Snow is flying already...earlier than normal -- Would you just look at this? Here it is only the end of September and heavy snow is falling in the Western mountains. Even places that aren't terribly high like Butte, Mont., had snow accumulation Wednesday.
About American Police Force symbol -- It is also the crest for the Rothchild family; it is also the emblem of the Byzantine or Roman empire.
Hardin Montana under siege! -- Today started not unlike any other. Except that one of my friends emailed me a story about how a company called American Police Force has moved into a town south of me called Hardin, and how they were “taking over that jail that was built and never opened”. Read More...
VA Bars Release of Nursing Home Reports -- Facing congressional scrutiny over details revealed in a review of care given to veterans at one of its Pennsylvania facilities, the Department of Veterans Affairs slammed the door on the release of similar reports nationwide. Read More...
Company Backed by Gore Gets Taxpayer Millions -- A start-up automotive company backed by former Vice President Al Gore has been loaned more than half a billion dollars by the federal government. The loan was intended to help Fikser produce a hybrid sports car to be sold in Finland.
Local hospital in Columbus Ohio says no flu shot, no pay raises -- No flu vaccine, no pay raise. That’s the mandate for employees at one local hospital. The new rule applied to both seasonal flu and H1N1 vaccines. Some question the policy, though. (You think??!!!)
US judge rules against compulsory vaccinations (why is this story buried? Hmmmm) -- A Preliminary Injunction to stop mandatory vaccinations has been issued in the United States District Court of New Jersey. This comes after a federal lawsuit opposing forced vaccines was filed in that court by Tim Vawter, pro se attorney, on July 31st with the federal government as defendant.
NY health workers revolt over forced vaccination -- Workers are being told to either get the swine flu vaccine or lose their jobs. New York is the first state in the country to mandate flu vaccinations for its health care workers. Check out the poll on right side...96% say workers should not be forced to take vaccine.
Video: The swine flu vaccine conspiracy
Santa Clara county in CA declares state of emergency over H1N1 -- Santa Clara County officials are declaring a local state of emergency due to the H1N1 swine flu virus. The Board of Supervisors additionally allocated $500,000 toward flu emergency response. Officials said there have been 155 hospitalizations and eight deaths due to the swine flu in Santa Clara County between April 3 and Sept. 15.
Big Brother changed TV says Dutch creator -- "I told my team, even before the first episode was aired: there will come a time when people will talk about an era in television before Big Brother and one after 'Big Brother'," the billionaire media baron told AFP recently at his office in the affluent town of Laren in the western Netherlands. "They looked at me like I was mad."
After leaflet drop kills Afghan girl, a search for safer psyop tech -- The Royal Air Force has accidentally killed a young girl in Afghanistan — by dropping a box of leaflets on her. The British Ministry of Defence is carrying out a full investigation.
Army prisoners isolated, denied right to legal counsel
Codex Alimentarius summarized in 7 points -- The principle of self medication with herbal/vitamin/mineral food supplements would be restricted to ‘prescription only’ status, if the Codex Alimentarius is applied in the UK and elsewhere, particularly the USA. Read More...
Jan Smith's stunning photo gallery of Morgellon's
Jury says chemotherapy drug death was manslaughter -- A British woman, Anna McKenna, was being treated with chemotherapy in 2006. Due to a mistake by her pharmacist, she was given quadruple the dose of chemotherapy chemicals -- an error that continued for four treatment sessions and ultimately killed her (as chemotherapy is known to do).
Pentagon to investigate troop's exposure to hexavalent chromium in Iraq -- The Pentagon's inspector general is investigating whether the Army mishandled troops exposed to a cancer-causing chemical in Iraq in 2003. The review comes after seven Senate Democrats charged that the Army and war contractor Kellogg, Brown & Root may have exposed hundreds of soldiers to dangerous levels of hexavalent chromium while they guarded civilian workers at a water treatment plant.
Portable Pentagon pain weapon may end up in police hands -- The weapon, which is claimed to cause no permanent harm, could also end up being used by police to control civilians.
White House: No pensions for Alaskan WWII vets-claims their service didn't count -- The Obama administration has advised Congress to cut off pensions for 26 elderly members of the World War II-era Alaska Territorial Guard who served the nation without pay during the Japanese attack.
