One of our wonderful Founding Father that no one talks about. Please go to the web page and read all about him. Knowledge is power.
John Dickinson was the only major political figure active on the home front at every stage of the founding of the United States from the protest of the Sugar Act in 1764 through the ratification of the Constitution in 1789. He published more works for the American cause than any other individual, earning him from historians the title of "Penman of the Revolution." Yet many scholars do not consider Dickinson among the principal Founders. His refusal to sign the Declaration of Independence damaged his reputation then and has perplexed historians since.
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Showing posts with label Founding Fathers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Founding Fathers. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 02, 2017
Wednesday, April 12, 2017
Show Notes 04-08-2017
Saturday Show 4-8-17
Liberals are Using THIS Tactic to Stop Trump's Border Fence
Wildlife conservation groups are collaborating with a federal government agency to halt construction of the southern border wall by fudging science to claim that unimpeded trans-border corridors are essential to an “endangered species” with 99% of its population in Mexico.
Read More
Justice Gorsuch: Senate Confirms Trump’s First SCOTUS Pick
The Senate voted just before noon Friday to confirm Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Nation’s highest bench. The vote, originally set for Friday evening, was moved up to the morning after Democrats agreed to waive part of the final debate period.
Read More
Palm Sunday
Palm Sunday is one of the most important days in the Christian calendar after Christmas and Easter. Palm Sunday is the Sunday before Easter, and marks the beginning of Holy Week, the week of events leading up to Jesus' death.
Read More
WOW: Two Burglars Kick In Door Of Former Marine, And Get A Surprise They Never Asked For
Police have identified a man who was shot and killed early Thursday after kicking in the door of a Salt Lake City apartment. Puleaga Danny Tupu, 33, of West Valley City, died in the living room of the apartment at 731 S. 300 East, police said Friday.
Read More
Bill would prohibit enforcement of federal ban on firearms in Montana
The House of Representatives gave preliminary approval Tuesday to a bill meant to preserve Montanans’ right to bear arms by prohibiting the enforcement of any federal ban on firearms or ammunition.
Read More
“The Founders Couldn’t Have Imagined Assault Rifles,” She Blogged
Consistently, the dumbest argument put forward by gun control supporters is the idea that the Founding Fathers—one of the best-educated and most intelligent groups of men ever assembled in world history—simply couldn’t have imagined that modern firearms could be invented, and so that the natural right of citizens to own these rifles couldn’t possibly exist.
Read More
POW story of "Angels of Bataan" army nurses is one of the greatest WWII stories never told
One of World War II’s greatest untold stories began on April 8, 1942 when Lt. Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, the commander of the U.S. Army in the Philippines, ordered the evacuation of military and civilian nurses to the island of Corregidor.
Read More
Philippine Bataan Death March survivors mark 75th anniversary
Ramon Regalado was starving and sick with malaria when he slipped away from his Japanese captors during the infamous 1942 Bataan Death March in the Philippines, escaping a brutal trudge through steamy jungle that killed hundreds of Americans and thousands of Filipinos who fought for the U.S. during World War II.
Read More
Army Announces Deployment of 1,500 Alaska-Based Troops
The U.S. Army announced Friday that approximately 1,500 soldiers from Alaska will deploy to Afghanistan later this year. The deployment of the 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, is part of a regular rotation of forces in support of Operation Freedom's Sentinel.
Read More
Sessions warns that overhaul of Baltimore police may result in 'a less safe city'
Attorney Jeff Sessions warned that the agreement negotiated under the Obama administration to overhaul the troubled Baltimore police force may result in “a less safe city.”
Read More
Scientists discover atmosphere around distant Earth-like planet
Astronomers have detected an atmosphere around the super Earth-like planet GJ 1132b, a discovery which could help pave the way to finding life outside our solar system.
Read More
Next Job for US Air Force: Space Cop?
The United States Air Force may become a sort of space cop in the not-too-distant future. An off-Earth economy cannot truly take off unless moon miners and other pioneering entrepreneurs are able to operate in a safe and stable environment, said Air Force Lt. Col. Thomas Schilling, of Air University.
Read More
Liberals are Using THIS Tactic to Stop Trump's Border Fence
Wildlife conservation groups are collaborating with a federal government agency to halt construction of the southern border wall by fudging science to claim that unimpeded trans-border corridors are essential to an “endangered species” with 99% of its population in Mexico.
Read More
Justice Gorsuch: Senate Confirms Trump’s First SCOTUS Pick
The Senate voted just before noon Friday to confirm Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Nation’s highest bench. The vote, originally set for Friday evening, was moved up to the morning after Democrats agreed to waive part of the final debate period.
Read More
Palm Sunday
Palm Sunday is one of the most important days in the Christian calendar after Christmas and Easter. Palm Sunday is the Sunday before Easter, and marks the beginning of Holy Week, the week of events leading up to Jesus' death.
Read More
WOW: Two Burglars Kick In Door Of Former Marine, And Get A Surprise They Never Asked For
Police have identified a man who was shot and killed early Thursday after kicking in the door of a Salt Lake City apartment. Puleaga Danny Tupu, 33, of West Valley City, died in the living room of the apartment at 731 S. 300 East, police said Friday.
Read More
Bill would prohibit enforcement of federal ban on firearms in Montana
The House of Representatives gave preliminary approval Tuesday to a bill meant to preserve Montanans’ right to bear arms by prohibiting the enforcement of any federal ban on firearms or ammunition.
Read More
“The Founders Couldn’t Have Imagined Assault Rifles,” She Blogged
Consistently, the dumbest argument put forward by gun control supporters is the idea that the Founding Fathers—one of the best-educated and most intelligent groups of men ever assembled in world history—simply couldn’t have imagined that modern firearms could be invented, and so that the natural right of citizens to own these rifles couldn’t possibly exist.
Read More
POW story of "Angels of Bataan" army nurses is one of the greatest WWII stories never told
One of World War II’s greatest untold stories began on April 8, 1942 when Lt. Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, the commander of the U.S. Army in the Philippines, ordered the evacuation of military and civilian nurses to the island of Corregidor.
Read More
Philippine Bataan Death March survivors mark 75th anniversary
Ramon Regalado was starving and sick with malaria when he slipped away from his Japanese captors during the infamous 1942 Bataan Death March in the Philippines, escaping a brutal trudge through steamy jungle that killed hundreds of Americans and thousands of Filipinos who fought for the U.S. during World War II.
Read More
Army Announces Deployment of 1,500 Alaska-Based Troops
The U.S. Army announced Friday that approximately 1,500 soldiers from Alaska will deploy to Afghanistan later this year. The deployment of the 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, is part of a regular rotation of forces in support of Operation Freedom's Sentinel.
Read More
Sessions warns that overhaul of Baltimore police may result in 'a less safe city'
Attorney Jeff Sessions warned that the agreement negotiated under the Obama administration to overhaul the troubled Baltimore police force may result in “a less safe city.”
Read More
Scientists discover atmosphere around distant Earth-like planet
Astronomers have detected an atmosphere around the super Earth-like planet GJ 1132b, a discovery which could help pave the way to finding life outside our solar system.
Read More
Next Job for US Air Force: Space Cop?
The United States Air Force may become a sort of space cop in the not-too-distant future. An off-Earth economy cannot truly take off unless moon miners and other pioneering entrepreneurs are able to operate in a safe and stable environment, said Air Force Lt. Col. Thomas Schilling, of Air University.
Read More
Monday, September 12, 2016
Show Notes 09-10-2016
Saturday Show 9-10-16
HHS Proposes Rule that Would Prevent States from DeFunding Abortion Providers
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a proposed rule last week that seeks to ban any recipient of Title X federal funding for family planning from excluding potential funding recipients “for reasons unrelated to its ability to provide services effectively.”
Read More
Trump rips media for mocking Christians
Donald Trump accused the media of mocking Christians and vowed to be a champion for religious liberty at a gathering of social conservatives in Washington on Friday.
