Profit Driven Swine Flu Propaganda -- The pharmaceutical industry, with public health officials and the mainstream media acting as a mass marketing team, is about to pull off the biggest profiteering scheme in the history of the world. The swine flu hoax, perpetrated on a global level, will generate unheard of profits from a non-existent pandemic.
Related Article: Profit driven swine flu propaganda part 2 -- This article is part two in a six-part series. The pandemic has fizzled out but the gravy train toward vaccine profits is still rolling. On September 16, 2009, Reuters reported that the death rate from the pandemic H1N1 swine flu was likely lower than earlier estimates.
Despite H1N1 fears, many worry about vaccination -- Americans have become increasingly alarmed about the swine flu, but many are wary about getting vaccinated against the disease, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.
For Some Parents, Shouting Is the New Spanking -- “I’ve worked with thousands of parents and I can tell you, without question, that screaming is the new spanking,” said Amy McCready, the founder of Positive Parenting Solutions, which teaches parenting skills in classes, individual coaching sessions and an online course. “This is so the issue right now.
CBS & swine flu -- Get this. The CDC stopped testing people for Swine Flu in JULY. Why? Because CDC assumed there was already an epidemic, and therefore more tests would be waste of time and money. CBS has been trying to obtain state-by-state numbers for Swine Flu cases compiled, by the CDC, BEFORE the testing was stopped. The CDC has refused to come across with those numbers. It’s been stonewalling CBS for the last three months.
Serious vaccine reactions to be called "coincidence"? -- Every day Americans wake up to news reports that warn us about the dangers of influenza, especially the new H1N1 “swine flu”. But swine flu is mild for most people and the virus is not mutating into a more serious form.
Extinct animals could be brought back to life using DNA technology -- Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park film may have been pure science fiction - but extinct creatures such as Neanderthals to Sabre-toothed tigers could soon be brought back to life thanks to advances in DNA technology.
US hate law encourages international enforcement -- We must preserve our free speech and national sovereignty at all costs! The only way we can do that right now is to continue to email the President against the defense/hate bill. But we must also now protest his signing away our national sovereignty at the Copenhagen conference.
TASER advises cops not to aim at suspect's chest -- The maker of TASER stun guns is advising police officers to avoid shooting suspects in the chest with the 50,000-volt weapon, saying that it could pose an extremely low risk of an "adverse cardiac event."
The dollar is finished & the Chinese are dumping it -- China's "current strategy is to diversify out of dollars and into commodities," Ferguson says. Furthermore, China's recent pact with Brazil to conduct trade in their local currencies is a "sign of the times."
Worlds stupidest inventions -- These are real - and real stupid - inventions. Click through to discover the most ridiculous inventions of all time.
Irrational exuberance behind recent stock gains says UAB expert -- A second straight week of stronger-than-expected third quarter earnings from a broad cross section of U.S. industries has held the nation's Dow Jones Industrial Average above the psychological benchmark of 10,000 points for the week of Oct. 19, but the climb isn't likely to last, says a finance expert at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
Swine vaccine goal 50 million doses next month -- The government now hopes to have about 50 million doses of swine flu vaccine out by mid-November and 150 million in December.
Canadian turkey sick with swine flu -- Canadian health officials on Tuesday announced the first case of turkeys catching the swine flu in this country, likely from humans, and urged farm workers to get vaccinated soon.
Pentagon used psychological operation on US public, documents show -- Figure in Bush propaganda operation remains Pentagon spokesman.
Man arrested in Boston on terrorism charges -- A pharmacist living with his parents in the suburbs of Boston was arrested on Wednesday on federal terrorism charges. The authorities said he had conspired to attack civilians at a shopping mall, American soldiers abroad and two members of the executive branch of the federal government.
America's phony war in Afghanistan -- One of the most remarkable aspects of the Obama Presidential agenda is how little anyone has questioned in the media or elsewhere why at all the United States Pentagon is committed to a military occupation of Afghanistan. There are two basic reasons, neither one of which can be admitted openly to the public at large.
Criminalizing Poverty For Profit: Local Government's New Debtors Prisons -- Local government is desperate for new funding but doesn't dare tap the wealthy. So they're busily criminalizing poverty and filling new Debtor's prisons.
US soldier commits suicide in Indiana movie theater -- A National Guard soldier home on a 15-day leave from the war in Afghanistan committed suicide in a Muncie, Indiana, movie theater October 12. Jacob W. Sexton, a 21-year-old from rural Farmland, Indiana, shot himself in the head, approximately 20 minutes into the violent comedy Zombieland, with friends and siblings sitting around him. The suicide underscores once again the psychological damage done to soldiers charged with carrying out the brutal colonial occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
VIDEO: Man paralyzed after routine vaccinations -- Jerry Emmons got a tetanus and a pneumonia shot in June. Now he's in a wheelchair. His legs are paralyzed, and his arms weak. The shots had caused the Guillain-Barre syndrome.
NY state assembly hearing on vaccines video -- Gary Null speaks out.
H1N1 outbreak at Air Force Academy -- Specimens from ill cadets tested positive for novel influenza A (H1N1 [nH1N1])–specific ribonucleic acid (RNA) by real-time reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction.
Clotheslines banned in thousands of US communities -- Treehugger.com reports that, "hanging clotheslines was against the rules in so many communities nationwide that state governments are being forced to step in and make it against the law to ban them. And states like Vermont and Utah have already succeeded. But the fight for the right to hang clotheslines is just getting started."
