Sunday show 08-30-15
Marijuana bars, budtender, growing trend at weddings
These newlyweds are going to pot. John Elledge and Whitney Alexander’s wedding earlier this month in Oregon featured a smoke tent – complete with 13 different strains of marijuana that guests could sample with the help of a budtender.
Read More
Hillary for prison signs keep getting stolen in the Hamptons
This Hamptonite wants Hillary Rodham Clinton behind bars — and had to put his signs saying so behind an electric fence. Andy Sabin’s first “Hillary for Prison 2016” signs lasted little more than a day before they were stolen from in front of his Amagansett home last week. So Sabin took steps to make sure the placards were secure.
Read More
Christian movie among best ever
Actress Karen Abercrombie as Miss Clara in “War Room,” the new, Christian film – yes, a Christian film! – from the Kendrick brothers (makers of “Fireproof” and “Facing the Giants”), is an absolute revelation.
Read More
When the wells run dry: California drought forcing some families to live in 'Third-World-type conditions'
Looking for water to flush his toilet, Tino Lozano pointed a garden hose at some buckets in the bare dirt of his yard. It's his daily ritual now in a community built by refugees from Oklahoma's Dust Bowl. But only a trickle came out; then a drip, then nothing more.
Read More
Foes dive for discarded records in abortion clinic dumpsters
The scene in front of abortion clinics is often tense, with clinic workers escorting patients past activists waving signs and taking photographs. But increasingly, another drama is unfolding out back. There, abortion opponents dig through the trash in search of patient information.
Read More
Feds fighting to keep cash seized from person never charged with crime
Federal prosecutors are battling in court to keep $167,000 in cash seized in a 2013 traffic stop, despite the motorist never being charged in the incident and the Obama administration clamped down this spring on such asset seizures and forfeitures.
Read More
Obamacare Mandate: Sterilize 15-Year-Old Girls for Free--Without Parental Consent
Thanks to an Obamacare regulation that took effect on Aug. 1, health care plans in Oregon will now be required to provide free sterilizations to 15- year-old girls even if the parents of those girls do not consent to the procedure.
Read More
With new chip credit cards on way here's what consumers need to know
Instead of swiping our plastic, we'll be able to slide or dip our chip-equipped credit cards at chip-enabled terminals at the register. You might see the new way of doing things as soon as the next time you shop at Target or another big retailer.
Read More
Monday, August 31, 2015
Friday, August 28, 2015
Brian Bonner's plan to take Our Republic back!
For
those who do not listen to my radio show, I spent 10 years trying to
figure out how to get back to the Constitutional Republic given to us
by those who created the Constitution, without bloodshed and this is
what I came up with:
We
need to take back our local and State governments with true
Constitutional Conservatives. I am talking from the school boards and town councils all the way to the Governor of the State. We the people have to get
off our backsides and find Constitution minded candidates, convince them to run and help
them get elected. We the people have been asleep behind the wheel for
too long. Once we achieve this, the State re-asserts their
Constitutional Sovereignty and tells the federal government we will
no longer follow your unconstitutional mandates, give you
unconstitutional money, take money from you and we do not care what
the courts think.
We,
the States, created you to serve our needs and not the other way
around. There are no "implied powers" in the Constitution.
The states then purge their courts of those who have served in bad
behavior and once enough states are taken back we hold an article 5
convention and make the Constitution CRYSTAL CLEAR, including stating
the courts will use natural law as found in Emerich de Vatell's Law
of Nations and place limitations on the courts.
We
then purge the federal courts of those who have served in bad
behavior and replace them with people who understand that the role of
the court is to look at the original intent of the legislators who
created the law and apply it to the person or situation in front of
them, not re-interpret the law. Next we get rid of all the
unconstitutional laws and bureaucracy that were created and phase out
all government entitlement programs. Anything we want to keep we have
to amend the Constitution to keep them. Like we need the Air Force,
but this requires an amendment. This puts the general government back
into it's Constitutional box.
Speaking
of the military, no standing army, we have the militia, we the people
and the organized militia, the National Guard and the Navy, with
Marines, Seals and planes. I would pull ALL our military back home
and close all over seas bases. Obviously the Navy would still patrol.
