RT

President Vladimir Putin says he’s shared Russian intelligence data on Islamic State financing with his G20 colleagues: the terrorists appear to be financed from 40 countries, including some G20 member states.

During the summit, “I provided examples based on our data on the financing of different Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) units by private individuals. This money, as we have established, comes from 40 countries and, there are some of the G20 members among them,” Putin told the journalists.   Continue reading “Putin: ISIS financed from 40 countries, including G20 members”

Washington’s Blog

Governments from Around the World Admit They Do It

There are many documented false flag attacks, where a government carries out a terror attack … and then falsely blames its enemy for political purposes.

In the following 42 instances, officials in the government which carried out the attack (or seriously proposed an attack) admits to it, either orally or in writing:   Continue reading “42 ADMITTED False Flag Attacks”

Boing Boing – by ROB BESCHIZZA

An unarmed North Carolina man was shot dead this weekend by Sheriff’s deputies in Harnett County, who reportedly kicked in his door after misidentifying his home as that of a suspect in another crime.

WNCN reports that John Livingston, 33, was shot several times during the incident. Few answers are forthcoming on the circumstances.   Continue reading “Cops kick in wrong door, kill wrong man”

SOTT – CBS Local

The National Weather Service confirms that a tornado did indeed touch down in Denair Sunday afternoon.

Authorities say the tornado hit near Zeering Road in Denair just before 2 p.m. and then headed east out of town. The tornado damaged some houses and trees, according to the Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department.    Continue reading “Rare tornado hits Central California town, damages buildings”

RT

An angry crowd attacked a police car in Oakland on Sunday after police responded to a sideshow involving around 700 vehicles. There were reports that a police helicopter was shot at. One person was shot dead after pointing a replica gun at officers.

On-the-spot footage posted on YouTube shows how a cheering crowd surrounds the vehicle and start damaging it. A handful of aggressive mobsters are seen kicking the car from both sides with some of them jumping on its roof.     Continue reading “Mayhem in Oakland: Police car smashed, chopper shot at after violent sideshow”

Mail.com

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will visit Pyongyang this week for a possible meeting with leader Kim Jong Un, a South Korean news report said.

The possible trip comes six months after Pyongyang at the last minute canceled an invitation for Ban to visit an inter-Korean factory park in the North Korean city of Kaesong. Ban has said North Korea gave no reason for the cancellation. He had not planned to visit Pyongyang at that time.   Continue reading “Report: UN chief to visit North Korea this week”

Mail.com

BOSTON (AP) — The number of international students studying at U.S. colleges increased by 10 percent last year, marking the largest single-year gain in 35 years, according to new federal data. Meanwhile, the number of Americans studying abroad grew by only 5 percent, falling short of expectations.

The findings were released Monday from an annual study by the nonprofit Institute of International Education and the U.S. Department of State. Of almost 1 million students that came to the U.S. in the 2014-15 school year, about a third came from China, the most from any country. But much of last year’s growth is credited to a surge in the number of students who came from India, drawn by strong research programs, experts say.   Continue reading “US adds foreign students, but few Americans study abroad”

MassPrivateI

According to a recent DHS/FBI National Counter Terrorism bulletin terrorists are impersonating police.

“Two disrupted plots in Europe earlier this year highlight terrorists possible interest in impersonating first responders through the acquisition of authentic or fraudulent uniforms, equipment, vehicles, and other items which may be associated with government, military, law enforcement, fire, and emergency services personnel. We cannot rule out that terrorists possibly could consider using this tactic in the Homeland to conduct an attack, perform surveillance, facilitate escape, or other operational activity. These items can be acquired legally at local or online retailers, through theft, or counterfeit manufacture.” Continue reading “DHS claims terrorists could be impersonating cops”

Yahoo News

Beirut (AFP) – Lebanon has arrested 11 people, mostly Syrians, over last week’s Beirut bombings that killed 44 people, an attack whose original target was a hospital, officials said on Sunday.

“The detained include seven Syrians and two Lebanese, one of them a (would-be) suicide bomber and the other a trafficker who smuggled them across the border from Syria,” Interior Minister Nuhad Mashnuq told a news conference.   Continue reading “Lebanon arrests 11 over Beirut bombings”

ABC News

Washington College in Maryland is reporting a campus gun threat and suspending classes temporarily.

The school in Chestertown on the state’s Eastern Shore is urging people on campus to shelter in place Monday morning and is warning faculty and staff not to report to work.   Continue reading “Washington College Says It’s Closing Campus for Gun Threat”

The Daily Signal – by Melissa Quinn

For federal state and local law enforcement agencies, a little-known practice giving them the power to take Americans’ property, cash, and cars has proven to be a boon over the last decade.

