Patriot Rising

A Wisconsin company has decided to give its employees revolvers as Christmas gifts this year. The company says the gifts will promote team building and personal safety.

Ben Wolfgram, who co-owns Hortonville-based BenShot, a local business that produces glassware embedded with bullets, recently decided to give every employee a handgun as a Christmas present. The father-son business was started in 2015 in a small garage workshop in a little village of about 3,000 residents 100 miles northwest of Milwaukee.  Continue reading “Wisconsin Company Gives Employees Guns For Christmas As Gifts”

Yahoo News

As Democrats count down the days until they take the speaker’s gavel for the first time in eight years, they are wasting no time getting down to the business of legislating. According to NPR, the House’s first vote in the 116th Congress will be on an omnibus bill that overturns Citizens United, depoliticizes the redistricting process, and closes loopholes in government ethics law—ones that happen to accrue to the untold benefit of a certain President of the United States.   Continue reading “Why Automatic Voter Registration Is Good for America, Democracy, and You”

The Baltimore Sun – by Collin Campbell

The Hammond High Bears got a visit from their mascot Wednesday.

A black bear sighting near the school in Columbia prompted officials to place the school on a modified lockdown — continuing classes as normal but keeping students, faculty and staff inside the building — just before noon, Howard County Public School System spokesman Brian Bassett said.   Continue reading “Black bear sighting prompts modified lockdown at Columbia high school (whose mascot just happens to be a bear)”

AMN

BEIRUT, LEBANON (1:40 P.M.) – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Wednesday afternoon that he will take over the role as Defense Minister.

Netanyahu’s decision to take over as Defense Minister comes just two hours after Avigdor Lieberman announced his resignation from this role.   Continue reading “Netanyahu announces he will take over as Israeli Defense Minister”

Judicial Watch

(Washington, DC) –Judicial Watch announced today that U.S. District Court Judge Emmet G. Sullivan ruled that within 30 days Hillary Clinton must answer under oath two additional questions about her controversial email system.

In 2016, Clinton was required to submit under oath written answers to Judicial Watch’s questions. Clinton objected to and refused to answer questions about the creation of her email system; her decision to use the system despite warnings from State Department cybersecurity officials; and the basis for her claim that the State Department had “90-95%” of her emails.   Continue reading “Federal Court Ordered Hillary Clinton to Answer Additional Email Questions Under Oath”

Fox News

A New Jersey couple and a homeless Philadelphia man who were once the symbol of generosity in hard times allegedly conspired with each other to come up with a false story to earn GoFundMe donations and will now face charges, according to a complaint obtained by NBC 10 Philadelphia.

The original story was this: Johnny Bobbitt, who was homeless, gave his last $20 to Kate McClure, a stranded motorist in Philadelphia in November last year, to help her get gas. To thank him, McClure, 28, and her boyfriend, Mark D’Amico, 39, created a GoFundMe account to raise funds for Bobbitt. Around 14,000 people donated to the campaign, which brought in more than $400,000 overall.   Continue reading “Homeless man, couple allegedly conspired to deceive GoFundMe funds: report”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

The co-author of a widely-cited global warming study has owned up to a major math error uncovered six days after its Oct. 31 publication by an independent scientist.

The study used a new method of measuring the ocean’s absorption of heat, and concluded – through incorrect math – that 60% more heat had been absorbed than previously thought.    Continue reading “Climate Scientists Admit To Major Math Error After Global Warming Study Debunked”

MassPrivateI

A recent article in Smart Cities Dive revealed that the Los Angeles Department of Transportation (DOT) will be partnering with RemixLime and Spin to create a mobility data standard for ride shares.

A ‘mobility data standard’ is just a fancy way of saying a real-time scooter and bicycle tracking standard.   Continue reading “National bike share data program allows DOT’s to identify scooter and bike share users in real-time”

The Atlantic – by Alexis C. Madrigal

As multiple devastating wildfires raged across California, a private firefighting crew reportedly helped save Kanye West and Kim Kardashian’s home in Calabasas, TMZ reported this week. The successful defense of the $50 million mansion is the most prominent example of a trend that’s begun to receive national attention: for-hire firefighters protecting homes, usually on the payroll of an insurance company with a lot at risk.

