https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjYMWWlsScc
FK – Or maybe it’s learned slavishness. The submissive have been surviving to breed for a very long time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjYMWWlsScc
FK – Or maybe it’s learned slavishness. The submissive have been surviving to breed for a very long time.
While the order does not in and of itself create new taxes or fees, it lays a groundwork for others to do so, without ever calling it an Internet tax. Specifically, states and local municipalities can now increase taxes on property owned by Internet Service Providers because public utilities are allowed to be taxed at a much higher rate than other businesses. Wheeler and others who sold Americans on the Net Neutrality scheme point to the Internet Tax Freedom Act (ITFA) and say that it prevents “state and local jurisdictions from imposing new taxes on the Internet,” but since the Internet is now considered a public utility, it would be the providers — not the Internet itself — that would be taxed. Of course the ISPs will have to consider those taxes as business costs and pass them along to consumers. The result is going to be higher and higher Internet bills — the very thing Wheeler and his ilk say will not happen.
To make matters worse, the ITFA comes up for reauthorization in September, and though it has been reauthorized five times, there is no guarantee that will happen again. If reathorization fails, states and local municipalities could add to their coffers by taxing the Internet directly as well as by taxing the property of ISPs at the higher rate allowed by the Title II reclassification. Furthermore, there is a difference between the theory of the order not creating new taxes and the reality of the federal government passing regulations and then expanding them to something larger.
FK – Imagine that. What’s next, subsidizing net access for the poor? Betcha ‘right wing extremists’ and other undesirables won’t qualify.
Pair this with the ongoing effort to mainstream the net and sweep all non PC content into some dark corner that most of the sheeple will never see.
Analysts say the stars are aligned for crude to hit a rock-bottom price sometime this quarter.
Iran remains the wild card for the price of oil, and it is now past the March 31 deadline to reach a framework agreement on its nuclear program. But analysts expect a deal will be made and the basic framework will be initially vague, with more details to come later.
“There’s 20 million barrels in floating storage at the moment off the coast of Iran … which could hit the market pretty quickly,” said Dominic Haywood, crude and product analyst at Energy Aspects. Haywood said it will take some time for Iran to make a full release of its oil. Sanctions have cut Iranian exports to about half the 2.5 million barrels it was exporting in 2012.
FK – I don’t pretend to understand how the ‘oil markets’ work or whatever but if the common Joe is having to over pay for a product he requires to survive and have some actual quality of life because of it then the wheeler dealers need to be shut down or ‘regulated'(as much as I hate that concept for most things) out of existence and returned to a simple producer, distributor paradigm if that’s possible.
There’s nothing wrong with getting rich, if you’re doing it honestly and not screwing people in the process.
And what else is involved in this process?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vrq51A12cgs
FK – The universities, full of Marxist trash as they are, are third or fourth in line for the war crimes trials.
FK – How about ‘Liberty Now!’?
I count my college years as some of the best of my life, but at that time I didn’t understand how my Marxist/ignorant professors weren’t teaching what really mattered.
Students who borrow should be required to submit some kind of a business plan: future job projections, future possible earnings, etc. But even more the whole ‘college experience’ needs to change. Get the Marxist professors out of the classrooms. They don’t belong in this country much less as indoctrinators of young people. Lots of courses could be taught online, for affordable prices. Testing could involve what students know, not regurgitating paragraphs at random.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5tUxu_Oa9c
Between $5 to $10 million, to be more precise. While this project seems ideal for a large humanitarian organization to back, the response has been lukewarm. Lissner said that representatives of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, for example, “don’t see the point in the male version” because their primary focus in contraceptives is options for women in developing nations. ” The science of contraception for men is less advanced, as is the proof of concept for men using contraception in the poorest countries of the world,” said Kellie Sloan, director of family planning at the Foundation, in a statement to Motherboard.
snip
Count big pharma out as well—unlike big-ticket products, Vasalgel doesn’t have the ability to make the money back since it’s a one-time procedure using materials that are relatively inexpensive to make and distribute. Lissner pointed out that if the average person hits puberty at 13, and doesn’t want to have a kid until they’re in their mid-30s, that’s more than 20 years worth of contraception from which pharmaceutical companies can profit.
