Friday Show Notes 7-21-17
Spokesman for Trump's legal team resigns, reports say
The spokesman for President Trump’s personal legal team resigned Thursday, according to multiple media reports.
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Supreme Court allows more exemptions to Trump travel ban
The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a federal court judge's order expanding the number of immigrants from six Muslim-majority nations who can enter the country under President Trump's temporary travel ban.
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ICE chief readies national sanctuary city crackdown
Empowered by a president who has "taken the handcuffs off of law enforcement," the nation's chief immigration official revealed Tuesday that deportation targets have surged and that he's planning to deploy more agents and resources to "sanctuary cities" to arrest illegal criminals.
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EPI Report: No Data to Support H-2B Visa Increase
A new report from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) shows that there is no evidence of a labor shortage to support the recent H-2B visa increase. DHS Secretary John Kelly announced this week that he will use the authority granted by Congress to approve an additional 15,000 H-2B visas over the annual 66,000 cap.
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Boston Launches Anti-Islamophobia Poster Campaign
The city of Boston is launching a poster campaign to fight Islamophobia by encouraging bystanders to intervene, in a nonconfrontational way, if they witness anti-Muslim harassment.
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European nations rebel against EU 'refugee' Quotas
As migrants flood Europe from Africa and the Middle East, several countries seeking to protect their sovereignty are rebelling against the European Union’s resettlement mandates, and their influence is growing as they announce support for a potential new ally against migration, Italy.
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Europe's female imams challenge Muslim patriarchy – and fight Islamophobia
Sherin Khankan flits about the window sills, lighting wicks and placing bouquets of roses in just the right places as she prepares for Friday prayers.
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Plot to replace Europeans with refugees exposed
Millions of migrants mostly from Africa and the Middle East have swarmed Europe in the last three years – the result of what has been explained by world leaders as a war-driven “refugee” crisis.
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Venezuela opposition calls for ‘zero hour’ action against Maduro’s plan
Venezuelan opposition leaders have called for their supporters to escalate street protests and support a 24-hour national strike later this week after more than 7.1 million people rejected a government plan to rewrite the constitution.
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'At home, we couldn’t get by': more Venezuelans flee as crisis deepens
There are no luxuries in the four-room house in southern Bogotá, where 12 recently arrived Venezuelans huddle on thin mattresses under even thinner blankets to ward off the Andean mountain chill. They have no hot water, and what few furnishings they have were salvaged from a nearby dump.
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In the Shadow of the Lighthouse: North Atlantic Boston Light, Little Brewster Island
The Boston Light played an important role in the economy of the colonies by guiding thousands of trading ships to Boston wharves. It was involved with the struggles leading up to the Revolutionary War, as well as a strategic post during the war itself.
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Showing posts with label US Supreme Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US Supreme Court. Show all posts
Sunday, July 23, 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
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Sunday show 01-17-16
Oregon standoff: Occupiers remove cameras, clash with conservationists
Tensions mounted Saturday at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, where men involved in an armed standoff clashed with conservationists and accused government workers of harassing their families.
Read More
Rep. Hartzler: Empty Chair at SOTU Should Be For ‘Those Who’ve Had Their Heads Cut Off’ by ISIL
At the State of the Union on Tuesday, Rep. Vicky Hartzler (R-Mo.) said that the empty chair President Barack Obama left in the first lady’s box for victims of gun violence should have been left for “those who’ve had their heads cut off or killed through ISIL, because that was the true cause of the problem in San Bernardino.”
Read More
Newly Released Email Shows Forces Were Ready to Deploy to Benghazi
Attkisson notes in Part One of "Rescue Interrupted" that "the White House has refused to detail the involvement of President Obama -- the Commander-in-Chief -- while Americans were under attack on foreign soil."
Read More
The roots of black lives matter unveiled
The Black Lives Matter movement (BLM) casts itself as a spontaneous uprising born of inner city frustration, but is, in fact, the latest and most dangerous face of a web of well-funded communist/socialist organizations that have been agitating against America for decades.
