Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl

Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl


Snake Eating a Crocodile

Snake eating gator, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo Courtesy of iflscience.com
Snake eating a crocodile, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo Courtesy of iflscience.com
There is perhaps nothing more scary than a crocodile, no wait make that a snake. Ya know what? How about an alligator eating a snake! That’ll keep you away from any part of the world that has big scary nature in it for sure. Something this jaw dropping might make you think Indiana Jones was right for being so cared of snakes.

Rock Kiss

Rock Kiss, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Tumblr.
Rock Kiss, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Tumblr.
For as long as humans has been civilized creatures there are two things that they have desired; adventure and romance. Those two ingredients make up so much of pop culture and desire that they pretty much run our life. Combine the two and what do you get? This very irresponsible but romantic picture.

Brave Construction Man

Brave construction man, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Pinterest.
Brave construction man, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Pinterest.
The world just wouldn’t be the same without the likes of blue collar workers who do the dirty jobs that many of us fortunately don’t have to. One prime example would be that of the construction worker. What they do isn’t glorious, well, unless you’re this guy that is. It takes a mans man to be up that high with a smile that big. The only one more manly than him? Perhaps the guy taking the picture.

Picnic Cliffhanger

Picnic cliffhanger, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Pinterest.
Picnic cliffhanger, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Pinterest.
Saying the word picnic often conjures up pleasant images of a Saturday afternoon in the park with family, or your best gal perhaps. Or maybe you think about Yogi Bear and Boo Boo out committing misdemeanors while stealing unsuspecting peoples picnic baskets. However, nobody in their right mind thinks of dangling a picnic table from the edge of a cliff and having drinks with friends. It begs to question, how did they get the table up there?

Fat Friend Face Vanish

Fat friend face vanish, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Tumblr.
Fat friend face vanish, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Tumblr.
If the first thing that comes to your mind when you see this picture is “oh no that poor girl,” you’re probably a better person than her friends. That being said, she is bending her neck backwards, implying that there is some level of cooperation on her part in order to bury her face in that portly gentleman’s stomach fat. Maybe it’s a good thing she isn’t dropper her jaw, I’m sure he wouldn’t want to leave a bad taste in her mouth.

Shark Fishing

Shark fishing, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Teckler.
Shark fishing, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Teckler.
It’s a little hard to know exactly what’s going on in this picture just by looking at it, but what is clear is that this is absolutely crazy. It basically seems like somebody decided to tie a rope around a scary looking monster fish in an attempt to go fishing for an even bigger scarier sea monster known more commonly as a shark. At least the water looks nice.

Skydive Human Stacking

Skydive human stacking, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Photobucket.
Skydive human stacking, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Photobucket.
Skydiving in itself is a pretty jaw dropping act. Jumping out of a plane thousands of feet above the planet and relying on a fancy blanket that is stuffed in a backpack to save you is absolutely crazy. Though, for some people, that isn’t quite enough. No, they have to add the element of doing complicated human art whilst rapidly falling to the ground. To say the least, this isn’t for everyone.

Camel Spider(s)

Camel spider, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Imgur.

Camel spider, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Imgur.
In all fairness to the horrifyingness that is the picture above, it isn’t quite as scary as it looks (or maybe it’s more scary depending on how you look at it). The History Channel show Monster Quest  brought to light that this is actually two camel spiders who are attached to one another. The camel spider, or more scientifically known as solifugae is still the stuff nightmares are made of, but it has eight legs, not sixteen.

Mountain Camping

Mountain camping, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Mountain camping, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Camping can be a great way to get in touch with the outdoors, especially in the digital age. There are many places to do that. Perhaps a state park, somewhere in the woods or in this case, dangling off the side of a sheer rock face. It does stand to reason that if you’re going to do some intense mountain climbing that you may need to stop and take a rest, but this is another level of crazy. Anyone else wondering what the bathroom situation is like?

