12 News Now

ANAHUAC – Voters in Chambers County briefly went back to voting on paper ballots Monday morning after a glitch was discovered in the county’s voting machines.

The issue was actually discoveredd on Monday morning when Chambers County Clerk Heather Hawthorne was casting her own ballot and the voter next to her noticed that one of her votes was not filled in when she reviewed her electronic ballot  Hawthorne told 12News on Tuesday.   Continue reading “Programming issue briefly forces Chambers County voters back to paper ballots”

Fred on Everything – by Fred Reed

More fun in the Indispensable Nation: As we have all heard by now, according to Hillary, ardent of becoming National Basilisk, half of Trump’s supporters are evil and the other half losers, deplorables all. That is, she holds half of Americans in contempt. Unsurprisingly she said this in New York, which is barely America, and to a convention of sexual curiosities.

I frankly think her admirable. As she coughs, staggers, convulses, lies, pilfers, sells favors and lapses into intermittent confusion, she still has the courage to tell America that she loathes half of it. That´s candor.   Continue reading “Ronald McDonald or Lucretia Borgia?: In the Long Run, We Are all Dead”

Anti-War – by Sheldon Richman

The U.S. Constitution can reasonably be seen as a massive tax and mercantilist trade-promotion program. However, there’s a third leg to this stool. It was a national-security program as well – almost a proto-PATRIOT Act. Indeed, these three elements formed an integrated project: it gave the new central government independent power to raise revenue by taxing individuals directly and to establish an army and navy in order to advance, by force if necessary, American trade. This, I submit, was not exactly a libertarian project. It let a terrifying genie out of the bottle ostensibly in order to contain it. Or, as James Madison put it, “You must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.”   Continue reading “The Constitution and the Standing Army”

RT

11 people were arrested after they chained themselves together and blocked the right side of the George Washington Bridge going into Manhattan during rush hour.

Eleven people protesting for immigrants’ rights were arrested after they chained themselves to the George Washington Bridge’s upper level and blocked all inbound lanes to Manhattan during rush hour, causing a 90 minutes delay.   Continue reading “‘We are visible’: 11 arrested after blocking New York bridge during morning rush hour”

Mail.com

BEIRUT (AP) — Airstrikes in Syria killed 17 people, mostly children on Wednesday when warplanes struck a school complex in the northern rebel-held province of Idlib, activists said. The Idlib News network said the strikes hit as the children were gathered outside the school complex in the village of Hass. The activist-operated group put the death toll at 17, and said most of the victims were children.

There were fears the death toll could rise further as some of the wounded were reported to be in critical condition, the network added. Another activist group, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put the death toll at 22. It said 14 children and a woman were among those killed.   Continue reading “Syria airstrikes kill 17, mostly children, outside school”

Mail.com

FALMOUTH, Maine (AP) — Rigged elections. Vigilante observers. Angry voters. The claims, threats and passions surrounding the presidential race have led communities around the U.S. to move polling places out of schools or cancel classes on Election Day.

The fear is that the ugly rhetoric of the campaign could escalate into confrontations and even violence in school hallways, endangering students. “If anybody can sit there and say they don’t think this is a contentious election, then they aren’t paying much attention,” said Ed Tolan, police chief in this seaside community, which decided to call off classes on Election Day and put additional officers on duty Nov. 8.   Continue reading “Fearing Election Day trouble, some US schools cancel classes”

The Firearm Blog

Forget about any military endurance testing of the AR/M16 platform, a rental range in Las Vegas has some extremely interesting findings when it comes to large round counts, sometimes in excess of 200,000 rounds through commercially available and full auto ARs. Granted, none of the grueling testing procedures in place from a military standpoint are there, but for sheer round count alone, it really tells a lot about what some companies can take and what others can’t when it comes to their rifles and products in general. This all stems from a forum thread on AR15.com that was started in June. His screen name is HendersonDefense, and there is a small arms company in Henderson, NV called Henderson Defense, but the range operations he is talking about are occurring at Battlefield Las Vegas, a big time rental range in Vegas. His name is Ron, and he’s been featured here at TFB before in the form of a post about the rental AKs at his range earlier this year.   Continue reading “AR endurance findings, at a rental range”

Daisy Luther

Last week, I reported that the MSM was doing a great deal to try and undermine the truths that are being revealed about our government, the rigged election, and their darling, Hillary Clinton. My suspicion was that they were  going so far as to set up fake websites and use skewed polls to prepare us for a Clinton victory.

