Monday, October 5, 2009

Cave's Headlines | 5 October 2009

iStockAnalyst.com | Extending the Recession Indefinitely
Unemployment continues to tick upward. Small businesses forgo profits on two-for-one deals just to keep the doors open. But we're in recovery. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, the guy who couldn't get around to paying his own taxes, says so. After all, government is doing all it can to speed the recovery, isn't it?

Daily Job Cuts | Layoffs, Bankruptcies & Closings for September
This is pretty stunning....

Janet Tavakoli On Why Meltdown Risk Now Is Greater Than It Was In 2007 (with video)

StanDeyo.com | Imagine living in a country where 80% went underwater – and heroes shone



ORIGINAL CAPTION: A man takes a break from cleaning a house swamped by flash floods brought on by Typhoon Ketsana, in a middle-class neighborhood in Marikina city, east of Manila, on Sept. 28. The Philippines appealed for international aid to help tens of thousands marooned by flooding. (Erik de Castro / Reuters)

A relative reacts after confirming the identity of a loved one killed by the floods brought on by the continuous rains of Typhoon Ketsana, inside a morgue in the town of Tanay, Rizal, east of Manila, Sept. 28. (John Javellana / Reuters)

Official Export Guide | Ex-Im Bank Announces Application for $260 Million Financing of Equipment and Services to UAE, Seeks Comments on Transaction

In a notice (PDF) published in the Federal Register on October 1, the Export-Import Bank of the United States (Ex-Im Bank) announced that it has received an application to finance approximately $260 million for the exportation of approximately $268 million worth of power equipment and services to a buyer in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The U.S. exports will enable the UAE company to produce aluminum. Production is scheduled to begin in 2010, with full production beginning in 2011. The UAE company will have an initial production capacity of 718,000 metric tons of aluminum per year, with efficiency gains expected to increase production capacity up to 750,000 metric tons per year. The total value of the aluminum producing facility is estimated to be $7.2 billion.

It is envisioned this new aluminum production will be primarily sold to customers in Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Libya, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan, and Vietnam. Some of the new aluminum will also be sold domestically within the UAE.

Interested parties may submit comments on the transaction by e-mail to economic.impact@exim.gov or by mail to 811 Vermont Avenue, NW., Room 1238, Washington, DC 20571. Comments must be received by October 15, 2009.

Xinhua | Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) says "Israel is number one threat to Middle East" with its nuclear arms

The Epoch Times | Vitamin D’s Cancer-Protective Potential

EarthObservatory.NASA.gov | Visibility dropped to zero in parts of eastern Washington on October 4, 2009, as a large dust storm blew through

Visibility dropped to zero in parts of eastern Washington on October 4, 2009, as a large dust storm blew through. This image of the storm was captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite shortly after noon (Pacific Daylight Time). According to local news, the storm brought strong winds gusting to 43 miles per hour in places that propelled the dust across the southeast corner of the state. After numerous multi-vehicle accidents, sections of Interstate 90 near the town of Moses Lake and several local roads had to be closed for several hours.

A thick, rippling plume of dust runs northeast to southwest through the center of the image. Dust stretches as far south as the cities of Pasco and Kennewick, which sit on opposite banks of the Columbia River. In the north, the dust seems to rise primarily from the pale golden squares of fields farmed using dryland agriculture, a common practice in arid eastern Washington. The dryland fields are larger and less colorful than the bright green and gold fields of irrigated agriculture near the Columbia and Snake Rivers in the center of the image.

Dryland farmers rely entirely on rainfall to sustain their crops, and as a result, do many things to preserve moisture in the soil. Some of these practices—leaving a field fallow after harvest to allow water to build in the soil for a year or covering the field with dry soil to prevent underlying moisture from evaporating—make dryland agriculture very prone to dust storms. These fields are likely either fallow or newly planted, probably with winter wheat, a common dryland crop in eastern Washington.

The dust storm persisted for several hours and was still visible when Aqua MODIS flew over the region at 2:00 p.m. local time. The Terra MODIS image shown here is available in multiple resolutions from the MODIS Rapid Response System.

  1. References

  2. Horton, P. (2009, October 4). Weather: Blowing dust shuts down part of I-90, record rain falls in Kennewick. Tricity Herald. Accessed October 5, 2009.

NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team. Caption by Rebecca Lindsey and Holli Riebeek.

RussiaToday.ru | US economy: “living on borrowed time”

Montserrat Volcano Observatory | Caribbean island of Montserrat's Soufriere Hills volcano shoots plume of ash two or more miles into sky

Activity Update 10:00am 5th October 2009

Activity on the volcano has increased overnight. Starting at around 9:00 pm local time (on 4th October) there was a short swarm of VT earthquakes. This was then followed at around 10:00 pm by a period of tremor associated with vigorous ash venting which generated considerable ash plumes that drifted west north west across the island and out to sea. Only a very light dusting of ash fell in Old Towne and Olveston as the plumes moved to the south of the inhabited areas.

The seismic signals indicate that there was no explosive activity or pyroclastic flows associated with these events. The ash venting ceased at around 12:00am. Two rockfall signals followed the vigorous ash venting. As of 6:00 am and continuing at time of writing there is intermittent ash venting occurring sending occasional plumes of ash west north west across the island and out to sea, but no further significant seismicity.

