AOL

Before introducing Donald Trump to roughly a dozen Republican lawmakers at the Washington law offices of Jones Day, U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions paused to acknowledge the man he said had facilitated the closed-door talks.

He said it was Jared Kushner, a 35-year-old real estate investor and newspaper owner, who had suggested the get-together last month, arguing that it would enable Trump to win more allies on Capitol Hill, according to a person in the room.  Continue reading “Behind Donald Trump, a son-in-law who is also an adviser”

Natural News – by Mike Adams

A preservative chemical that’s routinely added to hot dogs, beef jerky, bacon and breakfast sausage is now being deployed by government researchers as a fatal bait to poison wild hogs to death. Development of the deadly hog poison is being pursued by none other than the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the same agency that legalizes the same toxic chemical to be used in processed meat products approved for human consumption.

The chemical, known as sodium nitrite, is a cancer-causing “color fixer” and meat preservative added to processed meat products to give them a pink hue that consumers mistake for being “fresh.” When sodium nitrite combines with the hydrochloric acid (HCl) found in stomach acid, it forms cancer-causing nitrosamines. These nitrosamines go on to directly promote pancreatic cancer, colorectal cancer, leukemia, brain tumors and other cancers throughout the body — facts that I have been warning readers about for over a decade. Sodium nitrite is the reason why processed meats drastically raise the risks of cancer, heart disease and diabetes.   Continue reading “Chemical added to hot dogs, sausage and bacon now being developed by USDA as deadly bait that poisons wild hogs to death… and you’re EATING it for breakfast!”

Gov’t Slaves

(DETROIT)  Ford said today it will invest $1.6 billion to build a new plant in San Luis Potosí, Mexico, that will be manufacturing small cars by 2018, making it the latest automaker to expand its presence there.

Ford said construction of the new plant will begin this summer. It expects to begin producing cars there in 2018. Ford’s investment in Mexico will create more than 2,800 jobs by 2020, delivering a blow to the UAW, which pushed for higher wages in its contract talks with the automaker last year, and prompted a swift reaction from the union.   Continue reading “Ford to invest $1.6 billion for new plant in Mexico”

Sent to us by the author.

Location:
Victoria Gardens Apartments (formerly) Blue Diamond Apartments
Dummy Corporation, Whispering Brook Acquisitions
333 Whispering Brook Drive
Louisville, Kentucky 40229

To Whom This May Concern:

I am a former tenant of these private, for-profit, multi-family apartments where I, too, alike, hundreds of other past, present, and shall be future, low-income, tenants, are unsuspectingly being exposed to these airborne, molds, black molds T-2 mycotoxins, and infectious, bio-hazardous, bacteria’s fungi’s.   Continue reading “City Government corruptions, organized crimes, defrauding HUD of millions of federal, low-income, People’s, funds”

Tenth Amendment Center

HARRISBURG, Pa. (April 3, 2016) – A resolution protesting and demanding an end to federal overreach based on the the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798 was introduced in the Pennsylvania Senate last month.

Sen. Michael Folmer (R-Lebanon) and Sen. Mario Scavello (R-Tannersville) introduced Senate Resolution 293 (SR293) on March 7. The resolutions claims sovereignty for the citizens of Pennsylvania under the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, and demands that the federal government end unconstitutional actions.   Continue reading “Pennsylvania Resolution Affirms Principles of Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798”

This essay by “AN OLD WHIG” appeared in the Maryland Gazette and Baltimore Advertiser on Nov. 2, 1788. (see also Nos. 18-20, 49, 50, and 70)


Let us look to the first article of the proposed new constitution, which treats of the legislative powers of Congress; and to the eighth section, which pretends to define those powers. We find here that the Congress in its legislative capacity, shall have the power to lay and collect taxes, duties, and excises; to borrow money; to regulate commerce; to fix the rule for naturalization and the laws of bankruptcy; to coin money; to punish counterfeiters; to establish post offices and post roads; to secure copy rights to authors; to constitute tribunals; to define and punish piracies; to declare war; to raise and support armies; to provide and support a navy; to call forth the militia; to organize, arm and discipline the militia; to exercise absolute power over a district ten miles square, independent of all the State legislatures, and to be alike absolute over all forts, magazines, arsenals, dock-yards, and other needful buildings thereunto belonging. This is a short abstract of the powers given to Congress. These powers are very extensive, but I shall not stay at present to inquire whether these express powers were necessary to be given to Congress? Whether they are too great or too small?   Continue reading “Anti-Federalist Paper No. 46 – “WHERE THEN IS THE RESTRAINT?””

