Monday, April 28, 2014

Pork Tenderloin Medallions with Strawberry Sauce

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"Pork tenderloin paired with strawberries is a heavenly match, made even more special with a tangy feta garnish. Serve with roasted spring vegetables."
—Katie Wollgast, Florissant, Missouri
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Fulford Blurb: Obama Threatens Mayhem After Failing To Cash Forged Bonds During Asian Trip

The Rumor Mill News Reading Room 

Fulford Blurb: Obama Threatens Mayhem After Failing To Cash Forged Bonds During Asian Trip
Posted By: Jordon [Send E-Mail]
Date: Monday, 28-Apr-2014 10:12:53

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Weekly geo-political news and analysis
Barack Obama, spokesperson for the United States of America Corporation, tried and failed to cash some forged “Kennedy bonds” during his trip to Asia last week, according to Japanese royal family sources. The bonds can be seen here:
kennedy bonds-1
If you note, one of the bonds has a picture of the space shuttle on it. It does not take a historical genius to realize there were no space shuttles in existence while Kennedy was alive. The bonds were manufactured using paper from $20 US bills that had all the ink washed off them, according to MI5 sources. Nonetheless, Bill Clinton had previously succeeded in cashing some of these bonds. Not so for Obama this time.
However, Obama was able to extort some pocket change thanks to acts of terror such as the sinking of the South Korean ferry and the electronic hijacking of Malaysia Air flight 370, according to Japanese military intelligence. There are also renewed threats to use weather and earthquake weaponry unless the US corporate government was given more money, the sources said.
This was how a US agency source, who predicted recent terror attacks against Asia in advance, described Chinese reaction: “The Chinese blue army (computer geeks) now have all the banking codes, nuclear launch codes etc. One button and the entire financial system ceases. This means Russia and 9 other nations have these codes as well; it could get interesting.”
Also, there was a meeting last week between a White Dragon Society representative and representatives of a major Asian secret society. The previous head of this society has deceased and a new boss has taken over, the WDS was told. At the meeting...

video: "3000 Mile Wide Disc Caught By ISS?"



l DamoZz has shared a video with you on YouTube

Very nice footage






Ok, this image was released by the Brasilia Planetarium recently and seems to show a massive disc shaped object stationed above the Earth. The disc is estimated to be around 3-5 thousand miles in diameter. If you look at the bottom left of the image you can see a cloud formation passing over the top of the anomaly, this indicates that the object is not a projection onto the earth. I have no idea what this object is, i can only speculate at this point. I have contacted the Planetarium for further clarification regarding the slide, and will post an update when I get an answer.

ADG Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Alien-Disclosure-Group/189249627773146

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New Website: http://www.ADGUK.COM
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Obama Signs Law Banning Himself From Entering The US


Obama Signs Law Banning Himself From Entering The US


Tyler Durden's picture

Submitted by Simon Black via Sovereign Man blog,

You just can’t make this stuff up.

A few days ago the President of the United States signed into public law bill S. 2195, now known as Pub.L. 113-100.
The law aims to “deny admission to the United States to any representative to the United Nations who has been found to have been engaged in espionage activities or a terrorist activity against the United States and poses a threat to United States national security interests.”
In other words, if the US government thinks that if you have been spying on the United States, then they won’t let you in the country.

Gee, let’s think for a moment– who has been engaging in espionage against the United States? Anyone?
Ah, right. The US government. Mr. Obama himself. The entire US intelligence network. They’ve all been engaging in espionage against the United States, especially its citizens.

But let us not forget, the law also bars entry for folks who have engaged in terrorist activity against the United States.
Just so that we don’t mince words, my dictionary defines terrorism as the use of violence and intimidation in the pursuit of political aims.

Once again, the US government. Violence? Check. Intimidation? Check.

The government has awarded itself the power to hold people indefinitely without trial under military detention, assassinate US citizens by drone attacks, or use tax authorities to harrass political opposition groups.

The Department of Homeland Security is working to purchase 1.6 billion rounds of ammunition (and counting), enough to maintain a shooting war within the US for 22 years.