Read More
'HOW DARE YOU!' DOCTORS GROUP ATTACKED FOR HILLARY-HEALTH POLL
When the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons asked its membership and several thousand other doctors in an informal poll whether Hillary Clinton is exhibiting symptoms of health problems that could disqualify her from the presidency, the group’s leadership was shocked at the result.
Read More
Vets poisoned at Camp Lejeune inch closer to VA benefits
An expected 15,000 veterans whose serious illnesses are linked to a contaminated water supply at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina could receive compensation more quickly under a proposed Department of Veterans Affairs rule announced Friday.
Read More
Four Top Military Moments from Star Trek
Anyone with even a passing knowledge of Star Trek can’t help but notice the parallels between the U.S. Navy and the United Federation of Planets, right down to the ranks, fleet structure, and general military discipline (Roddenberry himself flew in the Army Air Forces in World War II).
Read More
State Dept.: U.S. Should ‘Rehabilitate’ and ‘Reintegrate’ Foreign Fighters Back into Society
The director of the Office of Countering Violent Extremism at the State Department outlined some of the department’s strategic planning Wednesday to counter “violent extremism.”
Read More
George Washington banished by PC police
The president of the San Francisco Board of Education wants “Washington” and “Jefferson” banned as school names, because the American Founders had slaves.
Read More
ATT charges its poorest customers more for super slow Internet
AT&T is benefiting from providing slow broadband Internet service to some poor neighborhoods.The FCC requires AT&T to provide discounted high speed Internet service to poor families who are eligible for food stamps. But AT&T is exploiting a loophole in the federal mandate to refuse those discounts to some qualified families.
Read More
At least 45 killed in Syria after US-Russia agreement
The Aleppo Media Center, an activist collective, said 45 people were killed Saturday, just hours after the new U.S.-Russian agreement was reached to try and end the violence in Syria. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 30 people were killed in Aleppo province and another 39 were killed by airstrikes in neighboring Idlib province.
Read More
The Science Behind the Samsung Galaxy Note 7's Battery Fires
The Samsung Galaxy Note 7 is suffering the same fate as countless hoverboards — there are reports that some phones have been bursting into flames, prompting Samsung is issue a recall and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration to strongly discourage passengers from carrying the device on planes, news sources report.
Read More
HHS Proposes Rule that Would Prevent States from DeFunding Abortion Providers
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a proposed rule last week that seeks to ban any recipient of Title X federal funding for family planning from excluding potential funding recipients “for reasons unrelated to its ability to provide services effectively.”
Read More
Trump rips media for mocking Christians
Donald Trump accused the media of mocking Christians and vowed to be a champion for religious liberty at a gathering of social conservatives in Washington on Friday.
Read More
'HOW DARE YOU!' DOCTORS GROUP ATTACKED FOR HILLARY-HEALTH POLL
When the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons asked its membership and several thousand other doctors in an informal poll whether Hillary Clinton is exhibiting symptoms of health problems that could disqualify her from the presidency, the group’s leadership was shocked at the result.
Read More
Vets poisoned at Camp Lejeune inch closer to VA benefits
An expected 15,000 veterans whose serious illnesses are linked to a contaminated water supply at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina could receive compensation more quickly under a proposed Department of Veterans Affairs rule announced Friday.
Read More
Four Top Military Moments from Star Trek
Anyone with even a passing knowledge of Star Trek can’t help but notice the parallels between the U.S. Navy and the United Federation of Planets, right down to the ranks, fleet structure, and general military discipline (Roddenberry himself flew in the Army Air Forces in World War II).
Read More
State Dept.: U.S. Should ‘Rehabilitate’ and ‘Reintegrate’ Foreign Fighters Back into Society
The director of the Office of Countering Violent Extremism at the State Department outlined some of the department’s strategic planning Wednesday to counter “violent extremism.”
Read More
George Washington banished by PC police
The president of the San Francisco Board of Education wants “Washington” and “Jefferson” banned as school names, because the American Founders had slaves.
Read More
ATT charges its poorest customers more for super slow Internet
AT&T is benefiting from providing slow broadband Internet service to some poor neighborhoods.The FCC requires AT&T to provide discounted high speed Internet service to poor families who are eligible for food stamps. But AT&T is exploiting a loophole in the federal mandate to refuse those discounts to some qualified families.
Read More
At least 45 killed in Syria after US-Russia agreement
The Aleppo Media Center, an activist collective, said 45 people were killed Saturday, just hours after the new U.S.-Russian agreement was reached to try and end the violence in Syria. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 30 people were killed in Aleppo province and another 39 were killed by airstrikes in neighboring Idlib province.
Read More
The Science Behind the Samsung Galaxy Note 7's Battery Fires
The Samsung Galaxy Note 7 is suffering the same fate as countless hoverboards — there are reports that some phones have been bursting into flames, prompting Samsung is issue a recall and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration to strongly discourage passengers from carrying the device on planes, news sources report.
Read More
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
Show Notes 06-28-16
Sunday Show 06-26-16
America's Founders proclamations for fasting and prayer
In May, 1774, the British Parliament ordered an embargo of Boston to begin June 1. Immediately the Burgesses of Virginia passed a resolution protesting this act and setting aside the day of embargo to seek God with fasting and prayer.
Read More
Obama Invites 18.7 Million Immigrants to Avoid Oath of Allegiance, Pledge to Defend America
Under the Obama administration’s expansive interpretation of executive authority, legal immigrants seeking citizenship through the nation’s Naturalization process are now exempt from a key part of the Oath of Allegiance.
Read More
Outrage over candidate's 'Make America White Again' sign
A candidate for Congress is under fire for a campaign sign highlighting his hope of making “America White Again.” The sign, which appeared over Highway 411 near Benton, Tenn., was placed there by independent candidate, Rick Tyler, who is currently running for Tennessee's 3rd congressional district seat, WRCB-TV reported.
Read More
Hospital boots abortionist in demonic baby killing rant
A California hospital has reportedly severed ties with an abortionist involved in a “demonic” confrontation with a pro-life activist, in which the doctor charged through the front doors of a medical facility while wielding a pair of scissors and proclaimed his “love” of tearing unborn babies apart in the womb.
Read More
England’s Farage: 'The EU's Failing, The EU's Dying, I Hope We've Knocked The First Brick Out of The Wall'
“An opinion poll in the Netherlands said that a majority there now want to leave,” said Nigel Farage in a speech today, covered by numerous media (and video here from RT). “So we may well be close, perhaps, to a Nexit.
Read More
Explosive new twist in idaho sex assault case
The Obama-appointed U.S. attorney for Idaho has taken the highly unusual step of intervening in a local criminal case involving an alleged sexual assault by juvenile Muslim migrants and threatened the community and media with federal prosecution if they “spread false information or inflammatory statements about the perpetrators.”
Read More
One of two remaining airmen who flew in World War II 'Doolittle Raid' dies
One of the last two surviving members of the Doolittle Raiders -- who bombed Japan in an attack that stunned that nation and boosted U.S. morale -- has died in Montana, his family said.
Read More
The Doolittle Raid, 1942
Once the shock of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor subsided, the focus of American military planners turned to retaliation - even if it was only symbolic. A few weeks after the attack, Lt. Colonel James H. Doolittle presented his superiors with a daring and unorthodox plan. B-25 bombers, normally land-based, would be transported by an aircraft carrier to within striking-distance of the Japanese mainland and launched to attack a number of cities.
Read More
Pope Francis Sparks Another Controversy by Saying ‘Great Majority’ of Catholic Marriages Are Invalid
“The great majority of our sacramental marriages are null,” Pope Francis was quoted as saying last Thursday in an impromptu answer to a question on what the Catholic Church should do regarding the “crisis of marriage”, sparking another controversy over Catholic teaching.
