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| 1/9/2012 |
Awakening to Ron Paul’s Crony Capitalism Ron Paul believes in the feudalism of the land barons and gold bankers of King George. Ron Paul believes land and money are capital. Land and money are not capital. They are the common wealth. To declare any free market currency to be legal tender is state intervention and a corruption of free markets. Title to land is state intervention and corruption of free markets. The Bible and the classical liberals understand this distinction. Ron Paul does not understand this distinction. Ron Paul wants government to allow the banks and land barons to steal the common wealth. Ron Paul does not distinguish between earned wealth and wealth stolen through economic rent and monetary interest. My article exposing Ron Paul as a globalist seeking the old world’s one world currency is getting a lot of traffic. Unfortunately, it seems a lot of people on forums discussing the article still have not awakened to the importance of the Endgame Ron Paul represents on the Grand Chessboard of the Red Symphony. The awakening to the crimes of the New World Order is being misdirected into the worship of one man, Ron Paul, and into a blind faith of a false economic paradigm of crony capitalism and corruption of free markets of the worst kind by government, the Austrian School of Economics, funded by the same people, the Rockefeller Foundation, who take an active part in the funding and control of the New World Order. What is really dangerous is that it is sold as the opposition to the New World Order and as the opposition to crony capitalism and corruption of free markets by the government when it was funded by the New World Order and when it is crony capitalism and corruption of free markets by the government. (Liberty Revival) | |||
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keywords: 9/11, Adam Smith, Alex Jones, Alternative Media, American Revolution, Austrian School Of Economics, Bill Still, China, Council On Foreign Relations, Dan Sullivan, European Union, Financial Crisis, George Orwell, George Washington, Gold, Great Depression, Henry George, India, John Maynard Keynes, Karl Marx, King George, New World Order, Rockefeller Foundation, Roman Empire, Ron Paul, Silver, Spain, US Congress, US Constitution, United States, Youtube, Zeitgeist
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| 1/1/2012 |
Hyperdimensional Space and The Unfolding of the Four Ages "The age of iron has no other seal than that of Death. Its hieroglyph is the skeleton, bearing the attributes of Saturn: the empty hourglass, symbol of time run out …" - Fulcanelli The inspiration for this essay comes from my almost nineteen years of research into the Great Cross of Hendaye and the French alchemist Fulcanelli. The unknown, anonymous, alchemist Fulcanelli in his masterpiece The Mysteries of the Cathedrals first brought the cross at Hendaye, France to the world’s attention. While the details of this research can be found in other articles written by myself (at jayweidner.com) and in the two books I co-authored (A Monument to the End of Time: Alchemy, Fulcanelli and the Great Cross and Mysteries of the great Cross of Hendaye: Alchemy at the End of Time) it can be stated that the Great Cross at Hendaye appears to be describing not only the end of the great four ages of the Hindu Yuga system but also the four ages of alchemical chronological time keeping. According to the cross at Hendaye the Iron Age, or the Kali Yuga, will be coming to an end with the galactic alignment on the winter solstice of December 21st 2012. According to the mythology of the Yuga system there are four ages of life and time on our planet. It is important to remember that there are many cycles within cycles in the Hindu Yuga system so the years mentioned next may have to do with a larger cycle than the one addressed in this article. Perhaps the huge number of years referred to below is the cycle of the solar system as it circles another star or perhaps it is a portion of the great cycle of one revolution around the galactic center. (Sacred Mysteries) | |||
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| 10/28/2011 |
How women defused population bomb This week the world will reach 7 billion people. Understandably that raises concern about a soaring world population. But there is a good news story from the demographic data that is not often told. We -- or rather the poor women of the world -- are defusing the population bomb. Women today are having half as many children as their mothers and grandmothers. The global average is now down to 2.5 children per woman, and it continues to fall. This is not just a rich-world phenomenon. Much of Asia now has fertility rates below two, from Japan and Korea to China, with its one-child policy, through Taiwan, Vietnam, Burma, Singapore and much of southern India and parts of the Middle East. Behind the veil, the women of Iran have cut their fertility from eight to less than two in a generation. According to Stephen Pacala, the director of the Princeton Environmental Institute, the world's richest half billion people -- that's about 7 % of the global population -- are responsible for half the world's carbon dioxide emissions, the primary cause of man-made climate change. Meanwhile the poorest 50 % of the world are responsible for just 7 % of emissions. So there is no way halting population growth in the poor world today would have more than a very marginal effect on climate change. It is the world's consumption patterns we need to fix, not its reproductive habits. Every time we talk about too many babies in Africa or India, we are denying this fact. (CNN) | |||
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| 5/12/2011 |
Al Qaeda Could Try to Replicate Fukushima-type Meltdowns A May 5 "intelligence brief" prepared by a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) official at the Pacific Regional Information Clearinghouse (PacClear) in Hawaii, warned Al Qaeda might try to cause the meltdown of certain vulnerable nuclear power plants in the US and Europe by replicating the failure of the electric supply that pumped cooling water to the reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan. The plant's primary and backup power supplies were knocked out by the earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan in March, resulting in partial meltdowns of the plant's reactors. Only a week after the intelligence brief was circulated, federal officials dispatched a security alert notifying US power plant operators to raise the level of their security awareness. According to the analysis in the “for official use only” intelligence brief, which was obtained by Homeland Security Today, “the earthquake and tsunami in Japan were ‘acts of nature,’ but a catastrophic nuclear reactor meltdown could potentially be engineered by Al Qaeda” by replicating the cascading loss of electric power that knocked out the Fukushima nuclear power plant’s ability to cool its reactors’ fuel rods, which led to the partial meltdowns of the reactors, causing the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl. (Homeland Security Today) | |||
