Showing posts with label Scam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scam. Show all posts

Thursday, February 20, 2014

‘I am a Ukrainian Video’ Exposed As Kony-Style Scam


Regime change propaganda goes viral


Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
February 20, 2014


The video is meant to push the idea that the Ukrainian revolt is grass roots, but its origins can be traced back to the U.S. State Department.


RELATED: Exposed: Ukrainian ‘Protesters’ Backed by Kony 2012-Style Scam


RELATED: The Truth About The Ukraine Crisis


Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/paul.j.watson.71
FOLLOW Paul Joseph Watson @ https://twitter.com/PrisonPlanet


*********************


Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Infowars.com and Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


This article was posted: Thursday, February 20, 2014 at 12:28 pm










Infowars



‘I am a Ukrainian Video’ Exposed As Kony-Style Scam

‘I am a Ukrainian’ Video Exposed As Kony-Style Scam

‘I am a Ukrainian’ Video Exposed As Kony-Style Scam
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Regime change propaganda goes viral


Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
February 20, 2014


The video is meant to push the idea that the Ukrainian revolt is grass roots, but its origins can be traced back to the U.S. State Department.


RELATED: Exposed: Ukrainian ‘Protesters’ Backed by Kony 2012-Style Scam


RELATED: The Truth About The Ukraine Crisis


Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/paul.j.watson.71
FOLLOW Paul Joseph Watson @ https://twitter.com/PrisonPlanet


*********************


Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Infowars.com and Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


This article was posted: Thursday, February 20, 2014 at 1:41 pm









Prison Planet.com




Read more about ‘I am a Ukrainian’ Video Exposed As Kony-Style Scam and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Beware Republican Scam Donation Sites

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Beware Republican Scam Donation Sites

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Lesbian Server Caught In Discrimination Scam

Lesbian Server Caught In Discrimination Scam
http://thedailynewsreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/4f2ee__Gay-Protest-SC-300x225.jpg


Photo credit: Philocrites (Creative Commons)


Many gay rights activists live in a state of perpetual offense, finding evidence of homophobia and bigotry around every corner. Despite the fact that their lifestyle is almost universally accepted in today’s culture, many homosexuals choose to present themselves as victims.


In one recent case, a lesbian waitress in New Jersey did not merely exaggerate an incident to maximize sympathy – she invented the entire event.


After posting a photo of a credit card receipt, ostensibly completed by one of her guests, onto her Facebook page earlier this month, Dayna Morales became a local celebrity for her stance against discrimination. Instead of a tip, the receipt showed the handwritten declaration: “I’m sorry but I cannot tip because I do not agree with your lifestyle.”


She went on a media tour to detail the scenario, declaring on multiple occasions that her guest wrote the offensive remark. The only problem, it seems, is that the family accused of this deed became aware of Morales’ crusade.


A married couple, who asked to have their identity hidden, came forward with an identical receipt from the same night. The only difference was in the way it was filled out. Instead of adding a contentious note to the receipt, the family actually left an $ 18 tip on the $ 93.55 bill.


The family produced bank records that show their account was debited for the cost of the meal plus the tip. Furthermore, the left-handed wife who filled out the receipt said she could not have easily made a slash mark pictured on the hoax receipt.


The bottom line, she said, is that the couple always tips good servers, “and we would never leave a note like that.”


Her husband agreed, noting he supports gay marriage rights and did not vote for Gov. Chris Christie because of the Republicans’ stance on the issue.


Morales continues to stick by her story, and the restaurant has declined to comment. Unfortunately, a number of individuals have apparently also been duped, as Morales previously confirmed she had received money from individuals near and far to make up for her supposedly lost tip.


As with race-baiters like Al Sharpton, homosexual activists must resort to outright lies to further their cause. Instead of celebrating the fact that America is overwhelmingly acceptant of their lifestyle, fraudsters like Morales prefer to create a false narrative of persecution and intolerance.


–B. Christopher Agee


Have an idea for a story? Email us at tips@westernjournalism.com


Photo credit: Philocrites (Creative Commons)



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Read more about Lesbian Server Caught In Discrimination Scam and other interesting subjects concerning Opinion Columns at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

The Biggest Scam In The History Of Mankind (Debt Ceiling Truth)


More: http://www.hiddensecretsofmoney.com You are about to learn one of the biggest secrets in the history of the world…it’s a secret that has huge effects for everyone who lives on this planet. Most people can feel deep down that something isn’t quite right with the world economy, but few know what it is. Gone are the days where a family can survive on just one paycheck…every day it seems that things are more and more out of control, yet only one in a million understand why. You are about to discover the system that is ultimately responsible for most of the inequality in our world today. The powers that be DO NOT want you to know about this, as this system is what has kept them at the top of the financial food-chain for the last 100 years…


Learning this will change your life, because it will change the choices that you make. If enough people learn it, it will change the world…because it will change the system . For this is the biggest Hidden Secret Of Money. Never in human history have so many been plundered by so few, and it’s all accomplished through this…The Biggest Scam In The History Of Mankind.