Read More
Bishop at Vatican Synod: 'One Can Still Perceive the Smell' of the 'Smoke of Satan' in Vatican DocumentReferencing Blessed Pope Paul VI's statement in 1972 that "the smoke of Satan" had entered the Catholic Church, one of the leading archbishops at the Vatican's ongoing synod (meeting) on the family, said the "smoke of Satan" tried to enter last year's meeting on the family and now "one can still perceive the smell of this 'infernal smoke' in some items" of the working document the bishops are using in the current meeting.
Read More
Can states separate politics from gun policy; California aims to try
Days before Democrats and Republicans in Congress traded verbal blows over four failed gun control amendments in the wake of the mass shooting in Orlando, Fla., the California Legislature voted to allot $5 million over five years to establish a state research center on gun violence.
Read More
America's Founders proclamations for fasting and prayer
In May, 1774, the British Parliament ordered an embargo of Boston to begin June 1. Immediately the Burgesses of Virginia passed a resolution protesting this act and setting aside the day of embargo to seek God with fasting and prayer.
Read More
Obama Invites 18.7 Million Immigrants to Avoid Oath of Allegiance, Pledge to Defend America
Under the Obama administration’s expansive interpretation of executive authority, legal immigrants seeking citizenship through the nation’s Naturalization process are now exempt from a key part of the Oath of Allegiance.
Read More
Outrage over candidate's 'Make America White Again' sign
A candidate for Congress is under fire for a campaign sign highlighting his hope of making “America White Again.” The sign, which appeared over Highway 411 near Benton, Tenn., was placed there by independent candidate, Rick Tyler, who is currently running for Tennessee's 3rd congressional district seat, WRCB-TV reported.
Read More
Hospital boots abortionist in demonic baby killing rant
A California hospital has reportedly severed ties with an abortionist involved in a “demonic” confrontation with a pro-life activist, in which the doctor charged through the front doors of a medical facility while wielding a pair of scissors and proclaimed his “love” of tearing unborn babies apart in the womb.
Read More
England’s Farage: 'The EU's Failing, The EU's Dying, I Hope We've Knocked The First Brick Out of The Wall'
“An opinion poll in the Netherlands said that a majority there now want to leave,” said Nigel Farage in a speech today, covered by numerous media (and video here from RT). “So we may well be close, perhaps, to a Nexit.
Read More
Explosive new twist in idaho sex assault case
The Obama-appointed U.S. attorney for Idaho has taken the highly unusual step of intervening in a local criminal case involving an alleged sexual assault by juvenile Muslim migrants and threatened the community and media with federal prosecution if they “spread false information or inflammatory statements about the perpetrators.”
Read More
One of two remaining airmen who flew in World War II 'Doolittle Raid' dies
One of the last two surviving members of the Doolittle Raiders -- who bombed Japan in an attack that stunned that nation and boosted U.S. morale -- has died in Montana, his family said.
Read More
The Doolittle Raid, 1942
Once the shock of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor subsided, the focus of American military planners turned to retaliation - even if it was only symbolic. A few weeks after the attack, Lt. Colonel James H. Doolittle presented his superiors with a daring and unorthodox plan. B-25 bombers, normally land-based, would be transported by an aircraft carrier to within striking-distance of the Japanese mainland and launched to attack a number of cities.
Read More
Pope Francis Sparks Another Controversy by Saying ‘Great Majority’ of Catholic Marriages Are Invalid
“The great majority of our sacramental marriages are null,” Pope Francis was quoted as saying last Thursday in an impromptu answer to a question on what the Catholic Church should do regarding the “crisis of marriage”, sparking another controversy over Catholic teaching.
Read More
Bishop at Vatican Synod: 'One Can Still Perceive the Smell' of the 'Smoke of Satan' in Vatican DocumentReferencing Blessed Pope Paul VI's statement in 1972 that "the smoke of Satan" had entered the Catholic Church, one of the leading archbishops at the Vatican's ongoing synod (meeting) on the family, said the "smoke of Satan" tried to enter last year's meeting on the family and now "one can still perceive the smell of this 'infernal smoke' in some items" of the working document the bishops are using in the current meeting.
Read More
Can states separate politics from gun policy; California aims to try
Days before Democrats and Republicans in Congress traded verbal blows over four failed gun control amendments in the wake of the mass shooting in Orlando, Fla., the California Legislature voted to allot $5 million over five years to establish a state research center on gun violence.
Read More
Saturday, December 12, 2015
Show Notes 12-10-15
Thursday show 11-10-15
3 Wealthiest U.S. Counties Are Virginia Suburbs of D.C.
Five of the nation's Top Ten wealthiest counties--when measured by median household income in 2014--are suburbs of Washington, D.C.; and the three wealthiest are all in suburban Virginia, according to data released today by the Census Bureau.
Read More
Best Pals: 257 Media Outlets and Journalists Awarded by Planned Parenthood
Planned Parenthood understands that, faced with the reality of what it does, the American public would decline to fund the nation’s largest abortion mill with tax dollars.
Read More
Morning Jolt: MSNBC Stops Trump From Talking Over Questions: 'Go to Break Right Now!'
The Tuesday morning telephone interview was contentious: At one point, when Trump kept talking over the hosts' questions, Joe Scarborough told the control room to "go to break right now!"
Read More
King Of The Zulus: Slams ‘So-Called’ South African Democracy, Says Country Was Better Off Under Apartheid
The head of the royal household of the Zulus has landed in the centre of a political storm after he made favourable comments about the former white minority government of South Africa.
Read More
Reid: Scalia's 'racist' comments worse than Trump
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) slammed Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia on Thursday after he suggested African-American students do better in "less-advanced schools."
Read More
Conservative star ruled unsafe for young minds
A California high school has deemed Breitbart News senior editor Ben Shapiro too dangerous for developing minds.
Read More
Sen. Inhofe: Military Contradicting President Unprecedented
The nation's military elite is starting to publicly contradict President Barack Obama's assertion that the Islamic State is under control — and their uncharacteristic bucking of the commander-in-chief comes out of a "sense of desperation," Sen. James Inhofe tells Newsmax TV.
Read More
Air Force to Triple Maternity Leave to 18 Weeks, Top Civilian Says
The U.S. Air Force plans to triple maternity leave for female airmen, the service's top civilian has announced. The change would expand the leave from six weeks to 18 weeks and was inspired by a similar move by the Navy, Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James said on Tuesday during a video town hall filmed at Fort Meade, Maryland.
Read More
House report: DoD found no evidence ransom paid for Bergdahl
The Pentagon's inspector general has told a House panel investigating the five Taliban Guantanamo Bay detainees released in exchange for U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl that it found no evidence a ransom was ever attempted or paid to secure the soldier's release.
Read More
John Jay is elected President of the Continental Crogress
On this day in 1778, John Jay, the former chief justice of the New York Supreme Court, is elected president of the Continental Congress.
Read More
A Brief Biography of John Jay
John Jay's long and eventful life, from 1745 to 1829, encompassed the movement for American independence and the creation of a new nation — both processes in which he played a full part.
Read More
3 Wealthiest U.S. Counties Are Virginia Suburbs of D.C.
Five of the nation's Top Ten wealthiest counties--when measured by median household income in 2014--are suburbs of Washington, D.C.; and the three wealthiest are all in suburban Virginia, according to data released today by the Census Bureau.
Read More
Best Pals: 257 Media Outlets and Journalists Awarded by Planned Parenthood
Planned Parenthood understands that, faced with the reality of what it does, the American public would decline to fund the nation’s largest abortion mill with tax dollars.
Read More
Morning Jolt: MSNBC Stops Trump From Talking Over Questions: 'Go to Break Right Now!'
The Tuesday morning telephone interview was contentious: At one point, when Trump kept talking over the hosts' questions, Joe Scarborough told the control room to "go to break right now!"