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keywords: 9/11, Abu Al Libi, Afghanistan, Airports, Al Quds Al Arabi, Al-qaeda, Anthony Kimery, Anthony Shaffer, Anwar Al Awlaki, Asahi Shimbun, Assassination, Ayman Al Zawahiri, Bangladesh, Central Intelligence Agency, Charles Faddis, Chernobyl, Christian Science Monitor, Civil Nuclear Constabulary, Clare Lopez, Earthquakes, European Union, Fukushima, Guantanamo Bay, Hawaii, India, International Atomic Energy Agency, Islamabad, Jamaica, Japan, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, London, Michael Scheuer, Middle East, Military, Mumbai, National Counterterrorism Center, New Jersey, Nuclear Power Plants, Nuclear Weapons, Operation Dark Heart, Osama Bin Laden, Pacific Regional Information Clearinghouse, Pakistan, Police, Saudi Arabia, Scott Malone, Sharif Al Masri, Sharif Mobley, Somalia, Taliban, Terrorists, Tokyo Electric Power CO, Tsunamis, US Army, US Department Of Defense, US Department Of Homeland Security, US Government Accountability Office, United Kingdom, United States, Weapons Of Mass Destruction, Wiki Leaks, Yemen
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| 2/16/2011 |
Revolution U: What Egypt Learned From The Students Who Overthrew Milosevic Early in 2008, workers at a government-owned textile factory in the Egyptian mill town of El-Mahalla el-Kubra announced that they were going on strike on the first Sunday in April to protest high food prices and low wages. They caught the attention of a group of tech-savvy young people an hour's drive to the south in the capital city of Cairo, who started a Facebook group to organize protests and strikes on April 6 throughout Egypt in solidarity with the mill workers. To their shock, the page quickly acquired some 70,000 followers. But what worked so smoothly online proved much more difficult on the street. Police occupied the factory in Mahalla and headed off the strike. The demonstrations there turned violent: Protesters set fire to buildings, and police started shooting, killing at least two people. The solidarity protests around Egypt, meanwhile, fizzled out, in most places blocked by police. The Facebook organizers had never agreed on tactics, whether Egyptians should stay home or fill the streets in protest. People knew they wanted to do something. But no one had a clear idea of what that something was. The botched April 6 protests, the leaders realized in their aftermath, had been an object lesson in the limits of social networking as a tool of democratic revolution. Facebook could bring together tens of thousands of sympathizers online, but it couldn't organize them once they logged off. It was a useful communication tool to call people to -- well, to what? The April 6 leaders did not know the answer to this question. So they decided to learn from others who did. In the summer of 2009, Mohamed Adel, a 20-year-old blogger and April 6 activist, went to Belgrade, Serbia. (Foreign Policy) | |||
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keywords: Adam Michnik, Africa, Al Jazeera, Aleksandr Lukashenko, Algeria, Angola, Ashin Kovida, Asia, Augusto Pinochet, Aung San Suu Kyi, Bahrain, Balkans, Belarus, Belgrade, Belgrade University, Bill Clinton, Burma, Cairo, California, Cambodia, Center For Applied Nonviolent Action And Strategies, Chile, Civil Rights, Coca-cola, Cold War, Coup, Detainees, Eduard Shevardnadze, Egypt, El-mahalla El-kubra, Ethiopia, European Union, Facebook, Freedom House, Gene Sharp, Georgia, Green Revolution, Harare, Hosni Mubarak, Hugo Chávez, Humanity IN Action, India, Internet, Ivan Marovic, James O'brien, Kazakhstan, Kefaya, Kmara, Latin America, Lebanon, Mahalla, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr, Middle East, Military, Minsk, Mohamed Adel, NE Win, Nicaragua, North Korea, Orange Revolution, Organization For Security And Cooperation IN Europe, Otpor, Poland, Police, Pora, Rangoon, Robert Helvey, Robert Mugabe, Rose Revolution, Russia, Saffron Revolution, Sandinistas, Seoul, Serbia, Slobodan Djinovic, Slobodan Milosevic, South Africa, Srdja Popovic, Sun Tzu, Syria, Tahrir Square, Tehran, Thailand, Tunisia, Twitter, US Army, Ukraine, United Nations Development Program, United States, Venezuela, Vietnam, Washington DC, World War II, Yemen, Yugoslavia, Zimbabwe
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| 11/18/2010 |
IPCC Official: "Climate Policy Is Redistributing The World's Wealth" Climate policy has almost nothing to do anymore with environmental protection, says the German economist and IPCC official Ottmar Edenhofer. The next world climate summit in Cancun is actually an economy summit during which the distribution of the world's resources will be negotiated. Interview: Bernard Potter NZZ am Sonntag: Mr. Edenhofer, everybody concerned with climate protection demands emissions reductions. You now speak of "dangerous emissions reduction." What do you mean? Ottmar Edenhofer: So far economic growth has gone hand in hand with the growth of greenhouse gas emissions. One percent growth means one percent more emissions. The historic memory of mankind remembers: In order to get rich one has to burn coal, oil or gas. And therefore, the emerging economies fear CO2 emission limits. But everybody should take part in climate protection, otherwise it does not work. That is so easy to say. But particularly the industrialized countries have a system that relies almost exclusively on fossil fuels. There is no historical precedent and no region in the world that has decoupled its economic growth from emissions. Thus, you cannot expect that India or China will regard CO2 emissions reduction as a great idea. And it gets worse: We are in the midst of a renaissance of coal, because oil and gas (sic) have become more expensive, but coal has not. The emerging markets are building their cities and power plants for the next 70 years, as if there would be permanently no high CO 2 price. The new thing about your proposal for a Global Deal is the stress on the importance of development policy for climate policy. Until now, many think of aid when they hear development policies. That will change immediately if global emission rights are distributed. If this happens, on a per capita basis, then Africa will be the big winner, and huge amounts of money will flow there. This will have enormous implications for development policy. And it will raise the question if these countries can deal responsibly with so much money at all. That does not sound anymore like the climate policy that we know. Ottmar Edenhofer was appointed as joint chair of Working Group 3 at the Twenty-Ninth Session of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in Geneva, Switzerland. The deputy director and chief economist of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and Professor of the Economics of Climate Change at the Berlin Institute of Technology will be co-chairing the Working Group “Mitigation of Climate Change” with Ramón Pichs Madruga from Cuba and Youba Sokona from Mali. (Global Warming Policy Foundation) | |||
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keywords: Africa, Big Oil, Cancun, Carbon Dioxide, China, Climate Change, Coal, Financial Crisis, Germany, Global Warming Policy Foundation, Globalization, Greenhouse Gases, India, Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change, Natural Gas, Ottmar Edenhofer, Ozone, Rio, Trees, United Nations, World War II
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| 10/3/2010 |
Travel alert issued for U.S. citizens in Europe The U.S. State Department has issued a travel alert for U.S. citizens in Europe, based on information that suggests that al Qaeda and affiliated organizations continue to plan terrorist attacks. Americans are warned to be aware of their surroundings and protect themselves when traveling, especially when they are in public places like tourist sites, airports or when they are using public transportation. The alert does not warn U.S. citizens against travel to Europe. Britain's Home Office has not raised its threat level. A statement released Sunday confirms that British authorities are keeping their threat level at "'severe," which means than an attack is highly likely. But, the UK's Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) has changed its travel advisory for British citizens in France and Germany from a "substantial" threat of terrorism to a "high" threat. The FCO said it does not comment on intelligence matters and thus can't specify whether the change is related to the U.S. travel alert. (CNN) | |||
