WFLA 8 News – by Jeff Patterson

BRANDON FL (WFLA) – A Walmart store closing in Brandon is getting a lot of attention and a great deal of speculation by conspiracy lovers.

Walmart announced it is closing the store due to plumbing issues.

The store closing now means that more than 400 Walmart employees will have to find work someplace else.   Continue reading “Walmart store closing in Brandon raising questions and doubt”

Photo: flickr/Kevin LallierRabble

“Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz announced that G3, a joint venture owned by two foreign corporations, Bunge and the Saudi investment company SALIC, is the beneficiary of CWB privatization. With this, the Conservative government has accomplished the biggest transfer of wealth away from farmers in the history of Canada,” said Jan Slomp, National Farmers Union (NFU) President.

“The CWB’s physical assets, its commercial relationships, and its good name have all been given away. The ‘buyers’ of the CWB actually get to keep the $250 million pittance they are ‘paying’ for it. Bunge’s 2014 sales totalled $58 billion and multi-billion dollar SALIC is a subsidiary of the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, PIF.”   Continue reading “SOLD! Canadian Wheat Board no longer quite so Canadian”

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Angelfire

In the U.S., they’re collectively called everything from “attorney” to “lawyer” to “counselor.” Are these terms truly equivalent, or has the identity of one been mistaken for another? What exactly is a “Licensed BAR Attorney?” This credential accompanies every legal paper produced by attorneys – along with a State Bar License number. As we are about to show you, an “attorney” is not a “lawyer”, yet the average American improperly interchanges these words as if they represent the same occupation, and the average American attorney unduly accepts the honor to be called “lawyer” when he is not. Continue reading “Hiding Behind the BAR – Why Attorneys are not lawyers”

Route 15 between Route 80 and Berkshire Valley RoadNJ.com – by  Justin Zaremba

ROCKAWAY TOWNSHIP — A possible explosive threat at the entrance of Picatinny Arsenal prompted the evacuation of employees from the base Friday.

At about 11:30 a.m., a driver tried to gain access to the Picatinny Arsenal through the post’s truck gate when security personnel noticed something suspicious within the vehicle, Picatinny Arsenal spokesman Ed Lopez said.   Continue reading “Suspicious car deemed ‘explosive threat’ at Picatinny, base evacuated”

National Guard troops secure the police station in Ferguson, Missouri, on November 25, 2014 a day after violent protests and looting following the grand jury decision in the fatal shooting of a 18-year-old black teenager Michael Brown. Missouri Governor Jay Nixon told reporters that a total of 2,200 National Guard troops were being deployed in the St Louis area on November 25-- triple the 700 sent out the night before. Looting erupted and businesses were set ablaze in the St Louis suburb overnight Monday, after a grand jury opted not to indict white police officer Darren Wilson for the fatal shooting of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown in August. AFP PHOTO/Jewel Samad        (Photo credit should read JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images)CNN – by Barbara Starr and Wesley Bruer

As the Missouri National Guard prepared to deploy to help quell riots in Ferguson, Missouri, that raged sporadically last year, the guard used highly militarized words such as “enemy forces” and “adversaries” to refer to protesters, according to documents obtained by CNN.

The guard came to Ferguson to support law enforcement officers, whom many community leaders and civil rights activists accused of using excessive force and inflaming an already tense situation in protests that flared sporadically from August through the end of the year.   Continue reading “National Guard Ordered To Consider Americans As ‘Enemy Forces’ And ‘Adversaries’”

Reuters/Jim YoungRT

Aldermen approved a $5 million settlement to be granted to the family of a teen shot 16 times by Chicago police last October, but insisted on keeping the dashboard camera footage of the shooting away from the public.

The City Council voted 47-0 on Wednesday to pre-empt a federal lawsuit by paying the family of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, shot by a Chicago police officer on October 20, 2014. Legal counsel for the city Stephen Patton told reporters that lawyers for the family initially sought $16 million.   Continue reading “Chicago pays $5 million to family of teen shot 16 times by police, but withholds video”

Reuters/Siegfried ModolaRT

World Bank ventures in less developed countries are hurting the people the organization has sworn to protect, with almost four million people across the globe left homeless, forcefully evicted and relocated as a result of World Bank-funded projects.

