Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Breaking News and Commentary from Citizens For Legitimate Government | 03 Jun 2009

AP source: US broke bombing rules in Afghanistan 03 Jun 2009 American troops made substantial errors and did not strictly follow rules for avoiding casualties during an air assault on Taliban fighters last month, a U.S. defense official said, underscoring a central quandary for President Barack Obama's new Afghan counterinsurgency campaign. The defense official said Wednesday that a military investigation faulted some of the actions of American troops in air strikes May 4 that killed dozens of Afghan civilians in Farah province.

Blackwater Accused Again of Murders in Iraq 03 Jun 2009 Two more Iraqi families accuse Blackwater, now known as Xe, of murdering their husbands and fathers in Baghdad and covering it up. Azhar Abdullah Ali, a father of three, was a security guard for the Iraqi Media Network when Blackwater mercenaries killed him and two others on Feb. 7, 2007, according to the federal complaint. The family of Rahim Khalaf Sa'adoon claims drunken Blackwater mercenary Andrew Moonen killed Sa'adoon on Christmas Eve, "for no reason," as Sa'adoon guarded the vice president of Iraq.

Chavez accuses US of assassination plot 03 Jun 2009 President Hugo Chavez has alleged that US intelligence agencies have been planning his assassination. Mr Chavez said the supposed conspiracy had kept him from visiting El Salvador to attend the inauguration of leftist President Mauricio Funes in El Salvador on Monday.

In CIA briefings, Cheney controlled input on torture 03 Jun 2009 Dick Cheney attempted to win support for harsh interrogation of 'suspected terrorists' by controlling the information Congress would receive on the matter, a report says. In 2005, the former US vice president [sic] directed 'at least four' related briefings with Congressmen during which he would produce 'an impassioned defense' of 'enhanced interrogation techniques' -- the former administration's euphemism for torture, The Washington Post reported on Wednesday.

Cheney Led Briefings of Lawmakers to Defend Interrogation Techniques 03 Jun 2009 Former vice president [sic] Richard B. Cheney personally oversaw at least four briefings with senior members of Congress about the controversial interrogation program, part of a secretive and forceful defense he mounted throughout 2005 in an effort to maintain support for the harsh techniques torture used on prisoners. The Cheney-led briefings came at some of the most critical moments for the program, as congressional oversight committees were threatening to investigate or even terminate the techniques, according to lawmakers, congressional officials, and current and former intelligence officials. The CIA made no mention of Cheney's role in documents delivered to Capitol Hill last month that listed every lawmaker who had been briefed on "enhanced interrogation techniques" since 2002.

Mission accomplished! Kurds start oil exports from northern Iraq --The revenue will be shared between Baghdad, the Kurds and oil companies. 01 Jun 2009 Iraq's self-ruled Kurdish region has started exporting crude oil to foreign markets for the first time. Companies chosen by the Kurdistan Regional Government will pump up to 90,000-100,000 barrels per day from two northern oilfields to Turkey.

Report Ties Dubious Iran Nuclear Docs to Israel By Gareth Porter 03 Jun 2009 A report on Iran’s nuclear programme issued by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last month generated news stories publicising an incendiary charge that U.S. intelligence is underestimating Iran’s progress in designing a "nuclear warhead" before the halt in nuclear weapons-related research in 2003. That false and misleading charge from an intelligence official of a foreign country, who was not identified but was clearly Israeli, reinforces two of Israel’s key propaganda themes on Iran – that the 2007 U.S. National Intelligence Estimate on Iran is wrong, and that Tehran is poised to build nuclear weapons as soon as possible. But it also provides new evidence that Israeli intelligence was the source of the collection of intelligence documents which have been used to accuse Iran of hiding nuclear weapons research.

IDF declares Nablus area a closed military zone to keep out left-wing activists 03 Jun 2009 The Israel Defense Forces has declared the area around the West Bank city of Nablus a closed military zone, in order to prevent left-wing activists from entering the area, Army Radio reported on Wednesday. According to Army Radio, Head of the Central Command General Gadi Shamni issued the closure after receiving numerous complaints from soldiers who said the activists were interfering with their 'security duties' at area checkpoints.

Mega barf alert! US Pledges Additional $200 Million in Aid to Pakistan 03 Jun 2009 U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke said the Obama administration is standing beside Pakistan in its fight to defeat create Islamic extremists. During a visit to Islamabad, Holbrooke said the United States has pledged an additional $200 million to assist Pakistanis displaced by a military offensive against Taliban militants. [See: Billions in U.S. Aid to Pakistan Wasted, Officials Assert 24 Dec 2007 and US Senate approves Pakistan aid worth $785m 20 Dec 2007.]

Unmanned vehicle spending in the 2010 DOD budget to reach $5.4 billion 28 May 2009 U.S. military forces plan to spend nearly $5.4 billion next year on unmanned vehicle (UV) technology for air, ground, and maritime applications, according to identifiable unmanned vehicle line items in the fiscal 2010 U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) budget, which was released in May and sent to Congress for consideration.

DOD budget for 2010 proposes $23.67 billion for military communications, electronics, and intelligence 20 May 2009 Leaders of the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) propose spending $23.67 billion in fiscal year 2010 for procurement and research in military communications, electronics, telecommunications, and intelligence (CET&I) technologies, which would represent a slight decrease of 0.13 percent from current-year enacted levels of $23.7 billion, according to Pentagon budget documents.

US troops killed in IED strikes in Afghanistan 01 Jun 2009 Two roadside bombs that struck back-to-back and only miles apart hit two U.S. military vehicles in Afghanistan Monday, killing four American troops, U.S. and Afghan officials said. U.S. military officials have predicted a 50 percent spike in IED attacks in Afghanistan this year as militants step up attacks and thousands of more troops pour into the country.

Pakistan predicts long war against militants 03 Jun 2009 Pakistan's army warns that the battle against insurgency in the troubled northwestern Swat valley and its adjoining areas could take longer than previously thought. The prediction of a long war comes days after the army claimed full control of the main town in the troubled valley, Mingora, after a month-long operation.

'Bin Laden' accuses Obama of sowing 'revenge and hatred' in Muslim world 03 Jun 2009 Osama bin Laden today denounced Barack Obama as the US president arrived in Saudi Arabia at the start of a short Middle East tour in his continuing effort to reach out to the Muslim world. In an audio recording timed for Obama's latest overture, the [deceased] al-Qaida leader said the US leader had planted seeds of "revenge and hatred" towards the US in the Muslim world, al-Jazeera television reported.

