Showing posts with label covering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label covering. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

Press covering Michelle O shoved, screamed at, blocked from events in China...

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Press covering Michelle O shoved, screamed at, blocked from events in China...

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Obama pollster: reporters should stop covering polls in 2014


posted on Dec, 31 2013 @ 08:26 PM


Well, considering that most “polls” are extremely small numbers of people in comparison to the population, whereby the statistics are skewed to favor a certain agenda or rhetoric, and then used by all major media outlets as “gospel”…

This actually surprises me. For once.


I can’t even take this seriously though. Someone got their panties in a bunch because they found out all the pathological lies are starting to catch up to them and need a quick fix. Shocking. If anyone believes the nonsense that these polls produce, I have a bridge to sell them.


Sometimes I wish you could buy common sense like junk food.




AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In Breaking Political News



Obama pollster: reporters should stop covering polls in 2014

Friday, September 27, 2013

Ex-pharmacist gets 14 years in federal prison for covering hospital surfaces with same toxic substance doctors inject into children











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(NaturalNews) It can still be found in virtually every influenza vaccine available at your local CVS, Rite Aid or Walgreens pharmacy, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) maintains an official position that it is perfectly safe when injected into a child’s arm. But the heavy metal mercury has landed a former New York pharmacist in the slammer following a conviction that he intentionally spread the substance on surfaces throughout the Albany Medical Center in New York out of anger over a hospital bill.

According to reports, the saga began when 60-year-old Martin Kimber of Ruby, New York, underwent two separate treatments at the Albany Medical Center back in December 2010. According to CSMonitor.com, Kimber was outraged when he received the bill for these treatments, which he tried to contend were too high. When hospital administrators denied these claims and explained that the charges were, in fact, correct, Kimber apparently went ballistic and decided to seek “revenge.”


Official court documents explain that, over the course of several months, Kimber applied at least six pounds of mercury, which he had apparently stolen, to surfaces throughout the facility’s cafeteria and elsewhere. He reportedly engaged in this activity on at least four different occasions, spreading mercury on the cafeteria salad bar, inside a toaster, inside an ice cream freezer and even directly on some chicken tenders that were later found to have made a hospital employee sick.


“Kimber’s action placed … others in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury because he placed the mercury in food and food containment areas where cafeteria patrons would be directly exposed,” reads a federal agent’s sworn affidavit. “[Kimber] was observed reaching into the ice cream cooler while cupping something in his hand and engaging in a pouring action. He did not take anything from this or other food stations, nor did he stay to eat any food.”


It was later confirmed through toll road records and security footage that Kimber had, indeed, been the culprit in each of these acts of “domestic terrorism,” to pull the words directly from official reports, and police later tracked him down and searched his vehicle and residence. Agents apparently found 21 firearms and roughly 50 knives in Kimber’s car and a Nazi swastika on a wall inside his home.


Kimber’s actions were obviously malicious and designed to harm innocent people, which clearly warrants his sentence. But what is most interesting about many of the reports on the case is their repeated use of terms like “highly hospital. But when a drug company poisons children with it, we call it “medicine.”

If mercury is really as toxic as all these reports claim, however — and it truly is, as we have been saying around here for years — then the vaccine industry is just as guilty as Kimber of committing crimes against humanity. Except vaccines have harmed far more people than the mere handful that ate Kimber’s mercury-laced foods. When will the vaccine companies and their executives be held criminally liable for domestic terrorism against the millions of children who have been forcibly vaccinated with mercury-containing vaccines?


Sources for this article include:


http://www.syracuse.com


http://www.dailyfreeman.com


http://www.csmonitor.com


http://science.naturalnews.com





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How consistent hospital error is having a deadly effect on the healthcare system

New Study Shows Need for a Major Overhaul of How United States Manages Chronic Illness (press release)


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Ex-pharmacist gets 14 years in federal prison for covering hospital surfaces with same toxic substance doctors inject into children

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Snowden suspected of covering electronic tracks








FILE – A Sunday, June 9, 2013, file photo provided by The Guardian newspaper in London shows Edward Snowden, who worked as a contract employee at the U.S. National Security Agency, in Hong Kong. The U.S. government’s efforts to determine which highly classified materials Snowden took from the National Security Agency have been frustrated by Snowden’s sophisticated efforts to cover his digital trail by deleting or bypassing electronic logs, government officials tell the AP. Such logs would have showed what information Snowden viewed or downloaded. (AP Photo/The Guardian, File)