Supreme Court will weigh challenges to gun laws -- The Supreme Court announced on Wednesday that it would decide whether state and local gun control laws may be challenged under the Second Amendment.
Newsmax removed this column -- Yesterday, we highlighted a Newsmax column by John L. Perry essentially advocating a military coup to resolve the "Obama problem" (while, of course, claiming he was advocating no such thing). It's just the latest example of extreme right-wing rhetoric directed at President Obama. Now, it appears that Newsmax has removed the column from its website; the link to it defaults to Perry's main column page. Fortunately, we made a copy.
New film blames drug firm for deaths of honeybees -- Vanishing of the Bees, which will be released in Britain next month, claims the cause is the use of a new generation of pesticides that weakens the bees and makes them more susceptible to other diseases.
The real public option: Congress' private medical clinic -- You can't say this enough: While members of Congress are busy protecting us from the inefficiency and danger of government-run health care, they're receiving top-notch taxpayer funded health care—seemingly without complaint.
Uno de gato (cat's claw) the Peruvian herb for cancer -- Cat's Claw (Uncaria tomentosa), commonly known as "una de gato" in Spanish, is a South American rainforest herb known among the natives for its curative properties. Referred to as the "Sacred Herb of the Rainforest," this vine's small thorns located at the base of its leaves resemble a cat's claw. Sold over the counter as a cancer treatment in South America, cat's claw's use as a cancer aid shows promising results in studies conducted throughout the world.
Senior groups push vaccine messages, pandemic planning -- As pandemic flu activity picks up speed across the nation, groups that serve older adults are shoring up plans for both seasonal and pandemic flu vaccination and are preparing backup plans in case absences hit key services such as Meals on Wheels, government officials and senior groups said today.
Army's new Electronic Warfare Manual -- FM 3-36 provides Army doctrine for electronic warfare (EW) planning, preparation, execution, and assessment in support of full spectrum operations. Users of FM 3-36 must be familiar with full spectrum operations established in FM 3-0; the military decisionmaking process established in FM 5-0; the operations process established in FMI 5-0.1; commander’s visualization described in FM 6-0; and electronic warfare described in JP 3-13.1.
About American Police Force symbol -- It is also the crest for the Rothchild family; it is also the emblem of the Byzantine or Roman empire.
Hardin Montana under siege! -- Today started not unlike any other. Except that one of my friends emailed me a story about how a company called American Police Force has moved into a town south of me called Hardin, and how they were “taking over that jail that was built and never opened”. Read More...
VA Bars Release of Nursing Home Reports -- Facing congressional scrutiny over details revealed in a review of care given to veterans at one of its Pennsylvania facilities, the Department of Veterans Affairs slammed the door on the release of similar reports nationwide. Read More...
Company Backed by Gore Gets Taxpayer Millions -- A start-up automotive company backed by former Vice President Al Gore has been loaned more than half a billion dollars by the federal government. The loan was intended to help Fikser produce a hybrid sports car to be sold in Finland.
Local hospital in Columbus Ohio says no flu shot, no pay raises -- No flu vaccine, no pay raise. That’s the mandate for employees at one local hospital. The new rule applied to both seasonal flu and H1N1 vaccines. Some question the policy, though. (You think??!!!)
US judge rules against compulsory vaccinations (why is this story buried? Hmmmm) -- A Preliminary Injunction to stop mandatory vaccinations has been issued in the United States District Court of New Jersey. This comes after a federal lawsuit opposing forced vaccines was filed in that court by Tim Vawter, pro se attorney, on July 31st with the federal government as defendant.
NY health workers revolt over forced vaccination -- Workers are being told to either get the swine flu vaccine or lose their jobs. New York is the first state in the country to mandate flu vaccinations for its health care workers. Check out the poll on right side...96% say workers should not be forced to take vaccine.
Video: The swine flu vaccine conspiracy
Santa Clara county in CA declares state of emergency over H1N1 -- Santa Clara County officials are declaring a local state of emergency due to the H1N1 swine flu virus. The Board of Supervisors additionally allocated $500,000 toward flu emergency response. Officials said there have been 155 hospitalizations and eight deaths due to the swine flu in Santa Clara County between April 3 and Sept. 15.