'Bin Laden' tape denounces Obama 03 Jun 2009 A tape recording purported to be of al-Qaeda leader 'Osama Bin Laden' has accused US President Barack Obama of fuelling hatred of America in Pakistan. The audio message broadcast on Arabic TV channel al-Jazeera blamed US pressure for Pakistan's crackdown in its north-western Swat Valley. Hundreds of thousands of civilians have fled the fighting with Taliban rebels.

Huge security clampdown in Cairo for Barack Obama's big speech to Muslim world 03 Jun 2009 The biggest security operation ever seen in Egypt was under way tonight as Cairo prepared to welcome Barack Obama for his landmark speech to the Muslim world after a warning of revenge against the US by 'Osama bin Laden.' Unprecedented security measures are in place for Obama's big day in Cairo, of which the centrepiece is a 50-minute address at the city's university tomorrow.

Bush's 'burrowers' are busy little bees: US nuclear secrets accidentally leaked? 03 Jun 2009 Washington has published a document containing details of the precise whereabouts of hundreds of its nuclear sites as well as fuel storage areas for its nuclear weapons stockpiles, allegedly by accident. The 266-page report marked "highly confidential" was released on Monday in an online newsletter for issues of federal secrecy, raising fears among nuclear experts who cited security hazards.

TSA Blocks Delta Flights to 2 African Cities On Security 03 Jun 2009 Delta Air Lines Inc. has been denied permission for direct flights to Nairobi, Kenya and Monrovia, Liberia until the airports meet security standards or until U.S. regulators change their assessment of security threats in the region. The Transportation Security Administration called the current threat to civil aviation in east Africa too significant to allow the flights, but said it will continue to monitor the situation. The routes were slated to begin within days.

Officials investigate Argentina bomb threat as pilot claims Air France Flight 447 was blown out of the sky by terrorists 03 Jun 2009 Investigators are examining a bomb threat called in on a flight from Buenos Aires to Paris just days before Flight 447 disappeared over the Atlantic ocean, it has been revealed. Aviation authorities are examining the possibility of a link between the threat to the Buenos Aires flight and the mysterious disappearance of Flight 447 with 228 people on board, a source has claimed. Meanwhile an Air France pilot said it was 'highly likely' the jet was blown out of the sky by a bomb.' Speaking under condition of anonymity to Le Figaro newspaper the pilot said: 'It is highly likely a bomb went off on board. I have flown these jets for Air France for more than ten years, and the chances of an electrical fault seem unfeasible to me.'

Another Air France plane got bomb threat 03 Jun 2009 Aviation authorities said an Air France Buenos Aires-to-Paris flight was grounded temporarily because of a bomb threat that turned out to be false. Officials at Buenos Aires' Ezeiza International Airport delayed an Air France flight from the Argentine city to Paris May 27 after the bomb threat was called in, The Daily Mail reported Wednesday.

Flight 447 black box may never be found 03 Jun 2009 French officials doubt the recovery of black boxes belonging to the missing Air France 447 flight from the bottom of deep Atlantic Ocean. The Chief of French Civil Aviation Ministry's bureau of investigation (BEA), Paul Louis Arslanian said he was "not optimistic" over the recovery of the black boxes, adding that there could be no speculations until everything was "checked and verified."

FAA looks into what pilot saw over Liberty 03 Jun 2009 The FBI, the Federal Aviation Administration and the Liberty County Sheriff’s Department met Tuesday to compare notes on an unidentified flying object reported late last week by an ExpressJet Airlines pilot. The pilot reported a "missile or rocket" flying near his airplane Friday at 8:09 p.m., shortly after takeoff from Bush Intercontinental Airport, according to sheriff’s officials.

Liberty Co., FAA to discuss report of object near plane 01 Jun 2009 Liberty County Sheriff’s officials are expected to meet with the FAA on Tuesday to discuss what a Continental Express pilot reported as a "missile or rocket" flying near his airplane. A pilot reported to the Federal Aviation Administration that at about 8:15 p.m. Friday, an object passed within 150 feet beneath the aircraft, sheriff’s officials said. The aircraft was near the southern edge of the county, flying at about 13,000 feet, officials said. "The pilot, from what we understand, was former military. He was able to get the coordinates down real quick," said Cpl. Hugh Bishop with the Liberty County Sheriff’s Department.

MPs' expenses: Departing MPs milked system to the end 03 Jun 2009 MPs who left Parliament at the last election made thousands of pounds from the expenses system in the months just before or after their departure, The Daily Telegraph can disclose. Some of those who resigned or lost marginal seats in 2005 have since made tens of thousands of pounds selling or renting out flats that had been funded by the taxpayer. Other departing MPs passed subsidised properties to their children, while some who had already announced they were stepping down spent thousands of pounds of taxpayers' money furnishing or redecorating homes.

Brown's authority dealt severe blow as Blears quits 03 June 2009 Gordon Brown's authority as Prime Minister was dealt a severe blow today, as Communities Secretary Hazel Blears quit the Cabinet on the eve of crucial European and local elections. But Mr Brown rejected opposition calls for an immediate General Election, insisting he was focusing on cleaning up the parliamentary expenses system and helping Britain through the recession.

Children who don't have MMR jab should be banned from school, says ex BMA chief 03 Jun 2009 Children should be banned from going to school if they have not had the MMR jab, a senior doctor has said. Sir Sandy Macara, former chairman of the British Medical Association, said the [deadly] vaccine should be made compulsory, with children who have not had it turned away at the school gates. His call came amid concerns over low levels of take-up for the jab.

Four swine flu sufferers in Glasgow area treated in intensive care 04 Jun 2009 Four people suffering from swine flu are being treated in intensive care wards in hospitals in and around Glasgow tonight. The four -- all aged under 50 -- are the only cases in Britain to require intensive care treatment for the H1N1 virus, and are among 88 confirmed cases of swine flu in Scotland. A total of 303 cases have been diagnosed in England, two in Northern Ireland and one in Wales.

Swine flu: home quarantine urged in SA 03 Jun 2009 Health authorities are recommending home quarantine for South Australian children who have visited Melbourne because of a high prevalence of swine flu there. A person visiting SA from Western Australia has also been diagnosed with swine flu, becoming the eighth case in South Australia. They are to stay in isolation in SA for a week.

