The celebration over the recent movements in the dollar may have been a bit premature, if the past two weeks are any indication.
Original Page: http://dailycaller.com/2012/03/30/dollar-weakening-on-euro-smokescreen/
Collapse, Environmental Science, Politics, Economics, with a Dash of Sky-is-Falling Paranoia. And Zombies.
The celebration over the recent movements in the dollar may have been a bit premature, if the past two weeks are any indication.
Original Page: http://dailycaller.com/2012/03/30/dollar-weakening-on-euro-smokescreen/
Saying that the lottery is justified since its for the children is a bit disingenuous, with students being failed by a public education system that is increasingly a political machine focused on revenue rather than a service by which learning occurs.The jackpot for the upcoming Mega Millions lottery drawing has grown to a whopping $640 million. This sky-high total has some state legislators hoping for a big payday via the tax bill that would come from one of their residents taking home the prize. "I'd love it if a Rhode Islander wins," said Rep. Helio Melo, the chairman of his state House's Finance Committee.
If a Rhode Islander were lucky enough to win, the state's take would be more than $20 million. But the fact that state legislators are giddy at the prospect of a lottery-financed tax windfall merely shows how foolhardy it is that states depend on lottery revenue at all. As Elizabeth Winslow McAuliffe pointed out in Public Integrity, "while lotteries were initially perceived as fiscal saviors, they have not generated the anticipated revenue." Many states earmark their lottery revenue for a specific purpose, most often education, but it turns out that that formula isn't workable:
The educational "bonus" appears to be nonexistent. Miller and Pierce (1997) studied the short- and long-term effect of education lotteries. They found that lottery states did indeed increase per-capita spending on education during the lottery's early years. However, after some time these states actually decreased their overall spending on education. In contrast, states without lotteries increased education spending over time. In fact, nonlottery states spend, on average, 10 percent more of their budgets on education than lottery states (Gearey 1997).
One more reason to go the homeschool route in my opinion. If taxation were not an issue, and entrance to state educational institutes was on a pay-per-play basis (like private higher education), local and independent schooling might make a much needed return. Federal intervention has had ever-increasingly negative effects on education, you know, for the children.The National Gambling Impact Study Commission has found that "there is reason to doubt if earmarked lottery revenues in fact have the effect of increasing funds available for the specified purpose." The Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government also found that "new gambling operations that are intended to pay for normal increases in general state spending may add to, rather than ease, state budget imbalances."
As Citizens for Tax Justice put it, "it becomes a case of diminishing returns as neighboring states introduce new and better lotto games. Then, states either lose business to another state or hit a ceiling for how many lotto tickets a population can buy. That is, as a revenue source, it's a short or medium term quick fix but not a long term solution."
And then there's the simple fact that the lottery is, in essence, a regressive tax, with about a 38 percent tax rate (a rate usually reserved for the very richest Americans). According to the Bloomberg News "Sucker Index," residents of Georgia are doing the most damage to their own finances through the lottery, followed by residents of Massachusetts.
Original Page: http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/03/30/455850/lottery-bad-bet-state-budget/
As BP reaps billions in profits from rising gasoline prices, the Gulf of Mexico is dying from its uncleaned pollution. "After months of laboratory work, scientists say they can definitively finger oil from BP's blown-out well as the culprit for the slow death of a once brightly colored deep-sea coral community in the Gulf of Mexico that is now brown and dull," the AP reports. Tarballs that washed up on the beaches were "teeming with bacteria." Oil from the killer Deepwater Horizon blowout "has contaminated zooplankton, one of the first links in the oceanic food chain," scientists found. And Louisiana state officials have found their coastline soaked in toxic oil, where the Coast Guard and BP have declared victory and abandoned monitoring:
Wetland areas in north Barataria Bay and the Pass a Loutre Wildlife Management Area at the mouth of the Mississippi River continue to show signs of oil that state officials say is from the BP oil spill, according to photos posted on Flickr by the state Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority.
In February, the oil giant BP reported reported $7.7 billion in profit for the fourth quarter of 2011, a 38 percent increase from a year earlier.
Original Page: http://thinkprogress.org/green/2012/03/30/455614/two-years-after-spill-disgusting-bp-oil-contaminates-cleaned-marshes/
But the US government and BP say that the coast has been cleaned up. Would they lie?
While much has been made of the public side the ECB's money-printing facade whereby any and every piece of junk collateral can be lodged with the lender-of-first-last-and-only-resort in return for shiny new Euros to spend on government bonds...
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Original Page: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/EconForecast/~3/x8sgwPbRyS0/europes-stealth-money-printing.html
If we could repeal property taxes, more buyers might consider owning property by removing the power of the State to use force to steal from citizens. Taxation is a form of violence by the state.The American dream of owning a home is still alive and well, but a large percentage of Americans today feel that for now, renting might be the better option.
With home prices still falling and foreclosures still flooding the market, just 65 percent of those surveyed in CNBC's All-America survey said they are better off owning than renting, far less than the 89 percent who favored owning back in 1996.
On the bright side, Americans do feel better about their home values, and that is vital given that home equity is such a key driver of consumer spending. If we feel richer, we buy more.
