Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Financial Times | Saudis drop West Texas Intermediate WTI oil contract for benchmark pricing its oil

By Javier Blas in London

Published: October 28 2009 20:27 | Last updated: October 28 2009 20:27

Saudi Arabia on Wednesday decided to drop the widely used West Texas Intermediate oil contract as the benchmark for pricing its oil, dealing a serious blow to the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The decision by the world’s biggest oil exporter could encourage other producers to abandon the benchmark and threatens the dominance of the world’s most heavily traded oil futures contract. It is the main contract traded on Nymex.

The move reveals the growing discontent of Riyadh and its US refinery customers with WTI after the price of the price of the benchmark became separatedfrom the global oil market this year.

The surge in oil inventories in Cushing, Oklahoma, where WTI is delivered into America’s pipeline system, depressed the value of the WTI against other global benchmarks, throwing the global oil market into disarray.

In January, WTI, which usually trades at a premium of $1-$2 a barrel to Brent, fell sharply, leaving it at a discount of almost $12 – a record gap. This dislocation in the market continued well into the summer.

From January, Saudi Arabia will base the price of oil for its US customers on a new index developed by Argus, the London-based oil pricing company.

The Argus Sour Crude Index will track the price in the physical market of a basket of US Gulf Coast crudes, including Mars, Poseidon and Southern Green Canyon.

Argus said the change in policy reflected the “increased importance of the US Gulf coast sour crude market, in which both production and trading activity was rising sharply”.

Paul Horsnell, head of commodities research at Barclays Capital in London, said Saudi Arabia’s decision was likely to reflect a “wider discontent” from its customers in the US about WTI performance.

ExxonMobil, Marathon and Valero are among the US’s biggest buyers of Saudi crude oil.

Edward Morse, chief economist at LCM Commodities in New York, said: “It is a recognition by large players that WTI sometimes does not reflect the true value of crude oil in the waterborne market.”

Saudi Arabia has priced its oil using WTI since 1994.

The price was based on quotes from the physical market which were compiled by Platt’s, a unit of McGraw-Hill.

Oil companies then covered their exposure to WTI using the futures market on Nymex.

Bob Levin, managing director of market research at the CME Group-owned Nymex, said the exchange was ready to move with the market.

“We plan to introduce a cash-settled futures contract tracking the new Argus index,” he said.

Mike Vinciquerra, equity research analyst at BMO Capital Markets, said the new Argus index would not replace WTI. “It’s more a supplement,” he said.

Real-time Magnetosphere Simulation | Earth's Magnetosphere Update - October 28, 2009 8pm CDT



http://www2.nict.go.jp/y/y223/simulation/realtime/index.html

Cave's Headlines | October 28, 2009

Peter Schiff: The People Who Don’t Get Out of the Dollar Are Going to Be Broke (video)
Oct 27, 2009 ..They’re going to print money until they revive the economy. You can’t revive the economy by printing money. They’re going to suffocate it to death. It’s going to die by hyperinflation.

DailyJobCuts.com | Layoffs, Bankruptcies and Closures

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis | City of Houston is Bankrupt (So are California, Oregon, and Pension Plans in General)

National Severe Weather Map - And it's a 60 degrees right now at 7:45 pm CDT in Lincoln, Nebraska on October 28, 2009

RMN.com | Tuberculosis masquerading as Flu

Breaking News and Commentary from Citizens For Legitimate Government | 28 Oct 2009

Oh, my God. US to Give $125 Million to Upgrade Pakistan's Power Sector 29 Oct 2009 Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, seeking to bolster Islamabad's fight against Islamic extremists US corporaterrorists' profits, initiated a crash U.S. assistance program for Pakistan's power sector aimed at rolling back electricity shortages that threaten to cripple the South Asian nation's economy. Mrs. Clinton, on the first of a three-day diplomatic mission to Pakistan, said that Washington will disburse $125 million to Islamabad for the upgrading of key power stations and transmission lines. U.S. experts [!] are also beginning to work with Pakistani utility companies to reduce power outages and lost revenue caused by outmoded technologies and systemic non-payment by customers, which costs Pakistan hundreds of millions of dollars each year. [Clinton announces $125 million more to be sucked into the Obusha AfPak money pit for... wait for it... *Pakistan's* power sector (that the US bombs in its illegal killer drone attacks). We can't get single-payer health care in the US -- we can't even get a so-called public option -- because the Congressional pharma-wh*res (LieberBush, etc.) tell us it may add to the US deficit. Where are the calls for endless CBO studies on the billions wasted funding contractors, mercenaries, and terrorists benefiting from Obusha's wars? Bay Bridge closed after repair falls apart 28 Oct 2009 (CA) Three pieces of an emergency repair to the Bay Bridge's cantilever section made over Labor Day weekend snapped and crashed onto the upper deck of the span late Tuesday afternoon, striking three vehicles and forcing the indefinite closure of the region's busiest bridge. Caltrans officials ordered the closure of the bridge in both directions shortly after 7 p.m. and said late Tuesday night that it would be closed indefinitely. Too bad the bridge isn't in Pakistan. Then, Blackwater/Xe could blow it up, blame the Taliban, and the US could pay contractors billions to keep rebuilding it. --LRP]

UN rights investigator warns US drone attacks may violate international law 28 Oct 2009 UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions Philip Alston said Tuesday that the use of unmanned warplanes by the US to carry out attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan may be illegal. Alston criticized the US policy in a report to the UN General Assembly's human rights committee and then elaborated at a press conference.