Saudi Arabia confirms first H1N1 flu case 03 Jun 2009 Saudi Arabia has confirmed its first case of the H1N1 flu virus in a Filipina nurse, the kingdom's health minister said on Wednesday. The woman arrived on Friday on board a Gulf Air flight from the Philippines and showed first symptoms on Monday, Abdullah al-Rabeeah told Saudi news channel al-Ekhbariya, adding that she was being held in quarantine in a hospital in the capital Riyadh.

2 More Deaths in City Linked to Swine Flu 03 Jun 2009 Two more deaths linked to swine flu -- both of adults in their early to mid-40s -- were reported by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene on Wednesday, bringing the total H1N1-related fatalities in the city to seven.

Already Hurting, Mets Face a Swine Flu Scare 03 Jun 2009 As if the Mets did not have enough injuries and illnesses to worry about, they confronted a swine flu scare Tuesday when a member of their traveling party was isolated after coming down with an unidentified strain of flu. An associate producer for SportsNet New York, who started having symptoms after arriving here Sunday night, was treated and tested at a hospital, but the Mets had not received confirmation as to what type of flu the strain was.

Obama Open to Plan Requiring Everyone to Get Insurance 04 Jun 2009 President Obama said Wednesday that he was receptive to Congressional proposals that would require every American to have health insurance and that would force employers to offer health insurance to their employees. But he said there should be exemptions for people who cannot afford coverage and for small businesses in general.

AIG Charity Grab --Bids to Claw Back Grants to Pay Bonuses 01 Jun 2009 Insurance giant AIG is trying to seize a $490 million charitable endowment -- and claw back $27 million it already awarded to New York charities -- to pay executive bonuses, The Post has learned. AIG intends to go to trial in federal court June 15. Legal experts say that if AIG wins its case, it would have the right to sue to claw back some of the $27 million already awarded to charities.

New Hampshire Legislature Approves Same-Sex Marriage 03 Jun 2009 New Hampshire this afternoon became the sixth state to allow gay marriage, after Gov. John Lynch (D) signed a revised bill approved by both houses of the legislature. The passage of the bill now leaves Rhode Island as the only New England state that does not allow same sex marriage.

Polar bears and a cactus urge climate action in Bonn 01 Jun 2009 U.N. climate talks started in Bonn on Monday with demonstrators dressed as camels, birds, trees, a cactus and several polar bears urging delegates to do more to cut greenhouse gas emissions. Environmentalists want developed countries to cut greenhouse gas emissions, mainly from burning fossil fuels, by 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020.

OttawaCitizen.com | Gold Missing From Canadian Mint


4 Magnitude quake hits Utah - less than 10 mi from Riverside, Fielding & Garland, UT - Wednesday, June 03, 2009 at 03:47:01 PM at epicenter


Magnitude 4.0 - UTAH

2009 June 03 21:47:01 UTC

Earthquake Details

Magnitude4.0
Date-Time
Location41.804°N, 112.214°W
Depth7.5 km (4.7 miles)
RegionUTAH
Distances
  • 6 km (4 miles) W (267°) from Riverside, UT
  • 8 km (5 miles) W (264°) from Fielding, UT
  • 9 km (6 miles) NNW (331°) from Garland, UT
  • 120 km (74 miles) NNW (347°) from Salt Lake City, UT
Location Uncertaintyhorizontal +/- 0.3 km (0.2 miles); depth +/- 0.6 km (0.4 miles)
ParametersNph= 34, Dmin=16.6 km, Rmss=0.15 sec, Gp= 61°,
M-type=local magnitude (ML), Version=3
Source
Event IDuu00004030
  • This event has been reviewed by a seismologist.
  • Did you feel it? Report shaking and damage at your location. You can also view a map displaying accumulated data from your report and others.

The risks of believing that the Mayan calendar ends December 21, 2012 | by Carl Johan Calleman

Much more on link:
http://www.examiner.com/examiner/x-2912-Seattle-Exopolitics-Examiner~y2009m5d19-The-risks-of-believing-that-the-Mayan-calendar-ends-December-21-2012

The risks of believing that the Mayan calendar ends December 21, 2012!

by Carl Johan Calleman

About eight years ago John Major Jenkins and I had a debate about the meaning of the Mayan calendar end date focusing especially on whether the energies of the Long Count ends on October 28, 2011 or December 21, 2012. This still remains the most important question anybody interested in the “2012 phenomenon” is faced with, but while at the time the debate might have seemed theoretical, or even hairsplitting, it is now a question that has very significant and practical consequences as to how we relate to the future. While many would like to sweep the end date question under the rug or sit on the fence, no one can do so with their intellectual integrity intact. Since that debate Jenkins has appeared on a History Channel documentary where December 21 2012 is presented as a predetermined “doomsday” when the world is going to come to an end. I get quite a few letters, sometimes from young people that worry that the world will come to an end at this date since they have seen this documentary posted on YouTube. While most knowledgeable people would probably reject this way of presenting the Mayan calendar it is still important to ask the question who benefits from it. I feel there are indeed many people, also apart from the participants in such documentaries that benefit from the claim that the Mayan calendar ends December 21, 2012. Thus, I do not think that it is an accident that we do not hear of the October 28, 2011 date in public media. To begin with, as far as I know no one who adheres to the end date of October 28, 2011 has ever presented this as a predetermined doomsday and thus unduly associated the Mayan calendar with fear.

Since the abovementioned debate two different intellectual cultures have emerged around the two possible end dates, one based on belief (December 21, 2012) and one based on evidence (October 28, 2011). These two cultures are about as different from one another as any one of them is from that using the Gregorian calendar. The proposal of the December 21, 2012 date is based on the unproven belief that the precessional cycle actually means something for human evolution, and, amazingly, as far as I know no one advocating this end date seems to have even bothered to try to prove this basic assumption. In contrast, the October 28, 2011 date is based on massive scientific evidence that the Nine Underworlds and Thirteen Heavens known from ancient Mayan sources indeed describe cosmic evolution in all of its aspects. Moreover, while there is extensive evidence that the Maya based prophecy and prediction on shifts between baktuns, katuns, tuns etc, not a single ancient Mayan text mentions the 26,000 year precessional cycle. Since those advocating the December 21, 2012 end date do not identify shift points in the Mayan calendar leading up to their end date their hypothesis is however not testable from the predictions made, which is the hallmark of any serious scientific theory. Hence, it must be qualified as belief rather than science. Based on nothing more than belief a culture has subsequently emerged around the December 21, 2012 date, since it serves as an ideal projection screen for fantasies, fears and hopes rather than something that can be proven and understood scientifically based on the patterns of the Mayan calendar.