Twenty-two percent of those surveyed believe their home values will increase in the next year. That's up from 15 percent last quarter and the highest level in two years, albeit less than half of the 50 percent who expected home price appreciation in March 2007, when housing was about to fall off a cliff.
Fifty-eight percent said they expect prices to stay flat, while 20 percent say home prices will continue to lose value.
Analysts who watch housing for a living are all over the map on this question, some predicting further price drops of up to 10 percent, while others claim prices have bottomed.
Original Page: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheMoneyGame/~3/OJGguOTw2FE/46857026
1) Economic collapse in America will begin when food inflation becomes a major crisis.
Currently there is a serious shortage of farmers the U.S. While there has been a boom in non-productive service oriented jobs in U.S. in recent decades, very few Americans have pursued productive jobs, especially in the agricultural sector. This has created a situation in which there is rising demand for but decreased production of food. Couple this with the fact that when governments create monetary inflation, prices of all goods and services do not rise equally. Inflation occurs greatest in products that people need most and cannot cut back on such as food. As the U.S. federal government continues creating money out of thin air to pay off its debts, and the resulting inflation occurs, the first thing Americans will buy in the beginning of the economic collapse will be food, and this will drive up prices considerably. It has been suggested by preparedness experts that families should stock up on non-perishable food supplies and have at least a six month reserve of food should food shortages become a serious problem in the coming economic collapse.
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Of all the examples cited, the issue of food seems to be paramount, as we can not survive without it.
Original Page: http://www.seoblox.com/5-predictions-for-the-u-s-economy-and-economic-collapse-in-2011-14/
A Love Letter From Israel to IranHere is one of the initial posts that caught light of this campaign. This forum captures a full coverage of the kind of outputs that the "Israel Loves Iran" had, including photographs, personal anecdotes and home-made videos. This was all around the time that Israel started threatening to bomb Iran.
"A message of love from Israelis to Iranians sounds stranger than fiction in these tense years where Iranian and Israeli governments threaten each other with any imaginable words. But we see examples of just this in a Facebook campaign launched by Pushpin Mehina (real name Ronny) in his timeline that says: 'We will never bomb your country. We love you.'"
Source: Global Voices
Iranians to Israelis: "We Are Your Friends"Oddly enough, some Iranians responded back with a similar response. From the same forum, it was reported that a Facebook campaign was launched sharing similar sentiments to that of the "Israel Loves Iran" group. Although the Facebook page has a lot of pro-Israel sentiments, it does not show a use of strong emotive words such as 'love' quite as much, limiting its sentiment to being "friends".Source: Global Voices
First, in 1979, there was nuclear meltdown at the Three Mile Island power plant in Pennsylvania. Supposedly there were no ill-effects from this incident. According to most government and regulatory officials, most of the radiation was contained and the actual release of radiation had negligible effects on the physical health of individuals or the environment. Whether your believe that or not, Three Mile Island was a wake-up up call regarding the safety of nuclear reactors.
This was followed by the Chernobyl disaster in 1986. The incident at Chernobyl resulted in an explosion and fire that released large quantities of radioactive contaminants into the atmosphere. These radioactive particles spread over much of Western USSR and Europe and it was bad. Really bad.
According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, over 200,0000 people are believed to have been relocated as a result of the accident. Reports of serious illness, though, have been vague and claim to show no direct correlation between their radiation exposure and an increase in other forms of cancer or disease.
Then in 2011, a massive tsunami severely damaged the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. And we still do not know for sure the impact of that incident on our health and the environment.
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Original Page: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ActivistPost/~3/WQTKDK5OnZM/15-ways-to-limit-radiation-after.html
We continue to have deflation in our homes and wages, with inflation in the things we need (gas and food). Sounds like a perfect combination. CNBC Bimbos say it's the best time to buy stocks. And so it goes. Case Shiller Finds Home Prices Declined For 9th Consecutive Month In January [...]
Original Page: http://www.theburningplatform.com/?p=32205
I agree that the confidentiality requirement is invalid and interferes with the relationship with patients. It impedes their ability to do something out of necessity (care for people) whereas the mining industry is not a necessity, but does infringe upon the right to healthy living by knowingly and intentionaly inflicting damage on the environment, and in turn humans through the ecology.I have a new piece up today about a provision in a Pennsylvania law that critics have called a "gag order" for medical professionals. The provision would allow doctors to access information about chemicals in "fracking" fluid, the stuff injected into the ground to tap into natural gas resources, but would make them sign a confidentiality agreement stating that they won't share that information with anyone—not even the person they're treating.
There is no reason that the contents of a pollutant being disposed of into the shared environment should not be public record, as it effects all of us.Doctors in Pennsylvania have expressed concern that this would interfere with their relationships with patients, and with attempts to gain a better understanding of broader public health matters as they relate to oil and gas drilling. And the president of the Pennsylvania Medical Society, Dr. Marilyn J. Heine, has also spoken out about the need for more information in the state as concerns about public health have increased. "We have no definitive answers to these questions because we lack data," she wrote in an op-ed last month.