The Organic Prepper

When things go wrong and we have more month than money, it can be difficult to keep the family fed, the bills paid, and a roof over your heads. However, if you have built a well-stocked prepper’s pantry, you have one less thing to worry about when you have no money for groceries.   Continue reading “50 Ways to Eat from Your Pantry When You Have No Money for Groceries”

The Daily Sheeple – by Melissa Dykes

As if the TSA could be any more of a big, fat, liberty-trampling joke on the American people…

Now, via Kevin Burke’s FOIA request, it has come to light that the Transportation Security Administration gave computer giant IBM hundreds of thousands of dollars in a program totaling over $1.4 MILLION to develop “software” that a pre-teen geek could’ve programmed in DOS back in the day before the Internet even existed.   Continue reading “Wow: The TSA Paid $1.4 Million For An App That Randomly Showed An Arrow… Just An Arrow”

Reuters

A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday upheld the ability of federal prosecutors to broker deals allowing corporate defendants to avoid criminal convictions in a case involving a Dutch company accused of illegally shipping aircraft parts to Iran and other countries.

The unanimous ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit focused on a so-called deferred prosecution agreement with aerospace services company Fokker Services B.V.   Continue reading “U.S. court upholds prosecutors’ role in deferred prosecution deals”

Breitbart – by Caroline May

The illegal immigrant charged with killing 21-year-old Sarah Root while street-racing drunk, entered the U.S. as an “unaccompanied child” three years ago, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Edwin (aka Eswin) Mejia, an illegal immigrant from Honduras, absconded after ICE declined to detain him following his arrest and posting bail. Mejia remains at-large and is currently on the ICE Most Wanted list.   Continue reading “Killer Illegal Immigrant Entered U.S. as ‘Unaccompanied Child’”

AmmoLand – by Justin Stakes

Boise, ID -(AmmoLand.com)- With the promise of convenience, time savings and discounted pricing, monthly subscription programs like Amazon Subscribe and Save or Target Subscriptions are gaining popularity with the public.

The problem for gun owners: Amazon and Target don’t sell ammunition.  

One company has recognized this fact and built a service providing gun owners with a regular purchase program for ammunition.   Continue reading “Ammunition: More Fun Than Getting a Box of Underwear or Razors Every Month”

Fellowship of the Minds – by Dr. Eowyn

Americans didn’t know about a curious species of fakery called Crisis Actors until the Dec. 14, 2012 Sandy Hook false-flag shooting massacre. (See “Remarkable resemblance of Sandy Hook victims and professional crisis actors“)

Located in Denver, Colorado, a business that calls itself VisionBox Crisis Actors provides professionals (“trained players and actors”) who impersonate real-life people in simulations of mass casualty events, such as government drills, shootings and bombings, to help “schools and first responders create realistic drills, full-scale exercises, high-fidelity simulations, and interactive 3D films.” As an Oct. 31, 2012 feature story on the Crisis Actors website which I found on January 1, 2013, once boasted:   Continue reading “New breed of crisis actors: Fake political protesters”

RT

A Syrian Su-22 jet has been shot down by a surface-to-air missile in Aleppo Province. The pilot ejected and was reportedly captured.

“The plane wasn’t striking any targets, but was carrying out airborne surveillance. It was hit by a surface to air missile to the south of Aleppo, and now we’re looking for the pilot who ejected from the aircraft,” Syrian Army press service head General Samir told RT on the phone.   Continue reading “Syrian jet shot down in Aleppo, pilot reportedly captured by Al-Qaeda affiliate”

RT

Police have detained 130 people in Paris, as violent demonstrations against labor reforms continue across France. In Rennes, police chased protesters from railways and used tear gas, as demonstrators threw projectiles at security forces and blocked traffic.   Continue reading “130 arrests made during anti-labor reform protests in Paris”

Mail.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The Ohio Supreme Court is set to hear arguments that defense attorneys wasted time challenging evidence against a Cleveland man who killed 11 women and hid the remains in and around his home, and should have focused instead on sparing him from a death sentence.

New lawyers for Anthony Sowell say a better strategy would have been to concede Sowell’s overwhelming guilt and push for life without parole based on his background, including a chaotic childhood. The state Supreme Court scheduled arguments from both sides on Tuesday, with a decision not expected for several months.   Continue reading “Court to hear appeal from condemned Ohio serial killer of 11”

Mail.com

LOS ANGELES (AP) — California’s decision to push its statewide minimum wage to a nation-leading $15 comes with uncertainties that could see the pay jumps postponed if the economy sours or the state budget slumps, while the overall goal of helping the working poor might be lessened if some employers cut jobs or, worse, leave the state.

With Congress deadlocked on sweetening the federal minimum wage, California on Monday stepped in. Under a law signed by Gov. Jerry Brown, the state will bump its $10 hourly minimum by 50 cents next year, and to $11 in 2018. Hourly $1 raises will then come every January until 2022. Businesses with 25 or fewer employees have an extra year to comply; wages will rise with inflation each year thereafter.   Continue reading “Uncertainties shadow California plan for nation-leading wage”