More Ultra-Vivid Headlines from
G. Edward Griffin’s RealityZone.com
2011 JULY 30 – AUGUST 5
Click on headlines to see full articles If original sources are missing, click on Cached.
Star indicates article worth printing for future reference.
See the entire collection here.
Camera indicates video or slideshow.
Speaker indicates audio.
Asterisk indicates an amazing event or phenomenon.
See the entire collection here.
Wall Street stocks suffer loss of nearly $2 trillion in last 2 weeks due to panic over global & US debt. The US debt deal will cut $2.5 trillion, but spending is projected at $30 trillion over next 10 years. People are waking up to the nature of fiat money.
DailyMail 2011 Aug 5 (Cached)
Mexican town’s entire police force of 26 quits after attack killed 2 of their colleagues. National Post 2011 Aug 5 (Cached)
White House releases document revealing intent to monitor the internet and social networking sites for ‘extremist propaganda’ and people who ‘feed on grievances’ and assign blame.
Prison Planet 2011 Aug 4 (Cached)
High definition imaging allows facial recognition of individuals in this massive crowd photo that was taken just before the Vancouver riots. The clarity is astounding. Keep enlarging the image.
Gigapixel posted 2011 Aug 4 (Cached)
Scottish university researcher says that students should consider selling their kidneys to pay off student loans at a suggested price of $45,754 (the average yearly income in the UK).
Activist Post 2011 Aug 4 (Cached)
Poll shows 69% of Americans believe it is likely that scientists falsified research supporting global warming. [And that’s in spite of massive media bias to the contrary.] Rasmussen Reports 2011 Aug 3 (Cached)
US: Justice Department accused of allowing tons of cocaine to be imported to the US by Mexican drug cartel, allegedly in exchange for information on competing cartels. The agency already is under fire for selling guns to Mexican drug gangs. [Are you still wondering why the so-called war on drugs has failed?] AHN 2011 Aug 3 (Cached)
Organic farmer wins suit against neighboring farmer whose pesticides damaged the organic crops. [While this seems like a victory, organic farmers should be able to sue the manufacturers of GMO crops and pesticides when they cause damage; but farmers sign a Monsanto contract that makes the farmers liable for everything. This pits farmer against farmer, and Monsanto is protected.] FarmWars 2011 Aug 3 (Cached)
US: It’s official. Borrowing now exceeds the country’s entire Gross Domestic Product. That puts the U.S. in the same category as highly indebted nations, such as Italy and Belgium. AFP 2011 Aug 3 (Cached)
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service estimates that the polar-bear population is higher now than a decade ago – and has more than doubled since the 1960s. Yet the purveyors of the global-warming myth continue saying that the bears are dying off.
IB Times 2011 Aug 2 (Cached)
Six scary new weapons that police and military use to subdue crowds and unarmed individuals. They include microwave pain rays, blinding laser beams, steroid taser shotguns, chemical weapons, ear-splitting sounds, and microwaves that pierce the skull. [Only governments are allowed to have these, of course.] Alternet 2011 Aug 1 (Cached)
Los Angeles: SWAT Team raids a private club for selling raw food and milk to its members without license or permits. Two of the parties arrested are held on conspiracy charges. High bail is set for all defendants. SMDP 2011 Aug 3 (Cached)
US: The new 12-member ‘Super Congress’ created by the debt-ceiling bill is a new layer of unconstitutional government and is shockingly totalitarian. It can force votes in both houses without debate or amendments and has no limit to its power. Prison Planet 2011 Aug 2 (Cached)
US: TSA to begin interrogating fliers to analyze behavior patterns. Training will cost $1-billion. Boston Herald 2011 Aug 2 (Cached)
Small Florida town terminates its entire police department due to unlawful behavior.
Fox Orlando 2011 Aug 2 (Cached)
UK: Policeman walks free from court after being found guilty of possessing child porn. [If not a police officer, he would have faced jail time.]
DailyMail 2011 Aug 2 (Cached)
US: Mobile biometric iris scans and fingerprinting to be deployed by police on the streets. [The 4th Amendment forbids unreasonable search, but police will claim that any search is reasonable.]