I hope that even if the law passes, doctors will release the information publicly and bypass these sort of bad laws through civil disobedience, rather similar to nullification on the individual level. Most of us recognize at least a few laws as being impractical, if not entirely invalid, and simply refuse to heed them. We just need to do so on a grander scale to have an effect on the state.But doctors in the national public health community are also worried about what the new law might mean. The provision "compromises both individual patient well-being and public health," said Dr. Jerome A. Paulson, director of the Mid-Atlantic Center for Children's Health & the Environment at Children's National Medical Center in Washington, DC, which serves Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. His group has been concerned about unconventional gas extraction the past few years and has been gathering information for families and for health professionals, he said. Pennsylvania's new law could interfere with that work.
Doctors would be forced to decide whether to sign a confidentiality agreement that would prevent them from sharing necessary information with patients, or not sign it—and then not have access to that information at all. "It's an untenable situation for a health professionals," said Paulson. "It really goes against our standard ways of getting and gathering information, and it goes against moral and ethical responsibilities for protecting the public health."
Original Page: http://motherjones.com/blue-marble/2012/03/docs-pa-no-fracking-way
Is the fix in in Illinois? Outrage builds as videos and screen grabs circulate online showing results for the Illinois Republican primary hours before voters went to the polls.Sure, it was a test, just a little accident. Nothing to see, move along, move along...
Results for the primary election briefly appeared on the ABC 7 Chicago website Monday, March 19, the day before the primary was to take place.
According to screen captures and videos circulating around the internet, the results show Rick Santorum narrowly defeating Mitt Romney, with Newt Gingrich placing third, and Ron Paul a distant fourth.
ABC 7 Chicago denies any election fraud or conspiracy. The network claims the curious screen captures were only a test. Responding to numerous queries, ABC 7 Chicago tweeted the following on Tuesday afternoon:
It was a test. The website results that appeared before polls opened were test results. Actual results will appear after the polls close.
While ABC may be being honest, their mistake is nevertheless inexcusable. The appearance of impropriety is often just as bad as actual impropriety. Posting the primary “test results” to their website was negligent and irresponsible.
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"How the hell does SGTreport have election results for a Republican primary in Illinois which has yet to take place? We have long argued that the fix is in but this... um... leaves us speechless.
Posted tonight -- MONDAY, March 19th -- on the web site of Chicago ABC News Affiliate WLS-TV are the following election results, clearly labeled as "Illinois Races, Federal Offices". If we have this wrong, please let us know why this information exists in ANY form. Or, if we are indeed living in a banana republic, copy that. You now have our blessing to move out of the country.
The content in my videos and on the SGTbull07 channel are provided for informational purposes only. Use the information found in my videos as a starting point for conducting your own research and conduct your own due diligence (DD) BEFORE making any significant investing decisions. SGTbull07 assumes all information to be truthful and reliable; however, I cannot and do not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of this information.
If anything, he was somewhere between libertarianism/classical liberalism and anarcho-capitalism. He was said to be against state or religious control over markets and money systems, putting the rights of the individual ahead of the collective. How is that even remotely like socialism, which has always collapsed in any state that puts it into practice.A new short film by Matthew Modine is making the rounds at film festivals and is receiving positive reviews. 'Jesus Was A Commie' is sparking a new wave of discussion about religion and economics.
Tim Yeager, a dedicated trade union organizer and Episcopal priest, will speak about the economic and social justice message in Christianity in a video presentation March 27.
Today many Christian conservatives have attempted to interpret the message of the Bible to justify a right-wing agenda of division, exploitation, capitalism and inequality. But what if the values at the heart of the gospel were really about equality, justice, environmentalism and collectivity?
What is liberation theology? Aren't Marxists against religion? Is the U.S. a Christian nation? Was Jesus a communist? What's the significance of the Christian right? Should religion influence politics at all? Do common teachings of progressive values (peace, love, equality, justice, the golden rule, etc) provide a basis for broader unity among religious and secular people?
Original Page: http://feeds.cpusa.org/~r/cpusaMain/~3/5HfG70WrfKw/
In spite of the large quantities of gas ejected by its many volcanoes, Io does not have a significant atmosphere. Io's average surface temperature is so low, (about 100 to 110 K (-280 to -290 degrees Fahrenheit), that much of the released gas condenses back onto the surface as frost deposits. The thin atmosphere that does exist is composed primarily of sulfur dioxide gas.
Some molecules of gas do escape, however, and Io is surrounded by a cloud of sodium, potassium, and oxygen atoms. The sodium cloud, visible in this image, is the most easily observed. The source of the sodium remains a mystery to scientists because it has not yet been detected anywhere on Io's surface. Recently, the element chlorine was also discovered. This finding leads scientists to believe that sodium chloride, or common table salt, may exist on Io and influence its violent volcanic activity. Prior to this discovery, only sulfur, oxygen, sodium, and potassium atoms were observed escaping Io's atmosphere.
Two common compounds of chlorine are sodium chloride, table salt, and hydrogen chloride, which is a colorless gas emitted by volcanoes. Scientists do not yet know if the chlorine is emitted from Io's volcanoes, or comes from the breakup salt on Io's surface by charged particles in the plasma torus. How salt might form on Io is unclear. It may be that there are subsurface rivers or aquifers supplying the fuel for Io's volcanoes that carry dissolved salts, or the salts may be the result of chemical reactions in the atmosphere.