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keywords: Airports, Al-qaeda, Berlin, European Union, Germany, India, Italy, Military, Mumbai, Oberoi-trident, Spain, Taj Mahal Palace, Terrorists, UK Foreign And Commonwealth Office, UK Home Office, US Department Of State, United Kingdom, United States, Victoria Terminus
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| 9/30/2010 |
Wiretapping the Internet On Monday, The New York Times reported that President Obama will seek sweeping laws enabling law enforcement to more easily eavesdrop on the internet. Technologies are changing, the administration argues, and modern digital systems aren't as easy to monitor as traditional telephones. The government wants to force companies to redesign their communications systems and information networks to facilitate surveillance, and to provide law enforcement with back doors that enable them to bypass any security measures. The proposal may seem extreme, but -- unfortunately -- it's not unique. Just a few months ago, the governments of the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and India threatened to ban BlackBerry devices unless the company made eavesdropping easier. China has already built a massive internet surveillance system to better control its citizens. (Bruce Schneier) | |||
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keywords: 9/11, AOL, Barack Obama, Blackberry, Bruce Schneier, Canada, China, Cybersecurity, Federal Bureau Of Investigation, Google, Greece, India, Internet, Iran, L-1 Identity Solutions, National Security Agency, New York Times, Nokia, Police, Privacy, Saudi Arabia, Secure Computing, Siemens, Skype, Sweden, Terrorists, Twitter, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States
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| 9/27/2010 |
Stuxnet worm rampaging through Iran: IT official The Stuxnet worm is mutating and wreaking further havoc on computerised industrial equipment in Iran where about 30,000 IP addresses have already been infected, IRNA news agency reported on Monday. "The attack is still ongoing and new versions of this virus are spreading," Hamid Alipour, deputy head of Iran's Information Technology Company, was quoted as saying by IRNA, Iran's official news agency. Stuxnet, which was publicly identified in June, was tailored for Siemens supervisory control and data acquisition, or SCADA, systems commonly used to manage water supplies, oil rigs, power plants and other industrial facilities. (Agence France-Presse) | |||
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keywords: Computer Virus, Cybersecurity, Germany, Hamid Alipour, India, Indonesia, Internet, Iran, Mahmoud Jafari, Nuclear Power Plants, Pakistan, Ralph Langner, Siemens, Stuxnet, Tehran, UN Security Council, United Nations, United States
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| 9/25/2010 |
Cyber Attacks Test Pentagon, Allies and Foes Cyber espionage has surged against governments and companies around the world in the past year, and cyber attacks have become a staple of conflict among states. U.S. military and civilian networks are probed thousands of times a day, and the systems of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization headquarters are attacked at least 100 times a day, according to Anders Fogh Rasmussen, NATO's secretary-general. "It's no exaggeration to say that cyber attacks have become a new form of permanent, low-level warfare," he said. More than 100 countries are currently trying to break into U.S. networks, defense officials say. China and Russia are home to the greatest concentration of attacks. The Pentagon's Cyber Command is scheduled to be up and running next month, but much of the rest of the U.S. government is lagging behind, debating the responsibilities of different agencies, cyber-security experts say. The White House is considering whether the Pentagon needs more authority to help fend off cyber attacks within the U.S. (Wall Street Journal) | |||
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keywords: Al-qaeda, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Barack Obama, Bushehr, China, Cybersecurity, Estonia, Georgia (country), India, International Institute Of Strategic Studies, Internet, Iran, Israel, James Appathurai, Jamie Shea, Japan, John Sawers, Jonathan Evans, Keith Alexander, MI5, MI6, Military, Nigel Inkster, Nigel Sheinwald, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, North Korea, Nuclear Power Plants, Pakistan, Pentagon, Russia, South Korea, Terrorists, UK Parliament, US Department Of Homeland Security, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, White House
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| 9/21/2010 |
Was Stuxnet Built to Attack Iran's Nuclear Program? A highly sophisticated computer worm that has spread through Iran, Indonesia and India was built to destroy operations at one target: possibly Iran's Bushehr nuclear reactor. That's the emerging consensus of security experts who have examined the Stuxnet worm. In recent weeks, they've broken the cryptographic code behind the software and taken a look at how the worm operates in test environments. Researchers studying the worm all agree that Stuxnet was built by a very sophisticated and capable attacker -- possibly a nation state -- and it was designed to destroy something big. Though it was first developed more than a year ago, Stuxnet was discovered in July 2010, when a Belarus-based security company discovered the worm on computers belonging to an Iranian client. Since then it has been the subject of ongoing study by security researchers who say they've never seen anything like it before. Now, after months of private speculation, some of the researchers who know Stuxnet best say that it may have been built to sabotage Iran's nukes. (PC World) | |||
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keywords: Bushehr, Computer Virus, Cybersecurity, Dale Peterson, Digital Bond, Eric Byres, India, Indonesia, Internet, Iran, Israel, Jmicron Technology, Maryland, Microsoft, Nuclear Power Plants, Nuclear Weapons, Ralph Langner, Realtek Semiconductor, Russia, Scott Borg, Siemens, Stuxnet, Tofino, US Cyber Consequences Unit
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| 9/5/2010 |
The Imperial Anatomy of Al-Qaeda. The CIA’s Drug-Running Terrorists and the “Arc of Crisis”, Part I As the 9th anniversary of 9/11 nears, and the war on terror continues to be waged and grows in ferocity and geography, it seems all the more imperative to return to the events of that fateful September morning and re-examine the reasons for war and the nature of the stated culprit, Al-Qaeda. The events of 9/11 pervade the American and indeed the world imagination as an historical myth. The events of that day and those leading up to it remain largely unknown and little understood by the general public, apart from the disturbing images repeated ad nauseam in the media. The facts and troubled truths of that day are lost in the folklore of the 9/11 myth: that the largest attack carried out on American ground was orchestrated by 19 Muslims armed with box cutters and urged on by religious fundamentalism, all under the direction of Osama bin Laden, the leader of a global terrorist network called al-Qaeda, based out of a cave in Afghanistan. The myth sweeps aside the facts and complex nature of terror, al-Qaeda, the American empire and literally defies the laws of physics. As John F. Kennedy once said, “The greatest enemy of the truth is not the lie – deliberate, contrived, and dishonest – but the myth – persistent, pervasive, and unrealistic.” This three-part series on “The Imperial Anatomy of Al-Qaeda” examines the geopolitical historical origins and nature of what we today know as al-Qaeda, which is in fact an Anglo-American intelligence network of terrorist assets used to advance American and NATO imperial objectives in various regions around the world. Part 1 examines the origins of the intelligence network known as the Safari Club, which financed and organized an international conglomerate of terrorists, the CIA’s role in the global drug trade, the emergence of the Taliban and the origins of al-Qaeda. (Global Research) | |||
