Yahoo News – by MATT SEDENSKY and NOMAAN MERCHANT

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Flashing lights pierced the black of night, and the big white letters made clear it was the police. The woman pulled over was a daycare worker in her 50s headed home after playing dominoes with friends. She felt she had nothing to hide, so when the Oklahoma City officer accused her of erratic driving, she did as directed.   Continue reading “Hundreds of officers lose licenses over sex misconduct”

The Economic Collapse – by Michael Snyder

Did you know that the United Nations intends to have biometric identification cards in the hands of every single man, woman and child on the entire planet by the year 2030?  And did you know that a central database in Geneva, Switzerland will be collecting data from many of these cards?  Previously, I have written about the 17 new “Global Goals” that the UN launched at the end of September.  Even after writing several articles about these new Global Goals, I still don’t think that most of my readers really grasp how insidious they actually are.  This new agenda truly is a template for a “New World Order”, and if you dig into the sub-points for these new Global Goals you find some very alarming things.   Continue reading “The UN Plans To Implement Universal Biometric Identification For All Of Humanity By 2030”

RT

An explosion occurred overnight at a nuclear power plant in Doel, northern Belgium, local media reported, adding that the blast caused a fire. The exact damage from the incident remains unknown.

The blast happened around 11pm local time on Saturday. The fire started in Reactor 1 of the plant, but was soon extinguished by personnel.   Continue reading “Explosion rocks nuclear power plant in Belgium”

All News Pipeline – by Deborah Dupre

St Louis residents dying in record numbers is sending locals fleeing, becoming refugees from a sacrifice zone, secretly kept for decades. A cover up was effective until community action resulted in reports explaining the myriad of local “environmental diseases” causing violent deaths was from ingesting and eating radioactive material in their homes and community, linking the horror to the United States war machine’s nuclear weapon system.    Continue reading “St Louis Radiation Poisoning Death Toll Revealed”

The Tenneseean

Fred Thompson, a former U.S. senator from Tennessee, GOP presidential candidate, Watergate attorney and actor who starred on the television drama “Law and Order,” died on Sunday in Nashville. He was 73.

Mr. Thompson died after a recurrence of lymphoma, according to a prepared statement issued by the Thompson family. Mr Thompson, who had recently purchased a house in Nashville to return to Tennessee, was first diagnosed with cancer in 2004.   Continue reading “Fred Thompson, with larger-than-life persona, dies at 73”

Bearing Arms – by Bob Owens

We can only assume that rabidly anti-gun mayor Rahm Emanuel and rabidly anti-gun (and inept) police superintendent Gary McCarthy are fuming that, even in Chicago, concealed carry thwarts crime and saves lives.

A robbery was thwarted at a Southwest Side corner store Saturday night when a patron with a concealed carry license shot and killed an armed robber, authorities said. Continue reading “Concealed Carrier Kills Robber In Chicago”

ArsTechnica – by Jon Brodkin

When you live somewhere with slow and unreliable Internet access, it usually seems like there’s nothing to do but complain. And that’s exactly what residents of Orcas Island, one of the San Juan Islands in Washington state, were doing in late 2013. Faced with CenturyLink service that was slow and outage-prone, residents gathered at a community potluck and lamented their current connectivity.

“Everyone was asking, ‘what can we do?’” resident Chris Brems recalls. “Then [Chris] Sutton stands up and says, ‘Well, we can do it ourselves.’”   Continue reading “How a group of neighbors created their own Internet service”

Yahoo News – by Julia Harte and Julia Edwards

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Almost a third of 6,000 federal prisoners scheduled to be freed between Friday and Tuesday, part of a push to reduce America’s soaring incarceration rate, will immediately be turned over to U.S. immigration authorities for deportation proceedings.

While this weekend will be a happy occasion for the thousands of inmates who are U.S. citizens and will reunite with their families, many of the roughly 1,780 foreign inmates to be put on the deportation track will leave family members behind in the United States.   Continue reading “Mass release of U.S. prisoners spells deportation for hundreds”

Reuters

One person was killed and another injured early Sunday on the campus of Winston-Salem State University in North Carolina, the university’s website said.

The names of the victims have not been released and the alleged gunman is still at large, local media reported. Campus police and local police could not immediately be reached for comment.   Continue reading “One killed in shooting at university in North Carolina”

Intellihub – by Shepard Ambellas

COTTONWOOD, Ariz. (INTELLIHUB) — R. Dyved, a local FedEx driver, submitted the following information to Intellihub, including several photographs which show spiderweb-like fibrous strands that Dyved spotted himself falling from the sky which he later “managed” to collect samples of, putting them in a jar:   Continue reading “More strange fibers rain down from sky onto populace, samples taken”

RT – by Finian Cunningham

Obama’s decision to send Special Forces into Syria is being widely viewed as a US military escalation in the country. The troop dispatch also signals that the US trying to forestall Russian successes in wiping out Washington’s regime-change assets in Syria.

In short, the US Special Forces are being used as “human shields” to curb Russian air strikes against anti-government mercenaries, many of whom are instrumental in Washington’s regime-change objective in Syria.   Continue reading “US Special Forces deployed as ‘human shields’ to salvage terror assets in Syria”

Patch – by Kara Seymore

Four police officers were injured, including a female officer who was taken to the ground, after responding to a 200-person brawl outside a Pennsylvania high school Thursday.

According to reports, the officers were injured as they responded to a fight around 3 p.m. near Allen High School in Allentown.   Continue reading “Police Officers Attacked By Students During Brawl Outside Pa. School”