Within Jupiter's magnetosphere, there is a significant amount of hot, ionized gas, or plasma. This plasma moves along with Jupiter's rotating magnetic field, sweeping charged particles off the surfaces of its moons as it passes them. Io has a particularly significant impact on Jupiter's magnetosphere. Io's volcanoes continually expel an enormous amount of particles into space, and these are swept up by Jupiter's magnetic field at a rate of 1,000 kg/sec. This material becomes ionized in the magnetic field and forms a doughnut-shaped track around Io's orbit called the Io Plasma Torus.
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There's no statistical correlation between how much oil comes out of U.S. wells and the price of gas, according to an analysis of 36 years of monthly, inflation-adjusted gasoline prices and U.S. domestic oil production conducted by AP: "If more domestic oil drilling worked as politicians say, you'd now be paying about $2 a gallon for gasoline. Instead, you're paying the highest prices ever for March." Since February 2009, U.S. oil production has increased 15 percent when seasonally adjusted. Prices in those three years went from $2.07 per gallon to $3.58.
The Great Sugar Shaft
by James Bovard, April 1998
The U.S. government has devotedly jacked up American sugar prices far above world market prices since the close of the War of 1812. The sugar industry is one of America's oldest infant industries — yet it dodders with the same uncompetitiveness that it showed during the second term of James Madison. Few cases better illustrate how trade policy can be completely immune to economic sense.
The U.S. imposed high tariffs on sugar in 1816 in order to placate the growers in the newly acquired Louisiana territory. In the 1820s, sugar plantation owners complained that growing sugar in the United States was "warring with nature" because the U.S. climate was unsuited to sugar production. Naturally, the plantation owners believed that all Americans should be conscripted into the "war." Protectionists warned that if sugar tariffs were lifted, then the value of slaves working on the sugar plantations would collapse — thus causing a general fall in slave values throughout the South.
In 1934, the U.S. government imposed sugar import quotas to complement high sugar tariffs and direct government subsidies to sugar growers. By the 1950s, the U.S. sugar program was renown for its byzantine, impenetrable regulations. Like most arcane systems, the sugar program vested vast power in the few people who understood and controlled the system. As author Douglas Cater observed in 1964, "In reviewing the sugar quotas, House Agriculture Committee Chairman Cooley has had the habit of receiving the [foreign representatives interested in acquiring sugar quotas] one by one to make their presentations, then summoning each afterward to announce his verdict. By all accounts, he has a zest for this princely power and enjoys the frequent meetings with foreign ambassadors to confer on matters of sugar and state."
Sugar quotas have also provided a safety net for former congressmen, many of whom have been hired as lobbyists for foreign sugar producers...
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The case to end the Federal Reserve has been made over and over again and again. It serves to make and keep the nation's wealth in the hands of those who seek to control a society, rather than to serve the public good. Any argument to the contrary is a statist position that does not take into account the damage it has done since Jekyll Island. The continued existence and support for the Fed is evidence of the level of corruption and the vestment of it's beneficiaries.On November 6, 2011, the Economic Collapse Blog published the article, 14 Reasons Why We Should Nationalize The Federal Reserve.
On March 21, 2012, they published the article, Ben Bernanke Tries To Convince America That The Federal Reserve Is Good And The Gold Standard Is Bad.
At the end of the article, the author, Michael Snyder writes:
"When you take an honest look at the Federal Reserve, there is only one rational conclusion: Congress should shut it down, lock the doors and throw away the key."
In a free market, a publisher can choose the material it wishes to publish, just as an author is free to find a publisher which is willing to support their work.On November 12, 2011, I wrote the article, Lew Rockwell says MSNBC is blocking their regular contributor, Pat Buchanan, from discussing his new book, but what about LewRockwell.com keeping certain articles by its regular contributors from its readers?
I imagine it would be quite entertaining to watch anyone debate Lew Rockwell on baseless accusations like this. I find it even more entertaining that the author is criticizing Rockwell for supporting a blogger who finds so much wrong with our current economic system and it's manipulation by the Fed.In it I challenged Lew Rockwell to hold himself to the same standard he expected of MSNBC regarding his selective publication of articles by the Economic Collapse Blog, in publishing lots of depressing articles about how poorly the U.S. government is currently functioning but none of the ones about improving government.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is trading in his chairman hat for that of a college professor.
Original Page: http://adamsmithblog.com/?p=51139
Arstechnica reports that RIAA and ISPs will monitor your web traffic, starting in the second quarter of this year (i.e., 2012). I feel this is a very wrong approach to stop online piracy! Online piracy isn't terrorism, and so we should not use this draconian measure in an effort to weed out online piracy, because this will make online privacy even worse than how it's now (i.e., some social networks might be too eager to implement web features that strip away better online privacy).
Do I have to worry about my normal web traffic being monitored by ISPs? Of course, normal web traffic has nothing to be worried about being flagged as traffic of pirating contents, but I have the feeling that people might not feel so good of knowing they're being watched constantly. It's the same idea as I do not want my phone company to listen into every conversation I have had or will have with my folks.
God knows what they might do with such phone conversations, right? They might store my phone conversations forever! I might have nothing to hide, but I might fear I do sound stupid during those conversations and do not ever want to be reminded of. Sure, they might not or if ever reveal those phone conversations of mine to anyone or even me, but do I want to know that they have my stupid phone conversations on record forever or however long?