“The big pharma companies like drugs that people will take for years and years, that they have to take every day,” Sokal said. By contrast, the makers of RISUG have bragged that it costs less than the syringe used to inject it; Vasalgel would cost less than your typical $800 IUD.
“[Pharmaceutical companies] have a target that if they can’t make $500 million a year on a new drug, it’s not worth their time and energy to invest in it,” Sokal said, citing his conversations with pharmaceutical reps. By that estimate, it would take 625,000 injections a year to be of interest to big pharma—which is about 125,000 more procedures than there are annual vasectomies in the US.
FK – I’d have been interested 30 years ago. There were always three words that struck fear in my heart: ‘child support court.’
Once proven ‘safe’ this should be done to every 14-year-old male, not mandatory, but at an affordable price. How much would we save in ‘entitlements.’ Oh, I forgot, when ‘they’ birthed the welfare state they knew full well what the outcome would be: generational constituents.
Now we need to get to work on gene therapy or whatever it would be called, so that no one has to be born ugly or disabled in some way. Yes we can, probably preferably through a mostly ‘free market’ while finding a way to deal with the runaway greed that seems to infect the drug industry.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eB2z4raDhP8
FK – The ‘truth’ is a tenuous thing. This is war. That usually means half truths, partial truths and outright deception.
FK – Who benefits from war? Hmmmm…..
And another version:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36gR9a-Db90
FK – Many in the military will simply choose their living or their ignorance over Liberty. Always been that way, always will be. Time to stop asking absurd questions and prepare for what will be required.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YM3UNjmBznA
FK – The real question might be who or what really started all this and/or why and does it still matter? We know what the evangelicals would answer, but what is the reality?
Are money and subterfuge and religion(but I repeat myself) the only tools they use in our subjugation or do they have other means at their disposal?
I wouldn’t want to see the ‘white’ race disappear, though I think the only danger of that is generations down the road if the undeveloped races keep breeding and we don’t. But population seems to be on the decline in Europe and here.
Not sure of the rates in Africa and Asia. I do think there are too many people. Yeah we could fit everyone into Texas but who the hell wants to exist like that, especially in Texas? Well, East Texas has hills and is pretty country.
The best and the brightest should be having children but the opposite is true.
Most ‘white’ people are mutts anyway, in this country. The English used to consider the Irish to be a separate race and on and on. I don’t have a conniption fit if I see a mix-raced couple. I know the smarter dog is often a mutt.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCvGZzsXRZU
FK – And another version:
FK – These folks may genuinely believe they’re searching for ‘truth.’ But how sad, when we’re losing our country and the Bill of Rights, which is what really makes us exceptional, that so many are still arguing over 3000-year-old tribal propaganda that was written over a long period of time by a lot of different people so they could push their version of what god/man/religion whatever is/was/is supposed to be. Time to wake up and grow up and stand up and stop waiting for the world to end.
— Rubio & Jordan introduce bill to repeal D.C. gun ban
ACTION: Contact your Senators and Representative. Ask them to cosponsor the GOA-backed Rubio/Jordan bill (S. 874/H.R. 1701).
Victory over Choke Point and United Nations!
We had hoped that a newly invigorated Senate Republican majority would have been a little more enthusiastic. But, in the end, we squeaked out a couple of victories on the Budget Resolution last week — and blocked the Bloomberg brigade from ever getting to first base.
FK – The republicrats are back to standing around with their fingers in the dike. Pathetic creatures. See next post.
More Second Amendment news, good and bad:
FK – April 19, the day they shot back, should be our biggest holiday.
FK – I call them communists. I don’t apologize for it. We MUST stop apologizing to our domestic blood enemies for calling them what they are and for saying what should be done to them.
Guns in trunks bill scores walkover victory in Tennessee
FK – And one from the far side:
FK – Do rapists commonly carry paper bags thick enough for that cow? If so we can hope the creature someday sees the need for self defense. That’s the only way it may learn.
FK – “College is for a larnin’ yer Marxist ideahology. All others step aside or bow down and kiss whatever we stick in yer faces, and they ah ain’t no limit ta that.”