Read More
King Of The Zulus: Slams ‘So-Called’ South African Democracy, Says Country Was Better Off Under Apartheid
The head of the royal household of the Zulus has landed in the centre of a political storm after he made favourable comments about the former white minority government of South Africa.
Read More
Reid: Scalia's 'racist' comments worse than Trump
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) slammed Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia on Thursday after he suggested African-American students do better in "less-advanced schools."
Read More
Conservative star ruled unsafe for young minds
A California high school has deemed Breitbart News senior editor Ben Shapiro too dangerous for developing minds.
Read More
Sen. Inhofe: Military Contradicting President Unprecedented
The nation's military elite is starting to publicly contradict President Barack Obama's assertion that the Islamic State is under control — and their uncharacteristic bucking of the commander-in-chief comes out of a "sense of desperation," Sen. James Inhofe tells Newsmax TV.
Read More
Air Force to Triple Maternity Leave to 18 Weeks, Top Civilian Says
The U.S. Air Force plans to triple maternity leave for female airmen, the service's top civilian has announced. The change would expand the leave from six weeks to 18 weeks and was inspired by a similar move by the Navy, Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James said on Tuesday during a video town hall filmed at Fort Meade, Maryland.
Read More
House report: DoD found no evidence ransom paid for Bergdahl
The Pentagon's inspector general has told a House panel investigating the five Taliban Guantanamo Bay detainees released in exchange for U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl that it found no evidence a ransom was ever attempted or paid to secure the soldier's release.
Read More
John Jay is elected President of the Continental Crogress
On this day in 1778, John Jay, the former chief justice of the New York Supreme Court, is elected president of the Continental Congress.
Read More
A Brief Biography of John Jay
John Jay's long and eventful life, from 1745 to 1829, encompassed the movement for American independence and the creation of a new nation — both processes in which he played a full part.
Read More
Friday, July 24, 2015
Show Notes 07-23-2015
Thursday
show 07-23-15
11
strange facts you didn't know about the first Moon landing
You
would expect that when NASA asks you to be the first man to walk on
the Moon that they would consider the possibility of things going
wrong. Well for Neil Armstrong he couldn’t afford the life
insurance policy for an astronaut. However, along with Michael
Collins and Buzz Aldrin he wasn’t alone.
Read More
Summer
is so bad here that cops 'arrest' weathermen
Fed-up
police in the Canada's Newfoundland and Labrador have become so
desperate about the lack of good weather in recent weeks that they
have issued a plea to locate the missing season.
Read More
Ancient
Amazon Rain forest Was Once Used for Agriculture
The
Amazon rainforest, often thought to have been pristine wilderness
before the modern era, was once domesticated, and was reclaimed by
the wild only in recent centuries, research increasingly suggests.
Read More
Uber has hilarious comeback to NYC Mayor Bill De Blasio
In
reaction to a NYC bill, Uber has done something to push back in a way
that is both unique and hilarious. The bill seeks to limit the amount
of new drivers transportation companies can hire and, thus, severely
limit the growth of alternative transport businesses such as Uber.
Read More
Residents sue Seattle saying new trash rules violate privacy
Environmental goals about garbage in this and other like-minded cities increasingly come down to three words: Throw less away. So Seattle residents are given different bins to put out on the curb — one for yard and food waste, another for recycling — and are encouraged to use ever-tinier cans for the stuff that really is trash.
Read More
Environmental goals about garbage in this and other like-minded cities increasingly come down to three words: Throw less away. So Seattle residents are given different bins to put out on the curb — one for yard and food waste, another for recycling — and are encouraged to use ever-tinier cans for the stuff that really is trash.
Read More
Hoyer: 'I Reject Any
Premise that Planned Parenthood is Harvesting Fetal Organs, or Body
Parts'
House Minority Whip
Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said he rejected the “premise that Planned
Parenthood is harvesting fetal organs” at his weekly pen-and-pad
meeting with reporters on
Tuesday.
Read More
Read More
Quiz: Who signed all 4
founding-documents?
He was the only person
to sign all four of America’s founding documents:
Articles of Association
– 1774
Declaration of
Independence – 1776
Articles of
Confederation – 1777
U.S. Constitution –
1787
Who was he? Roger
Sherman.
Read More
Obama admin looks to
ban some Social Security recipients from owning guns
Obama looks to ban
Social Security recipients from owning guns
The Obama
administration wants to keep people collecting Social Security
benefits from owning guns if it is determined they are unable to
manage their own affairs, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Read More
Friday, July 10, 2015
Show Notes 07-09-2015
Thursday show 07-09-15
Yes this was an entire show, we spent a lot of time on the Supreme Court. They should be put in straight jackets for the homosexual marriage decision that they made. Impeach the bums!!!
Opinion of the Supreme Court OBERGEFELL v. HODGES
JUSTICE KENNEDY delivered the opinion of the Court. The Constitution promises liberty to all within its reach, a liberty that includes certain specific rights that allow persons, within a lawful realm, to define and express their identity. The petitioners in these cases seek to find that liberty by marrying someone of the same sex and having their marriages deemed lawful on the same terms and conditions as marriages between persons of the opposite sex.
Read More
John Jay
His paternal grandfather, Augustus (1665-1751), established the Jay family's presence in America. Unable to remain in France when the rights of Protestants were abolished by the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, Augustus eventually settled in New York.
Read More
Lost boys: Moms of radicalized Western jihadists form support group
Islamic teaching states that “paradise lies at the feet of your mother,” and a group of Western moms who lost their sons first to radicalization and then on the battlefields of the Middle East are trying to use the lesson to stop other young men from turning to terrorism.
Read More
Yes this was an entire show, we spent a lot of time on the Supreme Court. They should be put in straight jackets for the homosexual marriage decision that they made. Impeach the bums!!!
Opinion of the Supreme Court OBERGEFELL v. HODGES
JUSTICE KENNEDY delivered the opinion of the Court. The Constitution promises liberty to all within its reach, a liberty that includes certain specific rights that allow persons, within a lawful realm, to define and express their identity. The petitioners in these cases seek to find that liberty by marrying someone of the same sex and having their marriages deemed lawful on the same terms and conditions as marriages between persons of the opposite sex.
Read More
John Jay
His paternal grandfather, Augustus (1665-1751), established the Jay family's presence in America. Unable to remain in France when the rights of Protestants were abolished by the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, Augustus eventually settled in New York.
Read More
Lost boys: Moms of radicalized Western jihadists form support group
Islamic teaching states that “paradise lies at the feet of your mother,” and a group of Western moms who lost their sons first to radicalization and then on the battlefields of the Middle East are trying to use the lesson to stop other young men from turning to terrorism.
Read More
Saturday, February 28, 2015
From Lily White Liberal To Gun Toten Momma
By Susan Frances Bonner RN BSN, author of Opening A Registered Nurses Eyes; A life Altering Journey Across North America
Guns kill, guns are evil, and no law abiding self-respecting woman needs to own one. Words I had heard over and over again. Words I believed and lived by. Growing up in a small neighborhood on Long Island, NY; “gun” was a curse word
reserved for the media and criminals. If your father and uncles didn't hunt, you were likely never to see a real one except on TV. Life in the “burbs” never prepared me for rural life in North Florida or the fact that practically everyone living there carried a gun.
Moving to the country meant cleaner air, a simpler life, less noise. But it also meant you were pretty much on your own. Something I quickly realized living on our 5.5 acres outside Tallahassee, Florida surrounded by woods and swamps. Our nearest neighbor lived pretty far away and then there was the animal factor. Not the neighbor’s cute furry cat and sweet waging tailed dog. There were wild pigs that dug up your lawn looking for grubs, seven different kinds of venomous snakes, bobcats, black bear and of course; alligators.
Our property bordered the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge and I was told early on to expect some visitors of the less cuddly type to our rural abode. And although this concerned me, I didn't run out and buy every weapon known to man and arm myself Rambo style. My husband however; a well traveled army guy and no stranger to guns, thought it was time to expose me to the Second Amendment. Knowing my gentile sensibilities and liberal upbringing, he bought one gun at a time.
