|
It's Not About Left Or Right
It's About Right And Wrong
This Site Is Updated Four Times Daily
More Frequent If Circumstance Warrant
Home
About This Blog
Recent Articles
Warrantless Spy Program Monitoring Peoples Thoughts, From President Richard M. Nixon To George W. Bush
Clinton, Bush Connection To Warrantless Wiretapping And The CIA Exposed
Another 911 - Another Israeli Spy Ring ?
Archives
The Best Of The Web
Video Online
Alternative - Independent
Talk Radio
Jack Blood
Charles Goyette
Alex Jones
Jackie Patru
Michael Rivero
Alan Stang
Webster Tarpley
Frank Whalen
Links


|
|
May 7, 2007
Paul and Gravel the Disappearing Presidential Candidates
Instead of Yahoo calling it Full Coverage Presidential Election 2008, perhaps Yahoo should call it Some Coverage Presidential Election 2008
California Man May Go to Prison for Inappropriate Touching on Plane
One passenger on a Delta flight from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City was arrested for leaving his seat to go to the lavatory less than 30 minutes before landing (due to the incident, air marshals ordered all passengers to put their hands on their heads for the rest of the flight).
World Bank Panel Finds Wolfowitz at Fault; Aide Resigns
A committee of World Bank directors has formally notified Paul D. Wolfowitz that they found him to be guilty of a conflict of interest in arranging for a pay raise and promotion for Shaha Ali Riza, his companion, in 2005. The findings stepped up the pressure on Mr. Wolfowitz to resign.
House memo targets Rove e-mails
A House committee has sent a memo to federal agencies dictating how they should conduct a wide search for e-mails involving political appointees, White House adviser Karl Rove and other aides.
TSA Security
After a birthday trip to San Diego, 12-year-old Jeffery Martin flew home from San Diego a couple hundred bucks richer. He thought his wallet with the $265 bucks in birthday money would be safe inside a bag he checked.
White House employee fired for trying to protect president's life
Senior Wolfowitz aide steps down
A senior aide to embattled World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz has announced his resignation.
"The Atlantic" Puts Out More JFK Disinfo
Let’s look at some specific examples of Mallon’s dishonesty or bias, whichever you wish to call it. Mallon calls Ruth Paine "virtuous Quaker woman who became, quite innocently, enmeshed in the assassination." He does not mention that during the Iran Contra war, her Quaker activities in Nicaragua got her shunned from her group because the peace activists believed her to be a CIA spy, documenting their every move. He does not mention that she had a big "x" in her calendar the day Oswald ostensibly bought the rifle (which provably, by the documentary record, Oswald didn't buy) and that even the Warren Commission expressed disbelief at her explanation that that X, the only X in her whole calendar, marked the start of one particular menstrual cycle. He does not mention that Ruth Paine's own daughter has suspicions about her mother's involvement in the JFK case, and that this caused a falling out between them. But then, if Mallon were a CIA apologist in the media, this would be expected.
Mallon also inaccurately states that the Kennedys believed in the Warren Report. As David Talbot's new book "Brothers" makes abundantly clear, Robert Kennedy’s first-day suspicion that the CIA was involved in his brother’s death continued until his own death.
9/11 Whistle-Blowers
A powerful lineup of Whistle-Blowers putting an end to the debate on 9/11. G*d help those who look at this information and still deny an investigation of the highest degree is in order. The deniers' own future is at stake, their children's future is at stake. Whistle-Blowers need our help.
Canadians Exposing the North American Union
Two years after Canada signed into the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP), an all party parliamentary committee held public hearings on the matter.
IRAQ: Hundreds of displaced children in south unable to get school places
The increase in the number of displaced children in the southern governorates has left hundreds of students out of school, according to education departments in the south.
Pakistan court halts judge probe
Pakistan's Supreme Court has suspended an inquiry into misconduct charges against the country's top judge.
Cut the bias
Iran doesn't have a policy of imprisoning people for the content of their blogs, as some human rights campaigners would have us believe.
The lethal media silence on Kent State's smoking guns
The 1970 killings by National Guardsmen of four students during a peaceful anti-war demonstration at Kent State University have now been shown to be cold-blooded, premeditated official murder. But the definitive proof of this monumental historic reality is not, apparently, worthy of significant analysis or comment in today's mainstream media.
After 37 years of official denial and cover-up, tape-recorded evidence, that has existed for decades and has been in the possession of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), has finally been made public.
Ab-Only Takes Another Hit
One week after highlighting medical inaccuracies in several abstinence-only print and online publications funded by the Bush Administration, the American Civil Liberties Union is now taking aim at an Oregon abstinence-only program, Stop and Think.
Eco-Extremist Wants World Population to Drop below 1 Billion
Children 'bad for planet'
Having large families should be frowned upon as an environmental misdemeanour in the same way as frequent long-haul flights, driving a big car and failing to reuse plastic bags, says a report to be published today by a green think tank.
Weak Dollar? Currency, at 10-Year Low, May Fall More
Anyone who says the dollar is weak after it fetched a record-low $1.3681 against the euro and the fewest pence against the pound in 25 years is expressing a euphemism.
The Failure of the 'Mainstream'
The media, the intellectuals, and the politicians all failed us in the run-up to war
Mainstream Media Liars: Where's the Truth?
California Republican Debate Poll
Spread of disease tied to US combat deployments
A parasitic disease rarely seen in United States but common in the Middle East has infected an estimated 2,500 US troops in the last four years because of massive deployments to remote combat zones in Iraq and Afghanistan, military officials said.
Row over Iraq oil law
A draft law being considered by the Iraqi parliament would enable US companies to take control of Iraq's oil industry, oil experts in the country say.
The proposed bill, approved by the Iraqi government in February after months of wrangling, opens the country's oil sector to foreign investors 35 years after it was nationalised.
Imus lawyer: Lawsuit 'very easy'
Don Imus' attorney Monday described the former talk show host's pending $120 million lawsuit against his former employer, CBS Radio, as "very easy" and said he expects a jury to award him the full amount for wrongful termination.
|