World Events and the Bible

WEB Notes: You see how division is used against the people? They divide the people by race and sex and then they erase our history. This is not about racism, but they make up a lie and turn it into that to get the people to stand divided, instead of standing united. Once again this occurred in the early morning hours with police on standby and “workers” (traitors) wearing masks so they would not be identified. If you have to do all of that it is common sense that the American people are not for it so why are you doing it? It is further proof if the American people will not take action over this, they will not take action over anything else.

Continue reading “Erasing Our History: Jeff Davis Monument Comes Down After 106 Years”

World Events and the Bible

WEB Notes: In California children must be vaccinated in order to attend public school. This vaccine must not be a requirement. Notice the school name, “Mariposa School of Global Education”. Global Education? That should tell you where our education system has gone.

Nearly 100 students of an Agoura Hills elementary school have been ordered to stay home while the school deals with an outbreak of chickenpox.  Continue reading “Unvaccinated Students Ordered To Stay Home While School Deals With Chickenpox Outbreak Caused By Vaccinated Student”

NBC 4 – by Sarah Wallace, Evan Stulberger, Dave Manney

The Department of Homeland Security is investigating allegations that U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agency officers at Newark Airport have been subjected to sexually abusive hazing by veteran officers, including the duct-taping of victims to a “rape table.”

“I’m afraid for my life, my safety,” CBP officer Diana Cifuentes told the NBC 4 New York I-Team in an exclusive interview about the abuse she says she suffered at the hands of fellow officers. “This is terrorizing. How is it that officers believe they’re free to do whatever they want to do?”   Continue reading “I-Team: Feds Investigate ‘Rape Table,’ Bombshell Hazing Allegations of Customs Officers at Newark Airport”

To me this article reads, no border fence or policy change coming.

Fox 10

NACO, Ariz. (AP) – The final panel new border fencing has been installed along 7.5 miles along the U.S.-Mexico border near Naco in southeastern Arizona.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection says the new barrier replaces outdated fencing aimed at only blocking pedestrian access.   Continue reading “Final panel of new section of border fencing installed in southeast Arizona”

Strategic Culture – by Eric Zuesse

The New York Times, as Robert Parry has pointed out, «Cheers the Rise of Censorship», but only of censorship of any allegations that expose the fraudulence of the NYT’s allegations. The Washington Post, Google, the TV networks, and practically all of the famous providers of ‘news’, have joined forces in order to block from the internet any statements that contradict, or especially any evidence that disproves, what they collectively define to be ’true’; and, while they do this, they add a lie, that their sole aim in doing this rigging of web-search results is to prevent ‘misinformation’ from polluting your mind. They use as an excuse the existence of some flagrantly fabricated reports on obscure websites, but if the mainstream press can ban reports such as those, then they can also ban real news reports, which expose the mainstream’s own lies. In other words: they are implementing their collective power to block you from being able to know that they’re systematically lying. Will the public trust them with this power?   Continue reading “Major Media Organize to Rig Web-Search Results”

CNN

As police stood between two opposing crowds, a crew lifted a statute of former Confederate President Jefferson Davis from its pedestal before dawn Thursday in New Orleans — the latest in a contentious plan to dismantle four Confederate monuments in the city.

It’s the second Confederate monument to come down after the New Orleans city council voted to remove the four landmarks back in 2015. After years of heated public debate and legal battles, recent court decisions paved the way for the city to relocate the four monuments.

Continue reading “New Orleans begins removing second Confederate monument”

RT

A former police officer is suing the City of Weirton Police Department in West Virginia for firing him after he refused to shoot at a distressed black man. Stephen Mader says he was dismissed to protect the officer who shot the man in the head.

According to the lawsuit filed Wednesday, Mader was fired from his position in a “flawed effort to buttress the other officer’s use of deadly force.”   Continue reading “Cop sues police after he was fired for refusing to shoot suicidal man”

Tech Republic – by  Brandon Vigliarolo

Cybersecurity company Bromium has found that an average of 10% of security professionals have quietly paid ransomware demands, and that 35% have admitted to circumventing, disabling, or otherwise bypassing their organization’s security.

The startling numbers come from research that began at RSAC 2017 and continued afterward due to the numbers above, which startled Bromium’s research team.   Continue reading “Study finds cybersecurity pros are hiding breaches, bypassing protocols, and paying ransoms”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

China recently tested a new, advanced type of guided missile in the sea near the Korean peninsula, the Chinese defense ministry said Tuesday cited by the Times of India, just as South Korea concluded its presidential elections amid rising regional tensions. The test in the Bohai Sea was conducted to “raise the operational capability of the armed forces and effectively respond to threats to national security,” the ministry said in a brief statement. The statement did not say when the launch took place, only that it happened “recently”, nor did it give any details about the missile nor the type of platform from which it was launched.   Continue reading “China Warns Washington Its Latest Missile Can Sink A US Aircraft Carrier”

RT

Shares in Snapchat’s parent company Snap Inc. have plummeted in value by almost a quarter – to the tune of $6 billion. The drop comes after the first earnings report since the company went public showed a slowdown in user growth and revenue.

On Tuesday, the company posted a $2.2 billion loss in the first quarter, much of which was tied to compensation following the company’s IPO in March. After adjusting for the expected expenses, losses of $188.2 million were reported – greater than analysts anticipated.   Continue reading “Snapchat slapped: $6bn wiped off value as shares collapse”

RT

The Dakota Access pipeline already had its first leak – 84 gallons of oil – at a pump station in South Dakota in early April, sparking outrage and calling into question its environmental safety.

The long-debated pipeline leaked crude oil on April 4 in Tulare Township in Spink County, according to the South Dakota Department of Environmental and Natural Resources. Reports of the incident emerged just several days before the pipeline becomes fully operational.   Continue reading “Dakota Access pipeline leaks 2 barrels of oil before becoming operational”

Mail.com

LOS ANGELES (AP) — U.S. authorities have said they are reducing the amount of time they will delay deporting the few immigrants in the country illegally awaiting congressional decisions to legalize their immigration status after lawmakers file so-called “private bills” supporting their last-ditch bids to remain in the country.

In a letter to lawmakers, Immigration and Customs Enforcement Acting Director Thomas Homan said the agency will only hold off deporting immigrants with legislation pending on their behalf for up to six months with the possibility of one 90-day extension.   Continue reading “US cuts congressional bill deportation delays for immigrants”

Mail.com

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Dozens of people were injured and a 27-year-old man killed Wednesday during another day of violent clashes in Venezuela’s capital during demonstrations demanding elections. National guardsmen launched tear gas and a group of armed pro-government militiamen harassed protesters as they tried to march to the Supreme Court. One masked militia member fired several shots into the air. The militia later dispersed after officers intervened.   Continue reading “Dozens hurt, 1 dead in violent day of protests in Venezuela”

NBC 26

(CNN) — A former soldier facing felony animal abuse charges after police say she tied up, shot and killed her dog has been found dead.

Marinna Rollins’ body was found Sunday morning, officials said. Her death is being investigated as a suicide, the Fayetteville Police Department told CNN.   Continue reading “Veteran arrested for killing dog in video found dead”