The first was a shotgun; I could handle this. Well I’d seen old movies before and most old homesteads had at least a shotgun, yes I could handle this. He took me out to the back forty and gave me a lesson in gun safety and shooting. I was appalled by the power, force and yes; the loud sound it produced. But if a wild boar was chasing me out of my garden and a black bear was blocking my way to the house; a shotgun was what I wanted. So, I carried it slung over my shoulder, kept it by the bed or in the kitchen next to me when my husband went to town.
Slowly my husband acquired more firearms, mostly rifles, until one day he introduced me to the infamous handgun, the weapon of choice for every murderer, rapist and burglar. Again he gave me the safety course and shooting lesson. This weapon was a little more intimidating. This one I did not carry. But I found out that the gun did not go off by itself. Someone had to pull the trigger because guns don’t kill anybody sitting on a desk. That lesson was ingrained in me when one day while my husband was out in the garden. I picked up the handgun off of the living room table in an attempt to get more familiar with it and then dropped it on the floor, purely by accident. I was so terrified it would blow up I ran into our bedroom screaming! But nothing happened; it just lied there on the floor silent and not moving.
The final induction into “gunhood” came one day when while putting a roof on our wood shed, my husband heard ATV’s coming down an old road in the woods that ran through our property. Hearing voices I went to investigate and saw my husband standing between two young men on said ATV’s. The young men were arguing with him and posturing. Now my husband is burly and is six foot four and was holding a hammer in his hands, but I guess they were counting on strength in numbers.
No one noticed I was there so I ran to the house and instead of dialing 911, I grabbed the handgun. Pulse pounding in my ears I said a silent prayer that I wouldn’t have to use it and ran outside. Slowly I rounded the bend in the driveway and holding the gun out at my side asked sweetly, “Honey, is everything alright?” Everyone was startled. The young men noticed the gun in my hand and immediately and hastily apologized for trespassing. Then they turned their ATV’s around and left. My husband smiled with pride.
From that day forward a gun became a tool for me; to be used like a hammer or chain saw. Used only when needed. Used cautiously. And used with respect. I remember that day and think about the brave pioneer women who came to colonize this great country and who had to protect their homesteads, family and livestock against “all” with their meager guns. I think about them and thank the Founding Fathers that we still have the right to protect life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness with a firearm.
Guns kill, guns are evil, and no law abiding self-respecting woman needs to own one. Words I had heard over and over again. Words I believed and lived by. Growing up in a small neighborhood on Long Island, NY; “gun” was a curse word
reserved for the media and criminals. If your father and uncles didn't hunt, you were likely never to see a real one except on TV. Life in the “burbs” never prepared me for rural life in North Florida or the fact that practically everyone living there carried a gun.
Moving to the country meant cleaner air, a simpler life, less noise. But it also meant you were pretty much on your own. Something I quickly realized living on our 5.5 acres outside Tallahassee, Florida surrounded by woods and swamps. Our nearest neighbor lived pretty far away and then there was the animal factor. Not the neighbor’s cute furry cat and sweet waging tailed dog. There were wild pigs that dug up your lawn looking for grubs, seven different kinds of venomous snakes, bobcats, black bear and of course; alligators.
Our property bordered the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge and I was told early on to expect some visitors of the less cuddly type to our rural abode. And although this concerned me, I didn't run out and buy every weapon known to man and arm myself Rambo style. My husband however; a well traveled army guy and no stranger to guns, thought it was time to expose me to the Second Amendment. Knowing my gentile sensibilities and liberal upbringing, he bought one gun at a time.
The first was a shotgun; I could handle this. Well I’d seen old movies before and most old homesteads had at least a shotgun, yes I could handle this. He took me out to the back forty and gave me a lesson in gun safety and shooting. I was appalled by the power, force and yes; the loud sound it produced. But if a wild boar was chasing me out of my garden and a black bear was blocking my way to the house; a shotgun was what I wanted. So, I carried it slung over my shoulder, kept it by the bed or in the kitchen next to me when my husband went to town.
Slowly my husband acquired more firearms, mostly rifles, until one day he introduced me to the infamous handgun, the weapon of choice for every murderer, rapist and burglar. Again he gave me the safety course and shooting lesson. This weapon was a little more intimidating. This one I did not carry. But I found out that the gun did not go off by itself. Someone had to pull the trigger because guns don’t kill anybody sitting on a desk. That lesson was ingrained in me when one day while my husband was out in the garden. I picked up the handgun off of the living room table in an attempt to get more familiar with it and then dropped it on the floor, purely by accident. I was so terrified it would blow up I ran into our bedroom screaming! But nothing happened; it just lied there on the floor silent and not moving.
The final induction into “gunhood” came one day when while putting a roof on our wood shed, my husband heard ATV’s coming down an old road in the woods that ran through our property. Hearing voices I went to investigate and saw my husband standing between two young men on said ATV’s. The young men were arguing with him and posturing. Now my husband is burly and is six foot four and was holding a hammer in his hands, but I guess they were counting on strength in numbers.
No one noticed I was there so I ran to the house and instead of dialing 911, I grabbed the handgun. Pulse pounding in my ears I said a silent prayer that I wouldn’t have to use it and ran outside. Slowly I rounded the bend in the driveway and holding the gun out at my side asked sweetly, “Honey, is everything alright?” Everyone was startled. The young men noticed the gun in my hand and immediately and hastily apologized for trespassing. Then they turned their ATV’s around and left. My husband smiled with pride.
From that day forward a gun became a tool for me; to be used like a hammer or chain saw. Used only when needed. Used cautiously. And used with respect. I remember that day and think about the brave pioneer women who came to colonize this great country and who had to protect their homesteads, family and livestock against “all” with their meager guns. I think about them and thank the Founding Fathers that we still have the right to protect life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness with a firearm.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Show Notes 01-25-2015
Sunday show 01-25-15
Horrid result when teacher confiscates cell phone
A high-school freshman in New Jersey is now facing a criminal charge after pouncing on his 62-year-old teacher who confiscated the student’s cell phone during class.
Read More
John McCain faces jeers-boos at GOP meeting
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., struggled to get his speech started Saturday at the Arizona Republican Party annual meeting. The chorus of boos and jeers was just too loud.
Read More
Getting married? Hire a bridesmaid for only $2000
It is time for the professionals to take over the bridesmaid game. That's right: If you are planning a wedding this year, you can hire the services of a professional bridesmaid for only $2,000.
Read More
Obama discusses bias to preschoolers
Discussing a children’s book about discrimination, President Obama told a group of preschoolers Thursday that his job would be a lot easier if some Americans didn’t feel superior to others.
Read More
Father of chemistry worked to evangelize America
The “Father of Chemistry” wanted to evangelize America? And warned of the end?
Robert Boyle was born Jan. 25, 1627. He studied Bacon, Descartes and other of his contemporaries, including scientists Isaac Newton and Galileo, philosophers John Locke and Thomas Hobbes and poet John Milton.
Read More
Baptists in jail inspire Constitutional revision
James Madison’s defense of religious freedom began when he stood with his father outside a jail in the village of Orange and heard Baptists preach from their cell windows.
Read More
June 30 will be a second longer than any other day this year
A "leap second" needs to be added in 2015 to make sure the time on atomic clocks stays in sync with Earth's rotational time, but some Internet companies are dreading the day.
Read More
220-Year-Old Time Capsule Buried by Sam Adams & Paul Revere Opened
In 1795, then-Massachusetts Gov. Samuel Adams, famed patriot Paul Revere and Col. William Scollay buried a time capsule under the Massachusetts State House cornerstone in Boston, and now, after more than 200 years, its contents have been revealed.