We would revert the National Guard back to the States as the State Guard
and use the individual border State Guards to secure our borders and
build the dang fence with gun turrets, unmanned drones, and seismic
sensors. The Air Force would have bases here in the USA to protect
us.
Show Notes 08-27-15
Thursday show 08-27-15
Florida gun range add restaurant, alcohol
Daytona Beach Florida city commissioners have given approval to an indoor shooting range that includes a restaurant that sells alcoholic beverages.
Read More
Gun rights advocate: “We don't have a gun problem we don't teach respect for life
Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) was calling for new gun control laws on Wednesday, even before the man who killed a reporter and cameraman on live television was in custody.
Read More
Happy National Toilet Paper Day!
The only time you think about toilet paper may be when there's a two for one deal in the grocery store, but now, like all things, there's a day devoted to TP.
Read More
White House proclaims today women equality day
The White House is declaring Wednesday Women’s Equality Day to mark 95 years since women won the right to vote under the 19th Amendment.
Read More
National dog day
Although we have been celebrating National Dog Day on August 26th for the last 11 years, this year it was brought to our attention that National Dog Day was drawing focus away from Women's Equality Day.
Read More
China's ownership of US government debt peaked in 2013
Although entities in mainland China remained the largest foreign owners of U.S. government debt, according to the latest data published by the U.S.
Read More
Defense official: China grabs 50 percent more land through man made islands
China has built up and reclaimed even more land in the South China Sea than previously thought -- with an archipelago of man-made islands now spanning 2,900 acres, according to a new Pentagon report released Friday.
Read More
Higher Learning: Colorado county mulls scholarship pot tax
Talk about higher learning. A Colorado county may create the world's first public college scholarship program funded with marijuana money. Pueblo County is considering a 5 percent excise tax on marijuana growers, with half the proceeds designated to a scholarship fund that boosters say would be the first of its kind.
Read More
HHS spending 42 million to preserve Native American languages
Health and Human Secretary Sylvia Burwell announced last week that the agency is spending $4.2 million in “funding awards” to “enhance native language revitalization efforts.”
Read More
Mormons keep affiliation to Boy Scouts despite gay leaders
The Mormon church announced Wednesday it will maintain its longtime affiliation with the Boy Scouts despite the organization's decision to allow gay troop leaders — preventing what would have been a thundering blow to the national association.
Read More
Florida gun range add restaurant, alcohol
Daytona Beach Florida city commissioners have given approval to an indoor shooting range that includes a restaurant that sells alcoholic beverages.
Read More
Gun rights advocate: “We don't have a gun problem we don't teach respect for life
Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) was calling for new gun control laws on Wednesday, even before the man who killed a reporter and cameraman on live television was in custody.
Read More
Happy National Toilet Paper Day!
The only time you think about toilet paper may be when there's a two for one deal in the grocery store, but now, like all things, there's a day devoted to TP.
Read More
White House proclaims today women equality day
The White House is declaring Wednesday Women’s Equality Day to mark 95 years since women won the right to vote under the 19th Amendment.
Read More
National dog day
Although we have been celebrating National Dog Day on August 26th for the last 11 years, this year it was brought to our attention that National Dog Day was drawing focus away from Women's Equality Day.
Read More
China's ownership of US government debt peaked in 2013
Although entities in mainland China remained the largest foreign owners of U.S. government debt, according to the latest data published by the U.S.
Read More
Defense official: China grabs 50 percent more land through man made islands
China has built up and reclaimed even more land in the South China Sea than previously thought -- with an archipelago of man-made islands now spanning 2,900 acres, according to a new Pentagon report released Friday.
Read More
Higher Learning: Colorado county mulls scholarship pot tax
Talk about higher learning. A Colorado county may create the world's first public college scholarship program funded with marijuana money. Pueblo County is considering a 5 percent excise tax on marijuana growers, with half the proceeds designated to a scholarship fund that boosters say would be the first of its kind.
Read More
HHS spending 42 million to preserve Native American languages
Health and Human Secretary Sylvia Burwell announced last week that the agency is spending $4.2 million in “funding awards” to “enhance native language revitalization efforts.”
