New York Post – by Julia Marsh

Facebook users, beware: That tag you’re about to ­apply to a post may be used against you in court.

A New York woman faces a year in jail for violating an order of protection involving her former sister-in-law — because the violator linked the woman in a Facebook post that called her “stupid.”   Continue reading “Woman faces year in jail for tagging former in-law on Facebook”

Free Thought Project – by Claire Bernish

Simpsonville, KY — Guns, drugs, and $30,000 stolen from an evidence locker at the Simpsonville Police Department on November 6th had police and the community scratching their heads — until Kentucky State Police apparently solved the mystery when they arrested award-winning Officer Terry Putnam on the job last week.

Putnam, however, maintains his innocence.   Continue reading “Award Winning Cop Exposed as Thief After Stealing $30K in Cash, Drugs & Guns from Own Department”

The Daily Sheeple – by  Piper McGowen

Maybe “obsessed” is too strong of a word. Maybe the phrase “constantly tolerate” is better.

Why are we constantly inundated with Kardashian stories in the media?

It’s a valid question, since this vapid, talentless group of people most well-known for strutting around half naked take up more headlines than actual relevant events which could potentially matter to a person’s daily life.   Continue reading “Occult Agenda: Why Did They Program The Sheep To Be Obsessed With The Kardashians?”

Free Thought Project – by John Vibes

Los Angeles, CA — Assemblyman Mike Gatto Southern of California lawmaker introduced legislation this week that would require owners of drones to get insurance and license plates, similar to the requirements for motor vehicles. The bill is called the Drone Registration/Omnibus Negligence-prevention Enactment (DRONE) Act of 2016 and would tighten the restrictions on personal drones even further than they have been already.

“If cars have license plates and insurance, drones should have the equivalent, so they can be properly identified, and owners can be held financially responsible, whenever injuries, interference, or property damage occurs,” Gatto told CBS.   Continue reading “Drone Legislation to Require Owners To Buy Insurance, Get License Plates – Constant GPS Tracking”

Breitbart – by JAMES DELINGPOLE

The climate alarmists have come up with a brilliant new excuse to explain why there has been no “global warming” for nearly 19 years.

Turns out the satellite data is lying.

And to prove it they’ve come up with a glossy new video starring such entirely trustworthy and not at all biased climate experts as Michael “Hockey Stick” Mann Kevin “Travesty” Trenberth and Ben Santer. (All of these paragons of scientific rectitude feature heavily in the Climategate emails)   Continue reading “Climate Alarmists Invent New Excuse: The Satellites Are Lying”

Reuters

World oil prices slumped more than 6 percent to below $29 a barrel on Friday, as a further fall in the Chinese stock market and the prospect of an imminent rise in Iran’s crude exports deepened fears of a longer supply glut.

After closing higher for the first time in eight sessions on Thursday, U.S. and Brent crude futures slumped to new 12-year lows, taking this year’s losses to more than 20 percent, the worst two-week decline since the 2008 financial crisis.   Continue reading “Oil plunges below $29 on prospects of more Iranian crude, China worries”

Register Guard – by Jack Moran

A federal jury on Thursday ruled that Oregon State Police Capt. Rob Edwards violated a Eugene man’s civil rights by kicking him in the upper chest after chasing down his speeding motor­cycle on Crow Road.

The eight-member jury heard evidence in a trial in U.S. District Court in Eugene earlier this week, and spent about four hours Thursday deliberating before returning a verdict that supports Justin Wilkens’ excessive-force claim in regard to the kick.   Continue reading “Federal jury rules in favor of speeding motorcyclist, against Oregon State Police trooper”

The Guardian – by Ben Child

A New York police union chief has claimed victory over Quentin Tarantino after the Oscar-winning film-maker’s new western, The Hateful Eight, struggled at the box office.

Patrick J Lynch, president of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of the City of New York, was one of the first officials to call for a boycott of the Pulp Fiction director following his appearance at a rally in support of campaigners against police brutality on 24 October.   Continue reading “Police union claims victory as The Hateful Eight struggles at box office”

CBC News

The number of military-style firearms that can be temporarily jury-rigged to become automatic weapons has increased “dramatically” in Canada over the last decade — and so has the public-safety risk.

