Wednesday, June 29, 2011
LORDS OF THE 7C'S: We R Tha 144,000!!!: UFO MOTHERSHIP VIDEO GOES VIRAL! ON YAHOO'S FRONTP...
LORDS OF THE 7C'S: We R Tha 144,000!!!: UFO MOTHERSHIP VIDEO GOES VIRAL! ON YAHOO'S FRONTP...: "This is video footage is blowing up. I saw it earlier on the frontpage of Yahoo! Here is the link: 'UFO mothership' video goes viral afte..."
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Monday, June 27, 2011
OH LOVELY: Residents Near Fukushima Are Pissing Radioactive Urine

Image: commons.wikimedia.org
This has been something we discussed in the last few weeks, but now there are some new disturbing details.
From Japan Times:
More than 3 millisieverts of radiation has been measured in the urine of 15 Fukushima residents of the village of Iitate and the town of Kawamata, confirming internal radiation exposure, it was learned Sunday.
Both are about 30 to 40 km from the Fukushima No. 1 power plant, which has been releasing radioactive material into the environment since the week of March 11, when the quake and tsunami caused core meltdowns.
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/residents-near-fukushima-are-pissing-radioactive-urine-2011-6#ixzz1QXETyi8y
13-Year-Old Bronx Prodigy Heads to College
By Will Bradford on Jun 24th 2011 3:10PM

There's a new star rising on Pelham Parkway and her name is Autum Shante.
This young prodigy is on the road to doing something extraordinary. This fall, she's heading to the University of Connecticut for her freshman year, at the amazing age ofthirteen.
Autum has got a lot going for her. She speaks no less than three different languages (Arabic, Swahili, and Spanish), is an accomplished performer of spoken word at various venues around the country, and scored 149 on an IQ test, higher than most college students.
Her father, Ben Ashante, recognized Autum's talents early on and opted for homeschooling. Having retired early, Ben was able to dedicate himself to his daughter's education full time. He also enlisted the help of the community, including local retired teachers.
"What she's doing is groundbreaking but this is not about vanity," he said. "It's about setting the tone for other black and Latino children who will come behind her. They're always being told they are underachievers. We want to show this can be done."
Mr. Ashante said in a recent statement to the Daily News that he wants his child to be a role model for others, especially Black and Latino young people.
With the public school system failing in various cities across the country, especially in Black and Latino neighborhoods, Autum Ashanti's story may inspire more parents to home school their children.
Congratulations, Autum!
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Existence of 200 ‘uncontacted’ tribal people in Brazilian rainforest confirmed (PHOTOS)
- By IBTimes Staff Reporter | June 24, 2011 7:01 AM EDTThe Brazilian government has confirmed the existence of about 200 unidentified tribal people in the Amazon rainforest.
Satellite pictures in January revealed this community was living near the border with Peru. A flight expedition over the area in April confirmed that they are about 200 in numbers.
Along with Survival International (Funai), an organization working for tribal people's rights worldwide, Brazilian authorities found that these people are living in three clearings in the Javari Valley in the western Amazon.
According to Fabricio Amorim, who led Funai’s overflight expedition, illegal fishing, hunting, logging, mining, cattle ranching, missionary actions, drug trafficking and oil exploration on the Peru-Brazil border area are the main threats to the well-being of this community and their dwellings.
Brazil follows a policy not to contact these people, instead monitor their land so that they can live without any risk.
The community and its four straw-roofed huts were spotted in the Javari Valley, which is believed to be hiding around 2000 uncontacted tribes in the world.
Survival International has released the first, clear pictures of this ancient Amazonian tribe, who grow crops, peanuts, bananas, corns and more. Have a look:




Also read:
Friday, June 24, 2011
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Monday, June 20, 2011
Sunday, June 19, 2011
About Peonage: Remember on Juneteenth slavery did not end in 186...
About Peonage: Remember on Juneteenth slavery did not end in 186...: "Image by New York Public Library via Flickr We have identified new avenues that have not been previously considered through the lens of gen..."
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
APD to start tracking seized drug cash | ajc.com
Seizing assets on suspicion of criminal activity and haven't been found guilty...robbery. Many cash forfeitures less than $1000, that could be anybody.
APD to start tracking seized drug cash | ajc.com
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Man dies while raping elderly South Texas woman
Associated Press
Posted on June 13, 2011 at 4:59 PM
Updated yesterday at 5:50 PM
REFUGIO, Texas (AP) — Investigators said a man has died while in the act of raping an elderly South Texas woman.
The Refugio County Sheriff's Office identified the man as 53-year-old Isabel Chavelo Gutierrez. Sheriff's Sgt. Gary Wright said the incident happened June 2 after he rode two miles by bicycle from his home to that of his 77-year-old victim in the tiny coastal community of Tivoli.
Wright said the 5'-7", 230-to-250 pound man sneaked into the woman's house and raped her at knifepoint.
During the assault, he said he wasn't feeling well, rolled over, and died.
Gutierrez' body was sent to the Nueces County medical examiner in Corpus Christi for autopsy.
Gutierrez was a registered sexual offender on parole from a sentence for aggravated sexual assault and indecency with a child.
Monday, June 13, 2011
Former transit cop convicted in California subway shooting goes free
By the CNN Wire Staff

