Telling the truth has become a revolutionary act, so let us salute those who disclose the necessary facts.
20 Jan 2015
Mike Buchanan And Radical Feminist Beatrix - 'Bea' - Campbell
What 4th Amendment? Police Across The U.S. Are Using Radars To See Inside People’s Homes
By Michael Krieger: The intentional erosion of public privacy is no accident. It’s not
merely a simplistically stupid overreaction to the dangerous world we
live in either. It is a very deliberate and nefarious plan being
intentionally implemented by the American oligarchy; i.e., the
super rich and the super powerful. This is precisely why the
establishment freaked out about the Edward Snowden revelations, and it
is why every single minor event is immediately manipulated into an
excuse to give the government and intelligence agencies more power.
While we already know a lot about the NSA’s unconstitutional and fascist policies when it comes to the web, the decimation of the 4th Amendment is also being eagerly practiced at a more local level by police departments across the country. USA Today published a very important article on this topic earlier today. Here are some excerpts:
While we already know a lot about the NSA’s unconstitutional and fascist policies when it comes to the web, the decimation of the 4th Amendment is also being eagerly practiced at a more local level by police departments across the country. USA Today published a very important article on this topic earlier today. Here are some excerpts:
WASHINGTON — At least 50 U.S. law enforcement agencies have secretly equipped their officers with radar devices that allow them to effectively peer through the walls of houses to see whether anyone is inside, a practice raising new concerns about the extent of government surveillance.
How The Bill Cosby Scandal Exposes Feminism For The Fraud That It Is! + It's Child Support NOT PAY-PER-VIEW!
Mexico, Land Of Opportunity - Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert with Pablo Boullosa + Saxo Bank Warns "This Is The Endgame For Central Banks"
JTO The Plagiarist
Insider Reveals Collapse Timeline
Bill Cosby Is Innocent
Look Who’s Dragging Down the Global Economy Though No One Is Allowed to Say it
By Wolf Richter: “A bit of inequality is good as it creates incentives for hard work
and rewards entrepreneurship,” explained Mohamed El-Erian, Chief
Economic Advisor of Allianz and former CEO of PIMCO. “Lots of inequality
is bad, disenfranchises segments of society, and erodes the social
fabric,” he said, joining the chorus of voices that have been lamenting
income and wealth inequality as an economic problem.
But none of these voices dare to mention the cause – though they all know it. And we just got numerical confirmation.
Hundreds of millions of people have been lifted out of abject poverty over the last two decades, mostly in Asia. In that respect, inequality has been reduced. But on a national level, “you get a different picture,” El-Erian said in the interview published on Monday:
But none of these voices dare to mention the cause – though they all know it. And we just got numerical confirmation.
Hundreds of millions of people have been lifted out of abject poverty over the last two decades, mostly in Asia. In that respect, inequality has been reduced. But on a national level, “you get a different picture,” El-Erian said in the interview published on Monday:
Minor Crimes, Incl. Soft Drugs, Not Police Business - German Union
RT: German cops should be spared investigating minor crimes, to have more
time for serious cases and terrorism, the country’s police union
(DpolG) has said.
Among crimes that could forego police investigation are insults, property damage and using public transport without a ticket, according to DpolG’s vice-president Arnold Plickert.
Those misdemeanors could be treated as civil offences, he specified, arguing the same should apply to small amounts of soft drugs such as marijuana.
"We have to make it dependent on the case," Plickert told the Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung (WAZ) on Monday, saying that police should only be involved in cases of repeat offenders.
One of the reasons for narrowing down the scope of police activity is the growing challenge of terrorism. Another rationale is a wave of forced early retirements, which are significantly decreasing personnel numbers.
Plickert indicated where police efforts would better be directed. He said the situation in some suburbs in the West German industrial Ruhr area was growing more and more tense, with foreign youth gangs warning police to stay away, saying: "Here we have the say, here no German law applies."
He compared the situation in the Ruhr to that in Berlin's southern Kreuzberg district, where racial tensions have been high for a while. The district’s Görlitzer Park has been notorious for drug dealing mostly carried out by immigrants.