Read More
DOJ: Children Do Not Need—and Have No Right to—Mothers
The Obama Justice Department is arguing in the United States Supreme Court that children do not need mothers. The Justice Department’s argument on the superfluity of motherhood is presented in a brief the Obama administration filed in the case of Hollingsworth v. Perry, which challenges the constitutionality of Proposition 8, the California ballot initiative that amended California’s Constitution to say that marriage involves only one man and one woman.
Read More
Chamber of Commerce: Administration on a ‘Regulatory Tear’ Til the Moving Van Backs Up to the White House Door
In a State of American Business address, U.S. Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Thomas Donohue said Thursday that the Obama administration is on a “regulatory tear” that will continue until President Barack Obama leaves the White House.
Read More
City squeezes family in court for 8 million to close business
The city of Palo Alto, California, wants a court to dismiss a lawsuit opposing its demand that the family owners of a mobile home park pay some $8 million for permission to close it down.
Read More
Oregon standoff: Occupiers remove cameras, clash with conservationists
Tensions mounted Saturday at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, where men involved in an armed standoff clashed with conservationists and accused government workers of harassing their families.
Read More
Rep. Hartzler: Empty Chair at SOTU Should Be For ‘Those Who’ve Had Their Heads Cut Off’ by ISIL
At the State of the Union on Tuesday, Rep. Vicky Hartzler (R-Mo.) said that the empty chair President Barack Obama left in the first lady’s box for victims of gun violence should have been left for “those who’ve had their heads cut off or killed through ISIL, because that was the true cause of the problem in San Bernardino.”
Read More
Newly Released Email Shows Forces Were Ready to Deploy to Benghazi
Attkisson notes in Part One of "Rescue Interrupted" that "the White House has refused to detail the involvement of President Obama -- the Commander-in-Chief -- while Americans were under attack on foreign soil."
Read More
The roots of black lives matter unveiled
The Black Lives Matter movement (BLM) casts itself as a spontaneous uprising born of inner city frustration, but is, in fact, the latest and most dangerous face of a web of well-funded communist/socialist organizations that have been agitating against America for decades.
Read More
DOJ: Children Do Not Need—and Have No Right to—Mothers
The Obama Justice Department is arguing in the United States Supreme Court that children do not need mothers. The Justice Department’s argument on the superfluity of motherhood is presented in a brief the Obama administration filed in the case of Hollingsworth v. Perry, which challenges the constitutionality of Proposition 8, the California ballot initiative that amended California’s Constitution to say that marriage involves only one man and one woman.
Read More
Chamber of Commerce: Administration on a ‘Regulatory Tear’ Til the Moving Van Backs Up to the White House Door
In a State of American Business address, U.S. Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Thomas Donohue said Thursday that the Obama administration is on a “regulatory tear” that will continue until President Barack Obama leaves the White House.
Read More
City squeezes family in court for 8 million to close business
The city of Palo Alto, California, wants a court to dismiss a lawsuit opposing its demand that the family owners of a mobile home park pay some $8 million for permission to close it down.
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.
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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
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Show Notes 07/17/2014
Thursday Show 7/17/14
Supreme Court limits
EPA global warming rules
The Supreme Court
delivered a setback to the Environmental Protection Agency on Monday,
placing limits on the sole Obama administration program already in
place to deal with power plant and factory emissions of gases blamed
for global warming.
Read More
Jack in the box robbed
again
Police agencies in two
states launched investigations Monday into armed robberies at local
outlets of chains that have declared their properties are gun-free
zones.
Read More
“Beyond BS”:
Attorney erupts over mom's shooting
Eric Sanders has been
extraordinarily patient while waiting more than nine long months for
investigators to release the official police report into the shooting
death of the unarmed suburban mother, after she apparently made a
wrong turn into a White House entrance on Oct. 3, 2013.
Read More
Armed Homeland Security
Agents in ‘Community Outreach’ to “Let People Know They’re in
the Area”
News channel WNCT 9
received calls from alarmed residents in response to reports of
numerous DHS vehicles parked outside a bankruptcy court in
Greenville, North Carolina. However, the “heavy presence” was not
because of any specific threat associated with the building.
Read More
Boehner: House Has No
Plans to Defund Unconstitutional Acts by Obama
House Speaker John
Boehner (R-Ohio) indicated today that if President Barack Obama takes
actions that exceed his constitutional authority, the House of
Representatives has no plans to use its own constitutional authority
to withhold funding from those actions.
