This Friday, February 21st, 7:00 Pacific, Laughing At Liberals will be presenting their 2nd live broadcast event. Join Portland attorney and candidate for Congress James Buchal, as he gives a presentation on the NSA spying and how serious the threat is to our privacy. The event will be at Portland State University, presented by the campus chapter of the College Republicans. If you can’t be there in person, tune in to www.youtube.com/LaughingAtLiberals for the live broadcast!   Continue reading “CRC Exposed, NSA Event, And More Gun Hearing Videos”

Washington’s Blog

The U.S. Government Condemns Authoritarian Regimes Which Use Anti-Terror Laws to Stifle Journalism

It is widely known that authoritarian regimes use “anti-terror” laws to crack down on journalism.

But this extreme tactic is becoming more and more common.  The Committee to Protect Journalists reported a year ago that terrorism laws are being misused worldwide to crush journalism:   Continue reading “Authoritarian Regimes (Like the U.S. and Britain) Treat Reporters Like Terrorists”

The Newspaper

Private companies that spy on motorists are suing the state of Utah over a law that limits commercial use of automated license plate readers (ALPR, also known as ANPR in Europe). The firms Digital Recognition Network Inc and Vigilant Solutions told the US District Court for the District of Utah that they have a First Amendment right to photograph motorists, identify the vehicle and record the time and GPS coordinates in a searchable database accessible to clients nationwide.   Continue reading “Utah: Repo Men Sue To Overturn Private License Plate Reader Ban”

MassPrivateI

According to a 2013 report from the Citizen Lab of the Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto, governments are using FinSpy and FinFisher, Gamma’s line of remote intrusion and surveillance software, to spy on political dissidents.

“Although touted as a ‘lawful interception’ suite for monitoring criminals, FinFisher has gained notoriety because it has been used in targeted attacks against human rights campaigners and opposition activists in countries with questionable human rights records,” the Citizen Lab report states.   Continue reading “Domestic spying using FinFisher’s surveillance software has spread worldwide”

Anti-War – by Philip Giraldi

Why is the United States so reluctant to negotiate with other countries and so prone to leap immediately to the option of using force or chicanery in lieu of a more deliberative foreign policy? It might partly be because we Americans are not very good at the subtlety and give-and-take that diplomacy requires, but it could also be because our framework for operating, which shapes what we do and how we do it, is hopelessly skewed. One might even argue that the dominant neoconservative way of thinking has thoroughly infected both parties’ perceptions of how a foreign policy is supposed to work, leading official Washington to see everything in terms of “us and them” while at the same time exonerating every American misstep by citing the largely bogus national security argument to explain places like Libya, Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Iran.   Continue reading “Diplomacy Is a Four Letter Word – The Neocon Triumph”

How to Make Tear GasUS Crow

Tear Gas, also known as Capstun ‘capsaicin’ is the active oil in red peppers. If you don’t think something derived from a pepper can be as good as CN or CS tear gas, think again. Even if a person is maced, he can still function if he is motivated enough. Capstun is an irritant that will cause nasal passages to causing the person to breather through their mouth, in turn forcing them to inhale the capstun which causes an immediate reaction…choking. Capstun will effect the eyes with extreme irritation and .tearing. In addition to irritating skin, basically your skin feels like its on fire. Capstun isn’t ‘lethal’ by normal standards, and its affects are not permanent.   Continue reading “How to Make Tear Gas”

Christopher Roupe killed by Euharlee police officer (WSB)The Raw Story – by David Edwards

A family in Georgia said this week that a police officer should never have killed 17-year-old Christopher Roupe because he was only holding a video game controller, not a gun as authorities have claimed.

According to WSB-TV, Roupe had been shot to death on Friday when Euharlee officers showed up at his home to serve a probation violation warrant on his father. The officer later told state investigators that she was forced to shoot because Roupe had pointed at gun at her when he opened the door.   Continue reading “Georgia cop fatally shoots teen boy who was holding a Wii video game controller”

Image: Manchester Airport security staff scan shoes in 2009.NBC News – by PETE WILLIAMS AND ROBERT WINDREM

The Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday told airlines about a potential new shoe-bomb threat and urged them to pay extra attention to flights from overseas into the United States.

