Continue reading “Big Victory! UK Man Wins Court Case Against BBC for 9/11 Cover Up”
Month: September 2014
Look at this grotesque email I received from the CFR. They must be getting really desperate for that immigration reform to pass.
In light of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere hearing on Thursday, September 18 titled “Unaccompanied Alien Children: Pressing the Administration for a Strategy,” you may be interested in these recent CFR publications on the subject. Continue reading “CFR Pre-Hearing Brief: Unaccompanied Alien Children – Pressing the Administration for a Strategy”
Our bodies are designed to survive. Aside from your spiritual being, the earth body has many functions. Our subconscious protects us on two fronts. Internal threats and external threats.
External threats are predators, storms, weapons, etc. Internal threats are bacterial, fungal and viral. There are also mental illness which is an internal illness of a virtual nature. Continue reading “How to build the ability to heal yourself and others”
“Facts are stubborn things, but statistics are pliable.” ― Mark Twain
I never believe government manufactured numbers. They will always be adjusted, massaged, and manipulated to achieve a happy ending for the propagandists attempting to control and fleece the sheep. Yesterday, the government produced retail sales numbers for August that were weak and the corporate MSM propaganda machine immediately threw up bold headlines declaring how strong these numbers were. Positive stories were published on the interwebs and Wall Street hack economists were rolled out on CNBC, where the bubble headed bimbos and prostitutes for the status quo like Jim Cramer and Steve Liesman declared the recovery gaining strength. Woo Hoo. Continue reading “Kohl’s & The Rest Of The Retailers Are In Deep Doo Doo”
Before kicking off today, I would like to make two things crystal clear:
1. I do not condone what ‘ISIS’ has done (or appears to have done). I regard Islamism – and its millions of assenting fellow-travelers – as a development fueled by male misogyny and medieval concepts. It represents a murderous fanaticism far worse than anything the Nazis displayed, and it will be even harder to eradicate.
2. I think it highly probable that David Haines was a good and brave man, doing his duty and very sadly dying in the process. Continue reading “Britain Heads Towards A War Based On Poor Intelligence, Corporate Disinformation, Spook Manipulation, Business Lobbyists & Political Ego”
Windsor Regional Hospital in southwestern Ontario has seen a sudden surge of young patients with severe respiratory issues.
The children affected are mostly younger than five years old.
Continue reading “Enterovirus D-68 could be cause of surge of admissions at Ontario hospital”
CBS Houston – by Benjamin Fearnow
Midland County, Texas (CBS HOUSTON) – Midland County Sheriff Gary Painter said that law enforcement agencies along the “wide open” border have received alerts to be on the lookout for terrorists from the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria crossing into the United States.
Painter, who said he has worked along the border for “about eight years,” stated that alerts have been issued to border law enforcement to be on the lookout for suspicious terrorist activity, specifically involving ISIS cells being smuggled into the United States. Continue reading “Texas Sheriff: Reports Warn Of ISIS Terrorist Cells Coming Across The Border”
CBS San Francisco – by Joe Vasquez
MENDOCINO COUNTY (KPIX 5) — There’s been some mysterious activity in the skies over Mendocino County lately. Folks who live there want to know: Who are the armed men dropping out of helicopters to chop down their marijuana grows?
They dress in combat camouflage, some of them hide their faces. This summer, a group of men in Mendocino County loaded into helicopters and flew missions to eradicate marijuana. They’re not police officers. They work for a security company called Lear Asset Management. Continue reading “Mysterious Men Dropping From Helicopters To Chop Down NorCal Marijuana Grows”
Colorado has a history with gun violence so it’s only appropriate that 17-year-old Kai Kloepfer, a high school student from Boulder, would want to apply biometric user authentication to firearms. Kloepfer just won the $50,000 Smart Tech for Firearms Challenge for his smart gun prototype.
Angel investor and gun reform advocate Ron Conway became the main backer of the $1 million Smart Tech prize to spur gun safety solutions earlier this year. “Let’s use innovation to bring about gun safety. Let’s not rely on Washington,” Conway told the SF Examiner in January. According to the Smart Tech Foundation, a total of 15 innovators will receive a part of that million dollar prize. Kloepfer is the first to get the award. Continue reading “Colorado High Schooler Invents Smart Gun That Unlocks With Your Fingerprint”
Are you ready for the possibility of an Ebola pandemic that will interrupt the day-to-day life of most Americans?