And local police departments are trading in their light blue uniforms for black paramilitary attire, combat boots, automatic assault rifles, and armored vehicles.

The whole place has become a giant police state where you can’t even apply for a passport anymore without being threatened with fines and imprisonment.

When the Republic was founded, there were three federal crimes listed in the Constitution: treason, piracy, and counterfeiting.

Today the number of laws, codes, and regulations is astounding. It is a federal crime, for example, to knowingly make a false statement to a federally insured bank.

(Naturally, though, banks can lie through their teeth and defraud their customers with impunity…)
Not to mention, there are hundreds of federal agencies as innocuous as the Fish and Wildlife Service which have gun-toting police forces to kick down doors and throw people in jail.

The government doesn’t rule with the consent of the governed. They rule through fear, intimidation, and threats of violence. They spy. They deceive. They steal.

So you can probably appreciate the irony and arrogance of the President signing this new law which bars spies and terrorists from entering the country.

The entire notion is so absurd, it’s like Barack calling the kettle black. And technically speaking he has just legally banned himself from being in the Land of the Free.

What You Should Know About FBI's Giant Biometric Database

What You Should Know About FBI's Giant Biometric Database

The FBI's Next Generation Identification is expected to house 52 million photos searchable by face recognition technology by next year.
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April 22, 2014  |  

Since 2008, the FBI has been hard at work transforming its massive fingerprint database (IAFIS) into an even more massive biometric database called Next Generation Identification. NGI will include iris scans, palm prints and images of faces that can be scanned using face recognition technology and matched to age, race, address, ID number, and immigration status, among other things. 

According to documents obtained by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the FBI's efforts to amass as much identifying data as possible is going quite well: the database, which contained 13.6 million images of 7 to 8 million people in 2012, is expected to hold 52 million photos by next year. Most of the images come from local and state law enforcement. Although the FBI has said it doesn't intend to collect social media images, there are no rules in place barring the accumulation of pictures from sources other than law enforcement. 

AlterNet spoke with Jennifer Lynch of the Electronic Frontier Foundation on the privacy dangers posed by NGI. 
Tana Ganeva: What's the goal of Next Generation Identification? Why aren't fingerprints good enough? 
Jennifer Lynch: I think it's a good question about why fingerprints aren't good enough. I think you'd have to talk to the FBI to get their opinion on that. My sense is that a possible reason is that other types of biometrics can be captured without having to come into actual physical contact with a person. For example, with face recognition you can take a picture of somebody even without their knowledge and you can do it from a certain distance. 

The NGI database is also including iris scans and palm prints. Iris scans are already being used inside prisons to monitor prisoners as they move from location to location within the prison. One of the reasons is because you can collect an iris scan without having to be in the same physical space as the prisoner. So that could be one reason. The FBI has said in the past that having more biometrics, different types of biometrics allows them to identify people better, but I don't know if that justifies having so much biometric information on people. 

Some of it might also be driven by the information-sharing environment within the federal government. So the Department of Defense has a database that's somewhat interoperable with the FBI's database. And DoD has been collecting multiple forms of biometrics, so that could also be driving the change. 

TG: Are there any barriers to how they can share the information?

JL: It's a good question. but I don't think there are any blocks, certainly not with DoD sharing information with the FBI. Now, DoD is not supposed to be collecting information on US citizens, so I think there would be a real issue if they had unfettered access to the FBI's database. 

TG: What about the role of local and state law enforcement?

JL: Probably most of the records are coming from local law enforcement—18,000 tribal, state and local enforcement agencies across the country that are providing biographic and biometric information to the FBI's database. So every time a mugshot's taken by one of these local agencies, it gets uploaded and stored by the FBI in addition to being stored in whatever state level criminal database there might be. So a lot of the data that's already in the FBI's database is coming from state and local law enforcement. They can also access it. 

We've gotten some memoranda of understanding between the FBI and some of the states. These are states ... that already were using face recognition in their criminal mugshot databases and those states have volunteered to turn over their whole database of mugshots to the FBI, which all of the sudden gets a whole state's database of biographic and biometric information. 

TG: One of the more seemingly disturbing developments is that they're collapsing the barrier between the criminal and non-criminal sections. Why do you suppose they're doing that and what problems might arise?