Read More
Mormons keep affiliation to Boy Scouts despite gay leaders
The Mormon church announced Wednesday it will maintain its longtime affiliation with the Boy Scouts despite the organization's decision to allow gay troop leaders — preventing what would have been a thundering blow to the national association.
Read More
Monday, August 24, 2015
Show Notes 08-23-2015
Sunday show 08-23-15
Amid Declining Participation, USDA's School Lunch Program Embraces 'Cultural Inclusion'
The Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 changed the nutrition requirements for school lunches and breakfasts, but the U.S. Agriculture Department says the law also gives schools the flexibility to prepare meals that are "familiar to kids from culturally diverse backgrounds."
Read More
CONGRESSMAN SPANKS COLLEGES FOR CENSORING STUDENTS
“The First Amendment prohibits the government, including government public colleges and universities, from infringing on free speech and the free exercise of religion,” says a new letter dispatched to educational the institutions by Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., the head of the House Judiciary Committee.
Read More
Popular novelist vs feminists: “There's no way to make myself not male”
Jonathan Franzen, the popular author of "The Corrections" and other books, has come under fire from feminists. "Purity," Franzen's forthcoming novel, features a radical feminist character who forces her husband to sit down when he uses the bathroom to atone for his maleness.
Read More
U.S. Government Made ‘Humanized’ Mice With Tissue from Babies 17- to 22-Weeks Gestational Age
A group of government researchers working for a National Institutes of Health laboratory in Montana made “humanized mice” by implanting the mice with tissues cut from human livers and thymuses taken from babies at 17 to 22 weeks gestational age.
Read More
New York City, the R Rated Version
On a crowded pedestrian plaza in Times Square, half a dozen topless women pose for pictures with passers-by. The only thing concealing their breasts is red, white and blue body paint.
Read More
Britain and France crack down on economic migrants
Britain and France on Thursday announced tougher security tools to guard the Channel Tunnel, a new joint police command to target human traffickers and 10 million euros ($11.2 million) in new British government money to help asylum seekers — and send others back home.
Read More
How splitting a church changed American history
300,000 miles on horseback, from the Atlantic to the Appalachians, from Maine to the Gulf of Mexico, for 45 years, he spread the Gospel. This was Francis Asbury, Methodist circuit riding preacher who was born Aug. 20, 1745.
Read More
Can tech turn moon into world's biggest billboard?
Japanese sports drink company Pocari Sweat is tapping into the moon’s immense advertising potential with its ambitious plan to land the drink on the moon’s surface.
Read More
Stairway to the stars: Company receives patent for 'space elevator'
Like something out of "The Jetsons," Canadian firm Thoth Technology has been granted a U.S. patent for a space elevator. The proposed "freestanding space tower" would reach a little over 12 miles above the Earth, according to an announcement from the company.
Read More
Amid Declining Participation, USDA's School Lunch Program Embraces 'Cultural Inclusion'
The Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 changed the nutrition requirements for school lunches and breakfasts, but the U.S. Agriculture Department says the law also gives schools the flexibility to prepare meals that are "familiar to kids from culturally diverse backgrounds."
Read More
CONGRESSMAN SPANKS COLLEGES FOR CENSORING STUDENTS
“The First Amendment prohibits the government, including government public colleges and universities, from infringing on free speech and the free exercise of religion,” says a new letter dispatched to educational the institutions by Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., the head of the House Judiciary Committee.
Read More
Popular novelist vs feminists: “There's no way to make myself not male”
Jonathan Franzen, the popular author of "The Corrections" and other books, has come under fire from feminists. "Purity," Franzen's forthcoming novel, features a radical feminist character who forces her husband to sit down when he uses the bathroom to atone for his maleness.
Read More
U.S. Government Made ‘Humanized’ Mice With Tissue from Babies 17- to 22-Weeks Gestational Age
A group of government researchers working for a National Institutes of Health laboratory in Montana made “humanized mice” by implanting the mice with tissues cut from human livers and thymuses taken from babies at 17 to 22 weeks gestational age.
Read More
New York City, the R Rated Version
On a crowded pedestrian plaza in Times Square, half a dozen topless women pose for pictures with passers-by. The only thing concealing their breasts is red, white and blue body paint.
