Photo credit: SS&SS (Flickr)Western Journalism – by L. Todd Wood

The Centers for Disease Control is another federal agency that has slithered to incompetence under the Obama administration. I wonder if they were instructed to lose their “frat boy” culture like the Secret Service. Or, maybe they’ve been turned into a Muslim outreach organization like NASA.

At any rate, their website currently displays this highlight, “The United States is currently experiencing a nationwide outbreak of enterovirus D68 (EV-D68) associated with severe respiratory illness.”   The funny thing is that this virus was historically rare in the United States.  The epidemic only became apparent as thousands of illegal immigrant children were allowed to cross the border and then were secretly moved to locations around the country, without telling local authorities.   Continue reading “Evidence Grows That Obama’s Policies Caused The Deaths Of 5 American Kids And Sickened Thousands”

Ebola lockdownReady Nutrition – by Tess Pennington

Gross mismanagement of the Ebola crisis by CDC and health officials around the country has left many Americans wondering what steps they need to take to prevent getting infected.

Some of the key questions facing concerned citizens revolve around the concepts of self quarantine and social distancing.   Continue reading “When Should I Go Into a Full Pandemic Lockdown Mode And Self Quarantine?”

Jim Stone Freelance

Other than the original facebook post, this web site is the first one to carry this and it needs to be spread, the future may be riding on this one, ARCHIVE, POST POST AND RE-POST!

Permalink

Nana Kwame wrote:

People in the Western World need to know what’s happening here in West Africa. THEY ARE LYING!!! “Ebola” as a virus does NOT Exist and is NOT “Spread”. The Red Cross has brought a disease to 4 specific countries for 4 specific reasons and it is only contracted by those who receive treatments and injections from the Red Cross. That is why Liberians and Nigerians have begun kicking the Red Cross out of their countries and reporting in the news the truth. Now bear with me:   Continue reading “From Ghana: Ebola is not real and the only people who have gotten sick are those who have received treatments and injections from the Red Cross”

Sent to us by the author.

Before It’s News – by Look up…Wake up

On the cusp of the historical GOLD REPATRIATION REFERENDUM in Switzerland, I thought it fitting to remind the Swiss people of the vital importance of this votation.

VOTE YES to Gold Repatriation on November 30th 2014 or say goodbye to the Swiss way of life and hello to inflation, rising prices, unemployment, higher taxes, foreclosures, austerity, loss of sovereignty, social decay and unrest and all the other good stuff that comes with Central Bank money printing!   Continue reading “To The Good People of Switzerland…Your Gold is All Gone!”

flynn robbersWNEP 16 – by DAVE BOHMAN AND NIKKI KRIZE

SCRANTON — A state lawmaker from Scranton pulled out a gun last night on the streets of Harrisburg and shot at a robber, according to police.

Police say state representative Marty Flynn from Scranton fired a gun Tuesday night at a teenager who tried to rob him and another representative in Harrisburg.   Continue reading “State Lawmaker Involved In Gunfire”

Revised History – by Al Benson, Jr.

It has been accurately asserted by author Gene H. Kizer Jr. that: “The arguments for the right of secession are unequivocal. There is the constitutional right based on the Compact Theory, and the revolutionary right based on the idea that a free people have a right to change their government anytime they see fit. The Compact Theory views the Constitution as a legal agreement between the states–a compact–and if any one state violates the compact, then the entire agreement becomes null and void. Northern states unquestionably violated the Constitution on a number of grounds including Personal Liberty Laws on their books, as well as by deliberately harboring fugitives from justice by protecting the sons of John Brown who were wanted by Virginia for murder at Harpers Ferry. Continue reading “Part 2–More About Secession the “History” Books Haven’t Told Us”

Osama bin Laden (Reuters / Stringer)RT

The body of Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden was not buried at sea, according to leaked emails of intelligence firm Stratfor, as revealed by WikiLeaks.

Stratfor’s vice-president for intelligence, Fred Burton, believes the body was “bound for Dover, [Delaware] on [a] CIA plane” and then “onward to the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Bethesda [Maryland],” an email says.   Continue reading “Leaked: Bin Laden not buried at sea, body moved on CIA plane to US”

Reuters / Jorge SilvaRT

The parents of two children who posted defamatory comments about a fellow student in a fake Facebook account are heading to court, which will determine whether parents should be liable for their children’s internet activity.

The parents of seventh-grade students Dustin Athearn and Melissa Snodgrass learned this the hard way after their children created a fake Facebook page under the name of fellow student Alexandria (Alex) Boston. Dustin and Melissa, with the help of a “Fat Face” app, distorted Alex’s features, while also making offensive comments about the girl.   Continue reading “Parents may be held liable for children’s Facebook posts – court”

U.S. President Barack Obama holds a meeting with cabinet agencies coordinating the government's Ebola response, in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington October 15,  2014. (Reuters/Kevin Lamarque)RT

President Barack Obama insisted Wednesday that the US response to the Ebola outbreak is effective and that the chances of the deadly virus taking hold in the United States are “extremely low.”

Concerns about health protocols have grown since two nurses that looked after Thomas Eric Duncan, who died of the disease, contracted the virus. Duncan was infected with Ebola in Liberia, where he is from, and then took a flight to the US.   Continue reading “Obama: I ‘hugged and kissed’ Ebola nurses”

Darrell Steinberg, Kevin de LeonMail.com

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Democratic Sen. Kevin de Leon was sworn in as the first Latino to head the California Senate in more than a century with an expensive and out-of-the-ordinary soiree Wednesday night in downtown Los Angeles.