"He was released at 12:01 a.m.," said spokesman Steve Whitmore.
June 13, 2011 -- Updated 1155 GMT (1955 HKT)

Johannes Mehserle had been behind bars since a Los Angeles jury found him guilty on July 8, 2010.
"He was released at 12:01 a.m.," said spokesman Steve Whitmore.
Los Angeles (CNN) -- A former transit police officer convicted last year in the shooting death of an unarmed man on an Oakland, California, train platform was freed from prison early Monday morning, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said.
Johannes Mehserle was sentenced to two years in prison for the involuntary manslaughter conviction, but California law gave him one day of good conduct credit for each of the 365 days he served behind bars, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Robert Perry said in a court order he signed last week.
Mehserle has been behind bars since a Los Angeles jury found him guilty on July 8, 2010.
Mehserle, a Bay Area Rapid Transit police officer when the shooting occurred, said at the trial that he intended to draw and fire his Taser rather than his gun when he fatally wounded 22-year-old Oscar Grant on New Year's Day 2009.
Violent protests erupted in Oakland last November when Perry sentenced Mehserle to just two years in prison, which meant he could be released after another seven months.
At least 150 people were arrested during the protests, which Oakland Police Chief Anthony Batts described at the time as "tearing up the city."
Grant's mother, Wanda Johnson, had asked the judge to sentence Mehserle to the maximum 14 years in prison. She and four other family members who spoke at the sentencing hearing last year called him "a murderer."
The jury acquitted him of the more serious charges of second-degree murder and voluntary manslaughter.
Although his defense attorney argued for probation, Mehserle told Perry before sentencing that he would be willing to go to prison if the sentence made his city and family safer.
"I shot a man," he said. "I killed a man. It should not have happened."
A conviction for involuntary manslaughter can carry a sentence of four years, but the judge had the option of adding an "enhancement" that could have made the sentence 14 years because a firearm was used in commission of a crime.
Sunday, June 12, 2011
They Lived Before Adam
http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/287796-2
Catherine Acholonu, author of They Lived Before Adam: Prehistoric Origins of the Igbo, The Never-Been-Ruled(Catherine Acholonu Research Foundation, 2009). The book details her research on the Ikom Monoliths of Cross River State, Nigeria. She argues that these stones inscriptions were made by the common ancestors of what she refers to as the Niger-Benue sub-family of Nigerian tribes and that they reveal the lost civilizations of ancient Nigeria. This was the 11:30 a.m. EDT program of the 11th annual Harlem Book Fair from the Langston Hughes Auditorium in the New York Public Library's Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Included in program ID 287796-1.
Catherine Acholonu, author of They Lived Before Adam: Prehistoric Origins of the Igbo, The Never-Been-Ruled(Catherine Acholonu Research Foundation, 2009). The book details her research on the Ikom Monoliths of Cross River State, Nigeria. She argues that these stones inscriptions were made by the common ancestors of what she refers to as the Niger-Benue sub-family of Nigerian tribes and that they reveal the lost civilizations of ancient Nigeria. This was the 11:30 a.m. EDT program of the 11th annual Harlem Book Fair from the Langston Hughes Auditorium in the New York Public Library's Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Included in program ID 287796-1.
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Urgent Warning about Gardasil 2009 Think Before You Get This Eugenic Vac...
Vaccines are supposed to protect right? Thought of making more and more of these vaccines a mandate for children to attend school makes home schooling that more appealing.
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Iranian Women Banned From Olympics Because of Headscarves
- By: Jenée Desmond-Harris | Posted: June 7, 2011
"This ruling means that women soccer in Iran is over," said Shahrzad Mozafar, the team's former head coach. She said that as a result of FIFA's decision, the Iranian government will no longer send the team abroad for competitions.
In April 2010, FIFA announced that it was planning to ban headscarves and other religious attire during the 2012 Olympics. In response, Iran's team designed special headscarves that players wrapped tightly around their heads and necks. The team said they were in line with guidelines set by the football association.
Iranian officials disagreed, saying that the players were "informed thoroughly" before Friday's match against Jordan that the headscarf covering a woman's neck is banned for safety reasons, an unidentified FIFA official said.