Further ash plumes are likely to result from these venting pulses and ashfall could occur in inhabited areas such as Old Towne, Salem and Olveston depending on the wind direction.

This activity demonstrates that activity can increase at anytime without any real warning.

The Montserrat Volcano Observatory (MVO) continues to monitor the situation closely.

RELATED

AP | Montserrat volcano shoots plume of ash into sky

2.5 magnitude earthquake in Tennessee - 3 mi SSW from Timptonville, TN - Monday, October 05, 2009 at 01:11:36 PM at epicenter


MAG UTC DATE-TIME
y/m/d h:m:s
LAT
deg
LON
deg
DEPTH
km
Region
MAP 2.5 2009/10/05 18:11:37 36.346 -89.500 5.0 TENNESSEE

http://maps.google.com/maps?q=36.346+-89.5003%28M2.5+-+TENNESSEE+-+2009+October+05++18%3A11%3A36+UTC%29&ll=36.346,-89.5003&spn=2,2&f=d&t=h&hl=e

Earthquake Details

Magnitude2.5
Date-Time
  • Monday, October 05, 2009 at 18:11:36 UTC
  • Monday, October 05, 2009 at 01:11:36 PM at epicenter
Location36.346°N, 89.500°W
Depth5 km (3.1 miles)
RegionTENNESSEE
Distances
  • 4 km (3 miles) SSW (212°) from Tiptonville, TN
  • 9 km (6 miles) N (350°) from Ridgely, TN
  • 14 km (9 miles) WSW (254°) from Samburg, TN
  • 143 km (89 miles) NNE (17°) from Memphis, TN
  • 262 km (163 miles) SSE (165°) from St. Louis, MO
Location Uncertaintyhorizontal +/- 0.3 km (0.2 miles); depth +/- 0.2 km (0.1 miles)
ParametersNST= 22, Nph= 30, Dmin=0 km, Rmss=0.05 sec, Gp= 61°,
M-type=duration magnitude (Md), Version=A
Source
Event IDnmhnw1005c
  • 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.

AlterNet.org | We've Given Trillions to the Super Rich -- There Are Many Better Uses for Your Money

China Ditches Derivatives- Stock Market Collapse to Follow? (YouTube)

Wall Street Pit | TARP Watchdog Says Treasury Misled Public on Bailouts

Raw Story | IMF chief hails ‘new era of collaborative global governance’

ProjectCensored.org | Top 25 Censored Stories for 2010

Top Censored Stories of 2009/2010

AP -Sioux Falls SD | Judge dismisses lawsuit filed by 4 American Indian Tribes from SD and NE attempting to stop TransCanada Keystone Pipeline

A judge has dismissed a federal lawsuit filed by four American Indian tribes from South Dakota and Nebraska in an attempt to stop construction of the TransCanada Keystone Pipeline.

It will move crude oil from Alberta, Canada, to refineries in Kansas, Oklahoma and Illinois.

The $5.2 billion project over more than 2,100 miles will also go through North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska and Missouri.

The Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate (oy-YAH'-tay), Rosebud Sioux, Santee Sioux and Yankton Sioux argued that treaties and federal laws and regulations were broken during the environmental assessment of the route and granting of a permit.

But a judge dismissed the complaint, saying the tribes didn't show a treaty basis or that the government failed in its duties.

SteveQuayle.com | Hot Headlines - October 5, 2009

Apollyon Rising 2012 - pt. 26
Crash/Collapse Dead Ahead Say Faber, Rogers, Dent and Celente
Waking Up to Discover the Mortgage Market was a Giant Criminal Enterprise
Obama's Permanent Depression
Consumer Bankruptcy Filings Surge Past One Million in First Nine Months of 2009
World Bank and IMF Join Global Attack on the Dollar
Online Glitch Angers Millions of TD Bank Customers
Israel Names Russians Helping Iran Build Nuclear Bomb
Another Prophecy Expert Prepares for Psalm 83 Mideast War!
Typhoon Parma Hovers, Threatening Philippine Slides, Floods
US Storms Troops into the Philippines
Mudslides Bury Villages in Rural Sumatra Valley
35 Quakes Rock Mayon Anew
Rep. Boehner Accuses Obama of Subverting Constitution
AAR Reports Rail Traffic Remains Down
Letter to Judge Carter - Speaks for Tens of Millions of Americans
List of Obama’s Czars
Defeat is Now Conceivable
China's Military Struts Its Stuff
US Relinquishes Control of the Internet

FDIC Insuring 8200 Banks with $9 Trillion in Deposits and ZERO in the Deposit Insurance Fund.

The problem is how the banking system is structured. Take a look at how assets are distributed over the 8,204 banks:FULL STORY

EconomyWatch.com | China/ Japan: China Overtakes Japan, But Real Lesson May Be For the US

The Jakarta Post | Typhoon Parma weakens into tropical storm - causing widespread flooding & landslides - 16 dead

CNN.Money.com | Treasury fibbed to save economy

Reuters | China vows to stand by isolated North Korea

The relationship between the world's third-biggest economy and its impoverished, isolated neighbor sets apart Beijing's approach to Pyongyang from the harder line long favoured by Washington, Tokyo and other regional capitals....