The October 28, 2011 end date can however be rationally understood. It has also been verified by several predictions, most recently my own that an economic collapse would set in and when it would do so: Regardless of what forms such a [financial] collapse may take it seems that the best bet is for it to occur close to the time that the Fifth NIGHT begins, in November 2007 [strictly speaking the 19th] (The Mayan Calendar and the Transformation of Consciousness, page 233). In accordance with this prediction economists now agree that it began in December of 2007, see Figure 1). This prediction was actually formulated already in my first book in English, Solving the Greatest Mystery of Our Time: The Mayan Calendar written in 1999 and published in 2001 (page 187). This is really a direct parallel to Edgar Cayce’s famous prediction of the time for the New York stock exchange crash, in this case however made about ten years in advance, and so was made much earlier than any professional economist even considered such an economic meltdown. I however do not claim to have some unusual psychic abilities, and instead this prediction attests to the fact that with the right end date, October 28, 2011 the mystery of the Mayan calendar has been exactly solved. That these predictions were accurate can be verified by anyone, who cares to examine the relevant pages in my books. In contrast no one who claimed that the end date of the Mayan calendar is December 21, 2012 made any similar prediction and can mostly not credit themselves with having made one single accurate prediction based on the Mayan calendar. Already this should be a red flag for anyone looking for a way to understand the evolution of civilization based on the Mayan calendar.

Much more on link:
http://www.examiner.com/examiner/x-2912-Seattle-Exopolitics-Examiner~y2009m5d19-The-risks-of-believing-that-the-Mayan-calendar-ends-December-21-2012

UniverseToday.com | Ice on the Moon? NASA, ISRO May Collaborate to Find Out

read more........

Telegraph.co.uk | 600 ft "Jellyfish" Crop Circle - 3x bigger that the usual crop circle- found in Oxfordshire England field (video also)

Photo: M AND Y

A 600ft jellyfish pattern has appeared in a barley field in Kingstone Coombes, Oxfordshire, in what is one of the most intriguing crop circles ever seen in Britain.

The vast pattern appeared in the field last week and experts are claiming it to be the first of its kind in the world.

Karen Alexander, a crop circle expert, said: "We have seen butterfly and bird patterns in the past, but this is the first jellyfish crop circle in the world.

"It is absolutely huge - roughly three times the size of most crop patterns and extremely interesting. People have been aghast at the size of it. It is a complete monster.

"We are looking into the meaning of it, but at present it just seems to have appeared out of nowhere."

Crop circle theorists known as 'croppies' - believe the patterns are created by UFOs during nocturnal visits, or caused by natural phenomena such as unusual forms of lightning striking the earth.

But it has been proven the patterns can be easily created artists.

Last year a crop circle described as the most complex ever to seen in Britain was discovered in a barley field in Wiltshire.

The formation, measuring 150ft in diameter, was a coded image representing the first 10 digits, 3.141592654, of pi.

Michael Reed, an astrophysicist, said: "The tenth digit has even been correctly rounded up. The little dot near the centre is the decimal point.

"The code is based on 10 angular segments with the radial jumps being the indicator of each segment.

"Starting at the centre and counting the number of one-tenth segments in each section contained by the change in radius clearly shows the values of the first 10 digits in the value of pi."

WattsUpWithThat.com | The Interplanetary Magnetic Field: lowest point since 1913?

International Property Maintenance Code (IPMC) - claims jurisdiction on US real estate

Power Hour audience researcher JIM LOVELL has completed extensive research into the International Property Maintenance Code (IPMC) and shares with us his findings. It may seem hard to believe that literally putting out your garbage can get someone into a whole lot of trouble, ridiculous fines and even the threat of imprisonment.
**2006 International Property Maintenance Code

Barack Hussein Obama: US "one of the largest Muslim countries in the world"

THE POWER HOUR Team Network News | June 3, 2009

Northwestern Mutual Makes First Gold Buy in 152 Years -- Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., the third-largest U.S. life insurer by 2008 sales, has bought gold for the first time the company’s 152-year history to hedge against further asset declines. “Gold just seems to make sense; it’s a store of value,” Chief Executive Officer Edward Zore said in an interview following his comments at a conference hosted by Standard & Poor’s in Brooklyn. “In the Depression, gold did very, very well.”

Expired passport prevents Brazilian from boarding missing plane -- A Brazilian man said his expired passport saved his life and the life of his friend as he was not allowed to board the missing Air France plane, Brazilian media reported on Tuesday.

US accidentally leaks maps of nuclear sites -- A 266-page classified document detailing information about United States civilian nuclear sites and programs was accidentally made public by the federal government, The New York Times reported Tuesday.

The Emergence of President Obama's Muslim Roots -- During a conference call in preparation for President Obama's trip to Cairo, Egypt, where he will address the Muslim world, deputy National Security Adviser for Strategic Communications Denis McDonough said

SAILORS NOW TO BECOME GUINEA PIGS FOR NEW H1N1 VACCINE? -- Vical Inc. (VICL 2.18, -0.02, -0.91%) said Thursday that in the two weeks since launching its program to develop a vaccine against H1N1 influenza, or swine flu, it has completed development of a prototype vaccine, produced an initial supply and initiated immunogenicity testing on animals. The firm said that, assuming a successful outcome of this testing and a commitment for external funding, it is ready to advance directly to large-scale manufacturing of the vaccine for human clinical trials to be conducted by the U.S. Navy.

33 OF THE HEALTHIEST FOODS ON EARTH -- Read the Healthiest Foods on Earth.

Katrina trailers for sale — for $5 or less -- The Obama administration will announce plans today to virtually give away roughly 1,800 mobile homes to 3,400 families displaced by Hurricane Katrina who are living in government-provided housing along the Gulf Coast, officials said.

Bomb threat AIR FRANCE in S America -- Days Before Flight Disappeared over Atlantic? -- This came from Drudge Report - May 27, 2009: 'The airport safety delayed an AIR FRANCE flight this evening before departing for Paris immediately after the company received a bomb threat over the phone at the airport of Ezeiza [Buenos Aires]'. (The article is no longer on the web....This is a cache of the article).

