Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (AFP Photo / Stan Honda)RT News

The Russian Foreign Minister has revealed that there are no real differences on practical issues between the six-party negotiators and Iran. What is needed now is to set down our understanding in a document, Sergey Lavrov told the Russian TVC channel.

“The negotiations with the Foreign Minister of Iran [Mohammad Javad Zarif] have confirmed that for the first time in many years the sextet of negotiators and Tehran are ready to truly seek common grounds instead of presenting mostly uncorrelated positions,” said the Russian FM in an interview to Postscriptum program.   Continue reading “No real dissent in nuclear talks between P5+1 and Iran – Lavrov”

TOR-M2 missile system (RIA Novosti / Andrei Aleksandrov)RT News

Tests of a new missile for the advanced version of the Russian air defense system Tor-M2 proved it is capable of shooting down challenging targets with amazing precision, hitting moving missiles head-on, Russian arms manufacturer Almaz-Antey revealed.

In an attempt to push the limits of modern missile defense systems, Russian military design bureaus Almaz-Antey and Vympel NPO (now part of Tactical Missiles Corporation) have jointly developed the new 9M338 surface-to-air missile.    Continue reading “Unique ‘direct kill’ air defense complex unveiled in Russia”

Afghan municipal workers clear the site of a suicide attack in Kabul on November 16, 2013.(AFP Photo / Massoud Hossaini)  RT News

A powerful car bomb has gone off causing casualties in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul, near the site where around 2,500 prominent Afghan elders will gather next week to debate a contentious security pact with the United States.

At least six people have been killed and more than 20 injured in the attack on Saturday, according to the Afghan Interior Ministry.   Continue reading “Deadly warning? Blast hits Kabul ahead of key talks on US-Afghan security pact”

Mail.com

BEIRUT (AP) — Forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad have firmly seized the momentum in the country’s civil war in recent weeks, capturing one rebel stronghold after another and triumphantly planting the two-starred Syrian government flag amid shattered buildings and rubble-strewn streets.

Despite global outrage over the use of chemical weapons, Assad’s government is successfully exploiting divisions among the opposition, dwindling foreign help for the rebel cause and significant local support, all linked to the same thing: discomfort with the Islamic extremists who have become a major part of the rebellion.   Continue reading “Assad gaining ground in Syrian civil war”

Mail.com

STEVENSON, Ala. (AP) — Weeping relatives watched as the body of an Alabama woman was exhumed from her front yard Friday, a bitter end for her husband who fought to keep her remains buried there.

With husband James Davis, his five children and some grandchildren standing by the log home, a crew unearthed the body of Patsy Davis from beside the front porch. Flowers still sat atop her tombstone.   Continue reading “Alabama woman’s body removed from front yard grave”

Press TV

New York City Police Department policeman Adhyl Polanco describes in a Democracy Now report and interview the corrupting and rights abusing quota system for stop-and-frisk, summons, and arrests in the largest local police department in the United States. Among other revelations, Polanco estimates that, but for the improper encouragement of stop-and-frisk by the city government, police department, and police union, about 600,000 of the around 700,000 police initiated stop-and-frisk incidents last year would not have occurred. Polanco adds that some police will arrest “whoever’s at the corner” near the end of a work shift to meet the quota plus receive overtime pay.   Continue reading “Cop describes stop-and-frisk, corruption at NYPD”

boomersZen Gardner

It’s no wonder the awakened boomer generation is so upset.  We’re the current elders who’ve watched these latest accelerating changes not just take place, but fully supplant the delicate human and planetary condition.  We’ve seen it happen step by premeditated step.

Even though we baby boomers were born in the heat of social programming experiments, the exponentially increasing onslaught on our world is next to unfathomable. Even we remember simpler times, while our forefathers are no doubt groaning from beyond.   Continue reading “Boomer On A Grampage”

Yahoo News – Reuters

UnitedHealth Group dropped thousands of doctors from its networks in recent weeks, leaving many elderly patients unsure whether they need to switch plans to continue seeing their doctors, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.