Read More
Britain and France crack down on economic migrants
Britain and France on Thursday announced tougher security tools to guard the Channel Tunnel, a new joint police command to target human traffickers and 10 million euros ($11.2 million) in new British government money to help asylum seekers — and send others back home.
Read More
How splitting a church changed American history
300,000 miles on horseback, from the Atlantic to the Appalachians, from Maine to the Gulf of Mexico, for 45 years, he spread the Gospel. This was Francis Asbury, Methodist circuit riding preacher who was born Aug. 20, 1745.
Read More
Can tech turn moon into world's biggest billboard?
Japanese sports drink company Pocari Sweat is tapping into the moon’s immense advertising potential with its ambitious plan to land the drink on the moon’s surface.
Read More
Stairway to the stars: Company receives patent for 'space elevator'
Like something out of "The Jetsons," Canadian firm Thoth Technology has been granted a U.S. patent for a space elevator. The proposed "freestanding space tower" would reach a little over 12 miles above the Earth, according to an announcement from the company.
Read More
Friday, August 21, 2015
Show Notes 08-20-2015
Thursday
show 08-20-15
A Fighting Force
Since the Air Force Nurse Corps emerged from the Army Nurse Corps in July 1949, Air Force nursing service personnel have excelled in providing dedicat- ed care to their customers.
Read More
Army kicking out decorated Green Beret who stood up for Afgan rape victim
The U.S. Army is kicking out a decorated Green Beret after an 11-year Special Forces career, after he got in trouble for shoving an Afghan police commander accused of raping a boy and beating up his mother when she reported the incident.
Read More
Army dog reunited with handler after being abandoned
It has been almost four years since U.S. Army Specialist Tyler Roberts has seen a teammate he spent every day with while serving in Afghanistan. That changed Wednesday night.
Read More
Half of critical positions open at some VA hospitals
One in three jobs are vacant at nine of the nation’s regional Veterans Affairs health care systems, leaving veterans waiting weeks to get care.
Read More
Greek prime minister says he is resigning, calls for early elections
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras announced Thursday that he will resign, clearing the way for elections next month as Greece deals with its ongoing debt crisis. Tspiras made the announcement Thursday night, as the country began tapping into a new bailout deal meant to ensure its financial future.
Read More
Planned Parenthood honors journalists amid near blackout over undercover videos
Journalists may be ignoring the firestorm surrounding a series of damning undercover Planned Parenthood videos, but the beleaguered abortion provider is not turning its back on the fourth estate.
Read More
For Nevada pot businesses, it's not all money in the bank
With one medical marijuana dispensary open in Sparks and another opening before the end of the month in Reno, marijuana establishments are gaining traction in Nevada.
Read More
NPR Reports on Illegal Aliens Who ‘Identify As Americans’
A reporter with National Public Radio said on Thursday that young men living in the United States illegally “identify as Americans" because they have been in the country since they were children.
Read More
A Fighting Force
Since the Air Force Nurse Corps emerged from the Army Nurse Corps in July 1949, Air Force nursing service personnel have excelled in providing dedicat- ed care to their customers.
Read More
Army kicking out decorated Green Beret who stood up for Afgan rape victim
The U.S. Army is kicking out a decorated Green Beret after an 11-year Special Forces career, after he got in trouble for shoving an Afghan police commander accused of raping a boy and beating up his mother when she reported the incident.
Read More
Army dog reunited with handler after being abandoned
It has been almost four years since U.S. Army Specialist Tyler Roberts has seen a teammate he spent every day with while serving in Afghanistan. That changed Wednesday night.
Read More
Half of critical positions open at some VA hospitals
One in three jobs are vacant at nine of the nation’s regional Veterans Affairs health care systems, leaving veterans waiting weeks to get care.
Read More
Greek prime minister says he is resigning, calls for early elections
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras announced Thursday that he will resign, clearing the way for elections next month as Greece deals with its ongoing debt crisis. Tspiras made the announcement Thursday night, as the country began tapping into a new bailout deal meant to ensure its financial future.
Read More
Planned Parenthood honors journalists amid near blackout over undercover videos
Journalists may be ignoring the firestorm surrounding a series of damning undercover Planned Parenthood videos, but the beleaguered abortion provider is not turning its back on the fourth estate.
