Continue reading “US controlling both sides of Egypt coup: Michel Chossudovsky”
Month: July 2013
CAIRO (AP) — Egypt’s new president moved to assert his authority and regain control of the streets Saturday even as his Islamist opponents declared his powers illegitimate and issued blood oaths to reinstate Mohammed Morsi, whose ouster by the military has led to dueling protests and deadly street battles between rival sides.
But underscoring the sharp divisions facing the untested leader, Adly Mansour, his office said pro-reform leader Mohamed ElBaradei had been named as interim prime minister but later backtracked on the decision saying consultations were continuing. A politician close to ElBaradei said the reversal was due to objections by an ultraconservative Islamist party with which the new administration wants to cooperate. Continue reading “Egypt’s new president asserts authority”
MEXICO CITY (AP) — The Popocatepetl volcano just east of Mexico City has spit out a cloud of ash and vapor 2 miles (3 kilometers) high over several days of eruptions, and Mexico City residents awoke Saturday to find a fine layer of volcanic dust on their cars.
It has been years since the center of the nation’s capital has seen a noticeable ash fall because prevailing winds usually blow the volcanic dust in other directions. Ash fell earlier this week in some neighborhoods on Mexico City’s south and east sides. Continue reading “Mexico volcano spits 2 mile-high ash cloud”
Century Link – by FRANCES D’EMILIO – Associated Press
ROME (AP) — A fugitive Italian mobster, who allegedly arranged major shipments of South American cocaine to Europe each month and was one of the world’s most powerful drug brokers, has been captured in a Colombian shopping mall, authorities said Saturday.
Roberto Pannunzi “at the moment is the most important broker for cocaine trafficking from South America to Europe,” Gen. Andrea De Gennaro, an Italian anti-drug customs police official, was quoted as saying by the Italian news agency ANSA. Continue reading “Top fugitive Italian cocaine boss nabbed in Bogota”
President Barack Obama is looking for a new ride.
Not that his current limousine – dubbed “The Beast” or “Cadillac One” – isn’t faring well, but it’s a 2009 model, which he takes wherever he travels, and the Department of Homeland Security says it’s time for an upgrade. Continue reading “Obama’s limo: Heavy armor, blood bank, night vision”
Cop Block – by Dustin McCaskill
Nearly three months later, the investigation into police murdering Chris and Stacey Stout has been completed.
Eight law enforcement agencies have turned over their reports for the D.A. to decide what should be done. Continue reading “Oklahoma Police Kill Two, Investigation Complete”
Before It’s News – by Deborah Dupre
While Nicaragua and Venezuela presidents on Friday offered asylum to Edward Snowden, more Latin American countries have said they aim to do the same, pitting South America against North America over “persecution by the empire,” as Venezuela head of state called the U.S. abuse of the human rights global violation whistleblower.
One day after South American leaders gathered to denounce the skyjacking of Bolivian President Evo Morales’ plane over Europe and searching it for surveillance abuse whistleblower Edward Snowden, Nicaragua and Venezuela presidents offered asylum to Snowden. Continue reading “S. America Countries Uniting For Snowden’s Escape From ‘Empire Persecution’”
Before It’s News – by Monica Davis
The US has been at war with Third World countries for more than 60 years. Used as proxies for wars with larger communist realms, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Nicaragua, El Salvador and countless stood as surrogates for larger communist regimes.
Now, the ideologies have turned toward free trade, market manipulation and resource acquisition. China is making inroads on the Monroe Doctrine, setting up mining operations in South America. And the US is looking to acquire African resources via manipulating military might through AFRICOM. Continue reading “Will US And Germany Go To War Over Free Trade Spying?”
BEIRUT (AP) — A former Syrian political prisoner with close links to Saudi Arabia was picked Saturday to lead Syria’s main Western-backed opposition group, filling a post long vacant due to divisions among President Bashar Assad’s opponents.
Inside Syria, government troops advanced into rebel-held areas of the central city of Homs, pushing into a heavily contested neighborhood after pummeling it with artillery that drove out opposition fighters, an activist said. Continue reading “Ex-prisoner chosen to lead Syria opposition group”
Is anyone else sick and tired of the government parading around this shill and her husband? She wants sympathy as if she were as immobilized as Stephen Hawking, yet she’s more than able to fire guns at a firing range? What gives her the right to fly all over the country with number of guns but not the rest of us? This piece of fiction from the Twilight Zone really makes my blood boil! Continue reading “On tour, Giffords’ actions speak on gun control”
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — An Asiana Airlines flight from Seoul, South Korea, crashed while landing at San Francisco International Airport on Saturday, forcing passengers to jump down the emergency inflatable slides to safety. It was not immediately known whether there were any injuries.
Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Laura Brown said Flight 214 crashed while landing on runway 28 left at the airport at 11:26 PDT. A video clip posted to YouTube shows smoke coming from a silver-colored jet on the tarmac. Passengers could be seen jumping down the inflatable emergency slides. Television footage showed debris strewn about the tarmac and pieces of the plane lying on the runway. Continue reading “NTSB to investigate San Francisco Crash”
I’m loathe to do so, but I regrettably believe it has become necessary to suggest a new holiday. It wouldn’t be something marked by fireworks and celebration, but instead it would be a day of mourning known as “Total Dependence Day.”
It would begin at the stroke of midnight on the fourth day of July, so immediately after celebrating “Independence Day”, you would have to stop the party, and reflect on the reality that our hard-won freedom has been lost due to our total dependence on government and gadgetry, and that many of us would be reduced to tears if not supplied with the endless cheap entertainment that now dominates our culture and our free time. Continue reading “Total Dependence Day”
The FDA owns a patent on cannabis, recognizing its medicinal value by labeling it as a schedule I narcotic but “with no accepted medical uses”… except in conditions that require a schedule 1 narcotic that are not defined? A patent on a Natural medicine that has been proven to cure skin- and ovarian cancer, and has medicinal applications for dozens of illnesses?
These two two positions are in stark contradiction with one another, a kind of bureaucratic oxymoron… Either deliberate or just a ‘schedule one’ bureaucratic oversight? Continue reading “What’s REALLY Wrong With Non-Psychoactive, RAW Cannabis as a Medicine if it REALLY Works?”
American Everyman – by willyloman
An amazing video has surfaced showing Super Spy Edward Snowden preparing to make his great escape from the transit area in Moscow. As you can see from this video, Snowden disguised himself as a black Muslim and jived his way past the tight security and onto the plane. An amazing bit of Bourne Identity type super duper spying on Edward’s part if you ask me. Continue reading “BREAKING: How Edward Snowden Escaped Transit Area in Moscow!”
A $214-million test launch of the only US defense against long-range ballistic missile attacks failed to hit its target over the Pacific Ocean, according to the Missile Defense Agency. There have been no successful interceptor tests since 2008.
In Friday’s test, a ground-based interceptor missile was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California and was expected to hit its target – a missile launched 4,000 miles away from the Kwajalein Atoll. Continue reading “US ABM test failure mars $1bn N. Korea defense plan”
Gas chambers could be brought back to life in the state of Missouri, where the attorney general has indicated replacing lethal-injection with the long-forgotten and controversial means of execution before the former’s drug supply runs out.
“As each supply expires, the department’s ability to carry out lawfully imposed capital sentences diminishes,” Attorney General Chris Koster said in a motion filed with the court. “Unless the court changes its current course, the legislature will soon be compelled to fund statutorily-authorized alternative methods of execution to carry out lawful judgments.” Continue reading “‘Machinery of Death’: Gas chamber may be revived in Missouri”
Before It’s News – by Mort Amsel
UPDATE: At least 30 buildings are on fire and 60 people are missing and scores may be dead but rescue workers cant get in to help anyone because of the heat.
A train carrying crude oil derailed in the town of Lac-Megantic, Que., early Saturday morning, sending giant flames into the air and prompting a mass evacuation. The derailment forced hundreds of people from their homes in Lac-Megantic, which is located about 250 kilometres east of Montreal. A number of the train’s 73 cars exploded, causing a fire that spread to several of buildings in the community. Continue reading “Train Derails, Explodes In Lac-Megantic, Quebec, Town Center Ablaze, Entire Town Evacuated, 60 Missing, Scores Feared Dead”
Before It’s News – by Mort Amsel
Bolivian President Evo Morales said on Saturday he would grant asylum, if requested, to former U.S. intelligence agency contractor Edward Snowden. Morales’ offer came after two other leftist Latin American leaders – Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro and Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega – also said they would help the U.S. fugitive, who is believed to be holed up in the transit area of a Moscow international airport. Continue reading “Bolivia Offers Edward Snowden Asylum”