Big Brother changed TV says Dutch creator -- "I told my team, even before the first episode was aired: there will come a time when people will talk about an era in television before Big Brother and one after 'Big Brother'," the billionaire media baron told AFP recently at his office in the affluent town of Laren in the western Netherlands. "They looked at me like I was mad."
After leaflet drop kills Afghan girl, a search for safer psyop tech -- The Royal Air Force has accidentally killed a young girl in Afghanistan — by dropping a box of leaflets on her. The British Ministry of Defence is carrying out a full investigation.
Army prisoners isolated, denied right to legal counsel
Codex Alimentarius summarized in 7 points -- The principle of self medication with herbal/vitamin/mineral food supplements would be restricted to ‘prescription only’ status, if the Codex Alimentarius is applied in the UK and elsewhere, particularly the USA. Read More...
Jan Smith's stunning photo gallery of Morgellon's
Jury says chemotherapy drug death was manslaughter -- A British woman, Anna McKenna, was being treated with chemotherapy in 2006. Due to a mistake by her pharmacist, she was given quadruple the dose of chemotherapy chemicals -- an error that continued for four treatment sessions and ultimately killed her (as chemotherapy is known to do).
Pentagon to investigate troop's exposure to hexavalent chromium in Iraq -- The Pentagon's inspector general is investigating whether the Army mishandled troops exposed to a cancer-causing chemical in Iraq in 2003. The review comes after seven Senate Democrats charged that the Army and war contractor Kellogg, Brown & Root may have exposed hundreds of soldiers to dangerous levels of hexavalent chromium while they guarded civilian workers at a water treatment plant.
Portable Pentagon pain weapon may end up in police hands -- The weapon, which is claimed to cause no permanent harm, could also end up being used by police to control civilians.
White House: No pensions for Alaskan WWII vets-claims their service didn't count -- The Obama administration has advised Congress to cut off pensions for 26 elderly members of the World War II-era Alaska Territorial Guard who served the nation without pay during the Japanese attack.
Supreme Court will weigh challenges to gun laws -- The Supreme Court announced on Wednesday that it would decide whether state and local gun control laws may be challenged under the Second Amendment.
Newsmax removed this column -- Yesterday, we highlighted a Newsmax column by John L. Perry essentially advocating a military coup to resolve the "Obama problem" (while, of course, claiming he was advocating no such thing). It's just the latest example of extreme right-wing rhetoric directed at President Obama. Now, it appears that Newsmax has removed the column from its website; the link to it defaults to Perry's main column page. Fortunately, we made a copy.
Obama risks a domestic military intervention -- There is a remote, although gaining, possibility America’s military will intervene as a last resort to resolve the “Obama problem.” Don’t dismiss it as unrealistic.
New film blames drug firm for deaths of honeybees -- Vanishing of the Bees, which will be released in Britain next month, claims the cause is the use of a new generation of pesticides that weakens the bees and makes them more susceptible to other diseases.
The real public option: Congress' private medical clinic -- You can't say this enough: While members of Congress are busy protecting us from the inefficiency and danger of government-run health care, they're receiving top-notch taxpayer funded health care—seemingly without complaint.
Uno de gato (cat's claw) the Peruvian herb for cancer -- Cat's Claw (Uncaria tomentosa), commonly known as "una de gato" in Spanish, is a South American rainforest herb known among the natives for its curative properties. Referred to as the "Sacred Herb of the Rainforest," this vine's small thorns located at the base of its leaves resemble a cat's claw. Sold over the counter as a cancer treatment in South America, cat's claw's use as a cancer aid shows promising results in studies conducted throughout the world.
Senior groups push vaccine messages, pandemic planning -- As pandemic flu activity picks up speed across the nation, groups that serve older adults are shoring up plans for both seasonal and pandemic flu vaccination and are preparing backup plans in case absences hit key services such as Meals on Wheels, government officials and senior groups said today.
Army's new Electronic Warfare Manual -- FM 3-36 provides Army doctrine for electronic warfare (EW) planning, preparation, execution, and assessment in support of full spectrum operations. Users of FM 3-36 must be familiar with full spectrum operations established in FM 3-0; the military decisionmaking process established in FM 5-0; the operations process established in FMI 5-0.1; commander’s visualization described in FM 6-0; and electronic warfare described in JP 3-13.1.