Local authorities have even pondered the legalization of marijuana as a possible solution to the problem.
Among crimes that could forego police investigation are insults, property damage and using public transport without a ticket, according to DpolG’s vice-president Arnold Plickert.
Those misdemeanors could be treated as civil offences, he specified, arguing the same should apply to small amounts of soft drugs such as marijuana.
"We have to make it dependent on the case," Plickert told the Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung (WAZ) on Monday, saying that police should only be involved in cases of repeat offenders.
One of the reasons for narrowing down the scope of police activity is the growing challenge of terrorism. Another rationale is a wave of forced early retirements, which are significantly decreasing personnel numbers.
Plickert indicated where police efforts would better be directed. He said the situation in some suburbs in the West German industrial Ruhr area was growing more and more tense, with foreign youth gangs warning police to stay away, saying: "Here we have the say, here no German law applies."
He compared the situation in the Ruhr to that in Berlin's southern Kreuzberg district, where racial tensions have been high for a while. The district’s Görlitzer Park has been notorious for drug dealing mostly carried out by immigrants.
Local authorities have even pondered the legalization of marijuana as a possible solution to the problem.
Misandric British Brainwashing Corp (BBC) And Lame-Stream Politics
This BBC charade shows how out of touch UK lame-stream media and politics have become.
WD: Why is it legal to genitally mutilate
baby boys but not girls? Why are men twice as likely to be charged for
identical crimes and why do they get twice the prison time? Why such
disproportionate support in favour of women when men are far more likely to
suicide and die younger? The street vox is a reflection of the Lame-stream
media brainwashing the population with feminism. What we see in this program is
not only how radical feminism is defunct but how politics has also become
defunct.
Europe Gets Cold Feet On “TTIP,” Americans Should Too, But Obama Needs It For His Legacy
'It is incomprehensible to me that the
leaders of major corporate interests who stand to gain enormous
financial benefits from this agreement are actively involved in the
writing of the TPP while, at the same time, the elected officials of this country, representing the American people, have little or no knowledge as to what is in it.'
By Don Quijones: As almost always, the U.S. government and European Commission are on the same page, reading from the same script. This year they have one overriding goal in common: to create the world’s biggest “free” trade area by passing the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) into national and supranational law on both sides of the Atlantic.To this end the White House is furiously lobbying Congress to grant it fast track authority for the passage of not only TTIP, but also TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership). It is to be Obama’s swansong legacy. And with the pro-“free” trade Republicans firmly back in control on the Hill, he’s almost certain to get what it wants.
As such, TPP and TTIP negotiations will likely remain closed off from the public until the deals are finalized, by which time it will already be too late: just as happened with the passage of NAFTA in 1994, a largely compliant Congress will sign along the dotted lines without questioning what they’re actually signing into existence.
Rita Panahi: Women Are More Equal Than Others
By Jim Muldoon: Rita
Panahi, of the Herald Sun, often writes articles critical of Feminists,
which cheers me up every now and then. She complains of “the
perpetually outraged sisterhood” and “the duplicitous hypocrisy of the
feminist movement.”
One might think that I would endorse Panahi and her column as a must read for the Men’s Human Rights Movement (MHRM), and maybe I would have. At least, up until I read her latest column. It was every bit as hypocritical as the Feminists she so regularly takes to task.
The crime that gets her on her soap-box this week is:
One might think that I would endorse Panahi and her column as a must read for the Men’s Human Rights Movement (MHRM), and maybe I would have. At least, up until I read her latest column. It was every bit as hypocritical as the Feminists she so regularly takes to task.
The crime that gets her on her soap-box this week is:
The South Australian Government had to remind public transport users to be “courteous and considerate” after a heavily pregnant woman was forced to stand during a recent train trip.Now, by “forced” she means that no one got up to give her a seat. There wasn’t actually any “force” involved. But of course, decrying Feminist techniques doesn’t mean that Panahi won’t use them herself.