WTF... In America?????????

MSNBC analyst believes submitting to theft at gunpoint is 'voluntary'




Good grief! This is, by far, one of the strangest and most bizarre arguments I've heard yet on the forceful extraction of taxes from the public.

Former RNC Chairman and current MSNBC analyst, Michael Steele, compares it to an armed robbery, saying that handing over your wallet with a gun pointed to your head is a 'voluntary' act because you can choose to face the consequences.

Hmmm...

I'm waiting for that defense to pop up in an armed robbery case.​




















:hmm:
 
MSNBC analyst believes submitting to theft at gunpoint is 'voluntary'




Good grief! This is, by far, one of the strangest and most bizarre arguments I've heard yet on the forceful extraction of taxes from the public.

Former RNC Chairman and current MSNBC analyst, Michael Steele, compares it to an armed robbery, saying that handing over your wallet with a gun pointed to your head is a 'voluntary' act because you can choose to face the consequences.

Hmmm...

I'm waiting for that defense to pop up in an armed robbery case.​




















:hmm:
 
New Exposé Tracks ALEC-Private Prison Industry Effort to Replace Unionized Workers with Prison Labor





The American Legislative Exchange Council (or ALEC), which helps corporations write model legislation, has paved the way for states and corporations to replace unionized workers with prison labor.

In fact, prison labor here in the US is cheaper than Chinese labor because corporations can save on shipping costs.

Also, this video lays bare the strange intersection between the War on Drugs, the privatized prison industry, and the wonderful chicken products that state agents are forcing kids to eat in school cafeterias...​

















[FLASH]http://www.democracynow.org/embed/story/2011/8/5/new_expos_tracks_alec_private_prison" frameborder="0"></iframe>[/FLASH]​


:hmm:
 
MSNBC analyst believes submitting to theft at gunpoint is 'voluntary'




Good grief! This is, by far, one of the strangest and most bizarre arguments I've heard yet on the forceful extraction of taxes from the public.

Former RNC Chairman and current MSNBC analyst, Michael Steele, compares it to an armed robbery, saying that handing over your wallet with a gun pointed to your head is a 'voluntary' act because you can choose to face the consequences.

Hmmm...

I'm waiting for that defense to pop up in an armed robbery case.​




















:hmm:

The income tax is the biggest fraud along with the federal reserve imposed on the American people! It is straight out of the communist manifesto on control of the masses. We need to switch to a consumption tax and get rid of the IRS! FAIRTAX!
 
The income tax is the biggest fraud along with the federal reserve imposed on the American people! It is straight out of the communist manifesto on control of the masses. We need to switch to a consumption tax and get rid of the IRS! FAIRTAX!

C/S! :hmm:
 
Creator explains message behind "Bomb Iran" billboard



I wish that I could post a good deal more on solutions, but solutions isn't always an easy topic.

I mean, we vote, we write our Congressmen, we sign petitions, and sometimes we take to the streets in protest, but we are rather limited in our options for stopping a moving train.

The best option we have is to try and raise awareness. To speak up.

A group of friends in Utah is doing just that..​















:hmm:
 
Cops arrest father after his daughter draws a picture of a gun




Over at 2nd Amendment TV we keep a close eye on firearms related ridiculousness from both media and government. This one is from our nice neighbors to the north.

A four year old girl drew a 'picture' of her father holding a gun, her teacher called Family and Children's Services (Canada's equivalent of Child Protective Services), who in turn called the police.

When the father arrived at the school to pick up his daughter he was met by police who arrested him, subjected him to a full strip search, and likely traumatized the child who watched her father being arrested.

Turns out there never was a real gun, the inspiration for the drawing was a toy gun belonging to her brother...​

























:hmm:
 
http://www.infowars.com/netanyahu-advisor-advocates-mass-starvation-against-iran/

Netanyahu Advisor Advocates Mass Starvation Against Iran

The Alex Jones Channel Alex Jones Show podcast Prison Planet TV Infowars.com Twitter Alex Jones' Facebook Infowars store

Richard Silverstein
Thursday, March 1, 2012

Ynet reports that an advisor of Bibi Netanyahu has suggested that the world starve Iran into submission:

Iran’s citizens should be starved in order to curb Tehran’s nuclear program, officials in Jerusalem said Wednesday ahead of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s upcoming trip to Washington.