AFP | United Nations human development index - Norway is best place to live, China moves up

Human Development Reports : http://hdr.undp.org/en/statistics/

  1. Norway
  2. Australia
  3. Iceland
  4. Canada
  5. Ireland
  6. Netherlands
  7. Sweden
  8. France
  9. Switzerland
  10. Japan
  11. Luxembourg
  12. Finland
  13. United States
Norway, Australia and Iceland took the first three spots while Niger ranks at the very bottom, just below Afghanistan. China moved up seven places on the list to rank as the 92nd most developed country due to improvements in education as well as income levels and life expectancy. The United States ranks 13th, down one spot from last year.

NEW YORK (AP) | Great time for US consumers: America is on sale

The Great Recession has caused massive job losses and hardship for millions, but it has also fostered a shoppers' paradise. Anyone who still has the means to spend can find unheard of deals. Prices on everything from clothes to coffee to cat food are dropping, some faster than they have in half a century. Items rarely discounted - like Tiffany engagements rings - are now. The two biggest purchases most people make - homes and new cars - are selling at steep price reductions....

Money and Markets | Three Government Reports Point to Fiscal Doomsday

Lakota Foundation | Lakota people live on less than 7 dollars a day. They need cloths, school supplies, resources.

The Foundation for the Lakota Children

HELP: THE LAKOTA FOUNDATION STOP CHILD SUICIDE

South Dakota has one of the largest populations of Native Americans on reservations particularly a Tribe called the Lakota . They have the highest rate of poverty in the world despite aid from the government, which has never been sufficient. Children are committing suicide at an alarming rate, one of the highest percentages of suicide in the world, next to Japan. Lakota people live on less than 7 dollars a day. They need cloths, school supplies, resources. If you would like to help, contact the Lakota Foundation:
http://www.firstvoicesindigenousradio.org/images/lakota_foundation-20091004.pdf

212-802-8681 ask for Lance White Magpie
You can also contact WBAI radio for more info:
First Voices Indigenous Radio
120 wall st,
NY, NY 10005

Or visit---
www.firstvoicesindigenousradio.org

You can also contact:
Tiokasin Ghost Horse For more Info
Tiokasin@gmail.com

Call the studio directly: 212-209-2800 or 212-209-2979
ask for Caroline Rose Or Tiokasin Ghost Horse

Peace, Do Something, Anything.

NaturalNews.com | Today's Featured Stories - October 5, 2009

Will real health reform ever happen in America?
(NaturalNews) When it comes to affordable, effective health care reform in America, there's only one question that really needs to be asked right now: What works? In other words, what works to keep people healthy? What's affordable, safe and...

Scientists Document How Manuka Honey Fights Superbugs
(NaturalNews) When infections caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria, also known as superbugs, are in the mainstream news there's usually a sense of panic connected to the story. After all, this type of infection is spreading and can be life-threatening...

Merck Blockbuster Diabetes Drug: Januvia Linked to Pancreatitis
U.S. health officials said on Friday they suspect Merck's blockbuster diabetes drug Januvia to be linked to pancreatitis, a potentially fatal condition marked by serious inflammation of the pancreas. As might be expected, Merck company officials...

Cinnamon spice helps prevent diabetes
(NaturalNews) When it comes to health care reform in America, if we hope to make real progress, we've got to consider safe, affordable solutions that really work to prevent disease. There's hardly a better example of this than cinnamon and its...

Overworked, Sleep-Deprived Surgeons and Doctors Blunder Through Patient Procedures
(NaturalNews) Medical staff in the United Kingdom committed 4,000 avoidable medical errors in 2008, according to a review conducted by the newspaper Daily Mirror. Based on a review of medical records acquired through a Freedom of Information...

Herbs and Natural Foods Maintain Optimum Brain Function
Many foods and nutrients are known to improve brain function. Fish has long been known as "brain food" because of the omega 3 fatty acids, but many other foods can improve and maintain healthy mental function and improve memory. Foods...

Superfood Profile: Discover the Health Benefits of Bee Pollen
Before our modern age of sterilization and sanitation, traditional medicine was based on healing herbal and food remedies that may seem eccentric by our "civilized" standards. And while substances like bee pollen were highly prized at one...

Vitamin B12 Just as Important as Folic Acid for Mothers-to-Be (Opinion)
Thanks to public health campaigns, it seems like everyone is aware that sufficient Folic Acid prevents 'neural tube defects' in developing infants. As such, most governments have made folic acid supplementation of many foods mandatory to...

Essential Oils in Common Spices Kill Sickness-Causing Germs in Food
(NaturalNews) When people talk about getting "food poisoning", they usually mean they became ill because of bacteria that contaminated something they ate. Some who comes down with this kind of foodborne disease simply has an upset stomach. But in far...


Interview with Elissa Ladd, creator of documentaries revealing off-label marketing deceptions of Big Pharma
(NaturalNews) Mike Adams interviews Elissa Ladd, PhD, RN, FNP, the Assistant Professor at the MGH Institute of Health Professions. She was awarded grant money from a Pfizer drug marketing settlement and used it to make a documentary showing how drug companies...

Anti-Inflammatory Painkillers Actually Worsen Dementia
(NaturalNews) Rather than reducing the risk of dementia as some researchers have suggested, regular use of anti-inflammatory drugs actually appears to worsen a person's risk of cognitive decline, according to a study conducted by researchers from the...