Brother of Afghan president reportedly on CIA payroll 28 Oct 2009 The New York Times has reported that the brother of Afghan President Hamid Karzai has been taking regular payments from the Central Intelligence Agency. The Times, quoting current and former US intelligence officials, said Ahmed Wali Karzai had been paid for different services including the putting together of a CIA directed Afghan paramilitary force.

Brother of Afghan President Is on C.I.A. Payroll, Officials Say 28 Oct 2009 Ahmed Wali Karzai, the brother of the Afghan president and a suspected player in the country's booming illegal opium trade, gets regular payments from the Central Intelligence Agency, and has for much of the past eight years, according to current and former American officials. The agency pays Mr. Karzai for a variety of services, and those financial ties and the agency's close working relationship with him raise significant questions about America's war strategy, which is currently under review at the White House.

Gunmen storm UN guest house in Kabul, 12 dead 28 Oct 2009 Taliban militants wearing suicide vests and police uniforms stormed a guest house used by U.N. staff in the heart of the Afghan capital early Wednesday, killing 12 people -- including six U.N. staff. It was the biggest in a series of attacks intended to undermine next month's presidential runoff 'election.' A Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility for the early morning assaults, which also included rocket attacks at the presidential palace and the city's main luxury hotel.

October deadliest month for US troops in Afghanistan 27 Oct 2009 October has been the deadliest month for U.S. troops in Afghanistan since the start of the war in 2001, Pentagon officials said on Tuesday. The death of eight troops in bomb attacks in southern Afghanistan on Tuesday pushed the October death toll to 53, topping the previous high of 51 deaths in August, officials said.

Afghan bombs kill eight US troops 27 Oct 2009 Eight US soldiers have been killed in bomb attacks in southern Afghanistan, say Nato-led forces. An Afghan civilian was also killed in what were called "multiple complex IED attacks" - or improvised bombs. The deaths make October the deadliest month for American forces in the eight-year war in Afghanistan.

Car bomb kills 90 in Pakistan as Hillary Clinton visits 28 Oct 2009 A car bomb ripped through a crowded market killing 90 people in Pakistan's city of Peshawar on Wednesday, just hours after Washington's top diplomat arrived pledging a fresh start in sometimes strained relations. Wednesday's bomb, the latest urban attack since [Blackwater arrived] the army launched a major assault on rural Taliban strongholds two weeks ago, was the deadliest since 2007 when around 140 died.

Pakistani journalist claims life under threat following U.S agency expose 27 Oct 2009 A Pakistani journalist claims to have been receiving life threats from a U.S agency for critically writing against the Obama administration and for reporting its secret operations in the country. Fears of being harassed has him to use a pseudo name, S.F.A. Shah, who now fears for his life after breaking the story of the presence of Blackwater (now Xe Worldwide) in Peshawar along with Creative Associates International Inc (CAII). He had published names of the investigation and operational heads of the agency and had unmasked the nexus of BW, FBI and CIA. He had also investigated the activities of the US Consulate in Peshawar... The Nation reports. Now a report has revealed how he was hounded out of his home and was later approached by the CIA.

UN rights rapporteur: Guantanamo detainees should be tried or released 27 Oct 2009 UN Special Rapporteur on human rights and counterterrorism Martin Scheinin said Monday that all Guantanamo Bay detainees should be brought before US federal courts for trial by the January 22 deadline for closure set by US President Barack Obama. Scheinin said that the detainees should not be held indefinitely and that if they cannot be brought to the US for trial then they should be released.

Ex-Gitmo detainees sue UK to make evidence public 28 Oct 2009 Seven former Guantanamo Bay detainees asked the High Court in London on Tuesday to reject a government request to use secret sessions to hear allegations that Britain was complicit in their torture overseas. Britain's government and intelligence agencies want parts of a claim for damages filed by the detainees prisoners to be heard in private, and to restrict their lawyers' access to documents that the attorneys say may prove whether Britain was aware of the detainees' mistreatment. The seven men allege they were tortured or abused at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and at detention centers in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Morocco.

Obama reaffirms Guantanamo pledge 27 Oct 2009 President Barack Obama has declared that he is "serious" about shutting Guantanamo Bay amid speculation that a January deadline for its closure may be pushed back. At a fundraising event in Miami, the President reiterated his pledge to move all detainees off the controversial Cuban base. He made no mention of when the process would be complete, stoking speculation that the planned closure is behind schedule.

Court's flu plan raises due-process concern --'Precautionary' quarantines delaying arraignments 28 Oct 2009 Defense attorneys in the desert are crying foul at a plan to contain the spread of H1N1 virus or any other flu-like illnesses, saying that it could violate an inmate's constitutional right to a speedy trial. Riverside County Jail officials developed the protocol, which includes inmate quarantines, in an effort to curb the chances of an outbreak of flu-like viruses in the county's jails. Los Angeles County man Anthony Raymond Magdaleno,18, was scheduled to be arraigned on Tuesday... But Magdaleno did not appear in court for the second time in two days because he is one of several inmates quarantined at the Riverside County Jail in Indio in a precautionary action attributed to a flu-like virus, jail officials said.

Hearing in DHS supermarket slaying postponed again for jail flu quarantine 27 Oct 2009 Arraignment for a Los Angeles County man accused of gunning down a man in front of a Desert Hot Springs supermarket was delayed today for a second day in a row because of a flu quarantine at the Indio Jail. The hearing was rescheduled for Wednesday for 18-year-old Anthony Raymond Magdaleno, who faces a murder charge... His arraignment has been delayed three times because of the quarantine. Riverside County jails have been quarantining inmates with flu-like symptoms in attempt to keep the H1N1 virus and the seasonal flu from spreading through the population, said Capt. Raymond Gregory, who oversees jails in Indio and Blythe.