Read More
For Nevada pot businesses, it's not all money in the bank
With one medical marijuana dispensary open in Sparks and another opening before the end of the month in Reno, marijuana establishments are gaining traction in Nevada.
Read More
NPR Reports on Illegal Aliens Who ‘Identify As Americans’
A reporter with National Public Radio said on Thursday that young men living in the United States illegally “identify as Americans" because they have been in the country since they were children.
Read More
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Show Notes 08-16-2015
Sunday show 08-16-15
Hottest ticket in Washington?
It's for the pope at Capitol Rep. Peter Welch's sister, Maureen, had better intelligence than the five-term Vermont congressman about Pope Francis' upcoming trip to the United States and his historic address to Congress.
Read More
Pizzeria apologizes over ‘racist’ Pic-a-Nika pizza menu item
A New York City pizzeria has apologized after it debuted new menu item with a name many call racist. Pizza by Certé created a “Pic-a-Nika” pie topped with Southern fried chicken, sea-salted watermelon, and a sunflower seed crust -- sparking anger among customers and those on social media, reports PIX 11.
Read More
Four Florida teens arrested in carjacking, kidnapping of federal agent
Four high school students have been arrested in the carjacking and kidnapping of a Texas border patrol agent who was vacationing with his family in Florida authorities said.
Read More
Matisyahu responds to music festival's cancellation of show after pressure from anti-Israel group
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is now causing a rift in reggae. A music festival in Spain has canceled the performance of American Jewish rapper Matisyahu due to pressure from the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement and because the artist wouldn’t sign a pledge supporting the Palestinian state.
Read More
Alabama church opens gun range ‘in the name of Jesus Christ’
Praise the Lord . . . and pass the ammunition. An Alabama church has opened a gun range behind its sanctuary as an extension of its fellowship, WIAT reports.
Read More
Super cold, slew of snow in Old Farmer's Almanac forecast
Just when you thought you had gotten over last winter, be warned: The Old Farmer's Almanac predicts it will be super cold with a slew of snow for much of the country, even in places that don't usually see too much of it, like the Pacific Northwest.
Read More
EPA Administrator: Climate Change Affects ‘Our Ability to Earn a Decent Living’
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Gina McCarthy said on Tuesday that climate change affects “everything and everyone we love,” including our ability to secure a livelihood.
Read More
Zoo discovers 150 alligators, crocodiles living in Toronto home
The founder of a Canadian zoo had a hard time believing owners of a Toronto home were living with 150 large alligators and crocodiles until he discovered it wasn’t just another reptilian urban myth.
Read More
Drones Spook Bears
Bears apparently find UFOs unbearable — airborne robots and other unidentified flying objects can make bear hearts beat four times faster, researchers say.
Read More
Hottest ticket in Washington?
It's for the pope at Capitol Rep. Peter Welch's sister, Maureen, had better intelligence than the five-term Vermont congressman about Pope Francis' upcoming trip to the United States and his historic address to Congress.
Read More
Pizzeria apologizes over ‘racist’ Pic-a-Nika pizza menu item
A New York City pizzeria has apologized after it debuted new menu item with a name many call racist. Pizza by Certé created a “Pic-a-Nika” pie topped with Southern fried chicken, sea-salted watermelon, and a sunflower seed crust -- sparking anger among customers and those on social media, reports PIX 11.
Read More
Four Florida teens arrested in carjacking, kidnapping of federal agent
Four high school students have been arrested in the carjacking and kidnapping of a Texas border patrol agent who was vacationing with his family in Florida authorities said.
Read More
Matisyahu responds to music festival's cancellation of show after pressure from anti-Israel group
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is now causing a rift in reggae. A music festival in Spain has canceled the performance of American Jewish rapper Matisyahu due to pressure from the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement and because the artist wouldn’t sign a pledge supporting the Palestinian state.
Read More
Alabama church opens gun range ‘in the name of Jesus Christ’
Praise the Lord . . . and pass the ammunition. An Alabama church has opened a gun range behind its sanctuary as an extension of its fellowship, WIAT reports.