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keywords: 9/11, Afghanistan, Africa, Air France, Akhtar Abdul Rahman, Al-kifah Center, Al-qaeda, Ali Mohamed, Andrew Young, Anwar Sadat, BBC, Bank Of Credit And Commerce International, Bilderberg Group, Burma, Central Intelligence Agency, Chase Manhattan Bank, China, Cold War, Council On Foreign Relations, Coup, Cyrus Vance, David Rockefeller, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, East India Company, Egypt, Foreign Affairs, France, George Ball, George H W Bush, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Heroin, India, Inter-services Intelligence, Iran, Jimmy Carter, John F Kennedy, John Mccloy, Jordan, Kamal Adham, Laos, MI6, Manouchehr Ganji, Middle East, Military, Mohamed Atta, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, Morocco, National Security Agency, Nelson Rockefeller, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Omar Abdel Rahman, Opium, Osama Bin Laden, Pakistan, Peter Dale Scott, Ramsey Clark, Richard Nixon, Robert Gates, Robert Huyser, Robin Cook, Ronald Reagan, Russia, Saddam Hussein, Safari Club, Salem Bin Laden, Samuel Huntington, Saudi Arabia, Selig Harrison, Taliban, Tehran, Terrorists, Thailand, Trilateral Commission, Turkey, Turki Bin Faisal, US Agency For International Development, US Congress, US Department Of Defense, US Department Of State, US National Security Council, United Kingdom, United States, University Of Nebraska, Vietnam, Vietnam War, War On Drugs, White House, William Sullivan, Woodrow Wilson International Centre For Scholars, World War II, Zbigniew Brzezinski
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| 8/27/2010 |
India halt vaccine programmes after the deaths of four children Vaccine programmes grind to a halt in India once more, when four children died after they received the measles vaccination in Lucknow. The four children were reported to have fainted soon after they were vaccinated and witnesses reported seeing the children's eyes roll back as they began to have seizures. All of the children were under the age of two years of age, with the youngest being just six months. Sadly the children died before medical aid workers could reach them. As news of the deaths spread, immunization drives in 41 villages have been halted until further investigations have taken place. The Indian Express stated in their article 4 children die within minutes of vaccination www.indianexpress.com that- "The immunisation programme was being conducted as part of the government's Jachha Bachha Suraksha Abhiyan launched on August 15. Minutes after vaccination, the children started gasping for breath." (Blitz) | |||
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keywords: Bangladesh, Gardasil, Gavi Alliance, Hpv, India, Indian Council Of Medical Research, John Hopkins Bloomberg School Of Public Health, Lucknow, Measles, Merck, US Agency For International Development, United Kingdom, Uttar Pradesh, Vaccines
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| 7/28/2010 |
Document leak part of U.S. plot, says Pakistani ex-general with ties to Taliban From the deluge of leaked military documents published Sunday, a former Pakistani spy chief emerged as a chilling personification of his nation's alleged duplicity in the Afghan war -- an erstwhile U.S. ally turned Taliban tutor. Now planted squarely in the cross hairs, retired Lt. Gen. Hamid Gul seems little short of delighted. In an interview Tuesday, Gul dismissed the accusations against him as "fiction" and described the documents' release as the start of a White House plot. It will end, he posited, with an early U.S. pullout from Afghanistan -- thus proving Gul, an unabashed advocate of the Afghan insurgency, right. President Obama "is a very good chess player. . . . He says, 'I don't want to carry the historic blame of having orchestrated the defeat of America, their humiliation in Afghanistan,' " said Gul, 74, adding that the plot incorporates a troop surge that Obama knows will fail. "It doesn't sell to a professional man like me." (Washington Post) | |||
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keywords: Afghanistan, Barack Obama, Benazir Bhutto, Hamid Gul, India, Inter-services Intelligence, Iran, Kabul, Mohammad Omar, Nobel Prize, Pakistan, Pentagon, Psyops, Rawalpindi, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Taliban, United Nations, United States, White House, Wiki Leaks
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| 6/30/2010 |
Study links bee decline to cell phones A new study has suggested that cell phone radiation may be contributing to declines in bee populations in some areas of the world. Bee populations dropped 17 percent in the UK last year, according to the British Bee Association, and nearly 30 percent in the United States says the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Parasitic mites called varroa, agricultural pesticides and the effects of climate change have all been implicated in what has been dubbed "colony collapse disorder" (CCD). But researchers in India believe cell phones could also be to blame for some of the losses. In a study at Panjab University in Chandigarh, northern India, researchers fitted cell phones to a hive and powered them up for two fifteen-minute periods each day. After three months, they found the bees stopped producing honey, egg production by the queen bee halved, and the size of the hive dramatically reduced. (CNN) | |||
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keywords: Andrew Goldsworthy, British Bee Association, Chandigarh, Colony Collapse Disorder, Imperial College, India, International Bee Research Association, London, Norman Carreck, Panjab University, Pesticides, UK Mobile Operators Association, US Department Of Agriculture, United Kingdom, United States, University Of Sussex
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| 6/23/2010 |
Extreme DIY: Building a homemade nuclear reactor in NYC Many might be alarmed to learn of a homemade nuclear reactor being built next door. But what if this form of extreme DIY could help solve the world's energy crisis? By day, Mark Suppes is a web developer for fashion giant Gucci. By night, he cycles to a New York warehouse and tinkers with his own nuclear fusion reactor. (BBC) | |||
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keywords: Anne Stark, California, Carbon Dioxide, China, European Union, Gucci, India, Japan, Mark Suppes, New York City, Nuclear Power Plants, Nuclear Weapons, Russia, Senior Public Information Officer For California's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, South Korea, Terrorists, US Navy, United States
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| 5/15/2010 |