Pig plague could crash interwebs, say US feds --DHS bandwidth rationing? 28 Oct 2009 A severe outbreak of the H1N1 pandemic could overwhelm internet providers' capacity, according to a report submitted Monday, which called on Department of Homeland Security officials to develop contingency plans to avert such a crisis. "Concerns exist that a more severe pandemic outbreak than 2009's could cause large numbers of people staying home to increase their internet use and overwhelm internet providers' network capacities," according to the report, which was prepared by the US Government Accountability Office... The authors said the DHS, which is responsible for making sure critical networks remain operational during emergencies, needs to consider ways to mitigate the threat and held out the rationing of customer bandwidth or the blocking of websites as possibilities. ...Networks used by security exchanges would most likely survive because they generally bypass the public internet.

Pharmaterrorists' swine flu vaccine guinea pigs: prisoners. Texas to Give Prisoners H1N1 Vaccine Before General Public 28 Oct 2009 Texas prison officials say thousands of high-risk convicts may be vaccinated against the swine flu ahead of the general public as soon as next week. Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokeswoman Michelle Lyons and state health officials say more than 45,000 convicts are being considered for the vaccine. They've been targeted by a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention distribution policy to receive the vaccine. Texas is the second state [Massachusetts is the other state] to announce it would vaccinate prisoners before vaccinating the general public.

Massachusetts Prisoners With 'Health Risks' to Get H1N1 Shots Before General Public 15 Oct 2009 Massachusetts health officials have decided to give swine flu vaccinations to prisoners with high health risks before the general population. Prison officials warn that inmates could quickly spread the flu if not inoculated -- particularly those in high-risk groups, such as AIDS patients or the aged. Department of Public Health spokeswoman Jennifer Manley told the Boston Herald that vaccines will go to correctional facilities the second week of November for prison health care workers and high risk prisoners. [Gee, can these Nazis get any more blatant with their medical experiments?]

U.S. may end up discarding unused H1N1 vaccine [Why not just toss the sh*t now to save time?] 27 Oct 2009 The U.S. government may end up throwing away unused doses of swine flu vaccine if people cannot get it soon enough, the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Tuesday. CDC director Dr. Thomas Frieden said 22.4 million doses were now available to states, which can get them a day after they order them. "It's quite likely that too little vaccine is one of the things that's making people more interested in getting vaccinated, frankly," Frieden told reporters.

Pregnant Women Wary of Swine Flu Shot --Survey Shows Most Pregnant Women and Moms of Young Kids Won't Get Vaccinated 27 Oct 2009 A new survey shows only about one in four pregnant women and mothers of young children plan to get the H1N1 flu vaccine this year, despite recommendations from public health groups massive propaganda campaigns urging them to do so. Only 27% plan on getting the H1N1 flu vaccine.

Swine flu doctors tell footballers to stop spitting 28 Oct 2009 It is one of the most common complaints from spectators of the beautiful game. And yesterday, footballers were warned that spitting during games is not only unattractive, but could increase the risk of spreading swine flu. The warning comes as players at two Premier League clubs in England were struck down by the virus, prompting fears that it could spread to other teams and players.

Experts discount 'accident' theory in Harvard pathology lab coffee poisoning 26 Oct 2009 A leading toxicologist believes the chances are slim that six lab workers at Harvard University Medical School were poisoned by accident. "An accident? Sodium azide is a poison," said David M. Benjamin, a toxicologist and Chestnut Hill-based clinical pharmacologist. "Absolutely not." The Herald reported yesterday that six scientists and students at the New Research Building in Boston’s Longwood Medical area were mysteriously poisoned after drinking from a communal, single-serve coffee machine on the eighth floor near their pathology lab on Aug. 26. Seconds later all six reported symptoms including dizziness and low blood pressure and were taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center for treatment.

Two Chicago men accused of plotting terror attacks in Denmark --U.S. citizen allegedly conspired with high-ranking operatives overseas, using code words to conceal plot called the "Mickey Mouse Project." 27 Oct 2009 Federal authorities have arrested and charged two Chicago area men in connection with an alleged terrorist plot focused on targets in Denmark after a newspaper there published cartoons that enraged the Muslim community. Prosecutors in Chicago and the District said that the men posed "no imminent danger" and noted that David Coleman Headley and Tahawar Hussain Rana have been in U.S. custody for several days while they conducted further "investigative activity."

Greyhound bus passengers get screened, pat down in special TSA operation --Everyone who walked into the terminal went through a metal detector like those at airports, and baggage was screened for explosives. 22 Oct 2009 The TSA's Visible Intermodal Prevention and Response (VIRP) teams stage periodic operations at bus and train stations, ports and other transportation centers. There was no specific threat to the bus station on John Young Parkway south of Colonial Drive. On Thursday, 50 officials from agencies including TSA, Orlando police, the Orange County Sheriff's Office, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection patted down passengers. Behavior and explosives experts and dogs trained to sniff out bombs and drugs also were used.

Anti-terrorism exercise held at CBBT 27 Oct 2009 Eight federal and local law enforcement agencies put on a show of force at the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel (CBBT) Tuesday. Random traffic stops were conducted at the north and south toll gates. The security check is part of the Transportation Security Agency's (TSA) Viper Program. It's a effort to deter terrorist activity and protect our bridges and tunnels.