“North Korea is halting its nuclear program in order to receive aid in food, and this is what should be done with Iran as well,” one unnamed official said.

“Suffocating sanctions could lead to a grave economic situation in Iran and to a shortage of food,” the source said. “This would force the regime to consider whether the nuclear adventure is worthwhile, while the Persian people have nothing to eat and may rise up as was the case in Syria, Tunisia and other Arab states.”

“The Western world led by the United States must implement stifling sanctions at this time already, rather than wait or hesitate,” the official said. “In order to suffocate Iran economically and diplomatically and lead the regime there to a hopeless situation, this must be done now, without delay.”

While it appears true that North Korea has agreed to suspend uranium enrichment and announced a moratorium on nuclear tests, it has not cancelled or ended its nuclear program as the Israeli official says. In fact, while the U.S. welcomed the announcement, it said it said it was “limited.”

As for starvation, it has been a North Korean fact of life for two decades or more. Chances are this change of policy has a lot more to do with a new leader taking over the country, than starvation proving an effective strategic tool. Besides, North Korea has entered into such talks before and then deserted them only to resume enrichment and testing. So gloating over this development is premature until we see whether it will produce long-term results.

Besides being a massive violation of international law, starvation as a tactic simply doesn’t work. Anyone remember the hundreds of thousands of children dying of malnutrition in Saddam’s Iraq? That worked pretty well there, didn’t it? How about the Nazi siege of Leningrad that killed millions and led to longstanding hatreds between Russia and Germany? How about the liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto and starvation there, which led to the uprising and eventual extermination of the entire Jewish population? Or the Roman siege of Jerusalem during which starvation and various plagues took many Jewish lives? Not to mention the Roman siege against Masada, that led to the greatest act of self-martyrdom in Jewish history? Those were all stellar examples of humanity in the history of our species, weren’t they?

Keep in mind, this particular gem of an Israeli isn’t advocating merely putting Iran “on a diet” as Dov Weisglass, Ariel Sharon’s advisor, did toward Gaza. He’s advocating death, malnutrition, pestilence: the whole nine yards of incremental genocide.

It’s especially telling that this genius came up with such a policy proposal on the eve of Bibi’s trip to Washington to meet with Pres. Obama, who will certainly warm to such an idea. I guess the Israelis must see this as an ice-breaker to bring the two leaders, who have a history of icy relations, closer.

I don’t know which butcher came up with this cracker jack idea, but my money would be on someone like Moshe Yaalon, who has Pharaoh’s cold-heartedness and ice-water running through veins where warm blood should be. If it was Yaalon, I look forward some day to seeing him in the dock at The Hague.

Now let’s talk Jewish morality. After all, Israel does claim to be the state of the entire Jewish people, right? Mass starvation is a hillul Ha-Shem, a desecration of God’s name. Any Jewish person or state which advocates such a policy has defiled Judaism. Unfortunately, few in Israel and certainly few rabbis there will take such a position, which is all the more reason for Israel NOT to deserve to be the state of the Jewish people. Israel is a state like any other (worse than some admittedly), some of whose citizens happen to be Jewish. When it makes monstrous statements like the one offered in Ynet, Israel loses any moral claims to represent Jews or Judaism as a whole.
 
"Santorum says killing Americans good, but killing Iranians is wonderful"



Assassination is not diplomacy.

Even as it remains a CONSENSUS among the 16 US intelligence agencies that there is NO evidence that Iran is seeking a nuclear weapon (article included) one of our own Presidential candidates is busy undermining any sense of diplomacy by basically announcing 'We will kill you."

It is the height of murderous arrogance to not only threaten the citizens of foreign countries with assassination, but also to brag that the US is willing assassinate its OWN citizens.

It is also important to note that Anwar al-Awlaki, the US citizen assassinated by a drone strike in Yemen, dined at the Pentagon with the Secretary of the Army just months after 9/11 (article also included). No mere citizen, al-Awlaki may have also been an asset..​











He thinks it is a wonderful thing to kill someone???





:hmm:
 
America's Nuclear Time Bombs



Flaws in General Electric's Mark 1 nuclear reactor designs have been known for years, but at the time of their discovery (back in the 1970's) revelations of the flaws could have been a major setback to the nuclear power industry, so they went with it.

