Breitbart – by Caroline May

The Department of Homeland Security is “diligently” complying with a federal judge’s order that prohibits the long term detention of illegal-immigrant families and children.

“In light of the October 23 deadline for compliance with the Court’s Flores Order, DHS has worked diligently to ensure that we are in compliance with all aspects of the Court’s Order,” Jennifer Elzea, a Customs and Immigration Enforcement spokeswoman, said in an emailed statement.   Continue reading “DHS Releasing ‘Family’ Illegal Immigrants”

The Daily Sheeple – by Joshua Krause

It’s been nearly 20 years since the Dayton Accord put an end to the bloody war in the Balkans, which killed over 140,000 people after the Yugoslav government collapsed. However, there are rumblings in the nation of Bosnia and Herzegovina that are threatening to reignite the conflict.

As part of the Dayton Accord, two independent entities were created within the nation of Bosnia: the Bosniak-Croat Federation and the largely Serb Republika Sprska. The government in Sprska is planning to unveil a referendum on the anniversary of the Dayton Accord. There will be a single question on the ballot that will ask their citizens if they support the legality of their current union with the Bosniak-Croat Federation. Many are calling the question a veiled independence referendum that will give the president of Sprska permission to obstruct the laws and institutions of the central government.   Continue reading “A New War May Be Brewing in the Balkans”

Natural News – by LJ Devon

Over the past year and half, a surging outbreak of Ebola virus has put entire countries in West Africa under duress, putting villagers’ immune systems to the test of their life. Approximately 11,300 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea have passed away, and at least 17,000 others have survived. After enduring two waves of vicious Ebola outbreak, these countries are now only seeing a few cases crop up in Guinea. However, researchers are discovering what might be the beginnings of a third Ebola wave.   Continue reading “Ebola surges back even after ‘recovery’ … mystery deaths in Africa believed to be Ebola’s third wave”

UFP News – by Rick Wells

Over-the-road company truck drivers aren’t generally allowed to select their loads by any national carrier. They are sent a dispatch, expected to accept it and go pick it up. That’s the understanding when you’re hired, the rules the industry operates under and what is expected of employees. If more consistency in runs or commodity type is needed, local delivery jobs, cement, produce, building materials or the like, perhaps beer or soda, offer an alternative.

That’s the system unless you’re an entitled, argumentative, self-aggrandized Muslim transplant from Somalia; then things are different. You expect the world to adjust to your whims, for employers to craft their company procedures around your particular demands, and file a lawsuit if they don’t.   Continue reading ““Special Privilege” Muslim Truck Drivers Win Lawsuit After Refusing To Deliver “Demon Alcohol,” Do Their Jobs”

American Everyman – by Scott Creighton

UPDATE: Talk about money-grubbing…. when you copy and paste an image from Jpost’s website, it let’s you think you posted it, but instead, when you publish, it’s an ad for the JPost. Funny thing is, they stole the image below from MEMRI. What a bunch of Mammon worshiping weasels over there at JPost.   Continue reading “20,000 Israelis Sue Facebook in Order to Force Them to Censor Pro-Palestinian Posts”

Sovereign Man – by Simon Black

Years ago, an elderly, frail Japanese martial arts master once boasted a 200-0 record against his opponents.

He claimed to have a unique power that allowed him to inflict serious injury on people without actually laying a finger on them.

Was it Chi? Magic? None of the above. It was a total scam. But that didn’t matter.   Continue reading “Nine of the biggest myths that people believe about the system”

Free Beacon – by Elizabeth Harrington

Employees for the federal government earn far more than their counterparts in the private sector, according to a new study by the Cato Institute.

Federal workers’ pay and benefits were 78 percent higher than private employees, who earned an average of $52,688 less than public sector workers last year.   Continue reading “Study: Government Workers Make 78 Percent More Than Private Sector”

RT

A tangle of skyrocketing rents, stagnant wages, evictions and a lack of affordable housing has led to a boom in homelessness in New York City. The latest figures show 57,448 people sleeping in shelters, and approximately 40 percent are children.