Ex-A.I.G. Chief Is Back, Luring Talent From Rescued Firm 27 Oct 2009 Maurice R. Greenberg, who built the American International Group into an insurance behemoth with an impenetrable maze of on- and offshore companies, is at it again. Even as he has been lambasting the government for its handling of A.I.G. after its near collapse, Mr. Greenberg has been quietly building up a family of insurance companies that could compete with A.I.G. To fill the ranks of his venture, C.V. Starr & Company, he has been hiring some people he once employed. Now, Mr. Greenberg may have received some unintended assistance from the United States Treasury. Just last week, the Treasury severely limited pay at A.I.G. and other companies that were bailed out by taxpayers. That may hasten the exodus of A.I.G.’s talent, sending more refugees into Mr. Greenberg’s arms, since C. V. Starr is free to pay whatever it wants. [AIG --they're like the monsters in the 'Aliens' movie. People kept feeding them so they could grow bigger and then absorb their hosts. --LRP]

New York Fed's Secret Choice to Pay for Swaps Hits Taxpayers 27 Oct 2009 By Sept. 16, 2008, AIG, once the world’s largest insurer, was running out of cash, and the U.S. government stepped in with a rescue plan. The government’s commitment to AIG through credit facilities and investments would eventually add up to $182.3 billion... After less than a week of private negotiations with the banks, the New York Fed instructed AIG to pay them par, or 100 cents on the dollar. The content of its deliberations has never been made public. Bloomberg News has filed a Freedom of Information Act request seeking copies of the term sheets related to AIG’s counterparty payments, along with e-mails and the logs of phone calls and meetings... The request is pending. The Federal Reserve has been reluctant to publish information on its efforts to stabilize the financial system since the crisis began. The Fed has loaned more than $2 trillion, yet it refuses to name the recipients of the loans, or cite the amount they borrowed, saying that doing so may set off a run by depositors and unsettle shareholders.

CLG: Silence On the Senator --The Lieberman Lie Pie is growing, and Connecticut's largest newspaper is ignoring it. By Lori Price 28 Oct 2009 When Senator Chris Dodd (D) sneezes, the state of Connecticut knows it. We know it, because the Hartford Courant tells us... and tells us and tells us. On the flip side, one can (jokingly) observe that one would have to revert to the Hartford Courant's founding date -- 1764 -- to find positive coverage of Dodd or any other Democrat. The Courant, mindful that reporting Joe Lieberman's actual actions would drag his approval ratings down lower than the Marianas Trench, avoids the topic of Joe(no)mentum altogether.

Lieberman says to back GOP filibuster against Democrats on health care 27 Oct 2009 Sen. Joe Lieberman (R-Israel) said Tuesday that he’d back a GOP filibuster of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s health care reform bill. LieberBush said he opposes any health care bill that includes a government-run insurance program -- even if it includes a provision allowing states to opt out of the program, as Reid has said the Senate bill will.

Poll: support growing for public option 27 Oct 2009 Public support for a public option in health care appears to be growing, according to a new poll. The NBC/Wall Street Journal survey found that 48 percent support a government-run plan to compete with private insurers and 42 percent oppose it -- the strongest support ever in the survey. Last month, opinion was basically divided with 46 percent in favor and 48 percent against.

Landfill sites may be used to dump radioactive waste --Government poised to allow nuclear power generators to put atomic waste in ordinary sites to cut cost [!] of decommissioning old reactors 19 Oct 2009 The [criminally insane] government is poised to allow nuclear power generators to use ordinary landfill sites for dumping "hundreds of thousands of tons" of waste in an attempt to reduce the £73bn cost of decommissioning old reactors. The move has triggered a swath of applications around the country from big corporations trying to cash in on this potential new business, but infuriated local councils and campaign groups.

Push to Legalize Marijuana Gains Ground in California 28 Oct 2009 These are heady times for advocates of legalized marijuana in California -- and only in small part because of the newly relaxed approach of the federal government toward medical marijuana. State lawmakers are holding a hearing on Wednesday on the effects of a bill that would legalize, tax and regulate the drug -- in what would be the first such law in the United States. Tax officials estimate the legislation could bring the struggling state about $1.4 billion a year, and though the bill’s fate in the Legislature is uncertain, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) has indicated he would be open to a "robust debate" on the issue.

Previous lead stories: In pandemic, Internet providers might need govt authorization to block popular websites --'The DHS is responsible for ensuring that critical telecommunications infrastructure is protected.' 26 Oct 2009 Securities exchanges have a sound network back-up if a severe pandemic keeps people home and clogging the Internet [!?!] but the Homeland Security Department has done little planning, Congressional investigators said on Monday... Blocking Websites: Private Internet providers might need government authorization to block popular websites, it [GAO report] said, or to reduce residential transmission speeds to make way for commerce. The Financial Services Sector Coordinating Council for Critical Infrastructure Protection and Homeland Security, a group of private-sector firms and financial trade associations, has been working to ensure that trading could continue if big exchanges had to close because of the risk of disease transmission.

Guantánamo torture: UK wants claims of complicity to be heard in secret --The government also wants its evidence kept secret from defence lawyers. 26 Oct 2009 The government wants allegations that it was complicit in the torture by the US of Britons held as terrorism suspects to be heard in secret. In documents seen by the Guardian, lawyers for the government argue it must be allowed to present evidence to the high court with the public excluded, otherwise Britain's relations with other countries and its national security could be damaged. The government also wants its evidence kept secret from defence lawyers. Lawyers for seven men who are now all back in the UK after the US released them without charge will tomorrow go to the high court in London to fight the government's attempt, which they say is designed to cover the embarrassment of ministers and the security services.

