Consumer, Celebrity Bankruptcies May Hit 1.4 Million -- Celebrities who filed for bankruptcy in July included movie actor Stephen Baldwin, who sought protection from creditors after lenders began foreclosure procedures against his home. Lenny Dykstra filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in a petition that says the former Major League Baseball All-Star owes between $10 million and $50 million. Read More...
Government Prepares for “unwillingness to follow government orders” -- The International Swine Flu Conference is being held in Washington D.C. next week. Read the agenda for the breakout sessions, especially the session on “psychological issues” (Session #2) and the topic heading: “Unwillingness to follow government orders.” Also note session #6, which includes “Control and diffuse social unrest & public disorder” and “Isolate prisons and other facilities.” Read the entire Swine Flu Conference Brochure at: http://www.new-fields.com/ISFC/brochure.pdf
8 cities in US line up for swine flu vaccine test including St Louis -- Hundreds of Americans in eight cities are lining up for experimental swine flu shots in a race to get a vaccine out in case the new flu virus regains strength this fall and winter. About 2,800 people will participate in the government-led studies. Saint Louis University will test 200 adults and 200 children. Also under way are separate studies by five flu vaccine manufacturers under contract with the government.
57 Trillion Reasons To Murder 100 Million Americans With Poisonous Vaccinations by Leonard G. Horowitz -- The fact is, you are worth more dead than alive to Obama's ilk, because in reality, there is a WARRANT FOR YOUR DEATH THAT CARRIES A REWARD OF $189K, and rising. Now you would never believe this is true. But do your "homework" and learn the FACTS - Read More...
Flu drugs 'unhelpful' in children -- Research has cast doubt on the policy of giving antiviral drugs to children for swine flu. (Sent to us by our friend Mike Tawse in the UK....thanks Mike)
Zombie Subdivisions and "Pig In The Python" Shadow Inventory -- These idled, “zombie” subdivisions can be found across metro Atlanta, but they’re most prevalent in outer-ring suburban areas. Selling them has proven tough, with some properties sitting on the market for months on end without even a nibble.
A Few things You Should Know About Offshore Banking in 2009 -- The Swiss emerged from those early conflicts wise enough to know that war was a messy, violent and costly affair…especially for whoever was waging war against them. So it comes as no shock that Switzerland hasn’t been at war internationally since 1815.
Deaths from avoidable medical error more than double in past decade, investigation shows -- Preventable medical mistakes and infections are responsible for about 200,000 deaths in the U.S. each year, according to an investigation by the Hearst media corporation. The report comes 10 years after the Institute of Medicine's "To Err Is Human" analysis, which found that 44,000 to 98,000 people were dying annually due to these errors and called for the medical community and government to cut that number in half by 2004.
Banks make $38bn from overdraft fees -- US banks stand to collect a record $38.5bn in fees for customer overdrafts this year, with the bulk of the revenue coming from the most financially stretched consumers amid the deepest recession since the 1930s, according to research. The fees are nearly double those reported in 2000.
Eunice Kennedy Shriver, JFK's sister and Special Olympics founder, dies -- President John F. Kennedy's sister Eunice Kennedy Shriver, a champion for the rights of the mentally disabled and founder of the Special Olympics, has died. She was 88.
Air Force Used Twitter to Track Public Backlash to Statue of Liberty Flyover -- Although the Pentagon has warned of the security risks posed by social networking sites, newly released government documents show the military also uses these Internet tools to monitor and react to coverage of high-profile events.
Spokane VA Center Miscounted Suicides -- The number of Spokane, Wash.-area veterans who killed themselves in a one-year period is far greater than the Spokane Veteran Affairs Medical Center knew at the time, a VA investigation has found. The VA's Office of Medical Investigations discovered that from July 2007 through the first week of July 2008, at least 22 veterans in the Spokane VA service area killed themselves, and 15 of them had contact with the medical center.
Amputee Private Matt Woollard plans return to fight Taliban -- A BRITISH soldier who had part of his leg blown off by a landmine is preparing to return to Afghanistan to settle “unfinished business” with the Taliban. The army expects him to pass fitness tests and he could return as early as next year.