JL: I think what they're trying to do is just come up with a uniform classification system. So it seems like just an outgrowth of trying to classify information. 

But the problem is that then of course people who've had to supply their biometric information for a non-criminal purpose are having their information searched every time there's a criminal search. And if you're providing your information just to get a job or to do a background check, that shouldn't go into some sort of criminal database to be scanned every time a law enforcement investigation is taking place. 

TG: The estimated breakdown between criminal and non-criminal images is about 46 million to 4 million. But even the so-called "criminal images" are just arrestees, so anyone who's had a run-in with police would be there, like low-level offenders, people picked up in a protest, etc.

JL: Yeah, that definitely puts you in the criminal database. Another thing we've seen is the increased use of mobile biometric collection devices. So it's happened mostly with mobile fingerprint scanners but in a few different areas, most notably in San Diego county, a bunch of law enforcement agencies are using tablets to take pictures of people right on the street and I think the big issue with that is that it takes a lot for an officer to go out on the street, find somebody doing criminal conduct and bring that person in the station, have a booking photo happen. It takes almost nothing to stop a person on the street and take their picture. And you take out all those operational safeguards that might stop an officer from collecting a facial recognition image. 

You increase the risk of racial profiling and some of the issues we've seen with, for example, stop-and-frisk in New York. 

TG: That's interesting, because one could argue that this is just your picture in a database somewhere, unlike the more physical violent intrusions like stop-and-frisk. What are some of the ways something like this could really, concretely, harm somebody?

JL: So, face recognition is not infallible. Under controlled lighting conditions and when the angle is controlled of a person's face, it's relatively accurate at identifying somebody. But if you're trying to compare a picture of a person on the street in a surveillance camera photo with a mugshot in a database there's a lot of false positives. A lot of people listed as looking like that person, but who were never anywhere near the crime scene. 

It means those people now have to worry about defending their innocence. What if you were sleeping alone that night? Or doing something that's not criminal, but maybe you don't want people to know about and all of the sudden you have to give that information to the police just to defend your innocence. 

TG: Beyond the spooky sci-fi aspect, why would you say face recognition is more alarming than other biometrics?

JL: I think for a few different reasons. One is that it's not really accurate at matching face image to face image as fingerprint to fingerprint. But the other reason is that it's possible to capture a face image at a distance. It's very easy. And there are surveillance cameras everywhere. And once face recognition technology improves, it will be possible to monitor people as they travel through society. It would be impossible to be anonymous in society anymore. And it has a chilling effect on people's speech, and activities, and their willingness to engage in discussion, religious discussion, associate with people they might not know.

And we've seen that with Muslim communities in New York, there's been some great research done on this and facial recognition just increases the risks. 

TG: The FBI's response to concerns about privacy abuses and dangers is that it's harmless because it just generates investigative leads, not concrete findings. 

JL: It seems to be their argument. I think it's a little bit naive because what humans tend to do is trust in technology and think that technology is going to solve all of their problems and believe despite any type of disclaimers that a computer is going to identify the right candidate. So I think that technology doing the identification presents risks. 

TG: Are there any efforts to rein in or regulate this technology?


JL: We hoped that Sen. Al Franklin was going to move forward with some limitations of how the FBI could collect the data, but it appears he's more concerned about private collection of face recognition data. The other thing is that it's basically impossible to get anything through Congress these days.

The scam of the century

Subject: The scam of the century

Ronald

There have been a lot of
incredible scams in the last
100 years.

This one has a good chance to make
it to the #1 slot.

Video:

http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/25279.html

- Brasscheck

P.S. Please share Brasscheck TV e-mails and
videos with friends and colleagues.

That's how we grow. Thanks.