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The Biggest Scam In The History Of Mankind (Debt Ceiling Truth)

Friday, October 11, 2013

McAuliffe investor in "dead people" scam


(WASHINGTON POST) Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe was one of dozens of investors with a Rhode Island estate planner charged with defrauding insurers by using the stolen identities of terminally ill people, according to court documents filed Wednesday by federal prosecutors in Providence.


McAuliffe’s name appeared on a lengthy list of investors with Joseph A. Caramadre, an attorney and accountant who obtained the identities of dying people to set up annuities that ultimately cost insurance companies millions of dollars, the documents say.


The list also included the law firm of a former Rhode Island Supreme Court justice, a Roman Catholic monsignor, a former Cranston, R.I. police chief, and a bookmaker, according to The Providence Journal, which first reported McAuliffe’s investment Wednesday.




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McAuliffe investor in "dead people" scam

Friday, August 16, 2013

Drivers warned of new "flash for cash" insurance scam


The criminals can make money by putting in false personal injury claims for whiplash, billing insurance firms for loss of earnings, or submitting fake bills for vehicle storage, recovery, repairs and replacement car hire.




“The problem is a growing problem,” he told the BBC.


“Financially it costs insurers £392m a year. That impacts on motorists as it’s an extra £50 to £100 on every person’s premium, so that’s a financial cost.


“[There are] emotional costs [as] if you’re involved in a crash you could well lose your confidence, and if your passengers are children they may well become wary of being passengers in cars, and of course you may get injured or killed.”


“Flash for cash” is a variation on the well-known car insurance scam known as “crash for cash”, in which criminals slam on their brakes for no reason, forcing the victim to smash into the back of their vehicle.


Similar insurance claims are then made by the fraudster, with the same risks posed to the innocent motorist they have targeted.


In February, four conmen were jailed at Reading Crown Court in Berkshire after the death of Baljinder Kaur Gill, a 34-year-old driver killed in a car crash that had been staged to claim a £20,000 insurance payout.


The incident was the first time a “cash for crash” scam was known to have caused the death of a driver.




Crime News – UK Crime News



Drivers warned of new "flash for cash" insurance scam

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Billion-Dollar Scam In a Bottle: Why Vitamins Could Be Useless—or Even Shorten Your Lifespan



The latest advice from the medical community? Don"t take your vitamins.








If you"re like roughly half of your fellow Americans, you probably popped a multi this morning. As the slightly acrid taste lingered on your tongue, you felt good knowing that something so quick and easy would help safeguard your health.


Multivitamins are the most popular dietary supplement on Earth. But here’s the sobering reality: They may be simply useless—or worse.


For the last several years, a Mount Fuji of evidence has piled up to show that multivitamins don’t do much of anything for the health of the average person. Though less conclusive, a growing body of evidence suggests that they may even shorten your life. Unless you are taking vitamins to address a specific deficiency, malnutrition or illness, gulping down a multivitamin in hopes of preventing disease or cheating the Grim Reaper may be one of the most prevalent medical myths of our time.


Yet Americans aren’t getting the message. In fact, as the economy remains stagnant, we are taking more vitamins than ever in the hopes that we can avoid a costly doctor’s visit. However misguided our thinking, there’s one sure bet on vitamins: With annual sales of more than $ 20 billion, there are pots of money to be made for an industry that operates in the shadows —money so big that hedge funds are tripping over themselves to get in on the action.


The victim is not just your wallet. It might be your health.


A look at the science


As recently as 2002, the Journal of the American Medical Association recommended that “all adults take one multivitamin daily.” Your doctor probably told you to take one, confident that her advice reflected the scientific consensus. Your friends or family members may nudge you to jump on the vitamin train, and share their favorite brands and doses.


But for the last several years, many doctors have begun to reverse their previous recommendations. Two gigantic studies have caused what Prevention magazine called a “sea change” in clinical thinking.


The first study, published by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality in 2006, combed through 63 randomized, controlled trials (the highest standard of research) on multivitamins. Turns out they did absolutely nothing to prevent cancer or heart disease in most people, with the exception of those in developing countries, where nutritional deficiencies are common. In a second paper, published in 2009, scientists at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center followed 160,000 postmenopausal women for about 10 years, and found that multivitamins did zilch to prevent cancer, heart disease and all causes of death, regardless of what the women were eating (See PDF here).


There’s more: In a 2010 study, a team of French researchers, who published their work in the International Journal of Epidemiology, tracked over 8,000 volunteers who took either a multivitiamin or a dummy pill every day for six years. Results? The vitamin-takers showed no improvement in health or well-being over the placebo group.


Jaakko Mursu, a nutritional scientist, was among those in the medical community who had grown skeptical of multivitamins. So he led a team of researchers to study the issue. Even he was shocked by what he found, which was published as the Iowa Women"s Health Study: Older women who took multivitamins were 6 percent more likely to die than others. This was true even though the women taking the vitamins tended to have healthier lifestyles than those who didn"t (calcium was the only vitamin or mineral associated with decreased risk).


Useless is one thing. But harmful? That"s really turning conventional wisdom upside-down.


So what’s the problem?


People take multivitamins under the theory that they act as a form of insurance against anything lacking in their diets. We hear all the time how we’re not getting enough fruits and vegetables, right?


