Why do you think they’re collecting this data and investing hundreds of billions of dollars into massive NSA data centers where they can store, process and cross reference this data? These aren’t just shovel-ready Obama jobs to boost the economy. There is a plan in place, and one day all of this data will be utilized by the government. And as we know, it’s never for the benefit of the people.
Everything you do right now is being monitored, and one day soon they’re going to use that data against you. (shtfplan.com)
A nursing student attending Pima Community College in Arizona was suspended from class and subjected to accusations of bigotry when she asked that the course she paid for be conducted in English.
The student, Terri Bennett, 50, initially complained in April to school officials because she said the Spanish-dominated discussions in her class room were preventing her from learning. The college nursing program director, David Kutzler, then allegedly called her “a bigot” and an expletive, and suspended her. (washingtontimes.com)
It is painfully self-evident that our financial system doesn't just enable theft, it is theft by nature and design. If you doubt this, please follow along.
Inflation is theft, but we accept inflation because we've been persuaded it benefits us. Here's the basic story: our financial system creates new credit money (i.e. debt) in quantities that are only limited by the appetites of borrowers and the value of assets they buy with freshly borrowed money.
(charleshughsmith.blogspot.co.uk)
Actions speak louder than words, as the saying goes, and as one Saudi court has dealt an activist blogger 7 years and 600 lashes, I think we can say Saudi Arabia still sucks at free speech. Raif Badawi had been imprisoned for the past few months for the apparent crime of starting a liberal blog seeking to start religious dialogue within Saudi Arabia. (techdirt.com)
More than 100 organizations from across the globe – including Privacy International, Access, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) – are taking a stand against unchecked communications surveillance, calling for the governments around the world to follow international human rights law and curtail pervasive spying. (activistpost.com)
The federal government is hiring what it calls a "Behavioral Insights
Team" that will look for ways to subtly influence people's behavior,
according to a document describing the program obtained by FoxNews.com.
Critics warn there could be unintended consequences to such policies,
while supporters say the team could make government and society more
efficient.
While the program is still in its early stages, the document shows
the White House is already working on such projects with almost a dozen
federal departments and agencies including the Department of Health and
Human Services and the Department of Agriculture.
Topics
-When Gold goes to $2,500, you won’t care weather you bought it at $1,200 or $1,350
-Ditto for silver
-The new GDP numbers and other fairy tales – Uncle Sam Cooks The Books
-Wages are falling and prices are rising. Period
-We go back to 1964 When Patrick made $1.15 an hour at MacDonald’s and compare numbers
-Andy believes the Ancient Sumarians were the first to use fiat money
-They left Jesus alone until he messed with the money boys
-Hitler, Socialism. Banking, fiat money and wars – A fun history lesson
-What are the dynamics for buying a home right now?
-What keeps Ben Bernanke up at night? Stagflation
-Obamacare may be the first Hegelian Dialectic leg of National Health Care
-Taking responsibility for our lives or give that privilege to governments
-FED, ECB and Bank of England meeting this week to talk money
-A listener asks “What Central Banks are not owned by the boys?”
-Liberating Iraq and now the farmers have Monsanto et al dictating acceptable seeds to buy
-Japan – the third largest economy with their biggest gamble in their long History
-Most of the QE ends up in foreign banks
-What are excess reserves and why do we care?
-And the big economic picture by Andrew Gause for this moment in time The Real World of Money Archive Andy's site
A blast from the past. The first and only audio I did completely sober. LOL
Joeblow was an admin at TIU and had disappeared for nine months therefor everyone was wondering WTF happened to him so this was my attempt to get some answers out of him.
Doug Owen and Charlie McGrath talk about their new collaborative project, the DoomCast's new weekly schedule, and the direction and overall initial response,which has been great!
The Hidden History of White Slaves White people have been slaving in horrid conditions throughout history and up until the present day. Topics include: white slaves in North Africa, white slaves in North America, white slaves in Israel, white children as sex slaves, white wage slaves, and more.
Kevin Zeese, Co-Chair of Come Home America,
discusses the verdict of Bradley Manning’s military trial; the serious
attack on freedom of the press; Judge Denise Lind’s strange rulings
(always favoring the prosecution) that could be overturned on appeal;
the high-powered government witnesses scheduled to denounce Manning
during the sentencing phase; and the tipping point in the battle between
citizen and corporate media. (Duration: 30:23 — 7.0MB)
Exclusive: the first reaction of Daniel Ellsberg, author of Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers,
to Bradley Manning’s acquittal on charges of “aiding the enemy,” but
conviction under the espionage act, why journalism is still threatened,
Manning’s motives, the positive consequences of his leaks — for instance
ending America’s occupation of Iraq once and for all, and the
importance of whistleblowers to a free society. (Duration: 19:32 — 4.5MB)
Today: Dr. David Duke hunkers down with you personally in this show scanning a wide landscape of thoughts both about the realities of the world and expressing wonderful thoughts about living a happier and more fulfilling life at the same time fulfilling your responsibility to your people and your world! He also quotes a wonderful poem by Norwegian nature poet and author Knut Hamsun. For those who want to hear the song, do a google search for Om hundrede aar er alting glemt (In one hundred years all will be forgotten) and you can find the lyrics with translation as well.
Whistleblowers, in my humble opinion, are honorable people who should be valued rather than prosecuted. I know that may go against the grain for some readers. However, are we not guaranteed—and morally obligated—to think, feel, and believe what our consciences require of us? (activistpost.com)
This article at the dailymail.co.uk site made me sick to my stomach today. Just one more example of how far down the toilet Britain has fallen.
A gang who laughed as they doused a woman in acid while she walked her six-year-old twins home from school have been jailed for a total of 44 years.
The attackers was heard laughing as the noxious liquid was sprayed at the screaming mother in front of her two boys outside Upton Cross Primary School in Upton Park, east London.
In an interview with The Daily Caller’s Ginni Thomas, Barletta said he didn’t come to Congress “to play politics.”
“I came here to do what’s best for America,” he declared.Barletta argued in the interview that American citizenship is a special privilege that shouldn’t be given away like a “cheap suit.”
'Not Guilty' on 'aiding the enemy' charge, but vPfc. Bradley Manning, the army whistleblower who exposed egregious U.S. war crimes after revealing military documents to the website WikiLeaks, has been found guilty of almost all of his charges in a military court in Fort Meade, Maryland and could face a maximum of more than 100 years in jail. (commondreams.org)