That’s the stark conclusion of an internal RCMP laboratory report on improvised methods for upgrading semi-automatic weapons, and for illegally altering magazine clips to allow for rapid continuous fire.   Continue reading “Rifles converted to automatic fire an increasing risk, RCMP internal report warns”

MassPrivateI

Epic Games barred an American professor from playing its online game Paragon because someone who has the same name as him is on a US gov’t blacklist.

Muhammad Zakir Khan, an assistant professor at Florida’s Broward College, had tried to sign up for the beta of first-person shooter Paragon.   Continue reading “Gaming companies work with the Feds to ban Americans from playing online games”

Guns America – by S.H. BLANNELBERRY

The Oklahoma Department of Human Services has a strict policy when it comes to the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding foster parents that leave many with a precarious choice: go unarmed and keep the children or arm oneself and risk losing the children.

To explicate, under the state DHS’s “Weapons Safety Agreement,” foster and adoptive parents must agree to keep their weapons locked up when their not in use, to not carry their firearms if a child is present (there is an exemption if one is required to carry a gun for work, e.g. a police officer) and to keep any firearm in an automobile unloaded, disabled and stored in a locked container.   Continue reading “Oklahoma Foster Parents Forced to Choose Between Guns and Children”

WSWS – by Thomas Gaist

PART ONE | PART TWO | PART THREE | PART FOUR

This is the last of four articles analyzing the new US Department of DefenseLaw of War Manual. The first article was posted November 3. The second article was posted November 4. The third was posted November 5.   Continue reading “The Pentagon’s Law of War Manual: Part four”

Mobi Health News – by Jonah Comstock

Redwood City, California-based Proteus Digital Health announced its first US healthcare provider customer, Barton Health, which will prescribe the company’s Proteus Discover to patients. The company says this is the first time its technology has been implemented outside of a clinical trial setting in the US.

Barton Health, a health system in Lake Tahoe, California, will use the medication adherence platform, which includes Proteus’s FDA-cleared ingestible sensor, in populations with uncontrolled and co-morbid hypertension. Implementation for other chronic conditions will follow if the first use case goes well.   Continue reading “California hospital becomes first in US to prescribe ingestible sensors from Proteus”

Jon Rappoport

Introduction: Since 1987, one of my goals as a reporter has been to educate the public about false science.

Between then and now, I have found that, with remarkably few exceptions, mainstream reporters are studiously indifferent to false science.

They shy away from it. They pretend “it couldn’t be.” They refuse to consider facts. They and their editors parrot “the experts.”   Continue reading “Official science: the grand illusion”

Reuters

Chicago on Thursday released video footage of a fatal Chicago police shooting of a black teenager in 2013 after a court ruling, as protesters renewed criticism of Mayor Rahm Emanuel for the handling of police killings.

Images from neighborhood surveillance cameras showing the killing of Cedrick Chatman, 17, in January 2013 had been sealed under a protective order. The city also released audio recordings.   Continue reading “Chicago releases videos of police shooting of black teen”

Ron Paul Institute – by Daniel McAdams

The two US Navy riverine command boats intercepted in Iranian territorial waters yesterday were sent on their way along with the crew of 10 US sailors after brief detention on Iranian soil. According to news reports, the well-armed warships either suffered mechanical or navigational difficulties which caused them to enter Iranian territory (although it may well have been a game of cat-and-mouse to test the Iranian response). The US sailors were apparently treated well, enjoyed what appeared a decent meal in relaxed surroundings, and in the end apologized for the mistake and praised their treatment by the Iranians.    Continue reading “Sen. McCain Furious Iran Treated US Sailors Well”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

One of the recurring themes in Obama’s final State of the Union address was describing the strength of the economic recovery as witnessed by the number of job gains over the past 6 (if not exactly 7) years, clearly a purely quantitative metric. There was no discussion of the qualitative component of these job gains for one simple reason: as we have explained for years, the bulk of new labor has gone to undereducated, minimum wage (and often part-time) workers.   Continue reading ““The Job Gains Have Gone To The Least Educated, And Lowest-Paid, Workers””