SF Gate – by Amy Larson

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security are detaining illegal immigrants this week on the Central Coast.

ICE agents went to homes in King City Monday, Soledad Wednesday, Santa Cruz Wednesday night, and Watsonville Thursday morning. They were also detentions in Salinas.   Continue reading “ICE raids underway across the Central Coast”

Fox News

Authorities say two people have been arrested after two D.C. police officers and a District Department of Transportation employee were struck by a pickup truck Thursday night in Adams Morgan.

D.C. Police Chief Peter Newsham says just before 9 p.m., a white pickup truck traveling at a high rate of speed hit two bicycle patrol officers on duty and a traffic control aide on 18th Street in Northwest D.C.   Continue reading “2 DC police officers, city worker struck by speeding vehicle, 2 arrested”

AOL – by Aris Folley

The New Mexico Department of Health (NMDOH) has reported the first case of human plague in the states this year.

Health officials said a 63-year-old man from Sante Fe County is currently being hospitalized and is in critical condition with the pneumonic plague.

The bacterial disease is the most infectious type of plague and is an advanced stage of the bubonic plague that can be passed directly from person to person, in addition to being transmitted by animals and fleas.   Continue reading “First human case of plague this year is reported in New Mexico”

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Infowars – by Kit Daniels

Here’s five devastating bombshells from fired FBI Director James Comey’s testimony in front of the Senate Intelligence Committee on Thursday:

Russia ‘Collusion’ Theory Falls Apart

Comey said he never felt that Trump tried to impede the FBI’s investigation into Russia, but instead the president had actually encouraged it.   Continue reading “Five Bombshells From Comey Testimony”

Jon Rappoport

This is an intelligence briefing. Here I present the bare bones of what has been happening before our eyes…if we would see it.

Once upon a time, there was an industrial combine in Nazi Germany called IG Farben. It was the largest chemical/pharmaceutical octopus in the world. It owned companies, and it had favorable business agreements with companies from England to Central America to Japan.   Continue reading “Exposed: the Nazi roots of the European Union”

Free Thought Project – by Matt Agorist

Harris County, TX — Terry Thompson, a 41-year-old Harris County man choked another man to death at a local Denny’s Sunday night. The dramatic footage of the fight emerged this week which prompted a heavy backlash by people wanting to know why the couple was not charged. However, it appears that all this has now changed as just moments ago, a Texas grand jury indicted both the sheriff’s deputy and her husband on murder charges for the death of John Hernandez.   Continue reading “Cop and Her Husband Indicted for Murder After She Watched Him Kill Man on Video”

SHTF Plan – by Mac Slavo

A viral video in which a man shoots a refrigerator door is causing an internet firestorm. The refrigerator is shown exploding after being shot with a rifle, and the door nearly ends the shooter’s life.

The man in the video obviously enjoys living life on the edge. The video posted on the Internet shows a man firing an what looks like an M-16 rifle at a refrigerator stocked with Tannerite. Tannerite is a widely sold and very popular exploding target specially geared toward gun owners. It consists of a mixture of ammonium nitrate and aluminum powder, is legal, and available at sporting-goods stores and websites. But it’s fair to say that it isn’t meant to be packed inside a refrigerator with intentions to shoot said fridge.   Continue reading “Man Almost Dies When He Shoots A Refrigerator Full Of Explosives”

Dissident Voice – by Jonathan Cook

Palestinian leaders have denounced new construction projects they say will further tighten Israel’s grip on occupied East Jerusalem and its holy places, including the incendiary site of Al-Aqsa mosque.

The most elaborate plan is for a cable car intended to bring thousands of visitors an hour to the Western Wall and its Jewish prayer plaza immediately below al-Haram al-Sharif, a compound containing Al-Aqsa and the golden-topped Dome of the Rock.   Continue reading “Israel tells Palestinians: “Al-Aqsa is No Longer Yours””

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Reuters

A supermarket employee fatally shot three co-workers before killing himself inside the store in northeast Pennsylvania early on Thursday, state police said.