You see, it's logical for people to fear that they're being watched as if they are guilty of something even though they have done nothing wrong! I don't think people will be happy if they know their ISPs are constantly watching them for the sake of the entertainment industry — but not every customer of each ISP is the customer of the entertainment industry — therefore not everyone who is the customer of an ISP should be subjected to be scrutinized for the sake of the entertainment industry!
If I'm wrong on all points, I still think ISPs' customers deserve to be treated as customers and not some criminals from the start! What do you think? You can check out Arstechnica's RIAA and ISPs to police your traffic this summer (updated) article/report to read more on ISPs to monitor your web traffic.
Comcast, Cablevision, Verizon, Time Warner Cable and other Internet service providers (ISPs) in the United States will soon launch new programs to police their networks in an effort to catch digital pirates and stop illegal file-sharing. Major ISPs announced last summer that they had agreed to take new measures in an effort to prevent subscribers from illegally [...]
Original Page: http://usahitman.com/ispcopycops/
Modern Liberalism has come a long way (wrong way) from classical liberalism, which was more akin to libertarianism, in opposition to aggressive foreign policy, opposition to increased state authority, and individual liberties held in higher regard than the state or collective. You can deny the socialism parallels, even refuse to accept the reality, but that makes it no less true.Sam Harris writes about the fallout from a recent visit with Joe Rogan on his blog:
I recently had a very enjoyable three-hour conversation with Joe Rogan on his podcast, where the topics ranged from jihad to probability theory to psychedelics. But I subsequently received a fair amount of abuse online for a few things I said about Islam and our adventures in the war on terror.
For instance, I appear to have left many viewers with the impression that I believe we invaded Afghanistan for the purpose of rescuing its women from the Taliban. However, the points I was actually making were rather different: I think that abandoning these women to the Taliban is one of the things that make our inevitable retreat from Afghanistan ethically problematic. I also believe that wherever we can feasibly stop the abuse of women and girls, we should. An ability to do this in places like Afghanistan, and throughout the world, would be one of the benefits of having a global civil society and a genuine regime of international law. Needless to say, this is not the world we are living in (yet).
The ferocious response to my discussion with Rogan about the war on terror has, once again, caused me to worry about the future of liberalism. It is one thing to think that the war in Afghanistan has been an excruciating failure (which I believe), but it is another to think that we had no moral right to attack al-Qaeda and the Taliban in the first place. A significant percentage of liberals seem to hold the latter view, and consider President Obama to be nothing more than a neocon stooge and Islam to be an unfairly maligned religion of peace.
That is the failure of modern Liberalism, that those greats from Chaplin to Mises would not associate with that term today which brought such meaning and pride in their day. How far they have fallen.I regularly hear from such people, and their beliefs genuinely trouble me. It doesn't take many emails containing sentences like "The United States and Israel are the greatest terrorist states on earth" to make me feel that liberalism is simply doomed…
[continues at the Sam Harris blog]
Original Page: http://www.disinfo.com/2012/03/sam-harris-joe-rogan-islam-and-the-future-of-liberalism/
It's a commonplace of Budget coverage to discuss the Chancellor's package in terms of theft, pilfering and picking pockets. Successive chancellors have been portrayed as masked robbers, cat burglars and footpads, sneaking away with a swag bag full of taxpayers' money. This one will be no different, but the victims of the theft in question [...]
Original Page: http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/jameskirkup/100145540/budget-2012-conservatives-fight-lib-dems-to-claim-credit-for-tax-policies/
Of course our elected representatives know what the private mercenaries are doing in the name of America overseas. They employ these "firms" as a way to bypass the accountability required of our own military, what little they seem to still have...US government officials requested that an American private security firm contact Syrian opposition figures in Turkey to see "how they can help in regime change," the CEO of one of these firms told Stratfor in a company email obtained by WikiLeaks and Al-Akhbar.
James F. Smith, former director of Blackwater, is currently the Chief Executive of SCG International, a private security firm with experience in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya. In what appears to be his first email to Stratfor, Smith stated that his "background is CIA" and his company is comprised of "former DOD [Department of Defense], CIA and former law enforcement personnel."
Imagine that. A warmonger in congress hiring mercenaries to help overthrow a foreign nation that poses no threat to our own."We provide services for those same groups in the form of training, security and information collection," he explained to Stratfor. (doc-id 5441475)
In a 13 December 2011 email to Stratfor's VP for counter-terrorism Fred Burton, which Burton shared with Stratfor's briefers, Smith claimed that "[he] and Walid Phares were getting air cover from Congresswoman [Sue] Myrick to engage Syrian opposition in Turkey (non-MB and non-Qatari) on a fact finding mission for Congress."
Walid Phares, named by the source as part of the "fact finding team," is a Lebanese-American citizen and currently co-chairs Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney's Middle East advisory group.
In a profile of Walid Phares published in Salon, As'ad AbuKhalil details Phares' history with right-wing militias during the Lebanese civil war.
Sue Myrick, who allegedly was providing "air cover" for the "fact finding team", is a Republican Congresswoman from North Carolina who has a track record of extremist pro-zionist and anti-Islamic views.
