Obama Romney Sandy And The Zionists – Sheik Imran Hosein [video]
108morris108
November 8, 2012
Zionist capacity to control has limitations, Western people are waking up. Was Sandy man made?
Colorado Reps Introduce Bill to Respect States’ Rights For Marijuana Use
Activist Post
November 20, 2012
When the people of Colorado voted to legalize recreational marijuana on Election Day, there was immediate speculation as to how the federal government would deal with how it conflicted with federal laws. So far there has not been an official response from the White House or the Department of Justice, and the waters remain as murky as prosecution of medical marijuana has been.
In an attempt to preempt any violation of states’ rights by the feds, a group of Colorado Congressmen formally introduced the Respect States’ and Citizens’ Rights Act this past Friday. The bill would amend the Controlled Substances Act to exempt states where lawmakers or voters have legalized marijuana.
The bill, which was authored by Democrat Congresswoman, Diana DeGette, has bipartisan support.
In a press release Rep. DeGette said “In Colorado we’ve witnessed the aggressive policies of the federal government in their treatment of legal medicinal marijuana providers. My constituents have spoken and I don’t want the federal government denying money to Colorado or taking other punitive steps that would undermine the will of our citizens.”
The bill is also supported by Mike Coffman and other Republicans, even though some of them were opposed to marijuana legalization.
“I voted against Amendment 64 and I strongly oppose the legalization of marijuana, but I also have an obligation to respect the will of the voters given the passage of this initiative, and so I feel obligated to support this legislation,” Coffman said in the statement.
This legislation is just part of the chorus of letters to Obama’s justice department demanding that the feds leave the states alone when it comes to marijuana laws.
Reps Barney Frank and Ron Paul sent a letter to Obama encouraging him to respect state laws and to not use federal resources to prosecute pot smokers.
“Respect for the principles of democracy; respect for the states to make decisions on matters that primarily affect the residents of those states; the chance to conserve scarce federal financial resources — these we believe are many strong reasons for you to defer to the state decisions,” Paul and Frank wrote.
Another bipartisan Congressional group wrote a similar letter to Eric Holder at the Department of Justice stating,
The voters of these states chose, by a substantial margin, to forge a new and effective policy with respect to marijuana. The tide of public opinion is changing both at the ballot box and in state legislatures across the country. We believe that the collective judgment of voters and state lawmakers must be respected.
California Governor Jerry Brown, who opposes marijuana legalization, also said the federal government should respect states’ rights to decide how to regulate marijuana use on CNN’s State of the Union shortly after the election.
“It’s time for the Justice Department to recognize the sovereignty of the states. We are capable of self-government,” he said. “We don’t need some federal gendarme to come and tell us what to do. I believe in comity toward the states, that’s a decent respect”
Although this bill specifically refers to state exemptions where marijuana is concerned, it comes at a time when more states and citizens are attempting to flex their muscles against federal dictates.With White House petitions for secession of all 50 states gaining steam, a clear message is being sent for the feds to back off.
Read other articles by Activist Post Here
Asking Black Friday Shoppers about their Credit Card Debt [video]
Mark Dice
November 23, 2012
Mark Dice talks with Black Friday shoppers outside a Best Buy in Oceanside, California about what they just bought and how much credit card debt they have
http://www.Facebook.com/MarkDice
http://www.Twitter.com/MarkDice
Check out The Illuminati: Facts & Fiction in paperback on Amazon.com, or e-book on Kindle, Nook, or Google Play. http://www.amazon.com/Illuminati-Facts-Fiction-Mark-Dice/dp/0967346657/ref=sr…
Henningsen on RT: ‘Gaza is the world’s largest open air prison’ [video]
21stCenturyWireTV
November 24, 0212
21st Century Wire’s Patrick Henningsen on RT, discussing Israel’s current herding and slaughter of the region’s indigenous Palestinian people, and how the western public opinion is beginning to shift away from Israel’s outdated cruel apartheid policy and in favour of the Palestinian’s right to exist.
http://www.21stcenturywire.com
http://www.ukcolumn.org
First Nations Stop Pipeline From Being Built
Canadian Awareness Network
November 18, 2012
By Barbara Yaffe, Vancouver Sun
Governments and corporate Canada remain in denial about a new reality: aboriginal groups hold veto power over resource development.
