Breitbart – by Robert Kraychik

“There are the types of stories that CNN is never going to tell, neither is MSNBC or any of the other mainstream media outlets,” said Angel Dad Dan Golvach of the 2015 murder of his 25-year-old son by a previously deported illegal alien.

Golvach joined Breitbart News’s Editor-in-Chief Alex Marlow on Monday for an interview on SiriusXM’s Breitbart News Daily.   Continue reading “Angel Dad: ‘Treasonous’ Amnesty Puts ‘Foreign Invaders’ over ‘American Families’”

The New Observer

The planned deportation of thousands of African invaders pretending to be “asylum seekers” in Israel will definitely happen, and an African state has “unequivocally assented” to all the details, the Israeli foreign minister has announced.

Speaking during an Israeli Knesset committee debate on the deportations, minister Aryeh Deri said that an unnamed state, widely believed to be Rwanda or Uganda, gave “unequivocal assent” to accept Africans forcibly deported from Israel.  Continue reading “Israel: African Deportations will Happen, Promises Foreign Minister”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

What was today’s most important diplomatic meeting, was also the least publicly discussed. And judging by the information blackout in its aftermath, that’s just what the organizers intended.

Very few details have emerged from the lengthy Moscow talks between Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu, the duo’s seventh face to face meeting in two years, in which the two leaders who are currently reshaping the middle east in the power vacuum left by the US, were expected to discuss military cooperation on Syria and Iran’s influence in the region.  Continue reading “Information Blackout Follows Putin-Netanyahu Meeting”

Anti-Media

Moscow — The Kremlin said Monday that a soon-to-be-released report by the U.S. Treasury Department — one that could lead to sanctions against Putin-linked oligarchs — is a “direct and obvious” attempt by the U.S. government to meddle in Russia’s upcoming presidential election.

The report, expected as early as Monday, will detail the closeness of President Vladimir Putin to a list of Russian business and political figures. While not directly calling for sanctions against these individuals, the report will lay out how sanctions could be applied.  Continue reading “Russia Just Officially Accused the US of Meddling in Its Upcoming Election”

Action News Jax

Former Congresswoman Corrine Brown is now a federal inmate.

She turned herself in at Federal Corrections Institution Coleman’s minimum security prison camp about 15 minutes before Monday’s noon deadline.

Brown was sentenced last month to five years in prison for fraud, filing false tax returns and more.   Continue reading “Former Congresswoman Corrine Brown turns herself in to prison”

The Daily Sheeple – by Dawn Luger

Is the vaccine industry in panic mode? They very well could be, especially after kids vaccinated against the flu keep dying of the influenza virus.

Mike Adams, otherwise known as The Health Ranger on his YouTube channel recently theorized that the reason this flu season is so horrendous is because of the vaccine industry.  And after gathering more information, it looks like he might be right.  This year’s vaccine is only 10% effective, yet we’ve all heard we should still get the flu shot because it can “lessen symptoms” if one gets sick. But a few are speaking out against that unscientific claim, which even if you’re all in for vaccines makes little sense when considering the science of virology and microbiology.   Continue reading “Vaccine Industry PANICS! Vaccinated Kids Keep Dying Of The Flu”

Reuters

THE HAGUE (Reuters) – The Syrian government’s chemical weapons stockpile has been linked for the first time by laboratory tests to the largest sarin nerve agent attack of the civil war, diplomats and scientists told Reuters, supporting Western claims that government forces under President Bashar al-Assad were behind the atrocity.

Laboratories working for the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons compared samples taken by a U.N. mission in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta after the Aug. 21, 2013 attack, when hundreds of civilians died of sarin gas poisoning, to chemicals handed over by Damascus for destruction in 2014.   Continue reading “Tests link Syrian government stockpile to largest sarin attack – sources”

Asia Times – by Grant Newsham

Watching China lay claim to territory in the South and East China Seas and on the Indian border resembles a fat man at the buffet table declaring that everything from the roast beef over to the chocolate éclairs is his. Now China is setting its sights on the Arctic – declaring itself a “near Arctic state.”