With this direct connection to Romney, don't expect him to be an alternative to Obama in terms of foreign policy. The names change, but the game stays the same.These include leading the charge against Dubai Ports World's attempt to buy major American ports in 2006 – labeling the Islamic Society of North America as a group of "radical jihadists" – and demanding that former President Jimmy Carter's citizenship be revoked for daring to meet with Hamas leaders in 2008.
Currently, Myrick is a member of the United States House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, a congressional committee charged with overseeing the American intelligence community, and is also involved with the Department of Defense and the US military.
In his email, the "true mission" for the "fact finding" team, Smith told Burton, was how "they can help in regime change."
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Late last week President Obama signed The National Defense Resources Preparedness Executive Order. This order gives him the authority to take hold of all of the US assets that are necessary to secure peace in times of war, essentially declaring martial-law in America. Many believe that this step was taken to prepare for a war with Iran. Reporters have questioned the Obama administration on if the recent move was in preparation for war with Iran, but the question was laughed off. Charlie McGrath, founder of WideAwakeNews.com, joins us to discuss if this new Executive Order is a laughing matter.So, we are taking a position of aggression and premeditation toward Iran, though they pose no threat to this nation (a Constitutional requirement for any military action). It has been a while since we had a president (or any politician) who acted as a proper statesman and opposed empirical actions like this. Obama was the antiwar candidate who became the warmongering Liberal. Shocker!
While the dollar is still functional, Donate $15 or More at my blog above and as a thank you , I will send a free CD packed with 160 Survival books to build your library to help you get the knowledge you will need to get through the great reset coming.
The dollar collapse will be the single largest event in human history. This will be the first event that will touch every single living person in the world. All human activity is controlled by money. Our wealth,our work,our food,our government,even our relationships are affected by money.
No money in human history has had as much reach in both breadth and depth as the dollar. It is the de facto world currency. All other currency collapses will pale in comparison to this big one. All other currency crises have been regional and there were other currencies for people to grasp on to.
This collapse will be global and it will bring down not only the dollar but all other fiat currencies,as they are fundamentally no different. The collapse of currencies will lead to the collapse of ALL paper assets. The repercussions to this will have incredible results worldwide.
Presidential contender Newt Gingrich has slammed President Barack Obama as a "food-stamp president," but the Rev. Jesse Jackson says that it is an honor, not an insult.When Gingrich labeled Obama "the best food-stamp president in American history," he clearly meant that as a negative. But Jackson, speaking at his regular Saturday service at the Rainbow PUSH headquarters in Chicago, had a different take."It's an honor to be a food-stamp president. Food stamps feed the hungry. Food stamps feed the children. Food stamps help the farmer," the civil rights leader declared. "Food stamps help the truck driver. Food stamps help the warehouse. Food stamps help the store. Food stamps hire people (really?) and feed people. Food stamps save people from starvation and malnutrition.""Whenever you attack feeding the hungry, you undermine the moral authority of our faith," Jackson said.
Released: 5th of November, 2011. Muad'Dib's latest hard-hitting documentary about the innumerable crimes of the Ashke-Nazi Banksters.
From their historical origins down to their planned genocidal future, Muad'Dib tracks who THEY* are, how THEY operate, and most importantly, how to get rid of them once and for all.
It is time for millions of us, to take full responsibility for our actions & circumstances, unite and peacefully gather at the Houses of Parliament in London, England -- on the 5th of November 2012 -- to support Muad'Dib in declaring a Year of Jubilee, to cancel all debts and end the corruption and treason, making this a day that present and future generations will never forget.
After being wrongfully arrested and falsely and maliciously imprisoned for making His "7/7 Ripple Effect" film and defending innocent people, Muad'Dib is back with no mercy for those who've shown none to others.
Cutting to the root of the problem, with the only solution. Come and be part of it.
Thanks to Adult Swim re-airing King of the Hill five nights a week I recently caught an old episode that has expanded my list of approved politicians to now feature two: Ron Paul and Hank Hill. The episode is "Flush with Power" from season four.
It makes sense that the only politician in American history whose integrity would rival Dr. Paul's is a fictional cartoon character.
In this episode, the Texas town of Arlen is experiencing a severe drought, and the local government has instituted water-rationing policies. Each household is permitted to use only a certain low amount of water each week until rain returns, and an army of bureaucrats has been unleashed to patrol the neighborhoods of Arlen, randomly checking meters and cracking down on those who defy the policy.
Rationing is a very typical measure imposed by central planners ignorant of economics. Much like the saying that a person who has a hammer sees everything as a nail, city managers see every societal problem as something that can only be solved by the exercise of their power. As if they are wizards holding magical wands, they believe each and every trouble in their jurisdiction can be fixed by regulations and policies.
This rationing policy is very bad news for Hank Hill. Hank has a lush lawn he proudly maintains, but this requires a lot of water. In order to stay within the restrictions of the rationing policy and still leave his family with enough water for their needs, Hank has to let his yard suffer.
If, instead of rationing, the Arlen city government allowed the price of water to freely fluctuate according to supply and demand, people like Hank would be much better off. The price of water would rise, which would result in people who don't value water as much reducing their consumption. This would leave more water left over for those who value the water more and are willing to pay the higher price. With rationing and price ceilings, yes, the price is lower, but the supply is extinguished much faster.