A probe by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), which examined World Bank’s records in 14 countries, discovered that some 3.4 million of the “most vulnerable people” were forced off their land in the last decade.   Continue reading “Uprooted & evicted: World Bank-funded projects force millions off their land”

Mail.com

SEATTLE (AP) — A 911 dispatcher seemed understandably confused by the call from a baggage handler who fell asleep inside the cargo hold of an Alaska Airlines jet bound for Los Angeles and said he needed someone to stop the plane.

“I’m inside a plane, and I feel like it’s moving in the air. Flight 448. Can you please have somebody stop it?” the airport worker said in a recording of the call made on Monday. The recording was released Thursday.   Continue reading “Dispatcher puzzled by 911 call from trapped baggage worker”

Mail.com

SAN DIEGO (AP) — A Coast Guard cutter arrived Thursday in San Diego with more than 14 tons of cocaine, part of what authorities described as a surge of seizures near Central and South America.

The cocaine, valued by the Coast Guard at $424 million, was seized by U.S. and Canadian forces in 19 separate incidents in the eastern Pacific Ocean near Central and South America. It included a 10½-ton bust from a coastal freighter, the largest maritime drug interdiction in that area since 2009.   Continue reading “Coast Guard cutter arrives in US with 14 tons of cocaine”

Mail.com

PHOENIX (AP) — Five adults were found dead inside a Phoenix home after a shooting in a suspected dispute over the family’s business, police said.

Police said Thursday the three men were brothers and the dead women apparently were the men’s mother and a spouse of one of the brothers. Two other women and two children managed to escape the home unharmed.   Continue reading “Police say 5 adults found dead inside Phoenix home”

Defense Ministry's antiaircraft missile battalions on combat alert dutySputnik

China has signed a contract with the Russian state-run arms exporter Rosoboronexport for the purchase of the S-400 air defense systems, the company’s chief executive Anatoly Isaikin said in an interview with the Russian daily Kommersant.

“I will not disclose the details of the contract, but yes, China has indeed become the first buyer of this sophisticated Russian air defense system.  It underlines once again the strategic level of our relations,” Isaikin said, when asked whether it was true that Beijing signed a contract for the purchase of four S-400 divisions in September 2014.   Continue reading “Russia Confirms Arms Deal to Supply China With S-400 Air Defense Systems”

Reuters – by Krista Hughes

Senior U.S. lawmakers reached agreement on Thursday on the wording of a bill aimed at giving the White House “fast track” authority to negotiate a Pacific trade pact that is central to President Barack Obama’s strategic shift toward Asia.

The agreement, over six months in the making, sets the stage for a bruising legislative battle over Obama’s proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and similar trade deals, with many Democrats opposed to the legislation along with a small but vocal contingent of Republicans.   Continue reading “U.S. lawmakers agree on wording of bill key to Pacific trade deal”

Human Wrongs Watch – by Kate Shuttleworth and Samuel Okiror

JERUSALEM/KAMPALA, 16 April 2015 (IRIN) – For Eritrean and Sudanese asylum-seekers facing deportation from Israel’s Holot detention centre, the future is bleak. Those who have gone before describe a hand-to-mouth existence in Uganda or no freedom of movement in Rwanda.

“There was no difference with the life in Israel,” Abush Mekonen, one of eight Eritrean asylum-seekers deported to Rwanda in July 2014, told IRIN. Mekonen said they had been promised jobs in Rwanda but instead were confined to a hotel. “We were not allowed to move or go out.”  Continue reading “Prison or Poverty: Impossible Choice for Israel Deportees”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

Earlier today we said the following about the Greek government’s rapidly deteriorating cash situation:

So it’s either pay salaries and pensions or pay the IMF which is tragically ironic because Athens has already gone the route of plundering pensions to make payments to its creditors, the only difference is that now, instead of “borrowing” money from the public coffers and hoping to pay it back in the interim before anyone actually gets shorted, you’re talking about simply not paying people at all Continue reading “Greece May Pay Wages And Pensions In IOUs”

Washington’s Blog

Spy Agencies Are Intentionally Destroying Digital Security

Top computer and internet experts say that NSA spying breaks the functionality of our computers and of the Internet. It reduces functionality and reduces security by – for example – creating backdoors that malicious hackers can get through.

Remember, American and British spy agencies have intentionally weakened security for many decades. And it’s getting worse and worse. For example, they plan to use automated programs to infect millions of computers.   Continue reading “Inventor of Antivirus Sofware: The Government Is Planting Malicious Software On Your Phone So It Can Bypass Encryption and See What You’re Doing”