When three reactors melted down in Japan last year (which to this day are spewing radiation unchecked), those flaws became known to the world.

Apparently, something as simple as a power outage can potentially cause a loss of cooling fluids and lead to meltdown.

There are 23 GE Mark 1 reactors throughout the United States.
With the increasing number of 'natural disasters' that hit the United States each year, let's hope none of these nuclear facilities lose power...​



























:smh::hmm:
 
Libyan rebels cage black Africans, force-feed them flags




I awoke this morning to sip some coffee and read the news, now my neck is now twisted from the spinning.

While reading some RT news and watching videos I found this 'shock video' of Libyan rebels caging black Africans at a zoo and forcing them to EAT the Libyan flag.

I went to look for other sources on this and found almost nothing.

I did, however, find an nice little article on CNN on Libya's rich history and hopes for the future. The article begins with, "Libya today is a free Libya..."

Well, that's a different take on things...​













I know this is a repost but fuck... it is not cool to treat anyone like this.








:angry::hmm:
 
Court Declares Corporations Are People, Some Human Beings Are Not​



By Jeffrey Kaplan
Published February 8, 2008


In evaluating allegations that U.S. military forces deprived four British men of human rights during two years they were held captive in Guantanamo Bay prison, a U.S. appeals court found an innovative way to let the Bush administration off the hook. Two of three judges ruled the men -- because they are not U.S. citizens and, technically, were not imprisoned in the U.S. -- were not legally "persons" and, therefore, had no rights to violate.

While those judges were defying common sense and decency by denying legal personhood to living human beings, an appeals court in Boston has been reviewing an April 2007 decision by Federal Judge Paul Barbadoro that engaged in a different form of judicial activism -- granting human rights to corporations.

Barbadoro struck down a New Hampshire law that prevented pharmaceutical corporations from learning exactly what drugs doctors prescribe and how much they prescribe. The law aims to protect doctors and, indirectly, their patients, from drug companies pressuring doctors to choose their products.

The judge's grounds? He claims corporations, as legal persons, have "free speech rights" that would be infringed by such a measure.

The real issue in these cases (Maine recently passed a similar law) isn't free speech at all; it's manipulation and control. The drug salespeople only will decide what to say after poking into the doctors' prescription records. Under the guise of protecting speech, Judge Barbadoro denied both legitimate privacy rights of doctors and key protections to ensure patients are prescribed drugs based on their medical situation, not pressure applied to their physician.

Taken together, these two rulings are a perplexing and dangerous development. The founding principle of our country is right in the Declaration of Independence: all people are "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights." It is not for judges to decide who is and who is not a human being.

Nor should the courts play Creator by endowing legal constructs like corporations with human rights. Our constitutional rights exist to prevent large, powerful institutions -- whether governments, corporations, or other entities -- from oppressing us humans.

For too long a strange dichotomy has persisted between many principled people on the political left and right wings. The left wing often warns against the growing power of business corporations. The right wing complains the left ignores the overweening power of the government and is “anti-business.”

Both sides have been seeing only part of the same elephant. What's happening is a merger of corporations and state.

Already there are corporate “black holes” for human rights that rival government affronts like Guantanamo. Under the Bush administration's legal framework for Iraq during its occupation, the Iraqi government wields no authority over Blackwater corporation's security guards.

And it's not clear the U.S. government does either. As a result, we may never see anyone punished for Blackwater's wanton killing of Iraqi civilians in Baghdad last September.

Then there's the case of Jamie Leigh Jones, an American employee of Halliburton/KBR in Iraq who claimed she was gang raped by co-workers in 2005. U.S. officials reportedly handed the evidence to KBR, whereupon the evidence apparently disappeared. Nobody in Congress, Democrat or Republican, has been able to persuade the Bush administration to reveal what it has done about the case since then.

Halliburton/KBR, like Blackwater, apparently enjoys the rights of a person, but not the responsibilities.
Editor's note: shortly after completing this article, we learned of this shocking story: Judge Denies Allows Halliburton to Force Sexual Assault Case Out of Court

The danger of "corporate personhood" is a bit like global warming; people have warned us of the threat for decades only to go unheeded because the dire consequences seemed far-fetched.

But look at what's happened to the First Amendment. Corporations use it to strike down laws clearly designed to protect citizens, even while courts deny prisoners the right to know what evidence the government is using against them. It's time for alarm.