FILE – A Sunday, June 9, 2013, file photo provided by The Guardian newspaper in London shows Edward Snowden, who worked as a contract employee at the U.S. National Security Agency, in Hong Kong. The U.S. government’s efforts to determine which highly classified materials Snowden took from the National Security Agency have been frustrated by Snowden’s sophisticated efforts to cover his digital trail by deleting or bypassing electronic logs, government officials tell the AP. Such logs would have showed what information Snowden viewed or downloaded. (AP Photo/The Guardian, File)













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(AP) — The U.S. government’s efforts to determine which highly classified materials leaker Edward Snowden took from the National Security Agency have been frustrated by Snowden’s sophisticated efforts to cover his digital trail by deleting or bypassing electronic logs, government officials told The Associated Press. Such logs would have showed what information Snowden viewed or downloaded.


The government’s forensic investigation is wrestling with Snowden’s apparent ability to defeat safeguards established to monitor and deter people looking at information without proper permission, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the sensitive developments publicly.


The disclosure undermines the Obama administration’s assurances to Congress and the public that the NSA surveillance programs can’t be abused because its spying systems are so aggressively monitored and audited for oversight purposes: If Snowden could defeat the NSA’s own tripwires and internal burglar alarms, how many other employees or contractors could do the same?


In July, nearly two months after Snowden’s earliest disclosures, NSA Director Keith Alexander declined to say whether he had a good idea of what Snowden had downloaded or how many NSA files Snowden had taken with him, noting an ongoing criminal investigation.


NSA spokeswoman Vanee Vines told the AP that Alexander “had a sense of what documents and information had been taken,” but “he did not say the comprehensive investigation had been completed.” Vines would not say whether Snowden had found a way to view and download the documents he took, without the NSA knowing.


In defending the NSA surveillance programs that Snowden revealed, Deputy Attorney General James Cole told Congress last month that the administration effectively monitors the activities of employees using them.


“This program goes under careful audit,” Cole said. “Everything that is done under it is documented and reviewed before the decision is made and reviewed again after these decisions are made to make sure that nobody has done the things that you’re concerned about happening.”


The disclosure of Snowden’s hacking prowess inside the NSA also could dramatically increase the perceived value of his knowledge to foreign governments, which would presumably be eager to learn any counter-detection techniques that could be exploited against U.S. government networks.


It also helps explain the recent seizure in Britain of digital files belonging to David Miranda — the partner of Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald — in an effort to help quantify Snowden’s leak of classified material to the Guardian newspaper. Authorities there stopped Miranda last weekend as he changed planes at Heathrow Airport while returning home to Brazil from Germany, where Miranda had met with Laura Poitras, a U.S. filmmaker who has worked with Greenwald on the NSA story.


Snowden, a former U.S. intelligence contractor, was employed by Booz Allen Hamilton in Hawaii before leaking classified documents to the Guardian and The Washington Post. As a system administrator, Snowden had the ability to move around data and had access to thumb drives that would have allowed him to transfer information to computers outside the NSA’s secure system, Alexander has said.


In his job, Snowden purloined many files, including ones that detailed the U.S. government’s programs to collect the metadata of phone calls of U.S. citizens and copy Internet traffic as it enters and leaves the U.S., then routes it to the NSA for analysis.


Officials have said Snowden had access to many documents but didn’t know necessarily how the programs functioned. He dipped into compartmentalized files as systems administrator and took what he wanted. He managed to do so for months without getting caught. In May, he flew to Hong Kong and eventually made his way to Russia, where that government has granted him asylum.


NBC News reported Thursday that the NSA was “overwhelmed” in trying to figure what Snowden had stolen and didn’t know everything he had downloaded.


Insider threats have troubled the administration and Congress, particularly in the wake of Bradley Manning, a young soldier who decided to leak hundreds of thousands of sensitive documents in late 2009 and early 2010.


Congress had wanted to address the insider threat problem in the 2010 Intelligence Authorization Act, but the White House asked for the language to be removed because of concerns about successfully meeting a deadline. In the 2013 version, Congress included language urging the creation of an automated, insider-threat detection program.


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Snowden suspected of covering electronic tracks