CFR Meeting: Zbigniew Brzezinski Fears Global Political Awakening "For the first time in all of human history, mankind is politically awakened. That's a total new reality. Total new reality. It has not been so for most of human history, until the last 100 years. And in the course of the last 100 years, the whole world has become politically awakened. And no matter where you go, politics is a matter of social engagement and most people know what is generally going on -- GENERALLY going on -- in the world, and are consciously aware of inequities, inequalities, lack of respect, exploitation." (Council on Foreign Relations) | |||
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| 5/6/2010 |
Gerald Celente: Crash of 2010 inevitable The Dow Jones industrial market is down and looks to continue to head that direction. This is not good news for the worlds economies that are trying to bounce back after this recession hit many different nations. Is this a direct reflection of the Greece financial crisis? (Russia Today) | |||
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keywords: Bailouts, Barack Obama, China, Dollar, Dow Jones, European Union, Financial Crisis, Gerald Celente, Gold, Greece, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Portugal, South Korea, Spain, United Kingdom, United States, Wall Street
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| 5/6/2010 |
Link emerges between Times Square bomb attempt and Pakistani militant group A member of the Al Qaeda-allied Pakistani militant group Jaish-e-Muhammad is being held by authorities in Pakistan. That man spent time with Faisal Shahzad, the person charged in the failed bomb plot, although sources say that does not mean Jaish-e-Muhammad engineered the plot. (Los Angeles Times) | |||
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keywords: Afghanistan, Al-qaeda, Athar Abbas, Baitullah Mehsud, Daniel Pearl, Faisal Shahzad, India, Inter-services Intelligence, Jaish-e-muhammad, Karachi, New York City, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Pakistan, Peshawar, Sheik Mohammed Rehan, Taliban, Terrorists, Wall Street Journal, Waziristan
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| 3/29/2010 |
James Lovelock: 'Fudging data is a sin against science' In his first major interview since the climate-change emails scandal, James Lovelock says he is disgusted by the actions of some scientists, applauds 'good' climate sceptics, and warns that global warming could even lead to war I don’t know enough about carbon trading, but I suspect that it is basically a scam. The whole thing is not very sensible. We have this crazy idea that we are setting an example to the world. What we’re doing is trying to make money out of the world by selling them renewable gadgetry and green ideas. It might be worthy from the national interest, but it is moonshine if you think what the Chinese and Indians are doing [in terms of emissions]. (London Guardian) | |||
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| 3/24/2010 |
SPECIAL REPORT. Obama and Emanuel: members of same gay bath house club in Chicago President Obama and his chief of staff Rahm Emanuel are lifetime members of the same gay bath house in uptown Chicago, according to informed sources in Chicago's gay community, as well as veteran political sources in the city. The bath house, Man's Country, caters to older white men and it has been in business for some 30 years and is known as one of uptown Chicago's "grand old bathhouses." WMR was told by sources who are familiar with the bath house that it provides lifetime memberships to paying customers and that the club's computerized files, and pre-computer paper files, include membership information for both Obama and Emanuel. However, sources close to "Man's Country" believe the U.S. Secret Service has purged the computer and filing cabinet files of the membership data on Obama and Emanuel. Members of Man's Country are also issued club identification cards. WMR learned that Obama and Emanuel possessed the ID cards, which were required for entry. Obama began frequenting Man's Country in the mid-1990s, during the time he transitioned from a lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School to his election as an Illinois State Senator in 1996. Emanuel, reportedly joined Man's Country after he left the Clinton White House and moved back to Chicago in 1998, joining the investment firm of Wasserstein Perella and maintaining his membership during his 2002 campaign for the U.S. 5th District House seat vacated by Rod Blagojevich, who was elected governor. (Wayne Madsen) | |||
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keywords: AIDS, Aaron Shock, Adam4adam, Airports, Al Kamen, Alabama, Alexi Giannoulias, Alternative Media, Antoin Rezko, Artur Davis, Barack Obama, Beau Biden, Bill Clinton, Bill Frist, British Petroleum, Broadway Bank, Chicago, Craigslist, Delaware, Democratic Leadership Council, Deval Patrick, Don Siegelman, Donald Young, Down Low Club, Duke University, Earl Bradley, Earl Hilliard, Elena Kagan, Eric Cantor, Eric Holder, Five Star Limousine Service, Florida, Gennifer Flowers, Hanky Codes, Harvard University, Health Care, Illinois, India, James Zagel, Jeremiah Wright, Jim Thompson, Joffrey Ballet, John Edwards, John Harris, Joseph Biden, Josephine Bland, Larry Bland, Larry Craig, Larry Sinclair, Leura Canary, Man's Country, Mark Kirk, Michelle Obama, Minneapolis, Mississippi, Monica Lewinsky, Nashville, Nate Spencer, National Enquirer, National Press Club, Patrick J Fitzgerald, Police, Rahm Emanuel, Ray Lahood, Reggie Love, Rezmar Corporation, Rielle Hunter, Rod Blagojevich, Roland Burris, Sam Adam, Sex Workers, St Paul, Tennessee, Tiger Woods, Trent Lott, Trinity United Church Of Christ, US Congress, US Navy, US Secret Service, US Supreme Court, United States, University Of Chicago, Valerie Jarrett, Vera Baker, Washington Metropolitan Police, Washington Post, Wasserstein Perella, White House
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| 3/22/2010 |
UN report: World's biggest cities merging into 'mega-regions' Trend towards 'endless cities' could significantly affect population and wealth in the next 50 years The largest of these, says the report launched today at the World Urban Forum in Rio de Janeiro is the Hong Kong-Shenhzen-Guangzhou region in China, home to about 120 million people. Other mega-regions have formed in Japan and Brazil and are developing in India, west Africa and elsewhere. The trend helped the world pass a tipping point in the last year, with more than half the world's people now living in cities. The UN said that urbanisation is now "unstoppable". Anna Tibaijuka, outgoing director of UN-Habitat, said: "Just over half the world now lives in cities but by 2050, over 70% of the world will be urban dwellers. By then, only 14% of people in rich countries will live outside cities, and 33% in poor countries." The development of mega-regions is regarded as generally positive, said the report's co-author Eduardo Lopez Moreno: "They [mega-regions], rather than countries, are now driving wealth." In a sample survey of world cities, the UN found the most unequal were in South Africa. Johannesburg was the least equal in the world, only marginally ahead of East London, Bloemfontein, and Pretoria. Latin American, Asian and African cities were generally more equal, but mainly because they were uniformly poor, with a high level of slums and little sanitation. Some of the most the most egalitarian cities were found to be Dhaka and Chittagong in Bangladesh. The US emerged as one of the most unequal societies with cities like New York, Chicago and Washington less equal than places like Brazzaville in Congo-Brazzaville, Managua in Nicaragua and Davao City in the Phillippines. (London Guardian) | |||