Read More
Super cold, slew of snow in Old Farmer's Almanac forecast
Just when you thought you had gotten over last winter, be warned: The Old Farmer's Almanac predicts it will be super cold with a slew of snow for much of the country, even in places that don't usually see too much of it, like the Pacific Northwest.
Read More
EPA Administrator: Climate Change Affects ‘Our Ability to Earn a Decent Living’
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Gina McCarthy said on Tuesday that climate change affects “everything and everyone we love,” including our ability to secure a livelihood.
Read More
Zoo discovers 150 alligators, crocodiles living in Toronto home
The founder of a Canadian zoo had a hard time believing owners of a Toronto home were living with 150 large alligators and crocodiles until he discovered it wasn’t just another reptilian urban myth.
Read More
Drones Spook Bears
Bears apparently find UFOs unbearable — airborne robots and other unidentified flying objects can make bear hearts beat four times faster, researchers say.
Read More
Friday, August 14, 2015
Show Notes 08-13-2015
Thursday
show 08-13-15
Connecticut
On Its Latest Cash Grab: It’s Not Greed When We Do It
Those
possessing the anti-capitalist mentality — so ascendant in our
culture today — often critique market actors as being solely
motivated by “greed.” Surely economic systems based on nobler
motivations, they say, would better promote the long-run interests of
the planet.
Read More
In
Greece, Reliance on Public Funds Is the Central Problem
The
main puzzle behind Greece is simple from a praxeological standpoint —
you get more of what you subsidize and less of what you tax. Greece,
being a nation with a high tax rate on production and a high subsidy
rate on public assistance, will generate a population that finds
greater preference toward public assistance and away from productive
labor.
Read More
Rush: orders from GOP donors to take out Trump
On
Friday, Limbaugh began by telling listeners how, on the day of
Thursday’s debate, he had learned “that big-time Republican
donors had ordered to take out Donald Trump in the debate last
night.”
Read More
Lerner
brands Republicans evil and dishonest in newly released emails
Newly
released emails from Lois Lerner show the former IRS official at the
heart of the Tea Party targeting scandal calling Republican critics
“evil and dishonest,” and even “hateful.”
Read More
Three
more women accuse Bill Cosby of sexual assault
The
list of women accusing comedian and actor Bill Cosby of sexual
assault grew by three Wednesday, as two actresses and a former
airline stewardess made their allegations public.
Read More
Six
cultures' favorite junk foods
When
many people think of Americans, visuals of potato chip-crusted couch
surfers come to mind. But we're not the only country with a penchant
for junk food. For every Dorito, Twinkie, Slim Jim and Pop Tart in
America, there's an ethnic equivalent in another country. Take a look
at how the rest of the world snacks.
Read More
Show Notes 08-09-2015
Sunday
show 08-09-15
Black
Lives Matter activists push Sanders off stage at Seattle event
Black
Lives Matter activists stole the spotlight away from Democratic
presidential candidate Bernie Sanders on Saturday in Seattle,
prompting Sanders to leave without giving his speech.
Read More
LOUISIANA
CUTS OFF PLANNED PARENTHOOD FUNDING
Louisiana
Gov. Bobby Jindal has cut off state taxpayer funding to Planned
Parenthood in the wake of shocking videos showing the organization
harvesting baby organs for profit.
Read More
Texas
judge tells defendant in assault case sentence is marriage or jail
A
Texas judge decided to mete out justice in an unusual fashion when he
offered a defendant up for sentencing in a minor assault case the
choice of getting married or going to jail for 15 days.
Read More
Iraqi
Christians who fled IS living in limbo while in exile
A
year after tens of thousands of Iraqi Christians fled communities
overtaken by Islamic State militants, their lives are on hold in
exile: They won't go back to Iraq, saying it's not safe for
Christians, but as refugees they're barred from working in temporary
asylum countries such as Jordan.
Read More
Perry
County Sheriff Jimmy Dale Smith told WDAM-TV that the soldiers were
training at Camp Shelby Joint Forces Training Center near
Hattiesburg.