Cost of Afghanistan project soars, benefits exaggerated 25 Oct 2009 Flipping a switch on one of Afghanistan's long-awaited electrical power plants in August, U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry urged Afghans to think of U.S. taxpayers' support when they turn their lights on at night. To some U.S. experts, however, the project is the latest example of exaggerated political expectations and wasted American taxpayers' dollars in the effort to 'rebuild' Afghanistan. Plagued by delays and rising costs, the project reveals how the U.S. government continues to ignore the hard lessons of Iraq, critics say, where contractors received billions of dollars with little oversight and inspectors have found rampant waste, fraud and abuse.

TimesOnline.co.uk | Large Hadron Collider switched on after year of repairs

October 28, 2009

(David Bebber/The Times)

The magnet test and assembly plant at the Large Hadron Collider, which was switched off in September last year

FULL STORY

Rense.com | America's Drug Crisis - Brought To You By The CIA

UFOs sighted by Marines in Iraq (YouTube)

InfoWars.com | Boss Bloomberg buys another election… as 39,000 homeless people check into NYC shelters each night

Jerry Mazza

Infowars
October 28, 2009

Let’s take the first scary fact. Mike the Boss Bloomberg (as in Boss Tweed) is spending $85 million on this his third term, after New Yorkers voted twice for two-term limits. A little arm-twisting, a raise for the City Council, and badaboom, they rubber stamped it. But, as the New Times reports, “he’s on pace to spend between $110 million and $140 million before Nov. 3” to beat his Democratic Rival Bill Thompson, whose got $6 million to spend and is twenty points behind him. Why such spending angst? Something big must be on the line..... FULL STORY

Rockefellers Fund Global-warming Protests as Earth Cools

Alex Newman

The New American
October 28, 2009

All across the world, collections of global-warming protestors financed by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund gathered on October 24 to call for forceful “climate change” action at the United Nations summit in Copenhagen, Denmark, this December.

Most of the gatherings were minuscule, even in big cities, but the effort did receive widespread publicity. According to organizers cited by Agence France-Presse, over 5,000 demonstrations were held in more than 180 countries.... FULL STORY

InfoWars.com | Has President Obama, the Constitutional Lawyer, Committed Open Treason?

JTCoyoté
Infowars
October 28, 2009

“Has President Obama, the Constitutional Lawyer, Committed Open Treason?”

When the president of the United States, Barack H. Obama accepted rotating status as chairman of the United Nations Security Council, he committed high treason… not only a direct violation of article 1 section 9 clause 7 of the Constitution for the United States of America, which states emphatically:
“No title of nobility shall be granted by the United States; and no person holding any office of profit or trust under them, shall without consent of Congress accept of any present, emolument, office, or title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.”

But this act by the President also has violated the 13th article of amendment that was duly ratified by March of 1819, but with secrecy and by active subterfuge, it was replaced by Lincoln’s 14th amendment right after the Civil War. This duly ratified original 13th amendment states the following:

“If any citizen of the United States shall accept, claim, receive, or retain any title of nobility or honour, or shall without the consent of Congress..... FULL STORY

InfoWars.com | Car bomb kills 90 in Pakistan as Hillary Clinton visits

Zeeshan Haider and Andrew Quinn
Reuters
October 28, 2009

A car bomb ripped through a crowded market killing 90 people in Pakistan’s city of Peshawar on Wednesday, just hours after Washington’s top diplomat arrived pledging a fresh start in sometimes strained relations.....

InfoWars.com | U.S. Government Now Wages Wars on Teddy Bears

Jack Williams
Infowars
October 28, 2009

New federal legislation (signed by President Obama) and agency programs have some local police and fire departments afraid to continue their policies of giving cuddly little teddy bears to comfort traumatize children at scenes of disasters.

Whether or not children are caught in car accidents, health emergencies, or cases of domestic abuse, police officers and fire-fighters have long found that little teddy bears placed into the arms of hysterical children can calm them in the midst of chaos.

But now, thanks to an over-reaching state, teddy bears will scarcely be made available to children when they most need them.

The “busy bodies” of Congress recently passed legislation entitled, the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, to be implemented by the U.S. Product Safety Commission (CPSC). Then, the CPSC launched something they are calling the “Resale Round-up.”

Quoting Fox News, this Resale Round-up could prove very expensive for some of us: “Americans who slap a one dollar price tag on one of their used possessions, at garage sales or bazaar events, risk being hit with fines of up to $15 million. FULL STORY

Law.com | Price to PepsiCo for Not Being in Court: $1.26 Billion

EDT, Wednesday October 28, 2009 - What's the cost of not showing up to court? For PepsiCo Inc., it's a $1.26 billion default judgment. A Wisconsin state court socked the company with the monster award in a case alleging that PepsiCo stole the idea to bottle and sell purified water from two Wisconsin men.

Now the company is scrambling to salvage the situation. The damages award was handed down on Sept. 30. PepsiCo filed motions to vacate the order and dismiss the claims on Oct. 13, saying it wasn't even aware of the lawsuit until Oct. 6.

The litigation began in April when Charles Joyce and James Voigt sued the soft drink maker and two of its distributors, alleging they had misappropriated trade secrets from confidential discussions the plaintiffs had with the distributors in 1981 about selling purified water. The information was illicitly passed to PepsiCo, which used it to develop and sell Aquafina bottled water, the plaintiffs allege in the case filed in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County before Judge Jacqueline Erwin.... (FULL STORY)

BlacklistedNews.com | October 28, 2009


Vigilante justice spreads across Mexico



Antipsychotic drugs widely used in children caused youths to gain as much as 19 pounds on average after just 11 weeks on the medications, according to a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.


