New York Times – by Elizabeth A. Harris

Thomas A. Mars, formerly the chief administrative officer for Walmart in the United States, stepped down. José Luis Rodríguezmacedo Rivera, once the general counsel at Walmart’s Mexican division, quietly left the company. And H. Lee Scott Jr., who was Walmart’s chief executive, will retire from the board this month.

These men belong to a list of executives from the uppermost reaches of Walmart’s management who held critical positions when corruption scandals engulfed the company’s international division. Come July, almost every person on that list will no longer be with the company — but no departure has been cited by Walmart as a way to clean house after those scandals.   Continue reading “After Bribery Scandal, High-Level Departures at Walmart”

Seattle Police Chief Says Concussion Made Officer Stomp Handcuffed Man's HeadInfowars – by Mikael Thalen

A Seattle police officer who stomped on a handcuffed man’s head in 2010 was cleared of wrongdoing this week after Interim Seattle Police Chief Harry Bailey agreed that a concussion made him do it.

According to reports, Seattle police officer Garth Haynes, who was off-duty and out of uniform at the time, began fighting several men who confronted him as he violently restrained a woman outside a bar.   Continue reading “Seattle Police Chief Says Concussion Made Officer Stomp Handcuffed Man’s Head”

cdc gun lies 263x165 Why Trust an Organization that Lies and Cheats: The Silly CDCNatural Society – by Paul Fassa

Very few know what has been hidden from public view regarding CDC lies, cover-ups, and congressional investigation. Probably those who don’t know don’t want to. Well, here are some examples of CDC corruption for those who do want to know.   Continue reading “Why Trust an Organization that Lies and Cheats: The Silly CDC”

Minnesota Mint Press – by Katie Rucke

MINNEAPOLIS – On May 28, 126 police officers in Seattle filed a lawsuit in federal court, arguing that restrictions placed on the department by a federal court in 2012 regarding officers’ ability to use excessive force was a violation of their constitutional rights as officers.

Although the restrictions were put in place by the feds to curb the rampant unconstitutional policing the city was experiencing — especially when it came to the use of excessive and deadly force against mostly minority suspects — the officers argue that having to restrain themselves while on duty only leads to an increase in the number of citizens and officers killed.   Continue reading “Trained To Kill: The Policing Tactics The Public Isn’t Supposed To Know About”

Photo from twitter.com user ‏@AlexPerez83 RT News

A military jet has crashed into a residential area in Imperial Valley, Southern California. At least two houses caught fire, but no one on the ground was hurt. The pilot ejected successfully and was uninjured.

The fire on the ground was quickly extinguished, yet homes impacted by the crash have been severely damaged by debris and fire.   Continue reading “Military Harrier jet crashes into residential area in California”

Watch this videoCNN – by Laura Smith-Spark and Jim Acosta

Warsaw (CNN) — U.S. President Barack Obama voiced his support for Ukraine’s newly elected president and called for the international community to “stand solidly behind” him Wednesday, on a visit to Europe dominated by the crisis in Ukraine.

Obama’s meeting in Warsaw, Poland, with Ukrainian President-elect Petro Poroshenko can be seen as a sign of U.S. support for the government in Kiev as it battles to quell a pro-Russian separatist uprising in Ukraine’s East.   Continue reading “Obama vows to stand with Ukraine as he meets President-elect in Poland”

Freedom Outpost – by Tim Brown, March 4, 2013

Freedom Outpost’s Constitutional scholar Publius Huldah recently explained why Federal gun laws are unlawful. She noted that the first gun control measures put in place in the United States did not take place until 1927, when Congress banned the mailing of certain weapons. We went from 1776 to 1927, 150 years after our founding, when Congress decided, “We better start disarming the American people.”

Huldah goes through the history of the Federal government’s unlawful actions to regulate firearms in America and she points out that when it started, the Progressives had already begun a takeover. I’ll also note the Federal Reserve had been established in 1913 as well.   Continue reading “All Federal Gun Laws Are Unconstitutional”

CTV News

A manhunt is underway after a gunman fatally shot three RCMP officers and injured two others in Moncton, N.B.

As heavily armed police conduct their search, residents in the Moncton Coliseum area and Pinehurst subdivision are advised to remain under lock down.