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keywords: Africa, Anna Tibaijuka, Asia, Bangladesh, Beijing, Benin, Bloemfontein, Brazil, Brazzaville, China, Chittagong, Congo-brazzaville, Davao City, Dehli, Dhaka, Eduardo Lopez Moreno, Ghana, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Johannesburg, Kobe, Kyoto, London, Los Angeles, Managua, Mumbai, Nagoya, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Osaka, Phillippines, Pretoria, Pyongyang, Rio De Janeiro, Seoul, Shenhzen, South Africa, São Paulo, Togo, Tokyo, Un-habitat, United Nations, United States
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| 2/13/2010 |
U.N. climate panel admits Dutch sea level flaw The U.N. panel of climate experts overstated how much of the Netherlands is below sea level, according to a preliminary report on Saturday, admitting yet another flaw after a row last month over Himalayan glacier melt. (Reuters) | |||
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keywords: Carbon Dioxide, China, Climate Change, Climategate, Dutch Ministry Of Transport, Himalayas, India, Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change, Netherlands, Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, United Nations
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| 2/10/2010 |
Airport denies body scanner photo claim by Bollywood star Shahrukh Khan BAA has disputed a claim by Bollywood star Shahrukh Khan that his naked image was printed and circulated by body scanner operators at Heathrow Airport. The 44-year-old pin-up, nicknamed ‘SRK’, said female security staff at the London airport had printed his naked image, as captured by the newly-installed body scanner. (London Telegraph) | |||
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keywords: 9/11, Airports, Baa, Christmas Day Bombing Attempt, India, London, Privacy, Shahrukh Khan, Terrorists, United Kingdom, X-ray
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| 2/10/2010 |
Exposed: Bollywood heart-throb makes mockery of Australia-bound nude airport scanners But Indian actor Shah Rukh Khan has debunked the government's claims, telling BBC talk show host Jonathan Ross that he autographed printed scans of his own body for two female security officers. (Sydney Morning Herald) | |||
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keywords: Airports, Australia, India, Privacy, Terrorists, United Kingdom, X-ray
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| 2/9/2010 |
Airport Security Officials Caught in Most Obvious Lie Ever There is no way that celebrities are not going to have images of their genitals recorded and shared because of this new machinery! Read more: Airport Security Officials Caught in Most Obvious Lie Ever (New York Magazine) | |||
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keywords: Airports, India, Privacy, Shahrukh Khan, Terrorists, United Kingdom, United States, X-ray
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| 2/8/2010 |
Skeptics Find Fault With U.N. Climate Panel “This is not about whether this is a good person or a good cause; it’s about the integrity of the scientific process,” Dr. Pielke said, adding: “This has become so polarized, it’s like you must be in cahoots with the bad guys if you are at all negative about Pachauri.” (New York Times) | |||
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keywords: Al Gore, Alaska, Big Pharma, Carbon Dioxide, Chicago Climate Exchange, Christopher Monckton, Climate Change, Climategate, Climateworks, Clinton Climate Initiative, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Energy And Resources Institute, European Union, Federal Reserve, Food And Drug Administration, Glorioil, Hal Harvey, Himalayas, India, Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change, JP Morgan Chase, John Barrasso, Lighting A Billion Lives, Margaret Thatcher, Pegasus Capital Advisors, Rajendra Pachauri, Roger Pielke, Science And Public Policy Institute, Toyota, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, University Of Colorado, Yale University
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| 2/6/2010 |
Rajendra Pachauri: head of UN climate change panel clocks up half a million miles of air travel Between January 2007 and July 2008, he took more than 120 long-haul flights and 43 short-haul trips, taking in countries such as New Zealand, America and Fiji. Dr Pachauri’s trips would have produced 121.1 tons of carbon dioxide, according to calculations by ClimateCare, a carbon offset provider. (London Telegraph) | |||
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keywords: Carbon Dioxide, Climate Change, Connecticut, Copenhagen, Delhi, Fiji, Himalayas, India, Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change, New Zealand, Paul Dennis, Rajendra Pachauri, The Energy And Resources Institute, Tokyo, United Nations, United States, University Of East Anglia, Yale University
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| 2/6/2010 |
Secret summit of top bankers World's top bankers fly in to meet at secret location trouble on the horizon Organised by the Bank for International Settlements last year, the two-day talks are shrouded in secrecy with high-level security believed to have been invoked by law enforcement agencies. (News.au.com) | |||
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keywords: Australia, Bank For International Settlements, Bank Of Japan, Ben Bernanke, Central Bank Of Malaysia, China, Dubai, European Central Bank, European Union, Federal Reserve, Financial Crisis, Greece, Hong Kong, India, Jaime Caruana, Japan, People's Bank Of China, Portugal, Reserve Bank Of India, Spain, United Kingdom, United States, Wayne Swan, Zeti Akhtar Aziz
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| 2/6/2010 |
Shah Rukh signs off sexy body-scan printouts at Heathrow 'I was in London recently going through the airport and these new machines have come up, the body scans. You've got to see them. It makes you embarrassed if you're not well endowed. (IANS) | |||
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Source Removed! InfoWarDocs Backup:
http://AltBib.Com/bak/dox/4440.html | ||||
keywords: Airports, Christmas Day Bombing Attempt, India, London, Privacy, Shahrukh Khan, Terrorists, United Kingdom, X-ray
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| 1/26/2010 |
The dam is cracking So the 40% of the world's population that relies on the seven major river systems supplied by these glaciers can sleep a little more soundly in the knowledge that their water won't run out in 25 years after all. (BBC) | |||
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| 1/1/2010 |
Greenhouse gases ...are gases in an atmosphere that absorb and emit radiation within the thermal infrared range. This process is the fundamental cause of the greenhouse effect. The main greenhouse gases in the Earth's atmosphere are water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and ozone. In our solar system, the atmospheres of Venus, Mars and Titan also contain gases that cause greenhouse effects. Greenhouse gases greatly affect the temperature of the Earth; without them, Earth's surface would be on average about 33 °C (59 °F) colder than at present. The burning of fossil fuels since the beginning of the Industrial revolution has substantially increased the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. (Wikipedia) | |||
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keywords: Antarctica, Australia, Big Oil, Carbon Dioxide, Carbon Monoxide, China, Chlorofluorocarbon, Climate Change, Egypt, Environmental Protection Agency, European Union, Fertilizers, Greenhouse Gases, Halocarbons, Hexafluoroethane, Holocene, India, Indonesia, Industrial Revolution, Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change, Iran, Japan, Kyoto Protocol, Mars, Methane, Montreal Protocol, National Safety Council, Nitrous Oxide, Ozone, Russia, South Korea, Sulfur Hexafluoride, Thailand, Titan, Ukraine, United Nations, United States, Venus, Water Vapor, World Bank