Read More
Bipartisan Bill Would
Promote Commercial Mining--of Asteroids
A bipartisan bill
introduced in Congress last week would ensure that U.S. companies are
able to mine resources from asteroids free from “harmful
interference.”
Read More
Wednesday, July 02, 2014
Show Notes 06/29/2014
Sunday Show 6/29/14
Obama adviser reasserts
U.S. is 'Islamic country'
An Obama adviser who
ruffled feathers last year claiming the U.S. is “an Islamic country
with and Islamically compliant constitution” is reportedly at it
again. Mohamed Elibiary is a senior fellow of Obama’s Department of
Homeland Security Advisory Council.
Casselberry mom refused
to take child to hospital over vegan beliefs
Sarah Anne Markham was
arrested Tuesday on a charge of child neglect. According to
Casselberry police, a pediatrician told Markham that her baby needed
to be admitted to Florida Hospital South for treatment because the
child was dehydrated and was losing weight.
Battle between Utahs
rural counties and BLM intensifies
When Garfield County
Sheriff Danny Perkins sat down in a conference room with the national
director of the Bureau of Land Management's law enforcement
operations, he had a series of numbers in his head.
ISIS crucifies nine
people in Syrian villages
A man has survived
being crucified by Isis in Syria, after the jihadists raided his
village and nailed him to a cross for eight hours. The unnamed man
from Al-Bab, near the border with Turkey, was crucified as a
punishment, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. He managed
to survive the ordeal.
225K to see Hilary
students say no
Hillary Clinton is in
hot water over a $225,000 speaking fee she will reportedly receive
for an upcoming appearance at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
UNLV students are demanding Clinton to return what they see as an
"outrageous" speaking fee for an October event and have
criticized the school for paying her so much money at a time when
tuition is scheduled to spike by 17 percent over the next four years.
Admitting faith on
resume cuts callback chances
Wanted: Hard-working
individual with job experience, demonstrated leadership and a minimum
of two references — those with faith need not apply. Most of the
country might consider itself religious, but according to two
recently released studies admitting one’s faith on a resume can cut
the chances for a callback by more than 25 percent.
Top Reps square off on
Hobby Lobby
A top House Democrat on
Sunday suggested that religious business owners who do not provide
birth control to their employees because it violates their faith are
“discriminating against women.”
Children forced to
watch as Pakistani couple who married for love were muredered as an
example
A young couple murdered
in Pakistan barely a week after they had married for love were killed
as a warning to other girls not to marry without the permission of
their parents, according to witnesses.
Appeals court orders
atheists justify lawsuit against 911 cross
The Second Circuit
Court of Appeals has ordered American Atheists to justify its claim
that placing the Ground Zero Cross at the National 911 Museum in New
York City constitutes a “particular and concrete injury” to
atheists and "marginalizes them as American citizens."
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
"What Is the American?"
In light of the Supreme Court decision today about affirmative action, I must share this with you.
From ushistory.org
MICHEL-GUILLAUME DE CRÈVECOEUR was a French settler in the American colonies in the 1770s. Coming from France he could not believe the incredible diversity in the American colonies. Living in one area, he encountered people of English, Welsh, Scots-Irish, German, French, Irish, Swedish, Native American, and African descent. "What then is the American, this new man?" He could not be sure, but he knew it to be different from anything that could be found on the European side of the Atlantic.
Now, we did not need Federal government laws to get along during the founding of this great nation and we do not need them now. And although I know that this is a victory for liberty, it should not have gone to the United States Supreme Court. Show me where, in Article Three of the Constitution, that the Supreme Court has any say in what law which a State decides to enact is allowed to do so. It doesn't. How dare these idiots in black robes tell a State anything. The arrogance of the court system infuriates me. We need to get away from this gerbil wheel of going to the courts for everything or listening to them. They do not make law, WE THE PEOPLE DO! We decide what is good for our local community and State. We have the power, not them. Whether they make a decision that we as Constitutional Conservatives agree with or not, we need to stop going to them for decisions that effect our lives and our State. They only deal with foreign matters and that's it!
