"Forget the NSA — the DEA has been working hand-in-hand with AT&T on a database of records of every call that passes through AT&T's phone switches going back as far as 1987.
The government pays AT&T for contractors who sit side-by-side with
DEA agents and do phone records searches for them. From the article:
'For at least six years, law enforcement officials working on a counter
narcotics program have had routine access, using subpoenas, to an
enormous AT&T database that contains the records of decades of
Americans’ phone calls — parallel to but covering a far longer time than
the National Security Agency’s hotly disputed collection of phone call
logs.'"
Before the routine dispersion of nano metallics by chemtrail tankers in our skies there was this...
TIL
In the early 1960s, the US military dispersed 480,000,000 copper
needles in orbit around the Earth, in a failed attempt at creating an
artificial ionosphere to improve radio communication. Many of the
needles are still up there today.
"Fox News reports, '... a psychiatric hospital in central
Pennsylvania is now set to become the country's first facility of its
kind to offer an inpatient treatment program for people it diagnoses with severe Internet addiction.
The voluntary, 10-day program is set to open on Sept. 9 at the
Behavioral Health Services at Bradford Regional Medical Center. The
program was organized by experts in the field and cognitive specialists
with backgrounds in treating more familiar addictions like drug and
alcohol abuse. '[Internet addiction] is a problem in this country that
can be more pervasive than alcoholism,' said Dr. Kimberly Young, ...
'The Internet is free, legal and fat free.' The program is designed to
accommodate four adult patients at a time, with each new class slated to
begin treatment on the same day. These classes take part in group
therapy and are placed inside a wing of the hospital designated for
other addicts. These patients will undergo a psychological evaluation
and learn ways they can minimally use the Internet and avoid problematic
applications.'"
Insane Ukrainian Roofer
Another reminder to not drive behind surfers because not all surfers know how to secure their surfboards properly
"America may be the land of the free, but upon arrival millions of
visitors cross a legal purgatory at the U.S. border. It is an
international legal phenomenon that is left much to the discretion of
host countries. In some cases, this space between offers travelers far
fewer rights than some of the least democratic and free countries on
Earth. Limited access to legal counsel, unwarranted searches, and
questionable rights to free speech to name a few. One of the more
controversial — and yet still legally a contested grey area — are the
rights travelers have in regards to electronics and device searches."
Last night
he followed me home, gave him some food and thought that was the end of
it. Today I woke up and went outside to find him still there, waiting
for me. I think I accidentally just adopted a cat.
A new EU road safety measure to fit cars with devices that would stop them going over 70mph. "Under
the proposals new cars would be fitted with cameras that could read
road speed limit signs and automatically apply the brakes when this is
exceeded. Patrick McLoughlin, the Transport Secretary, is said to be
opposed to the plans, which could also mean existing cars are sent to garages to be fitted with the speed limiters,
preventing them from going over 70mph. The new measures have been
announced by the European Commission's Mobility and Transport Department
as a measure to reduce the 30,000 people who die on the roads in Europe
every year. A Government source told the Mail on Sunday Mr McLoughlin
had instructed officials to block the move because they 'violated'
motorists' freedom. They said: 'This has Big Brother written all over it
and is exactly the sort of thing that gets people's backs up about
Brussels.'"
Swiss banks to divulge names of wealthy US tax avoiders, pay billions in fines
Why Britain will not get involved in the Syria event...
Revealed: Britain sold nerve gas chemicals to Syria 10 months after 'civil unrest' began
When the printing press hit Europe, royalty and clergy panicked.
All of a sudden, they had lost the gatekeeper position of determining
what culture and knowledge was available to the masses, and by
extension, lost control of the political discourse of their time.
Over the last few weeks Ethan Schlussler
has been working on a beautifully designed 30-foot-high tree house and
quickly became tired of “climbing a ladder six and a half million times a
day,” so he decided to build a human-powered elevator out of an old
bicycle.
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