Month: April 2016
I was loping along, minding my own business when State of the Nation called me this morning and asked me about my choices in the upcoming federal elections.
“I don’t vote in federal elections,” I spluttered.
This is a sore spot with me, because the whole “election” process is a fraud—-and a nasty, tortuous one. It is designed to make you think that you have a voice and choice, when in fact, the voter registration itself is designed to enslave you as a “franchise” operator of the federal corporation. That is what “enfranchisement” means and that’s what happens when you register to vote. Continue reading “Elections? What Elections? Big News. BIG.”
28 Tulane Law Review 22 (Suthon, 1953) (President Johnson vetoed the Reconstruction Act in an able message, stressing its harsh injustices and its many aspects of obvious unconstitutionality. He justifiably denounced it as “a bill of attainder against nine million people at once.”)
Living Americans naturally inhabit their birthright estate and DO NOT “reside” in any “State of State” concocted by the Federal United States or any incorporated entity at all.
Each of us who were born on the land can reclaim their birth right estate and operate the land jurisdiction courts, legislatures, and executive branch of government on the land under the Last Man Standing Rule of our native Law. Continue reading “Acting as a judge of a superior court – the Last Man Standing Rule of our native Law – Judge Anna von Reitz, Alaska”
On Apr 28, 2015, at 7:02 PM, Anna von Reitz <avannavon@gmail.com> wrote:
As to my being a judge….To give you the fair full depth of it, you have to learn a lot of history and learn it right now. so I am going to answer you and then I am going to post this letter and let everyone else read it to their heart’s delight.
Please bear in mind that if you feel stupid or overwhelmed at the end, that’s normal, and we all go through that in the process of waking up. Just realize that you were intentionally defrauded and kept uninformed, so it isn’t your fault that you never knew any of this. You simply weren’t told. So let’s begin. Continue reading “Alaska State Superior Court Judge, Anna von Reitz – Judge of the actual Alaska State, one of the Several States of the Continental United States.”
Natural News – by Amy Goodrich
Ever since President Nixon declared the “war on cancer” in 1971, cancer rates have been continuously rising. The incredibly expensive cancer treatments which promised to save the world don’t seem to be able to give us a solution.
Over $100 billion a year is spent on toxic chemotherapy, and even more money goes into the chemical research to find new treatments. Whenever the pharmaceutical industry comes up with a new promising drug or technique, the media jumps on the news declaring that the end of the “war on cancer” may be in sight. However, one of the biggest cancer stories was kept quiet and didn’t even make the headlines. Continue reading “Total media blackout on the biggest cancer story of the decade: Millions of diagnoses were wrong… NCI finally comes clean”
It’s no surprise that the US government would look the other way when lower IQ and cancer are business as usual.
One of the major agencies that would look the other way is the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
—But suppose scientists within the EPA spoke out, revolted, and issued official rebukes to their own Agency’s position on fluorides? Continue reading “The fluoride wars: loving cancer, loving lower IQ”
A Portland police officer was arrested Monday for a DUI. Officer Daniel Chastain was “on call” and driving a city-owned car when he was involved in a crash in Clackamas County on Monday. Alcohol was a factor in the crash, Portland police said in a news release. Continue reading “Portland Police Officer Involved In DUI Crash While On Call, In City-Owned Police Car”
From the first landings in Virginia and Massachusetts in the early 1600’s, American settlers kept pushing westward behind an ever moving frontier. Into wild country went hunters, trappers, fur traders, miners, frontier soldiers, surveyors, and pioneer farmers. The farmers tamed the land and made it productive.
Every part of America had its pioneers. Whatever their surroundings, the pioneers had to depend on themselves and on the land. Self-reliance was a frontier requirement. Game provided food and leather clothing. New settlers gathered wild fruits, nuts, and berries. For salt they boiled the water of saline springs. Maple sugar was made by tapping maple trees in early spring and boiling the sap until it thickened into a tasty sweetening. Continue reading “25 Forgotten Survival Lessons From The Pioneers Worth Finding And Learning”
Charlotte Observer – by Michael Gordon
A Kings Mountain “medicine man” faces federal firearms and tax-evasion charges after an FBI raid on his home uncovered an underground bunker containing dozens of weapons, drugs, large supplies of food and water, suspected materials for an explosive device – and a still.
Six years ago, Reuben DeHaan filed papers in Cleveland County renouncing his U.S. citizenship and challenging government authority, even as he built a murky business marketing “natural healing” services and remedies that earned gross receipts of more than $2.7 million during a recent six-year period. Continue reading “Federal raid uncovers dozens of guns and still in ‘medicine man’s’ bunker”
Blacklisted News – Motherboard
Federal regulators gave the green light to Charter Communications’ proposed $78 billion mega-merger with Time Warner Cable on Monday, paving the way for a new broadband industry giant with 24 million customers in 41 states.