Aljazeera 2011 Aug 2 (Cached)
US: Ron Paul introduces a bill to cancel $1.6 trillion in debt to the Federal Reserve. [This would not save money, because the Fed returns most of the interest on government debt anyway, but it would reduce the face value of the debt. The debt will be defaulted, either by not repaying holders of government bonds or by destroying the dollar through inflation so that interest payments are worthless. In the first case, the losers would be foreign governments and wealthy institutions that buy government bonds. In the second case, the losers would be common people in the middle-class. Can you guess which way it will go?]
The Hill 2011 Aug 2 (Cached)
Libya: Rebel commander was assassinated last Thursday, causing division and struggle for power among rebel ranks. This is allowing Gadhafi to regain influence and control. Time 2011 Aug 1 (Cached)
Chinese officials accused of stealing $2.8 billion from China’s high-speed rail project, and more corruption is under investigation. Forty people were killed in a bullet-train crash recently, but negative comments about the incident are censored. [Collectivism is the same everywhere.]
Telegraph 2011 Aug 1 (Cached)
Gold sets record high as debt fears flare around the globe. Reuters 2011 Aug 1 (Cached)
Fukushima radiation is at its all-time high (10 sieverts per hour). It is possible that it is higher than that, but 10 is as high as the detectors can monitor. ZeroHedge 2011 Aug 1 (Cached)
US: Former NSA and CIA head wants a private army to protect cyberspace of large banks and corporations. [It would be beyond Congressional or military oversight, yet would be funded by taxpayers.] InfoWars 2011 Jul 31 (Cached)
Australia: Electroshocks on children to be banned. The bad news is the discovery that it still is practiced. 100,000 Americans a year receive it, and it is used on children in Australia & the UK. Treatment can cause miscarriage, memory loss, and brain damage. It is covered by insurance, and psychiatrists who prescribe it typically make double the salary of those who don’t. CCHR 2011 Jul 31 (Cached)
Quartzsite, Arizona is the home of a lurid scandal involving a corrupt police chief, an out-of control city council, and an honest mayor. Ten police whistleblowers are put under house arrest. The Department of Homeland Security is considering charges of terrorism against those who are exposing the corruption. What a story this is!
OathKeepers Posted 2011 Jul 30 (Cached)
UK: Small town tracks EVERY car with police cameras. Plates are checked in a central database for insurance, taxes, and criminal records. [The town always has had a low crime rate, so the purpose is not crime prevention.] DailyMail 2011 Jul 30 (Cached)
US: House panel approves a bill forcing ISP providers to retain customers’ names, addresses, phone numbers, credit cards, and banking information for at least a year. [To fight pedophile activity, of course.] RawStory Posted 2011 Jul 30 (Cached)
Japan denies censorship over nuclear crisis, but the government monitors the Internet around the clock and has set up a budget to respond to ‘inaccurate’ online information. PhysOrg Posted 2011 Jul 30 (Cached)
Texas lawmaker calls for a Congressional investigation into why the word God and Christian prayers are banned at military funerals.
Fox News Posted 2011 Jul 30 (Cached)
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ANALYSIS
Reports and commentaries that look beyond the news to identify historical facts and trends that must be understood to place the news into perspective. This is our “think-tank” section that makes it possible to anticipate future events.
Fiat currency (without gold or silver backing) has an average life expectancy of 27 years. The world’s dominant monetary system fails every 30 to 40 years – at devastating cost to the average citizen. [The U.S. is overdue.] Washington’s Blog 2011 Aug 2 (Cached)
The Smart-Meter Grid has been funded by tax dollars and is expected to generate $170 billion in revenue in 2014 for corporations that produce and maintain the equipment. [The goal is not conservation of energy but monitoring and control of people plus profit for corporations that financially support legislators. The scheme can be thwarted if Smart Meters are rejected.] MorphCity 2011 Aug 5 (Cached)
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Dirty electricity (high frequency energy that rides on top of normal 60-cycle current) can lead to cancer, heart disease, and suicide. The causes of dirty electricity are explained here and how it relates too Smart Meters. YouTube posted 2011 Aug 5
Ron Paul describes what lies ahead for the economy and personal freedom. ‘The ultimate trap’ will be civil unrest that causes citizens to clamor for more so-called law-enforcement to protect them. Daily Reckoning 2011 Aug 1 (Cached)
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