Month: August 2018
A neighborhood in Texas has been consumed with mystery after a security camera recorded a barefoot woman wearing only a t-shirt and what appears to be wrist shackles frantically ringing the doorbell of a Montgomery County home in the early hours of the morning.
The incident, which occurred after 3 a.m. on Friday, was captured by a doorbell cam recently installed at a home in the Sunrise Ranch subdivision, according to the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office. The unidentified woman, seeming somewhat panicked, appears suddenly out the bushes and rings the bell a few times before the seconds-long clip cuts out. Continue reading “Texas police search for mystery woman recorded ringing doorbell in only a t-shirt and what appears to be restraints”
A pair of menacing Russian mobsters with a taste for arson and assault were convicted Tuesday of racketeering for their six-year Brooklyn reign of terror.
A Brooklyn Federal Court Jury returned its verdicts after the three-week trial of Leonid Gershman, 35, and Aleksey Tsvetkov, 39. The mobsters, who used their ill-gotten profits to lead a cozy life of leisure, will face life imprisonment at their upcoming sentencing.
by Robert Ruark
Something of Value is a novel based on events that took place in Kenya Colony during the violent Mau Mau insurrection of the 1950s, an uprising that was confined almost exclusively to members of the Kikuyu tribe. It is a powerful, gripping, and sometimes shocking novel that presents an enlightening glimpse into the lives of all sections of the population in Colonial Kenya fifty years ago…. Something of Value
Download here: https://archive.org/details/somethingofvalue00ruar
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The owner of a Texas company that makes untraceable 3D-printed guns said Tuesday that he has begun selling the blueprints through his website to anyone who wants to make one, despite a federal court order barring him from posting the plans online.
Cody Wilson said at a news conference that he started selling the plans Tuesday morning and that he had already received nearly 400 orders. He said he’ll sell the plans for as little as a penny to anyone in the U.S. who wants them. Continue reading “Texan says he’s selling 3D-printed gun plans, despite ruling”
Join in on the conversation. Call (641) 715-3610 then enter 220029#, press *6 to mute and unmute.
You can listen on our player.
Direct link for major players:
http://listen.spacial.com/api/listen/?sid=9826&method=sc
Get together in our chat room: The Pub.
Archive: TWFTT 8-28-18
Free Thought Project – by John Vibes
Baltimore, MD — Last November, Baltimore City Police Detective Sean Suiter was shot and killed while on duty the day before he was set to testify against dirty cops in the department. Now, nearly a year later, the panel responsible for investigating the case have ruled his death a suicide, because they claimed they could not find any evidence of a second person in the area.
Not only was Suiter set to testify in a massive corruptions case the day after his shooting but his partner was off work that day and the commissioner lied about this important detail in a press conference where he revealed the details of the case to the media. The man who filled in as Suiter’s partner on the day of his death is friends with one of the officers who Suiter was set to testify against. Continue reading “Dept Claims Cop Killed Himself, While Chasing Suspect, Days Before Testifying Against Dirty Cops”
Common Dreams – by Andrea Germanos
In the wake of a U.S. court ordering Monsanto to pay $289 million in damages to man who says its weedkiller Roundup caused his cancer, Vietnam has called on the agrichemical giant to pay reparations to Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange.
“This case is a precedent that rejects previous arguments that the herbicides supplied to the U.S. military by Monsanto and other U.S. chemical companies during the Vietnam War are not harmful to people’s health,” spokesperson for the Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Nguyen Phuong Tra said to reporters last week. Continue reading “Eyeing Landmark Verdict in Roundup Cancer Case, Vietnam Demands Monsanto Be Held Liable Over Agent Orange”
Gunpowder Magazine – by José Niño
South Africa is opening the door for tyranny.
The Constitutional Court of South Africa recently ruled that 300,000 gun owners must turn in their firearms.