We need to begin kicking this trash out of our country before it’s too late. The ‘gun rights’ battle is only one of dozens in this war and those who claim to love Liberty aren’t doing as well on the other fronts…
FK – Doesn’t surprise me, religion was created as another way to help keep the slaves working. On top of that, look under the hood on most of these ‘clergy persons’ and you’ll find a Marxist motor.
FK – And once again, this is why we desperately need a militia force in every county:
The tale told by Anthony Mitchell of how he and his family were robbed of these rights is compelling and cautionary.
Mitchell was sitting at home in Henderson, Nevada, on the morning of July 10, 2011, when the phone rang. Officer Christopher Worley of the Henderson Police Department was calling Mitchell to tell him that the police were going to take over his house. In order to gain “tactical advantage” over Mitchell’s next door neighbor, Officer Worley reportedly explained, police were going to set up shop in Mitchell’s house.
Mitchell was not asked if he would mind such a surrender of his home. The officer was informing Mitchell that they would be commandeering his house. In his legal complaint against the Henderson Police Department, Mitchell claims that he didn’t want to get involved with the police department’s operation against his neighbor and accordingly refused to let police occupy his home.
Not surprisingly, Mitchell’s refusal didn’t sit well with law enforcement. Again, according to Mitchell’s complaint, Officer David Cawthorn of the Henderson Police Department, one of the members of the force who were named as defendants in Mitchell’s lawsuit, “outlined the defendants’ plan in his official report: ‘It was determined to move to 367 Evening Side and attempt to contact Mitchell. If Mitchell answered the door he would be asked to leave. If he refused to leave he would be arrested for Obstructing a Police Officer. If Mitchell refused to answer the door, force entry would be made and Mitchell would be arrested.’”
It isn’t hard in the these times of police militarization to predict what happened next.
Just before noon, five (or more) officers of the Henderson Police Department “arrayed themselves in front of plaintiff Anthony Mitchell’s house and prepared to execute their plan,” according to the narrative laid out in Mitchell’s lawsuit.
After showing up at Mitchell’s door, the officers allegedly “banged forcefully” on his door and demanded that Mitchell and his family open up.
Seconds later, Mitchell claims, “officers … smashed open his front door using a metal ram.”
Standing in his living room in shock, Mitchell says that the officers “aimed their weapons” at him and ordered him “to lie down on the floor.” Fearing for his life, Mitchell complied.
FK – The trash involved in that fiasco should be arrested, tried and executed. In reality the militia should have been called so they could have dealt with them that day in the way they so rightly deserved.
It has been roundly condemned around the nation. Seattle’s mayor went so far as to issue a travel ban to Indiana for city workers, while San Francisco’s mayor is considering a ban on city funds being sent to the Hoosier state.
Nevertheless, the ‘extremely controversial’ RFRA is based on a 1993 Federal Law, which is also dubbed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. It was signed into law by ‘right-wing extremist’ president Bill Clinton.
FK – This is all ‘political,’ something else for the ameri-commies to scream and froth at the mouth about.
The entire issue illustrates common human insanity, one absurd ‘extreme’ against another, calling what amounts to a birth defect or mental illness a ‘sin’ and making a political issue out of what should be a health issue.
FK – This is supposed to be a ‘free country.’ If two nuts want to ‘marry'(very loosely defined) each other let them have at it as long as they’re not harming anyone else or their property. By the same token ‘christians’ or whomever have the right to teach their children it’s a ‘sin,’ which is just as insane.
“I’ve seen what’s happened with the decline of tobacco,” said Furnish. “Central and eastern Kentucky need a new crop. If we can build an industry around hemp here, it’ll be beneficial to growers.”
Furnish is also the chair of the Kentucky Hemp Industry Council, a 16-member group from around the state and nation that represents various stakeholder in hemp’s future, from farmers and crop processors to industries and retailers that want to process and sell hemp products. Hemp’s fiber and oil can be used in a multitude of goods, including food, paper, building materials, beauty products and much more.
Kentucky is entering its second year of industrial hemp pilot projects. The first round in 2014 produced a wealth of data about production methods, seed varieties, harvesting, processing techniques and uses for harvested hemp.
FK – How sad that in a ‘free country” farmers have to get permission to grow a crop…