Fox News

Officials in Utah said that eight people had died and five others were missing early Tuesday after floodwaters slammed into two vehicles carrying women and children in a small town near the Arizona border Monday afternoon.

The Utah Division of Emergency Management said in a Facebook post that heavy rains caused the flash flooding at about 5 p.m. local time Monday in Hildale, approximately 315 miles south of Salt Lake City. The statement said a “large wall of water and debris” smashed into the vehicles, washing them and their occupants downstream.   Continue reading “Utah flash floods kill eight people, five others missing”

CNS News – by Terence P. Jeffrey

The federal government raked in a record of approximately $2,883,250,000,000 in tax revenues through the first eleven months of fiscal 2015 (Oct. 1, 2014 through the end of August), according to the Monthly Treasury Statement released Friday.

That equaled approximately $19,346 for every person in the country who had either a full-time or part-time job in August.   Continue reading “$2,883,250,000,000: Federal Taxes Set Record Through August; $19,346 Per Worker; Feds Still Run $530B Deficit”

The Daily Signal – by Robert Moffit

Next year, millions of Medicare enrollees will see their premiums jump from $104.90 to $159.30, a stunning 52-percent increase.

Today’s bureaucratic premium setting is inherently defective. Real market-driven Medicare reform based on expanded patient choice, cost-cutting competition, and defined contribution financing would be much better for America’s seniors.   Continue reading “What’s Behind the Large Medicare Part B Premium Hike for Seniors?”

KFOR – by Abby Broyles

PURCELL, Okla. – An Oklahoma man said he was beaten black and blue by a Purcell police officer.

Chris Barger said he was dropping off a friend at an apartment complex when a police officer pulled over and shone a spotlight through his window.   Continue reading “‘The police are supposed to be the good guys,’ Man claims he was beaten by Purcell officer”

Breitbart News

In a long and often emotional interview with Ginni Thomas before his speech on Thursday at the Rally against the Iran Deal in Washington, D.C., Glenn Beck explained his mission to relocate Syrian refugees fleeing ISIS into the United States, even if that requires facilitating their illegal entry and his imprisonment.   Continue reading “Glenn Beck In His Own Words: I’ll Save More People Than Schindler”

Business Insider – by Danielle Andrew

When a couple out on their ranch in Morgan Hill, California, saw a wild pig roaming the brush, they decided to shoot it and take it home for meat. After transporting the pig back home and draining its blood, the pair cut open the pig, ready to skin and portion it, only to find this wild hog was hiding something quite unusual below the surface.   Continue reading “A wild pig with bright blue flesh was found in California — and no one knows why”

Natural News – by Ethan A Huff

In the day-to-day happenings of world politics, the United States and Russia are presented on the global stage as arch-enemies. Up in space, however, it’s a completely different story. Enter the International Space Station (ISS), which for years has housed astronauts from both countries along with life-support systems unique to each country’s needs. The two sides have long remained separate from one another until recently.   Continue reading “NASA gives thumbs up to use of colloidal silver as antibiotic in space”

Tech Firm

Megaupload, Kim Dotcom, and others filed their reply brief today in the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals urging the Court to reverse the trial court’s finding of “Fugitive Disentitlement.”

Here is an excerpt from the reply brief:   Continue reading “Megaupload Files Reply Brief in Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals Asking for Reversal of Fugitive Disentitlement”

BATR

“Who is going to save our Church? Not our bishops, not our priests and religious. It’s up to YOU, the people. You have the minds, the eyes, the ears to save the Church. Your mission is to see that your priests act like priests, your bishops act like bishops, and your religious act like religious.”  – Archbishop Fulton Sheen

Claims where religion is professed become easily strained when doctrines conflict. Wars have been waged over matters of belief, while actually fought over political power. When the Catholic Church becomes the topic of discussion, the historic differences between Protestant dominations and the Papacy often become passionate. However, disputes within the Catholic Church hierarchy can become most bitter. Attitudes towards Pope Francis vary widely. Before examining the facts, why are so many observers proclaiming that this Pontiff is the False Prophet of Revelation?   Continue reading “Pope Francis the False Prophet”

Sky News – by Jonathan Samuels

Refugees heading to Greece on people smugglers’ boats are given a ‘migrants handbook’ packed with tips, maps, phone numbers and advice about getting across Europe.