An even better solution would be for the city mangers of Arlen to completely demunicipalize water distribution and let the market handle it. Entrepreneurs would compete with each other over who can offer the highest-quality water services for the lowest price, and the victor would be awarded with the highest profits. This profit motive would make new innovations in water distribution much more likely. One entrepreneur might buy the rights to a water source in another well-hydrated territory and pipe it into Arlen. Another might invent a new, cheap way to desalinize the ocean water surrounding Texas.
Another, more pitiful solution the city managers of Arlen offer is the promotion of inefficient low-flow toilets being issued for "free" (at the expense of the taxpayers being forced to pay for them). This too is a typical response of the central planners: reduce your quality of life by using lower-quality products, citizens, and shut up. Rather than owning up to the problem being the result of foolish government management, the bureaucrats place the blame on the citizens for using the "wrong" toilets. We not only see this with the American government's present policy on toilets, but also with light bulbs and cars.
In the market you never hear entrepreneurs blaming their customers for problems. The customer is always right, and entrepreneurs slavishly have to find ways to continue pleasing the customer. If an entrepreneur held a press conference and told his customers that they need to quit complaining and learn to accept lower-quality products, he would go bankrupt overnight; but with government it is always about making the tax-slave citizens sacrifice and suffer, and about using violent force against those who refuse.
Hank, desperate to have water for maintaining his lawn, breaks down and gets a low-flow toilet.
Thanks to Adult Swim re-airing King of the Hill five nights a week I recently caught an old episode that has expanded my list of approved politicians to now feature two: Ron Paul and Hank Hill. The episode is "Flush with Power" from season four.
It makes sense that the only politician in American history whose integrity would rival Dr. Paul's is a fictional cartoon character.
In this episode, the Texas town of Arlen is experiencing a severe drought, and the local government has instituted water-rationing policies. Each household is permitted to use only a certain low amount of water each week until rain returns, and an army of bureaucrats has been unleashed to patrol the neighborhoods of Arlen, randomly checking meters and cracking down on those who defy the policy.
Rationing is a very typical measure imposed by central planners ignorant of economics. Much like the saying that a person who has a hammer sees everything as a nail, city managers see every societal problem as something that can only be solved by the exercise of their power. As if they are wizards holding magical wands, they believe each and every trouble in their jurisdiction can be fixed by regulations and policies.
This rationing policy is very bad news for Hank Hill. Hank has a lush lawn he proudly maintains, but this requires a lot of water. In order to stay within the restrictions of the rationing policy and still leave his family with enough water for their needs, Hank has to let his yard suffer.
If, instead of rationing, the Arlen city government allowed the price of water to freely fluctuate according to supply and demand, people like Hank would be much better off. The price of water would rise, which would result in people who don't value water as much reducing their consumption. This would leave more water left over for those who value the water more and are willing to pay the higher price. With rationing and price ceilings, yes, the price is lower, but the supply is extinguished much faster.
An even better solution would be for the city mangers of Arlen to completely demunicipalize water distribution and let the market handle it. Entrepreneurs would compete with each other over who can offer the highest-quality water services for the lowest price, and the victor would be awarded with the highest profits. This profit motive would make new innovations in water distribution much more likely. One entrepreneur might buy the rights to a water source in another well-hydrated territory and pipe it into Arlen. Another might invent a new, cheap way to desalinize the ocean water surrounding Texas.
Another, more pitiful solution the city managers of Arlen offer is the promotion of inefficient low-flow toilets being issued for "free" (at the expense of the taxpayers being forced to pay for them). This too is a typical response of the central planners: reduce your quality of life by using lower-quality products, citizens, and shut up. Rather than owning up to the problem being the result of foolish government management, the bureaucrats place the blame on the citizens for using the "wrong" toilets. We not only see this with the American government's present policy on toilets, but also with light bulbs and cars.
In the market you never hear entrepreneurs blaming their customers for problems. The customer is always right, and entrepreneurs slavishly have to find ways to continue pleasing the customer. If an entrepreneur held a press conference and told his customers that they need to quit complaining and learn to accept lower-quality products, he would go bankrupt overnight; but with government it is always about making the tax-slave citizens sacrifice and suffer, and about using violent force against those who refuse.
Hank, desperate to have water for maintaining his lawn, breaks down and gets a low-flow toilet.
The toilets are immediately revealed to be inferior products — requiring many more flushes to dispose of waste than normal toilets. This is a typical result of the government's remedies: not only are they usually unsuccessful, but they also exacerbate the problems they were allegedly intended to solve.
[...]
Read more »North America's largest trade show for natural products learned a dramatic lesson in hypocrisy last week when Occupy Monsanto members of the "Genetic Crimes Unit" showed up in biohazard suits, to highlight the hidden GMOs in most "natural" products.
Occupy Monsanto will target Congress tomorrow, March 16, again wearing bio-hazmat suits "to highlight how chemical company Monsanto is contaminating our political process," the group has announced.
"The GCU opposes Monsanto's bid to increase spraying of food with toxic weed killers like 2,4 D (the main ingredient in Agent Orange), genetic contamination of the organic food supply, and other risks associated with genetically modified food (GMOs)."
GCU spokesman David Bronner told OC, "We are approaching this as a necessary civil defense against the unknown long-term effects of eating GMO foods currently under investigation by the GCU."
Internet pornography could conceivably become a thing of the past if Rick Santorum is elected president.