The event at Walt Disney Concert Hall with an estimated price tag of $50,000 resembled a presidential inaugural more than the low-key affairs at the state Capitol held by past senate leaders. “What a beautiful venue,” de Leon said of the modern architectural marvel designed by Frank Gehry. “This is a grand public building and the centerpiece of my district. I chose this venue because it sits close to the working families who put me in office, and it is a visual representation of California’s innovative spirit.”   Continue reading “Lawmaker sworn in with bash that busts tradition”

Dario GuerreroMail.com

MEXICO CITY (AP) — A Harvard University student who was stuck for months in Mexico after crossing the border without permission said Wednesday he hopes to be back in the United States in less than a week after being granted a humanitarian visa.

Dario Guerrero Meneses, who was taken from Mexico to California by his parents at age 2 and only learned of his illegal status as a young adult, left the U.S. to accompany his dying mother who was seeking alternative cancer treatments. The 21-year-old told The Associated Press he will fulfill her last request and carry her ashes to the family’s home in Los Angeles.   Continue reading “Harvard student to be back in US in less than week”

Mail.com

TOKYO (AP) — The first made in Japan passenger jet in four decades reaches a development milestone later this week.

A “rolling out” ceremony in Nagoya, central Japan on Saturday will unveil the long awaited Mitsubishi Regional Jet, or MRJ, a fuel-efficient lightweight carbon-fiber composite passenger plane. Major Japanese machinery maker Mitsubishi Heavy Industries says the MRJ90 will seat 88 people, while the MRJ70 will seat 76, and the planned MRJ100X will have 100 seats.   Continue reading “First Japan passenger jet in 4 decades rolling out”

Mail.com

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — A popular tourist attraction in southern Arizona is at risk of being contaminated with orange and brown sludge that spilled from two abandoned mines near Patagonia.

The Trench Camp and Lead Queen mines overflowed late last month because of heavy rainfall caused by Hurricane Odile. The Arizona Department of Environmental Quality has issued a notice of violation to an Asarco trust that owns the Trench Camp Mine near Patagonia, Arizona. “We’ve talked to our consultants, and we’re gonna do what the state requires us to do,” Jay Steinberg, who runs the trust, said Wednesday.   Continue reading “Abandoned mines spill orange sludge in Arizona”

Juan Francisco Estrada-GonzalezMail.com

SAN DIEGO (AP) — The convicted leader of a Mexican drug gang that killed and kidnapped people in Southern California has been sentenced to a dozen life sentences without chance of parole.

U-T San Diego (http://bit.ly/1vwgjq2) says Jorge Rojas Lopez also got an additional 162 years to life Wednesday in San Diego. Rojas was convicted of four murders and pleaded guilty to five more. Authorities say Rojas was the head of Los Palillos — Spanish for “the Toothpicks.”   Continue reading “Kidnapping gang’s leader gets 12 life terms”

Police car photoKIRO 7

Ben and Rachel Kohnen were racing to the hospital in the middle of the night because Rachel had gone into labor, according to FOX 43. The couple claims they were going about 30 miles over the speed limit. When a police car turned on its lights to pull them over, they admit they kept going.

Rachel was terrified of having the baby in the car. She tried calling 911 to explain the situation, but she was having contractions and was so upset that the 911 operator may not have been able to understand her.   Continue reading “Police allegedly hold woman in labor at gunpoint for speeding to hospital”

Yale-New Haven HospitalCourant – by Kelly Glista

W HAVEN — Officials say Yale-New Haven Hospital expects to receive test results in the next 24 hours on a patient who recently traveled to Liberia and was admitted Wednesday night with a fever.

The patient is one of two Yale University students who returned home last week after spending a month in Liberia researching the Ebola outbreak, according to the mayor’s office.   Continue reading “Yale-New Haven Hospital Patient In Isolation With Ebola-Like Symptoms”

Syrian Kurd Kiymet Ergun, 56, celebrates an airstrike by the US-led coalition in Kobani, Syria as fighting continued between Syrian Kurds and the militants of Islamic State.The Star – by Suzan Fraser

ANKARA, TURKEY—NATO allies Turkey and the United States differed Monday on where they stand on the use of a key air base, with Turkish officials denying reports from the United States that there was a new agreement on its use for operations against Islamic State militants.

The impasse suggests that major differences remain between the two sides. Turkey has said it won’t join the fight against the extremists unless the U.S.-led coalition also goes after the Syrian government of President Bashar Assad, including establishing a no-fly zone and a buffer zone along the Turkish border.

Continue reading “Turkey wants no-fly zone in Syria, denies U.S. report of new agreement on use of Incirlik in bombing operations against Islamic State forces”

SFEq06_01The Daily Sheeple – by Chris Carrington

A new report from the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (BSSA) has highlighted four sections of the San Andreas fault that are locked in place and building up pressure.

Fault creep describes the slight slips, and the release of small amounts of pressure that build up on fault lines. Without the creep that most faults exhibit, the pressure builds and builds until there is a major earthquake when the ‘stuck’ rocks suddenly move and the pressure is released.   Continue reading “Four Sections of the San Andreas Fault are ‘Locked’ and Building Up Pressure”