Mail.com

BERLIN (AP) — A 37-year-old man alleged to have shot a police officer in a Munich subway station after randomly attacking another passenger had been living with his father in Colorado and was on a European trip, German officials said Wednesday.

Munich police chief Hubertus Andrae told reporters the suspect, identified only as a Bavarian-born German citizen, flew to Munich airport from Athens on Monday and spent the night in the airport. Witnesses told police as the man rode the subway toward the city Tuesday he was talking to himself in English, then suddenly began punching another, apparently randomly chosen, passenger in the face, pummeling him until he was bloody.  Continue reading “German police: Munich shooting suspect lived in Colorado”

Mail.com

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) — Two days after widespread anti-government rallies, protesters in St. Petersburg, Russia’s second-largest city, are facing a severe crackdown with local courts sending dozens of them to jail.

Tens of thousands took to the streets across Russia’s 11 time zones on Monday to protest government corruption. Some of the protests, like in Moscow and St. Petersburg, were explicitly banned by authorities and nearly 2,000 people were detained.   Continue reading “Dozens sent to jail for protest in Russia’s St. Petersburg”

Mail.com

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Commission on Wednesday launched legal action against the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland for failing to respect their commitment to take in refugees. The Commission, which polices EU agreements, sent formal letters of notice to the three states giving them one month to respond to its concerns. They could be taken to Europe’s top court, the European Court of Justice, if the matter is not resolved.

EU countries agreed in September 2015 to relocate 160,000 refugees from Greece and Italy as the two countries struggled to cope with more than a million migrants who entered Europe mostly through their borders that year.   Continue reading “EU launches legal action against 3 countries over refugees”

NBC News

WASHINGTON — A 66-year-old Illinois man has been identified as the suspect in the shooting of a congressional baseball practice Wednesday, injuring at least one member of the House of Representatives.

James T. Hodgkinson allegedly opened fire at a field in Alexandria, Virginia, several law enforcement sources told NBC News. More than a dozen GOP lawmakers were there with staff.

Continue reading “James T. Hodgkinson: Illinois Man Identified as Suspected Gunman in Virginia Shooting”

McUlta

Now that it is clear that reason is the soul of the common law, and that the forms of action are their embodiment in an suit at common law, before discussing the forms, it is important to understand what a common law court is, by definition, and then how that definition is related to our government.

Before explaining the details of a common law court, it is meaningful to examine Black’s definition of a “court” under the heading of “International Law” (425):   Continue reading “Common law courts”

MassPrivateI

In what can only be described as an obscene joke, that’s being played out in schools, churches and police departments across the country. David Grossman, a former Army Colonel is teaching thousands of people about the psychology of killing.

“Cops fight violence,” Grossman often says. “What do they fight it with? Superior violence. Righteous violence.”

When did it become acceptable to let former military personnel teach law enforcement, churches and schools to kill people?   Continue reading “Army Colonel teaching churches, schools and police the joys of killing”

The Organic Prepper

Back in January, after the worst Christmas sales in a decade, I predicted that 2017 would be the year of the Retailpocalypse and that we’d see hundreds of retail stores closing.

Sadly, I was wrong.

We’re going to see thousands of stores closing.   Continue reading “Almost 9000 Retail Stores Will Close This Year: Here’s the List of Businesses in Trouble”

Fox News

House Majority Whip Steve Scalise and Rep. Roger Williams were shot and multiple congressional aides were also hit by a gunman with a rifle who opened fire at a GOP baseball practice in Virginia Wednesday morning, Fox News confirmed.

The gunman was shot by U.S. Capital Police, apprehended and taken to the hospital, officials said. Sen. Mike Lee told Fox News, however, the gunman was dead.

Continue reading “Steve Scalise, Roger Williams shot in Virginia, aides also hit”

ABC News

A massive fire engulfed a residential high-rise building in London on Wednesday, leaving scores injured and an undetermined amount of people dead.

The London Fire Brigade dispatched at least 40 fire engines, 20 ambulance crews and more than 200 firefighters in an effort to battle the conflagration at the 24-story Grenfell Tower in West London.

A representative for the London Fire Brigade said there had been “a number of fatalities,” but declined to say how many people had died. Authorities said they were still monitoring the stability of the structure, but firefighters had managed to enter the building and had checked as many as 20 floors for remaining people.   Continue reading “Massive fire engulfs London high-rise, leaving ‘a number of fatalities’”

AOL

The Transportation Security Administration announced on Tuesday that it will begin a new program that allows a travelers’ fingerprints to replace their boarding pass and identification documents. There’s only one catch: you have to give the federal government your fingerprints.

The agency will begin assessing the new “biometric authentication technology” at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport and Denver International Airport this week, according to a TSA press release. The program is intended for people who have enrolled in TSA’s PreCheck program, and have voluntarily provided their fingerprints to the feds.   Continue reading “TSA is now using fingerprints as boarding passes”

Free Thought Project – by Matt Agorist

In Russia, there are free speech zones, gays are persecuted, and speaking out against the state is often met with police brutality — just ask the activist band Pussy Riot. Vladimir Putin is not a hero. That being said, however, on a larger scale, Putin is not attempting to build an empire, he is not destabilizing the Middle East and installing dictators, he’s not funding ISIS, and he tends to resist moves by the globalists that are harmful to the well-being of the Russian people and their money.

As the Free Thought Project reported earlier this year, Putin has begun preparing to release Russia from the crushing grip of the international banking system completely, by moving to a nationalist model based and conducting transactions with allies in gold.
Continue reading “Putin Postures Against Central Banking Elite, Moves to Create Nat’l Cryptocurrency”

Free Thought Project – by Matt Agorist

Despite the overwhelming mass of scientific literature and studies showing the harmful effects of ingesting fluoride, those who question it or advocate for the cessation of fluoridated water are labeled as kooks, conspiracy theorists, and shouted down by the mainstream. Even when the mainstream admits it — as in the case of the highly publicized Harvard Study — people remain in denial about this most horrific practice of mass medication without consent using the poisonous byproduct of fertilizer production.

However, all that appears to be changing. For the first time in US history, the courts will hear the evidence on the neurotoxicity of fluoridated water which could out an end to this practice once and for all.
Continue reading “For the First Time, Lawsuit Forces US Court to Review Fluoride Toxicity, Could END Fluoridation”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

Step aside Russia: there is a new global cyber villian in the house – North Korea.

On Tuesday, the U.S. government via the US Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) issued a rare alert on the activities of a hacking group called “Hidden Cobra,” saying the group was part of the North Korean government and that more attacks were likely. The joint alert from DHS and the FBI said that “cyber actors of the North Korean government” had targeted the media, aerospace and financial sectors, as well as critical infrastructure, in the United States and globally. Hidden Cobra has reportedly compromised a range of victims since 2009 and that some intrusions had resulted in thefts of data while others were disruptive.   Continue reading “US Accuses North Korean Government Of Cyber Attacks Since 2009”