Randy Stair opened fire at a Weis Markets in Eaton Township, about 25 miles (40 km) northwest of Scranton, shortly before 1 a.m. EDT (0500 GMT), Pennsylvania state police said. The 24-year-old was carrying two pistol-grip shotguns in a duffle bag when he arrived for his overnight shift at 11 p.m. on Wednesday, police said.   Continue reading “Supermarket worker kills three, himself in Pennsylvania store”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

Even as the world’s attention turns to the Comey testimony for the next few hours, the Qatar diplomatic crisis (where CNN’s “report” of Russian hacking now appears long forgotten) continues, and moments ago a barrage of headlines from Qatar suggests that the small nation, which may or may not be preparing for military action, is happy to welcome the Turkish troops that will be arriving soon as reported yesterday, with its foreign minister stating that “we are not ready to surrender and will never compromise the independence of our foreign policy.” Also, and perhaps even more critically, Qatar – whose foreign minister is set to fly to Moscow on Saturday – also announced that Iran is ready to help with food and that three of Iran’s ports will be designated for use for Qatar.   Continue reading “Qatar Says “We Will Never Surrender”, Welcomes Turkish Troops As Iran Offers Food, Ports”

Washington Examiner – by Paul Bedard

The government’s processing of illegal immigrants has broken down as the number of backlogged court cases has grown to a ratio of 1,456 per judge, prompting some courts to schedule deportation cases as far out as February 2022, according to a new Government Accountability Office assessment.

The audit agency tabulated a total of 437,000 pending cases, double what it was in 2006. What’s more, the normal wait time for illegals to face a judge has grown from 198 days to 404 days.   Continue reading “GAO: 437,000 deportation cases backlogged, hearings delayed to 2022”

Off the Grid News – by Daniel Jennings

Residents of one western state will be able to purchase only one gun a month if a bill passed by the state’s Senate becomes law.

The California bill, sponsored by State Senator Antony Portantino (D-Pasadena), was labeled “firearms rationing” by the Firearms Policy Coalition.   Continue reading “‘Gun Rationing’: State May Limit Rifle & Shotgun Purchases To One-A-Month”

Aletho News – by Maidhc Ó Cathail | The Passionate Attachment | May 29, 2012

In its tendentious report on the heckling of Sen. John McCain during a Memorial Day speech in San Diego, The Raw Story smears patriotic Americans who know the facts about Israel’s deliberate June 8, 1967 attack on the USS Liberty as “conspiracy theorists.” In order to discredit James Morris’ very public raising of the McCain family’s subsequent involvement in the incident, David Edwards explains:   Continue reading “Flashback: The Raw Story treats readers like “jerks” over Israel’s attack on USS Liberty”

Antiquated lunacy, one must be a moron, a Jew or a benefactor of sorts to be buying this economic Super Friends council BS

New York Times – by Jack Ewing

FRANKFURT — Forward guidance might sound like something to mount on the dashboard of a car. But in the world of monetary policy it is a crucial concept, one that will be the focus of the European Central Bank’s meeting on Thursday.

Continue reading “European Central Bank Meeting Focuses on ‘Forward Guidance’”

AJC – by Christopher Ingraham

Students at Worth County High School in Sylvester, Georgia, have filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against their country sheriff after he ordered what the complaint describes as a schoolwide drug sweep involving pat-down searches of hundreds of teenagers.

On April 14, Sheriff Jeff Hobby and dozens of deputies came to Worth County High School searching for students in possession of illicit substances. According to the students’ legal complaint, they proceeded to go to every classroom and physically search nearly every student present for drugs. The deputies, the lawsuit alleges, used “pat down” searches, with some deputies touching female students’ breasts and male students’ genitalia.

Continue reading “The Worth County sheriff ordered pat-down searches for every student at a public high school. Now they’re suing.”

NPR – by Dan Charles

Neil Shook was relaxing at home in Woodworth, N.D., on a Saturday afternoon just over a week ago.

“My wife was outside and she yelled at me to come outside and take a look at this,” he recalls.

A massive brown cloud covered the horizon to the west. It was a dust storm — although Shook, who’s a scientist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, doesn’t like to call it dust. “I like to refer to it as soil, because that’s basically what it is,” he says. “We saw this huge soil cloud moving from west to east across the landscape.”   Continue reading “U.S. Pays Farmers Billions To Save The Soil. But It’s Blowing Away”