The Bones of Station H

December 8th, 2006

One week before the attack on Pearl Harbor, a US Navy listening post on the other side of Oahu intercepted Admiral Yamamoto’s message to the AJapanese fleet to sail to Hawaii. Today, the remains of that radio station can still be seen.


Source: YouTube

Topics discussed, the Litvinenko murder, 9/11 and 7/7.


Source: Cremation Of Care


Perry is just trying to show how foolish the dittoheaded mockingbirds are that read the debunking sites and the 9/11 hit pieces then go counter every 9/11 debate with their broken one-liner logic and links to those garbage sites instead of facing the facts.

There are hundreds of these jibbering fools that have developed their own haikus that somehow make it not a conspiracy. (more…)

CNN’s Nick Roberson provides an ominous report, live from Iraq, one day after the Iraq Study Group report was released calling the situation “grave and deteriorating.”

“They are very terrible statistics, Soledat,” Roberson says. “We know now that 30 soldiers have died, now, in the first week of December. That is a very high and alarming statistic for US casulaties.”

Watch Robertson’s full report below.


Source: Raw Story / David Edwards

A New Mexico man is drawing the ire of neighbors–and his homeowners association–after putting up a politically-charged, lighted sign on his house to go with his holiday decorations.

Roberto Vasquez of Albuquerque said his sign, showing George Bush’s name crossed over by a red bar as though banning it, has caused people to shoot at the projector, try to pull out its bulb, and even threaten to “blow up the house,” he tells local TV station KOAT.

Vasquez says he’s “proud” of his message and defends the sign as “tasteful.” His neighborhood HOA, on the other hand, says it’s against the rules and wants it to come down. A KOAT reporter says that it “may take a court of law to decide which way to flip the switch.”


Source: Raw Story / Mike Sheehan and David Edwards

Take out the batteries!

December 8th, 2006

So we have been telling you, Alex Jones has been going on about it for ages.

This Fox News Clip with the Fox News Anchor Smith explain that the FBI can listen in on your conversation from the microphone embedded in your mobile phone…and they can do this even if your phone is off!


Source: YouTube

Big BrotherFingers. Eyes. DNA. X-Rays. Behavior. Rubbish. Spending. Habits. Meal Choices.

The barrage of invasive police state measures of surveillance have, of course, been ongoing with the pace of technology. Yet, in the UK the eyes and ears piecing together a total ‘electronic footprint’ has accelerated furiously– and with a frightening sense of inevitable entrapment.

BRITS NOW STAND COMPLETELY SURROUNDED…

The entire citizenry are now surrounded by nearly omnipresent surveillance by way of 4.2 million+ cameras in the streets of London, some of which now have microphones to eavesdrop on conversations and even speakers to shout back at individuals in an effort embarrass and correct behaviour. Not to mention a phasing in of face-scanning cameras and other monstrous technology. AND THAT IS ONLY THE BEGINNING… (more…)

President Bush vowed on Thursday to adopt a new strategy for Iraq and outline it in a major speech soon as he made his first substantive response to a bipartisan panel’s finding his Iraq policy has failed and time is running out for changing course.

“I believe we need a new approach,” Bush said a day after the panel, the Iraq Study Group, prodded him to change direction in Iraq. A senior White House official said Bush’s speech to Americans outlining his new policy was likely before Christmas.

Bush rejected direct talks with Iran and Syria, a central recommendation by the panel, but said he was open to the two countries participating in an international support group for Iraq if they met certain tough conditions. (more…)

A member of the Senate Banking Committee denounced RFID “no-swipe” credit cards at a press conference Sunday. Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY) said contracts for the cards should have warning boxes disclosing “the known weaknesses of the technology.” He cautioned cardholders about their vulnerability to identity thieves, commenting you “may as well put your credit card information on a big sign on your back.”

“No-swipe” or “contactless” credit cards contain RFID microchips that communicate account information silently and invisibly by radio waves. These microchips have earned the nickname “spychips” because the information they contain can be read without an individual’s knowledge or consent.

While Congress is just waking up to the dangers of RFID technology, privacy and civil liberties organizations like CASPIAN have been sounding the alarm for years. (more…)

Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres said Thursday that the Jewish state will remain mum on whether it has atomic weapons, following comments by the incoming US defense secretary that the Jewish state was a nuclear power.

“Israel will not say or not say whether we have nuclear weapons,” Peres told public radio. “It suffices that one fears that we have them and that fear in itself constitutes an element of dissuasion.”

The Jewish state is widely considered to be the Middle East’s sole nuclear power, but has never confirmed or denied the suspicions.

“Israel is the only country threatened with destruction. Israel does not threaten any other state,” Peres said.

No, instead they lobby the United States to destroy their enemies for them… (more…)

Former Russian premier Yegor Gaidar thinks the strange illness he caught while in Dublin last month may be a try by enemies of the Kremlin to kill him, Reuters news agency reported Thursday.

The symptoms of a mysterious illness that maid him bleeding from the nose and mouth pointed to poisoning, he said.

He collapsed at an Irish university conference on Nov. 24, the day after former Russian security agent Alexander Litvinenko, a Kremlin critic, died in a London hospital from radiation poisoning.

Gaidar was found bleeding from the nose and throwing up, pale and unconscious at the moment. He said that had begun to feel unwell after eating a simple breakfast of fruit and a cup of tea. (more…)

Five major companies have joined forces and invested in what appears to be the ultimate personal medical-records database.

Applied Materials, BP America, Intel, Pitney Bowes and Wal-Mart Stores have sunk an undisclosed amount of money into the Omnimedix Institute, a nonprofit organization that developed and will manage the database, called “Dossia.”

Dossia, which in 2007 will be made available to the companies’ 2.5 million U.S. employees, dependents and retirees, will hold medical records from multiple sources for a person over their entire lifetime. The database could include test results and medical evaluations from various doctors’ offices, hospitals and pharmacies. (more…)

Proposal was supposed to speed food lines and deter theft at University High, but school district officials scrap the idea after privacy issues are raised.

A plan to scan the fingerprints of 2,200 Irvine high school students to ease lunch lines was scrapped this week after angry parents argued it would violate teens’ privacy rights.

A spokesman for the Irvine Unified School District said district administrators had been unaware of University High School’s proposal and had halted its implementation.

“This is not something we will be using at our schools,” said Ian Hanigan, district spokesman. “It’s safe to say that this pilot [program] was marched out probably a little too quickly, without the study and evaluation needed to do something like this.” (more…)

Beijing - A court in southwestern China has secretly executed a man who took part in an environmental protest which turned into a riot, a lawyer and a family member said on Wednesday.

Three others were jailed, one of them for life, they said.

The four had been among thousands of people who took to the streets in Sichuan province in 2004 in anger over a hydropower project that would flood 100 000 people out of their homes.

Chen Tao, who was accused of “deliberately killing” a riot police officer during the protest, was executed, Cai Dengming, whose son was Chen’s co-defendant, told Reuters.

“When I went to the Ya’an jail to visit my son this week, the officer there told me that Chen Tao had been executed,” Cai said by telephone. (more…)

The US Government signalled some willingness this week to address concerns over citizens’ privacy, but also launched a scheme which will analyse secret airline passenger risk profiles and keep them for 40 years.

The US Government released guidelines which it says will protect the privacy of US citizens in an era of increasing data collection and information sharing by and between Government bodies.

Congress had previously mandated greater information sharing within government and law enforcement, but there have been concerns that that process undermines individuals’ privacy.

The office of the US intelligence chief John Negroponte has now released a set of guidelines for state agencies to follow in dealing with individuals’ data. (more…)