“We are still urging the public to stay inside their homes,” Const. Damien Theriault of the Codiac RCMP told CTV News Channel overnight.   Continue reading “Moncton manhunt after shooter kills three, wounds two RCMP officers”

Tyler Flockhart, currently a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Guelph, led the analysis, which combined all the known data about monarch populations and the factors that influence them.CBC News – by Emily Chung

The main cause of the monarch butterfly’s decline is the loss of milkweed — its food — in its U.S. breeding grounds, a new study has found. That all but confirms that the spread of genetically modified crops is indirectly killing the monarch.

This past winter, the number of monarch butterflies wintering in Mexico fell to its lowest since 1993, when records first started being kept, the World Wildlife Fund and Mexico’s Environment Department reported in January. That report blamed the loss of milkweed owing to genetically modified crops and urban sprawl in the U.S. and illegal logging in the butterflies’ Mexican wintering ground.   Continue reading “Monarch butterfly decline linked to spread of GM crops”

Captured Soldier Bowe BergdahlIdaho Statesman – by BRIAN SKOLOFF AND RAHIM FAIEZ

 — Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl’s hometown abruptly canceled plans Wednesday for a welcome-home celebration, citing security concerns over the prospect of big crowds — both for and against the soldier.

The town of 8,000 has been swamped with hate mail and angry calls over Bergdahl, whose release after five years of Taliban captivity in Afghanistan has touched off a debate over whether the 28-year-old should be given a hero’s welcome or punished as a deserter.   Continue reading “Bergdahl’s hometown cancels celebration amid furor”

US Secretary of State John Kerry speaks during a news conference in Beirut, Wednesday, June 4, 2014.Press TV

US Secretary of State John Kerry has denounced Syria’s presidential election, calling it a meaningless exercise.

The vote was “meaningless, because you can’t have an election where millions of your people don’t even have an ability to vote,” said Kerry, who landed in the Lebanese capital Beirut on Wednesday on an unannounced visit.   Continue reading “Kerry calls Syrian presidential election ‘meaningless’”

Press TV

Syria’s incumbent leader Bashar al-Assad has been announced as the winner of the country’s presidential election.

On Wednesday, Syrian People’s Assembly speaker Jihad al-Laham announced that Assad won 88.7 percent of the vote, or 10,319,723 of 11,634,412 votes cast in Tuesday’s election, the official SANA news agency reported.   Continue reading “Assad wins Syrian presidential election”

Press TV

A new report by the World Health Organization (WHO) says at least 208 people have died from the highly contagious Ebola virus in Guinea.

The UN health agency said on Wednesday it has registered 328 confirmed or suspected cases of Ebola, including 208 deaths, in the West African country.   Continue reading “Ebola kills 208 people in Guinea: WHO”

Edward Snowden.(AFP Photo / Channel 4)RT News

Nearly one year to the day since the National Security Agency’s secret spy programs were first exposed through leaked documents, the man responsible or those disclosures has come out and endorsed a new anti-surveillance campaign.

Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden — the source of a trove of classified documents that since last June have revealed the inner workings of the United States intelligence community’s vast surveillance apparatus — issued a statement on Wednesday this week in support of the ‘Reset the Net’ campaign scheduled for Thursday, exactly one year after the first news stories stemming from his cache of leaked documents were published.   Continue reading “Snowden publically supports Reset the Net campaign”

The Internal Revenue Service headquarters in Washington.CNBC

More than 77,000 foreign banks, investment funds and other financial institutions have agreed to share information about U.S. account holders with the IRS as part of a crackdown on offshore tax evasion, the Treasury Department announced Monday.

The list includes 515 Russian financial institutions. Russian banks had to apply directly to the IRS because the U.S. broke off negotiations with the Russian government over an information-sharing agreement because of Russia’s actions in Ukraine. Continue reading “77,000 Foreign Banks to Share Tax Info with IRS”

Chester NezTime – by Denver Nicks

Chester Nez was one of 29 Native Americans whose work creating a secret code was instrumental in World War II

Chester Nez, the last surviving member of the original band of Navajo Native Americans whose code helped the Allies win World War II, died Wednesday. He was 93 and suffered from kidney failure, Reuters reports.   Continue reading “Last of the Navajo Code Talkers Dies at 93”

Gun Control NY.JPGSyracuse – by Michelle Breidenbach

Albany, NY – Opponents of New York’s new gun laws are demanding answers about how Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the New York state Legislature can rush bills into law with little time for anyone to even read the bill.

The NY Safe Act was passed with no hearings, no testimony, no time for opponents to make a case to their legislators.

It’s not the first time a controversial bill was turned into a midnight emergency.   Continue reading “The Safe Act “emergency”: How Cuomo, past governors bypassed public to make laws”