Obama to Sell B-2 Bomber Blueprints to China to Pay Off Debt? -- On April 1st, President Obama spoke to Chinese Premier Hu Jintao during the G20 Summit. During this meeting, Mr. Hu expressed interest in writing off some of the US debt in exchange for military technology. The President has since referred the matter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates. The Defense Department is reportedly furious with the President's proposal to sell blueprints of the B-2 Spirit stealth bomber to the People's Republic.

W.H.O. says it's close to declaring a flu pandemic & raising to level 6 -- Moving closer to declaring swine flu a worldwide pandemic. The disease has reached 64 countries, and there have been dozens or hundreds of cases in several nations outside North America, including Britain, Spain, Japan, Chile and Australia.
And who benefits? AstraZeneca gets $90 million swine flu vaccine order -- AstraZeneca's (AZN.L) MedImmune biotechnology unit has won an initial $90 million order from the U.S. government to make a live attentuated vaccine against the new H1N1 flu strain, it said on Monday.

GM to sell Hummer to Chinese company -- GM has a buyer for Hummer, Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery Company of China plans to buy the company. GM says the deal would likely save more than 3,000 jobs, including hundreds in our area. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the Mishawaka plant will continue to make the H2.

Texas deputies searching for mysterious 'rocket-like' object -- A Continental Express jet pilot reported a close call with an unidentified flying object. Now officials from the FAA are trying to determine just what happened in the skies over Liberty County.

USS Liberty: Sailor Awarded Silver Star for '67 Actions -- A former Sailor whose quick action aboard the USS Liberty 42 years ago kept it from sinking was awarded a Silver Star Wednesday in the Visilia, Calif., office of Rep. David Nunes.

U.S. auto sales rise in May -- U.S. sales of cars and light trucks rose 13 percent in May when compared with April, even as two of the nation's automakers grappled with reorganizations.

California to run out of cash in 14 days -- The state wallet is empty. The bank closed. Credit has dried up, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger told lawmakers in a special Tuesday morning address at the Capitol. “California’s day of reckoning is here,” he said. With no action, the state will run out of cash in 14 days. Three months after the state budget was approved, California faces a $24 billion deficit.

War Stories: The Greatest Generation remembers -- A soldier's final tribute. They all lived through the Great Depression, and when their country asked for help they answered the call, never dreaming that some day they would be dubbed the Greatest Generation.

House panel wants new review of BPA safety -- The federal investigation comes after the Journal Sentinel revealed Saturday that lobbyists met last week at an exclusive club in Washington to hammer out a public relations strategy to sell the benefits of BPA to the American public, including "befriending people that are able to manipulate the legislative process."

Crisis as backlog of benefits claims at VA top 1 million -- During the past four months, the Department of Veterans Affairs backlog of unfinished disability claims grew by more than 100,000, adding to an already mountainous backlog that is now close to topping one million.

New Zealand most peaceful country; Canada 8th; US 83rd -- The economic downturn has made the world more violent and unstable in the last year, according to a study Tuesday that ranked New Zealand as the most peaceful country and Iraq the least.

End of Live Free or Die Rally the end of free assembly in America? -- The 4th Annual New Hampshire Live Free or Die Rally is quickly sinking into a quagmire of bureaucratic red tape, and with no 11th hour reprieve on the horizon, chief organizer Jean Coutu may have to cancel.

Computer modeling shows that strategies to rein in epidemics need to be retooled for rural populations -- An infectious disease striking a large city may seem like a disastrous scenario -- millions of people sharing apartment buildings, crammed on buses and trains and brushing past one another on crowded sidewalks. A group of Kansas State University engineers is finding that a truly disastrous epidemic scenario could also take place in the wide-open spaces of the Great Plains. Read More...

Fighting for the right to grow food in Los Angeles -- Just how much trouble can one community garden start? For starters, three years of court proceedings, two eviction notices, one assault charge, countless allegations of corruption, and $16 million worth of fundraising. Read More...

Farm groups counter call for GMO wheat -- Farm and environment groups opposed to genetically modified wheat are countering a call from other farm organizations for biotech companies to commercially develop it.

Former MI6 chief says Big Brother has gone too far -- Warning: Sir Richard Dearlove is concerned about the loss of liberties in 'Big Brother' Britain.

Federal court says states can regulate guns -- A federal appeals court in Chicago ruled today that the Second Amendment doesn't bar state or local governments from regulating guns, adopting the same position that Judge Sonia Sotomayor, President Barack Obama's nominee to the Supreme Court, did when faced with the same question earlier this year.

Florida county requires fingerprints to resell video games -- For many young Americans, reselling video games to pick up the newest, latest and greatest is simply the only choice to keep up with the fast-paced, high-dollar industry (which is about to kick off a massive annual trade show in Los Angeles).

Taxed for nothing -- With all the trillions of dollars of new money being deficit-spent by the US federal government, not the least of which is the mind-boggling US$1.84 trillion in new deficit-spending that the Barack Obama administration and Congress have conspired to enact and spend This Freaking Year (TFY), it is at least amusing to know that we taxpayers are paying taxes for nothing! Hahaha! Paying taxes for nothing!

FDA asks if supplement labeling notifications are a burden -- The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has asked the dietary supplement industry for feedback on the burden of notifying the agency of claims made on their product labels.

Drug samples handed out by doctors pose risks to patients -- According to Dr. Chimonas and Dr. Kassirer, these findings show that prescription drug samples often reach people they weren't intended for -- and the obvious result is that these medications are frequently misused and abused.

Interactive data eyeglasses (this is wild!) -- The data eyeglasses can read from the engineer's eyes which details he needs to see on the building plans. A CMOS chip with an eye tracker in the microdisplay makes this possible. The eyeglasses are connected to a PDA, display information and respond to commands.

SpaceWeather.com | Since Sunspot 1019 emerged on May 31st - it has rapidly grown & reorganized into a Double Sunspot

MAGNETIC MAELSTROM: "Sunspot 1019 continues to put on a show," reports astronomer Pete Lawrence of Selsey UK. "Two distinct main spots are visible with a number of smaller pores scattered around a vast field of magnetic fibrils. The view through an H-alpha 'scope is stunning."