================================

BUSTED! Pilot Forgets To Turn Off CHEMTRAILS Before Landing


Print


Sunday, 27 April 2014 13:35
April 27, 2014 -- (TRN) -- A pilot of a commercial airliner made a mistake that irrefutably PROVES the existence of "CHEMTRAILS" -- by forgetting to turn them off before he landed!  We have video of the plane landing while still spraying CHEMTRAILS as it hits the runway.  This is the first empirical evidence to back-up claims made people, smeared as "conspiracy-theorists," who claimed airlines are being used by government to spray aerosols into the air without the knowledge or consent of the people being sprayed.  With proof like this, the public now has legal standing to file lawsuits, utilize subpoenas and force discovery of evidence.  The 1 minute blockbuster video appears below.


Despite the fact that the plane is landing in foggy weather, the emission of chemtrails is unmistakable; their existence cannot be denied or explained-away by weather.  First, the trails are NOT coming from the back of the jet engines.  Second, the trails are not merely water trailing off the edges of the wings because as the plane passes, in addition to the wing trail emissions, there are clearly SPRAYS coming out of several sections at the rear of the wings in clear addition to any water that may be washing off the wing during landing.  See for yourself.

Donation Time Again

Donation Time Again --- Your support is required to keep these 2 Nesara blogs running and to pay my family living expenses. The advertising revenue should be stepping in next month and these donations may not be required to survive.

John MacHaffie

Terminator Robot from the Pentagon

posted on Apr, 27 2014 @ 05:53 AM
link   

Published on Apr 23, 2014
"U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel got a first-hand look at a life-size robot that resembles Hollywood's "Terminator," the latest experiment by the Pentagon's hi-tech researchers.

But unlike the cinematic version, the hulking Atlas robot is designed not as a warrior but as a humanitarian machine that would rescue victims in the rubble of a natural disaster, officials said on Tuesday.

The 6-foot-2-inch Atlas is one of the entrants in a contest designed to produce a man-like life-saver machine, the brainchild of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)."



Thought I'd pop in and post this video. I'm sure there are dual purposes for such technology. So without further delay. enjoy.

Thought?

http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread1009779/pg1

JUDGE JEANINE FOX NEWS RE: BUNDY RANCH LAND GRAB 4/26/14

Subject: JUDGE JEANINE FOX NEWS RE: BUNDY RANCH LAND GRAB  4/26/14

60 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About New York City

60 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About New York City

Basically, you’re always walking over thousands of dead bodies. posted on March 20, 2014 at 1:35pm EDT
Matt Stopera BuzzFeed Staff