We should take offense whenever we hear the dangerous notion of "corporate citizenship" promoted. Soon, the only citizens with real power in the United States may be the corporate kind.

Jeffrey Kaplan is a researcher with ReclaimDemocracy.org, a non-profit organization working to restore citizen authority over corporations.


:hmm:
 
Google’s no privacy policy



Google's new no privacy policy kicked-in a few days ago.

If you use Google and if you haven't heard the nitty-gritty on what
these policy changes mean, you should probably look into it.

This video elaborates on what having a company like Google
compiling such detailed profiles on you could mean.

If you wish to limit the amount of information Google has access
to, there are ways, but you have to be a computer genius to
navigate to these settings. That's why I included links to an
article to help you find those setting and change them.​






Fuck google! www.startpage.com is all I use.










:hmm:
 
The CIA's Heart Attack Gun




People laugh when I mention that the CIA was looking for a way to weaponize the cancer virus back in the 1960's, but I suppose that without a map, a detailed plan that spells it all out, and a list of signed confessions most people ARE going to laugh it off.

One thing that is NOT a theory, however, is that they were (and likely still are) looking for ways to to assassinate people without leaving traces. Bullets draw too much attention.

Unless, of course, the bullet is a frozen liquid poison dart, but that secret has been out since 1975.

Let's take a look back at the CIA's 'heart attack gun'...​











:hmm:
 
Google’s no privacy policy




So I got a whole bunch of emails regarding the broken link to an article on how to adjust Google's search history settings. I fixed it. I hope. Somehow the web address of the article changed.

Now, Google's new policy is already in place, so if you didn't do this before March 1st, then they've already begun building your profile.

However, there is no reason you can't change your settings now and limit their ability to continue gathering information.

Who knows if changing these setting will actually frustrate their efforts?

I figure it's worth a try...​















:hmm:
 
Germ warfare experiments on civilian populations



I think it's great that CNN is currently running a series of stories on "Soldier Guinea Pigs" in which American soldiers were used as human test subjects in chemical and biological weapons experiments.

These are the kinds of things that need to be exposed.

And since they're doing their thing over there at CNN, I figure now is as good a time as any to bring up the fact that it wasn't just soldiers who volunteered, but unwitting civilian populations as well.

That's right, they conducted open air experiments in major metropolitan areas, just to see what would happen...​





















:hmm:
 
Euthanasia in the Netherlands:
Rick Santorum claims the Dutch 'murder' their elderly




According to MSNBC's Rachel Maddow, the Dutch are very very upset with Rick Santorum.

As it happens, euthanasia is legal in the Netherlands.

Well, the Dutch are upset because Rick Santorum is a vocal critic of their 'Right to die' policy and has perhaps exaggerated how the policy is implemented.

Fair enough.

Though, one week after Santorum was ripped to shreds by Maddow on her show, news comes out that the Dutch now have "Mobile Euthanasia Units".

I have to wonder if the word 'voluntary' means the same thing in the Netherlands as it does to the IRS here.

For their sake, I hope not.​














:hmm:
 
TSA forces nursing Mom to pump breast milk and fill empty bottles



There is always a new way to harass and humiliate the traveling public in America, the TSA has now forced a mother of three to pump breast milk and fill empty bottles before allowing her to fly.

Accompanying the video on this matter is an article that covers the TSA's plan to have highway checkpoints while elaborating on how little training these 'non-sworn officers' receive.

Bumbling and ill-trained security guards made to look like 'federal officers' with the authority to harass and humiliate.

Welcome to the Homeland, brother...​












:angry::angry::angry:














:hmm:
 
Re: WTF... ?????????

How Goldman wired Greece for implosion... What crime haven't these guys committed?





Greece is a crime scene and the victims of the crime are being held responsible, while the bankers who perpetrated the crime walk scot-free.

Con-artists like this don't just scam one country and call it quits after one score, no, they'll run the con on anyone buying it, which is why we should be paying close attention.

Who's next? Spain? Portugal? Ireland? US?

From our friends at Real Econ TV we get some details.

Here's the scam and what you've got to watch out for...​




















:hmm:
 
"If See Something, Film Something" You have a right to film the police




With cameras on street corners, cameras in buildings, cameras on police car dashboards, and even microphones on police uniforms it is well understood that recording devices can play a role in determining just how an event went down.