A Western observer who has spent several decades in the People’s Republic of China but wishes to remain unnamed by Asia Times, believes China’s claim with regard to the Arctic is the chance for the world to say: “NO, you are not a near Arctic state. Rather, you are a state proclaiming its interest in the Arctic. Your rationale is militarily and economically motivated, not geographical.”   Continue reading “China as a ‘near Arctic state’ – chutzpah overcoming geography”

Veterans News Now – by Paul Craig Roberts

Peter Jenkins, a former British ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, expresses concerns about the decisions of France, Germany, and the UK to appease President Trump on fixing “flaws” in the Iranian nuclear agreement.    Continue reading “Trump’s Foreign Policy Is In Service To Israel”

Ars Technica – by Timothy B Lee

Over the last 15 years, Elon Musk’s companies have had a big impact on the rocket, electric car, and battery markets. This weekend, Musk entered yet another new market: flamethrowers. Musk’s Boring Company began selling branded novelty flamethrowers for $500 apiece.

“Obviously, a flamethrower is a super terrible idea,” Musk tweeted on Saturday evening. “Definitely don’t buy one.”   Continue reading “Elon Musk sells 10,000 flamethrowers in 48 hours”

The Organic Prepper – by J.G. Martinez D

Hello to all those readers interested in learning from my personal experience of surviving an economic collapse.

I decided to write this article, the first of a series of several similar that will be posted because I am experiencing these days a huge emotional mix. I am not embarrassed in any way for this, I am a normal person, I have feelings and emotions like everyone else, and until not long ago I had a home, a job, and a conventional, peaceful life like perhaps many of you are enjoying right now.   Continue reading “Anxiety, Anguish, Anger: How It Feels to Survive a Collapse”

American Trucker

National average prices for both diesel and gasoline increased this week versus last week, according to data tracked by the Energy Information Administration (EIA), with diesel fuel now over the $3 per gallon mark in all but three U.S. regions.

The national average price for diesel is up 4.5 cents this week to $3.070 per gallon, which is 50.8 cents per gallon higher compared to the same week in 2017.   Continue reading “U.S. fuel prices keep right on climbing”

The Hill – by Miranda Green

The governor of Washington on Monday rejected a permit that would allow North America’s largest oil-by-rail terminal to be built in the state.

Gov. Jay Inslee (D) said that he was in agreement with state regulators who unanimously recommended last month that he reject oil companies Tesoro and Savage’s application to build a terminal at the Port of Vancouver.   Continue reading “Washington gov rejects proposed oil-by-rail train station”

Miami Herald

As Florida Highway Patrol trooper Joseph Perri filled out paperwork on the shoulder of a highway, a speeding sedan slammed into his patrol car.

But what seemed like an accident was actually done on purpose, and the man behind the wheel is facing charges, according to FHP officials.

After ramming into Perri, the Daytona Beach driver got out of the car, approached the trooper and told him he “struck the patrol car on purpose,” said FHP spoksperson Sgt. Kim Montes.   Continue reading “Driver slams into FHP trooper’s patrol car on highway — ‘on purpose,’ officials say”

Fox News

Two Dreamers who were living in the U.S. under the Obama-era DACA program were arrested last week on suspicion of human smuggling in separate incidents, federal officials reportedly said.

The San Diego Union-Tribune reported Monday that one of the men was in the country under the program and the other’s program had expired.   Continue reading “2 DACA recipients arrested over suspicion of human smuggling: report”

KHON 2 News

Have you noticed more police out giving tickets on freeways and roads?

The Honolulu Police Department tells us thanks to federal grant money, it’s able to step up traffic enforcement by using the money to pay for officers’ overtime.

“We have a speeding grant, a distracted driving grant, a pedestrian grant, a bicycling grant, and then we have a Click It or Ticket occupant protection and a DUI grant,” said acting Capt. Ben Moszkowicz. “So with those five enforcement grants, total it’s approximately $1.8 million that we get from the federal government to bring in officers on overtime to conduct enforcement in addition to their regular duties.”   Continue reading “Notice more police officers out writing tickets? HPD explains why”

NJ.com – by Michaelangelo Conte

JERSEY CITY — Popcorn smoldering in a microwave oven caused the evacuation of hundreds of people, including prisoners, from the Hudson County Administration Building in Jersey City this afternoon.

A source told The Jersey Journal popcorn being heated triggered the alarm and a recorded message broadcast throughout the building ordering the evacuation into the cold and breezy weather at about 1:15 p.m.   Continue reading “How a salty snack led to the evacuation of a county courthouse”