Pondering on the “Where’s Snowdo?” situation, I wondered “Why Iceland?”, Iceland was the first place Snowden originally wanted safe haven. One might look at the events below, and be inspired that peaceful solutions can actually exist.

In an age where a farmer in Africa can hold in his hand more information access than Ronald Reagan had in the Situation Room, would you believe the worlds 13th most developed nation and one of humanities oldest Democracies could have a revolution, oust the parliament, bring up their Prime Minister on criminal charges, then crowd source their new constitution to ALL the people over the internet; and you haven’t heard about it for 4 years? Well it is in process, right now and it began in 2008.  I’m betting (like me) you never heard about it either… get a load of this:   Continue reading “Why [no] Iceland? They’re Having a Revolution!”

Century Link – by JULIE PACE – Associated Press

PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) — One element of President Barack Obama’s Africa policy is to encourage a free press, although he offered repeated reminders for U.S. reporters traveling with him on the continent to be on their best behavior.

“Americans, behave yourselves,” he needled as a contingent of U.S. and South African media was pulled from a quick photo-op Saturday with President Jacob Zuma.   Continue reading “WHITE HOUSE NOTEBOOK: Obama to US media: ‘Behave’”

Equine_Protozoal_MyeloencephalitisReal Farmacy – by Matt Agorist

Americans consume somewhere in the ballpark of 5 billion hamburgers a year. To keep up with this demand, just over 4100 cows are slaughtered every hour in the U.S. That’s a lot of dead cows! When 68 cows a minute are slaughtered you can bet that mistakes are made or parts are shifted into the wrong areas. A study published in the Annals of Diagnostic Pathology helped to discover just how much “shifting of parts” is really going on.

The study presumed that most hamburgers are composed primarily of meat. 8 different popular fast food hamburger brands were tested using histologic methods. The burgers were evaluated for water content by weight and then microscopically to verify tissue types. An additional test known as Glial fibrillary acidic protein staining was used to test for brain tissue. We’ll give you the good news first, none of the eight samples had brains in them. Unfortunately that is as good as it gets.   Continue reading “Fast Food Burgers Only 7% Meat, The 8 Other ‘Ingredients’ Will Disgust You”

Before It’s News – by Alton Parrish

Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars – An Introduction Programming Manual (how economy and people can be controlled like an electronic circuit, with technical diagrams).pdf

Forward

This manuscript was delivered to our offices by an unknown person. We did not steal  the document, nor are we involved with any theft from the United States Government, and we did not get the document by way of any dishonest methods. We feel that we are not endangering the “National Security” by reproducing this document, quite the contrary; it has been authenticated and we feel that we are not only within our rights to publish it, but morally bound to do so.    Continue reading “Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars On American People: Secret Document Found In Auctioned Copier”

Common Dreams – by Andrea Germanos

Frances Moore Lappé and Vandana Shiva, noted figures in the food sovereignty movement, added their voices to the chorus blasting the 2013 World Food Prize going to GMO scientists with the biotechnology giants Monsanto and Syngenta.

The GMO scientists’ work contributes to hunger and ecological devastation while not advancing nutrition, said the two Right Livelihood Laureates, also Councillors on the World Future Council, and noted the irony of Monsanto being awarded at a time of rising worldwide opposition to the seed giant.   Continue reading “Frances Moore Lappe, Vandana Shiva Blast Award for GMO Scientists”

Zombie Soup

Ecuador’s response to US thuggery & bullying is priceless. That’s a truly free, fully sovereign, & self-respecting country!

QUITO, Ecuador — Ecuador’s president said Wednesday that media coverage of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden is distracting the world from the surveillance programs that Snowden revealed.    Continue reading “Ecuador president blasts coverage of Snowden case, says it’s distracting from real issues”

Sherrie Wilcox standing by FEMA coffins outside of AtlantaThe Common Sense Show – by Dave Hodges

When retired FBI agent, the now deceased Ted Gunderson, reportedly told a gathering of militia members that the federal government had set up 1,000 internment camps across the country, I had no trouble believing his statement because there is ample documentation to support his statement (e.g. REX 84Operation Garden Plot and now the NDAA). However, when Gunderson reported that the federal government was storing over 500,000 caskets outside of Atlanta, I also knew he was accurate on this point because Sherrie Wilcox found the evidence in the adjacent photo. However, when I heard that Gunderson was accusing the government of storing 30,000 guillotines, I thought he had lost his mind.   Continue reading “Why Does the Government Need Guillotines?”