Read More
Digital life hack: Turn your old phone into a security camera
In these days of nonstop hacking, phishing and data breaches, it's easy to forget that regular old burglars are still lurking around to steal from your home. That's why I'm a big fan of home security systems, especially ones that let you watch your home from a distance and alert you when someone breaks in.
Read More
Drivers trying to calculate whether it's practical to own an electric car are facing a new math.
U.S. gas prices have fallen more than $1 per gallon over the last 12 months, to a national average of $2.06, according to AAA. That makes electric cars — with their higher prices tags — a tougher sell.
Read More
Dinosaurs not wiped out by global firestorm
The theory that a global firestorm accompanied the asteroid that killed off the dinosaurs may not be correct, according to a new study. A team of researchers has found that heat near the impact site would not have been sufficient to ignite plants. It suggests our understanding of the mass extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs may not be as complete as thought.
Read More
Greece anti-bailout Syriza party wins election
The anti-bailout Syriza party won a clear victory in austerity-weary Greece's national election on Sunday, according to projections by state-run TV's exit poll.
Read More
Horrid result when teacher confiscates cell phone
A high-school freshman in New Jersey is now facing a criminal charge after pouncing on his 62-year-old teacher who confiscated the student’s cell phone during class.
Read More
John McCain faces jeers-boos at GOP meeting
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., struggled to get his speech started Saturday at the Arizona Republican Party annual meeting. The chorus of boos and jeers was just too loud.
Read More
Getting married? Hire a bridesmaid for only $2000
It is time for the professionals to take over the bridesmaid game. That's right: If you are planning a wedding this year, you can hire the services of a professional bridesmaid for only $2,000.
Read More
Obama discusses bias to preschoolers
Discussing a children’s book about discrimination, President Obama told a group of preschoolers Thursday that his job would be a lot easier if some Americans didn’t feel superior to others.
Read More
Father of chemistry worked to evangelize America
The “Father of Chemistry” wanted to evangelize America? And warned of the end?
Robert Boyle was born Jan. 25, 1627. He studied Bacon, Descartes and other of his contemporaries, including scientists Isaac Newton and Galileo, philosophers John Locke and Thomas Hobbes and poet John Milton.
Read More
Baptists in jail inspire Constitutional revision
James Madison’s defense of religious freedom began when he stood with his father outside a jail in the village of Orange and heard Baptists preach from their cell windows.
Read More
June 30 will be a second longer than any other day this year
A "leap second" needs to be added in 2015 to make sure the time on atomic clocks stays in sync with Earth's rotational time, but some Internet companies are dreading the day.
Read More
220-Year-Old Time Capsule Buried by Sam Adams & Paul Revere Opened
In 1795, then-Massachusetts Gov. Samuel Adams, famed patriot Paul Revere and Col. William Scollay buried a time capsule under the Massachusetts State House cornerstone in Boston, and now, after more than 200 years, its contents have been revealed.
Read More
Digital life hack: Turn your old phone into a security camera
In these days of nonstop hacking, phishing and data breaches, it's easy to forget that regular old burglars are still lurking around to steal from your home. That's why I'm a big fan of home security systems, especially ones that let you watch your home from a distance and alert you when someone breaks in.
Read More
Drivers trying to calculate whether it's practical to own an electric car are facing a new math.
U.S. gas prices have fallen more than $1 per gallon over the last 12 months, to a national average of $2.06, according to AAA. That makes electric cars — with their higher prices tags — a tougher sell.
Read More
Dinosaurs not wiped out by global firestorm
The theory that a global firestorm accompanied the asteroid that killed off the dinosaurs may not be correct, according to a new study. A team of researchers has found that heat near the impact site would not have been sufficient to ignite plants. It suggests our understanding of the mass extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs may not be as complete as thought.
Read More
Greece anti-bailout Syriza party wins election
The anti-bailout Syriza party won a clear victory in austerity-weary Greece's national election on Sunday, according to projections by state-run TV's exit poll.
Read More
Labels:
Baptists,
bridesmaid,
Christians,
computers,
Dinosaurs,
fossil fuels,
Founding Fathers,
GOP,
Greece,
James Madison,
John McCain,
President Obama,
public education,
Robert Boyle,
technology
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
The Society of the Cincinnati
This site is a good place to learn about our Republic. Well, the Republic we are loosing. It will give you ammo against the progs who want to transform this great Nation. Don't forget to visit patriotspub.us, to learn about the Constitution.
The Society of the Cincinnati is an institution dedicated to promoting the memory and ideals of the American Revolution. Founded in 1783 by the officers of the Continental Army, the society is named after Cincinnatus, a patriotic leader who refused rewards for serving the Roman republic.
Read More
The Society of the Cincinnati is an institution dedicated to promoting the memory and ideals of the American Revolution. Founded in 1783 by the officers of the Continental Army, the society is named after Cincinnatus, a patriotic leader who refused rewards for serving the Roman republic.
Read More
Saturday, August 09, 2014
Show Notes 08/07/2014
Thursday Show 8/7/14
Founding Fathers refute
Obama's Muslim fabric
President Obama’s
remarks thanking Muslims for “building the very fabric of our
nation” and claiming they were in part responsible for “the core
of our democracy” have left many in and outside of Washington
scratching their heads. But the Founding Fathers would find the
comments even more baffling.
Read More
Richmond-area school to
keep ‘Rebels’ team name
A Richmond-area public
high school will keep “Rebels” as its team name after a
student-led protest called attention to plans by the administration
to field a new mascot without ties to the Confederacy.
Read More
In rare move Universtiy
grants 22k scholarship to undocumented student
In a rare move for U.S.
higher education, Rutgers University has awarded a full scholarship
to an undocumented immigrant, allowing him to finish his last two
years of college and receive his bachelor’s degree.
Read More
'The Big Bang Theory'
actors get $25,000 an hour
Call it the ultimate
revenge of the nerds -- or, at least, the actors playing nerds. The
cast of the hit CBS (CBS) show "The Big Bang Theory" are
receiving stunning raises for the upcoming seasons. Cast members
portraying Sheldon Cooper, Leonard Hofstadter and Penny will now make
$1 million each an episode. That's akin to what the 'Friends' actors
got at the end of that show's historic run -- and it's a big boost
from the $300,000 per show they were receiving this past season.
Read More
President Obama,
Congress Invited to Free 'America' Movie Screening
President Barack Obama
and hundreds of other powerful members of government were sent
letters this week inviting them to a free screening of America, the
docudrama from conservative filmmaker Dinesh D'Souza.
Read More
When it comes to Cancer
the benefits of Aspirin may outweigh the risk
A new study in Annals
of Oncology finds that the benefits of daily aspirin may outweigh the
risks, at least when it comes to cancers of the digestive tract –
bowel, stomach and esophageal.
Read More
Computer Games Better
Than Medication in Treating Elderly Depression
Computer games could
help in treating older people with depression who haven't been helped
by antidepressant drugs or other treatments for the disorder,
researchers say.
Read More
Tuesday, August 05, 2014
Show Notes 08/03/2014
Sunday Show 8/3/14
Faith of nation's
forefathers celebrated at Plymouth
The unique American
experiment is being celebrated at the spot where the Pilgrims landed
in 1620. It’s the 125th anniversary of the National Monument to the
Forefathers, which the Plymouth Rock Foundation is commemorating with
a series of special events this week, concluding Saturday.
Read More
Marvel comics makes
Thor thunder Goddess
Thor is now a Goddess
of Thunder. Marvel Comics announced this month that the
hammer-wielding Norse superhero will be a woman in upcoming comic
book issues. Marvel was thin on details explaining the switch, but
said in a press release that "no longer is the classic male hero
able to hold the mighty hammer."
Read More
Netanyahu warns US not
to ever second guess me again
Following the quick
collapse of the cease-fire in Gaza, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu told the White House not to force a truce with Palestinian
militants on Israel.
