Before It’s News – by Mort Amsel

Sound of gunfire continued to ring around the security directorate area in central Port Said into the early hours of Sunday night as several media outlets reported that police and army soldiers have been exchanging fire at the end of a tense day in the Suez Canal city.

During the day, some 360 people were injured in clashes between police and protesters near the security directorate on Sunday, according to Egypt’s health ministry. Continue reading “Egyptian Army Fires On Police In Port Said”

Before It’s News – by Josey Wales

Now they are targeting people with concealed carry permits when renewing their drivers license in Missouri.

Will other states follow Missouri’s lead?

Missouri’s Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder. Listen to the interview with Kinder here: Continue reading “Missouri Lt. Gov Kinder, DHS Plans Backdoor Gun Registration Through Drivers License Renewal”

Image courtesy Google MapsWFLA 8 – by Galina Tishchenko

PINELLAS COUNTY, FL – Structural engineers were on scene at a Palm Harbor home Tuesday morning after a woman was trapped in her bedroom because of a possible sinkhole, according to Pinellas County Fire Rescue report.

Fire officials told us 89-year-old Elsie Hall called 911 after she heard her house crack. She stayed in the bedroom awaiting rescue teams. Continue reading “Pinellas County investigating possible sinkhole”

Colorado Gun Accessories Maker to Leave When Magazine Limits Bill PassesThe New American – by Bob Adelmann

Richard Fitzpatrick, founder of Magpul Industries, said he would move his company from Erie, Colorado, to another state if the state legislature passes a pending bill that would limit firearms magazines to 15 rounds for rifles and 8 rounds for shotguns. Under the bill, not only would customers living in Colorado be unable to purchase his products, but his company would be forced to add serial numbers to each magazine made as well. Continue reading “Colorado Gun Accessories Maker to Leave When Magazine Limits Bill Passes”

Infowars – by Paul Joseph Watson

Amidst concerns that the agency is engaged in a domestic arms race against the American people, the Department of Homeland Security has signed a new $4.5 million dollar contract with weapons manufacturer Heckler & Koch.

A synopsis posted on the Federal Business Opportunities website yesterday announces the DHS’ intention to ink a five year deal with the Virginia-based firearms maker to provide gun replacement parts for the Federal Protective Service, ICE, Customs and Border Protection, “and other DHS agencies as needed.” Continue reading “DHS Signs $4.5 Million Dollar Contract With Heckler & Koch”

Mail Tribune

NEW YORK — Mexico’s Carlos Slim remains the world’s richest man for the fourth year in a row, according to Forbes, while Warren Buffett dropped out of the top three for the first time since 2000.

And Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg saw his ranking drop 31 spots as his net worth declined by $4.2 billion. Continue reading “Record 1,426 people make Forbes’ billionaire list”

AFP Photo / Alain JokardRT News

After returning from combat duty with post-traumatic stress disorder, a former US Navy Corpsman in Colorado now faces prison for using marijuana to cope. A court said it would violate his probation after a string of run-ins with the law.

Jeremy Usher uses marijuana medicinally to deal with insomnia, anxiety, depression, flashbacks and a speech impediment developed as a result of the disorder, the Greeley Tribune of Greeley, Colorado reports. Continue reading “Colorado veteran faces jail after using marijuana to treat PTSD”

FILE - In this Friday, Oct. 5, 2012, file photo, a boogie boarder walks past a sign displaying high gas prices in Laguna Beach, Calif. Higher gas costs drove up U.S. consumer prices in September for the second straight month. But outside energy, there was little sign of inflation. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson) — APUT San Diego – by Jonathan Horn

The tax you pay on a gallon of gas will rise by 3.5 cents in California come July 1.

The state Board of Equalization voted 3-2 on Thursday to increase the excise tax about 10 percent, from 36 cents per gallon to 39.5 cents per gallon. Continue reading “It’s official: California Gas tax going up”

Singularity Hub – by David J. Hill

In what is sure to be only the beginning of human vs. robot confrontations, a surveillance robot belonging to the police was recently shot after a six-hour standoff with a 62-year-old heavily inebriated man.

