Liberland – by Alan

Glenn Greenwald says he’ll name Americans who have been victims of NSA surveillance and it will be his “biggest” revelation.

“One of the big questions when it comes to domestic spying is, ‘Who have been the NSA’s specific targets?’,” he said.

“Are they political critics and dissidents and activists? Are they genuinely people we’d regard as terrorists?

Continue reading “Greenwald To Name Americans Spied On By NSA”

Rancher Cliven Bundy speaks during a news conference near his ranch on April 24, 2014 in Bunkerville, Nevada. (AFP Photo / David Becker)RT News

With the Republican embrace of Cliven Bundy softening as soon as he offered his controversial views on the state of African Americans in the US, the Nevada rancher has decided to switch his allegiances.

According to the Associated Press, Bundy officially left the Republican Party last Friday, when both he and his wife registered as voters with the Independent American Party. The switch took place at an event held by his new political group, which was organized to honor “his courage in standing up for state sovereignty.”   Continue reading “Cliven Bundy leaves GOP, joins the Independent American Party”

Activists opposed to the Keystone XL Canada-to-Texas pipeline project enter the the exclusive neighborhood of Bel-Air to rally outside a USC Shoah Foundation fundraiser to be attended by President Barack Obama on May 7, 2014 in Los Angeles, California. (AFP Photo / Getty Images / David McNew)RT News

Bad welds, dents and damaged coatings discovered at the southern leg of the Keystone XL pipeline have led to safety regulators imposing two extra conditions on the implementation of the project’s northern segment.

The two new conditions have been added to a list of 57, which project implementers, TransCanada Corp, agreed to three years ago, AP reports. The federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration has thus amended the environmental impact statement on Keystone XL released by the State Department in January.    Continue reading “‘Horrible’ pipeline defects prompt new rules for Keystone XL construction”

A man looks at the exterior of the abandoned Packard Automotive Plant December 13, 2013 in Detroit, Michigan. (AFP Photo / Getty Images / Joshua Lott)RT News

Some $1.9 billion is to be spent on clearing abandoned or unusable properties in Detroit. Around 70,000 unusable properties across the city will need to be cleared in the next five years – at a cost of $1.9 billion to the taxpayer.

Uninhabited or unusable properties make up one in five of all the city’s properties.   Continue reading “Clearing up Detroit’s dilapidated buildings to cost $1.9bn”

Mail.com

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Google will build a car without a steering wheel.

It doesn’t need one because it drives itself. The two-seater won’t be sold publicly, but Google said Tuesday it hopes by this time next year, 100 prototypes will be on public roads. Though not driving very quickly — the top speed would be 25 mph.

The cars are a natural next step for Google, which already has driven hundreds of thousands of miles in California with Lexus SUVs and Toyota Priuses outfitted with a combination of sensors and computers.   Continue reading “Google: We’re building car with no steering wheel”

Mail.com

BEIJING (AP) — China is targeting popular smartphone-based instant messaging services in a monthlong campaign to crack down on the spreading of rumors and what it calls infiltration of hostile forces, in the latest move restricting online freedom of expression.

Such services incorporate social media functions that allow users to post photos and updates to their friends, or follow the feeds of companies, social groups or celebrities, and — more worryingly for the government — intellectuals, journalists and activists who comment on politics, law and society. They also post news reports shunned by mainstream media.   Continue reading “China cracks down on instant messaging services”

Mail.com

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A treasure trove of rare gold coins discovered by a California couple out walking their dog has gone on sale, with one coin selling for $15,000 on Tuesday.

The coins date from 1847 to 1894 and have been valued at $11 million. Several coins were auctioned at the Old San Francisco Mint at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, and one of them — an 1874 $20 double eagle that is usually worth $4,250 — sold for $15,000.   Continue reading “California couple’s buried gold coins go for sale”

Mail.com

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Someone is dropping envelopes full of cash across San Francisco — and causing an international frenzy on social media.

