Activist Post – by Julian Rose

The Polish Ministry of Digitalisation has denied (June 11) that Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki signed the Global Appeal to Stop 5G on Earth and in Space.*

The refutation was put out by the Ministry of Digitalisation, the government department that deals with telecommunications. The same department put out a related statement that “The opponents of 5G are heating-up the mood, serving customers fake news – we want to give Poles a reliable source of information about 5G so that no one misleads them.”  Continue reading “Polish Ministry of Digitalisation Denies Polish Prime Minister Supported 5G Appeal”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

Russian lawmakers have said the new US-Poland joint declaration unveiled yesterday, which will see 1,000 more US troops sent to Poland from Germany along with military drones, will force the Kremlin to take “retaliatory steps” against what the Russian parliamentary statement called US “further large-scale deployments”.

One lawmaker went so far as to say the Russian military “would make Poland a target in the event of a conflict,” according to ReutersContinue reading “Kremlin Vows “Retaliatory Steps” Against “Aggressive” US Troop, Drone Build-up In Poland”

End of the American Dream – by Michael Snyder

Once again tonight, countless numbers of Americans will sleep in their vehicles, and this is a problem that is getting worse with each passing year.  According to the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the homeless population in the United States hit 552,830 in 2018, but many believe that the true number is actually a lot higher.  Because in order to accurately count the homeless you have got to find them first, and many homeless do not want to be found.  But even if the HUD figure is accurate, it is still a great national tragedy to have such a high number of homeless, and a large percentage of those homeless Americans are living in their vehicles.  Continue reading “For Countless Americans, Living In Their Vehicles Has Become “The New Normal””

Breitbart – by John Binder

President Trump’s Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released about 8,500 border crossers and illegal aliens into the interior of the United States over the past eight days, federal data confirms.

From June 4 to June 11, DHS released 8,500 border crossers and illegal aliens into various American communities across the country. The federal data indicates that over the past eight days, more than 1,000 border crossers and illegal aliens were released every day into the interior of the U.S.  Continue reading “DHS Frees 8.5K Illegal Aliens in Eight Days; 204.5K Released in Half a Year”

FLIR

ARLINGTON, Va.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Jun. 5, 2019– FLIR Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ: FLIR) today announced the FLIR TrafiData intelligent thermal traffic sensor solution for improved data collection capabilities to offer transportation management with key insights for smarter, safer cities. FLIR TrafiData is a unique offering in the Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) market with the ability to perform as both a data collection device and classification unit with the advantage of thermal and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies in a single, unified platform.  Continue reading “FLIR Announces TrafiData Intelligent Thermal Traffic Sensor Solution for Smarter and Safer Cities”

RT

Britain’s Home Secretary has revealed he has signed a request for the extradition of WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange to the US, where he is accused of violating the Espionage Act.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today program, Sajid Javid said that he signed and certified the papers on Wednesday, with the order going before the UK courts on Friday.  Continue reading “British Home Secretary signs extradition order to send Julian Assange to US”

American Mirror – by Victor Skinner

When officials in Portland, Maine convened a meeting of the Health & Human Services and Public Safety Committee Tuesday to discuss emergency measures to house a flood of illegal immigrants at The Expo – the local basketball arena – 72 mostly African asylum seekers had arrived in the previous three days.

By the end of the 3 ½-hour meeting, the total had jumped to 86, or about 20 percent, the Press Herald reports.  Continue reading “Africans seeking asylum in Portland, ME jump 20% — just during city meeting on managing migrants!”

Daily Wire – by Emily Zanotti

If a new law passes the Calfornia state assembly, major California cities will be required to keep and maintain “safe parking lots” for people who make their homes in cars and recreational vehicles.

Cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco are already struggling with unmanageable homelessness — largely the result of longstanding, left-leaning policies that prevent enforcing basic laws concerning things like public health and loitering.  Continue reading “California Cities May Now Be Required To Keep ‘Safe Parking Lots’ Open For Homeless Camps”

Bearing Arms – by Tom Knighton

As things currently stand, federal law prohibits victims and the family of victims from suing gun stores and firearm manufacturers. The law was passed because it was a common tactic to blame the people who sold the gun for what someone did with it later.