As reported by the Ohio-based Chillicothe Gazette, officers in the town of Waverly responded to a complaint that shots were fired inside a bedroom in a home and that the homeowner had more guns and was threatening others. Police knocked on the door, called on the phone, and even brought in a trained negotiator, but the man refused to speak to anyone for several hours. So the officers contacted the Pike County Sheriff’s Department and the Highway Patrol’s Strategic Response Team for assistance. Continue reading “Ohio Man Charged with Shooting Robot”

North KoreaHuffington Post

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea vowed Tuesday to cancel the 1953 cease-fire that ended the Korean War, citing a U.S.-led push for punishing U.N. sanctions over its recent nuclear test and ongoing U.S.-South Korean joint military drills. Continue reading “North Korea Threatens To End Ceasefire With South Over Military Drills, Sanctions”

Air Force Times – by Rick Maze

A stopgap spending bill unveiled Monday to keep the government operating through Sept. 30 would not undo sequestration, but it would give the Defense Department flexibility in how to make $46 billion in reductions.

The House version of the so-called continuing resolution, needed to keep the government operating beyond March 27, represents a bit of pragmatism as lawmakers come to realize they cannot reach a compromise on deficit reduction and spending priorities if they face one crisis deadline after another. Continue reading “House agrees on bill to keep government running”

Conference emblemBefore It’s News – by Josey Wales

Many Americans can feel the tension in the air lately. With all the military maneuvers, military equipment being transported around the nation.

Then people are asking why all the UN Vehicles in the US? Continue reading “Read UN Small Arms Treaty: March 18 – 28 2013, If Ratified, The 2nd Amendment Will Be Gone”

Senator Leahy Holds First Congressional Hearing On Immigration ReformBefore It’s News – by Alton Parish

Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), and Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) unveiled on Monday a new bill to combat straw purchasing and gun trafficking that will be considered by the Judiciary Committee later this week. Continue reading “New Deal To Limit Gun And Ammo Sales Gets Bipartisan Support In Senate”

At North Island Naval Air Station, Allen Kosmalski and Myra Balina look over the F/A-18 Hornet that was painted to resemble a Korean War Corsair fighter. UT San Diego – by Jeanette Steele

The Navy announced Tuesday that budget cuts will force it to reduce aircraft maintenance at its North Island Naval Air Station depot, putting up to 480 jobs in jeopardy at two civilian contracting firms.

Navy F/A-18s, C-2s and E-2s and helicopters go to Fleet Readiness Center Southwest at the Coronado air base for regular overhauls. About 2,700 civilian government employees do the work, alongside 1,000 uniformed service members and roughly 480 contract employees. Continue reading “Budget cuts hit North Island aircraft maintenance jobs”

Infowars – by Kurt Nimmo

On February 20, 2013, the Tucson, Arizona City Council passed a resolution allowing the U.S. Air Force to “make appropriate decisions when balancing National Security and community needs when it comes to their existing and future military mission and assignments.”

In other words, the resolution allows the military to reject decisions made by the people of Tucson. Continue reading “Martial Law: Tucson City Council Hands Authority Over to Military”

stromcloudsLiberty Gold and Silver

Behind the hoopla of the mainstream financial pundits, behind the forced exuberance of the talking heads on the business news networks, behind the shills who pimp themselves for Wall Street, there are, like a dark, ominous thunderstorm on the horizon that is the precursor to a dangerous rash of tornadoes soon to descend from the sky, chilling signs that the stock market is on its way to being taken down. If and when this happens, there are going to be trillions upon trillions of losses that will drive the final nail into the financial coffin for baby boomers, retirees, pension funds, and the world economy at large. Continue reading “Warning Clouds on the Horizon for World Markets”