Yet, scores of individuals have been arrested (under eavesdropping laws) for trying to protect themselves in this same fashion when their rights are being violated. Many cops don't like being on camera and it's not because they're shy.

Recently, an Illinois judge ruled that the state's eavesdropping law is unconstitutional. This is not the first time such laws have been ruled against.

You have a right to film, so get your cameras ready...​















:hmm:
 
Exposing the fraud that is the TSA's backscatter x-ray




An engineer posted a video the other day that demonstrates how the TSA's radiation firing body scanners can easily be bypassed.

All he needed was a sewing kit.

By calling his successful effort to evade the body scanner "crude," the TSA is admitting that its body scanners can be easily defeated by "crude" methods.

Here's the story...​










:angry:
:angry:








:hmm:
 
Re: WTF... ?????????

How Goldman wired Greece for implosion... What crime haven't these guys committed?





Greece is a crime scene and the victims of the crime are being held responsible, while the bankers who perpetrated the crime walk scot-free.

Con-artists like this don't just scam one country and call it quits after one score, no, they'll run the con on anyone buying it, which is why we should be paying close attention.

Who's next? Spain? Portugal? Ireland? US?

From our friends at Real Econ TV we get some details.

Here's the scam and what you've got to watch out for...​




















:hmm:


Dylan Rattigan, always keeps bringing the realness!!
 
Leon Panetta cites UN & NATO, not Congress, as 'legal basis' for military action




In an awkward testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee,
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta insists that the UN and NATO can
provide the Administration with 'legal authority' for military action without congressional approval.

In fact, it would seem that Congress isn't even necessary.

Once "legal permission" had been granted by NATO or "some kind of UN Security Council resolution," Panetta maintained, the President wouldn't need authorization from Congress.​




















:hmm:
 
got damn:smh:
sooner or later this house of cards is gonna collapse

hope i'm on the other side of the world when it does
 
got damn:smh:
sooner or later this house of cards is gonna collapse

hope i'm on the other side of the world when it does

I feel ya. But I can't help to think how will shit be else where if all hell break loose here... :hmm:
 
CBC broadcast on HAARP weather control Note: To remove text, click top right corner of video




HAARP (High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program) claims to be an academic project, however, patents and military documents demonstrate that the project resembles Tesla's 'death ray' and Bernard Eastlund's "ionospheric heater."

The U.S. Navy and Air Force are co-sponsors of the project, leading one to ask, "Since when is the military interested in academia without military applications?"

HAARP is a weapon.

Check out this clip from the CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation)...​









:smh:










:hmm:
 
John Stossel's "Gun Laws That Kill "



Having watched John Stossel's "Everything Illegal" recently, I thought it was pretty darn good, so I looked up some other John Stossel videos and he has a pretty good one on the Second Amendment.

This video focuses on restrictions on carry for legal gun owners, so-called 'gun-free zones' where your right to self-defense magically disappears as you cross some arbitrary line.

Including interviews with people that have lost loved ones due to these restrictio​
















:yes:
 
What is REALLY in your hamburger



Let's put it this way, if they had been caught doing this in the 1980's they would have called it what it is, dog food, but because the laws changed in the 1990's it is now called "filler".

This video exposes the details behind "pink slime" found in more than 70% of USDA approved ground beef found on grocery store shelves.

In the accompanying article, the Department of Agriculture is defending the use of ammonium-treated filler in meals destined for schoolchildren as part of the national school lunch program.

Good grief! I thought the chicken nuggets were bad...​











:smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh:







:hmm:
 
Virginia State Delegate Bob Marshall discusses H.B. 1160, against illegal detention




Once again I am pleased to be passing along the news that there is resistance among the States against the President's claim to unconstitutional authority to indefinitely detain American citizens without due process.

The Virginia Senate has passed a law that forbids authorities in the state from using the 'indefinite detention' provisions of the National Defense Authorization Act against Americans.

This is great news, but it's not all good news.

Governor Bob McDonnell may not sign the bill. McDonnell was included on President Obama's infamous 'Council of Governors', which was created to help advance the "synchronization and integration of State and Federal military activities in the United States".​










:smh::smh::smh:










:hmm:
 
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