Dr. Diane Harper, lead researcher in the development of two human papilloma virus vaccines, Gardasil and Cervarix, said the controversial drugs will do little to reduce cervical cancer rates and, even though they’re being recommended for girls as young as nine, there have been no efficacy trials in children under the age of 15.

Best Buy is selling a transmitting device that lets parents keep track of their children. Parents can place the device in a child's backpack or lunch box, for example.

It is impossible to overstate the importance of the climate-change treaty now being negotiated for adoption at the Copenhagen, Denmark, U.N. meeting in December.


Brother Industries, Ltd. has just announced that next year it plans to produce Retinal Imaging Display (RID) glasses that augment regular vision.

Foreign Service officer and former Marine captain says he no longer knows why his nation is fighting

Ahmed Wali Karzai, the brother of the Afghan president and a suspected player in the country’s booming illegal opium trade, gets regular payments from the Central Intelligence Agency, and has for much of the past eight years, according to current and former American officials.

The emergency-use authorization allows use of the drug without prior FDA approval.

Israel is denying Palestinians access to even the basic minimum of clean, safe water, Amnesty International says.


In the months leading up to the September 2008 collapse of giant insurer American International Group Inc., Elias Habayeb and his colleagues worked nights and weekends negotiating with banks that had bought $62 billion of credit-default swaps from AIG, according to a person who has worked with Habayeb.

Capmark Financial Group Inc., the lender owned by companies including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and KKR & Co., filed for bankruptcy protection after posting a second-quarter loss of about $1.6 billion.

There is no official or legal definition of the term. Instead, the police have made a vague stab at what they think it means.

“AFRICOM facilitates the United States advancing on the African continent, taking control of the Eurasian continent and proceeding to take the helm of the entire globe.”

The bourse, based on the Gulf economic free zone island of Kish, has been planned for years but had faced repeated delays. The first phase of the exchange for trading oil products was inaugurated in February.

Baghdad's governor on Monday blamed negligence or even collusion by the security forces for devastating twin suicide bombings that killed around 100 people in the heart of the capital.

George Ure's UrbanSurival.com | 1:30pm Update - October 28, 2009

Keeping Up Appearances

Missiles to China to Save US Economy?

To be sure the evidence here is circumstantial, but the facts are quickly falling into place:

President Obama has issued the power and authority of his office to Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, an (American of Chinese descent) and two term Washington State governor - who is now in China.

Specifically, the delegation of powers reads:

"Presidential Determination No. 2009–31 of September 29, 2009 Presidential

Determination On the Delegation of Certifications Under Section 1512 of Public Law 105–261 Memorandum for the Secretary of Commerce

By virtue of the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including section 301 of Title 3, United States Code, I hereby delegate to you the functions of the President under section 1512 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1999 (NDAA). In the performance of your responsibility under this memorandum, you shall consult, as appropriate, the heads of other executive departments and agencies. You are authorized and directed to publish this determination in the Federal Register.

And what exactly does this Section 1512 authorize?

Sec. 1512. Certification of exports of missile equipment or technology to China.

SEC. 1512.

CERTIFICATION OF EXPORTS OF MISSILE EQUIPMENT OR TECHNOLOGY TO CHINA.

The President shall certify to the Congress at least 15 days in advance of any export to the People’s Republic of China of missile equipment or technology (as defined in section 74 of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2797c)) that— (1) such export is not detrimental to the United States space launch industry; and (2) the missile equipment or technology, including any indirect technical benefit that could be derived from such export, will not measurably improve the missile or space launch capabilities of the People’s Republic of China.

So, that's why our Commerce Secretary is in China this week, maybe? I mean besides to give a speech to the students at Jinan University in Guangzhou, of course...

Wait till the MSM wakes up on this. So is the reason for the dollar turnaround that the Chinese are getting a little quid pro quo not to bankrupt the USDA ...just yet? A fine question which someone beside an old goat rancher like me in the East Texas outback oughta be asking!


MORE>>>

SteveQuayle.com | Hot Headlines - October 28, 2009

WHO Memos 1972 Explains How to Turn Vaccines into a Means of Killing
Internet Could Get Clogged During Flu Pandemic
Pilot Monitors Chemtrail Production by 2 C-17 Globemaster Cargo Planes
The Raid That Rocked the Met: Why Gun and Drugs Op on 6,717 Safety Deposit Boxes Could Cost Taxpayer a Fortune

Regulators Prepare for the Next 'Big One'
Could Cost Taxpayer a Fortune
Bring on the Banking Dullards
It Will Be Difficult for the Housing Market to Return to Normal
Japan's Fujii Says He Will Skip G-20 Finance Meeting Next Week
300,000 People Readied for Evacuation in Albay
Kilauea Sends Flow Over Road But Stalls
Volcanic Eruptions Caused Ancient Warming and Cooling
Dismantling of America

Prosperity and the Roots of American Order
Helicopter Rumors Refuse to Die
Who Wants War with Iran?
Attempted Murder of 6 Harvard Microbiologists

Disturbingly Real Replicants from Hanson Robotics
Spy Cameras in Digital Converter Boxes – video
New Route to Nano Self-assembly Found

Joyce Riley's THE POWER HOUR NEWS | October 27, 2009


Benefits of Hemcrete -- To the lady that called into The Power Hour who lives in a "tepee" in Alaska. A Power Hour listener did some research on hemp and found out that you can use hemp by products in construction like construction blocks or powder that can be shaped for building and insulation purpose. Thanks Knightrider777!!!