For most of us, the idea of blaming Remington or Glock for a murder makes no sense. The gun isn’t responsible. It would be one thing if the firearm had some catastrophic failure that resulted in death, but that’s different. The maker may well be responsible then. Continue reading “Bill Introduced To Allow Lawsuits Against Gun Manufacturers”

KTLA 5

California ammo buyers are making a run on gun shops ahead of a new state law, which on July 1 will require buyers of bullets to show identification and undergo a background check to screen out felons and people with illegal firearms.

In a state with the toughest gun laws in the nation, Gov. Gavin Newsom and some other leaders see restricting ammunition sales as a necessary next step in reducing gun tragedies.  Continue reading “Gun Owners Stockpile Ammo Before New California Background Check Law Begins”

Jerusalem Post

Joining the race to secure Israeli automotive technology, the Ford Motor Company opened a new research center in the heart of Tel Aviv on Wednesday.

The Ford Research Center, the company said, will assist its global Research and Advanced Engineering team, and identify local technologies and start-up companies to support Ford’s automotive and mobility businesses.  Continue reading “Joining Israeli innovation race, Ford opens Tel Aviv research hub”

Sputnik

WASHINGTON (Sputnik) – President Donald Trump has ordered US regulators to streamline and accelerate the process for approving genetically engineered agricultural products, the White House said in a press release.

“Today, President Trump is signing an executive order directing Federal agencies to streamline the agricultural biotechnology regulatory processes,” the release said on Tuesday.  Continue reading “Trump Signs Executive Order to Accelerate Approval of GMO Crops”

Commercial Appeal

A fatal police shooting led to a violent confrontation between officers and community members in Memphis’ Frayser neighborhood Wednesday night after a man was killed in a shooting involving U.S. Marshals.

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation identified the man as 20-year-old Brandon Webber on Thursday morning.  Continue reading “Man killed in Frayser police shooting identified as 20-year-old Brandon Webber”

Weather Channel

Skygazers near Amarillo, Texas, were treated to the breathtaking sight of a cumulonimbus “mushroom” cloud associated with a thunderstorm southeast of the city Tuesday evening.

A cumulonimbus cloud is a towering, vertical cloud containing a thunderstorm, formed from water vapor forced upward by powerful upper-air currents.  Continue reading “Cumulonimbus ‘Mushroom’ Cloud Hovers in the Sky Near Amarillo, Texas”

MassPrivateI

Sometimes I have trouble coming up with a title for one of my articles, but this one came easy because the two companies involved in this article helped create it.

A New York based company called Vuzix along with a UAE software company called NNTC, worked together to produce the world’s first automatic facial recognition sunglasses for law enforcement.  Continue reading “Police To Use Automatic Facial Recognition Sunglasses To Watchlist People”

Milne News

Candi CdeBaca on June 5th became the fourth Denver City Council candidate in 32 years — and the second in this election — to unseat an incumbent council member, knocking off District 9 Councilman Albus Brooks in a runoff race.

CdeBaca will represent one of the busiest parts of Denver, a north-central district including Five Points, Lower Downtown, Globeville, Elyria, Swansea, Whittier, River North, Auraria, Cole, Clayton, City Park and City Park West.  Continue reading “Denver City Council winner is excited to usher in communism by any means necessary”

Cincinnati.com

The Cincinnati police officer who shot an 11-year-old girl with a stun gun in a Kroger shoplifting incident has successfully appealed his seven-day suspension.

An arbitrator handling the case brought by the Fraternal Order of Police, which represented Officer Kevin Brown, against the City of Cincinnati found that the policy in place during the August incident allowed officers to use a stun gun on children as young as 7. The arbitrator found Brown did not use excessive force.  Continue reading “CPD cop shot child with a stun gun at Kroger. It wasn’t excessive force, arbitrator finds”

DW

US President Donald Trump welcomed Polish President Andrzej Duda to the White House on Wednesday. The visit, Duda’s second within a year, was ostensibly to deal with two issues: Poland’s desire for an expanded US military presence and the US’ desire to sell natural gas to Poland. During the meeting, Trump also touched on the possibility of sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 project and warned Germany not to be dependent on Russian energy.  Continue reading “Trump to send more troops to Poland”