Alcohol: Find the Proper Balance
You`ve no doubt heard the phrase "everything in moderation." It`s hard to find anyone that follows this maxim religiously; everyone falls off the wagon now and again, whether it`s eating too much or exercising too little. But the one place...

Hypnosis is Used in Study of Emotions
There is a lot still to be learned about emotions. Approximately 20 years ago, researchers were under the impression that emotions and feelings originated with the heart, not the brain. They also believed that emotions could not be measured...

Geology.com | News - October 5, 2009

Hazard in the New Madrid Seismic Zone

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 11:54 PM PDT

There is broad agreement in the scientific community that a continuing concern exists for a major destructive earthquake in the New Madrid seismic zone. Many structures in Memphis, Tenn., St. Louis, Mo., and other communities in the central Mississippi River Valley region are vulnerable and at risk from severe ground shaking.

Chinese Companies Drilling the Gulf of Mexico?

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 10:43 PM PDT

Devon Energy reports that Chinese companies are interested in joint ventures with them on Gulf of Mexico oil and gas projects.

Shale Gas Potential and Pipelines in North Carolina

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 10:02 PM PDT

The North Carolina Geological Survey has a new publication: “Shale Gas Potential in Triassic Strata of the Deep River Basin, Lee and Chatham Counties, North Carolina with pipeline and infrastructure data.” This is a two-page summary in a .pdf document.

Coal Ash Gets More Scrutiny

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 07:58 PM PDT

A lengthy article on the 60 Minutes website describes several places where coal as is either intentionally or unintentionally in locations where people can contact it, water that has contacted it or breathe the dust particles. Is it unsafe in any of these situations?

Progress on Offshore Drilling Ban

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 10:34 AM PDT

One year ago, gasoline was at $4/gallon and a federal ban on certain types of offshore drilling was lifted. Since then opportunities to drill have not increased. An article at Investors.com explores the issues.

Samson The T. Rex Goes Unsold in Las Vegas

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 09:05 AM PDT

“Samson” is the name of the third most complete tyrannosaurus skeleton ever found. He was placed up for auction in Las Vegas with the expectation that he would fetch at least $8 million – the price paid about ten years ago for a similar fossil. Bidding fizzled at $3.7 million – less than [...]

Florida’s Solar-Powered City

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 08:35 AM PDT

Florida Power and Light is planning a solar-powered city on a property named “Babcock Ranch” which will have a population of about 49,000. Embedded video from CNN Video

Photos of Taiwan Debris Flow

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 08:07 AM PDT

A small collection of photos showing the damage done by a debris flow and river flood in southern Taiwan that occurred during Typhoon Morakot.

Sumatra: Earthquake-Triggered Landslides

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 08:00 AM PDT

Dave Petley reports on landslides in Indonesia that were triggered by the recent earthquake. “It is interesting to note that in all three of the large earthquakes upon which I have worked (1999 Taiwan, 2005 Pakistan, 2008 China), the media has tended to initially focus their coverage upon urban areas, whilst the real story has actually [...]

California Board for Geologists and Geophysicists Abolished

Posted: 04 Oct 2009 07:28 AM PDT

California Assembly Bill No. 20, 4th Extraordinary Session will abolish the Board for Geologists and Geophysicists effective October 23, 2009. More details and references at Arizona Geology Blog.

Vaccinated By FORCE, NOW AUTISTIC (video)


Unacceptable!

This little girl was taken out of the arms of her mother who didn't want her vaccinated, forcibly given vaccines, and ended up in critical condition that very day!

It is NOT the law that you must vaccinate your children (no matter what the doctor or schools tell you), and you can sign a form to make your child exempt.

The law states that schools must accept your children under 1 of 3 possible exemptions, depending on your state:

1. Religious - Vaccines are against your religion, no matter what religion your practice. You do not need to list a religion.

2. Philosophical - You don't believe in vaccines, you don't think they're safe, you don't think they've been tested enough, etc.

3. Medical - Your child has an autoimmune disease or had a negative reaction to a vaccine in the past.

Under such conditions it is dangerous to vaccinate a child and it states in the vaccine insert not to vaccinate under these circumstances, but doctors and nurses are NOT taught this so you must be firm!

Vaccinations are a school policy, NOT the LAW. If you choose not to vaccinate, the law is on your side.

Joyce Riley's THE POWER HOUR NEWS | October 5 2009


A Soldier’s Protest By: JOHN ALAN COEY -- John Alan Coey was a U.S. soldier during the Vietnam era who saw through the U.S. Government’s façade of “fighting communists” when it was actually aiding them in the field, and adopting their guiding principles at home. His “Soldier’s Protest” is reprinted here with permission from his mother. It not only describes the problems with our government during the Vietnam War, but also the same problems exist today with the Iraq war. He saw how globalists and bankers now effectively run our military and use it as their own private mercenary team to further their own greedy profits as well as enslaving the American people to their Communistic goals of globalism. (A BIG Thanks to David Deschesne, editor of the Fort Fairfield Journal for publishing some of John's works)

3 Failed Banks made the list Friday Oct. 2, 2009 -- 2 in Minnesota and 1 in Colorado.

E. coli path shows ground beef inspection flaws -- After reading this article, it will make you think twice before buying hamburger meat again!!!