Read More
Sockdolager
A "sockdolager"
is a knock-down blow. This is a newspaper reporter’s captivating
story of his unforgettable encounter with the old "Bear Hunter"
from Tennessee. From "The Life of Colonel David Crockett",
by Edward S. Ellis (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1884)
Read More
Education in Colonial
America
Mr. Peterson is
Headmaster of The Pilgrim Academy, Egg Harbor City, New Jersey. He
teaches economics and is constantly in search of ways to support and
defend the principle of voluntarism in education.
Read More
Federal court upholds
Florida law in “Doc's vs Glock's case
The suit, brought in
part by the Florida chapters of the American Academy of Family
Physicians and the American Academy of Pediatrics, had won an
injunction by a lower court in what became known popularly as the
“Docs vs. Glocks” case.
Read More
Saturday, May 24, 2014
Founding Truth on the Halls of Valhalla Radio Network
Founding Truth had to be canceled tonight 05/24/2014 due to personal reasons with one of the hosts. It will return next week 05/31/2015. Thank you for your patience.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Show Notes 06/16/2013
Show notes Sunday
06/16/13
Father's Day
Scholars believe that
the origin of Father's Day is not a latest phenomenon, as many
believe it to be. Rather they claim that the tradition of Father's
Day can be traced in the ruins of Babylon.
Pope blesses hundreds of Harley Davidsons
Biker culture came to
the Vatican on Sunday as Pope Francis blessed thousands of
Harley-Davidsons and their riders celebrating the manufacturer's
110th anniversary with a loud parade and plenty of leather.
Allen West blames big
government for problems in the black community
Former Florida Rep.
Allen West asserted Friday that liberal policies were responsible for
the high unemployment and out-of-wedlock births in the
African-American community.
CDC: Nearly 50 US
adults will develop one mental illness
A CDC mental-health
fact sheet--Mental Illness Surveillance Among U.S. Adults--says that
"published studies report that about 25% of all U.S. adults have
a mental illness and that nearly 50% of U.S. adults will develop at
least one mental illness during their lifetime.”
Man of Steel takes
flight
"Man of Steel"
leaped over box office expectations in a single weekend. The Warner
Bros. superhero film earned $113 million in its opening weekend at
the box office, according to studio estimates Sunday.
Birthday of the US Army
When the American
Revolution broke out, the rebellious colonies did notpossess
an army in the modern
sense. Rather, the revolutionaries fielded an amateur force of
colonial troops, cobbled together from various New England militia
companies.
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Show notes 11/15/2012
Uncooperative Radio Show Notes:
Thursday 11/15/12
This is important!
I know it's late. But I just walked out
of a meeting with some Senate insiders, and I'm still steaming mad at
what I heard. Members of both parties are scheming to ram through the
so-called "Cybersecurity" Bill.
Petitions seeking White House approval
to secede now come from 47 States
White House website petitions are
largely a symbolic measure. Serious observers don’t expect the
federal government to allow any state to withdraw from the U.S. on
the basis of electronic “yes” votes from — in Louisiana’s
case — less than one-half of one percent of residents.
NBC Developing George Washington Drama
From David Seidler & Levinson/Fontana
With United States’ 16th President
Abraham Lincoln back in the cultural zeitgeist with Steven
Spielberg’s feature biopic, NBC hopes to do the same on the TV side
with the nation’s first president.
Saparmurat Atayevich Niyazov
Niyazov was born in Gypjak, located in
the Turkmen SSR. According to the official version, his father died
in World War II fighting against Nazi Germany, while other sources
contend that he dodged fighting and was therefore sentenced by a
military court. The other members of his family were killed in a
massive earthquake that leveled Ashgabat in 1948. He grew up in a
Soviet orphanage before the state put him in the custody of a distant
relative.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Mark Levin gives unvarnished truth on Rommey loss
Mark Levin passionately defends conservatism and analyzes last night's election in the opening monologue of the Wednesday broadcast of his nationally syndicated radio program. Here's a partial transcript of Levin's opening remarks:
MARK LEVIN: We conservatives, we do not accept bipartisanship in the pursuit of tyranny. Period. We will not negotiate the terms of our economic and political servitude. Period. We will not abandon our child to a dark and bleak future. We will not accept a fate that is alien to the legacy we inherited from every single future generation in this country. We will not accept social engineering by politicians and bureaucrats who treat us like lab rats, rather than self-sufficient human beings. There are those in this country who choose tyranny over liberty. They do not speak for us, 57 million of us who voted against this yesterday, and they do not get to dictate to us under our Constitution.
We are the alternative. We will resist. We're not going to surrender to this. We will not be passive, we will not be compliant in our demise. We're not good losers, you better believe we're sore losers! A good loser is a loser forever. Now I hear we're called 'purists.' Conservatives are called purists. The very people who keep nominating moderates, now call us purists the way the left calls us purists. Yeah, things like liberty, and property rights, individual sovereignty, and the Constitution, and capitalism. We're purists now. And we have to hear this crap from conservatives, or pseudo-conservatives, Republicans.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2012/11/07/mark_levin_gives_unvarnished_truth_on_romney_loss.html
MARK LEVIN: We conservatives, we do not accept bipartisanship in the pursuit of tyranny. Period. We will not negotiate the terms of our economic and political servitude. Period. We will not abandon our child to a dark and bleak future. We will not accept a fate that is alien to the legacy we inherited from every single future generation in this country. We will not accept social engineering by politicians and bureaucrats who treat us like lab rats, rather than self-sufficient human beings. There are those in this country who choose tyranny over liberty. They do not speak for us, 57 million of us who voted against this yesterday, and they do not get to dictate to us under our Constitution.
We are the alternative. We will resist. We're not going to surrender to this. We will not be passive, we will not be compliant in our demise. We're not good losers, you better believe we're sore losers! A good loser is a loser forever. Now I hear we're called 'purists.' Conservatives are called purists. The very people who keep nominating moderates, now call us purists the way the left calls us purists. Yeah, things like liberty, and property rights, individual sovereignty, and the Constitution, and capitalism. We're purists now. And we have to hear this crap from conservatives, or pseudo-conservatives, Republicans.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2012/11/07/mark_levin_gives_unvarnished_truth_on_romney_loss.html
Monday, April 23, 2012
Show Notes: 04-22-2012
Links for Uncooperative Radio Show: Sunday 04/22/12
A Prayer about Nature and God's Creation
http://www.thoughts-about-god.com/prayer/prayer_nature.html
Billionaire-backed space venture Planetary Resources to be unveiled April 24
An audacious new private space exploration company backed by billionaire investors and filmmaker-turned-explorer James Cameron will unveil its master plan "to help ensure humanity's prosperity" on Tuesday, April 24.
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/04/21/billionaire-backed-space-venture-planetary-resources-to-be-unveiled-april-24/
Democrats Call for New Amendment to Limit First Amendment Rights
Democratic Representatives Donna Edwards (D-Md.) and John Conyers (D-Mich.) renewed their call for a constitutional amendment that would limit the First Amendment rights of political action groups and corporations by overturning the Citizens United decision.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/democrats-call-new-amendment-limit-first-amendment-rights
Stinky fish helps limit potfest at Colo university
Stinky fish fertilizer and two dozen law-enforcement officers kept pot smokers away from a grassy quad at the University of Colorado on Friday, but a few hundred protesters defied the crackdown and rallied on another field, where some lit up at 4:20 p.m.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/stinky-fish-helps-limit-potfest-colo-university
Possible NATO Role Eyed in Syria Conflict
As the United States Thursday accused the Assad regime of unleashing “yet another wave of horrific violence against the Syrian people” despite a week-old ceasefire, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pointed to the possibility of NATO involvement.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/possible-nato-role-eyed-syria-conflict
Immigration officials say they've tried to remove convicted criminal from the U.S. but no country will take him
Federal authorities said they have tried to remove a Palestinian man who has been arrested 35 times in 12 years in Alabama, but said other countries have refused to take him
http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2012/04/immigration_officials_say_they.html
Still the Land of Dreams: 150 Million Want to Immigrate to U.S.