The insurer said in October that underfunding of Medicare Advantage plans for the elderly could not be fully offset by the company’s other healthcare business. The company also reported spending more healthcare premiums on medical claims in the third quarter, due mainly to government cuts to payments for Medicare Advantage services.   Continue reading “UnitedHealth drops thousands of doctors from insurance plans: WSJ”

Project Chesapeake – by Tom Chatham

Based on current estimates there are between 91 and 102 million working age Americans without a job. A nation cannot sustain a service based economy with that many unemployed people that contribute nothing to the economy. A service based economy requires a certain amount of money flowing through the hands of working people to support all of the service work done. When you eliminate a large percentage of those people the system becomes unsustainable and soon collapses in on itself. This is the situation we now find ourselves in as a nation.  Continue reading “Time to Reshuffle the American Job Market”

Next Gov – by Aliya Sternstein

The next Cuban missile crisis could be resolved through the power of music rather than an armed standoff between nuclear powers, military officials and researchers speculate.

It is believed that sound waves can “jump the air gap” — or hack a machine that is not on a network — to paralyze a ship’s control systems. Instead of using a blockade or firing Tomahawk missiles to prevent Russia from delivering weapons to Cuba, the United States could use malicious tones.    Continue reading “The Next U.S. Weapon at Sea Could be Music”

Fox News – by Catherine Herridge

At least five CIA personnel, including government contractors, were asked to sign a second non-disclosure agreement after the Benghazi terrorist attack, Fox News has learned.

While the three-page NDA, obtained by Fox News, does not contain specific references to the 2012 attack which killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, it does contain standard language that unauthorized disclosures could lead to “temporary loss of pay or termination” and “in some circumstances, constitute a criminal offense.”   Continue reading “CIA personnel asked to sign additional non-disclosure form after Benghazi attack”

MassPrivateI

Local law enforcement is getting the kind of technological boost that used to be limited to three-letter agencies, thanks to Web-based software services that mine social media for intelligence.

At last month’s International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) conference in Philadelphia, LexisNexis showed off a new tool it will bundle with its research service for law enforcement agencies—one that will help them “stake out” social media as part of their criminal investigations. (making it easier for them to spy on activists or suspicious people)   Continue reading “Police departments have NSA like spying powers for social media monitoring”

freedom religionAmac Press Release

It puts a new focus on how the law also takes aim at the Bill of Rights – 

John Grimaldi – WASHINGTON, DC, Nov 15 – “We can thank God that there are still judges out there who seek to protect religious freedom, namely those at the U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago who decided a few days ago that Obamacare infringes on that freedom,” rights advocate Dan Weber said.   Continue reading “Appeals Court Obamacare Decision Exposes Attack on Basic Rights, AMAC”

Breitbart- by CHRISTIAN TOTO

Celebrities tag-teamed against President George W. Bush during his eight years in the White House, leveling as much verbal abuse as possible against the Commander in Chief.

One rocker compared Bush to Hitler, another said we would all die if Bush had his way and a rapper blamed him for 9/11. We even saw a film like Death of a President, which imagined what would happen if someone assassinated Bush.   Continue reading “Oprah Winfrey: Americans Disrespect Obama Because He Is Black”

ENE News

Fairewinds Chief Engineer Arnie Gundersen, Coast to Coast AM with John B. Wells, Nov. 9, 2013 (at 31:30 in):

Sources have told me — within Tokyo Electric — that they have no confidence that there’s any boron left between these fuel bundles. And they need boron to prevent the nuclear fuel from becoming a self-sustaining chain reaction, a criticality. So without boron in the plates — there are plates between these fuel bundles — but they got extraordinarily hot from not being cooled off the better part of a couple weeks, and they also were exposed to salt water. So that combination likely stripped out the boron. So the only thing Tokyo Electric can do is throw all sorts of boron into the water. Then pull the fuel. […]   Continue reading “Gundersen: Fuel already “very close to going critical” at Unit 4”