Friday, May 29, 2015

When Gary Sinise Saw How Obama Treated Families of Fallen Soldiers, His Response Was Legendary

When Gary Sinise Saw How Obama Treated Families of Fallen Soldiers, His Response Was Legendary:

"Watching an industry full of sheep who worship Obama’s every move, we’re always grateful to see patriotic Americans in Hollywood, who stand behind our troops, separate themselves from the rest and not hesitate to call out the commander in chief for his questionable actions."

Coming soon to your neighborhood!-----911 Promo

History for May 29 - On-This-Day.com








History for May 29 - On-This-Day.com
Patrick Henry 1736 - Prominent figure in the American Revolution, known for his "Give me Liberty, or give me Death!" speech, one of the Founding Fathers of the United States, Bob Hope 1903 - Comedian, actor, John Fitzgerald Kennedy (U.S.) 1917 - 35th President of the United States, refered to by his initials JFK 


Paul Erlich 1932 - Biologist, educator, Stacy Keach, Sr. (Walter Stacy Keach) 1941 - Actor, narrator, 
John Hinckley Jr. 1955 - Attempted to assassinate U.S. President Ronald Reagan on March 30, 1981 


1765 - Patrick Henry denounced the Stamp Act before Virginia's House of Burgesses. 


1910 - An airplane raced a train from Albany, NY, to New York City. The airplane pilot Glenn Curtiss won the $10,000 prize. 


1912 - Fifteen women were dismissed from their jobs at the Curtis Publishing Company in Philadelphia, PA, for dancing the Turkey Trot while on the job. 


1916 - U.S. forces invaded Dominican Republic and remained until 1924. 


1922 - The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that organized baseball was a sport, not subject to antitrust laws. 


1953 - Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay became first men to reach the top of Mount Everest. 


1974 - U.S. President Nixon agreed to turn over 1,200 pages of edited Watergate transcripts. 


1986 - Colonel Oliver North told National Security Advisor William McFarlane that profits from weapons sold to Iran were being diverted to the Contras. 


1990 - Boris Yeltsin was elected president of the Russian republic by the Russian parliament. 

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Pamela Geller: ‘It Is Fierce Bullies Like Juan Williams Who Want to Impose the Shariah’ | Video | TheBlaze.com

Pamela Geller: ‘It Is Fierce Bullies Like Juan Williams Who Want to Impose the Shariah’ | Video | TheBlaze.com:

"Radical Islam critic Pamela Geller counted Fox News contributor Juan Williams among the “fierce bullies” who want to impose Shariah law in the United States.

Geller and Williams debated Tuesday on “Hannity” regarding her campaign to get the winning cartoon from her “draw Muhammad” contest in Garland, Texas, displayed as ads on the sides of Washington, D.C., buses."

Major construction at NKorea rocket site, US institute says

My Way News - Major construction at NKorea rocket site, US institute says
WASHINGTON (AP) — Satellite imagery shows significant new construction at North Korea's main rocket launch site in a sign of leader Kim Jong Un's determination to pursue a space program despite international censure, a U.S. research institute said Thursday.
North Korea is barred under U.N. Security Council resolutions from launching rockets as that technology can also be used to launch ballistic missiles.
Kim, however, declared this month that its space program "can never be abandoned."
North Korea has been upgrading the Sohae launch site on its west coast since mid-2013 after it blasted its first rocket into space in December 2012.
It says the space program is peaceful.
...Satellite imagery analyst Tim Brown writes that the expansion of the launch tower suggests the North wants to field a larger space launch vehicle, which may also contribute to its development of long-range ballistic missiles.
Concern is rising over North Korea's weapons development.
The North recently claimed it tested a new type of missile from a submarine and reiterated that it had built a nuclear warhead small enough to be mounted on a long-range missile.
Outside analysts are skeptical about both claims, but they believe the North has built a small but growing nuclear bomb arsenal and advanced its missile program since international nuclear disarmament talks stalled in early 2009....