4th teen from same Palo Alto high school commits suicide -- For the fourth time in less than six months, a student from one Palo Alto high school has committed suicide, authorities say. The boy stepped in front of a train at the same location where three other students have killed themselves since May.

Gardasil Researcher Drops A Bombshell -- Dr. Diane Harper, lead researcher in the development of two human papilloma virus vaccines, Gardasil and Cervarix, said the controversial drugs will do little to reduce cervical cancer rates and, even though they’re being recommended for girls as young as nine, there have been no efficacy trials in children under the age of 15.

Swine flu peaks out before vaccines make it into widespread distribution -- Swine flu infections have peaked out in the USA, even before drug companies could get their vaccines injected into everyone. According to CDC findings announced recently in Atlanta, one in five U.S. children have already experienced the flu this month, and most of those were likely H1N1 swine flu cases, the CDC says.

Report: Exposure to the H1N1 flu virus could protect people form the H5N1 bird flu -- Kristien Van Reeth and colleagues at Ghent University infected pigs with a closely related “predecessor” to the current pandemic strain of the flu virus. Four weeks later they also infected these animals with the H5N1 virus, and found that they had developed some immunity to bird flu.
What is H5N1 you ask: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Influenza_A_virus_subtype_H5N1

Obama's daughters get swine flu shot, but he is waiting to get his vaccine until more becomes available -- President Barack Obama's daughters, Malia and Sasha, have received their swine flu shots. A spokeswoman for first lady Michelle Obama said Tuesday that 11-year-old Malia and 8-year-old Sasha received their H1N1 shots last week from a White House doctor after the vaccine became available to schoolchildren in the Washington, D.C., area.

Governors & Muppet Elmo dragged out for public service announcements on flu -- the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced the availability of thirteen new 30-second flu radio public service announcements (PSA). These new radio messages feature 13 of America’s governors and Elmo from Sesame Street. The messages, which will be promoted to radio stations across the country, promote key flu prevention messages to parents and children.

Massachusetts House passes H1N1 pandemic bill -- As feared Massachusetts House of Representatives passed H1N1 bill. House of Representatives to take the state closer to giving the governor nearly unlimited power to declare states of emergency and public health emergencies.

What's behind the false flag flu emergency? -- Misdirection, overreaction and lack of preparedness by public health officials is a clear indication to the public that they cannot totally rely upon potentially problematic vaccines or anti-viral drugs to defend themselves against the flu. QUOTE: "The public should utilize bona fide immune boosters such as vitamin D and vitamin C, and take nutrients that are documented to reduce the duration and severity of the disease which include vitamin E, the trace mineral selenium, the sulfur compound NAC, and elderberry."

VIDEO: 9-11 and the Medical Reserve Corps -- Video of HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius calling for health professionals to consider enlisting in the Medical Reserve Corps. (now tell me everyone, but is this woman scary looking & monotonous?)

Curcumin inhibits cancers of the head & neck -- The yellowish orange Indian spice turmeric, used to flavor curries, contains a remarkable phytochemical known as curcumin -- and this natural substance is the target of feverish research across a spectrum of medical disciplines. The reason? Curcumin has shown remarkable promise in helping the human body in a wide variety of ways. Read More...

87.4 million people using government health programs such as Medicare/Medicaid -- SK&A, a leading provider of healthcare information and research, today released its Physician Office Acceptance of Government Insurance Programs Report, which reveals that 83% of U.S. medical offices accept Medicare and 65% accept Medicaid.

Recession declared over, but job losses mounting -- It's about to become official: The recession is over—but not the pain.
The government will release figures this week expected to show that the economy has awakened from its deepest slump since the 1930s and is in the early stages of a recovery. But the following week, the government will issue another set of figures expected to show unemployment continuing to rise toward and possibly above a clearly recessionary 10 percent.

Feds to convince DC area taxpayers to embrace $4.8 billion mileage tax -- Washington, DC regional officials seek federal gas tax money to study political implication of $4.8 billion mileage tax on motorists.

"Little Buddy" GPS device keeps track of your kid -- Best Buy is selling a transmitting device that lets parents keep track of their children. Parents can place the device in a child's backpack or lunch box, for example. The "Little Buddy Child Tracker" retails for $100 (far less than other devices that sell for $200 to $500). It combines global satellite positioning and cellular technology to signal the child's whereabouts to a computer or smartphone.

AFRICOM and America's military agenda: Taking the helm of the entire world -- “AFRICOM facilitates the United States advancing on the African continent, taking control of the Eurasian continent and proceeding to take the helm of the entire globe.”

Journal article says suppressed study show GM corn killed ladybugs -- A recent article in Nature Biotechnology on how biotechnology companies restrict independent research described a study showing that a genetically modified corn killed ladybugs. The study was suppressed by the corn's developer.

German pilot describes spreading of Chemtrails -- Description of a commercial jet pilot - The written description was made on Aug. 17. 2009 and is reproduced in this article as a literal transcript.

FBI raid Pennsylvania Turnpike offices in corruption probe -- A number of Pennsylvania Turnpike officers have lost computer hard drives to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Last Thursday morning Oct 22, FBI officers showed up unexpectedly at the Turnpike offices in Harrisburg and apparently presented their authority (subpoena) to impound, examine and confiscate equipment and records as part of a criminal investigation. The agents returned and spent most of Friday at the Turnpike also. Nothing has been announced by either the FBI or the Turnpike.