Several officials familiar with the advisory told NBC News that “very recent intelligence” considered credible warns of possible attempts to attack passenger jets using explosives concealed in shoes.   Continue reading “Homeland Security Alerts Airlines to Possible Shoe-Bomb Threat”

Washington Post – by Ellen Nakashima and Josh Hicks

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson on Wednesday ordered the cancellation of a plan by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency to develop a national license-plate tracking system after privacy advocates raised concern about the initiative.The order came just days after ICE solicited proposals from companies to compile a database of license-plate information from commercial and law enforcement tag readers. Officials said the database was intended to help apprehend fugitive illegal immigrants, but the plan raised concerns that the movements of ordinary citizens under no criminal suspicion could be scrutinized.   Continue reading “Department of Homeland Security cancels national license-plate tracking plan”

The Lonely Conservative

The Department of Health and Human Services wants full access to all of your social media data to monitor public health issues. Not only do they want current data, the creeps want to be able to go back five years.

The Washington Free Beacon has the details of the latest government intrusion into our lives.   Continue reading “HHS Wants Full Access To All Of Your Social Media”

la-fi-mo-california-exchange-enrollment-201402-001-1.jpgRed Flag News

(LA Times) — California’s insurance exchange said more than 828,000 people have signed up for Obamacare coverage ahead of a March enrollment deadline.

With six weeks left for open enrollment, the Covered California exchange also unveiled new TV ads Wednesday aimed at reaching uninsured Latinos.   Continue reading “Illegals courted with ads costing millions of dollars to flood Obamacare rolls”

BBC News – by Alastair Leithead 

While historic winter storms have battered much of the US, California is suffering its worst drought on record. So why is America’s most valuable farming state using billions of gallons of water to grow hay – specifically alfalfa – which is then shipped to China?

The reservoirs of California are just a fraction of capacity amid the worst drought in the state’s history.

“This should be like Eden right now,” farmer John Dofflemyer says, looking out over a brutally dry, brown valley as his remaining cows feed on the hay he’s had to buy in to keep them healthy.   Continue reading “California drought: Why farmers are ‘exporting water’ to China”

pantry primer picThe Organic Prepper – by Daisy Luther

When I moved from Ontario, Canada to the Pacific Northwestern United States, I was unable to bring my stockpile with me.  It was a situation I wanted to rectify as quickly as possible when I arrived at my new destination.

I began rebuilding my pantry and documenting it in a series that I posted my website. The series, called The Pantry Primer, was very well-received because many of us are in the same situation. We have less food than we wish to have stockpiled, and we’re on a budget, which can make building our stores challenging.    Continue reading “Announcement: The Pantry Primer is Now Available on Amazon”

Freedom Outpost – by Tim Brown

Nearly two weeks ago, following posting a couple of articles from Mac Slavo and Dean Garrison on the comments by Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia regarding the return of American Internment Camps, I also read an article by Dr. Joel McDurmon titled A Rising Police State is a Reality. McDurmon’s article was about the topic of Scalia’s comments and the increasing number of stories we’ve been hearing about the militarization of local police departments and the growing use of SWAT teams. However, while I was familiar with the things he wrote about, it was in the comment section that I found a little nugget from the CATO Institute.   Continue reading “Rise of the Police State & No-Knock Raids – Either We are Against Them or Allowing Them to Happen”

bulletsCNS News – by Ali Meyer

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is contracted to purchase 704,390,250 rounds of ammunition over the next four years, which is equal to a total of about 2,500 rounds per DHS agent, according to a January 2014 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report entitled Ammunition Purchases Have Declined Since 2009.

“If DHS were to purchase all 704 million rounds over the next four years, and if they were used by 70,000 DHS agents and officers, it would be roughly 2,500 rounds per agent per year,” David Maurer, author of the GAO report, told CNSNews.com.   Continue reading “DHS Contracted To Purchase 704 Million Rounds of Ammo Over Next 4 Years: 2,500 Rounds Per Officer”