On
April 30th, reporters flocked to the penthouse suite of a Midtown
Manhattan hotel where fifteen representatives of the Rockefeller
dynasty were holding court. There, the Rockefellers chastised
oil giant Exxon-Mobil for failing to invest in “alternative
energy” sources, invoking their own moral authority as Exxon-Mobil’s
longest standing shareholders.
Doctors
have condemned as corporate "intimidation" a court decision
ordering a chief medical examiner to remove any reference to the
use of a taser as an antecedent in the deaths of three men. Ohio
examiner Dr. Lisa Kohler had noted in her autopsy reports that
electrical shocks from Tasers were partially to blame for the
deaths of individuals in three separate confrontations with police.
Jason
Bermas of Loose Change fame fills in for Alex and welcomes author
and lecturer Jim Marrs to discuss the fallacy of the war on
terror, the primary smoking guns of the 9/11 conspiracy, how
disinformation threatens to poison the truth movement and much
more.
CNBC business
analyst Mark Hanes delivered the economic news on MSNBC, then
asked host Joe Scarborough to explain why Hillary Clinton isn’t
being given more credit for narrowly winning the primary in
Indiana, where some early polls had showed Obama leading.
It’s
all very well doing what alarmists do which is to say that Co2
is rising and temperatures are rising so in the absence of any
other known cause it must be man made CO2 that is warming the
planet.
The
arrest of a New Jersey engineer on charges of conspiracy to
pass U.S. military secrets to Israel shows a consistent, continued
pattern of spying on its major benefactor, the United States,
according to espionage experts.
The
euro fell to an eight-week low against the dollar and had its
biggest decline in almost two months versus the yen on speculation
the European Central Bank will signal concern today that economic
growth is slowing.
China will
not guarantee it won't censor the Internet over this summer's
Beijing Olympics, nor can it guarantee to stamp out piracy of
Olympic-branded goods, officials said on Thursday.
It
has become commonplace knowledge, and is unchallenged, that
global average temperature has not increased since 1998. This
corresponds to a 9-year period during which the level of atmospheric
carbon dioxide, in contrast, did increase, and that by almost
5%.