Squalene in H1N1 vaccine -- The people who do take the vaccine are likely to get a dose that has squalene. The military has taken a serious thrashing over the years for their use of squalene in "classified vaccines" , so you can find out quite a bit about the use of squalene and other vaccine adjuvants in the various web-sites the military has set up to explain their position.

The case for precaution in the use of cell phones -- Electromagnetic fields generated by cell phones should be considered a potential human health risk. Sufficient time has not elapsed in order for us to have conclusive data on the biological effects of cell phones and other cordless phones — a technology that is now universal.
Websites on electromagnetic radiation:
http://www.radiationresearch.org
http://www.guineapigsrus.org

DOE awards $3.4 billion for smart grid upgrades -- The Dept. of Energy has awarded $3.4 billion in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act grants to modernize the electric power grid and boost its efficiency and reliability.

DARPA looks to send the Internet into orbit -- There’ve been satellites orbiting Earth for half a century. But getting information to and from them is still a pain. Which is why Pentagon research arm Darpa is looking to finally hook the orbiting spacecraft up with reliable broadband connections. It’s part of a larger movement to extend terrestrial networks into space, and eventually build an “Interplanetary Internet.”

Mathew Hoh, Senior Civilian official in Afghanistan resigns over US strategy -- A key U.S. official in Afghanistan has resigned in protest over U.S. policy in the war-torn region, as the Obama administration deliberates its future strategy there.

Fighting Afghanistan's dumbed down and deadly bombs -- Afghanistan’s low-tech, relatively-primitive bombs might be even harder to stop than Iraq’s comparatively-sophisticated improvised explosives. The Pentagon is sinking almost a billion dollars into new tools to stop this dumbed-down threat, like sensors and software that can detect minute changes on the ground, along with dozens of other initiatives.

Coming in December: World Government

The ominous "success" of re-education -- "The purpose of education and the schools is to change the thoughts, feelings and actions of students."

Australia faces famine expert warns -- Experts say greatest threat to the world is food production on land and in the water. A food production expert says Australia may face a massive famine if governments fail to address an impending global food shortage.

ADHD drugs side effects raise concerns -- A new report from Australia is raising alarm about potentially dangerous side effects of drugs used to treat ADHD. The report states that 30 children have had suicidal thoughts (some attempting suicide), while taking drugs for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)causing the National Health and Medical Research Council in Australia to upgrade the guidelines for prescribing ADHD drugs, such as Ritalin.

UK: How police rebranded lawful protest as "domestic extremism" -- About 600 climate change campaigners had gathered outside the Drax power station in North Yorkshire. They had chosen to demonstrate there because the huge plant is the UK's biggest emitter of carbon. The protesters were mainly families with young children, accompanied by clowns, cyclists, baton twirlers and, according to some reports, a giant ostrich puppet.

The Top 20 worst foods in America

2009 US Army aviation accidents costly -- So far, 2009 is shaping up to be a costlier year for U.S. Army aviation accidents and incidents, according to an Aerospace DAILY analysis of data provided by the Army Combat Readiness/Safety Center (USACRC). The average cost per accident or incident for this calendar year was about $220,178 as of July 28, the last date for which data were provided, compared to about $176,638 for all of 2008, the analysis shows.

San Francisco's Bay Bridge closed indefinitely due to fallen debris (video)

Authorities closed the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge Tuesday after a cable snapped on the upper deck of the span during the evening commute. The bridge is expected to be closed for at least 24 hours. (Oct. 27)

NaturalNews.com | Today's Featured Stories - October 28, 2009


Swine flu peaks out before vaccines even make it into widespread distribution
(NaturalNews) Swine flu infections have peaked out in the USA, even before drug companies could get their vaccines injected into everyone. According to CDC findings announced recently in Atlanta, one in five U.S. children have already experienced the...

Curcumin inhibits cancers of the head and neck
(NaturalNews) The yellowish orange Indian spice turmeric, used to flavor curries, contains a remarkable phytochemical known as curcumin -- and this natural substance is the target of feverish research across a spectrum of medical disciplines. The reason...

Vitamin D: How to Determine Your Optimal Dose
In the wide world of supplements, vitamin D is the superstar. For the last few years, this humble nutrient has been featured prominently in allopathic and alternative circles alike. It has basked in the rays of media publicity, and has survived...


OCA's Ronnie Cummins joins NaturalNews Talk Hour to discuss "organic cheaters" vs. honest organic
(NaturalNews) This week's NaturalNews Talk Hour features Ronnie Cummins, Director of the Organic Consumers Association, who will discuss "Organic Deception, Labeling Fraud, Fair Trade & More." The talk hour runs this Thursday evening at 6pm Pacific /...

Keep Your Heart Strong and Healthy with Traditional Chinese Medicine
Traditional Chinese Medicine offers ways to keep the Heart healthy and strong, even when a person does not have typical symptoms of heart disease. Heart health is fundamental to whole body health. Many people have a family history of heart...

Using probiotics to prevent or eliminate Candida
(NaturalNews) Probiotics are good for much more than simply enhancing intestinal health and improving digestion; they're also very effective at preventing candida albicans (as you'll see below). Here you'll find a healthy collection of explanations...

Homeopathic Remedies Cure Chronic Infections
Homeopathic remedies are made with natural substances from plants, minerals and animals and are used to treat a wide range of health problems, diseases and chronic conditions. Unlike most western doctors, homeopaths treat their patients based...

Clinical Spectro-Chrome Color Therapy Crushed by the Medical Mafia
If someone told you he or she cured his or her cancer with color therapy, would you believe it? You may understandably categorize it as new age nonsense. Well, it appears that it's for real and not just for cancer. Colored light therapy was...