter.   Continue reading “Family Burned by Explosion of Well Contaminated by Fracking”

Intellihub

Since the start of the controversial massive realistic training exercise known as Jade Helm, news on what is actually happening within the exercise has become almost non-existent.

This is in marked contrast to all the information that was being released on a daily basis by the alternative media in the lead up to the exercise when one couldn’t go half a day without a new military convoy sighting or announcement of another urban military training drill.   Continue reading “Jade Helm: Woodland military train convoys seen in four states stretching as far as the eye can see”

Raw Story

A series of massive explosions at a warehouse in the northern Chinese port city of Tianjin killed 17 people, state media reported Thursday, as witnesses described a fireball from the blasts ripping through the night sky.

An AFP reporter at the scene saw shattered glass up to three kilometres (two miles) from the blast site, after a shipment of explosives detonated in an industrial zone raining debris on the city.   Continue reading “Chinese media: Massive Tianjin explosion killed 17 people and injured 400 others”