Silva Leg Break

Silva leg break, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl - Photo courtesy of Pinterest.
Silva leg break, Jaw Dropping Photos That Will Make Your Toes Curl – Photo courtesy of Pinterest.
Anderson Silva very famously destroyed his leg during the UFC 168 title fight against Chris Weidman. That is not Photoshop magic, that is actually what happened to Silva’s leg when he defended a hard kick from Weidman. His leg literally snapped in two and that rubbery look was the immediate result. It truly makes anyone with even the least bit of feeling cringe. Silva is fortunately making a strong recovery, but the world is still left with one of the most jaw dropping photos of all time as a result of the injury.

10 Mysterious Photos That Can’t Be Explained

10 Mysterious Photos That Can’t Be Explained 

Black Knight Satellite

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
This mysterious photo was taken in 1960, long before there were any of the many satellites that now orbit the Earth’s atmosphere. So yes, on a first look it is unassuming enough, but when put on a timeline, it is fairly hard to explain.

The Copper Falling Body

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Part of the reason this photo is very difficult to explain is that very little is known about it. What is known is that the Copper family decided to take this family photo after moving into their new home. What they weren’t planning on was the falling body that showed up in the picture after it was developed.

Elisa Lam

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
This photo looks unassuming enough, but the story behind it is much more unnerving. Elisa Lam was found dead on the roof of a hotel inside the water tank in 2013. No fowl play was discovered, but there was some very strange elevator footage discovered with Lam just before hear death. You can watch the video below for yourself.

Freddy Jackson

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
This photo, taken in 1919, shows Goddard Squadron honoring their fallen member Freddy Jackson shortly after his funeral. If you look closely at the photograph, you can see a man in the background who was identified by other squadron members as, you guessed it, Freddy Jackson.

Geophone Rock Anomaly

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
This photo was taken during the Apollo 17 shuttle mission, which was the last mission to the moon. The photo was originally thought to be blank, but when the contrast was changed, it revealed a structure that appeared to be a pyramid on the surface of the moon.

Hook Island Sea Monster

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
In 1964, a couple visiting hook island saw what appeared to be an 80-foot-long tadpole like creature. The couple took several photographs of the alleged creature and it was never heard from or seen again.

Soloway Firth Spaceman

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
In 1964, this photo was taken of a mans daughter with what appears to be an astronaut or spaceman of sorts standing behind her. Though that may be weird in its own way of right, what makes it much more peculiar and un-explainable is that the man who took the photo claims that there was nobody else in the shot when he took it.

S.S. Watertown Ghosts

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
This photo taken in 1924 clearly shows two faces hidden in it. The faces are supposedly of two men who were buried at sea just days before who then proceeded to stalk the ship following said burial.

The Hessdalen Lights

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
This is just one of many photos that have been taken over the years in Norway’s Hessdalen Valley. Many photos taken there show these vibrantly colored lights, which as of yet after much scientific study haven’t been able to be explained.

The Babushka Lady

Photo courtesy of Imgur.
Photo courtesy of Imgur.
During President John F. Kennedy’s 1963 assassination, a woman can be seen in various footage and photographs who is taken some photos for herself. While others around her were ducking for cover, she was simply taking photos. She was never found and her photos were never recovered.

