Continue reading “Send Underwear To Obama & Boehner to Stop Amnesty for Illegals”
Month: June 2014
Intellihub – by SHEPARD AMBELLAS
KINGMAN, Ariz. (INTELLIHUB) — Spokespeople for the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) were shocked Wednesday, during their meeting, when activists converged on them with real questions, including ones about chemtrails and their effects on the human population. The meeting was reportedly set up as a smoke an mirrors spectacle by Sen. Kelli Ward, likely to sidetrack the public on geoengineering operations. However, the ADEQ found it tough to dodge real questions. Continue reading “AZ Dept. of Environmental Quality dominated by geoengineering activists at meeting”
New York Post – by Isabel Vincent and Melissa Klein
The humanitarian crisis of unaccompanied children crossing into the United States is hitting New York, with advocates scrambling to help them avoid deportation.
One advocacy group says it works with 30 new kids a month and expects the number to skyrocket within four months as the child immigrants are released from shelters.
There are 6,000 juvenile cases now in New York Immigration Court, said Claire Thomas, a lawyer working through the Safe Passage Project at New York Law School. Continue reading “Unaccompanied minors flood into city’s immigration court”
New York City has created what advocates say is the nation’s first system of public defenders for poor immigrants facing deportation.
The New York Immigrant Family Unity Project will cover all eligible immigrant city residents detained in the system and appearing in immigration courts in New York City or the New Jersey cities of Elizabeth and Newark.
Lawmakers approved $4.9 million for the initiative as part of the $75 billion budget passed early Thursday for the fiscal year which starts July 1. Continue reading “NYC Creates Public Defender System for Immigrants”
The City Council Thursday approved a municipal ID card program — paving the way for immigrants who entered illegally to obtain a legal form of identification — though some supporters had lingering concerns about security against fraud.
The city-issued IDs will feature fraud-prevention measures resembling those used by the Department of Motor Vehicles, but the standards for qualification will be “flexible” enough to accommodate residents excluded from other government-issued ID programs, Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito said. Continue reading “NYC council approves ID program for immigrants who entered illegally”
Daily Finance – by Mitch Lipka
Benet Wilson is one of the 2.5 million Americans who have paid a yearly fee to skip security lines at airports and thinks it’s worth every penny she paid for a five-year membership in the Global Entry program offered by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection department.
“It’s a beautiful thing,” says the 50-year-old frequent flier, who writes theAviationQueen.com blog.
Earlier in June, Wilson was traveling back to Washington Dulles International Airport from a conference in Qatar, and walked right past an enormous customs line that had a wait time of nearly an hour. Continue reading “Should You Spend $100 to Skip Airport Security Lines?”
I had the “privilege” of being invited, friended, or whatever you call it, to join the Pennsylvania Militia FB page a couple weeks ago. My reasons for going along with it were simple, networking. I feel networking is one of the biggest advantages of social media, and if you are involved in training preparedness minded folks, then a militia FB page is probably a good place to be. The Page Moderator/Dictator/Starter , is an individual by the name of Christopher Hershman. Mr’ Hershman fancies himself to be a “Colonel” in the militia of PA (my Girlfriend reminded me of the Metallica lyric “Where’s your crown, king nothing?) , and at the time I started there, I could care less what he called himself. Continue reading “Rank, Duty Position, And Authority, Or Not Being A “Colonel of Corn””
A groundbreaking new study finds synthetic (GMO) insulin is capable of rapidly producing type 1 diabetes in type 2 diabetics.
Last year, we reported on the dangers of insulin therapy for type 2 diabetics, following the publication of a study comprised of almost 85,000 type 2 diabetic patients that found insulin monotherapy doubled their risk of all-cause mortality, in addition to significantly increasing their risk for diabetes-related complications and cancer. Insulin monotherapy resulted in: Continue reading “GMO Insulin Causes Type 1 Diabetes in Type 2 Diabetics, Study Finds”
The VA scandal was just the beginning.