Read More
Chattanooga
Shooting: Navy Plans Armed Guards for Reserve Centers
After
a gunman killed four Marines and a sailor at a Navy Reserve Center in
Chattanooga last month, the Navy plans to station armed guards at all
of its reserve centers across the country, NBC News has learned.
Read More
Feds
gun grab plan sparks protest in Idaho
Dozens
of people, including the local sheriff, gathered outside a Navy
veteran’s home in Idaho this week because of their worries a
federal gun grab program may have authorities confiscating his guns –
in what may be the first public protest to a strategy on which WND
has been reporting for two years.
Read More
Pope
urges compassion for divorced Catholics who remarry
Pope
Francis' call Wednesday for a church of "open doors" that
welcomes divorced Catholics prompted speculation over whether he was
signaling support for easing the ban on Communion for couples who
remarry without a church annulment.
Read More
A
group of black pastors sent a letter to the director of the
Smithsonian Institution’s National Portrait Gallery asking that the
bust of Planned Parenthood Founder Margaret Sanger be removed from
the museum’s “Struggle for Justice” exhibit, citing her support
for eugenics and the targeting of minorities by the nation’s
largest abortion provider.
Read More
Saturday, August 08, 2015
Show Notes 08-06-2015
Thursday
show 08-06-15
Weed:
Good for the Bones?
Got
pot? Marijuana might take a cue from the famous advertising slogan
for milk. A new study suggests that weed might be good for the bones.
The
compound cannabinoid cannabidiol (CBD), which is a nonhallucinogenic
chemical in marijuana plants, helps heal bone fractures, the research
finds.
Read More
Study:
Spicy food may help you live longer
Adding
a little spice to your life could make it last longer.
A
Harvard study tracked people who ate spicy foods at least three to
five times per week and compared their health to those who ate them
less than once a week.
Read More
Most
States waiving work requirements for food stamps despite improving
job numbers
Most
states still are waiving work requirements for those on food stamps,
raising concerns that despite an improving job market the Obama
administration is feeding government dependency -- and all at the
expense of taxpayers.
Read More
States
ask Obama administration to put power plant rules on hold
The
campaign to stop President Barack Obama's sweeping emissions limits
on power plants began taking shape Wednesday, as 16 states asked the
government to put the rules on hold while a Senate panel moved to
block them.
Read More
Al
Qaida urges: “Strike America in its own home”
The
Yemen branch of al-Qaida has put out a call for terror attacks
against Americans, saying lone wolf radicals ought to launch
immediate strikes on U.S. soil.
Read More
UN
forum to focus on surging antisemitism
Fox
News reports that a surge in anti-Semitic attacks by Muslims in
France has sparked an “unprecedented” wave of immigration in
Israel. And in the United Kingdom, Breitbart reports, anti-Semitism
is on the rise as hate crimes have more than doubled over the last
year.
Read More
3D-Printed
Spy Drones Could Be Built at Sea
A
3D-printed drone was recently launched from a British military
warship and successfully flew to shore, a demonstration that could
pave the way for futuristic spy drones that can be printed at sea.
Read More
Bug
Bots! These Insect-Inspired Robots Can Jump on Water
Swarms
of robots inspired by water-hopping insects could one day be used for
surveillance, search-and-rescue missions and environmental
monitoring, researchers say.
Read More
Show Notes 08-02-2015
Sunday
show 08-02-15
Former
abortion clinic owner: “We pushed sex-ed to create a market for
abortion”
As
reported by The Catholic Register, Everett earned a commission for
every abortion in addition to a share of the fees charged by each
clinic. She says she sold abortion and made big bucks off of the
“cash cow” of abortion.
Read More
Hundreds
rally to support Confederate flag at Stone Mountain Memorial
On
Saturday, hundreds upon hundreds of people from Georgia arrived at
Stone Mountain, the nation’s largest Confederate memorial, to show
their support for the Confederate flag
Read More
Soldier
Asked to Produce ID for Cigarette Purchase — but Clerk’s Alleged
Response to Seeing It Had Him in ‘Shock’
Collin
Brown walked into a 7-Eleven in Redmond, Washington, last Wednesday
and got himself a Slurpee. He also was looking to get cigarettes for
his fiancee, so when the clerk asked Brown for proof of age, the Army
reservist placed his military ID — which has his birthdate on the
back and is a legal form of identification — on the counter.
