Natural News – by Mike Adams

Before long, your pill-pushing doctor will be replaced by a pill-pushing AI toilet that’s tag-teamed with a Terminator-style compliance android or drone.

Why? Because today’s pharma-bribed doctors do almost nothing that can’t be done by a sophisticated drug vending machine owned and operated by the pharmaceutical industry. Modern doctors, in other words, are little more than robotic pill pimps who offer absolutely nothing to patients that can’t be done more cheaply and efficiently by automated systems. (And believe me, Big Pharma can’t wait to take human doctors out of the loop entirely. It’s one less group of people they have to bribe…)   Continue reading “The dark future of medicine: Why your human doctor will be replaced by a pill-pushing robotic toilet that’s tag-teamed with a Google Terminator compliance hunter-killer drone”

Next Gov – by Jack Moore

The Department of Homeland Security wants an extra $1 million next year to develop a public-service campaign designed to increase awareness of online threats. The new initiative will be modeled on the “If You See Something, Say Something” effort rolled out after the Sept. 11 attacks.

The new cyber PSA “will look to raise public and private sector awareness of cybersecurity and to emphasize the importance of cyber awareness and information safekeeping,” according to an explanation of the project in fiscal 2017 budget documents released last week.   Continue reading “See Something Suspicious Online? Homeland Security Wants To Know About It”

Free Thought Project – by John Vibes

Portland, OR — On the surface, it would seem that Black Lives Matter and the militia groups that recently occupied a wildlife refuge in Oregon have very little in common. However, they are very much fighting the same struggle, and they have a common enemy.

The media and the political establishment would like to see these groups divided, because if they unify, they could make a strong and worthy opponent for the current control system.   Continue reading “Black Lives Matter Teams Up with Oregon Occupier Supporters to Fight for Police Accountability”

Zero Hedge – Wall Street Journal

These are strange monetary times, with negative interest rates and central bankers deemed to be masters of the universe. So maybe we shouldn’t be surprised that politicians and central bankers are now waging a war on cash. That’s right, policy makers in Europe and the U.S. want to make it harder for the hoi polloi to hold actual currency.   Continue reading “This Is The Real Reason For The War On Cash”

CJ Online – by Jonathan Shorman

A new federal lawsuit charges thousands of Kansans seeking to register to vote at DMV locations have been illegally blocked, forced to provide proof of citizenship in violation of federal law.

The suit, brought the American Civil Liberties Union, alleges DMV workers are telling individuals applying or renewing their drivers licenses who want to register they must have proof of citizenship, or are allowed to fill out a registration form and are later told they’re on a suspended voter list.
Continue reading “ACLU sues Kansas over proof of citizenship for DMV voter registrations”

Reuters

The World Bank said on Thursday it is making $150 million in financing immediately available to help combat the Zika virus outbreak in affected Latin American and Caribbean countries.

The multilateral lender said in a statement that it stands ready to increase its support if needed, and the initial amount is based on current demands from the affected countries and assessments from teams of experts sent there.   Continue reading “World Bank offers $150 million in financing to Zika-affected countries”

Truth Dig – by Alexander Reed Kelly

Tech entrepreneur Justin Keller stoked San Francisco’s growing reputation for insensitivity to the misery of the impoverished by telling Mayor Ed Lee in an open letter that he is “outraged” that wealthy workers, who he says “have earned their right to live in the city,” have to see people in pain and despair.

“I am writing today, to voice my concern and outrage over the increasing homeless and drug problem that the city is faced with. I’ve been living in SF for over three years, and without a doubt it is the worst it has ever been,” Keller wrote on his blog. “Every day, on my way to, and from work, I see people sprawled across the sidewalk, tent cities, human feces, and the faces of addiction. The city is becoming a shanty town … Worst of all, it is unsafe. …”   Continue reading “San Francisco ‘Tech Bro’ Complains to Mayor That He Has to See Poor People in Despair”

The Realist Report

According to a report coming from The Jerusalem Post, the Israeli Foreign Ministry is openly demanding governments around the world regulate social media platforms in an effort to combat and ultimately ban “anti-Semitism” and “incitement of violence.”

Most readers are no doubt aware of the fact that the organized Jewish community regularly hypes, exaggerates, and even outright fabricates “incitement to violence” against Jews and other minorities in order to advance their tyrannical, anti-free speech agenda. (See here and here, for example.)  Continue reading “Israel Demands Governments Regulate Social Media & Ban “Anti-Semitism””

RT

Gasoline will no longer be cheaper than water for Venezuelans after President Nicolas Maduro devalued the national currency and raised petrol prices 60-fold.

