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May 21, 2007
UK: Police Using Surveillance Drones Designed for Military
It looks more like the latest in saucepan technology than the future of crime fighting.
But police are confident that this miniature remote- controlled helicopter will be an invaluable weapon in the war against wrongdoers.
The Secret History of Jerry Falwell
Is The Bush Regime Spying on "Gitmo" Lawyers"? Lawsuit Seeks Answers
The lawsuit, Wilner v. NSA, was filed on behalf of sixteen attorneys representing Guantnamo Bay prisoners. The lawsuit alleges that the lawyers may have been subjected to the NSAs warrantless wiretapping program that was illegally authorized by President Bush shortly after 9/11.
Spying On The American People Without A Warrant In Administration After Administration. New World Order Scam (fraud and conspiracy) #844 For The Microchip Generation.
Flashback - Clinton, Bush Connection To Warrantless Wiretapping And The CIA Exposed
Court claim that Murdoch killed Clinton stories
Rupert Murdoch ordered his US editors to kill any negative stories about President Clinton and his wife Hilary, according to claims made in a US lawsuit.
Now We Need Female Expertise
Spy chiefs are trying to recruit hundreds of women to bring a more subtle touch to their battles against international terrorism and espionage.
Attack-proof power line to be installed under NY
Consolidated Edison, Inc and American Superconductor Corporation have agreed to put a superconducting power line under midtown New York that should lead to a sturdier power grid able to withstand extreme weather and attacks.
U.S. media job cuts up 88 percent
U.S. media job cuts surged 88 percent in 2006 from the previous year, a downsizing trend expected to continue this year, a survey said Thursday.
"CIA officers 'crack' in 14 seconds during water boarding technique"
Harsh interrogation techniques authorized by top officials of the CIA have led to questionable confessions and the death of a detainee since the techniques were first authorized in mid-March 2002, ABC News has been told by former and current intelligence officers and supervisors.
Israeli Military fire on Palestinian and International journalists
Pot Prisoners Cost Americans $1 Billion a Year
American taxpayers are now spending more than a billion dollars per year to incarcerate its citizens for pot. That's according to statistics recently released by the U.S. Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Internet surveillance grows under expanded 'wiretapping' law
Critics blast statute making it easier to collect your data
Flashback - Clinton, Bush Connection To Warrantless Wiretapping And The CIA Exposed
As US, NATO forces turn to airpower, civilian casualties
With reinforcements often a long helicopter ride away, US and NATO troops in Afghanistan are turning to air power when they get into trouble. A disturbing result, analysts say, has been mounting civilian casualties.
Brown won't pull UK troops out of Iraq: U.S. official
Washington is confident British prime minister-in-waiting Gordon Brown will not pull British troops out of Iraq early, a senior U.S. official said on Monday.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, the official told reporters Washington had an "excellent level of discussion and dialogue" with the British government on future policy in Iraq.
National average gas price tops record
The average price of self-serve regular gasoline hit a record high of $3.18, rising more than 11 cents over the past two weeks, according to a nationwide survey released Sunday
China a top violator of US food standards: reports
China is a top violator of US food safety standards, with US authorities last month rejecting 257 Chinese food shipments -- far more than from any other country, US media reported Sunday.
The Chicago Tribune reported that at least 137 food shipments were rejected as "filthy" after testing positive for salmonella, or for containing banned ingredients.
At Padilla terror trial, a witness's surprise effect
A witness for the US government has painted a less-than-menacing picture of a terrorist training camp.
Iraqi leadership's failures raise pressure on U.S.
Congress may push for the premier's ouster in the coming months if no progress is made toward its 'benchmarks.'
My fears of a Big Brother nation, by police chief
Britain faces an 'Orwellian' future with CCTV cameras on every street corner, a senior policeman has warned.
States balk at cancer vaccine mandate
Correction system 'mess' held inmates past their time
Man imprisoned four years too long
Robert Fisk: Scores dead as Lebanese army battles Islamists in bloodiest day since civil war
The secret US plot to kill Al-Sadr
The US Army tried to kill or capture Muqtada al-Sadr, the widely revered Shia cleric, after luring him to peace negotiations at a house in the holy city of Najaf, which it then attacked, according to a senior Iraqi government official.
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