The Telecom Industry has admitted there are no studies that show 5G wireless technology is safe. Since 2017 200+ doctors and scientists have demanded a moratorium on installation due to research that proves it’s harmful. Regardless, 5G promotion and installation has continued in the U.S. (See 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) despite all of that as well as increasing American opposition. Portland, Oregon city officials are now trying to stop it from being installed in their community. Continue reading “Portland, Oregon City Officials Try to Block 5G Installation Due to Health Risks”
Year: 2019
A Swedish programmer with purported ties to Wikileaks has been arrested at a Quito airport while trying to board a flight to Japan, as the government of President Lenin Moreno cracks down on the organization founded by Assange, part of its efforts to discredit the organization that recently exposed Moreno for his involvement in a corruption scandal involving offshore accounts. Continue reading “Swedish Programmer With Ties To Wikileaks Arrested In Ecuador”
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – In the staid world of the U.S. Supreme Court, where decorum and etiquette are prized and silence is enforced by court police, the F-word could create quite a stir.
Yet that expletive and others will be the focus on Monday when the nine justices hear arguments in a free-speech case brought by Los Angeles-based clothing designer Erik Brunetti. His streetwear brand “FUCT” – which sounds like, but is spelled differently than, a profanity – was denied a trademark by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Continue reading “F-words and T-shirts: U.S. Supreme Court weighs foul language trademarks”
There is a law on the books to cover pretty much everything, but when there isn’t, just make one up to suit.
It covers all the bases and makes de facto what isn’t – yet – de jure: That the law is whatever those who enforce it claim it is, even when it isn’t. Continue reading ““Indignities to an AGW””
Big League Politics – by Shane Trejo
Ecuadorean President Lenín Moreno thrust a dagger into the heart of free speech today after he allowed a foreign country’s authorities into his nation’s embassy in Britain to arrest heroic whistle-blower and award-winning journalist Julian Assange.
What was Moreno’s price to commit this betrayal? A 4.2 billion loan guarantee from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), it seems. Continue reading “How Ecuador’s Globalist Regime Received Billions to Sell Out Julian Assange”
Information Liberation – by Chris Menahan
Democrat 2020 presidential candidate Rep Tulsi Gabbard on Thursday forcefully condemned the arrest of Wikileaks publisher Julian Assange saying it was “meant to send a message” to Americans to “be quiet, behave [and] toe the line” or “you will pay the price.”
“The arrest of #JulianAssange is meant to send a message to all Americans and journalists: be quiet, behave, toe the line. Or you will pay the price,” Gabbard said on Twitter. Continue reading “Gabbard: Assange Arrest Is Meant to ‘Send A Message to All Americans’ to ‘Toe The Line’ or ‘Pay The Price’”
LifeSiteNews – by Lianne Laurence
April 10, 2019 (LifeSiteNews) — As a Canadian father fights to stop court-ordered testosterone treatments for his 14-year-old daughter, U.S. experts warn there’s an increasing danger that more and more American parents will find themselves in a similar heartrending predicament.
“Yes, it is really that bad,” Michelle Cretella, president of the American College of Pediatrics, told LifeSiteNews. Continue reading “State-coerced child gender ‘transitioning’ is here. Parents are horrified”
Daily Advertiser – by Ashley White
The 21-year-old son of a St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s deputy is the only suspect thought to be responsible for the burning of three predominantly black churches, and his interests in black metal music and pagan gods is of interest in the case, authorities said Thursday.
Holden Matthews, son of Deputy Roy Matthews, was arrested Wednesday and charged with three counts of simple arson of a religious building in connection with the church burnings that took place over 10 days. Once probable cause, including surveillance video, connected the younger Matthews to the crime, he was arrested within about 12 hours, State Fire Marshall Butch Browning said. Continue reading “St. Landry Parish fires: 21-year-old suspect in custody but authorities say ‘we are not done’”
The Central Elections Committee published Thursday night the final results of the Israeli election, ending two tense days of specualtion as to the makeup of the 21st Knesset.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu‘s Likud party has 36 seats in the next Knesset, after initially tying at 35 with Kahol Lavan, the political alliance led by former Israeli army chief of staff Benny Gantz. Continue reading “Final Israeli Election Results: Bennett Wiped Out; Netanyahu’s Likud Gains One Seat”
WASHINGTON (AP) — It was a far cry from “I love WikiLeaks!”
President Donald Trump declared on Thursday that “I know nothing about WikiLeaks” after its disheveled founder Julian Assange was hauled out of the Ecuadorian Embassy in London to face charges, a stark contrast to how candidate Trump showered praise on Assange’s hacking organization night after night during the final weeks of the 2016 presidential campaign. Continue reading “Trump says he knows ‘nothing’ about WikiLeaks — even though he praised it over 100 times in 2016”
The first privately funded mission to the Moon has crashed on the lunar surface after the apparent failure of its main engine.
The Israeli spacecraft – called Beresheet – attempted a soft landing, but suffered technical problems on its descent to the Moon’s surface. Continue reading “Israel’s Beresheet spacecraft crashes on Moon”
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Archive: TWFTT 4-11-19
The Telegraph – by Helena Horton
The Co-op has launched a gender neutral gingerbread person in order to be “inclusive” and has asked the public to choose a “fitting” name.
Shoppers have been encouraged to sign up to the supermarket’s website and send name suggestions which would suit a gender-neutral biscuit. Continue reading “Gender neutral gingerbread person launched by supermarket as they ask public to choose a ‘fitting’ name”
There is no doubt that policing is a dangerous profession. But is it safer to be a cop today than it was 50 years ago? Yes, according to a study that analyzed police officer deaths (felonious and non-felonious) in the United States from 1970 to 2016. The study represents one of the most comprehensive assessments of the “dangerousness” of policing to date and provides an important historical context on the ongoing dialogue over a perceived “war on cops” in recent years. Continue reading “It’s Safer To Be A Cop In The U.S. Today Than 50 Years Ago”
Campus Reform – by Cabot Phillips
The Eleventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that colleges in Georgia are not required to admit illegal immigrant students.
The decision further sparked a national conversation about the rights of Dreamers, as well as the legality of offering them in-state tuition benefits, which usually allow students attending college in their home states to pay far less than their peers from different states. Continue reading “Eighteen states offer in-state tuition for illegals…and legal resident students are NOT happy about that”