Caracas has hiked petrol prices for the first time in 20 years, as the oil-dependent Venezuelan economy is no longer able to subsidize its cost at the pumps, selling gasoline to its citizens for next to nothing.   Continue reading “Petrol pump pain: Venezuelan gasoline prices jump 6,000%”

Mail.com

CHICAGO (AP) — A woman with a history of sneaking aboard airplanes has been arrested again at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport. Chicago police say 64-year-old Marilyn Hartman was arrested Wednesday at an airport bus shuttle center. She’s scheduled to appear Thursday in bond court.   Continue reading “Serial stowaway arrested again at Chicago’s O’Hare airport”

Mail.com

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — The National Park Service has outlined a series of actions in response to a federal report that found employees at the Grand Canyon preyed on their female colleagues and retaliated against them for refusing sexual advances.

The agency’s Intermountain Region director, Sue Masica, said employees will be disciplined appropriately and she will push a message of zero tolerance for sexual harassment and hostile work environments.   Continue reading “Park Service vows reforms after report on sexual harassment”

Mail.com

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Turkey blamed Kurdish militant groups at home and in neighboring Syria on Thursday for a deadly suicide bombing in Ankara and vowed strong retaliation for the attack — a development that threatens to further complicate the Syria conflict.

The rush hour car-bomb attack on Wednesday evening targeted buses carrying military personnel, killing 28 people and injuring dozens. It came as Turkey is grappling with an array of serious issues, including renewed fighting with Kurdish rebels, threats from Islamic State militants and the Syria refugee crisis. The attack was the second deadly bombing in Ankara in four months.   Continue reading “Turkey blames Kurdish rebels, Syria for Ankara attack”

Mail.com

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A college fundraiser fatally shot his niece and her 4-year-old son at their suburban Indianapolis home Wednesday, following a dispute over a family trust worth millions of dollars, before killing himself inside a downtown hotel room, authorities said.

Lucius Oliver Hamilton III fatally shot himself inside a hotel room one block from the Indiana Statehouse just after officers knocked on the door, state police Capt. Dave Bursten said. Hamilton, 61, had been the subject of a manhunt since shortly after the bodies of Katherine Giehll and Raymond Peter Giehll IV were found Wednesday morning in their home in an upscale neighborhood near Zionsville, just northwest of Indianapolis.   Continue reading “Authorities: Man kills 2, himself after family trust dispute”

CBS News

LOS ANGELES — The FBI is leading the investigation of a hostage situation at a California hospital — but it’s not people who were being held, it was the hospital’s computer system.

Inside Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital, computer screens were dark since hackers took over the data network almost two weeks ago.   Continue reading “California hospital computer system taken “hostage””

MassPrivateI

According to Courthouse News (CN) article, DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson warned law enforcement of a new breed of terrorism that sees people “self-radicalize.”

“As I have said many times, we are in a new phase of the global terrorist threat, requiring a whole new type of response,” Johnson said. “We have moved from a world of terrorist-directed attacks to a world that includes the threat of terrorist-inspired attacks.”
Continue reading “Fearing Americans are tiring of the war on terror, DHS creates a “new breed of terrorism””

Reuters

Iraq is searching for “highly dangerous” radioactive material stolen last year, according to an environment ministry document and seven security, environmental and provincial officials who fear it could be used as a weapon if acquired by Islamic State.

The material, stored in a protective case the size of a laptop computer, went missing in November from a storage facility near the southern city of Basra belonging to U.S. oilfield services company Weatherford WFT.N, the document seen by Reuters showed and officials confirmed.   Continue reading “Radioactive material stolen in Iraq raises security fears”

Intellihub – by Shepard Ambellas

BASTROP, Tex. (INTELLIHUB) — Photos taken by Joe Carey last Friday, in a Lowe’s parking lot reveal something rather suspicious.

A fully armored surveillance truck, equipped with surveillance electronics and stabilizer bars, that is sitting stationary, with its stabilizers extended as if it’s in operation.   Continue reading “Fully armored surveillance truck, with stabilizers down spotted in Lowe’s parking lot — European plates”

Papers, Please!

One of the big lies being told by supporters of the REAL-ID Act of 2005 is that, as the DHS says on its official “Rumor Control” page, “Fact: REAL ID does not build a national database nor does it grant the Federal Government or another state access to a state’s driver’s license data.”

In fact, as we’ve been pointing out and as others have noted, the REAL-ID Act is both building a national database and requiring any state that wants to issue drivers’ licenses or state ID cards that are “compliant” with the REAL-ID Act to grant all other states access to their state’s drivers’ license and ID card data.   Continue reading “How the REAL-ID Act is creating a national ID database”

Boston Globe – by Matt Rocheleau

The federal government has ordered three Massachusetts town police departments and the state Department of Correction to return military equipment, including grenade launchers, bayonets, and tracked armored vehicles, that they received as part of a controversial program.

After concerns were raised over the use of military equipment by police during riots in Ferguson, Mo., in 2014, President Obama issued an executive order that established a working group to study the issue. He later accepted the group’s recommendations to curb federal programs that send surplus military equipment to law enforcement agencies nationwide.   Continue reading “Goodbye, grenade launchers: Mass. towns return military equipment to feds”