Month: April 2019
Note: I have couched this piece in FICTION, which is a convenient way to pinpoint hidden trends…
While the cathedral of Notre Dame burned and grabbed headlines all over the world, a little noticed development took place along the Texas-Mexico border in a town called Twin. A reporter for the Twin Clarion wrote the following: Continue reading “If hidden technology were exposed for all to see”
- The US stock market is slightly overbought (which is not a positive in terms of head room for more of a rally).
- It’s massively built up on debt that is now more expensive to maintain and/or obtain.
Continue reading “List of 24 Points Pressing Hard toward Recession”
The United States owes the world $1 trillion because of the damage it has caused the global economy with carbon emissions.
Foreign Policy magazine reported: Continue reading “Report: U.S. Owes the World $1 Trillion for Carbon Emissions”
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Archive: TWFTT 4-19-19
The Organic Prepper – by Dagny Taggart
Scientists seem to be crossing a lot of boundaries as of late, which begs the question: Just because they can do something, does it mean they should?
Advances in brain-related technology are reaching dystopian levels. Scientists recently developed the ability to predict our choices before we are consciously aware of them, and can now translate people’s thoughts into speech. Smart chips that will create super-intelligent humans are in development, and China is mining data from the brains of citizens. Continue reading “Zombie Science: Researchers Kept the Brains of Decapitated Pigs Alive For 36 Hours”
n 18 March, Maria Palacios Escalera got a call from a doctor at the UC San Diego hospital in southern California. Her son, Ivan Ortiz, an inmate at San Diego’s Central jail, had tried to kill himself, he said. Doctors had been able to revive him, but he had a weak pulse and his brain had been deprived of oxygen. She should make her way over to the hospital as soon as possible. Continue reading “Four prisoners dead in six weeks: the crisis unfolding in San Diego county jails”
An extreme-right Frenchman has been convicted and sentenced to a year in prison for denying the Holocaust and was ordered jailed.
A Paris court on Monday convicted Alain Soral, 60, for publishing on his internet site the conclusions of the lawyer, Damien Viguier, in an earlier case. Viguier was fined 5,000 euros ($5,650) for his conclusions, which were deemed to have negated the Holocaust. Viguier said on Soral’s site that they were appealing the conviction. Continue reading “Extreme-right Frenchman sent to prison for Holocaust denial”
In a sharp reversal of longstanding US policy which recognizes only the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli as the legitimate authority over Libya, the White House on Friday said President Trump spoke by phone this week to Benghazi based commander Kalifa Haftar, pledging support to the general and his Libyan National Army (LNA) as it lays siege to the capital. Continue reading “Trump Thanks Gen. Haftar For “Securing Libya’s Oil Resources” Amid Tripoli Fighting”
PARIS — The murder of the Saudi columnist Jamal Khashoggi — in a year when more than half of all journalists who were killed around the world were targeted deliberately — reflects a hatred of the media in many areas of society, a free-press advocacy group said Tuesday.
At least 63 professional journalists were killed doing their jobs in 2018, a 15 percent increase over last year, said the group, Reporters Without Borders. The number of deaths rises to 80 when all media workers and people classified as citizen journalists are included, it said in its annual report. Continue reading “United States added to list of most dangerous countries for journalists for first time”
The Yankees have decided to no longer run Kate Smith’s version of “God Bless America” during their seventh-inning stretch because of Smith’s affiliation with songs that carried racist lyrics.
Most famously, Smith sang a 1931 song, “That’s Why Darkies Were Born,” which opened: “Someone had to pick the cotton, Someone had to pick the corn, Someone had to slave and be able to sing, That’s why darkies were born.” Continue reading “Kate Smith’s ‘God Bless America’ out at Yankee Stadium over racist songs”
Nearly two-thirds of Americans were against a cashless society, according to a recent survey conducted by CivicScience. Continue reading “Americans Aren’t Buying Into The Elites’ Cashless Utopia”
Americans are increasingly living in fear of the opposing political party. While the elites laugh and continue to enslave the populace even further because of this fear, Americans increasingly embrace their chains while asking them to be shortened, and all while dehumanizing those on a different plantation. Continue reading “The Elites Laugh As Americans Revel In Their Enslavement While Fearing Each Other”
US National Security Adviser John Bolton has announced a series of new sanctions against Cuba and Venezuela as the Donald Trump administration is seeking to boost pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and the countries that support him.
Bolton, in a speech to an association of veterans of the failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion on Wednesday, said the US was adding five names linked to Cuba’s military and intelligence services to its sanctions blacklist, including the military-owned airline Aerogaviota. Continue reading “US administration unveils new sanctions to pressure Cuba, Venezuela”
Revolutionary War Archives – Sons of Liberty Chapter – by Donald N. Moran
It can be argued that April 19th, 1775 is the most important date in American history. The Battle of Lexington, Concord and Battle Road was the opening engagement of the American Revolution. And, it is not surprising that after two hundred and twenty-two years, some of the details are still the subject of some debate.
Since our readership is very familiar with the battle, we will only present an overview of the battle as background to our biography. Continue reading “Never Too Old: The Story of Captain Samuel Whittemore”