From ushistory.org
MICHEL-GUILLAUME DE CRÈVECOEUR was a French settler in the American colonies in the 1770s. Coming from France he could not believe the incredible diversity in the American colonies. Living in one area, he encountered people of English, Welsh, Scots-Irish, German, French, Irish, Swedish, Native American, and African descent. "What then is the American, this new man?" He could not be sure, but he knew it to be different from anything that could be found on the European side of the Atlantic.
Now, we did not need Federal government laws to get along during the founding of this great nation and we do not need them now. And although I know that this is a victory for liberty, it should not have gone to the United States Supreme Court. Show me where, in Article Three of the Constitution, that the Supreme Court has any say in what law which a State decides to enact is allowed to do so. It doesn't. How dare these idiots in black robes tell a State anything. The arrogance of the court system infuriates me. We need to get away from this gerbil wheel of going to the courts for everything or listening to them. They do not make law, WE THE PEOPLE DO! We decide what is good for our local community and State. We have the power, not them. Whether they make a decision that we as Constitutional Conservatives agree with or not, we need to stop going to them for decisions that effect our lives and our State. They only deal with foreign matters and that's it!
Friday, January 17, 2014
Show Notes 01/12/2014
Sunday Show 1/12/14
Obama’s use of executive power faces reckoning
at Supreme Court
Nothing less than the boundaries of executive
power are at stake Monday as the Supreme Court considers whether
President Obama violated the Constitution during his first
term.
John McCain has been Censured..
As leaders in the Republican Party, we are
obligated to fully support our Party, platform, and its candidates.
Only in times of great crisis or betrayal is it necessary to publicly
censure our leaders. Today we are faced with
both.
Carrier Pigeons Eyed As Way to Foil Hackers,
Government Snoops
Internet security breaches and government
surveillance is reviving interest in the use of carrier pigeons to
circumvent hackers and snoops. There’s plenty of historical
precedence for “pigeonets.” The ancient Egyptians were the first
to train pigeons to relay messages as far back as 2900 B.C., and
Julius Caesar used them to communicate over his far-flung
empire.
Obama donor wins bid to take over HealthCare.gov
The global consulting firm that just won a
one-year government contract to continue fixing HealthCare.gov is a
big political donor to President Obama, WND has
learned.
Delegates to the Continental Congress
On May 15, 1776, the Second Continental Congress,
meeting in Independence Hall, Philadelphia, issued “A Resolve” to
the thirteen colonies: “Adopt such a government as shall, in the
opinion of the representatives of the people, best conduce to the
safety and happiness of their constituents in particular and America
in
general.
Individual Biographies of the Delegates to the
Constitutional Convention
It has often been remarked that in the journey of
life, the young rely on energy to counteract the experience of the
old. And vice versa. What makes this Constitutional Convention
remarkable is that the delegates were both young and
experienced.http://teachingamericanhistory.org/convention/delegates/
Monday, June 24, 2013
Show Notes 06/23/2013
Show Notes Sunday
06/23/13
Fighter jets providing
training in Jordan
About a dozen U.S.
fighter jets will be flying and conducting training operations in
Jordan, poised to respond if needed to protect allies if the war in
neighboring Syria spills over the border, U.S. administration
officials said Friday.
Illegal drone business
thrives in US
Despite regulations
banning commercial drone use in the United States, a thriving black
market for drones is on the rise, sending the Federal Aviation
Administration into a
tailspin.http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2013/06/21/illegal-drone-business-thrives-in-us/?intcmp=features#ixzz2X5E7IEtw
The Summer Solstice
The June solstice
occurs when the sun is at its furthest point from the equator – it
reaches its northernmost point and the Earth’s North Pole tilts
directly towards the sun, at about 23.5 degrees.
The Supermoon
The Full moon falls on
June 23, 2013 at 11:32 UTC (6:32 a.m. CDT in the U.S.). Thus, for
many, the moon appears about as full in the June 22 evening sky as it
does on the evening of June 23.
Historic week opens as
High Court saves biggest cases for last
A historic week at the
U.S. Supreme Court may transform the rights of racial minorities and
gays, potentially cutting longstanding voting protections for blacks
and Hispanics while allowing a new wave of same-sex marriages.
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