It appears I was not alone in that suspicion because all sorts of people began to bring up the topic of skewed polls, including the Trump campaign.   Continue reading “Did You Notice Anything Different in the MSM Lately?”

AP

TROUT RUN, Pa. (AP) — Officials say a bridge washed out by flooding traveled the length of a football field and ruptured a pipeline last week, spilling about 55,000 gallons of gasoline into a Pennsylvania creek.

Officials with Sunoco Logistics said Tuesday that “an object of extreme destructive force” severed the 8-inch pipeline under Wallis Run in Lycoming County. David Chalson, s Sunoco Logistics executive, says “it’s clear the bridge was responsible for the damage to the pipe.”   Continue reading “Washed-out bridge blamed for pipeline rupture, gas spill”

Prison Planet – by Paul Joseph Watson

Towns across Sweden have banned Christmas street lights in the name of “security,” but the real reason is almost certainly because the country has completely capitulated to Islam after importing countless Muslim migrants over the last two years.

According to an SVT report, The Swedish Transport Administration (Trafikverket) will not allow municipalities to erect Christmas street lights on light poles that the authority manages, meaning that many towns will have no festival lights at all on major streets.   Continue reading “Sweden Bans Christmas Street Lights; To Avoid Offending Muslim Migrants?”

New York Post – by Larry Celona and Jamie Schram

Washington-based federal prosecutors plan to aggressively pursue charges against NYPD cop Daniel Pantaleo for the chokehold death of Eric Garner on Staten Island, a law enforcement source told The Post on Tuesday.

“It’s going to happen sooner than later,” the source said of an indictment. “Washington wants to indict him.”   Continue reading “Justice Department to charge cop in death of Eric Garner”

CBS News

MCALLEN, Texas — Every day, dozens of men, women and children stream through the streets of McAllen, Texas to a migrant center at Sacred Heart Catholic Church.

They have just illegally crossed into the U.S. and have been released by border patrol, with ankle monitors, while they file for asylum.
Continue reading “Surge of migrants illegally crossing U.S.-Mexico border ahead of election”

New York Post – by Paul Sperry

For months now, we’ve been told that Hillary Clinton’s 33,000 missing emails were permanently erased and destroyed beyond recovery. But newly released FBI notes strongly suggest they still exist in several locations — and they could be recovered, if only someone would impanel a grand jury and seize them.

In a May interview with FBI agents, an executive with the Denver contractor that maintained Clinton’s private server revealed that an underling didn’t bleach-clean all her subpoenaed emails, just ones he stored in a data file he used to transfer the emails from the server to Clinton’s aides, who in turn sorted them for delivery to Congress.   Continue reading “Hillary’s 33,000 emails might not be ‘missing’ after all”

Breitbart – by AWR Hawkins

On Friday, the government of gun-controlled Australia admitted that hundreds of thousands of “illegal firearms” remain in criminal possession and launched a new amnesty in hopes of persuading said criminals to turn over the weapons.

In September, Breitbart News reported that Melbourne, Australia, had a gun problem; that they had witnessed more than one shooting a week on average since January 2015.   Continue reading “Fail: Gun-Controlled Australia Admits Criminals Still Armed, Launches New Amnesty”

Anti-Media- by Carey Wedler

The war on our police must end,” Donald Trump forcefully demanded during a speech in Wisconsin in August. “It must end now.”

This sentiment is often parroted by right-wing outlets and savored by cop-loving Americans who should (according to what’s left of their ideological principles) harbor the utmost skepticism toward institutions of government.   Continue reading “War On Cops Debunked: More Cops Died By Accident Than From Violence in 2015”

Mother Jones – by Julia Lurie

This summer, 81,000 homes in Pittsburgh received a worrisome letter about their water. The local utility “has found elevated levels of lead in tap water samples in some homes,” it said. Seventeen percent of samples had high levels of the metal, which can cause “serious health problems.”

The situation was bad enough to attract the attention of Marc Edwards, the Virginia Tech professor who helped exposed the Flint water crisis. “The levels in Pittsburgh are comparable to those reported in Flint,” he said in an interview with local TV station WPXI.  Continue reading “This Major City’s Drinking Water Was Fine. Then Came the Private Water Company.”