Essential Oils in Common Spices Kill Sickness-Causing Germs in Food --In a study just published in the Journal of Food Science, a publication of the Institute of Food Technologists, researchers at Processed Foods Research and Produce Safety and Microbiology units of Western Regional Research Center from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) investigated the effectiveness of oregano, allspice and garlic essential oils (EOs) against disease-causing E. coli, Salmonella and Listeria. The EOs were incorporated into thin, tomato-based coatings known as edible films which were layered on top of the bacteria. The disease-causing germs were also exposed to vapors rising up from the EOs in the tomato film.

Curry powder ingredient, curcumin, may block nicotine activated cancer cells in head, neck -- Researchers found that curcumin, a compound found in turmeric, the Indian spice that gives curry its orange-yellow colour, may block nicotine from activating cancer causing cells in patients with head and neck cancer who continue to smoke or use nicotine products to help them quit. The researchers hope the findings will help to discover additional therapies for preventing and treating cancer.

Growing Number of Detroit Pastors Wear Handguns in Pulpit -- Michigan allows pastors to decide if someone registered to carry a handgun can do so for protection inside churches.The clergy in Detroit who arm themselves say they do so because of the high overall crime rate. But churchgoers elsewhere have been the target of violent attacks several times in recent years...Read More...

Kid vaccinated by force developed autism (video) -- This little girl was taken out of the arms of her mother who didn't want her vaccinated, forcibly given vaccines, and ended up in critical condition that very day!

Swine flu vaccine & NY health workers -- Remember these profound words: "There is no evidence that the vaccine will protect anyone from the virus."

RFID can help in containing swine flu -- Simple RFID tags can be used on the wristbands of patients and their movement can be tracked across wards. Health administrators can subsequently analyze the log of all patient interactions to immediately take precautionary action, in case a patient has interacted with an infected person. Considering the number of visitors to a hospital on a daily basis, this information can help in preventing the breakout of the pandemic.

Aspirin misuse may have made 1918 pandemic worse --High aspirin dosing levels used to treat patients during the 1918-1919 pandemic are now known to cause, in some cases, toxicity and a dangerous build up of fluid in the lungs, which may have contributed to the incidence and severity of symptoms, bacterial infections, and mortality.

Layoffs, bankruptcies & closings for September -- This is pretty stunning..but the recession is over don't you know......

Top 10 famous home schooled people

My Beautiful America - A 3 minute tour of 50 states.

California quake swarm continues -- A swarm of earthquakes have been shaking the Owens Valley since Wednesday. The quake activity intensified on Friday night, with more than 70 250 (and another 30 by 5:30 a.m. local time) temblors hitting by midnight. Bob Dollar of the US Geological Survey says such activity is not unexpected in this region of the Eastern Sierra.

Man evicted from house for resisting warrantless inspections -- A Pennsylvania man who refuses to allow city officials to enter his home without a warrant has been forced out to stay in a hotel instead, evicted by a notice posted on his door that forbids him from using or occupying the building he owns.

Obama: Trilateral Commission endgame -- As previously noted in Pawns of the Global Elite, Barack Obama was groomed for the presidency by key members of the Trilateral Commission. Most notably, it was Zbigniew Brzezinski, co-founder of the Trilateral Commission with David Rockefeller in 1973, who was Obama’s principal foreign policy advisor.

Police chiefs endorse anti terror community watch -- Using brochures, public service announcements and meetings with community groups, iWatch is designed to deliver concrete advice on how the public can follow the oft-repeated post-Sept. 11 recommendation, "If you see something, say something."
Related Article: IWatch Los Angeles site -- iWATCH, iREPORT, i KEEP US SAFE (iWATCH) is a community awareness program created to educate the public about behaviors and activities that may have a connection to terrorism.

Decatur Georgia installs wireless parking meters -- The city of Decatur in Georgia has taken a new approach to manage its parking meters and is testing a wireless system that could improve asset management, increase revenue, and make it easier for employees to do their jobs. Read More...

Feds sued to keep out of state's gun affairs -- In the second major front in the war over gun rights that has developed in just days, a lawsuit has been filed against U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder seeking a court order that the federal government stay out of the way of Montana's management of its own firearms.

Military's disaster proof cuisine tastes like soap -- The military’s got disaster-proof foodstuff down to a science: their meals ready-to-eat (MREs) are packaged, vacuum-sealed rations that supply high-calorie sustenance, have a multi-year shelf life and are prepped using nothing but water. Too bad they taste like Irish Springs.

The Group of Twenty and the evolution of global governance by Joan Veon -- The bottom line: the United Nations and the G8 have not brought or kept world peace, they have not prevented war and neither have they improved the finances of any country. Furthermore, they have not improved the state of the world either.

Smart meters in homes could be hacked -- Plans to install gas and electricity smart meters in every home by 2020 pose a "national cyber security risk" because the devices could be hacked into, one of the government's own data security consultants has warned.

Raising Awareness of the Harmful Effects of Cellphone Masts -- This is a website dedicated to a international community of people suffering adverse health effects from microwave transmitting telecommunications masts & cell-towers in the vicinity of their homes.

Excreted Tamiflu found in rivers -- The premier flu-fighting drug is contaminating rivers downstream of sewage-treatment facilities, researchers in Japan confirm. The source: urinary excretion by people taking oseltamivir phosphate, best known as Tamiflu.

