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Month: August 2016
Free Thought Project – by Jay Syrmopoulos
Washington, D.C. – Only days after board-certified medicine specialist, and TV personality, Dr. Drew Pinsky publicly stated that he was “gravely concerned” about the health of Hillary Clinton, his show was abruptly canceled by CNN.
After evaluating Clinton’s medical records Dr. Drew concluded that the medical treatments she has been receiving for a number of conditions were akin to “a 1950’s level of care.” He stated that if he were providing the type of care she is receiving he would be ashamed to show up in the doctor’s lounge and would essentially be laughed at by other medical professionals. Continue reading “CNN Cancels Dr. Drew’s Show After He Publicly Expressed “Grave Concern” Over Hillary’s Health”
It could have been a scene straight out of a horror movie.
A woman trying to sell crickets and worms on a crowded New York City subway car became frazzled by some teenagers and let the critters loose on riders, then urinated on herself, according to social media posts and news reports. Continue reading “Panic on NY subway train as crickets, worms let loose”
Washington Free Beacon – by Elizabeth Harrington
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is spending nearly $1 million to teach refugees how to farm.
New grants announced last week include two projects in Idaho and Kansas to “cultivate the next generation of farmers” by helping refugees get land leases to start their own farms. Continue reading “Feds Spend $1 Million for Refugees to Become Farmers”
Nine Florida Mall shoppers were injured in a frantic flee from the building after an alarm and popping sounds caused panic at the fear of an active shooter, officials said Thursday.
About 3:20 p.m., mall patrons began reporting on social media that an alleged shooting had occurred in the food court after hearing sharp popping sounds and a fire alarm. The unsettling sounds sent fearful patrons running from the mall.
Continue reading “Nine people injured after Florida Mall shooting scare”
Town Hall – by Victor Davis Hanson
Emphasizing diversity has been the pitfall, not the strength, of nations throughout history.
The Roman Empire worked as long as Iberians, Greeks, Jews, Gauls and myriad other African, Asian and European communities spoke Latin, cherished habeas corpus and saw being Roman as preferable to identifying with their own particular tribe. By the fifth century, diversity had won out but would soon prove a fatal liability. Continue reading “Diversity: History’s Pathway to Chaos”
As the scope of the NSA’s bulk surveillance program becomes all too clear, less attention has been paid to the issues surrounding genetic information and surveillance. BioGenFutures, a company-cum-art-project launched by information artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg, hopes to bring DNA surveillance back to the fore. The company announced a product it calls “Invisible,” which endeavors to make it harder for authorities to trace left-behind DNA evidence back to people. Not only is the product actually launching to consumers, but Dewey-Hagborg believes solutions of its kind will be commonplace within five years. Continue reading “It’s Now Possible To Make Your DNA Untraceable, Thanks To This Company”
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A 76-year-old veteran committed suicide on Sunday in the parking lot of theNorthport Veterans Affairs Medical Center on Long Island, where he had been a patient, according to the Suffolk County Police Department.
Peter A. Kaisen, of Islip, was pronounced dead after he shot himself outside Building 92, the nursing home at the medical center. Continue reading “Veteran Kills Himself in Parking Lot of V.A. Hospital on Long Island”
MRC TV – by P. Gardner Goldsmith
The spirit of Robin Hood is alive and well in the United States, and some US politicians aren’t happy about it.
Invoking the name of the famous fictional (and possibly real) hero of medieval England, these contemporary rebels have, for a decade, set about righting wrongs not with arrows, but with coins.
Continue reading “NH Bureaucrats Try to Crush Heroic ‘Robin Hoods’ Who Pay Expired Parking Meters”
Around the world, governments have recently been issuing an unsettling call for their citizens to become more self-reliant. Just this week, the governments of both Germany and Czechoslovakia warned that people should be prepared for ““be prepared for the worst case possible scenario.”
But here in the United States, just the opposite is happening. Our government seems to have an unquenchable thirst for cracking down on those who take responsibility for themselves. There is an abundance of evidence of this in Louisiana. Continue reading “Louisiana Officials Demand That Self-Reliant Locals Stop Surviving the Flood Without Permission”
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Tax Revolution Institute – by Chloe Anagnos
It’s no secret that dealing with the Internal Revenue Service is complicated. But trying to deal with the IRS while also attempting to make sense of the US tax code is just downright daunting.
Now containing 74,000 pages, the federal tax code has almost tripled in the last 30 years. At the current rate it is growing, it will surpass 100,000 pages by 2050. Continue reading “How the US Tax Code Kills Entrepreneurship”
Pennsylvania mother Jessica Battiato has been diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome – a rare inherited connective tissue disorder which can cause brittle bones which may be easily broken. When she took her first-born son to the doctor more than a year ago for a swollen leg, she was shocked to learn that he had 18 to 20 fractures in his body. Cesar was seized by child protective services.
Since that time, experts have diagnosed him with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, low vitamin D, and infantile rickets. However, after more than a year, the state has still not released Cesar back to his parents. Continue reading “Pennsylvania Children with Genetic Disorder Medically Kidnapped, Mother Falsely Accused of Abuse”
South Carolina Representative Trey Gowdy appeared on Fox News today and disclosed new details about the Clinton email scandal that seem to indicate intent to destroy evidence. Per the clip below, Gowdy reveals that Clinton used “BleachBit” to erase the “personal” emails from her private server.
For those not familiar with the software, BleachBit is intended to help users delete files in a way to “prevent recovery” and “hide traces of files deleted.” Per the BleachBit website: Continue reading “FBI Admits Clinton Used Software Designed To “Prevent Recovery” And “Hide Traces Of” Deleted Emails”
In the United States, state police are a police body unique to each U.S. state, having statewide authority to conduct law enforcement activities and criminal investigations. In general, they perform functions outside the jurisdiction of the county sheriff (Vermont being a notable exception), such as enforcing traffic laws on state highways and interstate expressways, overseeing the security of the state capitol complex, protecting the governor, training new officers for local police forces too small to operate an academy, providing technological and scientific services, supporting local police and helping to coordinate multi-jurisdictional task force activity in serious or complicated cases in those states that grant full police powers statewide. Continue reading “The Little Brown Army Guard Target”
Police State America has devised a new way to track dissidents or person’s of interest, they’re calling it Pay-By-Plate. Raytheon’s Pay-By-Plate system will allow police to “Hotlist” motorists across the country.
According to the Boston Globe, officials are working with the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security to draft a list of all situations that warrant “Hotlist” use. Continue reading “Police use ‘Pay-By-Plate’ to “Hotlist” motorists across the country”
ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) – In the near decade they’ve flown around the world together the Bergstrom family has never had problems with TSA — Let alone over 9-year-old Chille’s pacemaker — until Saturday morning at Sky Harbor Airport in Phoenix.
“Usually, they are friendly, they smile, they give him a sticker, a TSA sticker,” Chille’s mother, Ali Bergstrom, of Wyoming, Minnesota, told FOX 9. Continue reading “TSA hassles 9-year-old boy with pacemaker, 4 heart defects”