It has become a cliché for politicians who want to provide some sort of pathway to U.S. citizenship to the estimated 11.2 million illegal aliens living in the United States to say that these illegal aliens will need to “go to the back of the line” first.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/still-land-dreams-150-million-want-immigrate-us
The equal pay day myth
This month, feminist groups celebrate Equal Pay Day, a pseudo-holiday based on the idea that women are systematically underpaid, making only about three-quarters of every dollar a man makes for the same work. Women, they claim, have to work until April to make up for last year’s “wage gap.”
http://c1355372.cdn.cloudfiles.rackspacecloud.com/2e18fceb-9fda-44d9-bd26-bb06fef8ea22/Newsletter%20April%202012%20Proof%201.pdf
Cause of Brain Freeze Revealed
Most people have likely experienced brain freeze — the debilitating, instantaneous pain in the temples after eating something frozen — but researchers didn't really understand what causes it, until now.
http://www.livescience.com/19834-brain-freeze-blood-flow-migraines.html
Jurassic lark? Expedition to seek living dinosaurs in Africa
A young Missouri man has turned to the Internet in search of investors for his expedition into the remote jungles of Africa seeking to document undiscovered flora and fauna. That is not so unusual, but one of the creatures he hopes to find is: a living dinosaur.
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/04/21/jurassic-lark-expedition-to-seek-living-dinosaurs-in-africa/
Are We Headed Toward the Constitution or the Communist Manifesto?
This Breakdown Tells You During his Thursday morning radio broadcast, Glenn Beck asked if America, on its current trajectory, is headed toward the values and principles of the Constitution, or rather, those of the Communist Manifesto. To glean greater insight, The Blaze expanded on each of the Manifesto’s 10 planks and juxtaposed them with modern day American society. The picture revealed, while perhaps not shocking, is unsettling to say the least.
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/are-we-headed-toward-the-constitution-or-the-communist-manifesto-this-breakdown-tells-you/
A Prayer about Nature and God's Creation
http://www.thoughts-about-god.com/prayer/prayer_nature.html
Billionaire-backed space venture Planetary Resources to be unveiled April 24
An audacious new private space exploration company backed by billionaire investors and filmmaker-turned-explorer James Cameron will unveil its master plan "to help ensure humanity's prosperity" on Tuesday, April 24.
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/04/21/billionaire-backed-space-venture-planetary-resources-to-be-unveiled-april-24/
Democrats Call for New Amendment to Limit First Amendment Rights
Democratic Representatives Donna Edwards (D-Md.) and John Conyers (D-Mich.) renewed their call for a constitutional amendment that would limit the First Amendment rights of political action groups and corporations by overturning the Citizens United decision.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/democrats-call-new-amendment-limit-first-amendment-rights
Stinky fish helps limit potfest at Colo university
Stinky fish fertilizer and two dozen law-enforcement officers kept pot smokers away from a grassy quad at the University of Colorado on Friday, but a few hundred protesters defied the crackdown and rallied on another field, where some lit up at 4:20 p.m.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/stinky-fish-helps-limit-potfest-colo-university
Possible NATO Role Eyed in Syria Conflict
As the United States Thursday accused the Assad regime of unleashing “yet another wave of horrific violence against the Syrian people” despite a week-old ceasefire, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pointed to the possibility of NATO involvement.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/possible-nato-role-eyed-syria-conflict
Immigration officials say they've tried to remove convicted criminal from the U.S. but no country will take him
Federal authorities said they have tried to remove a Palestinian man who has been arrested 35 times in 12 years in Alabama, but said other countries have refused to take him
http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2012/04/immigration_officials_say_they.html
Still the Land of Dreams: 150 Million Want to Immigrate to U.S.
It has become a cliché for politicians who want to provide some sort of pathway to U.S. citizenship to the estimated 11.2 million illegal aliens living in the United States to say that these illegal aliens will need to “go to the back of the line” first.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/still-land-dreams-150-million-want-immigrate-us
The equal pay day myth
This month, feminist groups celebrate Equal Pay Day, a pseudo-holiday based on the idea that women are systematically underpaid, making only about three-quarters of every dollar a man makes for the same work. Women, they claim, have to work until April to make up for last year’s “wage gap.”
http://c1355372.cdn.cloudfiles.rackspacecloud.com/2e18fceb-9fda-44d9-bd26-bb06fef8ea22/Newsletter%20April%202012%20Proof%201.pdf
Cause of Brain Freeze Revealed
Most people have likely experienced brain freeze — the debilitating, instantaneous pain in the temples after eating something frozen — but researchers didn't really understand what causes it, until now.
http://www.livescience.com/19834-brain-freeze-blood-flow-migraines.html
Jurassic lark? Expedition to seek living dinosaurs in Africa
A young Missouri man has turned to the Internet in search of investors for his expedition into the remote jungles of Africa seeking to document undiscovered flora and fauna. That is not so unusual, but one of the creatures he hopes to find is: a living dinosaur.
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/04/21/jurassic-lark-expedition-to-seek-living-dinosaurs-in-africa/
Are We Headed Toward the Constitution or the Communist Manifesto?
This Breakdown Tells You During his Thursday morning radio broadcast, Glenn Beck asked if America, on its current trajectory, is headed toward the values and principles of the Constitution, or rather, those of the Communist Manifesto. To glean greater insight, The Blaze expanded on each of the Manifesto’s 10 planks and juxtaposed them with modern day American society. The picture revealed, while perhaps not shocking, is unsettling to say the least.
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/are-we-headed-toward-the-constitution-or-the-communist-manifesto-this-breakdown-tells-you/
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Firm uses mushrooms to make eco-friendly packaging
This will make all the eco-nuts feel warm and fuzzy.
From usatoday.com
Turns out that mushrooms — great in soups and salads — also make decent packaging material. Mushrooms are a key ingredient in pale, soft blocks produced by the thousands in an upstate New York plant. The blocks are used to cushion products ranging from Dell servers to furniture for Crate and Barrel.
From usatoday.com
Turns out that mushrooms — great in soups and salads — also make decent packaging material. Mushrooms are a key ingredient in pale, soft blocks produced by the thousands in an upstate New York plant. The blocks are used to cushion products ranging from Dell servers to furniture for Crate and Barrel.
More precisely, the packaging blocks are made with mycelium — the hidden "roots" of the mushroom that usually thread beneath soil or wood. Two former mechanical engineering and design students in their 20s, Eben Bayer and Gavin McIntyre, figured out how to grow those cottony filaments in a way that binds together seed husks or other agricultural byproducts into packaging shapes.
Look, capitalism works if government gets the hell out of the way. Manufacturers will go green if they can make a buck. "We the people" know what is best for us, we are not children and our Founding Fathers knew that. So back off and let us live free!!
Friday, July 04, 2008
Thursday, August 09, 2007
The Patriot's Pub Radio Show

I have started a new radio show on Thursdays at 8pm eastern called the Patriot's Pub
Description: Discussion on The U.S. Constitution, the Founding Fathers and the creation of this great nation. Apolitical, just plain facts and through the writings of our Founding Fathers. Relax, pull up a chair and imbibe your favorite beverage. All patriot's welcome, liberals, conservatives and independent.
Trackposted to Outside the Beltway, Perri Nelson's Website, Rosemary's Thoughts, Right Truth, Inside the Northwest Territory, Shadowscope, Stuck On Stupid, Webloggin, The Amboy Times, Leaning Straight Up, Conservative Cat, Conservative Thoughts, Pirate's Cove, The Pink Flamingo, Wyvern dreams, High Desert Wanderer, Gone Hollywood, and The Yankee Sailor, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.
Technorati Tags: U.S. History, Constitution, Founding Fathers. education
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