Common Dreams – by Michael Winship

Back in January, a month after the Newtown school slayings and just a few days before his second inauguration, Barack Obama announced he would “put everything I’ve got” into the fight against gun violence.

Part of his effort – and an end run around a Congress reluctant to make any move that might rile the National Rifle Association – was a group of 23 executive actions that, according toThe New York Times, “he initiated on his own authority to bolster enforcement of existing laws, improve the nation’s database used for background checks and otherwise make it harder for criminals and people with mental illness to get guns.”   Continue reading “Guns Lost, Stolen or Strayed”

Ecology News – by Alfred Lambremont Webre, JD, MEd

VANCOUVER, BC – There is now a sufficient threshold of prima facie evidence to reasonably conclude that that the Calgary floods of June 2013, which are estimated to cost billions in property damage and affect the Canadian economy as a whole,  were in fact an act of environmental warfare in the form of an intentional weather warfare attack against the people of Calgary, Alberta, Canada and environs. Environmental warfare is banned under the 1978 Convention on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification Techniques (ENMOD), to which Canada, the United States and Russia are all parties.   Continue reading “Prima Facie forensic evidence of weather warfare attack in June 2013 Calgary floods: Canadian media and officials silent”

Article imageNation of Change

Something is looming in the shadows that could help erode our basic rights and contaminate our food.  The Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) has the potential to become the biggest regional Free Trade Agreement in history, both in economic size and the ability to quietly add more countries in addition to those originally included.  As of 2011 its 11 countries accounted for 30 percent of the world’s agricultural exports.  Those countries are the US, Australia, Brunei, Chile, Canada, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Viet Nam.  Recently, Japan has joined the negotiations.   Continue reading “Trans-Pacific Partnership and Monsanto”

Huffington Post – by Hunter Spirit

A University of Virginia student says she was put in jail after buying cookie dough, ice cream and a pack of bottled water that state agents mistook for beer, according to multiple reports.

Elizabeth Daly, 20, says she was in her car in the parking lot of a Charlottesville, Va., grocery store in April when she was approached by seven plainclothes agents from the Virginia Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, one of whom she says pulled a gun on her, according to the Charlottesville Daily Progress.   Continue reading “Elizabeth Daly, College Student, Says She Spent Night In Jail After Buying Bottled Water”

Town Hall – by Leah Barkoukis

If you’re sick of high gas prices, too bad—they’re not going down, according to outgoing Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

“Gas prices aren’t going down,” he said in his final press conference, “they are not going to go down.”   Continue reading “Transportation Secretary: Gas Prices Will Never Go Down”

coloradomags12.jpgFox News

With just days to go before Colorado’s strict new gun control law is set to take effect, gun accessories manufacturer Magpul says it plans to distribute 1,500 30-round magazines to gun owners for free.

The company, which has vowed to leave the state over the law, will take part in what organizers are calling a “Farewell to Arms Festival,” on Saturday in Glendale, KDVR.com reports.   Continue reading “Colorado company to give away ammunition magazines ahead of ban”

(Image credit: Abode of Chaos/Flickr)End the Lie – by Richard Cottrell

Points of detail are important.

Edward Snowden is not an NSA sub contractor. He worked for the ‘consultancy’ Booz Allen Hamilton which is a shop front for the CIA, not the NSA. First warning.

Second. None of the ‘secrets’ he revealed are even vaguely secret, since the information concerning NSA snooping on foreign powers was already in the public realm, many times over. The problem is that newspapers and journalists intoxicate themselves with spy stories and rarely bother to sift through all the parallel information. Takes too long.   Continue reading “Edward Snowden: the Manchurian Candidate”

Common Dreams – by Tom Gitlin

Only Martians, by now, are unaware of the phone and online data scooped up by the National Security Agency (though if it turns out that they are aware, the NSA has surely picked up their signals and crunched their metadata).  American high-tech surveillance is not, however, the only kind around.  There’s also the lower tech, up-close-and-personal kind that involves informers and sometimes government-instigated violence.  Continue reading “The Wonderful American World of Informers and Agents Provocateurs”

Gold Silver Worlds – by  Taki Tsaklanos and GE Christenson

Unsustainable trends can survive much longer than most people anticipate, but they do end when their “time is up” – at the culmination of their time cycles. Examples of these trends include deficit spending, exponential debt increases, overpriced bond markets, and unbacked paper currencies, to name a few. In an effort to bring clarity in how and when these trends could change direction we analyzed more than 20 different cycles. They almost unanimously point to tectonic shifts in the months and years ahead … starting now. We have been warned.   Continue reading “2013 – Start of Seismic Shifts in Money, Metals, Markets”