World Bank could 'run out of money' within 12 months -- “By the middle of next year we will face serious constraints,” said its president Robert Zoellick, as he launched a major campaign to persuade rich nations to pour more money into the Washington-based institution.

WiFi signals used to see through walls -- Scientists at the University of Utah in the United States have found a way to harness Wi-Fi signals to 'see' through solid walls.

Sugary Mix Is Just What the Flu Doctor Ordered -- Cherry flavoring added to Tamiflu for kids!
**Related Fact sheet on cherry flavoring -- Why is there ethanol in it?

Reviewing Project Censored's Latest Top 25 Censored Stories -- For 33 years, Sonoma State University's (SSU) Project Censored (PC) has engaged in pioneering research on, and advocacy for, First Amendment issues. PC works cooperatively "with numerous independent (US) media groups," primarily to train SSU students "in media research and First Amendment issues and the advocacy for, and protection of, free press rights in the United States."

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Breaking News and Commentary from Citizens For Legitimate Government | 04 Oct 2009

'If you see someone wearing clothes that are too big and too heavy for the season,' report them. Police chiefs endorse anti-terror citizens watch --Program materials list nine types of suspicious behavior that should compel people to call police, and 12 kinds of places to look for it. The important places to watch include government buildings, mass gatherings, schools and public transportation. 03 Oct 2009 Los Angeles police Cmdr. Joan McNamara cited this summer's [Najibullah Zazi] incident as police chiefs meeting in Denver adopted a model for a nationwide community watch program that teaches people what behavior is truly suspicious and encourages them to report it to police. Los Angeles police Chief William Bratton, who developed the iWATCH program with McNamara. The Major Cities Chiefs Association, headed by Bratton and composed of the chiefs of the 63 largest police departments in the U.S. and Canada, endorsed iWATCH Saturday at its conference in Denver. [See: Virginia Terrorism Threat Assessment: Universities Possible Terror Portals --2009 Virginia Terrorism Threat Assessment.]

Spotting terrorists: New iWATCH program tells citizens what to watch for and where 03 Oct 2009 A new anti-terrorism community watch program, iWATCH, beginning this weekend in Los Angeles, advises the public that these nine suspicious signs should be reported to police: ...People drawing or measuring important buildings... [My favorite:] A person wearing clothes that are too big and too heavy for the weather... The iWATCH program advises people to be alert for those behaviors at these 12 important types of places...

Arrested for tweeting: New York pair accused of directing protesters during G-20 in Pittsburgh --FBI agents spent 16 hours Friday raiding the home of Madison and his wife 04 Oct 2009 State police have accused two anarchists from New York of using cell phones and the Internet messaging service Twitter [!] to direct the movements of protesters during the Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh. Police arrested Elliot M. Madison and Michael Wallschlaeger, both of Jackson Heights, N.Y., after they found them Sept. 24 in a Kennedy Township hotel room full of computers, police scanners and Pittsburgh-area maps, according to a state police criminal complaint.

Detainees Face Severe Conditions if Moved to U.S. 04 Oct 2009 The Justice Department has begun to hint in court filings that at least some of the defendants in the Sept. 11, 2001, case, as well as other prominent suspects, will be transferred to federal custody in the United States. ...Little attention has been paid to the conditions that high-value detainees would face in the United States. And those conditions, it turns out, would be vastly more draconian than they are at Guantanamo Bay. They will have little or no human contact except with prison officials. And the International Committee of the Red Cross, the only outside group with access to Camp 7, will no longer have contact with them.

US military indoctrinating Pakistani officers 04 Oct 2009 The United States has reportedly established a secret military training camp just a few kilometres away from Islamabad. According to The Nation, the base is situated in the heart of an industrial estate and is being used to recruit retired Pakistani military officers to work for the US military. The high-walled structure bears signs which suggest it is an auto repair shop. Military-style barbed wire is fixed to fences around the building and a watchtower can be seen from certain vantage points.

Terrorists could seize nuclear weapons if we fail in Afghanistan, warns Army chief 04 Oct 2009 The new head of the British Army has given a stark warning to the public of the 'terrifying prospect' of losing the war in Afghanistan. General Sir David Richards intervened by saying that if Britain and Nato failed in Afghanistan the risks to the western world would be 'enormous' and 'unimaginable', with the possibility of terrorists seizing nuclear weapons. Speaking to the Sunday Telegraph, the Chief of the General Staff said: 'If al-Qaeda and the Taliban believe they have defeated us – what next?'

UK will probably commit more troops to Afghanistan 04 Oct 2009 The UK government has said it is ready to send more soldiers to Afghanistan. General David Richards, Britain’s army commander, has told the Telegraph newspaper that the troops will be committed if requested by the commander of the US and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Afghan policeman fires on US troops, killing 2 03 Oct 2009 An Afghan policeman conducting a joint operation with U.S. soldiers opened fire on the Americans, killing two of them before fleeing, an Afghan official said Saturday, raising fears that militants have infiltrated the ranks of Afghan forces. Over a period of less than a month last year, Afghan policemen twice attacked American soldiers in the east. [US strategy in Afghanistan revealed: Pay Blackwater/Xe to train and equip Afghan troops who then fire on US soldiers. That way, a surge is 'needed' to stop the 'insurgency.' --LRP]

Ten US soldiers killed in Afghanistan 04 Oct 2009 Ten American troops were killed at the weekend in two surprise attacks that caused alarm in Nato’s US-led coalition. In one, hundreds of insurgents attacked a pair of isolated outposts in eastern Afghanistan, killing eight US soldiers and several Afghan policemen in the deadliest battle in 15 months. Scores more Afghan policemen were reportedly captured by the Taleban.