Since the sunspot emerged on May 31st, it has rapidly grown and reorganized itself into the double spot visible today: movie. The region is crackling with A- and B-class solar flares, which nicely highlight the sunspot's surroundings for astrophotographers. Readers, if you have a solar telescope, take a look!

more images: from Howard Eskildsen of Ocala, Florida; from Jérôme Grenier of Paris France; from Marco Vidovic of Stojnci, Slovenia; from Pavol Rapavy of Observatory Rimavska Sobota, Slovakia; from Steve Wainwright of Swansea, S.Wales, UK; from David Evans of Coleshill, Warwickshire, UK; from Keith Davies of Swansea, South Wales, UK; from Bruno Nolf of Otegem, Belgium; from Domenico Licchelli of Gagliano del Capo, Italy

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Interactive maps: GM's sphere of influence wraps the globe


Breaking News and Commentary from Citizens For Legitimate Government | 02 Jun 2009

U.S. Releases Secret List of Nuclear Sites Accidentally -- The report lists many particulars about nuclear programs and facilities at the nation's three nuclear weapons laboratories -- Los Alamos, Livermore and Sandia -- as well as dozens of other federal and private nuclear sites. 03 Jun 2009 The federal government mistakenly made public a 266-page report, its pages marked "highly confidential," that gives detailed information about hundreds of the nation’s civilian nuclear sites and programs, including maps showing the precise locations of stockpiles of fuel for nuclear weapons. The publication of the document was revealed Monday in an on-line newsletter devoted to issues of federal secrecy.

Obama: Iran Has the Right to Nuclear Power 02 June 2009 President Barack Obama suggested that Iran may have some right to nuclear energy _ provided it proves by the end of the year that its aspirations are peaceful. In a BBC interview broadcast Tuesday, he also restated plans to pursue direct diplomacy with Tehran to encourage it set aside any ambitions for nuclear weapons it might harbor. Iran has insisted its nuclear program is aimed at generating electricity.

'We don't approve of the mandate the committee was given to investigate war crimes.' Israel won't be aiding UN Gaza investigation 02 Jun 2009 Tel Aviv has voiced disdain over the United Nations' authority to look into Israel's three weeks of military onslaught through the Gaza Strip. "We don't approve of the mandate the committee was given to investigate war crimes," Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Ehud Barak told UN's Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Monday, Jerusalem Post reported.

35 Israeli spies identified in Lebanon 01 Jun 2009 Beirut has charged three more people with spying for Tel Aviv amid a crackdown on Israeli espionage networks in Lebanon. The latest decision by the Lebanese military prosecutor brings to 35 the number of the people who are charged in connection with the Israeli espionage case.

Iraq agrees to let Britain help protect oil platforms --British troops and up to five naval vessels could help Iraq protect its floating oil terminals against attack. 02 Jun 2009 Iraq and Britain have struck a deal that will allow British troops to remain in the country, helping Iraqi naval forces protect oil platforms beyond a previously agreed withdrawal date, officials said on Tuesday. Britain's presence in Iraq began with its support of the 2003 U.S. invasion, but was set to conclude at the end of June under a pact signed at the end of last year. The two sides agreed to extend the British deployment so that a small number of British troops and up to five naval vessels could help Iraq protect its floating oil terminals against attack, said government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh.

KBR sees U.S. military contract margins up 02 Jun 2009 KBR Inc expects profit margins on the next round of U.S. military logistics contracts to rise as they are split between different companies, the engineering and services company's chief executive said on Tuesday. KBR is competing with Fluor Corp and DynCorp International for the next Logistics Civil Augmentation Program, or LOGCAP IV, and expects to find out whether it has won one of two contracts for Afghanistan in July.

Iraq rattled by snakes on a plain 02 Jun 2009 A plague of snakes has caused panic in Iraq's southern province of Nasiriyah, biting cattle and worrying residents as poisonous reptiles flee their dens in the country's water-deprived marshes. Iraq's water reserves dipped to 11 billion cubic metres (385 billion cubic feet) in May, compared with 40 billion cubic metres three years earlier, although rainfall this past winter was normal. Experts say Iraq faces agricultural disaster this summer if neighbouring Turkey continues to retain waters from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers which have nourished Iraqi agriculture for millennia.

Police: Bomb kills 4 at Baghdad vegetable market 01 A bomb in a Baghdad market killed four people. Also Monday, a suicide bomber exploded his car at a police checkpoint in Jalula, 80 miles (125 kilometers) northeast of Baghdad, killing a 7-year-old child and wounding eight other people, an Iraqi police official said.

Baghdad roadside bomb kills US soldier 02 Jun 2009 An American soldier was killed by a roadside bomb that struck his patrol in eastern Baghdad, the US army said on Tuesday. He was the first American military casualty in June after 25 US troops died May, the highest US military death toll in Iraq for eight months.

Yemeni inmate found dead at Guantanamo prison: US 02 Jun 2009 A man from Yemen held at the US-run prison in Guantanamo for more than seven years without charge was found dead in an apparent suicide, the US military said. The 31-year-old inmate was identified as Muhammad Ahmad Abdallah Salih, also known as Al-Hanashi. He had been held at Guantanamo since February 2002, US Southern Command said in a statement. It was the fifth reported 'suicide' at the controversial "war on terror" prison since the center opened at the remote US naval base in southeast Cuba in 2002, officials said.

US judge: Guantanamo evidence must be made public 01 Jun 2009 A federal judge rejected on Monday a U.S. government request to keep secret the unclassified evidence that it says justifies the continued imprisonment of more than 100 Guantanamo Bay prisoners. U.S. District Judge Thomas Hogan ruled the government cannot keep the documents known as factual returns from public disclosure and must seek court approval to keep specific information secret.

Judge holds Bagram detainee cases pending Obama appeal 01 Jun 2009 A federal judge on Monday put a hold on his groundbreaking order allowing detainees at a U.S. air base in Afghanistan access to U.S. courts until an appeals court can rule on the case involving prisoners held in an active war zone. The Obama administration, in arguments similar to those made by the Bush White House, had challenged a ruling by U.S. District Judge John Bates two months ago that some foreign detainees at Bagram Airfield could use civilian courts in the United States to challenge their detention.

Telegraph report over Abu Ghraib 'abuse' photos confirmed --A former senior US army officer who spoke to the Daily Telegraph about photographs of rape and sexual abuse at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq has confirmed the story, despite denials from the White House. 30 May 2009 This newspaper reported that photographs showed a soldier apparently raping a female prisoner, a translator apparently raping a male prisoner and instances of sexual abuse involving objects. After initially failing to respond to a request for comment, a White House spokesman eventually spoke to denigrate the standards of the British press, and said that the Telegraph report "mischaracterises" the photos. But Major General Antonio Taguba, who retired from the army in January 2007 after writing a critical report on Abu Ghraib, has confirmed that the quotes the Daily Telegraph ran were accurate.