According to Internal documents obtained by New York Times, US military healthcare is “a system in which scrutiny is sporadic and avoidable errors are chronic.” As the NYT reports In Military Care, a Pattern of Errors but Not Scrutiny, “the military system has consistently had higher than expected rates of harm and complications in two central parts of its business — maternity care and surgery.” Continue reading “Dear US Soldiers And Veterans: Avoid The Following Hospitals Like The Plague”
Liberty Blitzkrieg – by Michael Krieger
The article below is a great example of the unforeseen dangers of creating gigantic bureaucratic systems into which hundreds of millions of people are forced into involuntarily, i.e., Obamacare.
The moment you create a national system of healthcare is the moment everybody suddenly has this so-called “health responsibility” to everyone else. Which is fascistic and the opposite of freedom. Again, I don’t have an issue with human beings voluntarily organizing into whatever kind of systems they want. This brings me back to this idea that we need to move more toward city-states and decentralization as a means of human organization. If the people of Boulder for example want to have a city-wide healthcare system they devise, great. Let the people decide. If you don’t want to live under that, you can easily move to another city that does it differently. This idea that one healthcare system should be in place for a gigantic, culturally diverse land of 315 million people is childish, inefficient and, for lack of a better word, stupid. Continue reading “Big Brother is Coming to Healthcare – How Hospitals are Entering Your Credit Card Info Into Algorithms”
Business Insider – by AHMED RASHEED AND ALEXANDER DZIADOSZ, REUTERS, MICHAEL B. KELLEY
Insurgents brought down an army helicopter over the northern city of Tikrit on Sunday as the military sent in tanks to try to dislodge them on second day of a major pushback against a Sunni militant takeover of large stretches of Iraq.
The army retreated to the south, BBC reports, striking a blow to the first major offensive to counter an Sunni insurgency led by extremist ISIS militants. Continue reading “Iraqi Army Retreats From Saddam’s Hometown As Assault On ISIS Falters”
SAN DIEGO (AP) — The downcast faces on computer screens are 1,500 miles away at a Border Patrol station in McAllen, Texas: a 20-year old Honduran woman arrested rafting across the Rio Grande and a 23-year-old man caught under similar circumstances.
Four agents wearing headsets reel through a list of personal questions, spending up to an hour on each adult and even longer on children. On an average day, hundreds of migrants are questioned on camera by agents in San Diego and other stations on the U.S.-Mexico border. Continue reading “Border Patrol has lots of agents _ in wrong places”
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama plans to nominate former Procter & Gamble executive Robert McDonald as the next Veterans Affairs secretary, as the White House seeks to shore up an agency beset by treatment delays and struggling to deal with an influx of new veterans returning from wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
An administration official said Obama would announce McDonald’s appointment Monday. If confirmed by the Senate, McDonald would succeed Eric Shinseki, the retired four-star general who resigned last month as the scope of the issues at veterans’ hospitals became apparent. Continue reading “Obama picks ex-P&G head to lead Veterans Affairs”
BAGHDAD (AP) — The al-Qaida breakaway group that has seized much of northeastern Syria and huge tracts of neighboring Iraq formally declared the establishment of a new Islamic state on Sunday and demanded allegiance from Muslims worldwide.
With brutal efficiency, the Sunni extremist group has carved out a large chunk of territory that has effectively erased the border between Iraq and Syria and laid the foundations of its proto-state. But the declaration, made on the first day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, could trigger a wave of infighting among the Sunni militant factions that formed a loose alliance in the blitz across Iraq and impact the broader international jihadist movement, especially the future of a-Qaida. Continue reading “Al-Qaida splinter declares new Islamic caliphate”
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Two men exchanged gunfire early Sunday on the city’s always-crowded Bourbon Street in the celebrated French Quarter and nine people were shot in the crossfire, including two who were critically wounded, police said.
Images captured from a surveillance camera above a bar showed people running down the famous street in the chaos of the shooting at 2:45 a.m., NOLA.com The Times-Picayune reported (http://bit.ly/1iRk304). Police and emergency workers responded immediately and attended to victims as other revelers looked on. Continue reading “Police: 9 shot on Bourbon Street in New Orleans”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has hinted that the Tel Aviv regime is ready to expand its military operations in the besieged Gaza Strip.
The Israeli premier said on Sunday that Tel Aviv was prepared to widen its operations in the besieged enclave.
Netanyahu says the almost-nightly strikes on Gaza could be expanded if need be. Continue reading “Netanyahu vows all-out war on Gaza”