Well, yes. But most of us in a rich country like the United States do, in fact, have a diet that is varied and plentiful enough that we don’t have specific vitamin deficiencies. We’re not keeling over from scurvy or rickets. In fact, those among us who take multivitamins and other vitamin supplements are actually the least likely to need them. Vitamin users tend to have higher levels of education, smoke less, exercise more, and choose healthier foods than non-users.


Even if you do have a specific deficiency, which a doctor would be able to determine through blood work and other diagnostic tools, it does not necessarily follow that a pill made in a laboratory is the way to get those nutrients. The vitamin industry is poorly regulated, and those little pills are not required to go through rigorous safety and efficacy tests. Current laws make it extremely difficult for the FDA to ban harmful ingredients once they are discovered—the battle over supplements containing ephedra, purported to reduce weight and increase energy, is a case in point. Despite a tsumani of evidence of the ingredient"s harmful, even fatal, effects, a 2004 FDA ban was challenged by manufacturers, and eventually overturned in court, only to be restored in 2006 in the U.S. Court of Appeals.


Unlike medicines, vitamin packages, for the most part, are not required to alert consumers to harmful side-effects. And then there’s the problem of illegal sales of counterfeit vitamins, nutrients and supplements over the Web, not to mention the possibility of contamination. The term “natural,” frequently used in marketing vitamins, is reassuring to consumers, but means basically nothing: hemlock is natural, but you"d probably not want to take it as a supplement. Just ask Socrates.


It’s also possible to overdose on vitamins. Between the food you eat during the course of a day (including items like cereal fortified with vitamins and minerals) and the supplements you ingest, you could be getting way over the recommended amount of a given item. Trader Joe’s Women’s Once Daily Multivitamin & Mineral supplement, for example, contains 200 percent of the recommended amount of Vitamin C, 286 percent of the recommended dosage of selenium, and over 400 percent of what you need in the way of Vitamin B12.  More is better, right? Wrong.


According to Norman Hord, associate professor in the department of Food Science and Human Nutrition at Michigan State University, too much could hurt you. “Excesses of all nutrients, from water, to iron, to water-soluble B vitamins, can potentially cause toxicities,” he says. “People who take vitamins and minerals in amounts above the established upper limits of the Dietary Reference Intakes (DRIs) may harm tissues where the vitamin is stored in their body…That’s why you shouldn’t take more than the recommended amount.”


High doses of folic acid have been associated with higher risk of precancerous colon polyps. Too much beta carotene has been linked to lung cancer. The chances of dying for people who take antioxidant supplements have been found to be 5 percent higher than non-users. As the New York Times pointed out in a 2009 article, “the selling point of antioxidant vitamins is that they mop up free radicals, the damaging molecular fragments linked to aging and disease.” The problem is that your body actually needs free radicals in order to fight off illnesses. Wipe them out and you may have just said good-bye to your body’s natural defense system.


Katherine Zeratsky, a registered dietician at the Mayo Clinic, explains that, “Most people, if they are eating a generally healthy diet—not a perfect diet, but a generally healthy diet—don"t need a multivitamin…With things like breakfast cereals, nutrition bars, foritified grains and bread, because all those foods are fortified with other minerals, we are getting more than we realize and more than we need.”


So how did nearly half of us end up shelling out hard-earned money for something that begins to look like the equivalent of 19th-century bloodletting? As is so often the case, bad things can happen when money, science and politics collide.


How America became vitamin-crazed


Paul A. Offit, the chief of the infectious diseases division of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, is the ultimate medical nofunik. Rigorously dedicated to evidence-based medicine, he has raised the ire of many with his crusade to debunk the widespread belief that autism is caused by vaccines. Now he’s written a book challenging the fervent belief in vitamin supplements and some of the claims of alternative medicine, Do You Believe in Magic? The Sense and Nonsense of Alternative Medicine. In Offit’s view, there’s really no such thing as “alternative medicine.” If a treatment is proved to enhance health or prevent illness, it’s medicine, plain and simple. Unfortunately, the problem with claims made about many popular treatments, including vitamin supplementation, is that they haven’t passed the evidence test.


In recent op-eds in the New York Times and the Guardian, Offit explains how the vitamin supplement industry has gotten away with selling snake oil for the past several decades. America’s vitamin craze started with one Dr. Linus Pauling, whom Offit colorfully describes as “a man who was so spectacularly right that he won two Nobel prizes and so spectacularly wrong that he was arguably the world"s greatest quack.”


Pauling, whose work in chemistry won him the Nobel Prize in 1954 and who later became a peace activist (winning the Nobel Peace Prize), became interested in longevity in his 60s, and his deep desire for a long life seems to have clouded his judgment. He developed a correspondence with an amateur chemist who claimed that high doses of Vitamin C could expand the human lifespan. Pauling developed tremendous enthusiasm for Vitamin C, touting it as the means of curing the common cold, which caused sales to skyrocket. Undaunted by numerous studies that contradicted his claims, he began to promote the use of antioxidant combinations as a cure for everything from mental illness to kidney failure.


By the mid-"70s, Americans were rushing to the pharmacy to follow Pauling’s advice. “Although studies had failed to support him,” writes Offit, “Pauling believed that vitamins and supplements had one property that made them cure-alls, a property that continues to be hawked on everything from ketchup to pomegranate juice, and that, for sales impact, rivals words such as natural and organic: antioxidant.”