Morrison & Foerster and DRA to Present Appeals Argument Against Department of Veterans Affairs on Behalf of 900,000 Veterans -- Non-profit group Veterans for Common Sense (VCS) and co-plaintiff Veterans United for Truth (VUFT) are asking Court of Appeals judges to reverse the lower court’s ruling, which lacks the authority to order VA to provide timely medical care and disability benefits to hundreds of thousands of waiting veterans. The lawsuit was filed in July 2007 on behalf of all veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI), conditions impacting more than 600,000 U.S. service members sent to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
Canada Finds Possible US Plane Lost in 1942 -- Nine people were aboard the PBY-5A Catalina, which was based at Presque Isle, Maine. Four crew members survived. Five others died inside the aircraft. Their bodies have yet to be recovered.
Neutralizing A TASER Gun Assault -- A simple body armour can be nothing but a piece of tin foil worn under the clothes. That would short out the electrical currents even if the darts pierce through it. Two or three layers of the foil would even be better if the dart probes pierced it and would provide small holes so the taser electrical arcs would short out more and faster. Even a piece of cardboard or heavy cloth wrapped in tin foil would do the trick.
VIDEO: An Interview with Gerald Celente
'Buy American' won't endanger Canadian trade says Obama -- U.S. President Barack Obama on Monday downplayed the threat to Canadians posed by Buy American policies while rejecting the notion that Canada should be seen as a health-care "bogeyman." The Buy American policy, which requires that U.S. suppliers use American-made materials in economic-recovery projects, has cast a chill over Canadian exporters and provoked fears of U.S. protectionism.
Big Brother Britain has more CCTV cameras than China -- Britain has one and a half times as many surveillance cameras as communist China, despite having a fraction of its population, shocking figures reveal. There are 4.2million closed circuit TV cameras here, one per every 14 people.
Obama fights back as bid to reform US healthcare stalls -- President Barack Obama has become mired in a frenzied fight over US healthcare reform as Republicans scent a devastating political victory that could hobble his presidency. Obama yesterday lashed out at critics of his ailing push to provide coverage for America's 46 million uninsured people by saying that his critics were resorting to "outlandish rumours" and "misleading information" to scupper his plans.
Government Prepares for “unwillingness to follow government orders” -- The International Swine Flu Conference is being held in Washington D.C. next week. Read the agenda for the breakout sessions, especially the session on “psychological issues” (Session #2) and the topic heading: “Unwillingness to follow government orders.” Also note session #6, which includes “Control and diffuse social unrest & public disorder” and “Isolate prisons and other facilities.” Read the entire Swine Flu Conference Brochure at: http://www.new-fields.com/ISFC/brochure.pdf
8 cities in US line up for swine flu vaccine test including St Louis -- Hundreds of Americans in eight cities are lining up for experimental swine flu shots in a race to get a vaccine out in case the new flu virus regains strength this fall and winter. About 2,800 people will participate in the government-led studies. Saint Louis University will test 200 adults and 200 children. Also under way are separate studies by five flu vaccine manufacturers under contract with the government.
57 Trillion Reasons To Murder 100 Million Americans With Poisonous Vaccinations by Leonard G. Horowitz -- The fact is, you are worth more dead than alive to Obama's ilk, because in reality, there is a WARRANT FOR YOUR DEATH THAT CARRIES A REWARD OF $189K, and rising. Now you would never believe this is true. But do your "homework" and learn the FACTS - Read More...
Flu drugs 'unhelpful' in children -- Research has cast doubt on the policy of giving antiviral drugs to children for swine flu. (Sent to us by our friend Mike Tawse in the UK....thanks Mike)
Zombie Subdivisions and "Pig In The Python" Shadow Inventory -- These idled, “zombie” subdivisions can be found across metro Atlanta, but they’re most prevalent in outer-ring suburban areas. Selling them has proven tough, with some properties sitting on the market for months on end without even a nibble.
A Few things You Should Know About Offshore Banking in 2009 -- The Swiss emerged from those early conflicts wise enough to know that war was a messy, violent and costly affair…especially for whoever was waging war against them. So it comes as no shock that Switzerland hasn’t been at war internationally since 1815.