1. Pinball was banned in the city until 1978. The NYPD even held “Prohibition-style” busts.
2. It is a misdemeanor to fart in NYC churches.
3. It costs $1 million to get a license (medallion) to operate a taxicab.
4. The first pizzeria in the United States was opened in NYC in 1895.
5. In 1857, toilet paper was invented by Joseph C. Gayetty in NYC.
6. The Jewish population in NYC is the largest in the world outside of Israel.
7. Up until World War II, everyone in the entire city who was moving apartments had to move on May 1.
8. The city of New York will pay for a one-way plane ticket for any homeless person if they have a guaranteed place to stay.
9. There’s a man who mines sidewalk cracks for gold. He can make over $600 a week.
10. According to New York City’s Office of Emergency Management, the last hurricane to pass directly over the city was in 1821. The storm surge was so high that the city was flooded up to Canal Street.
11. Hog Island, a one-mile-long island south of Rockaway Beach, was never seen again after the hurricane of 1893.
12. New York City’s leading hurricane historian, Nicholas Coch, a professor of coastal geology at Queens College, believes that this is the only reported incidence ever of the removal of an entire island by a hurricane.
13. Up until 1957, there was a pneumatic mail tube system that was used to connect 23 post offices across 27 miles. At one point, it moved 97,000 letters a day.
14. Albert Einstein’s eyeballs are stored in a safe deposit box in the city.
15. There are tiny shrimp called copepods in NYC’s drinking water.
16. On Nov. 28, 2012, not a single murder, shooting, stabbing, or other incident of violent crime in NYC was reported for an entire day. The first time in basically ever.
17. There’s a wind tunnel near the Flat Iron building that can raise women’s skirts. Men used to gather outside of the Flat Iron building to watch.
18. About 1 in every 38 people living in the United States resides in New York City.
19. New York City has more people than 39 of the 50 states in the U.S.
20. There is a birth in New York City every 4.4 minutes.
21. There is a death in New York City every 9.1 minutes.
22. The borough of Brooklyn on its own would be the fourth largest city in the United States. Queens would also rank fourth nationally.
23. New York City has the largest Chinese population of any city outside of Asia.
24. New York has the largest Puerto Rican population of any city in the world.
25. PONY stands for Product of New York.
26. In 1920, a horse-drawn carriage filled with explosives was detonated on Wall Street killing 30 people. No one was ever caught, and it is considered to be one of the first acts of domestic terrorism.
27. In nine years, Madison Square Garden’s lease will run out and it will have to move.
28. UPS, FedEx, and other commercial delivery companies receive up to 7,000 parking tickets a DAY, contributing up to $120 million in revenue for the city of New York.
29. It can cost over $289,000 for a one-year hot dog stand permit in Central Park.
The New York Times / Via nytimes.com
30. Sixty percent of cigarettes sold in NYC are illegally smuggled from other states.
31. There was one homicide on 9/11, and it remains unsolved.
32. There are “fake” buildings in the city that are used for subway maintenance and ventilation. The building below in the middle, located in Brooklyn, has a fake facade. There is no brownstone within.
Google Maps
33. Chernobyl is closer to New York than Fukushima is to L.A.
34. There are more undergrad and graduate students in NYC than Boston has people.
35. New York City’s 520-mile coastline is longer than those of Miami, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco combined.
36. The Empire State building has its own zip code.
37. The East River is not a river, it’s a tidal estuary.
38. There is a secret train platform in the Waldorf Astoria hotel.
Charles Mostoller / Barcroft Media / Getty Images
39. When the Dutch first arrived to Manhattan, there were massive oyster beds. In fact, Ellis Island and Liberty Island were called Little Oyster and Big Oyster Island.
40. McSorley’s, the oldest Irish ale house in NYC, didn’t allow women inside until 1970.
41. Madison Square Park, Washington Square Park, Union Square Park, and Bryant Park used to be cemeteries.
42. There are 20,000 bodies buried in Washington Square Park alone.
43. The original Penn Station was considered to be one of the most beautiful train stations in the world but was torn down because of declining rail usage.
Ewing Galloway/Hulton Archive / Getty Images
44. NYC garbage collectors call maggots “disco rice.”
45. In 2010, 38% of all 911 calls in NYC were butt dials.
46. Times Square is named after the New York Times. It was originally called Longacre Square until 1904 when the NYT moved there.
47. The entire world’s population could fit in the state of Texas if it were as densely populated as New York City.
48. In 1975, the city of New York sold a private island in the East River for $10.
Courtesy of the NYC Audubon / Via tpl.org
49. The winter of 1780 was so harsh in New York that New York harbor froze over. People could walk from Manhattan to Staten Island on the ice.
50. From 1904 to 1948 there was an 18th Street station on the 4/5/6 line. It’s abandoned now, but you can still see it on local 6 trains.
51. The narrowest house in NYC is in the West Village: 75 1/2 Bedford Street is just over 9 feet wide.
52. In 1906, the Bronx Zoo put an African man on exhibit in the monkey house.
53. Credit card minimums ARE legal in the city. In 2010, Congress passed a law saying up to a $10 minimum was legal.
54. It would cost about $17,000 to take a cab from NYC to L.A.
55. In 1922, there was a Straw Hat Riot. It was an unofficial rule in NYC that straw hats weren’t allowed to be worn past Sept. 15, but some unruly kids started snatching people’s hats a few days before that causing an uprising that lasted a few days.
56. Eating a New York bagel is equivalent to eating one-quarter to one-half a loaf of bread.
57. NYC buries its unclaimed bodies on an island off the coast of the Bronx called Hart Island. Since 1869, nearly a million bodies have been buried there. The island is not open to the public.
58. There’s a 150-foot-deep hole (15 stories) on Park Avenue between 36th and 37th streets.
59. The price of a slice of pizza and the cost of a single ride on the subway has been nearly equal for the past 50 years.
60. The scary nitrogen gas tanks you see on the corners of streets are used to keep underground telephone wires dry.
LO