Baltimore Residents Fearful Amid Rash Of Homicides

Baltimore Residents Fearful Amid Rash Of Homicides « CBS Baltimore
BALTIMORE (AP) — A 31-year-old woman and a young boy were shot in the head Thursday, becoming Baltimore’s 37th and 38th homicide victims so far this month, the city’s deadliest in 15 years.
Meanwhile, arrests have plunged: Police are booking fewer than half the number of people they pulled off the streets last year.
...“It’s so bad, people are afraid to let their kids outside,” Perrine said. 
“People wake up with shots through their windows. 
Police used to sit on every corner, on the top of the block. 
These days? 
They’re nowhere.”
West Baltimore residents worry they’ve been abandoned by the officers they once accused of harassing them, leaving some neighborhoods like the Wild West without a lawman around.
“Before it was over-policing. Now there’s no police,” said Donnail “Dreads” Lee, 34, who lives in the Gilmor Homes, the public housing complex where Gray, 25, was chased down.
“People feel as though they can do things and get away with it.
I see people walking with guns almost every single day, because they know the police aren’t pulling them up like they used to.”
Police Commissioner Anthony Batts said his officers “are not holding back,” despite encountering dangerous hostility in the Western District.
“Our officers tell me that when officers pull up, they have 30 to 50 people surrounding them at any time,” Batts said.
Batts provided more details at a City Council meeting Wednesday night, saying officers now fear getting arrested for making mistakes.

Obama’s Forthcoming Executive Action Could Impact Your Property | TheBlaze.com

Obama’s Forthcoming Executive Action Could Impact Your Property | TheBlaze.com:

"The Obama administration is expected to announce final details of “Waters of the United States” rule this week that could impact any property owner with water or a ditch that occasionally fills with water on their land. Moreover, the regulation could even conflict with two Supreme Court rulings.

The Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers have sought to provide more clarity to what bodies of water are protected under the 1972 Clean Water Act, which has previously affected rivers, lakes and the streams that flow directly to them.

Private property advocates, such as ranchers and farmers, fear the new rule could encompass nearly any type of water on a property."

CHICAGOLAND: Schools purge ‘white male’ authors from required reading lists

CHICAGOLAND: Schools purge ‘white male’ authors from required reading lists - EAGnews.org
CHICAGO – Chicago area schools are replacing white male authors on student reading lists with minority and women authors who delve into themes like power, justice, humanity and social responsibility.
“I think yes, book lists in schools are sexist, but I don’t think it’s the school’s fault,” senior Sarah Eiden told the Gapers Block Book Club blog.
“I think it’s because we still think good literature is only written by white males, which simply isn’t true.
I do see though that teachers are trying to change that.”
...Those changes include books like “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian,” which is actually a fictionalized story about a 14-year-old Native American teen that attends a mostly white high school with themes of alcoholism, sexuality, violence and bullying, according to the blog.
Other titles like “Always Running: La Vida Loca, Gang Days in L.A.” focuses on gang life, unemployment, drug addiction, incarceration and suicide.
“But in the end, it’s a positive, uplifting story of a man who realizes his potential as a Chicano activist and artist and manages to turn his life around,” Gapers Block reports.
“This book gives readers a raw look at what it meant to be Latino in Los Angeles during the ‘80s and how community involvement can truly impact marginalized groups.....”

What could possibly go wrong?------Shared roadway proposed in Grand Rapids

Shared roadway proposed in Grand Rapids | WOODTV.com:
"GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) — The City of Grand Rapids is proposing a new shared roadway to make one of the city’s streets more bicycle-friendly.
A rendering showing how the proposed shared Jefferson Street plan might work. The final design is likely to differ. (Courtesy the City of Grand Rapids - May 27, 2015)
The city is proposing to make Jefferson Street north of Burton Street a shared roadway. In short, the street would have two bicycle lanes and one lane for vehicles. It would also have parking on both sides.
Vehicles would share the center lane with oncoming traffic. 
When facing oncoming traffic, both vehicles would yield to bikes before merging to the bike lane. Then when the vehicles merge into the bike lane it would allow for enough room for both to pass.
If you are a bicyclist, you would treat the lane like a normal bike lane and would have to look out for merging vehicles.
The concept is similar to narrow residential roadways, like those in the Heritage Hills neighborhood."