Deaths from avoidable medical error more than double in past decade, investigation shows -- Preventable medical mistakes and infections are responsible for about 200,000 deaths in the U.S. each year, according to an investigation by the Hearst media corporation. The report comes 10 years after the Institute of Medicine's "To Err Is Human" analysis, which found that 44,000 to 98,000 people were dying annually due to these errors and called for the medical community and government to cut that number in half by 2004.
Banks make $38bn from overdraft fees -- US banks stand to collect a record $38.5bn in fees for customer overdrafts this year, with the bulk of the revenue coming from the most financially stretched consumers amid the deepest recession since the 1930s, according to research. The fees are nearly double those reported in 2000.
Eunice Kennedy Shriver, JFK's sister and Special Olympics founder, dies -- President John F. Kennedy's sister Eunice Kennedy Shriver, a champion for the rights of the mentally disabled and founder of the Special Olympics, has died. She was 88.
Air Force Used Twitter to Track Public Backlash to Statue of Liberty Flyover -- Although the Pentagon has warned of the security risks posed by social networking sites, newly released government documents show the military also uses these Internet tools to monitor and react to coverage of high-profile events.
Spokane VA Center Miscounted Suicides -- The number of Spokane, Wash.-area veterans who killed themselves in a one-year period is far greater than the Spokane Veteran Affairs Medical Center knew at the time, a VA investigation has found. The VA's Office of Medical Investigations discovered that from July 2007 through the first week of July 2008, at least 22 veterans in the Spokane VA service area killed themselves, and 15 of them had contact with the medical center.
Amputee Private Matt Woollard plans return to fight Taliban -- A BRITISH soldier who had part of his leg blown off by a landmine is preparing to return to Afghanistan to settle “unfinished business” with the Taliban. The army expects him to pass fitness tests and he could return as early as next year.
Morrison & Foerster and DRA to Present Appeals Argument Against Department of Veterans Affairs on Behalf of 900,000 Veterans -- Non-profit group Veterans for Common Sense (VCS) and co-plaintiff Veterans United for Truth (VUFT) are asking Court of Appeals judges to reverse the lower court’s ruling, which lacks the authority to order VA to provide timely medical care and disability benefits to hundreds of thousands of waiting veterans. The lawsuit was filed in July 2007 on behalf of all veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI), conditions impacting more than 600,000 U.S. service members sent to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
Canada Finds Possible US Plane Lost in 1942 -- Nine people were aboard the PBY-5A Catalina, which was based at Presque Isle, Maine. Four crew members survived. Five others died inside the aircraft. Their bodies have yet to be recovered.
Neutralizing A TASER Gun Assault -- A simple body armour can be nothing but a piece of tin foil worn under the clothes. That would short out the electrical currents even if the darts pierce through it. Two or three layers of the foil would even be better if the dart probes pierced it and would provide small holes so the taser electrical arcs would short out more and faster. Even a piece of cardboard or heavy cloth wrapped in tin foil would do the trick.
VIDEO: An Interview with Gerald Celente
'Buy American' won't endanger Canadian trade says Obama -- U.S. President Barack Obama on Monday downplayed the threat to Canadians posed by Buy American policies while rejecting the notion that Canada should be seen as a health-care "bogeyman." The Buy American policy, which requires that U.S. suppliers use American-made materials in economic-recovery projects, has cast a chill over Canadian exporters and provoked fears of U.S. protectionism.
Big Brother Britain has more CCTV cameras than China -- Britain has one and a half times as many surveillance cameras as communist China, despite having a fraction of its population, shocking figures reveal. There are 4.2million closed circuit TV cameras here, one per every 14 people.
Obama fights back as bid to reform US healthcare stalls -- President Barack Obama has become mired in a frenzied fight over US healthcare reform as Republicans scent a devastating political victory that could hobble his presidency. Obama yesterday lashed out at critics of his ailing push to provide coverage for America's 46 million uninsured people by saying that his critics were resorting to "outlandish rumours" and "misleading information" to scupper his plans.