The deal, in which Charter would also absorb smaller rival Brighthouse Networks for $10.4 billion, has been fiercely opposed by public interest groups that call it just the latest example of a decades-long pattern of runaway consolidation in the telecommunications industry. Together, the new Charter and industry leader Comcast would become the nation’s two dominant broadband providers, controlling nearly two-thirds of the high-speed broadband market. Continue reading “Feds Approve $78B Charter-TWC Merger, Creating Broadband Colossus”
(NEW YORK) America has a huge part-time workforce problem.
And it’s Worry Number One for Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen. She has talked about part-timers at each of her last three press conferences, at nearly every speech in the last six months, and at both of her past two testimonies to Congress.
Yellen’s worries stem from the fact that the part-time U.S. workforce is at “very high levels.” Continue reading “Federal Reserve Worried About America’s Part Time Work Force”
Young Americans for Liberty – by George Hawley
When the Berlin Wall fell and the Soviet Union imploded two years later, Americans sighed a breath of relief. Seemingly overnight, our debilitating fear that a horde of T-72’s would blitz through the Fulda Gap evaporated; the world realized a nuclear holocaust would not be the Cold War’s coup de grace. What’s more, the Cold War’s conclusion freed millions of souls from Soviet oppression. We were right to be relieved. American conservatives, who were eager to take credit for USSR’s demise, were feeling particularly triumphant at that time. We had finally reached the “end of history,” and “democratic capitalism” reigned supreme. It remains to be seen, however, whether post-Cold War conservative chest thumping was truly justified. Continue reading “Has The Communist Manifesto replaced the Constitution?”
Los Angeles Daily News – by Saul Gonzalez
With the exception of maybe the cowboy, is there any job more typically “American” than being a trucker? Now, it’s time to rethink that as the industry increasingly depends on drivers from many parts of the world.
To see this shift up close, head 50 miles west of Los Angeles, just off Interstate 10, home to one of the busiest long-haul truck stops in the US. It’s where tired drivers often park their 18-wheelers for the night and eat, shower and relax before hitting the road again. It’s also where you’ll see just how multinational the trucking industry is now because of drivers like Harsharan Singh, originally from Punjab, India. Continue reading “America’s trucking industry faces a shortage. Meet the immigrants helping fill the gap.”
A new report examining the devastating toll of incarcerated parents on children, families and their community has found that over five million children have a parent in jail, leading to poor education outcomes, economic strife and psychological problems.
“The saying is all too familiar: Do the crime, do the time. But in America’s age of mass incarceration, millions of children are suffering the consequences of their parents’ sentences and our nation’s tough-on-crime practices,” stated the report, A Shared Sentence released on Monday by The Annie E. Casey Foundation. Continue reading “Over 5 million American children have a parent in jail – report”
The 96 supporters of Liverpool Football Club who died in Britain’s worst sporting disaster, were killed unlawfully, a jury ruled on Tuesday. It was decided that responsibility for the tragedy lay with officials and the authorities, not with the fans.
After answering “Yes” to the question “Are you satisfied, so that you are sure, that those who died in the disaster were unlawfully killed? Yes or no,” family members and relatives of the victims celebrated by clapping and hugging each other. Continue reading “Jury rules police responsible for Hillsborough tragedy, Liverpool fans not at fault”
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A friend of the white man accused of fatally shooting nine black parishioners in Charleston last year is set to plead guilty to two federal charges, according to an agreement signed by federal prosecutors and filed online Monday.
The plea would mark the first conviction in a mass killing that stunned the country, reignited discussions about race relations and led to the removal of a Confederate battle flag from the South Carolina Statehouse. Dylann Roof, who is charged with the slayings, had previously posed for photos with a rebel flag. Continue reading “Church shooting suspect’s friend to plead”
CHICAGO (AP) — A man who alleges he was sexually abused by former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert and later promised $3.5 million to stay quiet filed a breach-of-contract lawsuit Monday, saying he’s owed more than half the money Hastert promised.
The man, identified in court documents as Individual A, filed the lawsuit in Yorkville, the northern Illinois city where Hastert was a high school teacher and wrestling coach when, prosecutors believe, he molested at least four boys decades ago. Continue reading “‘Individual A’ sues Hastert, alleging unpaid hush money”
Dear Sheriff Ward,
I am writing to you today to ascertain your office and position with respect to the Hammonds and the developing situation at the Bundy Ranch with respect to “Federal Officers”.
My name is Anna Maria Riezinger, also known as Anna von Reitz because my actual name is German and a mile long. I am an American Common Law Superior Court Judge in Alaska where operation of the Seventh Amendment Courts started up again in conjunction with the Common Law Grand Juries more than a year ago and I also serve as a Federal Postal District Court Judge for the Western Region. Continue reading “An Open Letter to Sheriff Ward of Harney County Oregon from Anna Von Reitz”