An anonymous man with the Twitter handle @HiddenCash has been hiding money throughout the city since Friday, leading scores on a scavenger hunt. His Twitter following exploded from a few hundred Friday to more than 80,000 and counting by midday Tuesday.   Continue reading “Anonymous “HiddenCash” creates social media frenzy”

This year I took my mom to a Memorial Day parade held at Turkey Brook Park in Mount Olive Township in New Jersey.  I could not help but notice that all the American flags in the parade had a gold fringe on them.  I have heard the topic of the gold fringed flag brought up on several occasions during the Trenches Livestream cast. 

I found various pages on the Internet that address the issue.  Does anyone else have any further information about how these flags have come to be in every courtroom, municipal building, etc.? Continue reading “Gold Fringed Flag”

How long have they really had this? 

C-Net – by Michael Franco

Thanks to her kick-butt skill of telekinesis (my secret superhero power wish), longtime X-Men alum Jean Grey can move things with her mind. And she’s not the only one.

New research out of the Technische Universität München (TUM) in Germany is hinting that mind control might soon reach entirely new heights — even by us non-mutants. They’ve demonstrated that pilots might be able to fly planes through the sky using their thoughts alone.   Continue reading “‘Mind pilots’ steer plane sim with thoughts alone”

obamaSent to us by the author.

Pontiac Tribune

Tonight at 10 p.m. ET on NBC an interview with Edward Snowden will be aired, his first with any US television station.

In the exclusive interview with NBC news anchor Brian Williams, Snowden blamed the State Department for isolating him in Russia and announced he was not a low-level systems administrator as the U.S. government has repeated again and again…   Continue reading “Edward Snowden To Be Interviewed By NBC News Tonight”

Medical workers moving patient on gurney through hospital corridor ShutterstockRaw Story – by Travis Gettys

A California veteran suffered a stroke that eventually killed him nearly three years ago after police beat him up when he tried to leave a Veterans Hospital with a shunt in his arm, according to a lawsuit filed by the man’s family.

Jonathan Montano grew impatient May 25, 2011, after waiting four hours for dialysis at the VA hospital in Loma Linda, and he told a nurse he intended to leave with the needle apparatus in his arm so staffers at a VA hospital in Long Beach would not have to insert a new one.   Continue reading “Cops caused fatal stroke by beating CA veteran tired of waiting at VA hospital, suit claims”

Gina McCarthy testifies before a Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearing on her nomination to be administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency on Capitol Hill in Washington April 11, 2013. (REUTERS/Joshua Roberts)The Daily Caller – by Michael Bastasch

Despite being soundly rejected a few years ago, cap-and-trade will soon get its U.S. encore — but not in Congress. The Obama administration will likely use its executive power to unilaterally impose carbon dioxide emissions trading systems.

The Environmental Protection Agency will unveil regulations for existing U.S. power plants early next month. For months, onlookers have been speculating about what could be included in the EPA’s rule for existing power plants.   Continue reading “EPA To Unilaterally Push Cap And Trade On Carbon Emissions”

MassPrivateI

First lady Michelle Obama is encouraging students to monitor (spy) their older relatives, friends and co-workers for any racially insensitive comments they might make, and to challenge those comments whenever they’re made.

One journalist, this was more than an off-hand comment made by the first lady. In the opinion of Cheryl Chumley, a reporter for The Washington Times Michelle Obama’s remark reflects a growing trend in America to target and attack individuals for committing “thought crime.” Continue reading “Police state America where even your thoughts are criminal”

Newtown Tax Assessors Database: ‘The whole town of Sandy Hook was bought off on Christmas Day 2009′, says investigatorIntellihub – by Shepard Ambellas

NEWTOWN, Conn. (INTELLIHUB) — That’s right, on Christmas Day of 2009, when just about every business in the country was closed, numerous real estate transactions for the amount of $0.00 (free) took place in and around the town, most of which included families or public figures, such as Gene Rossen, who were in some way connected to the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.   Continue reading “Newtown Tax Assessors Database: ‘The whole town of Sandy Hook was bought off on Christmas Day 2009′, says investigator”