How they "think"........Judge Hears Arguments On Granting Chimpanzees Human Rights

Judge Hears Arguments On Granting Chimpanzees Human Rights - BuzzFeed News:
"A New York City judge heard arguments over the rights of two chimpanzees, Hercules and Leo, that animal rights advocates hope to free from Stony Brook University.
Last month Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Barbara Jaffe granted a hearing on the chimpanzees’ habeas corpus petition, leaving Stony Brook University to defend keeping them in captivity.
Habeas corpus is a legal petition that detainees use to seek relief from unlawful imprisonment, and by granting habeas corpus to chimps, Jaffe endorsed the idea that they deserve the rights of human beings.
The chimpanzees are kept at the Long Island university, which is part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system, where they are used in locomotion studies.
Steven Wise, a lawyer for the Nonhuman Rights Project argued on Wednesday that chimpanzees are “autonomous and self-determining beings,” that they have “personhood” rights.
“They are the kind of beings who can remember the past and plan for the future,” Wise said in court as to why detaining the animals was wrong.
The chimpanzees are in prison, being exploited by Stony Brook, and they don’t even know why they are there.
We only do that for our worst criminals around us.”
Wise later argued that Hercules and Leo are “essentially in solitary confinement, at the mercy of their keepers.”..."

Report Reveals the Clintons Operated a Shell Company to Funnel Payments to Bill Clinton | TheBlaze.com

Report Reveals the Clintons Operated a Shell Company to Funnel Payments to Bill Clinton | TheBlaze.com:

"WASHINGTON (AP) — The newly released financial files on Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton’s growing fortune omit a company with no apparent employees or assets that the former president has legally used to provide consulting and other services, but which demonstrates the complexity of the family’s finances.

Because the company, WJC, LLC, has no financial assets, Hillary Clinton’s campaign was not obligated to report its existence in her recent financial disclosure report, officials with Bill Clinton’s private office and the Clinton campaign said. They were responding to questions by The Associated Press, which reviewed corporate documents."

HSBC fears world recession with no lifeboats left

HSBC fears world recession with no lifeboats left - Telegraph:
"The world economy is disturbingly close to stall speed. 
The United Nations has cut its global growth forecast for this year to 2.8pc, the latest of the multinational bodies to retreat.
We are not yet in the danger zone but this pace is only slightly above the 2.5pc rate that used to be regarded as a recession for the international system as a whole.
It leaves a thin safety buffer against any economic shock - most potently if China abandons its crawling dollar peg and resorts to 'beggar-thy-neighbour' policies, transmitting a further deflationary shock across the global economy."

Pot Possibilities and Problems

Pot Possibilities and Problems | The American Spectator:
Often the first thing I’m asked when traveling outside of Colorado is a half-question half-joke about how many people in the state I now call home are stoned.
...It sounds like a bad ’70s movie but this is serious business which other states are watching closely, wondering whether the potential public revenue and private employment benefits are worth the cost and effort of regulation, of reforming state banking laws and pushing for parallel federal reforms, of how to deal with “edibles” (one of the biggest post-legalization issues in Colorado) and the impact of legalization on children — including everything from accidental ingestion to the prescription of high-CBD strains such as “Charlotte’s Web” to treat seizure disorders.
(CBDs are pharmacologically active ingredients in marijuana but do not get you “high,” a feeling created by another chemical called THC.
Many high-CBD strains are specifically engineered to be low in THC.)
...The banking issue is critical:
Without an ability to deposit the cash from its sales at a bank, a legal marijuana business becomes an obvious target for violent crime while being tempted toward tax evasion. 
But banks, being federally regulated, are wary of becoming involved with a business selling a Schedule I substance directly to consumers.
...I don’t smoke pot and I warn my young children away from it. But the genie of marijuana legalization is not going back into the bottle, nor should it in a free society.
All jokes aside, Colorado is leading the way in understanding both the benefits and perils of legal pot and of its regulatory framework.
Other states, rather than stamping their feet and running to the feds, should watch this laboratory of democracy and learn from our success and our temporary failures.