Yes, the Federal Reserve has enormous power over who is president

Yes, the Federal Reserve has enormous power over who is president

  
(Wikimedia Commons)
Thanks for staying on the gold standard, Herbert. (Wikimedia Commons)
The arc of the political universe is long, but it bends towards monetary policy.
That's the boring truth that nobody wants to hear. Forget about the gaffes, the horserace, and even the personalities. Elections are about the economy, stupid, and the economy is mostly controlled by monetary policy. That's why every big ideological turning point—1896, 1920, 1932, 1980, and maybe 2008—has come after a big monetary shock.
Think about it this way: Bad monetary policy means a bad economy, which gives power back to the party that didn't have it before. And so long as the monetary problem gets fixed, the economy will too, and the new government's policies will, whatever their merits, get the credit. That's how ideology changes.
In 1896, for example, Republicans completed their transformation from being the anti-slavery party to the anti-inflation one. Back then, the U.S. was on the gold standard, but there wasn't enough gold. Miners had found so little of it that global prices were falling, which was particularly bad news for anyone who'd borrowed money. That's because wages fall if prices do, so debts that don't become harder to pay back. The result was two decades of slower-than-it-should-have-been growth where the economy was in recession more often than not.
Democrats, for their part, finally came up with a solution: stop crucifying mankind on a cross of gold, and use silver as money, too. They were four years too late, though. Gold discoveries in South Africa in 1896 and the Yukon in 1898 made the gold standard sustainable just in time for the Republicans, who had become the party of the financial elite that stood to lose a lot of money from inflation, to rally to its defense. Wall Street threw more money, as a percent of gross domestic product, into defeating the pro-silver Democrats than has been spent in any presidential election before or since. And it worked. Republicans won, the gold standard survived, and a new old era of conservative politics, of balanced budgets and low inflation, was ushered in.
Well, at least until World War I. That's because Republicans agreed on fiscal and financial policy, but not on regulation. That split let Woodrow Wilson win a three-way race in 1912, and, despite getting reelected on the slogan that "he kept us out of war," he didn't in 1917. Now, gold had already been pouring into the U.S., fueling inflation, as people moved it out of Europe, but once we joined the Allies, we also partially suspended the gold standard by banning gold exports.
That left us with higher prices and a big pile of shiny rocks after the war ended. So, in 1920, the Fed raised rates so much that prices not only stopped rising, but actually started falling. A deep recession followed, right before the presidential election. That, together with general war weariness, was enough for an extreme mediocrity like Warren G. Harding to win the biggest popular vote victory, by percentage points, on record just on the strength of three word: return to normalcy. A year later, the Fed lowered rates, the Roaring Twenties were born, and the conservative orthodoxy of low taxes and low spending once again seemed to be vindicated.
It wouldn't for long. Households, you see, went on a borrowing binge in the 1920s. They borrowed money to buy cars. They borrowed money to buy homes. And, yes, they borrowed money to buy stocks. So once the market crashed, this pyramid of debt did too. Even zero interest rates weren't enough to stop the economy's free fall. This only got worse when people panicked, sometimes justifiably so, that all these bad debts would make their banks go bust. That became a self-fulfilling prophecy as people rushed to pull their money out before everyone else, and the Fed, which was more concerned about propping up the gold standard than propping up the financial system, let everything collapse.
The craziest part was that the U.S., along with France, had so much gold that they could have created inflation and still stayed on the gold standard if they wanted to. But they didn't. They were so pathologically afraid of anything even resembling inflation that they chose depressions that forced them off gold instead. Hoover tried to run balanced budgets in the face of 25 percent unemployment, and the Fed raised rates in the face of bank runs, all to try to maintain the gold standard that, to them, was synonymous with civilization. This wasn't exactly popular. FDR came in and immediately did everything Hoover hadn't been willing to: going off gold, stress testing the banks, and spending money even if it meant running deficits. Recovery followed, and, in the process, discredited laissez-faire government for more than a generation.
By the 1970s, though, the Fed had made the opposite mistake of the one it made in the 1930s. This time, instead of saying there was nothing it could do about falling prices, it said there was nothing it could do about rising prices. Part of it was because Richard Nixon pressured it not to raise ratesbefore his reelection. Another part was that the oil shocks pulled it in opposite directions—higher oil prices hurt the economy, but also increased inflation—and it didn't know what to do. And the final part was thatwidespread cost-of-living-adjustment contracts turned price shocks into wage shocks that then made the price shocks even worse. Now, even though this didn't have anything to do with actual Keynesianism, which, remember, is when the government runs deficits to fight recessions, "Keynesianism" became the bête noire of stagflation.
It was more than enough to undo Jimmy Carter, who had the misfortune of appointing the right Fed Chair at the wrong time, at least for him. Paul Volcker, you see, tried raising rates in 1980, just enough to create a small recession, before really raising them in 1981 and whipping inflation for good at the cost of a much deeper recession. This was perfectly timed, though, for Ronald Reagan, who got to run against Carter during a slump, and then watch Volcker engineer an inflation-killing slump that ended just in time for his own reelection. You know the rest of the story: it looked like government really was the problem, not the solution, and now it was Morning in America, etc., etc.
Now, it's worth pointing out that politics can change without ideology also changing. Richard Nixon's Southern strategy, for example, created a new conservative coalition, but it didn't create new conservative policies. Instead, Nixon tried to co-opt Democrats by using price controls to fight inflation, setting up the Environmental Protection Agency to fight pollution, and offering a healthcare reform bill to bring down the uninsured rate. Bill Clinton similarly showed Democrats how to win in the post-Reagan world, peeling off professionals and soccer moms, without really challenging the prevailing "era of big government is over," deregulating ethos.
So will 2008 be an ideological inflection point? Well, like the French Revolution, it's too early to say. Turning points come when the old policies aren't working, and the old policies don't work when there's a big monetary shock. That doesn't mean everything else is irrelevant—some policies are good ideas and others aren't—but rather that politics is a status quo business, and as long as the Fed is keeping the economy growing, people tend to be reasonably happy with what they have.
But there's something a little false about any "turning point." It's something we half-invent in retrospect. FDR's New Deal took Hoover's half-measures and made them full-measures. Reagan deregulated business like Carter had already started to. And Obama, well, he used the same healthcare plan as Mitt Romney. But if politics is the art of the possible, then these stories we tell matter because they change what we think is possible.
And that only changes when the Fed thinks something isn't.