Propaganda leaflets dropped by RAF plane kill Afghan girl 30 Sep 2009 The crew of an RAF C130 Hercules had been flying over rural parts of the province as part of a leaflet campaign. The boxes of leaflets weight 30-40lbs, but are supposed to break open before landing in order to avoid injury. Usually the leaflets are supposed to scatter in mid-air after the box opens in the sky, but on this occasion, according to defence officials, it failed to open.

The Obusha AfPak Money Pit: Unlike the 'public option,' Congress doesn't ask if funding the Taleban to blow up contractors' bridges will add to the US deficit By Lori Price, www.legitgov.org 03 Oct 2009 Ever wonder WHY (besides protecting gas and opium pipelines) the US is *still* in Afghanistan? Ever ponder WHY US taxpayers are funding infrastructure programs in *Afghanistan,* instead of in the US? Today, this tidbit: Arrest Warrant Out for USAID Contractor in Afghanistan --A federal arrest warrant was quietly issued last month for a former official employed by the major US government reconstruction contractor here in Afghanistan, in a case that underscores the lure of potential contract fraud in Afghanistan. Scott "Max" Anthony Walker was a "security coordinator" for the $1.4 billion infrastructure program commissioned by US Agency for International Development and funded by US taxpayers.

Iraq delays oil law until after January elections 04 Oct 2009 Iraq's parliament has suspended discussions on a long-delayed oil investment law until after legislative 'elections' in January because of the long running dispute over control of the north's energy resources, a lawmaker said Sunday.

Feds look for soldiers likely exposed by KBR to toxic chemical in Iraq 03 Oct 2009 More than 1,100 soldiers, including members of the West Virginia National Guard were likely exposed to a highly toxic chemical [sodium dichromate] in southern Iraq in 2003, according to information provided to U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd by the U.S. Defense Department... In June, Russell Powell [a onetime member of the 82nd Airborne Division] and six other members of the West Virginia National Guard unit filed a lawsuit in the state's Northern District, alleging that KBR, a former Halliburton subsidiary that was awarded billions of dollars' worth of no-bid contracts to rebuild Iraq, negligently exposed them to the chemical.

Colombia says 'no' to US bases 04 Sep 2009 Amid reports of a deal reached for the establishment of US military bases in Colombia, the country's foreign minister says there is no need for more American personnel. In an effort to reassure other South American countries, Foreign Minister Jaime Bermudez told the BBC that Colombia seeks only "information, technology, intelligence" in the form of military cooperation with the US.

Muslim graves targeted in hate attack 02 Oct 2009 (UK) Up to 20 Muslim graves have been vandalised in a racially motivated attack at a south Manchester cemetery. Vandals struck at the Southern Cemetery on Barlow Moor Road sometime overnight on Thursday. Staff arrived at the cemetery to find up to 20 gravestones had been deliberately pushed over, and a number had broken.

E. Coli Path Shows Flaws in Ground Beef Inspection 04 Oct 2009 Ground beef is usually not simply a chunk of meat run through a grinder. Instead, records and interviews show, a single portion of hamburger meat is often an amalgam of various grades of meat from different parts of cows and even from different slaughterhouses. These cuts of meat are particularly vulnerable to E. coli contamination, food experts and officials say. Despite this, there is no federal requirement for grinders to test their ingredients for the pathogen. The [E.coli-tainted] frozen hamburgers that the Smiths ate, which were made by the food giant Cargill, were labeled "American Chef’s Selection Angus Beef Patties." Yet confidential grinding logs and other Cargill records show that the hamburgers were made from a mix of slaughterhouse trimmings and a mash-like product derived from scraps that were ground together at a plant in Wisconsin. The ingredients came from slaughterhouses in Nebraska, Texas and Uruguay, and from a South Dakota company that processes fatty trimmings and treats them with ammonia to kill bacteria. [Similar US corporaterrorists are behind the production of the swine flu vaccine (not to mention, the pandemic itself). Moreover, Barack Obama gave immunity -- on a Friday evening in the middle of July, when *no one* was paying attention -- to both the government and the pharmaterrorists manufacturing this deadly vaccine. You'd have to be *out of your mind* to get their injections. It's tantamount to going on a date with a serial killer. --LRP]

Vaccine Is On Its Way, But Public Still Wary 04 Oct 2009 Billions of tax dollars have been paid to giant pharmaceutical companies. Millions of doses of vaccine are on their way to huge warehouses across the country... As the federal government launches the most ambitious inoculation campaign in U.S. history, several surveys indicate the public is decidedly ambivalent. A nationally representative poll of 1,042 adults released Friday by the Harvard School of Public Health found that only 40 percent were sure they would receive the vaccine and that about half were certain their children would.