The world is drowning in debt, warns Goldman Sachs

The world is drowning in debt, warns Goldman Sachs - Telegraph:
"The world is sinking under too much debt and an ageing global population means countries' debt piles are in danger of growing out of control, the European chief executive of Goldman Sachs Asset Management has warned.
Andrew Wilson, head of Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA), said growing debt piles around the world posed one of the biggest threats to the global economy.
"There is too much debt and this represents a risk to economies. Consequently, there is a clear need to generate growth to work that debt off but, as demographics change, new ways of thinking at a policy level are required to do this," he said.

"The demographics in most major economies – including the US, in Europe and Japan - are a major issue – and present us with the question of how we are going to pay down the huge debt burden.
With life expectancy increasing rapidly, we no longer have the young, working populations required to sustain a debt-driven economic model in the same way as we've managed to do in the past."
Mr Wilson used Japan, where gross government debt has climbed above 200pc of gross domestic product (GDP), as an example of where the ageing population could demographics were working against them.
"[This] is evidently not sustainable over the long term," he said...

‘Vindication’ for Parents Whose Children Were Taken Into Custody for Walking, Playing Alone | Video | TheBlaze.com

‘Vindication’ for Parents Whose Children Were Taken Into Custody for Walking, Playing Alone | Video | TheBlaze.com:

"So-called “free-range” parents in Maryland, whose children have been taken to protective services a couple of times as they were allowed to do things like walk home alone and play at a local park without parental supervision, were cleared in one case."

SHOCKER: Fat Models Complain That Too Many Are White

SHOCKER: Fat Models Complain That Too Many Are White
Apparently there is a “plus size revolution” in modeling, giving overweight women the role models in fashion they’ve all be looking for. You’d think, hearing this exciting news, that bountiful beauties everywhere would be rejoicing.
Not so, according to an OpEd on CNN… because too many of them are white.
But I was disappointed when I looked at the models featured inside the magazine as members of “The Plus-Size Revolution.” At first glance there appeared to be no women of color among the four women featured. (Further research revealed that model Denise Bidot is Puerto Rican and Kuwaiti.)
There is no industry more vapid and judgmental than the fashion industry. By definition, it’s discriminatory. It’s the way the people in charge – generally gay, liberal men – want it. If the images of rotund ladies sold clothing, magazines wouldn’t have to be shamed shamed into putting them there. And of course now that the fashion industry has given the world (that didn’t ask for it) fat models, other chubby chicks are complaining that they aren’t the right fat models.

History for May 28

History for May 28 - On-This-Day.com
Dr. Joseph Ignace Guillotine 1738 - Physician, he did not invent the guillotine even though he did propose the use of a mechanical device to carry out death sentences in France, Jim Thorpe 1888 - Olympic athlete, baseball and basketball player 


Ian Fleming 1908 - Author, journalist, created character of James Bond, Gladys Knight 1944 - Singer, Rudolph Giuliani 1944 - Mayor of New York City 


John Fogerty 1945 - Musician (Creedence Clearwater Revival), Larry Gatlin 1948 - Musician (Gatlin Brothers), Elisabeth Hasselbeck 1977 - Television host ("The View") 


1533 - England's Archbishop declared the marriage of King Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn valid. 


1805 - Napoleon was crowned in Milan, Italy. 


1863 - The first black regiment left Boston to fight in the U.S. Civil War


1928 - Chrysler Corporation merged with Dodge Brothers, Inc. 


1934 - The Dionne quintuplets were born near Callender, Ontario, to Olivia and Elzire Dionne. The babies were the first quintuplets to survive infancy. 


1957 - National League club owners voted to allow the Brooklyn Dodgers to move to Los Angeles and that the New York Giants could move to San Francisco. 


1987 - Mathias Rust, a 19-year-old West German pilot, landed a private plane in Moscow's Red Square after evading Soviet air defenses. He was released August 3, 1988. 


1996 - U.S. President Clinton's former business partners in the Whitewater land deal were convicted of fraud. 


1998 - Pakistan matched India with five nuclear test blasts. The U.S., Japan and other nations imposed economic sanctions. Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said "Today, we have settled the score with India." 


1999 - In Milan, Italy, Leonardo de Vinci's "The Last Supper" was put back on display after more than 20 years of restoration work.