HIGHLY POTENT NEWS THAT MIGHT CHANGE YOUR VIEWS

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VIDEO — Attention Soldiers: Who Do You Serve?

Activist Post
May 18, 2013

Adam Kokesh

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AUDIO — Philadelphia Police being EXTREMELY unprofessional regarding the arrest of Adam Kokesh

YouTube — Cameron D
May 18, 2013

UPDATE:
Call log screenshot: http://i41.tinypic.com/35idhki.png
Call log screenshot from my phone: http://tinypic.com/r/dym7n6/5
You can’t make this crap up: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_e1CgI…

Edit: AS FAR AS I CAN TELL THIS IS THE CORRECT NUMBER. I CALLED THE PHILLY POLCE DISTRICT #22 AT THE # BELOW AND RECORDED IT WITH MY ROOTED ANDROID SMARTPHONE.
Very sad.
22nd district Philly PD
215-686-3220
Call to complain if you dare.
Oh, and the best part? I remembered to inform her that I was recording the call. Share this far and wide, because she consented to the recording.

My call log: http://tinypic.com/r/dym7n6/5
My Sprint web login is currently down, as soon as I can access my cell records I will post the corresponding call length screenshots.
For those saying this is fake http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0ZiQj…

[hat tip: JG Vibes]


VIDEO — Adam Kokesh Framed

Ryan Dawson
May 19, 2013

Clearly a man is trying to plant a joint on him or it was fellow pat doing the ultimate dick move trying to plant his own shit on someone else. Adam was not resisting arrest. This is why you must ALWAYS have a camera. It’s even better than a gun. I am not supporting smoking weed or breaking the law. I am defending someone who is in jail who did not commit a crime did not have drugs and did not resist arrest.

[related video: Color of Law Thugs Kidnap Adam Kokesh]


VIDEO — Turks Blame Erdogan and FSA for Bombings in Reyhanli

Syrian Girl
May 12, 2013

Angry residents of Reyhanli cars owned by FSA refugees in Antaya ‘Turkey’. Protesters call for the step down of Erdogan, and their suppport of Assad. The people of Antakya blame Erdogan terrorist supporting foreign policy for the bombings in Reyhanli.


Trading blame over bombings: Turkey calls Syria ‘usual suspect’, Damascus accuses Erdogan [video included]

End the Lie – Independent News
May 12, 2013

A woman raises her arms and shouts as she stands on the site where car bombs exploded on May 11, 2013 near the town hall in Reyhanli (AFP Photo / Cem Genco)A woman raises her arms and shouts as she stands on the site where car bombs exploded on May 11, 2013 near the town hall in Reyhanli (AFP Photo / Cem Genco)

Turkey has been quick to blame the Assad regime for two massive car bombs that killed 43 people in a town on its border with Syria. Ankara warned it will take “all retaliatory measures necessary” raising the prospect of an escalation in the conflict.

The Syrian Information Minister dismissed Turkey’s accusations, claiming “this is not the behavior of the Syrian government.”

Omran al-Zoubi told a news conference on Sunday that “no one has the right to make false accusations,” adding that “Syria did not commit and would never commit such an act because our values would not allow that.”

“It is [Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip] Erdogan who should be asked about this act… He and his party bear direct responsibility,” Zoubi said. “As an assassin, he should resign.”

After Saturday’s bombings in Hatay province on the Turkey-Syria border, Ankara warned it would take “all retaliatory measures necessary,” raising the prospect of an escalation in the conflict.

“The attack has nothing to do with the Syrian refugees in Turkey, it’s got everything to do with the Syrian regime,” Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in an interview with Turkey’s TRT television.

He said those behind the deadly Saturday’s bombings were allegedly behind an attack on the Syrian coastal town of Banias that reportedly killed at least 62 people in early May. The London-based NGO Syrian Observatory for Human Rights blamed “the army and Alawite members of the National Defense Forces” for the mass killing in a Sunni neighborhood of the Syrian city on May 3.

London-based blogger Karl Sharro told RT the continuing escalation in Syria will have “damaging effects across its border.”

“I think what’s important now is not to rush into accusations very quickly and especially without having solid proof. I think it requires much more responsibility and commitment from all sides to hold back from escalating the situation. You can’t just really discover the perpetrators behind such an explosion within less than one day, less than 24 hours. So I think it’s a bit irresponsible of Turkey to rush into this accusation,” Sharro stated.

Ankara warned it will take “all retaliatory measures necessary” raising the prospect of an escalation in the conflict. The investigations into the bombings has almost been completed, Turkish interior minister Muammer Güler told local press, announcing that the perpetrators were “linked to the Syrian regime and intelligence agency and had nothing to do with the Syrian opposition and the refugees.

Nine people were arrested following the blasts, three of whom were said to be Syrian nationals. Top Turkish government officials, including Prime Minister Erdogan, were quick to place the blame with Syria, despite lacking any evidence at the time.

The “usual suspect” in such a horrific attack is Syrian government, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc announced after the blasts pledging to do “what is necessary” if Assad regime’s guilt is proven.

“We know that the people taking refuge in Hatay have become targets for the Syrian regime,” he said. “We think of them as the usual suspects when it comes to planning such a horrific attack.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)

Turkey reserves the right to take “every kind of measure” but so far is not planning to call an emergency NATO meeting, said foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu, while Prime Minister Erdogan announced that Turkey will take “all retaliatory measures it deems necessary.”

Provocation to disrupt Syria peace talks?