Among discarded life jackets and punctured rubber dinghies, Sky News discovered a tattered copy of the unique travel guide washed up on a beach on the Greek island of Lesbos.   Continue reading “Sky Finds ‘Handbook’ For EU-Bound Migrants”

Top Secret Writers – by Sally Painter

It’s a story that broke almost a year ago, yet garnered very little media coverage. In fact, it took a year and a book (August 2015) later to get the attention of a US Representative. Even that type of recognition hasn’t ignited TV screens or mainstream media outlets.

Rep Bill Posey (R-FL) spoke before the House requesting an investigation into the allegations made by vaccine whistleblower CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) employee Dr. William Thompson.   Continue reading “Media Ignores CDC Whistleblower Admitting Vaccine Autism Link”

Reuters – by Therese Apel

A Mississippi college professor was shot and killed in his campus office on Monday, and police said a fellow Delta State University teacher was “a person of interest” in the shooting.

Authorities said they were searching for geography and social science instructor Shannon Lamb in connection with the killing of Ethan Schmidt, an assistant professor of American history.   Continue reading “Professor killed at Mississippi university, fellow teacher sought”

Golden Jackass – by Jim Willie, CB

The ultimate patriotic act is to invest the life savings in Gold & Silver, which does honor to real money, shows disdain for paper merchants who rule the central banks, and forces nations to put forth honest sound money in usage. It is important to recall the 9/11 event, however based in reality, not the official story. Honor should be given to the 2500 victims of the mass murder event. The official story makes far less sense than the Kennedy assassination, while the two events appear to be front and back bookends of the same Fascist takeover of the United States Govt. The Patriot Act was a fascist manifesto, much like the Enabling Act installed in Germany over seven decades ago. The two acts have a 90% correlation and overlap, yet the American public remains largely in the dark on the similarity in template. Continue reading “9/11 Memory: Fascism & Gold”

ArsTechnica – by Julia Angwin, ProPublica

Since Edward Snowden exposed the extent of online surveillance by the US government, there has been a surge of initiatives to protect users’ privacy. But it hasn’t taken long for one of these efforts—aproject to equip local libraries with technology supporting anonymous Internet surfing—to run up against opposition from law enforcement.

In July, the Kilton Public Library in Lebanon, New Hampshire, was the first library in the country to become part of the anonymous Web surfing service Tor. The library allowed Tor users around the world to bounce their Internet traffic through the library, thus masking users’ locations. Soon after, state authorities received an e-mail about it from an agent at the Department of Homeland Security.   Continue reading “First library to support anonymous Internet browsing effort stops after DHS e-mail”

ArsTechnica – by Cyrus Farivar

Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom and his co-defendants have lost their bid to have their extradition hearing delayed yet again, the Court of Appeal of New Zealand ruled on Monday.

As of now, the hearing is set for September 21, 2015—the tenth time this hearing has been scheduled.   Continue reading “Nearly 4 years after raid, Dotcom loses bid to delay extradition hearing”

ArsTechnica – by Jon Brodkin

An innocent bystander who was holding a cell phone on his own property was shot last week, with officers saying they perceived an “imminent threat” because they mistook his phone for a gun, according to several news reports.

Danny Sanchez of Rancho Cordova, California, the unarmed man who was shot by police, reportedly underwent surgery Friday to remove bullet fragments from his leg. The officers who shot at him are reportedly on paid leave while the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department investigates the shooting.   Continue reading ““Dad, I’m shot”: Man with phone camera shot by police on his own property”

Freedom Outpost – by Tim Brown

James O’Keffe strikes again, exposing more corruption from the Clinton criminal mafia. This time it’s in Nevada, where the Hillary Clinton campaign not only promotes the breaking of election law, but brags about doing so.

Christina Gupana, a Hillary campaign worker and Las Vegas attorney, was caught by Project Veritas Action journalists advising her fellow campaign workers to “do whatever you can, whatever you can get away with just do it.”    Continue reading “Hillary Clinton Campaign Workers Busted on Video Bragging about Breaking Election Law: “Whatever you Can Get Away With, Just Do It””

Tech Dirt – by Karl Bode

As Google, Tesla, Volvo, and other companies make great strides with their self-driving car technology, we’ve started moving past questions about whether the technology will work, and started digging into the ethics of how it should work. For example, we recently discussedwhether or not cars should be programmed to sacrifice their own driver if it means saving the lives of countless others (like a number of children on a school bus). Programmers are also battling with how to program vehicles to obey all rules — yet still account for highway safety’s biggest threat: shitty human drivers.    Continue reading “Should Police Have The Right To Take Control Of Self-Driving Cars?”