In December 1972, the FDA, alarmed at the growing vitamin obsession, tried to regulate supplements containing more than 150 percent of the recommended daily allowance. The goal was to force manufacturers to prove that they were safe. Vitamin-makers not only destroyed the bill, they were able to set things up so the FDA would be pretty much off their backs for good. Industry executives recruited William Proxmire, a Democratic senator from Wisconsin, to put together a bill blocking the FDA from requiring safety tests and regulating megavitamins.


The industry leaders pleaded that consumer costs would go up if they had to be bothered with regulations. Among those who said that the Proxmire bill was bunk were the American Medical Association, the FDA, the National Nutrition Consortium (which represents jointly the American Institute of Nutrition, the American Society for Clinical Nutrition, the American Dietetic Association, and the Society of Food Technologists), Ralph Nader’s Consumers" Union, the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers’ Association, the American Association of Retired Persons, and the president of the National Academy of Sciences.


On Aug. 14, 1974, at the hearing, Marsha Cohen, a lawyer with the Consumers Union, tried to introduce common sense into the proceedings. She set down eight cantaloupes in front of her and pointed out that pills containing Vitamin C might contain the same amount as what was in those fruits, or even 20 times as much — clearly much more than Mother Nature ever intended a human to consume at one sitting. As Offit put it: “Ms. Cohen was pointing out the industry’s Achilles’ heel: ingesting large quantities of vitamins is unnatural, the opposite of what manufacturers were promoting.”


Nevertheless, Proxmire won the day, and myth became policy. In 1976, in what Peter Barton Hutt, chief counsel to the FDA, called “the most humiliating defeat” in the agency’s history, his bill became law. That’s why it has taken so long for consumers to learn that taking vitamins could actually harm them.


In 1994, Linus Pauling died of prostate cancer—a cancer that has been linked to high doses of vitamins.


Offit is happy to report serious studies that support the use of certain supplements. The problem is that you can count them on one hand: “Of the 51,000 new supplements on the market, four might be of benefit for otherwise healthy people: omega-3 fatty acids to prevent heart disease; calcium and vitamin D in postmenopausal women, to prevent bone thinning; and folic acid during pregnancy, to prevent birth defects.”


Four out of 51,000. You’d have better odds at a slot machine.


Humans are not very scientific


Part of the great puzzle of the vitamin myth is how the public continues to ignore large clinical trials and mounting evidence. Respected organizations like Harvard Men’s Health Watch may try to educate the public with press releases featuring titles like, “It’s time to reassess the value, safety of multivitamin use” which warns that “the average man [should] give up the multivitamin, at least until scientists solve the puzzle of folic acid and cancer,” but the enduring myth of multivitamins shows that hope is stronger than evidence.


In preparing this article, I spoke to friends and acquaintances, several of whom hold doctoral degrees, though only one in science or medicine. Most were conscientious consumers of vitamins, and even when I presented them with the evidence from large clinical trials, they tended to show great reluctance to question what was in the bottle in the cabinet.


Excuses ranged from “I don’t take megadoses” (never mind that any dose that gives your body more than the recommended daily allowance is a megadose) to “My doctor is very up on these things” (then he’d have to be rethinking his pro-vitamin advice) to “the studies always change and I’m going to just stick to what I’m doing” (yes, scientific opinion changes, and it increasingly suggests that vitamins may be useless or harmful). None of the people I spoke to had specific deficiencies that had been diagnosed through blood work, etc. They were what some doctors call the “worried well”— people who aren’t sick but think of vitamins as a little “extra” that will boost their health. (Hey, it’s easier than hitting the gym.)


The only exceptions to the vitamin-believers in my circle were the journalists, who tended to be more aware of changes in the news, and the one acquaintance who is an actual medical doctor. She threw up her hands and said: “This vitamin thing drives me crazy. You wouldn’t believe how hard it is to get people to accept evidence-based medicine. Even many doctors resist it.”


Part of the answer is that even highly educated people are uncomfortable about changing their beliefs— and they may be more stubborn because they trust that they have greater acumen in deciding what to believe and not to believe. And yet without a background in science, nutrition or biology, it’s very difficult for the lay person to even begin to understand what is happening in their bodies when they take a vitamin. Frankly, if we really get down to it, most of us are not terribly literate in science. A 2009 Pew poll shows that over half of us don’t know what a stem cell is, and nearly as many are unaware that atoms are larger than electrons. We’re only passingly familiar with the nation’s top scientific agencies, and yet we actually feel confident making declarative statements about the benefits of antioxidants, phytonutrients and sublingual vitamin delivery.


Perhaps that’s because our language and our thinking is derived from advertising much more than we realize. The multi-billion dollar industry hawking vitamins greets us with endless admonitions and claims in the drug store, the grocery aisle, our in-boxes, and every time we flip on the TV. We become faux-conversant in matters that actually require serious study. I’m not a scientist, but as a layperson who has spent several weeks reading about the most current studies and research, I have come to three conclusions:


  1. Never take any vitamin or supplement without discussing it with your doctor and having appropriate diagnostic work done. Tips from well-meaning friends or relatives do not count.