In his just-published book, Resource Rulers; Fortune and Folly on Canada’s Road to Resources, Bill Gallagher reviews the legal victories natives have toted up since the 1980s, and draws an intriguing conclusion.
He says it’s no longer enough for companies to merely consult on resource projects, they need to invite aboriginals to become partners and co-managers in proposed developments.
Gallagher, a Kitchener resident who has worked as an oil-patch lawyer and treaty negotiator, calls the situation “the biggest under-reported business story of the last decade.”
He personally has counted up “well over” 150 legal wins for native groups, all based on provisions outlined in Canada’s Constitution.
“The native legal winning streak now simply has to be fundamentally and constructively addressed, both nationally and regionally .”
That message was reinforced last week by Assembly of First Nations chief Shawn Atleo, speaking at a gathering north of Thunder Bay. Atleo said aboriginals are prepared to take care of themselves financially, using revenue from resources they believe they own.
Gallagher says natives have become unrelenting because their legal wins have convinced them of their clout.
That attitude is playing out at the moment in their inflexible opposition to the Northern Gateway pipeline in B.C. – despite the fact some native groups in the province have signed on to the project.
He says ultimately it will be the native people who will have the major voice in deciding risks that can be tolerated in transporting bitumen.
In the same vein, Gallagher labels “inconceivable” any oil development off B.C.’s coast – in an area where ownership rights remain unclear.
“Until we have true resource-power sharing with natives, the fate of Canada’s resource sector will be in the hands of native strategists in their new capacity as resource rulers.”
The aboriginals also are benefiting from the help of sophisticated eco-activists, though occasionally, they’ve spurned such help in favour of resource revenue and jobs on offer.
Natives, asserts the author, are “in the driver’s seat,” with power outmuscling that found even in the Prime Minister’s Office.
Provincially, says Gallagher, “Only Quebec has risen to address this complex social justice and environmental challenge.”
He points to a 2002 Paix des Braves agreement signed by Ottawa, Quebec City and the James Bay Cree.
The 50-year deal, which followed decades of court battles, mandates sharing among the parties of decision-making and revenue relating to mining, forestry and hydro power development on Cree land in northern Quebec.
The Cree, expecting to reap $3.5 billion from the accord, have opened an embassy in Quebec City in the spirit of nation-to-nation dealings.
B.C., Gallagher says, is making progress in engaging aboriginals in resource decision-making while Ontario is by far the poorest performer on this front.
Former premier Gordon Campbell, who presided over a 2010 Olympics that fully recognized B.C.’s aboriginals, received credit from the author for being the Canadian leader who has tried hardest to bring about a reconciliation with native Indians.
In Alberta, the oilpatch has yet to realize, “only natives can green the oil-sands and thereby imbue Canada’s bitumen with a measure of international respectability.”
As for the corporate sector, Gallagher says too many business executives continue to take native people for granted.
Perhaps in recognition of the growing influence of aboriginal people across the country, a trio of aboriginal lieutenants-governor have been appointed: Ontario’s James Bartleman in 2002; B.C.’s Steven Point in 2007 and New Brunswick’s Gray-don Nicholas in 2009.
Source: Canada.com
‘Israeli regime could break truce’ [video]
PressTV
November 23, 2012
committed to any long-term peace accord in the region as they are always willing to kill innocent Palestinians, a Gaza official tells Press TV.
Palestinian resistance movements Hamas and Islamic Jihad have signed a ceasefire agreement with the Tel Aviv regime to mark the end of the recent violent Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip.
Press TV has conducted an interview with Ihab al-Ghsain, chief of the government media office from Gaza.
http://youtu.be/UEdn8FIRit8
Follow our Facebook on: https://www.facebook.com/presstvchannel
Follow our Twitter on: http://twitter.com/presstv
Scene of Gaza-Israel border shooting after IDF kills Palestinian [video]
Russia Today
November 23, 2012
One adult has been killed and at least 10 teenagers injured after Israeli soldiers opened fire at the Gaza-Israel border, Gaza medical authorities claimed. The incident happened east of the city of Khan Yunis in southern Gaza. The clashes erupted after a group of Palestinian farmers wandered into the disputed 300-meter buffer zone along the border – DETAILS http://on.rt.com/77srpi
RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/+RT
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.