Why'd Obama switch on detainee photos? Maliki went ballistic 01 Jun 2009 President Barack Obama reversed his decision to release prisoner abuse photos from Iraq and Afghanistan after Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki warned that Iraq would erupt into violence and that Iraqis would demand that U.S. troops withdraw from Iraq a year earlier than planned, two U.S. military officers, a senior defense official and a State Department official have told McClatchy.

Commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan warns of greater casualties 03 Jun 2009 President Obama's pick to lead U.S. forces in Afghanistan warned Tuesday that casualties are likely to increase as the U.S. military steps up its campaign against 'insurgents.' Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal also voiced skepticism that Taliban guerrillas could be persuaded to sever their ties with Al Qaeda; a similar strategy was critical to McChrystal's success as commander of special operations forces [death squads] in Iraq.

Pakistan plan to attack Taliban haven promises wider war 31 May 2009 Waziristan, the remote area that's the epicenter of Taliban and 'al Qaida' militants in Pakistan, is set to become the next war zone in the nation's fight against Islamic extremists, where clashes between insurgents and the army erupted over the weekend. So far, there are just skirmishes in Waziristan but the key U.S. ally plans a full-scale military offensive there this summer, according to Pakistani and Western officials, a fight that is certain to be deadlier than the current operation in Swat valley and with profound international repercussions.

CIA wages 'microchip' war against al-Qaida --The CIA is equipping Pakistani tribesmen with secret transmitters to call in airstrikes 01 June 2009 In the tribal regions of Pakistan, believed to be harbouring Osama Bin Laden [LOL! Weren't the 'tribal regions of Afghanistan' harbouring Osama?] and other high-ranking terrorists, America is stepping up its covert operations. The CIA is equipping Pakistani tribesmen with secret transmitters to call in airstrikes targeting 'al-Qaida' and Taliban militants.

400 students kidnapped in N. Waziristan 01 Jun 2009 Insurgents have kidnapped hundreds of students at an army-run educational institution in Pakistan's troubled North Waziristan region. They were held up at gunpoint on Monday when a convoy of minibuses carrying the students from a cadet college in the tribal North Waziristan region was going to the northwestern town of Bannu.

U.S. officials raise alarm about new Venezuelan missiles 31 May 2009 Venezuela's recent purchase of the most lethal shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles in the Russian arsenal is sharpening U.S. concerns that parts of President Hugo Chávez's massive weapons buildup could wind up in the hands of terrorists or guerrillas [resistance fighters] in neighboring Colombia. [US officials are constantly 'alarmed' over everyone else's weapons but *their own* - and Israel's. --LRP]

Obama picks GOP congressman to head Army 02 Jun 2009 Bringing another Republican into his inner circle, President Obama announced today that he is nominating a GOP congressman from upstate New York to be the next Army secretary. John McHugh, who has been in Congress since 1993, is the senior Republican on the House Armed Services Committee. At the Pentagon, he'll join Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a holdover from the Bush administration. "Keeping America safe means keeping the armed forces strong," Bush Obama said at a White House news conference.

Gibbs: Army Secretary Nominee Favors DADT Change 02 Jun 2009 White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Tuesday that President Barack Obama's nominee for secretary of the Army, Republican representative John McHugh, agrees with the president that "don't ask, don't tell" should be changed.

Jacqui Smith goes - hit by porn claims, but fatally damaged by 42 days 03 Jun 2009 She was one of the first and most high-­profile targets of the expenses leaks, but when the disclosures hit her back in March, Jacqui Smith was, in truth, already on the political ropes. The revelations capped a torrid year for the home secretary, and she spent at least one weekend agonising over whether she could continue in her post, eventually ­concluding that she could not... Smith will go down in the public's mind and in political history as the home secretary who failed to get 42 days pre-charge detention for terror suspects through the House of Commons.

Marines Train "Civilians" to Accept Coming Martial Law (Infowars) 01 Jun 2009 On May 23, the Staten Island Real-Time News reported on "mock raids at the public park to give civilians a feel for how soldiers operate in battle." Or maybe that should be "mock raids" to give civilians a taste of things to come and, of course, get them acclimated to the presence of uniformed and armed soldiers in their midst. It is interesting the Marines characterized Flushing Meadows Park as "enemy territory." In fact, according to our rulers and their military functionaries, the entire United States is "enemy territory" in need of martial law.

WHO getting closer to declaring A/H1N1 pandemic, says official 03 Jun 2009 As the A/H1N1 flu virus spreads further around the world, the World Health Organization (WHO) is getting closer to declaring a full pandemic, a senior official of the UN agency said on Tuesday. "Globally we believe that we are at phase 5, but we are getting closer to phase 6," said WHO Assistant Director-general Dr. Keiji Fukuda, referring to the WHO's six-phase pandemic alert system.

A/H1N1 virus invades all U.S. states 02 Jun 2009 All the 50 states in the United States reported cases of A/H1N1 flu on Monday, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in the country to 10,053, according to the latest figures released by the federal government. Until last week, Alaska, West Virginia and Wyoming were the last three states which had been free of the newly found virus, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said Friday that the state of Wyoming had conformed its first case, and reported Monday that the states of Alaska and West Virginia had finally been invaded by the A/H1N1 virus.

Mandatory Flu Vaccines for Health Care Personnel on Agenda for SHRPC Committee 20 May 2009 A proposed regulation that would require annual influenza vaccines for all health care personnel in hospitals will be discussed at tomorrow’s Codes Committee of the State Hospital Review and Planning Council (SHRPC). The rule would also apply to employees of diagnostic and treatment centers, certified home health agencies, long-term home health care programs, acquired immune deficiency syndrome home care programs, licensed home care services agencies, and hospices. A separate proposal that would require mandatory flu vaccines for personnel working in nursing homes is currently under consideration in the State Legislature.

3,000 under swine flu quarantine Down Under 01 Jun 2009 The number of H1N1 cases in Australia is climbing quickly. Three thousand people are in quarantine, after a big increase in cases in the last 24 hours. In the state of New South Wales, twelve hundred people are in quarantine.

Gunman Kills Soldier Outside Recruiting Station 02 Jun 2009 A 23-year-old man upset about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan opened fire from his truck at two soldiers standing outside a military recruiting station here on Monday morning, killing one private and wounding another, the police said. The gunman, identified by the police as Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad of Little Rock, fled the scene and was arrested minutes later a short distance from the recruiting station. The police confiscated a Russian-made SKS semiautomatic rifle, a .22-caliber rifle and a handgun from his black pickup truck.