  2. If your doctor prescribes preventative vitamins, ask her about the changing state of the evidence and demand information on clinical trials. The onus is on her to demonstrate the efficacy of taking supplements if she is prescribing them.

  3. Try to get your body’s nutrients through foods, rather than pills.

But please, don’t take my word for it. Keep abreast of the latest developments through the National Institutes of Health, the Mayo Clinic, peer-reviewed journals and other serious research agencies and groups. A scientific perspective is always one of questioning. If vitamin mythology is the disease, trustworthy information is the cure.


 

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Billion-Dollar Scam In a Bottle: Why Vitamins Could Be Useless—or Even Shorten Your Lifespan

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Baby scam tricked clients to look pregnant



Pregnant hostages


BORN TO ORDER: Police discovered pregnant teenagers in a raid on a compound. Source: Supplied




FOR nine months, the midwife had been giving the woman herbs to take and several things indicated she was indeed pregnant. Her stomach had swelled, so had her feet.



She had spent many years trying to conceive and now, at 61, she was finally with child, twins in fact – or so she thought.


Even when it came time to give birth, the woman still believed she was an expectant mother. She went back to the midwife, was given seeds to chew and started feeling drowsy.


The woman, Desope Cecilia, says the midwife told her to start pushing and that soon after she heard the cry of one baby and then another. Her miracle babies.


There was even blood, making the delivery scenario all the more real.


It wasn’t until some time later, when she took the twins to be immunised, that someone smelled a rat and alerted authorities.


Tests confirmed that Cecilia was not the mother of the two babies.


She had paid 1.5 million naira ($ 9800) for the services of the midwife, Oby George, in Port Harcourt in Nigeria’s south.


She had never been to a hospital to have a scan of any kind during her so-called pregnancy because the midwife had told her not to.


Apparently, she told Cecilia the scan would show nothing because she was carrying a “miracle” pregnancy.


Miracle indeed – a $ 9800 miracle which was highly illegal.


Cecilia wasn’t the midwife’s only victim.


Joy Ibe, 43, also wanted babies – miracle triplets. She paid about $ 17,500.


But despite having a protruding stomach and swollen feet, she never got to “give birth”.


She was at the midwife’s home when police arrived.


She too had been told not to go to the hospital for scans or check-ups.


So desperate were both women for children that they were willing to fork out huge sums of money to a dodgy midwife.


Both claim they had no idea their pregnancies were not real.


In Cecilia’s case, she truly believed she had given birth.


It seems that the herbs the women were prescribed formed a kind of large tumour in the stomach, causing the protrusion and the belief that it was a pregnant belly.


George has apparently said she doesn’t remember how many such miracle babies she has delivered. Police suspect it’s many.


George and her two victims were revealed to the media by police in Lagos a week ago.


George was paraded and her victims, their faces covered, answered questions about their ordeals.


The revelation comes in the same month as Nigerian police uncovered and raided two so-called “baby factories”.


It’s not known where the babies George was delivering came from but it is known that unscrupulous types have been holding young women and teenage girls basically hostage and forcing them to have babies, which are then sold.


Based on the accounts of the victims, some are forced to become pregnant at the factories and others are brought to the factory already pregnant and told they will be paid for their babies.


This has been an easy way to lure young, unmarried women who face shame in their communities as a result of such pregnancies.


One baby factory was in Imo State, in the southeast, where 20 pregnant teenage girls and 11 babies were found. Local media reported the girls told police they had been made pregnant by a young man at the compound.


Another baby factory was uncovered in Enugu State about the same time. Six young pregnant girls were found and the owner reportedly told police that he was doing a service for childless couples. Not medically trained, he was apparently delivering the babies himself.


Authorities believe the two operations uncovered with pregnant girls are not the only baby factories out there.


They have vowed to hunt down others who are also taking advantage of young, poor and vulnerable teenagers and of women desperate for babies.


Such rackets are nothing new in Nigeria and especially in the southeastern region.


A multitude of problems and poor systems allow the baby factories to exist and flourish.


But the bottom line is this: Babies are little humans and they shouldn’t be sold and traded, like apples at the market.


Email Cindy Wockner


wocknercindy1@yahoo.com


Twitter: @cindywockner




NEWS.com.au | The Other Side



Baby scam tricked clients to look pregnant

Monday, February 25, 2013

50 Signs That The U.S. Health Care System Is A Gigantic Money Making Scam That Is About To Collapse

50 Signs That The U.S. Health Care System Is A Gigantic Money Making Scam That Is About To Collapse - Photo by RagesossThe U.S. health care system is a giant money making scam that is designed to drain as much money as possible out of all of us before we die.  In the United States today, the health care industry is completely dominated by government bureaucrats, health insurance companies and pharmaceutical corporations.  The pharmaceutical corporations spend billions of dollars to convince all of us to become dependent on their legal drugs, the health insurance companies make billions of dollars by providing as little health care as possible, and they both spend millions of dollars to make sure that our politicians in Washington D.C. keep the gravy train rolling.  Meanwhile, large numbers of doctors are going broke and patients are not getting the care that they need.  At this point, our health care system is a complete and total disaster.  Health care costs continue to go up rapidly, the level of care that we are receiving continues to go down, and every move that our politicians make just seems to make all of our health care problems even worse.  In America today, a single trip to the emergency room can easily cost you $ 100,000, and if you happen to get cancer you could end up with medical bills in excess of a million dollars.  Even if you do have health insurance, there are usually limits on your coverage, and the truth is that just a single major illness is often enough to push most American families into bankruptcy.  At the same time, hospital administrators, pharmaceutical corporations and health insurance company executives are absolutely swimming in huge mountains of cash.  Unfortunately, this gigantic money making scam has become so large that it threatens to collapse both the U.S. health care system and the entire U.S. economy.

