WBFF Fox Baltimore

Children at Park Elementary School went home with a letter today explaining there was a disruption in school. Seven year old Josh Welch, and his father, say the disruption lead to a two day suspension for the second grader in Brooklyn Park.

Academics are hard for Josh, who suffers from ADHD, but he excels in art class. It is Josh’s own creativity that may have gotten him into trouble. Continue reading “7-Year-Old Suspended, Teacher says he shaped pastry into gun”

flagOn Wednesday’s broadcast, Mark Koernke said to tell these folks to carry flags. Well, take a look at this photograph of Thursday’s Gun Rally in Albany. I do not think that they needed any reminder. There were plenty of Don’t Trend on Me Flags, US Flags and anti-commie or anti-fascist signs. Note the flag pole near center of photograph; the flags it flies are almost off camera. The holder wanted to make sure the buracRATS could see his flags. Continue reading “Albany NY Gun Rally 2-28-13”

2013_buffalo_obverseSilver Doctors – by Bill  Holter

The GOP reportedly is considering “ceding” power to President Obama regarding the sequester.  The President will have until March 8 to come up with $85 billion in spending cuts and Congress can “veto” these by March 22 with a 2/3rds vote.

If this actually passes and Congress does this (presumably to embarrass the President by displaying “where” he cuts), the country will then pass into dictatorship.  The Constitution was written specifically to prevent this exact possibility! Continue reading “At the Brink of Dictatorship”

CNBC – by Stephanie Strom, New York Times

The United States Department of Agriculture is likely to approve a horse slaughtering plant in New Mexico in the next two months, which would allow equine meat suitable for human consumption to be produced in the United States for the first time since 2007.

The plant, in Roswell, N.M., is owned by Valley Meat Company, which sued the U.S.D.A. and its Food Safety and Inspection Service last fall over the lack of inspection services for horses going to slaughter. Horse meat cannot be processed for human consumption in the United States without inspection by the U.S.D.A., so horses destined for that purpose have been shipped to places like Mexico and Canada for slaughter. Continue reading “USDA May Approve Horse Slaughter Plant”

Rose Gilbert RetiresHuffington Post – by CHRISTINA HOAG

LOS ANGELES — Rose Gilbert wanted to be a schoolteacher since she was in the first grade and was inspired by the teacher who taught her to read and write.

Gilbert carried out that childhood dream with a rare commitment – she retired last week at the age of 94 after a 63-year teaching career in the Los Angeles Unified School District. Continue reading “Rose Gilbert, Los Angeles Teacher, Retires At 94”

Ny Gun LawHuffington Post – by MICHAEL GORMLEY

ALBANY, N.Y. — A New York court agreed Friday to review whether the state’s strict new gun controls were rushed into law in violation of the state constitution.

A state Supreme Court justice granted the request for a hearing by plaintiffs who claim the law violates the guarantees of free speech, property ownership and the right to petition the government guaranteed under the state and federal constitutions. Continue reading “New York Gun Law Passage To Be Reviewed For Speedy Approval By Court”

The Captain’s Journal – by Herschel Smith

In Senator Chris Murphy Versus Guns we discussed how Senator Murphy is playing the poll card with his colleagues.  The polls support us, he says.  But I pointed out that they don’t, and (via David Codrea) here is more evidence.

In an ongoing poll conducted of its membership by Gun Owners of America, 96.2% of over 18,500 respondents have thus far opposed Obama’s universal background check proposal. Continue reading “Senator Chris Murphy Runs Afoul Of Second Amendment”

Dr. Eran Elhaik

Veterans Today – by Jim W. Dean

On Decemever 14, 2012, Dr. Eran Elhaik turned almost two generations of Jewish genome research upside down. But he went even further. The young Israeli-Ameican geneticist has charged former researchers with academic fraud, and he has the research to back it up.

How could those those eminent Jewish scientist before him have been so wrong? Easy says Dr. Elhaik, “First these researchers decided what conclusions they wanted to find, and then they set off to find evidence to support it.” I was not bashing Jewish scientists. What Elhaik has described is a slam dunk fraud. Continue reading “New Genome Study Destroys Zionist Claims to Palestine”

Olag Volk

The term “final protective fire” means the highest priority is given to this request due to the danger of a position being overrun. For the guy in the trenches, that means firing as fast as possible to break up a determined assault — even if that uses up barrels and ammo fast. If the FPF fails, there won’t be a “later” for those troops. Continue reading “Final protective fire”

Africa 6The Big Bad Bank – by George Washington Hunt

Obama Budgets $307 Billion For the African Internet, etc.
The “Alliance For An Affordable Internet” is a public-private partnership which intends to build a huge, expensive African Internet. Its headquarters are in Nairobi, Kenya, now dubbed “Africa’s Silicon Valley”. Continue reading “Shock! $307 Billion paid to Africa while America goes over cliff”

March 1, 2013, open austerity takes effect in the United States.  Though this is being called sequestration, make no mistake, it is austerity and austerity can only occur in a socialist country.  Via the original Constitution for the United States, there was to be not but, if at all, direct tax for a specific purpose for a stated span of time, and only as agreed upon by the people through their lawful representatives.

The theory being that all property is retained by the people and could only be transferred via free will.  But then again, there was to be no taxation upon taxation, and more to the present time, upon taxation, upon taxation, upon taxation.  Today’s act of austerity dispels any notion of the people’s absolute right to their property. Continue reading “US Soviet Insurgency Institutes Austerity”

marijuanaWaking Times

The majority of America has either decriminalized cannabis, or legalized it for medicinal purposes
It’s almost hard to believe when you consider how strong prohibition continues in most parts of the country, but 27 states in the U.S. have either decriminalized cannabis possession, legalized possession and state-licensed retail sales, legalized cannabis for medicinal purposes, or a combination of the three. Continue reading “12 Things You May Not Know About Cannabis”

Before It’s News – by Live Free or Die

A Florida man whose bedroom has been ‘swallowed’ by a sinkhole is presumed dead. What in the world is going on with our Earth that so many sinkholes have been ‘popping up’ across the planet recently? Does this have anything at all to do with a ‘Nibiru Earth Wobble’ as this story from a Beforeitsnews contributor might argue? This particular sinkhole was found to be ‘not made by human beings’ and was still expanding, according to this story from Raw Story. Continue reading “Florida Man Swallowed By Sinkhole, Presumed Dead; Why All The Sinkholes Recently?”

Activist Post – by Brandon Turbeville

Few government research programs have produced as many questions and as much speculation as the High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP). From the potential of HAARP to disrupt and control communications to the possibility of controlling the weather and creating natural disasters, the sophistication of HAARP and the extent to which it is being used is the subject of much debate. Continue reading “U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Confirms HAARP’s Ability to Manipulate Atmosphere”

Abu GhraibThe Guardian – by Morris Davis

“Honesty is the best policy” and “cheaters never win” are among the best known sayings of all times, but are they true? Reality shows that society’s reverence for these principles is betrayed by the fact that, all too often, it is the liars and cheaters we reward.

Jonah Lehrer was a bestselling author and a respected journalist until the summer of 2012 when the former Rhodes scholar and neuroscientist was shown to have engaged in a pattern of plagiarism and dishonesty. By early fall, the man who was once heralded as a prodigy had resigned from his post at the New Yorker, was reportedly terminated at Wired magazine, and the sale of his book Imagine was suspended. Continue reading “Is honesty the best policy? Look at the evidence”