Continue reading “Kim Kardashian’s Private Firefighters Expose America’s Fault Lines”

Gizmodo – by Rhett Jones

Customers of the Infowars store are getting scammed every day but this time it’s different. A security researcher discovered a form of malware embedded in the conspiracy site’s checkout process that records credit card details and transmits them to a remote server.

ZDNet interviewed Dutch security researcher Willem de Groot about his discovery of a strain of malware known as Magecart on the Infowars store. De Groot uses a custom-built malware scanner to monitor various websites for infections and he told ZDNet that he’s kept tabs on Infowars for three and a half years with no signs of foul play. Continue reading “Infowars Infected With Credit Card-Stealing Malware, Alex Jones Claims It’s a Conspiracy”

The Organic Prepper – by Meadow Clark

A self-driving car program, now known as Waymo, is about to quietly launch a fleet of paid rides in the world’s very first commercial driverless car service.

Imagine a world where you hail a cab and step into an empty vehicle. This empty car takes you to your destination while you sit in the back, read and swipe the app for payment.   Continue reading “Google’s Self-Driving Cars: The Big-Tech Takeover Continues”

9 News

Lloyd Bates worked in construction almost all his life.

That’s why it came as a surprise to his wife, Carol, when the day came that he couldn’t remember the basics of carpentry. Being that he’s blind in one eye and partially losing his hearing, she wrote most of Lloyd’s missteps off as aging.

“He couldn’t figure out how to put plugs in drywall. He couldn’t see to put them in,” Carol said. “I attributed a lot of what was happening to his inability to see.”   Continue reading “Should a family remove their guns after a dementia diagnosis? Here’s why this one did”

Daily Mail

Instead of opening their arms to welcome Amazon, some Queens residents are fearing a ‘Scamazon’.

After the Seattle-based retail giant announced plans to build part of its second headquarters in Long Island City, Queens, locals took to the street on Wednesday to decry to massive tax incentives New York offered to lure Amazon.   Continue reading “Fury at Amazon deal in which New York taxpayers PAY the company $61,200 per job”

Daily Mail

As a pediatrician-scientist who develops new vaccines for neglected diseases, I spent most of my career in the Boston-Washington, DC corridor.

While working in the Northeast, I had heard a few things about the anti-vaccine movement.

As both a vaccine scientist and a father-of-four, including a daughter diagnosed with autism and intellectual disabilities, I followed the emergence of doubt over vaccine safety in the general public.    Continue reading “The anti-vaxxer maps of America: Where states allow parents to opt-out for ‘personal belief’ reasons – and where the trend is taking hold”

American Mirror – by Victor Skinner

The first migrant caravan arrived at the U.S.-Mexico border this week to find a fortified Tijuana port of entry, and they’re now resting up at Airbnbs in upscale neighborhoods in Playas de Tijuana provided by their American attorneys.

Locals haven’t exactly greeted the group with open arms, according to Mexican journalist Jorge Nieto.   Continue reading “Tijuana Airbnbs ‘completely booked’ for caravaners — paid for by American attorneys”

East Bay Times – by Harry Harris

OAKLAND — An Oakland police officer is being credited with saving the life of a baby boy, who he found not breathing after being prematurely born to his homeless mother Tuesday afternoon inside her car, officials said Wednesday,

Officer Gregory Palomo found the baby not breathing and turning blue about 3:22 p.m. Tuesday after police received a 911 call of a woman screaming and crying for medical aid in the street next to a car on Sixth Street near Laney College. It turned out the 22-year-old woman was living out of the car and had just given birth, police said.   Continue reading “Non-breathing premature baby revived by Oakland police officer”

FAIR – by Matthew O’Brien and Spencer Raley

At the end of 2016, the United Nations estimates that a record-setting 65.3 million people had been forcibly displaced from their homes due to conflict or persecution. Many of those people will seek refuge in the developed countries of the West, including the United States. Reflecting America’s long tradition of providing refuge to the oppressed, we have admitted over 3.5 million people since 1980 and 96,900 refugees just in the last year in 2016. Continue reading “The Fiscal Cost of Resettling Refugees in the United States”