The following are 50 signs that the U.S. health care system is a massive money making scam that is about to collapse…

#1 Medical bills have become so ridiculously large that virtually nobody can afford them.  Just check out the following short excerpt from a recent Time Magazine article.  One man in California that had been diagnosed with cancer ran up nearly a million dollars in hospital bills before he died…

By the time Steven D. died at his home in Northern California the following November, he had lived for an additional 11 months. And Alice had collected bills totaling $ 902,452. The family’s first bill — for $ 348,000 — which arrived when Steven got home from the Seton Medical Center in Daly City, Calif., was full of all the usual chargemaster profit grabs: $ 18 each for 88 diabetes-test strips that Amazon sells in boxes of 50 for $ 27.85; $ 24 each for 19 niacin pills that are sold in drugstores for about a nickel apiece. There were also four boxes of sterile gauze pads for $ 77 each. None of that was considered part of what was provided in return for Seton’s facility charge for the intensive-care unit for two days at $ 13,225 a day, 12 days in the critical unit at $ 7,315 a day and one day in a standard room (all of which totaled $ 120,116 over 15 days). There was also $ 20,886 for CT scans and $ 24,251 for lab work.

#2 This year the American people will spend approximately 2.8 trillion dollars on health care, and it is being projected that Americans will spend 4.5 trillion dollars on health care in 2019.

#3 The United States spends more on health care than Japan, Germany, France, China, the U.K., Italy, Canada, Brazil, Spain and Australia combined.

#4 If the U.S. health care system was a country, it would be the 6th largest economy on the entire planet.

#5 Back in 1960, an average of $ 147 was spent per person on health care in the United States. By 2009, that number had skyrocketed to $ 8,086.

#6 Why does it cost so much to stay in a hospital today?  It just does not make sense.  Just check out these numbers

In 1942, Christ Hospital, NJ charged $ 7 per day for a maternity room. Today it’s $ 1,360.

#7 Approximately 60 percent of all personal bankruptcies in the United States are related to medical bills.

#8 One study discovered that approximately 41 percent of all working age Americans either have medical bill problems or are currently paying off medical debt.

#9 The U.S. health care industry has spent more than 5 billion dollars on lobbying our politicians in Washington D.C. since 1998.

#10 According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, the U.S. is  currently experiencing a shortage of at least 13,000 doctors.  Unfortunately, that shortage is expected to grow to 130,000 doctors over the next 10 years.

#11 The state of Florida is already dealing with a very serious shortage of doctors

Brace yourself for longer lines at the doctor’s office.

Whether you’re employed and insured, elderly and on Medicare, or poor and covered by Medicaid, the Florida Medical Association says there’s a growing shortage of doctors — especially specialists — available to provide you with medical care.

And if the Florida Legislature goes along with Gov. Rick Scott’s recommendation to offer Medicaid coverage to an additional 1 million Floridians — part of the Affordable Care Act that takes effect next January — the FMA says that shortage will only get worse.

#12 At this point, approximately 40 percent of all doctors in the United States are 55 years of age or older.

#13 In America today, many hospital executives make absolutely ridiculous amounts of money

In December, when the New York Times ran a story about how a deficit deal might threaten hospital payments, Steven Safyer, chief executive of Montefiore Medical Center, a large nonprofit hospital system in the Bronx, complained, “There is no such thing as a cut to a provider that isn’t a cut to a beneficiary … This is not crying wolf.”

Actually, Safyer seems to be crying wolf to the tune of about $ 196.8 million, according to the hospital’s latest publicly available tax return. That was his hospital’s operating profit, according to its 2010 return. With $ 2.586 billion in revenue — of which 99.4% came from patient bills and 0.6% from fundraising events and other charitable contributions — Safyer’s business is more than six times as large as that of the Bronx’s most famous enterprise, the New York Yankees. Surely, without cutting services to beneficiaries, Safyer could cut what have to be some of the Bronx’s better non-Yankee salaries: his own, which was $ 4,065,000, or those of his chief financial officer ($ 3,243,000), his executive vice president ($ 2,220,000) or the head of his dental department ($ 1,798,000).

#14 Health insurance administration expenses account for 8 percent of all health care costs in the United States each year.  In Finland, health insurance administration expenses account for just 2 percent of all health care costs each year.

#15 If you can believe it, the U.S. ambulance industry makes more money each year than the movie industry does.

