This sounds like the type of order only given during wartime or imminent terrorist threat. Direct from the DOT/Federal Railroad Administration website: Continue reading “A Hint of War? Federal Railroad Administration Issues Emergency Order for Trains with Hazardous Materials”
Month: August 2013
A veterans group has filed a free speech lawsuit against officials who banned a “Don’t Tread on Me” flag from a city-owned armory because they viewed the flag as a Tea Party symbol.
The lawsuit says the actions of officials in New Rochelle, N.Y., in addition to being unconstitutional, are “unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious” and demonstrate a lack of appreciation of history, according to the Associated Press. Continue reading “‘Don’t Tread on Me’: Fed-Up Veterans File Free Speech Lawsuit against City Officials over Flag Ban”
New America Now – by Paul Craig Roberts
As Washington loses its grip on the world, defied by Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, and now Russia, the US government resorts to public temper tantrums. The constant demonstration of childishness on the part of the White House and Congress embarrasses every American. Continue reading “Obama: The Current WH Moron”
Here’s a new installment of my Rotten to the Core series on education and curriculum. This latest scandal has only just begun. I hear from multiple sources that there are more damaging e-mails to come. Jeb World is getting rocked not only by this mess, but by the nationwide, grass-roots revolt against his top-down Common Core scheme — which continues to grow despite Bush’s latest p.r. efforts to bamboozle talk radio and conservative pundits about his education racket. Continue reading “Rotten to the Core: Jeb Bush’s Crony Republicans Against Higher Standards”
Herald Review – by Huey Freeman
DECATUR — A two-year investigation by Texas newspaper reporters into the whereabouts of a man who shot his parents and sister to death when he was 15 years old led them to a 61-year-old psychology professor who resides in Decatur.
James St. James, a member of the Millikin University faculty since 1986, changed his name from Jim Wolcott in 1976 after he served six years in a state mental hospital following the slayings in Georgetown, Texas. Continue reading “Man who killed family as teen in Texas found teaching at Millikin”
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Two Northern California men accused of sexually abusing a teen runaway and keeping her in a metal box on their marijuana farm pleaded not guilty on Friday to federal drug charges.
The men appeared in San Francisco federal court in shackles and jail garb and were returned to custody after a brief hearing. Continue reading “Calif. men plead not guilty to marijuana charges”
Information Clearinghouse – by Jameel Jaffer and Brett Max Kaufman
James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, has been harshly criticized for having misled Congress earlier this year about the scope of the National Security Agency’s surveillance activities. The criticism is entirely justified. An equally insidious threat to the integrity of our national debate, however, comes not from officials’ outright lies but from the language they use to tell the truth. Continue reading “How to Decode the True Meaning of What NSA Officials Say”
(Market Watch) – The White House has approved a deal that will exempt members of Congress and their staff from some of the provisions of the Affordable Care Act, Politico reported late Thursday. Under the law, popularly referred to as Obamacare, lawmakers and their aides were required to source health insurance “created” by the law or offered through one of its exchanges, and without the subsidies they currently enjoy, the members of Congress would have faced thousands of dollars in additional premium payments each year, the report said. Continue reading “Obama Changes ObamaCare: Exempts Government Officials While Georgia Citizens See a 198% Increase in Rates”
Before It’s News – by Monica Davis
How the heck do we let Facebook become such a part of our lives? This is not reality; don’t treat it as such. People put all of their personal business on Facebook, then get angry because someone laughs about it, forwards it, or makes fun of them.
Facebook is turning Americans into video twits who feud and kill over gossip and idiocy that needs to stay at home. Continue reading “Woman Stabs Friend To Death Over Facebook”
American Thinker – by Carole Hornsby Haynes
Although high information Americans are becoming aware of the federal takeover of education through Common Core Standards, there seems to be little recognition yet that Common Core gives schools and third parties unprecedented access to students’ personal information. The federal government is acquiring a massive amount of data that can be sold to the highest bidders. This is an invasion of student and family privacy and a violation of our 4th Amendment rights. Continue reading “Common Core’s Data Mining Trojan Horse”
Before It’s News – by Deborah Dupree
Soldiers have arrived in southern Oregon to help battle lightening-sparked infernos, the nation’s highest priority fires that killed one fireworker and prompted state of emergencies, mandatory evacuations and suffocating smoke, not the type the state’s greenies prefer.
A state of emergency and mandatory evacuations have been declared in southern Oregon where for six days, fires remained at zero containment until yesterday’s cooler and moister conditions. Continue reading “Soldiers Battle S. Oregon 40,000-Acre Inferno”
Wake Up America – by Susan Duclos
With the recent and ongoing revelations of the U.S. government’s Prism and NSA’s XKeyscore programs, spying has become a debate on what is too much, what amount of privacy are we willing to give up in the name of security and the natural progression of that debate leads to how much spying is the government capable of. Continue reading “Spying Through Every Device- The Vast Reach Of Big Brother”
Wake Up America – by Susan Duclos
The Chattanooga Times Free Press fired editor Drew Johnson after an editorial titled “Take your jobs plan and shove it, Mr. President, (Titled now changed to “President Obama’s policies have harmed Chattanooga enough”) claiming his headline was “inappropriate” and “outside of normal editing procedures.” Continue reading “Editor Fired For Anti-Obama Headline Speaks Out”
Our webhost is having unknown technical difficulties and we are unable to access our Email, thus we are unable to post articles that have been sent to us.
We hope to have the issue resolved shortly.
Please bear with us.
Update: We just talked to BlueHost and they are working the problem which lies in their network, though they say they do not know where the problem came from or how long it will continue. (Maybe they should check with Haifa and Tel Aviv. 🙂 ) Continue reading “Problems with our Email”
I was searching for ways to lower my electric bill here in my small 850 ft. apartment and I think I’ve found some solutions. Not to mention these are great ways to create lighting for a camping or a bug out situation. Here are 5 easy examples. Take your pick and make it a fun family project.
SOLAR LANTERN LIGHT Continue reading “Easy Ways to Create Free Lighting”
Before It’s News – by N. Morgan
A very intriguing article about Project Blue. The history behind this research is even more interesting. Serge Monast and another journalist who were researching and exposing Project Blue Beam, both died of heart attacks, just weeks apart and neither had had a history of heart disease. Monast’s daughter was also abducted by the Canadian government, to dissuade Monast from continuing his research. She was never returned or found. Continue reading “Heart Attack Guns, Abductions, State Sanctioned Assassinations, And Project Blue Beam”