Fort Hood soldier, 24, under self-monitoring for Ebola found dead at 7.30am outside his own apartment

Fort Hood soldier, 24, under self-monitoring for Ebola found dead at 7.30am outside his own apartment 

  • The unidentified 24-year-old man was recently granted emergency leave
  • Officials with Fort Hood, Texas, have downplayed any fears of Ebola 

A Fort Hood soldier who just returned from West Africa and was self-monitoring for Ebola symptoms was found dead on Tuesday outside his apartment, officials said.
Killeen police and hazmat teams arrived after 911 calls came in of a man's body on the front lawn of his home, which is just outside the base.
Fort Hood said that the 24-year-old man, who has not been named, had returned on January 7 as part of a 87-person team assigned to West Africa for three months and was found dead at around 7.30am.
Worries: Killeen police investigate the death of a Fort Hood soldier who was found dead at his  home on Tuesday morning
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Worries: Killeen police investigate the death of a Fort Hood soldier who was found dead at his home on Tuesday morning
Scene: A U.S. Army soldier who just returned from West Africa and was self-monitoring for Ebola symptoms was found dead on Tuesday near the Texas base where he was posted, Fort Hood officials said
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Scene: A U.S. Army soldier who just returned from West Africa and was self-monitoring for Ebola symptoms was found dead on Tuesday near the Texas base where he was posted, Fort Hood officials said
Carrie Williams, director of media relations for Texas Department of State Health Services, told CBS News the man was stationed in Liberia.
'We are aware of the situation. Testing will occur. The risk is considered to be very low,' Williams said.
The unidentified soldier, who recently returned to Fort Hood in central Texas on emergency leave, was monitoring himself twice daily and reporting his status to medical officials said military officials.
'At this point, there is no indication of the Ebola virus disease, but medical tests are under way to ensure there is no threat to the community,' Army officials said in a statement.
Hazmat: The unidentified soldier, who recently returned to Fort Hood in central Texas on emergency leave, was monitoring himself twice daily and reporting his status to medical officials, they said
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Hazmat: The unidentified soldier, who recently returned to Fort Hood in central Texas on emergency leave, was monitoring himself twice daily and reporting his status to medical officials, they said
Indeed, officials at Fort Hood said that the man had recently been granted leave for a family emergency, which they did not elaborate on.
The soldier had been working with the 36th Engineering Brigade and was building hospitals to house Ebola patients.
An autopsy is due to take place at the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center at Fort Hood.
'Because he recently returned from West Africa we're erring on the side of caution,' said Carroll Smith, spokesperson for the Killeen Police Department to the Scoop Blog.
'Because he was deceased and because we don't know the cause of death we want to take any and every precaution we need for safety reasons.'

