The Department of Homeland Security is set to pay for illegal minors up to the age of 17 to be escorted into the United States, according to a new solicitation posted at FedBizOpps.
The Seattle Times newspaper has decided to ban the name “Redskins” from its print edition and website, sports editor Don Shelton wrote in a blog post on Wednesday.
“We’ll probably receive scathing emails, letters, phone calls and reader comments telling me we’re too PC, that the name actually honors Native Americans or that we have no right to change a team’s official name,” Shelton wrote. “Everyone’s entitled to an opinion – even if I don’t buy it. We’re banning the name for one reason: It’s offensive. Far from honoring Native Americans, the term colors an entire race. Many Native Americans consider it an outdated label placed on their people.” Continue reading “Seattle Times Bans The Name ‘Redskins’ From Newspaper, Website”
Rome burned as Nero fiddled. Today, the American-Mexican border is going up in smoke. America is being invaded and successfully occupied. Obama is fanning the flames of border violence and artificially contrived human destitution through his unyielding attitude of corporate servitude resulting in providing the globalists with an endless supply of cheap, illegal alien labor regardless of the cost to the American people and their safety as well as the safety of the immigrants themselves. And on a more grand scale, this crisis is one more nail in the coffin in America and Obama knows exactly what he is doing. Continue reading “What You Are Not Being Told About the Invasion of America”
If someone told you that your backyard may contain plants that could boost your immune system, improve your eyesight, relieve your upset stomach and help you fall asleep, would you believe them? Most people take for granted the fact that their yard, neighborhood or favorite spot in the woods are full of vegetation with therapeutic value.
However, Native Americans were quick to realize the value in plants. They have been practicing herbal therapy for thousands of years. Some believe that native medicine may be as old as 40,000 years old, although there was no early written language and nothing was documented until the Europeans arrived at the end of the 15th century. Continue reading “5 Native American Survival Medicines Secretly Made At Home”
A new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll reveals that President Obama’s overall approval rating has cratered to 41 percent, tying the low-water mark of his presidency.
Moreover, only half of those polled consider the president to be competent, a lower percentage than that accrued by George W. Bush following the pounding he and his administration took for its response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005. One year later, Democrats took control of both houses of Congress. Whether the 2014 election will produce similar results remains to be seen. Continue reading “Hope and Change Has Crashed and Burned”
LITHIA (FOX 13) –The FBI is hoping you can help them track down a Lithia man, believed to be a ‘doomsday prepper,’ who fled from agents Monday morning.
According to the agency, Martin Howard Winters sped away from FBI agents when they approached him around 8:40 Monday morning. They believe he then abandoned his car and fled on foot.
RICHMOND, Ind. (June 18, 2014) – A Richmond woman was shot in the face and a toddler was bound with duct tape Tuesday night, according to the Wayne County Sheriff’s Department.
The 911 call from the Robert F. Smith Apartments at 850 N. 17th St. took place around 9:35 p.m. with reports of shots fired.
Utah’s residents have had a contentious history with the federal government when it comes to public lands. Now one county in the state has taken things a step further, passing a resolution refusing to recognize federal agents.
A video posted to facebook today shows two belligerent cops assault a man and his mother.
The man filming is Richard Phillips who was at his mother’s house today when two Wareham, Massachusetts police officers, Chandler and Verhaegen showed up at the door.
The British parliament was quickly evacuated following a security alert after a suspicious package was found in the visitor center in Westminster Hall.
Witness report that all traffic was at a standstill around Parliament Square, according to UK media.
Lawyers for accused Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev have petitioned Massachusetts to move the trial out of state, claiming the juror pool in Boston is already biased against their client.
An 89-year-old Czechoslovakian immigrant was arrested by federal officials in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Wednesday to face charges related to allegations that he worked for the Nazis at concentration camps during World War II.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The deteriorating situation in Iraq is giving Congress pause about President Barack Obama’s plan to withdraw U.S. forces from Afghanistan by the end of 2016, with fears that hard-fought gains could be wiped out by a resurgent Taliban.
Senior Obama administration officials insist Afghanistan is not Iraq, with a population far more receptive to a continued U.S. presence and the promise of a new unity government. But the officials could offer no assurances that Afghanistan won’t devolve into chaos after Americans leave, as Iraq has. Continue reading “Iraq crisis stirs fears Afghanistan could be next”
PHOENIX (AP) — A teacher at an Arizona prison was alone in a room full of sex offenders before being stabbed and sexually assaulted by a convicted rapist, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press about an attack that highlighted major security lapses at the facility.
The attack occurred Jan. 30 at the Eyman prison’s Meadows Unit, which houses about 1,300 rapists, child molesters and other sex offenders. The teacher was administering a high school equivalency test to about a half-dozen inmates in a classroom with no guard nearby and only a radio to summon help. The Department of Corrections issued only a bare-bones press release after the attack, but the AP pieced together what happened based on interviews and investigatory reports obtained under the Arizona Public Records Act. Continue reading “Left alone with a sex offender, a teacher is raped”
TENINO, Wash. (AP) — A deadly blast at a fireworks plant in Washington state came as workers were preparing shells for shipping, an Entertainment Fireworks official says.
The company produces professional fireworks shows around the region, Ken Julian, company operations vice president, said in a statement. After the explosion Wednesday morning, a 75-year-old man died of his injuries while awaiting an airlift to a regional trauma center. Continue reading “ATF, Wash. investigate fatal fireworks explosion”
BAGHDAD (AP) — Sunni militants hung their black banners on watchtowers at Iraq’s largest oil refinery, a witness said Thursday, suggesting an ever-increasing stranglehold on the vital facility by insurgents who have seized vast territories across the country’s north. A top Iraqi security official and a militant fighting for control of the plant said the government still held it.
The fighting at Beiji, some 250 kilometers (155 miles) north of Baghdad, comes as Iraq has asked the U.S. for airstrikes targeting the militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. While U.S. President Barack Obama has not fully ruled out the possibility of launching airstrikes, such action is not imminent in part because intelligence agencies have been unable to identify clear targets on the ground, officials said. Continue reading “Militants fly their black flags over Iraq refinery”
ST. LOUIS (AP) — With Florida carrying out the nation’s third execution in less than 24 hours, some death penalty states — particularly in the South — appear unfazed by the recent furor over how the U.S. performs lethal injections.
A botched execution seven weeks ago in Oklahoma amplified a national debate about the secretive ways many states obtain lethal injection drugs from loosely regulated compounding pharmacies. Before Tuesday, nine executions were stayed or delayed — albeit some for reasons not related to the drug question. Continue reading “Concerns aside, executions persist in some states”
An attorney pursuing a lawsuit against alleged domestic United States military spying says during depositions in the case a civilian employee who worked for the Army admitted he was paid to attend activist meetings at private homes in the state of Washington. And a fusion center intelligence employee, who coordinated with the military, also considered civil disobedience to be “terrorism.”Continue reading “Army spied on activist’s meetings in their homes, call civil disobedience terrorism”