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| 12/21/2009 |
Uranium Is So Last Century -- Enter Thorium, the New Green Nuke The thick hardbound volume was sitting on a shelf in a colleague’s office when Kirk Sorensen spotted it. A rookie NASA engineer at the Marshall Space Flight Center, Sorensen was researching nuclear-powered propulsion, and the book’s title — Fluid Fuel Reactors — jumped out at him. He picked it up and thumbed through it. Hours later, he was still reading, enchanted by the ideas but struggling with the arcane writing. “I took it home that night, but I didn’t understand all the nuclear terminology,” Sorensen says. He pored over it in the coming months, ultimately deciding that he held in his hands the key to the world’s energy future. Published in 1958 under the auspices of the Atomic Energy Commission as part of its Atoms for Peace program, Fluid Fuel Reactors is a book only an engineer could love: a dense, 978-page account of research conducted at Oak Ridge National Lab, most of it under former director Alvin Weinberg. What caught Sorensen’s eye was the description of Weinberg’s experiments producing nuclear power with an element called thorium. At the time, in 2000, Sorensen was just 25, engaged to be married and thrilled to be employed at his first serious job as a real aerospace engineer. A devout Mormon with a linebacker’s build and a marine’s crew cut, Sorensen made an unlikely iconoclast. But the book inspired him to pursue an intense study of nuclear energy over the next few years, during which he became convinced that thorium could solve the nuclear power industry’s most intractable problems. After it has been used as fuel for power plants, the element leaves behind minuscule amounts of waste. And that waste needs to be stored for only a few hundred years, not a few hundred thousand like other nuclear byproducts. Because it’s so plentiful in nature, it’s virtually inexhaustible. It’s also one of only a few substances that acts as a thermal breeder, in theory creating enough new fuel as it breaks down to sustain a high-temperature chain reaction indefinitely. And it would be virtually impossible for the byproducts of a thorium reactor to be used by terrorists or anyone else to make nuclear weapons. (Wired) | |||
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keywords: Alabama, Alternative Energy, Alvin Weinberg, Atomic Energy Commission, Barack Obama, Beijing, Carbon Dioxide, Chernobyl, China, Climate Change, Dubai, Energy From Thorium, Exelon, Harry Reid, Huntsville, Hyman Rickover, India, James Hansen, John Rowe, Kirk Sorensen, Kurchatov Institute, Los Alamos, Marshall Space Flight Center, Mormons, Moscow, National Aeronautics And Space Administration, Nuclear Power Plants, Oak Ridge National Lab, Orrin Hatch, Pu-239, Russia, Steven Chu, Terrorists, Thorium, Thorium Power, U-235, U-238, US Department Of Energy, US Energy Information Administration, United States, University Of Tennessee, Uranium, Virginia
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| 12/17/2009 |
Mumbai terror suspect David Headley was 'rogue US secret agent' A key terror suspect who allegedly helped to plan last year’s attacks in Mumbai and plotted to strike Europe was an American secret agent who went rogue, Indian officials believe. David Headley, 49, who was born in Washington to a Pakistan diplomat father and an American mother, was arrested in Chicago in October. He is accused of reconnoitring targets in India and Europe for Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), the Pakistan-based terror group behind the Mumbai attacks and of having links to al-Qaeda. He has denied the charges. He came to the attention of the US security services in 1997 when he was arrested in New York for heroin smuggling. He earned a reduced sentence by working for the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) infiltrating Pakistan-linked narcotics gangs. Indian investigators, who have been denied access to Mr Headley, suspect that he remained on the payroll of the US security services — possibly working for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) — but switched his allegiance to LeT. (London Times) | |||
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keywords: Al-qaeda, Bollywood, Central Intelligence Agency, Chicago, Daood Gilani, David Headley, Denmark, Drug Cartels, Drug Enforcement Administration, European Union, Gopal Krishna Pillai, India, Jyllands-posten, Lashkar-e-taiba, Mumbai, Pakistan, Pakistani Army, Paul Gimigliano, Shiv Sena, Tahawwur Hussain Rana, Terrorists, US National Counterterrorism Centre, United Kingdom, United States
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| 11/13/2009 |
Go forth and multiply a lot less THOMAS MALTHUS first published his “Essay on the Principle of Population”, in which he forecast that population growth would outstrip the world’s food supply, in 1798. His timing was unfortunate, for something started happening around then which made nonsense of his ideas. As industrialisation swept through what is now the developed world, fertility fell sharply, first in France, then in Britain, then throughout Europe and America. When people got richer, families got smaller; and as families got smaller, people got richer. Now, something similar is happening in developing countries. Fertility is falling and families are shrinking in places— such as Brazil, Indonesia, and even parts of India—that people think of as teeming with children. As our briefing shows, the fertility rate of half the world is now 2.1 or less—the magic number that is consistent with a stable population and is usually called “the replacement rate of fertility”. Sometime between 2020 and 2050 the world’s fertility rate will fall below the global replacement rate. (The Economist) | |||
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keywords: Brazil, China, Climate Change, Eugenics, European Union, France, India, Indonesia, Iran, Japan, Malaysia, Russia, Thomas Malthus, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States
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| 9/22/2009 |
Marc Faber: "Total Collapse Will Come" Marc Faber predicts with certainty that the United States will go through high inflation and a lower standard of living. Expect wars and currency re-evaluation. (Yahoo!) | |||
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keywords: Brazil, China, Coup, Dollar, Federal Reserve, Financial Crisis, India, Marc Faber, Medicaid, Medicare, Military, Stimulus Package, United States
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| 8/27/2009 |
Four crucial resources that may run out in your lifetime On the rebuttal side, there are people promoting the idea that oil isn't a fossil fuel, created by dead biomass buried beneath the Earth's surface. The Russian theory of "abiotic oil" that became popular in the 1950s claims that oil is produced from a monstrous reserve of hydrocarbons in the Earth's primordial core. Oil is created in the Earth's incredibly hot mantle layer, and pushed up into the crust, where gargantuan reserves are available to us if we just drill deep enough. But it's a scientifically unproven theory, promoted in recent times most strongly by one man, Thomas Gold, an astronomer who died in 2004. And the responding arguments for biogenic oil, from Petroleum Geologists, are very strong. So it looks fairly clear that sometime in the next few decades, oil production is going to start to fall, just as global demand is rising. Prices are forecast to skyrocket, and the effect on societies worldwide will reflect just how important fossil fuels are to us. Apart from oil control wars which many would say we're already witnessing in the middle east we can expect the industrial world to be turned on its head, starting with the economy and ending with a complete lifestyle revolution where food production, among other things, is brought right back into the backyard. (Giz Mag) | |||