Read More
Obamas
TPP trade deal hits the wall
President
Obama’s hopes for a globalist pact integrating economies on four
continents ran aground in Hawaii on Friday. Trade negotiators from 12
nations announced Friday they failed to reach a deal on the proposed
Trans-Pacific Partnership, TPP.
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Student's
stunning plea: Why did NYC let me graduate high school?
Melissa
Mejia, 18, was stunned and embarrassed when officials at William
Cullen Bryant HS in Long Island City, Queens, told her she had met
all the requirements to receive a diploma in June.
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More
parents turn to homeschooling
The
National Catholic Register reports that recent data from the U.S.
Department of Education shows explosive growth in homeschooling among
American families, particularly in the last 10 years, when the number
of students between the ages of 5 and 17 went from 1.09 million in
2003 to 1.77 million in 2012.
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Obama
will impose unprecedented emissions controls US power plants
Aiming
to jolt the rest of the world to action, President Barack Obama moved
ahead Sunday with even tougher greenhouse gas cuts on American power
plants, setting up a certain confrontation in the courts with energy
producers and Republican-led states.
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Builders
forced to purchase art to receive permits
A
new program adopted by the city of Oakland, Calif., to force builders
to fund projects by artists who are chosen by the city is being
challenged in federal court, where the builders have filed a lawsuit
alleging violations of the Constitution’s First and Fifth
Amendments.
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Orthodox
Jewish tenants at LeFrak City in Queens claim they are being
discriminated against because newly installed lobby doors only open
with an electronic key — which they cannot use on the Sabbath, a
federal lawsuit alleges.
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Obama
gives illegals massive health care plane
The
level of health-care services provided to illegal aliens is about to
get a huge boost from the Obama administration, which is hiring
contractors to provide the equivalent of 5.5 million additional labor
hours of treatment to detainees.
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Saturday, August 01, 2015
Show Notes 07-30-2015
Thursday
show 07-30-15
Families
face tough decisions as cost of elder care soars
Doris
Ranzman had followed the expert advice, planning ahead in case she
wound up unable to care for herself one day. But when a nursing-home
bill tops $14,000 a month, the best-laid plans get tossed aside.
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Teens
emergency contraception use increase
The
percentage of teen girls who use emergency contraception, sometimes
referred to as the "morning-after pill," has increased
considerably over the last decade, according to a new report.
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On
June 28, 1914, a young Serbian nationalist named Gavrilo Princip
killed Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire, in Sarajevo,Bosnia. Taking place against a
backdrop of escalating tensions in the Balkans, the assassination set
off a chain of events that would lead to the start of World War I
barely one month later.
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Graduates
Sue Rolling Stone Over Retracted Rape Story
Three
University of Virginia graduates and members of a fraternity profiled
in a debunked account of a gang rape in a retracted Rolling Stone
magazine story filed a lawsuit against the publication and the
article's author Wednesday, court records show.
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Stallone
puts 'Rocky,' 'Rambo' memorabilia up for auction
Sylvester
Stallone is parting with memorabilia from the "Rocky" and
"Rambo" movies, but he's keeping the two characters alive
onscreen.
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AP
Investigation: Olympic teams to swim, boat in Rio's filth
Athletes
competing in next year's Summer Olympics here will be swimming and
boating in waters so contaminated with human feces that they risk
becoming violently ill and unable to compete in the games, an
Associated Press investigation has found.
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Chicago
sheriff puts inmates to work demolishing abandoned buildings
A
Chicago sheriff has a new ally in the battle to rid the city of
abandoned properties that attract squatters, drugs and crime: prison
inmates.
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Navy
admiral confirms US pulling aircraft carrier from Persian Gulf this
fall
The
U.S. Navy will not have an aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf this
fall for the first time in years, President Obama's nominee to be the
Navy's top officer told Capitol Hill lawmakers
Thursday.
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Court
dismisses lawsuit seeking person hood for 2 N.Y. chimps
Two
chimpanzees will not be freed from a New York state university where
they're used in locomotion studies after a court decision Thursday
dismissed a lawsuit that had sought to afford them legal personhood
rights.
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