Because now, the CDC has issued a checklist and said that “Now is the time to prepare.”
You can read the entire document HERE. As well, the state department has purchased 160,000 Ebola Hazmat suits. Continue reading “When the CDC Tells Us to Prepare for the Ebola Pandemic, Things Are About to Get Real”
The Japan News – by Eiji Noyori and Hiroyuki Oyama
FUKUSHIMA — Three and a half years after the outbreak of the crisis at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, efforts to contain water contaminated with radioactive substances at the plant are at a crossroads.
Resolving the radioactive water issue is the first hurdle toward decommissioning the plant. However, despite the time that has passed since the beginning of the nuclear disaster, Tokyo Electric Power Co. has been unable to curb the growing volume of contaminated water. Continue reading “TEPCO measures fail to hold water”
Japan‘s nuclear watchdog has given the green light for two reactors to restart but the operator still has to persuade local communities they are safe.
Widespread anti-nuclear sentiment has simmered in Japan ever since an earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 caused meltdowns at the Fukushima power plant, sparking the worst atomic disaster since Chernobyl. Continue reading “Japan To Restart Two Nuclear Reactors”
Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) and BP Singapore (BPS), an affiliate of BP Group have signed an agreement under which the Japanese utility will purchase up to 1.20 million tons of LNG per year over 17 years from the British firm.
LNG supplies are expected to commence in April 2017 and the gas would be sourced from multiple sources the BP holds, TEPCO said Friday in a statement. The prices will be linked to the US Henry Hub gas index rather than oil prices. Continue reading “TEPCO Signs LNG Purchase Deal With BP”
Scientists warn two solar flares heading our way are some of the biggest seen in several years.
But what exactly are they?
Jeff Rodgers from the Bishop Planetarium in Bradenton explains solar flares originate in sun spots, and are a wave of charged particles blasted from the surface. Continue reading “Two giant solar flares head to earth”
A Grade 12 student in Lethbridge, Alta., was suspended last week for dealing Pepsi to fellow students out of his locker.
Keenan Shaw was suspended for two days by Winston Churchill high school for selling the soft drink to students, violating a school policy that only permits diet pop on the premises.
Shaw says he was told the sales violated the nutrition and marketing policies, and that he was operating a business without a licence. Continue reading “Lethbridge student suspended for dealing banned Pepsi from locker”
Youth-oriented retailer Urban Outfitters apologizes for selling a sweatshirt that appears to be covered in blood spatter, dirt and holes, and is emblazoned with the name of infamous U.S. college Kent State.
The clothing chain’s website shows the sweatshirt as being sold out and no longer available. But over the weekend, it was available for $129 US. Continue reading “Kent State sweatshirt prompts Urban Outfitters apology”
NEW YORK (AP) — A man charged with killing a boy who disappeared in 1979 calmly told investigators that he strangled the child, according to a confession video played in court Monday for a judge who will decide whether the recording can be used as trial evidence.
Pedro Hernandez has pleaded not guilty to murder in the death of Etan Patz, who vanished on his way to school. In the video, Hernandez is sitting in a plain room with lots of chairs as a detective asks him about the child. Continue reading “Judge sees confession tape in ’79 missing boy case”
BAGHDAD (AP) — The extremist-held Iraqi city of Mosul is set to usher in a new school year. But unlike years past, there will be no art or music. Classes about history, literature and Christianity have been “permanently annulled.”
The Islamic State group has declared patriotic songs blasphemous and ordered that certain pictures be torn out of textbooks. But instead of compliance, Iraq’s second largest city has — at least so far — responded to the Sunni militants’ demands with silence. Although the extremists stipulated that the school year would begin Sept. 9, pupils have uniformly not shown up for class, according to residents who spoke anonymously because of safety concerns. They said families were keeping their children home out of mixed feelings of fear, resistance and uncertainty. Continue reading “Islamic State group issues new curriculum in Iraq”