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keywords: Abiotic Oil, Big Oil, China, Climate Change, Dickson Despommier, European Union, Food Riots, Genetic Engineering, Genetically Modified Organisms, India, International Energy Agency, Matt Savinar, Monsanto, Peak Oil, Russia, Thomas Gold, United States, Water, World Economic Forum
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| 8/18/2009 |
Boston FBI head: Police need assault rifles in case of terror attack The top FBI agent in Boston said today that the Menino administration should revive a controversial plan to arm neighborhood officers with semiautomatic assault rifles, saying the scarcity of such weapons on the force makes Boston more vulnerable to a terrorist attack similar to the 2008 rampage in Mumbai, India, that killed 166 people (Boston Globe) | |||
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keywords: Boston, Edward Davis, Federal Bureau Of Investigation, India, Massachusetts, Military, Mumbai, Police, Terrorists, Thomas Menino, United States
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| 7/15/2009 |
Foreign Policy Address at the Council on Foreign Relations by Hillary Rodham Clinton “We get a lot of advice from the Council, so this will mean I won’t have as far to go to be told what we should be doing and how we should think about the future.” (Department of State) | |||
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keywords: Afghanistan, Al-qaeda, Barack Obama, Brazil, China, Climate Change, Cold War, Council On Foreign Relations, Detainees, Drug Cartels, European Union, Financial Crisis, G20, G8, Ghana, Guantanamo Bay, Hillary Clinton, India, Indonesia, International Monetary Fund, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Japan, Lebanon, Liberia, Mexico, Middle East, Military, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, North Korea, Nuclear Weapons, Palestine, Religion, Russia, South Africa, South Korea, Taliban, Terrorists, Turkey, Twitter, US Department Of State, United Nations, United States, War On Drugs, World Bank
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| 7/6/2009 |
New climate strategy: track the world's wealthiest -- World's richest emit about half of Earth's carbon Tracking the wealthy could break climate impasse New method would follow individual greenhouse emissions (Reuters) | |||
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keywords: Brazil, Carbon Dioxide, China, Climate Change, India, Kyoto Protocol, United States, US Congress
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| 7/5/2009 |
Tony Blair: 'I’m a planet-saving kinda guy' The former PM has a new green masterplan: it won’t mean giving up our energy-rich lifestyle but it will cost us billions (London Times) | |||
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keywords: Carbon Dioxide, China, Climate Change, Climate Group, G8, George W Bush, India, Iraq, Japan, Peter Mandelson, Tony Blair, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, US Congress
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| 7/3/2009 |
Noam Chomsky Crisis and Hope: Theirs and Ours, June 12 (1 of 6) (Democracy Now) | |||
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keywords: Adam Smith, Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Financial Crisis, Haiti, India, Noam Chomsky, Rwanda, Uganda, United Kingdom, United States, Woodrow Wilson
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| 7/3/2009 |
Noam Chomsky Crisis and Hope: Theirs and Ours, June 12 (3 of 6) (Democracy Now) | |||
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keywords: Afghanistan, Barack Obama, David Kilcullen, David Petraeus, Financial Crisis, India, Internet, Iraq, Military, Noam Chomsky, Nuclear Weapons, Pakistan, Pentagon, Religion, South Korea, Stanley Mcchrystal, United Kingdom, United States
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| 7/3/2009 |
Noam Chomsky Crisis and Hope: Theirs and Ours, June 12 (4 of 6) (Democracy Now) | |||
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keywords: Climate Change, Edward Bernays, Financial Crisis, Germany, India, James Madison, John F Kennedy, Noam Chomsky, United Kingdom, United States, US Congress, US Constitution, Walter Lippmann, Woodrow Wilson, World War II
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| 7/2/2009 |
Senate May Pass U.S. Climate Bill, Reject Treaty, Kerry Says The U.S. Senate may pass legislation to slow climate change and then fail to approve a global treaty that commits nations to do so, Senator John Kerry said (Bloomberg) | |||
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keywords: Al Gore, Barack Obama, Barbara Boxer, Brazil, Carbon Dioxide, China, Climate Change, George W Bush, India, Iowa, James Inhofe, John Kerry, Kyoto Protocol, Nature Conservancy, Pew Center On Global Climate Change, Sherrod Brown, Todd Stern, Tom Harkin, United States, US Congress
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| 6/29/2009 |
Flood of Afghan heroin fuels drug plague in Russia Drugs have become yet another scourge of post-communist Russia, with millions addicted to heroin and an annual death toll reportedly in the tens of thousands from overdoses and other drug-related causes (McClatchy Newspapers) | |||
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| 6/26/2009 |
Climate Bill Passes Key Procedural Hurdle in House Democrats Still May Not Have Votes for Final Passage (Wall Street Journal) | |||
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keywords: Barack Obama, Carbon Dioxide, China, Climate Change, Ellen Tauscher, India, Nancy Pelosi, United States, US Congress, White House
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| 6/17/2009 |
Dollar drops on reserve currency doubts The dollar fell against the euro and yen on Wednesday after major emerging economies cast doubt on its long-term future as the world's main reserve currency (Agence France-Presse) | |||
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| 6/17/2009 |
Time for 'new world order': Brazilian President "I want to say that before the crisis, there were many countries which had greater significance than others, and some countries which had no significance at all," (Agence France-Presse) | |||
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keywords: Brazil, China, Financial Crisis, India, Kazakhstan, Luiz Inacio Lula Da Silva, New World Order, Nursultan Nazarbayev, Russia, UN Security Council, United Nations
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| 6/16/2009 |
Iranians suspicious of recount offer as Tehran goes on unofficial strike The move by the clerics on the country's highest legislative body appeared to be the first concession to the opposition after hundreds of thousands joined anti-government protests in recent days (London Times) | |||
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keywords: Barack Obama, China, Dmitry Medvedev, Free Speech, Hossein Mousavi, India, Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Pakistan, Police, Russia, Tehran, United States, Voter Fraud
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