Last
Updated:
Friday, July 31, 2009 18:00
GMT Government’s
Swine Flu “Czar” To Become ABC Medical Reporter The government’s swine flu “czar” has been
hired by ABC News as a senior medical reporter, in the latest example
of a prominent government mouthpiece shifting to become a prominent
media mouthpiece.
‘No
evidence’ bin Laden in Pakistan: Islamabad
Pakistan’s civilian government reiterated Thursday it had “no
evidence” that Al-Qaeda mastermind Osama bin Laden was in the
nuclear-armed Muslim country, as Washington has charged.
House
approves bill on food safety
The House approved the first major changes to food safety laws in 70
years yesterday, giving sweeping new authority to the Food and Drug
Administration to regulate the way food is grown, harvested, and processed.
New
York Judge Dismisses Claim Negligent Construction Contributed To WTC
7 Collapse
A New York judge presiding over a multi-million dollar insurance case
has dismissed the claim that negligent design or construction of WTC
Building 7 contributed to its collapse, and in doing so has destroyed
a key justification cited by debunkers in claiming that WTC 7 was not
deliberately imploded.
Corporate
Media Gets You Ready for Your Forced Experimental Vaccination
Fox’s Shepard Smith almost said “draconian” and instead
said “drastic” while reporting on Northcom’s involvement
in plans to “administer” a toxic H1N1 vaccine, more than
likely in October. FEMA report detailing Palmer,
TX ‘population removal’ section missing
The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s reports of how to mitigate
potential civil uprisings and disasters have sections dealing with the
mass relocation and confinement of citizen populations: except in Palmer,
a city 20 miles south of Dallas. Hillary
Out to Strong-Arm Swiss
First we attacked Afghanistan. Then we attacked Iraq. Now the U.S. has
it sights set on Switzerland.
UN:
1000 Afghan civilians killed in 2009 A latest UN report shows that the number of Afghan civilians
killed either in US-led airstrikes or Taliban attacks has risen beyond
the 1000 in first half of 2009.
Canadians
plan ‘moon’ protest of US spy balloon
A Canadian man is planning what local press called a “moon mission”
in protest of a U.S. spy balloon being tested for the Department of
Homeland Security. In other words, when the balloon flies, he and other
Canadians (he hopes) will give its operators a glimpse at how they feel
about the aerial spying. ‘Swine
flu drug has side-effects’
More than half of children taking Tamiflu suffer side-effects such as
nausea, insomnia and nightmares, researchers said.
Recession
Worse Than Prior Estimates, Revisions Show The first 12 months of the U.S. recession saw the economy
shrink more than twice as much as previously estimated, reflecting
even bigger declines in consumer spending and housing, revised figures
showed.
Iran
sends warships into Gulf of Aden
Iran has deployed a flotilla of warships and support vessels into
the Gulf of Aden, the second in recent weeks, and says it also plans
to establish a new naval base in the Gulf of Oman, at the southern
end of the chokepoint Strait of Hormuz.
Arrest
of NJ Rabbis, Mayors, Lays Bare Global Crime Cabal
The case of the New Jersey rabbis who ran a mafia-style syndicate—with
a sideline in body parts— is only part of a global criminal
conspiracy to traffic in human body parts headquartered in Israel
and financed by the Israeli National Health Plan.
Air
Force Vet Breaks Silence on What Hit Pentagon on 9-11
A veteran Air Force mechanic called to help clean up the Sept. 11,
2001 explosion at the Pentagon says the U.S. government’s
blaming a plane for the damage makes no sense. The evidence was
staged, he said.
July
13 - Gregory Seabrooke - $100
June 24 - David Kwon - $50
June 11 - Peter Keeley - $10
June 11 - James Gathings - $10
May 25 - Stefan Lisander - $200
May 15 - Barry John Bennett - $15