According to a new report from the Institute for Justice, a public interest law firm, the federal government has seen a substantial increase over the last 13 years in the amount of money deposited into forfeiture funds governed by the Departments of Justice and Treasury—the two federal agencies that typically conduct forfeitures.   Continue reading “The Government Netted $4.5 Billion in Cash, Cars, and Houses Taken From Americans Last Year”

Guns America – by Paul Helinski

Everyone needs a plan B. And that got me thinking. From everything I see, there is a “master plan” that will lead us to a directed outcome, yet there is no way to tell what that is coming. You can’t take all of your survival supplies with you in daily travels ,and what are the statistical chances that you will have your survival supplies at hand should “the big one” pop? What if I’m on the way back from Legoland with my kids and there is a roadblock between me and home? Granted, at some point you have to accept that the One Above is in charge, but I do believe in due diligence. You can drive yourself nuts with the what ifs, but is it wise to hide some survival supplies, especially outside of your property? What kind of storage will last for years, and protect the contents inside from pests and water damage? I found a couple of large military containers that are cheap, and from what I can tell so far, they are also bone dry and indestructible.   Continue reading “Prepping 101: Bury a Rifle and Some Food”

The Free Thought Project – by John Vibes

Greenfield, IN – A cop that apparently has a decent sense of humor had his fun spoiled by The Indiana Supreme Court, who decided that he could not have a vanity license plate that said “OINK,” on his vehicle. Corporal Rodney Vawter of the Greenfield Police Department was told that vanity licence plates are not covered by free speech.

According to Justice Brent E. Dickson, who ruled on the case, the constitution “restricts government regulation of private speech” but it “does not regulate government.”   Continue reading “Irony? Court Violates Cop’s Free Speech, Ruling that His License Plate Can’t Say ‘OINK’”

The Daily Sheeple – by Melissa Dykes

Another day, another very important bill being passed by the Senate. This one almost makes sense, but then it doesn’t… considering no nation on Earth can claim sovereign ownership of a celestial body in space, that is.

On Tuesday, the Senate passed the Space Act of 2015 which is being hailed as a way to encourage the private space industry. Part of the bill legalized space mining, allowing companies the property rights to any resources that they might extract from asteroids out there. The Daily Caller noted that a bunch of think tanks concluded the lack of this bill was a major hurdle to space-based industry development. “This bill will keep America at the forefront of aerospace technology, create jobs, reduce red tape, promote safety, and inspire the next generation of explorers,” Chairman of the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee, Congressman Lamar Smith, said in a press release. Continue reading “Senate Passes a Bill to Legalize Asteroid Mining, Amended It to Ban Alien Enslavement”

NORML – by Paul Armentano

Over twelve percent of federal drug prisoners are incarcerated for marijuana-related violations, according to data compiled by US Bureau of Prisons and the United State’s Sentencing Commission and published by the US Bureau of Justice Statistics

Of the 94,678 federal inmates incarcerated for a drug violation as their most serious offense, 12.4 percent (11,533 persons) are serving time for violating marijuana laws. Most marijuana offenders are imprisoned for trafficking violations. The average length of prison time for those incarcerated for marijuana-related offenses is 88 months.   Continue reading “Report: One In Eight Federal Drug Prisoners Serving Time For Marijuana Offenses”

Video Rebel’s Blog

We might ask ourselves the following:
Who created the Muslim refugees swarming over Europe?
Who created and financed Al Qaeda and ISIS?
Who benefits from the tragic attacks in Paris?
If all the roads in ancient Europe lead to Rome, then we know who built them. And if all the answers to our questions about the Paris attacks lead to one mad dog criminal entity, then we know who is responsible.   Continue reading “The Paris Attacks? Who Benefits?”

The American Mirror – by Olaf Ekberg

The Greensboro, North Carolina police department wants to make residents safer by disarming them.

The department held a turn-in Saturday and invited citizens to sign a “non-violence” pledge and hand over their guns.

” … gun owners may safely turn in unwanted firearms. Police employees will accept handguns, rifles, shotguns, and ammunition at the event. This is not a buy-back program. No cash will be given in exchange for weapons voluntarily surrendered to police,” the city said in a news release announcing the program.   Continue reading “NC police department urges residents to turn in their guns”

RT

In response to the deadly Paris attacks, the French military has deployed a further 1,000 troops to ensure safety on the capital’s streets. The military deployment comes amid French Defense Ministry’s promises to revise national security strategy.

Parisians have become accustomed to living alongside soldiers in their city since the launch of Operation Sentinelle in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo attacks in January, which killed 17 people.   Continue reading “5,000 soldiers patrol Paris as France adapts to ‘militarized’ threat at home & abroad”

L A Times – by Howard Blume

Athorities are investigating the beating by Alameda County sheriff’s deputies of a man accused of ramming patrol cars and leading deputies on a high-speed chase last week that ended in San Francisco, officials said.

The beating of the man, identified as Stanislav Petrov, occurred early Thursday morning and was caught on surveillance video and released on YouTube by the San Francisco public defender’s office, which said it received the footage from someone who operates a security camera in the area.   Continue reading “Police beating after high-speed chase in San Francisco under investigation”