Turkish Foreign Minister Davutoğlu called the attacks a “provocation,” saying that the timing of the blasts was not coincidental, referring to the recently proposed peace talks sponsored by Russia and the US.

“Such provocation can [come to mind] in such a critical transition phase regarding Syria. It is not a coincidence that this happened when diplomatic traffic is intensifying. We invite our citizens to be prudent,” Davutoğlu told reporters during his visit in Germany on Saturday.

Russia has raised concerns that groundless accusations and any subsequent adventurous third-party action could be disruptive.

“In the terrorist attack in Turkey, Syria was accused again – as it is always blamed for everything. Someone wants to disrupt the peace conference and to push ahead with the use of military force,” Alexei Pushkov, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of Russia’s Duma stated on Twitter.

People stand on the site of a car bomb explosion on May 11, 2013 near the town hall of Reyhanli (AFP Photo / Ihlas News Agency)People stand on the site of a car bomb explosion on May 11, 2013 near the town hall of Reyhanli (AFP Photo / Ihlas News Agency)

The deadly blasts could even be an inside job, in the hope of encouraging international military action against Assad’s government, according to Marcus Papadopoulos, an editor for the UK’s Politics First magazine.

“Turkey has been pushing for intervention in Syria, Western military intervention. It’s been pushing for a no-fly zone over northern Syria,” Papadopoulos said. “Given that Turkish generals a couple of years ago were planning to provoke a war with Greece, why is it implausible that Turkish generals or members of Turkish intelligence services wouldn’t be doing the same today, to try and provoke a war against Syria and thereby bringing in NATO,” he told RT.

Residents evacuate a wounded woman to hospital after car bombs exploded on May 11, 2013 near the town hall in Reyhanli (AFP Photo / Ihlas News Agency)Residents evacuate a wounded woman to hospital after car bombs exploded on May 11, 2013 near the town hall in Reyhanli (AFP Photo / Ihlas News Agency)

Border town protests Turkey’s policy on Syria, violence spillover

Saturday’s twin car bombs exploded outside the city hall and post office, killing 43 and injuring a further hundred people and destroying local buildings in the country’s deadliest attack in more than a decade.

A third explosion was later reported in the same city. However, local press later reported that the incident was unrelated.

A person is evacuated from the site where car bombs exploded on May 11, 2013 near the town hall in Reyhanli (AFP Photo / Lale Koklu)A person is evacuated from the site where car bombs exploded on May 11, 2013 near the town hall in Reyhanli (AFP Photo / Lale Koklu)

Police reinforcements were dispatched to the city after the bombs ripped through the streets of Reyhanli, which is home to thousands of Syrians who have fled the conflict. Some 300,000 are now resident in Turkey overall. Their presence has caused some tension in the city on the Syrian border, especially among those unhappy with the influx of migrants.

Following the blasts approximately a hundred of the city’s residents took to the streets outside Turkey’s Foreign Ministry, calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Erdogan and accusing him of a failed policy towards Syria which they believe led to the assault.

Some locals have also blamed Syrian residents for bringing violence over the frontier, resulting in attacks against refugees.

“We heard that there were some reactions from local Turkish people against Syrian cars and Syrian people. Police reinforcements have been sent to prevent that sort of thing,” an anonymous Turkish government official told Reuters.

Some 60 people also marched in Ankara, Turkey’s capital following the blasts. The demonstrations were quickly dispersed.

Source: RT


VIDEO — Teargas, water cannons used against students in Chile

Russia Today
May 9, 2013

Clashes broke out in the Chilean capital Santiago on Wednesday at a student demonstration to demand free education. Water cannons were used against the protesters when they bombarded police with a hail of stones. According to police, around 37-thousand people took part in the event, but organizers put the total much higher at 80-thousand – READ MORE: http://on.rt.com/hh7k58

Footage by RT’s RUPTLY video agency: 0:020:21

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Worldwide ‘March Against Monsanto’ Protests Planned for May 25th

by Anthony Gucciardi
Natural Society

May 9, 2013

Countless individuals will soon assemble in small and large groups around the nation and the globe alike in protest against Monsanto’s genetic manipulation of the food supply. Organized under the May 25th movement known as the ‘March on Monsanto’, the massive new rally reveals how the grassroots public has truly had enough of Monsanto’s monopoly on the many staple crops that have quickly been sucked into Monsanto’s genetically modified tycoon.

It’s virtually impossible these days to enter a grocery store, even one bearing the title of ‘natural’, and not encounter at least a few items that contain genetically modified ingredients. And for quite some time, this fact was not even known to the large majority of the United States public. Many simply did not even know what a GMO was, or what it could potentially do to their bodies (or the bodies of the children who they were feeding with genetically engineered processed food).

This, of course, stems from the fact that the FDA and Monsanto have decided that you aren’t allowed to know if your food contains GMOs. Even despite the fact that peer-reviewed research has pegged Monsanto’s best selling herbicide Roundup (which is a key part of Monsanto’s Roundup-ready GMO crops) to around 37 associated diseases, the FDA says it’s perfectly safe. So safe that it’s not even necessary to label in your food. So very safe that the only study that ever examined how Roundup and GMOs affect rats throughout their lifetime found that the rats developed tumors so large that it impacted their very ability to move.

It’s madness that has been identified for a long time by alternative news writers and readers, but thanks to the success of Prop 37 and other initiatives it has now hit the general public — and they’re not happy.

[READ MORE…]