According to the latest Department of Homeless Services (DHS) figures, more than 23,000 of the 57,448 people sleeping in New York City shelters are children. There are nearly 12,000 families in the shelter system. Organizations that help aid homeless people are getting worried that as the cold weather sets in, the numbers will return to the record high of seen in December 2014, when the homeless population numbered 59,068.   Continue reading “New York City homeless population nears 60,000, over 40% are children – report”

Mail.com

PHOENIX (AP) — Weeks after a judge ordered an overhaul of his office, an Arizona sheriff with a reputation for retaliation received a fax that critics say proves he was secretly investigating a judge who ruled against him in a racial profiling case.

The 2013 fax from an informant was written as a timeline of key developments in the profiling case: It cited the judge’s assignment to the case, claimed federal authorities were wiretapping the phone of one of Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s aides, and suggested both happened shortly after the U.S. Justice Department allegedly called the judge.   Continue reading “Arizona sheriff confronted with recurring retaliation claims”

Mail.com

BEIJING (AP) — A U.S. Navy warship sailed past one of China’s artificial islands in the South China Sea on Tuesday, in a challenge to Chinese sovereignty claims that drew an angry protest from Beijing, which said the move damaged U.S.-China relations and regional peace.

China’s Foreign Ministry said authorities monitored and warned the USS Lassen as it entered what China claims as a 12-mile (21-kilometer) territorial limit around Subi Reef in the Spratly Islands archipelago, a group of reefs, islets, and atolls where the Philippines has competing claims.   Continue reading “China warns US Navy after ship sails by Chinese-built island”

MassPrivateI

FBI director James Comey said his conversations with police officers often come back to cellphones. He claims they’re worried that young people are recording EVERY police encounter with their cellphone cameras.

Comey said he has been told about higher-ranking police telling officers “to remember that their political leadership has no tolerance for a viral video.”

Try not to laugh but Director Comey claims the “era of viral videos” has led officers to feel they’re“under siege“and unwilling to get out of their cars…   Continue reading “FBI Director claims police don’t like being recorded, calls it a “chill wind blowing through American law enforcement””

Lew Rockwell – by Laurence M. Vance

“Law and order” conservatives: When they are right, they are so right; but when they are wrong, they are so wrong.

They are right when they decry the militarization of local police. They are right to point out that the DOD 1033 program has transferred over $5 billion worth of military equipment from the Defense Department to local police forces. They are right to oppose more federal laws and mandates relating to local police. They are right to oppose a federal police “czar” like the Congressional Black Caucus has called for. Continue reading “Support Your Local Police?”

Infowars

Police in Texas gave youngsters an up close view of the rising police state last week, showing elementary school children the used military equipment other departments have acquired under Pentagon authorization.   Continue reading “Police State Indoctrination: Cops Show MRAP, Militarized Swat Gear Off to Kindergarteners”

Washington Post – by Christopher Ingraham

Earlier this school year, a sixth-grader in the gifted-and-talented program at Bedford Middle School in Bedford, Virginia was suspended for one year after an assistant principal found something that looked like a marijuana leaf in his backpack.

The student, the 11-year-old son of two school teachers, had to enroll in the district’s alternative education program and be homeschooled. He was evaluated by a psychiatrist for substance abuse problems, and charged with marijuana possession in juvenile court. In the months since September, he’s become withdrawn, depressed, and he suffers from panic attacks. He is worried his life is over, according to his mother, and that he will never get into college.   Continue reading “Virginia school suspends an 11-year-old for one year over a leaf that wasn’t marijuana”

Government Executive – by Charles S. Clark

Eight Drug Enforcement Administration employees with records of sexual harassment or other misconduct were given bonus awards contrary to agency policy, a watchdog found.

Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz in a report released Thursday said a review of 20 awards primarily from $1,000 to $5,000 spread among 14 DEA staff (including supervisors) found 10 bonuses that were questionable.   Continue reading “DEA Paid Bonuses to Employees With Records of Sexual Harassment, Other Misconduct”