This judgement came in response to the North Gauteng High Court’s ruling in 2017 which said Section 24 and Section 28 of the Firearm’s Control Act were unconstitutional. Continue reading “South Africa Calls for 300,000 Gun Owners to Turn Over Their Weapons”
MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia will next month hold its biggest war games since the fall of the Soviet Union, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said on Tuesday, a massive military exercise that will also involve the Chinese and Mongolian armies.
The exercise, called Vostok-2018 (East-2018), will take place in central and eastern Russian military districts and involve almost 300,000 troops, more than 1,000 military aircraft, two of Russia’s naval fleets, and all of its airborne units, Shoigu said in a statement. Continue reading “Russia to hold its biggest war games since fall of Soviet Union”
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Canada’s top trade negotiator joins her Mexican and U.S. counterparts in Washington on Tuesday in a bid to remain part of a revamped trilateral North American trade pact, as U.S. officials expressed optimism a deal could be reached this week.
But Ottawa will be under pressure to accept new terms on auto trade and dispute settlement rules after the United States and Mexico agreed on Monday to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Continue reading “Canada rejoins talks to stay in NAFTA, deal possible this week”
American Free Press – by Mark Anderson
Former federal prosecutor Larry Klayman, founder of Judicial Watch and Freedom Watch, issued a press release earlier in August on behalf of his client, Cliven Bundy, vowing to fight a Department of Justice appeal of a judge’s dismissal of the case against Bundy for his role in the spring 2014 protest against federal land tyranny in Nevada.
In January, U.S. District Judge Gloria M. Navarro dismissed conspiracy charges against Bundy, his two sons, and fellow protestor Ryan Payne after finding prosecutors violated federal law and unjustly failed to share with the court evidence favorable to the defendants. Later, on July 31, Judge Navarro rejected the prosecutors’ request to reconsider her dismissal of the case. Continue reading “Bundy Hit Again”
DownTrend – by V. Saxena
Two years before the late Sen. John McCain got annihilated by former President Barack Hussein Obama in the 2008 presidential election, he met with a sinister Russian oligarch “whose suspected links to anti-democratic and organized-crime figures are so controversial that the U.S. government revoked his visa.”
According to an investigatory piece published by The Washington Post during the 2008 election, the man who arranged the meeting between McCain and Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska was his campaign manager, Rick Davis. As in the same Rick Davis who co-founded the lobbying firm Davis-Manafort Inc. with Paul Manafort. Continue reading ““Hero” John McCain Met With Sinister Russian Oligarch Before 2008 Election And Then Lied About It”
KAUBER, West Bank (Reuters) – The Israeli military on Tuesday demolished the family home of a Palestinian teenager in the occupied West Bank who killed an Israeli in a Jewish settlement a month ago and was shot dead in the attack.
Footage distributed by the military showed an armoured bulldozer tearing into the one-storey structure in the village of Kauber, north of the Palestinian city of Ramallah. Continue reading “Israel demolishes family home of Palestinian attacker”
NEW YORK (AP) — The Kushner family real estate company was fined $210,000 by New York City regulators on Monday following an Associated Press investigation earlier this year that showed it routinely filed false documents with the city claiming it had no rent-regulated tenants in its buildings when, in fact, it had hundreds.
Separately, a watchdog group said Monday that former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen has engaged in the same practice, perhaps in a more brazen way, by telling the city that buildings he owned were empty, though tax records showed they were filled with tenants, many rent-regulated. Continue reading “Kushner Cos. fined $210K by New York for false documents”
Two years ago, I wrote an article warning NYC residents that City Bridge was installing spying Smart City Kiosks (SCK) throughout the city.
The SCK’s came equipped with cameras, microphones and sensors that created the largest urban spying system in the country.
SCK’s collect lot’s of personal information, like a person’s MAC address, IP address, browser type and version and their destination IP address to name a few. Continue reading “Cities across the country are installing ‘free’ spying Smart City Kiosks”