Canadian military prepares for worst -- The Canadian military has been looking a decade ahead as it tries to prepare for various worst case scenarios that it may be faced with in the future, and some are pretty scary.
Related Article: Profit driven swine flu propaganda part 2 -- This article is part two in a six-part series. The pandemic has fizzled out but the gravy train toward vaccine profits is still rolling. On September 16, 2009, Reuters reported that the death rate from the pandemic H1N1 swine flu was likely lower than earlier estimates.
Despite H1N1 fears, many worry about vaccination -- Americans have become increasingly alarmed about the swine flu, but many are wary about getting vaccinated against the disease, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.
For Some Parents, Shouting Is the New Spanking -- “I’ve worked with thousands of parents and I can tell you, without question, that screaming is the new spanking,” said Amy McCready, the founder of Positive Parenting Solutions, which teaches parenting skills in classes, individual coaching sessions and an online course. “This is so the issue right now.
CBS & swine flu -- Get this. The CDC stopped testing people for Swine Flu in JULY. Why? Because CDC assumed there was already an epidemic, and therefore more tests would be waste of time and money. CBS has been trying to obtain state-by-state numbers for Swine Flu cases compiled, by the CDC, BEFORE the testing was stopped. The CDC has refused to come across with those numbers. It’s been stonewalling CBS for the last three months.
Serious vaccine reactions to be called "coincidence"? -- Every day Americans wake up to news reports that warn us about the dangers of influenza, especially the new H1N1 “swine flu”. But swine flu is mild for most people and the virus is not mutating into a more serious form.
Extinct animals could be brought back to life using DNA technology -- Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park film may have been pure science fiction - but extinct creatures such as Neanderthals to Sabre-toothed tigers could soon be brought back to life thanks to advances in DNA technology.
US hate law encourages international enforcement -- We must preserve our free speech and national sovereignty at all costs! The only way we can do that right now is to continue to email the President against the defense/hate bill. But we must also now protest his signing away our national sovereignty at the Copenhagen conference.
TASER advises cops not to aim at suspect's chest -- The maker of TASER stun guns is advising police officers to avoid shooting suspects in the chest with the 50,000-volt weapon, saying that it could pose an extremely low risk of an "adverse cardiac event."
The dollar is finished & the Chinese are dumping it -- China's "current strategy is to diversify out of dollars and into commodities," Ferguson says. Furthermore, China's recent pact with Brazil to conduct trade in their local currencies is a "sign of the times."
Worlds stupidest inventions -- These are real - and real stupid - inventions. Click through to discover the most ridiculous inventions of all time.
Irrational exuberance behind recent stock gains says UAB expert -- A second straight week of stronger-than-expected third quarter earnings from a broad cross section of U.S. industries has held the nation's Dow Jones Industrial Average above the psychological benchmark of 10,000 points for the week of Oct. 19, but the climb isn't likely to last, says a finance expert at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
Swine vaccine goal 50 million doses next month -- The government now hopes to have about 50 million doses of swine flu vaccine out by mid-November and 150 million in December.
Canadian turkey sick with swine flu -- Canadian health officials on Tuesday announced the first case of turkeys catching the swine flu in this country, likely from humans, and urged farm workers to get vaccinated soon.
Pentagon used psychological operation on US public, documents show -- Figure in Bush propaganda operation remains Pentagon spokesman.
Man arrested in Boston on terrorism charges -- A pharmacist living with his parents in the suburbs of Boston was arrested on Wednesday on federal terrorism charges. The authorities said he had conspired to attack civilians at a shopping mall, American soldiers abroad and two members of the executive branch of the federal government.
America's phony war in Afghanistan -- One of the most remarkable aspects of the Obama Presidential agenda is how little anyone has questioned in the media or elsewhere why at all the United States Pentagon is committed to a military occupation of Afghanistan. There are two basic reasons, neither one of which can be admitted openly to the public at large.
Criminalizing Poverty For Profit: Local Government's New Debtors Prisons -- Local government is desperate for new funding but doesn't dare tap the wealthy. So they're busily criminalizing poverty and filling new Debtor's prisons.
US soldier commits suicide in Indiana movie theater -- A National Guard soldier home on a 15-day leave from the war in Afghanistan committed suicide in a Muncie, Indiana, movie theater October 12. Jacob W. Sexton, a 21-year-old from rural Farmland, Indiana, shot himself in the head, approximately 20 minutes into the violent comedy Zombieland, with friends and siblings sitting around him. The suicide underscores once again the psychological damage done to soldiers charged with carrying out the brutal colonial occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
VIDEO: Man paralyzed after routine vaccinations -- Jerry Emmons got a tetanus and a pneumonia shot in June. Now he's in a wheelchair. His legs are paralyzed, and his arms weak. The shots had caused the Guillain-Barre syndrome.
NY state assembly hearing on vaccines video -- Gary Null speaks out.
H1N1 outbreak at Air Force Academy -- Specimens from ill cadets tested positive for novel influenza A (H1N1 [nH1N1])–specific ribonucleic acid (RNA) by real-time reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction.
Clotheslines banned in thousands of US communities -- Treehugger.com reports that, "hanging clotheslines was against the rules in so many communities nationwide that state governments are being forced to step in and make it against the law to ban them. And states like Vermont and Utah have already succeeded. But the fight for the right to hang clotheslines is just getting started."
Canadian military prepares for worst -- The Canadian military has been looking a decade ahead as it tries to prepare for various worst case scenarios that it may be faced with in the future, and some are pretty scary.