#16 All over America, people are reporting huge health insurance premium increases thanks to Obamacare.  The following example is from a recent article by Robert Wenzel

A California small businessman tells me that he switched healthcare insurance carriers in 2012.  The monthly premium for him and his wife was about $ 400, but when he received his first bill in January of this year it was for $ 1,200.  He hasn’t been to a doctor in years, his wife has only gone for minor care.

Apparently there is some clause in the Affordable Healthcare Act that results in health insurance firms using a new method to calculate premiums. Those who have health insurance plans that have been in effect since at least 2010 are grandfathered under the old calculation method, but insurance carriers are using a new formula for new plans.

#17 Blue Shield of California has announced that it wants to raise health insurance premiums by up to 20 percent this year in an effort to keep up with rising health costs.

#18 Aetna’s CEO says that health insurance premiums for many Americans will double when the major provisions of Obamacare go into effect in 2014.

#19 Close to 10 percent of all U.S. employers plan to drop health coverage completely when the major provisions of Obamacare go into effect in 2014.

#20 According to a survey conducted by the Doctor Patient Medical Association, 83 percent of all doctors in the United States have considered leaving the profession because of Obamacare.

#21 Approximately 16,000 new IRS agents will be hired to help oversee the implementation of Obamacare, and the Obama administration has given the IRS 500 million extra dollars “outside the normal appropriations process” to help the IRS with their new duties.

#22 During 2013, Americans will spend more than 280 billion dollars on prescription drugs.

#23 Prescription drugs cost about 50% more in the United States than they do in other countries.

#24 In the United States today, prescription painkillers kill more Americans than heroin and cocaine combined.

#25 Nearly half of all Americans now use prescription drugs on a regular basis according to the CDC.  Not only that, the CDC also says that approximately one-third of all Americans use two or more pharmaceutical drugs on a regular basis, and more than ten percent of all Americans use five or more pharmaceutical drugs on a regular basis.

#26 The percentage of women taking antidepressants in America is higher than in any other country in the world.

#27 In 2010, the average teen in the U.S. was taking 1.2 central nervous system drugs.  Those are the kinds of drugs which treat conditions such as ADHD and depression.

#28 Children in the United States are three times more likely to be prescribed antidepressants as children in Europe are.

#29 There were more than two dozen pharmaceutical companies that made over a billion dollars in profits during 2008.

#30 According to the CDC, approximately three quarters of a million people a year are rushed to emergency rooms in the United States because of adverse reactions to pharmaceutical drugs.

#31 According to a report by Health Care for America Now, America’s five biggest for-profit health insurance companies ended 2009 with a combined profit of $ 12.2 billion.

#32 The top executives at the five largest for-profit health insurance companies in the United States combined to bring in nearly $ 200 million in total compensation for 2009.

#33 The chairman of Aetna, the third largest health insurance company in the United States, brought in a staggering $ 68.7 million during 2010. Ron Williams exercised stock options that were worth approximately $ 50.3 million and he raked in an additional $ 18.4 million in wages and other forms of compensation.  The funny thing is that he left the company and didn’t even work the entire year.

#34 It turns out that the financial assistance that Barack Obama promised would be provided for those with “pre-existing conditions” under Obamacare is already being shut down because of a lack of funding…

Tens of thousands of Americans who cannot get health insurance because of preexisting medical problems will be blocked from a program designed to help them because funding is running low.

Obama administration officials said Friday that the state-based “high-risk pools” set up under the 2010 health-care law will be closed to new applicants as soon as Saturday and no later than March 2, depending on the state.

#35 In America today, you are 64 times more likely to be killed by a doctor than you are by a gun.

#36 People living in the United States are three times more likely to have diabetes than people living in the United Kingdom.

#37 Today, people living in Puerto Rico have a greater life expectancy than people living in the United States do.

#38 According to OECD statistics, Americans are twice as obese as Canadians are.

#39 Greece has twice as many hospital beds per person as the United States does.

#40 The state of California now ranks dead last out of all 50 states in the number of emergency rooms per million people.

#41 According to a doctor interviewed by Fox News, “a gunshot wound to the head, chest or abdomen” will cost $ 13,000 at his hospital the moment the victim comes in the door, and then there will be significant additional charges depending on how bad the wound is.

#42 It has been estimated that hospitals overcharge Americans by about 10 billion dollars every single year.

#43 One trained medical billing advocate says that over 90 percent of the medical bills that she has audited contain “gross overcharges“.

#44 It is not uncommon for insurance companies to get hospitals to knock their bills down by up to 95 percent, but if you are uninsured or you don’t know how the system works then you are out of luck.

#45 According to a study conducted by Deloitte Consulting, a whopping 875,000 Americans were “medical tourists” in 2010.

#46 Today, there are more than 56 million Americans on Medicaid, and it is being projected that Obamacare will add 16 million more Americans to the Medicaid rolls.

#47 Back in 1965, only one out of every 50 Americans was on Medicaid.  Today, one out of every 6 Americans is on Medicaid.

#48 Today, there are more than 50 million Americans on Medicare, and that number is projected to grow to 73.2 million in 2025.

#49 When Medicare was first established by Congress, it was estimated that it would cost the federal government $ 12 billion a year by the time 1990 rolled around.  Instead, it cost the federal government $ 110 billion in 1990, and it will cost the federal government close to $ 600 billion this year.

