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Kill One for Allah - Killing cops in the name of Islam. And left wing politicians keep making fools of themselves.
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Texas Governor Calls for States to Amend Constitution, Offers 9 Amendments
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Mysterious Metal Balls Fall from Space, Vietnam's Army Investigates Objects
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Gas prices could drop to $1 gallon...
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ISIS Burns Christians Alive in Locked Caskets, Escaped Prisoner Reveals
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Economic Collapse Happening Now-Rob Kirby:What do Kirby’s billionaire contact say? Kirby reports, “They say they think we are very close to the end. I don’t want to see the end because it’s not going to be a happy day, not for me, not for you—not anyone
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Idaho Militia Group Arrive To ‘Secure Perimeter, Prevent Waco-style Situation’ At Oregon Refuge
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Something Just Snapped: Currencies Crashing, Dow Dumped, Crude Carnage
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New way police are surveilling you: Calculating your threat 'score'...
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Margin Call Gentlemen! :The world is facing a global margin call again, only this time there are no sovereign entities left with a clean balance sheet that can be levered up further, with no tools left available to the various central banks to administer
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One World Religion: Pope Francis Says All Major Religions Are ‘Meeting God In Different Ways’
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Amid Stock Market Panic, Dozens of Chinese Billionaires Are Mysteriously Disappearing
Activist Post - According to Bloomberg, as many as 36 companies reported executives missing from January to September. Just a few weeks ago, Chang Xiaobing, the CEO of the state-owned telecoms giant China Telecom, resigned and then went missing. There were rumors that Xiaobing was taken by police or government agents in a widening corruption investigation that is touching every corner of the Chinese economy. Back in November, Yim Fung, chairman and CEO of Guotai Junan International Holdings went missing, sending the company’s stock down 12%. Also in November, Chen Jun and Yan Jianlin, two senior executives of Citic Securities vanished without a trace....
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Brazil Justice Ministry Fines Nestle over Failing to Label GMOs
Sustainable Pulse - The Brazilian Ministry of Justice has issued fines against six food manufacturers for failing to include labels indicating the use of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO). The list of companies charged with financial penalties includes Nestle, Pepsico and Bimbo, with fines ranging from US$277,400 to just over US$1 million. In total, the fines amount to an estimated US$3 million. The decision was reached as a result of an inspection carried out by Brazil’s Consumer Protection Agency Senacon in 2010, which found that GMOs had been used in cake mixes, snacks and various other products being sold in the country’s supermarkets. Senacon accuse the companies of violating Brazilian consumer rights including the right to information, freedom of choice and the right for protection against abusive corporate practices.
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Washington Times - Members of an Idaho militia group arrived at an Oregon refuge on Friday as armed occupiers refused to leave the federal building outside Burns. The “3% of Idaho” group’s members will “secure a perimeter” around the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, which has been occupied by an armed militia led by Ammon Bundy for seven days. “They just keep an eye on everything that is going on” to make sure “nothing stupid happens,” Mr. Bundy said Friday, The Oregonian reported. Mr. Bundy said if the Idaho group hadn’t showed up, “I’d worry” about a Waco-style siege by federal officers. Brandon Curtiss, the president of the 3% of Idaho, would not reveal how many people his group was sending to Oregon. Some of the members who had already arrived at the bird sanctuary where carrying what appeared to be handguns on their hips, according to The Oregonian. Mr. Curtiss said he was also on his way to the refuge.
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U.S. Coal Production Falls to Lowest Level in 30 Years
AllGov - U.S. coal production has fallen to its lowest level in nearly 30 years as cheaper sources of power and stricter environmental regulations reduce demand, according to preliminary government figures. A report released Friday by the U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates 900 million short tons of coal were produced last year, a drop from about 1 billion short tons in 2014. That's the lowest volume since 1986… Last year's drop in demand hit hardest in the central Appalachian basin, where production plunged 40 percent below its annual average from 2010 through 2014, according to the report. The U.S. coal industry didn't get any help overseas last year either, as exports to the United Kingdom, Italy and China plummeted by more than 50 percent. Overall, U.S. exports of coal dropped by about 21 percent last year, the report estimated.
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Human-Animal Chimeras Are Gestating on U.S. Research Farms
MIT Technology Review - Braving a funding ban put in place by America’s top health agency, some U.S. research centers are moving ahead with attempts to grow human tissue inside pigs and sheep with the goal of creating hearts, livers, or other organs needed for transplants. The effort to incubate organs in farm animals is ethically charged because it involves adding human cells to animal embryos in ways that could blur the line between species. Last September, in a reversal of earlier policy, the National Institutes of Health announced it would not support studies involving such “human-animal chimeras” until it had reviewed the scientific and social implications more closely. The agency, in a statement, said it was worried about the chance that animals’ “cognitive state” could be altered if they ended up with human brain cells.
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Bear Market: The Average U.S. Stock Is Already Down More Than 20 Percent
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Oregon Standoff: Isolated Event or Sign of Things to Come?
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---Amman Bundy Is the Next Davy Crockett
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Burns, OREGON Downtown 3% Rollout
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Live Update Burns Oregon With Pete Santilli
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The Oregon Standoff: A Community Divided
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