Hacker creates a USB charger that can steal banking details remotely

The £6 'spy box' that tracks EVERYTHING you type: Hacker creates a USB charger that can steal banking details remotely

  • KeySweeper device was created by security researcher Samy Kamkar
  • The covert device looks, and works, like a typical USB wall charger
  • It ‘sniffs’ and logs keystrokes made on nearby wireless keyboards 
  • Device sends these decrypted, logged keystrokes to a hacker remotely
  • It can even alert a hacker by text message if a certain combination of keys is typed, such as web address for online banking or a credit card number

For just £6, a hacker can create a covert device that tracks everything you type on a keyboard including usernames, credit card details and banking passwords.
The device, called KeySweeper, was built by a Poland-based security researcher and works with a range of wireless keyboards.
Once connected, the small USB wall charger remotely decrypts, logs and sends keystrokes to a hacker using specially designed software. 
The device, known as KeySweeper, looks and works like a typical USB wall charger (pictured), but uses a built-in chip to  ‘sniff’ for keystrokes typed onto nearby wireless keyboards. All of these strokes are then decrypted, logged and sent to a hacker over the web 
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The device, known as KeySweeper, looks and works like a typical USB wall charger (pictured), but uses a built-in chip to ‘sniff’ for keystrokes typed onto nearby wireless keyboards. All of these strokes are then decrypted, logged and sent to a hacker over the web 
KeySweeper was built by hardware hacker Samy Kamkar using an Arduino board, USB charger and Microsoft wireless keyboard.
These keyboards use a specific chip that runs on a frequency known as 2.4GHz RF protocol, which is how the communicate wirelessly.

As keystrokes are typed on wireless keyboards, they are typically encrypted as they move from the keyboard to computer.
By determining which chip a keyboard uses, Mr Kamkar can figure out how to decrypt these keys.