US rolls out massive swine flu vaccination campaign 03 Oct 2009 US health authorities are hoping to contain what they say is an intensifying swine flu pandemic with a massive A(H1N1) vaccination [propaganda] campaign starting this week. US health authorities on Friday announced plans for a massive vaccination campaign intended to protect infect millions of Americans, with the first distribution of 600,000 vaccine doses set for Tuesday, two weeks ahead of schedule.

Child swine flu jab trials begin 03 Oct 2009 About 1,000 children are taking part in a study testing two swine flu vaccines ahead of a UK vaccination programme. The trial, which began on Saturday, will involve children aged between six months and 12 in Oxford, Southampton, London, Bristol and Devon. Millions of doses of the vaccines have been purchased for use across the UK.

Exclusive Excerpts From Original Draft of Sarah Palin's Book Satire By R J Shulman 05 Oct 2009 We have obtained a copy of the original manuscript of Sarah Palin's book, Going Rouge: An American Life. The manuscript, originally titled, You Betcha I'm Qualified: How a Failed Weather Girl Almost Got Her Revenge, apparently went through a major rewrite at the insistence of her publisher, HarperCollins. However, here are unedited selections from the original You Betcha version... 'Times have changed in what is important in educating our youth. The traditional three Rs -- reading, writing and the other one -- are not enough. Now it's the three G's -- God, guns and gays.' (Satire)

Discrimination by Insurers Likely Even With Reform, Experts Say --To avoid patients with costly, complicated medical conditions, health plans could include in their networks relatively few doctors who specialize in treating those conditions. 04 Oct 2009 Any health-care overhaul that Congress and President Obama enact is likely to have as its centerpiece a fundamental reform: Insurers would not be allowed to reject individuals or charge them higher premiums based on their medical history. But simply banning medical discrimination would not necessarily remove it from the equation, economists and health-care analysts say.

FDIC Seizes Three Banks, Taking Tally For Year to 98 03 Oct 2009 Banking regulators seized small banks in Michigan, Minnesota and Colorado, bringing to 98 the number of U.S. banks that have failed so far this year. [The banks: Family-owned Jennings State Bank of Spring Grove, Minn.; Warren, Mich.-based Warren Bank; and Southern Colorado National Bank of Pueblo, Colo.]

UN warns of 70 percent desertification by 2025 03 Oct 2009 Drought could parch close to 70 percent of the planet's soil by 2025 unless countries implement policies to slow desertification, a senior United Nations official has warned. "If we cannot find a solution to this problem... in 2025, close to 70 percent could be affected," Luc Gnacadja, executive secretary of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, said Friday.

Polar bear cub hitches a ride 02 Oct 2009 Arctic waters are at best chilly and at worst close to freezing. Which may explain why a polar bear cub has recently been seen riding on the back of its mother as the bears swim across parts of the Arctic Ocean... Experts have rarely seen the behaviour, and they say the latest find suggests it may be a more common practice than previously thought.

Previous lead stories: Lockerbie papers say US secretly paid witness --Scottish detectives discussed secret payments of up to $3m made to witness and his brother, documents claim 02 Oct 2009 Two key figures in the conviction of the Lockerbie bomber were secretly given rewards of up to $3m (£1.9m) in a deal discussed by Scottish detectives and the US government, according to legal papers released today. The claims about the payments were revealed in a dossier of evidence that was intended to be used in an appeal by Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the Libyan convicted of murdering 270 people in the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 in 1988. The documents published online by Megrahi's lawyers today show that the US Department of Justice (DoJ) was asked to pay $2m to Tony Gauci, the Maltese shopkeeper who gave crucial evidence at the trial suggesting that Megrahi had bought clothes later used in the suitcase that allegedly held the Lockerbie bomb. The DoJ was also asked to pay a further $1m to his brother, Paul Gauci, who did not give evidence but played a major role in identifying the clothing and in "maintaining the resolve of his brother".

Obama agrees to keep Israel's nukes secret 02 Oct 2009 President Obama has reaffirmed a 4-decade-old secret understanding that has allowed Israel to keep a nuclear arsenal without opening it to international inspections, three officials familiar with the understanding said. The officials, who spoke on the condition that they not be named because they were discussing private conversations, said Mr. Obama pledged to maintain the agreement when he first hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House in May.

EU agency recommends Baxter's H1N1 flu shot 02 Oct 2009 European drugs regulators recommended Baxter's Celvapan vaccine 'against' H1N1 flu for approval on Friday and said it expected the shot to get a licence from the European Commission "shortly". The recommendation from the European Medicines Agency (EMEA) comes after its expert committee on new drugs also gave a green light last week to the first H1N1 swine flu vaccines from GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis, called Pandemrix and Focetria. [See: Baxter: The 'Lucky Larry' of swine flu Baxter Vaccine 'Oddities' By Lori Price 17 Jul 2009 Baxter files swine flu vaccine patent year ahead of outbreak; Baxter working on vaccine to stop swine flu, though admitted sending live pandemic flu viruses to subcontractor 26 Apr 2009; Baxter not to provide anti-swine flu vaccine to Czechs --Czech Health Ministry: Baxter unable to guarantee its vaccine is safe, won't be responsible for its side-effects 03 Aug 2009 The U.S. pharmaceutical firm Baxter which manufactures a vaccine against the swine flu in its Czech branch will not ensure the vaccine for the Czech Republic in the case of a pandemic, Baxter media representative Jana Cechova told CTK today.]