Nebraska physician vows to keep Tiller's abortion clinic open 01 Jun 2009 Women's Health Care Services, the clinic that has been bombed, blockaded and vandalized for more than 20 years because late-term abortions are performed there, will be closed this week to mourn the slaying Sunday of founder George Tiller. But the clinic will resume normal operations next Monday, said LeRoy Carhart, a Nebraska physician who has been coming to Tiller's clinic on a rotating basis for more than 10 years.

Suspect in Kansas abortion doctor's slaying reportedly belonged to anti-government militia 02 Jun 2009 The 51-year-old man held on suspicion of killing prominent abortion provider Dr. George Tiller belonged to anti-government militia groups, had been convicted of carrying explosives in his car and was outraged by the doctor's speedy acquittal on abortion-related charges, authorities and antiabortion activists said Monday. Scott Roeder had attended a demonstration outside a Kansas City, Kan., abortion clinic two weeks ago and spoke of traveling to Wichita for Tiller's trial, said longtime antiabortion activist Eugene Frye.

'The answer, Mr. Obama, Mr. Law Professor, is that it's illegal.' Grand Theft Auto: How Stevie the Rat bankrupted GM by Greg Palast 01 Jun 2009 I smell a rat. Stevie the Rat, to be precise. Steven Rattner, Barack Obama's 'Car Czar' - the man who essentially ordered GM into bankruptcy this morning... Stevie the Rat has a different plan for GM: grab the pension funds to pay off Morgan and Citi. Here's the scheme: Rattner is demanding the bankruptcy court simply wipe away the money GM owes workers for their retirement health insurance. Cash in the insurance fund would be replace by GM stock... Yet Citibank and Morgan, says Rattner, should get their whole enchilada - $6 billion right now and in cash - from a company that can't pay for auto parts or worker eye exams. Preventive Detention for Pensions So what's wrong with seizing workers' pension fund money in a bankruptcy? The answer, Mr. Obama, Mr. Law Professor, is that it's illegal.

Day of reckoning is here, governor says 02 Jun 2009 Challenging the Legislature to "spend only what we have," Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) on Tuesday outlined a path of devastating cuts that he said was unavoidable but could lead to lasting reforms and a revived economy. He urged the Legislature to resolve a $24 billion deficit within the next two weeks before the state starts to run out of cash, and he stuck to his revised cuts-only budget that includes eliminating the state's welfare-to-work program and its health insurance program for poor children, along with deep cuts to schools, parks and higher education.

Hawaii's governor orders furloughs 3 days a month 02 Jun 2009 Describing a "fiscal emergency," Gov. Linda Lingle has ordered three days of unpaid furloughs each month for 14,500 state employees to help erase a $729 million budget shortfall. The furloughs beginning in July amount to an almost 14 percent pay cut and will be unilateral, applying to the Republican governor herself and her staff.

Pawlenty will not seek re-election 02 Jun 2009 Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty will announce Tuesday that he will not seek a third term as governor, sources tell CNN. The decision to avoid a potentially difficult re-election bid next year will almost certainly be seen as the first step in a possible presidential run in 2012.

160 Syrian villages deserted 'due to climate change' 02 Jun 2009 Some 160 villages in northern Syria were deserted by their residents in 2007 and 2008 because of climate change, according to a study released on Tuesday. The report drawn up by the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) warns of potential armed conflict for control of water resources in the Middle East.

Brazil finds Air France wreckage, all feared dead 02 Jun 2009 Brazilian military planes found wreckage on Tuesday from an Air France jet that crashed in the Atlantic Ocean with 228 people aboard, the airline's worst disaster in its 75-year history. Brazilian Defense Minister Nelson Jobim said there was "no doubt" that a 5-km (3-mile) strip of debris in the high seas was from the Airbus A330 that went missing in stormy weather early on Monday. Experts were certain that all aboard died.

NaturalNews.com | Feature Stories - June 2, 2009

Health Ranger Reveals the Five Most Powerful Anti-Viral Remedies for Influenza and Swine Flu in New Report
(NaturalNews) The Health Ranger, a proponent of nutritional education for the public, has overcome the censorship efforts of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and published a new, non-commercial guide that reveals five powerful anti-viral remedies...
Drug Samples Handed Out by Doctors Pose Risk to Patient Health
(NaturalNews) Countless U.S. doctors regularly give away free drug samples provided by the industry to their patients. It's a practice that may simply seem, at first glance, like an altruistic way to help sick people save money. However...
Studies Show Selenium Prevents Cancer and Thyroid Disease
Selenium is an essential trace mineral that forms an important part of our immune defense function, as well as a component in heart muscle. Found naturally in animal protein and vegetables, it is also found in fish, vegetables, and especially...
Prevent Cancer By Changing Your Diet
(NaturalNews) Nearly a quarter of cancers could be prevented by simple changes in diet and exercise, including up to 70 percent of cases of certain varieties, according to a report issued by the World Cancer Research Fund. "The evidence linking diet...
Vitamin C Shown to be Vital for Optimum Health
Vitamin C or ascorbic acid offers many health benefits including being a powerful antioxidant. Recent studies have shown the numerous benefits of including Vitamin C as part of a daily regimen. Vitamin C can decrease health risks. The...
Facts about Grapes and Their Amazing Health Benefits are Proven
In this article you will discover some interesting facts about grapes and how incredibly healthy they are for you. Spanish explorers brought the grape to America about 300 years ago. It is about 80 percent water making it a delicious low...
Papaya is Tasty Way to Fight Cancer and Poor Digestion
Sweet and succulent with a satiny consistency, papaya was referred to as the "fruit of the angels" by Christopher Columbus. Slice open a papaya and see hundreds of shiny black seeds that all need to get their start in life from the nutrition...
Use Hypnotherapy to Reduce Pain and Nausea in Cancer Patients
Cancer is an illness that affects millions of Americans, whether they are currently being treated or in remission. Two of the most common symptoms of cancer and cancer treatments are pain and nausea. Hypnotherapy has been proven to help cancer...
Pandemic Preparedness Audio Course Launched: How to Prepare for any Pandemic (with Dr. Sheldon Marks)
(NaturalNews) Swine flu has now infected all 50 states in the USA, the CDC now reports. Worldwide, infections now exceed 100,000 people, and the World Health Organization (WHO) is openly concerned that this widely-circulating H1N1 viral strain may combine...