HOW KEYSWEEPER WORKS 

KeySweeper was built by hardware hacker Samy Kamkar using an Arduino board, USB charger and Microsoft wireless keyboard.
These keyboards use a specific chip that runs on a frequency known as 2.4GHz RF protocol, which is how they communicate wirelessly.
As keystrokes are typed on wireless keyboards, they are typically encrypted as they move from the keyboard to computer. 
By determining which chip a keyboard uses, Mr Kamkar can figure out how to decrypt these keys.
Once set up, the charger is plugged into the wall and ‘sniffs’, or ‘listens’ to all the keys the user types.
These keys are decrypted, logged and sent back to a hacker over the web, remotely, using Mr Kamkar’s KeySweeper software.
The technology can be configured to record everything, and even send a text to the hacker if a certain combination of keys is pressed.
Once set up, the charger is plugged into the wall and ‘sniffs’, or ‘listens’ to all the keys the user types.
These keys are decrypted, logged and sent back to a hacker over the web, remotely, using Mr Kamkar’s KeySweeper software.
The technology can be configured to record everything, and even send a text alert to the hacker if a certain combination of keys is pressed.
For example, if the user types the URL for an online banking site, or enters a 16-digit number, which suggests it could be a credit card number.
And even if KeySweeper is unplugged, an internal battery will keep it running - although the battery life depends on the battery used.
The range of the KeySweeper is said to be on par with a standard Bluetooth device, at around 32ft (10 metres). 
Mr Kamkar used Microsoft keyboards, in particular, because they use the same protocol encryption, meaning once he had decrypted one, he could decrypt others.
In theory though, this process could be applied to any wireless keyboard.
Mr Kamkar has released the source code and instructions for building a KeySweeper, but advises against people doing so without an electrical background.
Last year, Israeli researchers created keylogging software that can steal keystrokes from computers even when they're not connected to the web, using so-called 'air gaps.'  
The logged, decrypted keystrokes are sent to a hacker remotely using the KeySweeper software (pictured). The technology can be configured to record everything, and even send a text alert to the hacker if a certain combination of keys is pressed, such as the web address for online banking or a credit card number
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The logged, decrypted keystrokes are sent to a hacker remotely using the KeySweeper software (pictured). The technology can be configured to record everything, and even send a text alert to the hacker if a certain combination of keys is pressed, such as the web address for online banking or a credit card number
Samy Kamkar (pictured bottom right) has released instructions (video grab pictured) for building a KeySweeper, but advises against people doing so without an electrical background. Mr Kamkar used Microsoft keyboards (pictured top) as an example because they use the same protocol and encryption
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Samy Kamkar (pictured bottom right) has released instructions (video grab pictured) for building a KeySweeper, but advises against people doing so without an electrical background. Mr Kamkar used Microsoft keyboards (pictured top) as an example because they use the same protocol and encryption
An air-gap or air wall is a network security measure.
It was designed to make sure secure computer networks are physically isolated from unsecured networks, such as the internet or a local area network.
The researchers from Israel designed computer software that logs keystrokes, and this software transmits these strokes via FM radio signals generated by the computer's graphics card.
The data is picked up by a nearby mobile, equipped to pick up radio signals.
In the example case, the researchers used a Samsung Galaxy S4 and had to plug in the headphones to get the radio receiver to work.
This can be done without being detected by the user, but does rely on the software being installed on the computer in the first place.
Since FM radio signals can travel over long distances, the receiver could be placed in another building.

Highlights of Tony's CC: NEW WINDOW NEXT 3-5 DAYS!!!!


Highlights of Tony's CC.  Updated as call progresses. 

Tony:  There is a window!  We got it Monday evening . . . 
 
 
   NEW WINDOW:  over the next 3-5 days, 4 pm EST - 6 am EST.  
 
Wealth Managers leaking information.
 
DC:  Decision has been made. . . As of this morning the guys who were resisting this said, "Okay, let's go!" 
DC: Everyone appears to be on board right now. . .Hearing only positive things from all sides.  Simple answer is until the folks the President delegated it too, say Go, this doesn't go. . . Iraq waiting for the US final approval . . . Won’t go without it! 
  • CAUTION:  If you get a Tweet that says it's from Tony double check it.  An "idiot" sent a Tweet over the weekend titled "RV Notification" with false phone numbers. 
PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENTS:    1)  A Transcriber has announced she is naming her soon to be born child after Tony and 2)  Pam is naming a new hunting dog after Winston. 
IRAQ:  Abadhi is taking heat for the RV delay.  Kurdistan is ready, dealing with ISIS issues. Almost fully RI'd already. Operating on the 3.58 rate.  Article 140 issues.  Kurds want more than 30%.
  • Budget is done and document signed
  • Parliament - beside themselves why this has not occurred.  Screaming "need economic reform NOW."  
  • CBI
  • RV Deadline date:  DC does not believe there is a back wall date or deadline for completion.
  •  
INTERNATIONAL
  • England:  more exchanges taking place.  Rates $3.41 - $3.90 USD.  Getting as agitated as rest of the world to get this going.
  • China / Japan eager and pushing to get this done.  
  • IMF & BIS coordinating with each other for RI/RV to happen in next 3-5 days.
  • UN Sec. Council eager to have this completed.  It funds ISIS and stabilizes the entire area.
  • FOREX:
  • Declining Oil Prices:  China economy slowing down; Russia in a depression, Europe in a recession and mild winter - consumption down.  Tony feels it's a temporary situation and only a matter of time before it goes back up.  OPEC not near as co-ordinated as it was in the 70-90's.  DC:  Some members don't play well with others. Iran and Saudi's do not get along at all. Expensive to produce oil from shale in USA.  Rig count is down. Russia acting aggressive again and need oil at $90/barrel for their budget.  US has changed efficiency standards significantly in vehicles.  No one will explore for oil if it's $40/barrel.  US automotive becoming more efficient and lowering demand.  Oil is a hudge fund play and if demand goes down they won't invest in it.  DC:  RV is still safe with all of that.  . . . Iraq has planed for this (lower prices). . . Shows their maturity to be able to adjust.  The guys do not believe the oil price drop is to bring the rate down that affects us. Ruble has dropped 50% and Tony feels Russia and Iran will have trouble bouncing back from this decline.
UNITED STATES:  large part of resistance in the past 48 hours has broken down and they are ramping back up.  Those responsible in the US Administration are now impatient for it to happen.  DC reported they are playing nice with everyone and have stated they prefer the RV to be triggered after 6 pm EST and before 4 am EST.
  • UST:  Guys no longer reporting on lockdown or ramping up as all those pieces are completed.
  • Banks: At bank headquarters in NYC, meetings with upper executives about roll out plan/strategy.
  • Exchanges/Packages:  Recently received some info but do not know if it's the final package.  Tony:  Some of the information is exciting to us and some is complete BS and does not make sense to me.

