WHO, May 2006

Mobile telephony is now commonplace around the world. This wireless technology relies upon an extensive network of fixed antennas, or base stations, relaying information with radiofrequency (RF) signals. Over 1.4 million base stations exist worldwide and the number is increasing significantly with the introduction of third generation technology.  Continue reading “Electromagnetic fields and public health”

Breitbart – by John Binder

Pro-mass immigration GOP megadonor billionaires the Koch brothers are set to release a seven-figure ad campaign to push amnesty for millions of illegal aliens in the United States, just months ahead of the 2018 midterm elections.

Statements by spokesmen for the Koch brothers and their network of organizations reveal that the billionaires are lobbying President Trump and the Republican-controlled Congress to back a plan that would open the door for amnesty for millions of illegal aliens who are eligible and enrolled in the President Obama-created Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.   Continue reading “‘DREAMers Are Among Our Best and Brightest:’ Koch Brothers to Push Amnesty with Seven-Figure Ad Campaign”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

Blackwater founder Erik Prince says he has been informally contacted by Arab officials looking to marshal a multi-national force in Syria which would be able to fill any “security vacuum” left by a United States withdrawal – similar to the one which allowed ISIS to flourish when President Obama pulled US troops out of Iraq.

The security force would have two goals: stop ISIS from reestablishing a presence in Syria, while also stopping Iran or Iranian-backed sources from doing the same (though Israel already has the latter pretty well under control).   Continue reading “Blackwater Founder May Train Arab Forces To Dominate Syria”

RT

The leader of the Communist Party of Greece, Dimitris Koutsoumpas, has lambasted Athens for appeasing the US and EU governments, by allowing what he claims are American nukes in the country.

In an interview with ANT1 TV, the Greek communist leader has once again claimed that there are more US and NATO military facilities in the country than is commonly known-about.  Continue reading “NATO bases upgraded under anti-migrant guise, US nukes now stockpiled in Greece – Communist chief”

Business Insider – by Andy Kiersz

Immigration has always been a central part of the American experience, and certain areas draw more immigrants than others.

The US Census Bureau recently released its annual population estimates for each of the country’s 3,142 counties and county equivalents. In addition to showing the estimated total population change in those areas between July 1, 2016 and July 1, 2017, the Census Bureau also included a breakdown of the components of that change, including net international migration, or the number of immigrants from other countries moving into a county minus the number of people leaving that county for another country.   Continue reading “Here’s where immigrants are moving to in the US”

The American Mirror – by Victor Skinner

The United Nation’s Ambassador to Peace Leonardo DiCaprio told the world body in 2014 that “now must be our moment for action” to fight climate change.

This week, DiCaprio was pictured on his private gas-guzzling jet enroute to Coachella, the annual California music festival.  Continue reading “‘Climate change’ campaigner Leonardo DiCaprio takes private jet to Coachella”

..because a federal judge presided over the ceremony at his Caramoor Estate in Bedford, NY about an hour NNE from NYC.

And to think that Judge Kimba Maureen Wood was Bill Clinton’s failure of a nominee for Attorney General. Shame on you, George Soros!   Continue reading “On or about 20-Sep-2013 George Soros got married. Why should Americans care?”

KDVR 31 News

WASHINGTON — The mayor of Washington, D.C., and a majority of the council are voicing support for letting 16-year-olds vote for president.

Local media report that the measure would lower the voting age from 18 for both federal and local elections.   Continue reading “Washington D.C. may consider allowing 16-year-olds vote for president”

Waking Times – by Phillip Schneider

In a world where the average person consumes more resources than could possibly be regenerated in their lifetime, it’s no surprise to hear that our quickening resource consumption is resulting in a slow-motion collapse of the environment and all life on the planet.

However, researchers at a San Francisco Bay startup company have discovered a way to counteract this degradation. MycoWorks, a company which creates products out of fungi, believes that the answer may lie in replacing just some of the many products we consume with this entirely sustainable and renewable source material.  Continue reading “Company Develops Revolutionary Way to Create Leather, Wood, and Bricks from Mushrooms”

If you were in the market for a watch in 1880, would you know where to get one? You would go to a store, right? Well, of course you could do that, but if you wanted one that was cheaper and a bit better than most of the store watches, you went to the train station!

Sound a bit funny? Well, for about 500 towns across the northern United States , that’s where the best watches were found.   Continue reading “About the Pocket Watch”

Dollar Collapse

“War” and “pensions” are conceptually about as different as it’s possible to be. But – in a measure of how far into Crazy Town we’ve wandered – they’re both taking the world in the same direction.

If a Middle East (or Asian!) war doesn’t spike oil prices and push the global economy into recession, then pensions will probably produce the same end result. Here’s an excerpt from a much longer New York Times article that should be read in its entirety for a sense of what public finance has become:   Continue reading “More Absolutely Crazy Pension News”

The Hill

Police detectives in Pittsburgh have been instructed to start bringing their riot gear to work over fears that President Trump could soon fire special counsel Robert Mueller and set off widespread protests.

WTAE reporter Marcie Cipriani obtained emails sent to detectives in Pittsburgh warning them of a “potential large scale protest” in the city.   Continue reading “Pittsburgh police told to prepare for protests over potential Mueller firing: report”

Daily Mail

The Wyoming school district where U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos suggested that teachers might need to be armed to protect children from grizzly bears voted Tuesday on doing just that, though concerns about school shootings worry parents more than the possibility of big bruins on the prowl.

The 4-2 vote by the Park County School District No. 6 board in the town of Cody near Yellowstone National Park came after more than six months of discussion and debate. Under the proposed policy, school employees would need to have at least 24 hours of initial firearms training and annual recertification to carry concealed guns at school.  Continue reading “Wyoming school district where Betsy DeVos suggested teachers should carry guns to protect children against BEARS now votes to arm its educators”

Business Insider

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — President Donald Trump has given his “blessing” for North and South Korea to discuss the end of the Korean War amid a diplomatic push to end the North Korean nuclear standoff. One problem: There can be no real talks without the involvement of the other countries that fought the 1950-53 war, and especially the United States.

The reason is that South Korea wasn’t a direct signatory to the armistice that stopped the fighting but left the Korean Peninsula still technically in a state of war.  Continue reading “South and North Korea are talking about peace — But to end the war they need the US and China”