#50 Even if you do have health insurance, that is no guarantee that medical bills will not bankrupt you.  Just check out what a recent Time Magazine article says happened to one unfortunate couple from Ohio that actually did have health insurance…

When Sean Recchi, a 42-year-old from Lancaster, Ohio, was told last March that he had non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, his wife Stephanie knew she had to get him to MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. Stephanie’s father had been treated there 10 years earlier, and she and her family credited the doctors and nurses at MD Anderson with extending his life by at least eight years.

Because Stephanie and her husband had recently started their own small technology business, they were unable to buy comprehensive health insurance. For $ 469 a month, or about 20% of their income, they had been able to get only a policy that covered just $ 2,000 per day of any hospital costs. “We don’t take that kind of discount insurance,” said the woman at MD Anderson when Stephanie called to make an appointment for Sean.

Stephanie was then told by a billing clerk that the estimated cost of Sean’s visit — just to be examined for six days so a treatment plan could be devised — would be $ 48,900, due in advance.

By the way, that hospital down in Houston made a profit of 531 million dollars in one recent year.

So what can be done about all of this?

Well, the truth is that the status quo is a complete and total disaster, and every “solution” being promoted by politicians from both major political parties would only make things worse.

In the end, the U.S. health care system needs to be rebuilt from the ground up, but we all know that is not going to happen.

Instead, our politicians and the health care industry will just find additional ways to extract money from all of us, and the level of care that we all get will continue to decline.

If you don’t believe this, just check out what Paul Krugman of the New York Times had to say recently

We’re going to need more revenue…Surely it will require some sort of middle class taxes as well.. We won’t be able to pay for the kind of government the society will want without some increase in taxes… on the middle class, maybe a value added tax…And we’re also going to have to make decisions about health care, doc pay for health care that has no demonstrated medical benefits . So the snarky version…which I shouldn’t even say because it will get me in trouble is death panels and sales taxes is how we do this.

Others are urging us to become more like Europe.

But do we really want what they have in the UK?…

Sick children are being discharged from NHS hospitals to die at home or in hospices on controversial ‘death pathways’.

Until now, end of life regime the Liverpool Care Pathway was thought to have involved only elderly and terminally-ill adults.

But the Mail can reveal the practice of withdrawing food and fluid by tube is being used on young patients as well as severely disabled newborn babies.

One doctor has admitted starving and dehydrating ten babies to death in the neonatal unit of one hospital alone.

Writing in a leading medical journal, the physician revealed the process can take an average of ten days during which a  baby becomes ‘smaller and shrunken’.

In the end, my philosophy is just to avoid the U.S. health care system as much as possible.  Most doctors are just trained to do two things – prescribe drugs and cut you open.  In an emergency situation where you are about to die, those may be your best options, but otherwise I would just as soon avoid the gigantic money making scam that the U.S. health care industry has become.

But just don’t take my word for it.  The following is some very sound advice from Dr. Robert S. Dotson

Avoid contact with the existing health care system as far as possible. Yes, emergencies arise that require the help of physicians, but by and large one can learn to care for one’s own minor issues. Though it is flawed, the internet has been an information leveler for the masses and permits each person to be his or her own physician to a large degree. Take advantage of it! Educate yourself about your own body and learn to fuel and maintain it as you would an expensive auto or a pet poodle. One does not need a medical degree to:

1. avoid excessive use of tobacco or alcohol or, for that matter, caffeine;
2. avoid poisons like fluoride, aspartame, high fructose corn syrup, and addictive drugs (legal or illicit);
3. avoid unnecessary and potentially lethal imaging studies (TSA’s radiation pornbooths, excessive mammography, repetitive CT scans – exposure to all significantly increases cancer risk);
4. avoid excessive cell phone use and exposure to other forms of EMR pollution where possible (the NSA is recording everything you say and text anyway);
5. avoid daily fast food use and abuse (remember: pink slime and silicone) ;
6. avoid untested GM foods (do you really want to become “Roundup Ready?”):
7. avoid most vaccinations and pharmaceutical agents promoted by the establishment;
8. avoid risky behaviors (and, we do not need a bunch of Nanny State bureaucrats to define and police these);
9. exercise moderately;
10. get plenty of sleep;
11. drink plenty of good quality water (buy a decent water filter to remove fluoride, chloride, and heavy metals);
12. wear protective gear at work and play where appropriate (helmets, eye-shields, knee and elbow pads, etc.):
13. seek out locally-grown, whole, organic foods and support your local food producers;
14. take appropriate nutritional supplements (multi-vitamins, Vitamin C, Vitamin D3);
15. switch off the TV and the mainstream media it represents;
16. educate yourself while you can;

And, lastly…

17. QUESTION AUTHORITY!

Doing these simple, common-sense things will add healthy years to a person’s life and help one avoid most medical encounters during his or her allotted time on earth.

So what do you think?

Do you believe that the U.S. health care system is a gigantic money making scam that is about to collapse?

Please feel free to post a comment with your thoughts below…

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50 Signs That The U.S. Health Care System Is A Gigantic Money Making Scam That Is About To Collapse