The unapologetic social conservative, currently in second place behind Mitt Romney for the GOP nomination, has promised to crack down on the distribution of pornography if elected.
Santorum says in a statement posted to his website, "The Obama Administration has turned a blind eye to those who wish to preserve our culture from the scourge of pornography and has refused to enforce obscenity laws."
The International Monetary Fund has formally approved its €28bn (£23bn) contribution to a second bailout for Greece, as part of a €130bn package of emergency funding from fellow eurozone members.
'Sometimes the truth must be protected by a bodyguarian of LIES'?
"It is impossible to rule out the possibility of fakes in the email cache, but…" "The Assad E-Mails," London Guardian, March 14, 2012.
This sentence right here should have immediately halted the publication of anything revolving around an alleged cache of e-mails provided to the Guardian by the obviously compromised "Syrian opposition." The source is clearly biased, politically motivated, and their information unconfirmed. Yet the Guardian decided to run with the story anyway, casting doubt on their own objectivity, journalistic integrity, and their true motivation, which now is clearly not "journalism."
The Guardian, in their explanation as to why they decided to publish unconfirmed information included the following statement, "we believe the more detailed picture of the workings of Assad's inner circle that emerges from the mails, and the extent to which he and his wife have managed to sustain their luxurious lifestyle, are also of public interest." A "more detailed picture" that is in fact unverified and most likely a politically motivated fabrication is indeed of "public interest" if you are trying to sell a particular narrative regardless of the actual facts.
The job of a journalist is to report the facts impartially to help inform the public and enable them to make accurate decisions in regards to a vast array of issues that affect their daily lives as well as the collective well-being of their communities and nations. A journalist is not to irresponsibly publish anything that comes across their desk, applying sensational headlines while making incredible innuendos only to post disclaimers halfway down the page that the information they are attempting to foist upon the public as fact and "truth," "may not be verified or true."
That is propaganda, deceit, manipulation, and above all, fraud. Of course, in the Guardian's quest to "verify" these alleged e-mails, they contact other propagandists within the same circle of corporate-media outfits, including ABC News (whose Barber Walters' interview with Assad was a humiliating disgraceful display of how far America's journalistic establishment has sunk.) Another source contacted to "confirm" whether or not at least some of the e-mails were genuine was former British Ambassador to Syria "Sir" Andrew Green, whose former employer, the British Foreign Ministry, is a viciously adamant opponent of Assad's government working directly with Syrian opposition harbored in London, with members of the notorious Syrian Observatory for Human Rights literally passing in and out of Foreign Secretary William Hague's office.
More: http://deadlinelive.info/2012/03/15/junk-journalism-the-assad-e-mails/
ASR, a global coastal and marine consulting firm updated the simulation of the marine contamination from Fukushima nuclear plants.
We use a Lagrangian particles dispersal method to track where free floating material (fish larvae, algae, phytoplankton, zooplankton…) present in the sea water near the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station plant could have gone since the earthquake on March 11th. THIS IS NOT A REPRESENTATION OF THE RADIOACTIVE PLUME CONCENTRATION. Since we do not know exactly how much contaminated water and at what concentration was released into the ocean, it is impossible to estimate the extent and dilution of the plume. However, field monitoring by TEPCO showed concentration of radioactive Iodine and Cesium higher than the legal limit during the next two months following the event (with a peak at more than 100 Bq/cm3 early April 2011 for I-131 as shown by the following picture).
Source: TEPCO
Assuming that a part of the passive biomass could have been contaminated in the area, we are trying to track where the radionuclides are spreading as it will eventually climb up the food chain. The computer simulation presented here is obtained by continuously releasing particles at the site during the 2 months folllowing the earthquake and then by tracing the path of these particles. The dispersal model is ASR's Pol3DD. The model is forced by hydrodynamic data from the HYCOM/NCODA system which provides on a weekly basis, daily oceanic current in the world ocean. The resolution in this part of the Pacific Ocean is around 8km x 8km cells. We are treating only the sea surface currents. The dispersal model keeps a trace of their visits in the model cells. The results here are expressed in number of visit per surface area of material which has been in contact at least once with the highly concentrated radioactive water.
[...]
Original Page: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FukushimaDiary/~3/yZknzlmQKIw/
If you've got a spare $100,000, you could potentially become the owner of a small Wyoming town that's set to be auctioned off next month by its sole resident. After more than 30 years of residing in the unincorporated community, town "mayor" Don Sammons says it's finally time to move on. "Don, 'The Mayor', is retiring after 20 wonderful years in his town," Sammons writes on the website for his business, the Buford Trading Post, a gas station and store. "This entire, income producing, town is for sale; the house, the Trading Post, the former school house, along with all the history of this very unique place." Buford, located between Cheyenne and Laramie, was first founded in the 1860s and was once home to an estimated 2,000 residents before the Transcontinental Railroad was rerouted. Sammons moved to Buford with his family in 1980. In 1992, he bought the Buford Trading Post and has continued to preside as Buford's unofficial "mayor." Over the years, members of Sammons' family gradually moved away until he was finally left as the only resident.
Original Page: http://www.sott.net/articles/show/242986-Entire-Town-of-Buford-Wyoming-for-Sale-by-Sole-Resident