  • Taxes:  DC said the vast majority will pay some capital gains tax rates and some won't pay taxes at all.          DC:  Is that fair? I don't know. Everyone not being treated equal. Contracts are not equal.  
  • Rates: $3.58 loaded on Iraq cards.  Dinar exchange rates right now are from $3.41 to over $4.00.  All currencies still in the basket. Dinar contract rate cap has been decreased down to 20 million Dinar to allow more people to have access to it.  Dong contract rate cap is still at 50 million. 
  • Different NDA’s for different rates?  There are different contract rates but only “one” version of the NDA.  Everyone  will be under the same NDA and it says basically you can’t talk about it or here is what happens.
Tony's Analysis of Delay:  Economic war going on. Part of sanctions - intentionally trying to change the economies of certain countries to change leadership positions and get them to agree to things we want to see without a fight.  He indicated this was personal political motivation.
Tony to caller:  You are asking DC, do you believe in your hearts of hearts?  
DC:  We believe enough.  Maybe not wholeheartedly – been to this party before. . . Do I believe?  I want to. . . I really do think they are pushing it.

Tony:  Actions not words is what makes the difference . . . we can watch what they are doing.  We are watching what Iraq is doing – Parliament, CBI, banks . . . Could go on a moment’s notice.  
 

TIME TRAVELER: Gettysburg 1863 and 9/11 Was Known About 30 Years in Advance


Time Traveler Andrew Basiago.....  Gettysburg 1863 and 9/11 Was Known About 30 Years in Advance


In 1971 DARPA was doing time travel and most of you don't believe it, so you will hear an article about it and you will hear testimony from a 15 year old kid who saw Abraham Lincoln give the Gettysburg Address. He has grown up and now practices law in the state of Washington. His name is Andrew Basiago.

Anyone who brings such startling news to you is bound to receive harsh criticism because this event opens up some extraordinary possibilities that you are not likely ready to accept, so I'm not going to tell you about Viktor Grebennikov and his anti-gravity device just yet. We'll save that one for later. Giving you a chance to digest this one first, which is likely to give you indigestion or a heart attack.

I bring you the news about the Pegasus Project and let you in on a big secret.  Donald Rumsfeld (Ronald Dumbsfeld) knew about the 9/11 inside job false flag terrorist attack in 1971 and he did NOTHING to prevent it. There is a very good reason why he did nothing. He was in on it! 

Anyway, you all should know the truth. At the end of this video, you will hear Andy talking about his experiences with DARPA and the Pegasus Project. If you know how to use Google, you can find a lot more on the subjects, too...

VIDEO.... MIND BLOWING!!
Time Traveler Andrew Basiago
Gettysburg 1863 and 9/11 Was Known 30 Years in Advance


Published on Mar 20, 2012