We're no soccer safety experts, but we have to wonder how these simple scarves could present such a threat to the athletes that a compromise, redesign, exception, or other work-around couldn't be arranged to accommodate them. After all, we're talking about FIFA rules, not an ancient religious text here. While there may be legitimate concerns about physical harm that the scarves could cause, it's hard to understand how they can be allowed to outweigh the damage caused by a decision that's guaranteed to kill the ambitions of these already oppressed female athletes.
China Genetically Modifying Cows To Produce Human Breast Milk
Mad Scientists are in the building!
China Genetically Modifying Cows To Produce Human Breast Milk
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Cops Smash Bystander's Cell Phones To Cover Up Their Murderous Actions!
Bad boys bad boys what ya gonna do?
Mexican war on drugs reaches new low as drug gangs hang rival members from city-centre bridges
By RICHARD HARTLEY-PARKINSON
Last updated at 2:04 PM on 6th June 2011
They are the gruesome images that are testament to the trouble that has hit one Mexican city which has become a flashpoint for the war on drugs.
Two young men, cut down in the prime of their life, were left hanging from a pedestrian bridge as warring drugs cartels continue to fight in Monterrey
One of the men was was missing a foot and had been stripped down to just his underwear while the other's clothes were splattered with blood.
Warning: One of the men has had a foot chopped off while the other has clothes that are spattered with bloodTheir bodies were discovered early yesterday morning and both had placards that said: 'This happened to them for supporting the CDG [Gulf cartel].'The manufacturing city where they were found has changed dramatically over the last four years. With a population of 4million people, it has gone from being a model for developing economies to a symbol of Mexico's drug war chaos. It has been sucked down into a dark spiral of gangland killings, violent crime and growing lawlessness.Trouble has escalated since late 2006 when President Felipe Calderon launched an army-led war on the cartels. In that time, grenade attacks, beheadings, firefights and drive-by killings have surged.The city is home to some of Latin America's biggest companies and average incomes are double the Mexican average.
Both men had signs next to them that said 'This happened to them for supporting the CDG (Gulf cartel)'. Right, a forensics team removes one of the victimsAcross the country almost 40,000 people have now been killed since 2006 and Monterrey's violence has risen to the point that questions are being raised over the government's ability to maintain order and ensure its viability.Although Mexico City has avoided most of the troubles, killings have started in the second city of Guadalajara.If the cartels were to declare war in the capital, Monterrey's experience shows that Mexico's long-neglected police and judiciary are not equipped to handle it.Javier Astaburuaga, chief financial officer at Latin American drinks maker, Femsa, said: 'If we can't deal with the problem in Monterrey, with all the resources and the people have here, then it is a serious concern for the rest of Mexico.'Since the beginning of this year, 600 people have been killed already - in the whole of 2010 there were 620 deaths.
Rescue workers cut the chain from which one of the men was hanged from the bridgeAmong them are local mayors, innocent civilians - including a housewife caught in crossfire, a newlywed systems engineer killed by soldiers on his way to work and a young design student who was killed in one of the city's busiest shopping streets.Hanging people from bridges happens with increasing regularity and is designed to intimidate.On New Year's eve, gunmen hanged a woman from a road bridge. Severed heads have been dumped outside kindergartens and traffic police have been shot as they guide children across roads.On two days in April, a record 30 people were killed in shootouts, mainly hitmen and police, but also a student run down and fatally wounded when a police officer fled from gunmen.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1394823/Mexican-war-drugs-reaches-new-low-drug-gangs-hang-rival-members-city-centre-bridges.html#ixzz1OdaCqaRO
They are the gruesome images that are testament to the trouble that has hit one Mexican city which has become a flashpoint for the war on drugs.

Warning: One of the men has had a foot chopped off while the other has clothes that are spattered with blood


Both men had signs next to them that said 'This happened to them for supporting the CDG (Gulf cartel)'. Right, a forensics team removes one of the victims
Across the country almost 40,000 people have now been killed since 2006 and Monterrey's violence has risen to the point that questions are being raised over the government's ability to maintain order and ensure its viability.
Although Mexico City has avoided most of the troubles, killings have started in the second city of Guadalajara.

Rescue workers cut the chain from which one of the men was hanged from the bridge
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