The Russian Government’s Tass ‘news’ agency is alleging that “The US private military company Academi (formerly known as Blackwater) … has confirmed to the Kiev authorities its readiness to start training an experimental battalion of 550 men as of January at the request of Ukraine’s General Staff,” according to an unnamed source, which source is probably one of the few remaining anti-nazi bureaucrats still remaining in the Ukrainian Government. The reported price of this Blackwater (a.k.a. “Xe,” a.k.a. “Academi”) training contract is $3.5 million. Continue reading “Russia Says Ukrainian Nazis Pay Blackwater for Training”
Month: January 2015
It could not have happened to a nastier person.
On New Year’s day, in an unfortunate, home “exercise” accident, USSA Senator, Harry Reid (D-NV) smashed his face, resulting in broken facial bones, as well as broken ribs and a very black eye.
Reid also previously dislocated his shoulder, bumped his head and got a black eye, while “jogging” in 2011. Continue reading “Happy New Year, Harry Reid!”
This is what each Patriot should be striving towards ….becoming more self reliant in every way possible.
Here at Natural News, we’re declaring 2015 to be the “Year of Self-Reliance.”
This is a year in which we’re going to be focused on bringing you the news and practical skills that help you become more self-reliant, prepared for the unexpected and more independent from all the systems that we now take for granted: food, water, medicine, finances, community safety and more. Continue reading “Natural News declares 2015 the “Year of Self-Reliance””
The New American – by Joe Wolverton, II, J.D.
A bill filed late last month in Missouri would step into the breach left by a federal government unwilling to restrain the unconstitutional surveillance of Americans.
The bill, HB 264, or the Missouri Fourth Amendment Protection Act, was filed by state representative Keith Frederick and would not only offer support to the effort of sister states to shut down the NSA’s facilities (such as the mammoth data center in Utah), but would mandate that counties, cities, and towns in the Show Me State: Continue reading “Missouri Bill Bans Use of Local Resources for NSA Surveillance”
To properly generate a One-Time Pad (OTP), you need a source of random numbers. There are electronic random number generators, but the cheapest way to generate randomness is to “roll the bones” as Geddy Lee and Neal Peart would say.
For our purposes, the easiest way to do this is by using 10-sided dice. They are also known as “D10” dice. Those of you who used to play Dungeons and Dragons, or some other role-playing game, or board-type wargame in the 1980s know what I’m talking about (and still probably have a bag of assorted dice packed away somewhere). For the rest of you, a 10-sided die looks like this: Continue reading “One-Time Pad (OTP) Generation and Use”
Today I was out of coffee and went down to my local grocer to get the good stuff. As it turned out, they no longer carry the brand I normally buy from them. As I perused the selection of seemingly endless blends of organic, yummy, wake the hell up, what does my eyes land on but this (see pic attached). Grin & Bear It coffee.
Of course it made me smile and think of my wonderful trenches family and none other than Susan of the GrinNBarret sort(I know it is different spelling). I tossed it into my basket and off to the check out I went.
I should add that it is actually pretty good. Even without Jameson Irish Whiskey.
I thought I’d share the pic.
Cheers!
Nottoobitter
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) – Little Jimmy Dickens, a diminutive singer-songwriter known for his sense of humor and as the oldest cast member of the Grand Ole Opry, has died. He was 94.
Dickens died Friday at a Nashville-area hospital of cardiac arrest after suffering a stroke on Christmas Day, Opry spokeswoman Jessie Schmidt said. Continue reading “Little Jimmy Dickens, oldest Opry member, dies at 94”
Police in Texas are on alert after a marked Harris County constable car appeared to have had two lines powering the anti-lock braking system intentionally cut.
At the same time, there have been two separate reports of shots fired at Houston-area police in the space of a week.
Houston police, Harris County constables and uniformed officers patrolling in marked cars have been told to be on the lookout for rogue attacks, and whenever possible, to travel in pairs. Continue reading “Texas Cops on Alert After Brake Lines on Houston Police Cruiser Cut”
IJ Reveiw – by Jennifer VanLaar
If you have been battling a case of the flu over the last few weeks, this week’s data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that you’re definitely not alone.
The CDC warned that this flu season could be a bad one. Erin Burns of the CDC told USA Today: Continue reading “Severe Flu Epidemic Follows U.S. Into the New Year”
Most of us will remember 2014 as the year Ebola came to the U.S. But another virus made its debut in the Western Hemisphere. And unlike Ebola, it’s not leaving anytime soon.
The virus is called chikungunya: You pronounce it a bit like “chicken-goon-ya.” Continue reading “Painful Virus Sweeps Central America, Gains A Toehold In U.S.”
CONWAY, S.C. — A South Carolina man accused of rape has been brutally beaten by the victim’s boyfriend.
MyrtleBeachOnline.com reported that 52-year-old William Mattson was charged with criminal sexual conduct early Thursday morning after police were called to a home in Conway. Continue reading “Rape suspect brutally beaten by victim’s boyfriend”
Happy New Year to all! How does it sound to start the year off with stricter gun laws? At least this will be the case for Californians.
So here’s what California has planned: the current state law allow gun shop owners to convert a semiautomatic handgun – not on the state’s approved roster – to fire single-shot only through the use of a magazine plug and extended barrel. But back in July of this year, California Governor Jerry Brown signed the Assembly Bill 1964. This law will ban the sale of single-shot handguns that can be changed into semi-automatics. Continue reading “New Year, New Gun Laws”
Guns Save Lives – by Dan Cannon
Police are searching for an armed robbery suspect who is luck to be alive after a run-in with an armed store owner in Knoxville, Tennessee.
According to WVLT:
Employees say the man pointed a gun at one of the clerks. When he tried going around the lottery machine to get to the cash register, the store owner pulled a handgun. Continue reading “Surveillance Cameras Show Store Owner Opening Fire on Armed Robber”
The Telegraph – by John Ficenec
The FTSE 100 slid on the first day of trading in 2015. Here are 10 warning signs that the markets may drop further.
Vix fear gauge
For five years, investor fear of risk has been drugged into somnolence by repeated injections of quantitative easing. The lack of fear has led to a world where price and risk have become estranged. As credit conditions are tightened in the US and China, the law of unintended consequences will hold sway in 2015 as investors wake up. The Vix, the so-called “fear index” that measures volatility, spiked to 18.4 on Friday, above the average of 14.5 recorded last year.
Continue reading “Ten warning signs of a market crash in 2015”
LUZERNE COUNTY — Call it the case of the mysterious boom. Folks in the back mountain heard a loud rumble, some even saying it shook their home.
It takes a lot to wake up 12-year-old Kendra Steltz of Lake Township.
“I was sleeping and all I heard was a big bang,” she said. Continue reading “Mysterious Boom In Luzerne County, Pennslyvania”
The Washington Post – by Brian Fung
Federal regulators looking to place restrictions on Internet providers will introduce and vote on new proposed net neutrality rules in February, Federal Communications Commission officials said Friday.
President Obama’s top telecom regulator, Tom Wheeler, told fellow FCC commissioners before the Christmas holiday that he intends to circulate a draft proposal internally next month with an eye toward approving the measure weeks later, said one official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the agency’s deliberations are ongoing. The rules are meant to keep broadband providers such as Verizon and Comcast from speeding up or slowing down some Web sites compared to others. Continue reading “Get ready: The FCC says it will vote on net neutrality in February”