News Updates from CLG
19 May 2014
19 May 2014
http://www.legitgov.org/
All links are here:http://www.legitgov.org/#breaking_news
All links are here:http://www.legitgov.org/#breaking_news
Previous edition: Obama Backs Away From Net Neutrality Campaign Promises After FCC Vote (Google subscribers: Google Filter Instructions for CLG Newsletter.)
Pentagon document lays out battle plan against zombies --Tactics include 'concentration of all firepower to the head, specifically the brain' --The CDC and DHS have used zombies as 'a vehicle for training their personnel' aka false flags. 16 May 2014 From responses to natural disasters to a catastrophic attack [false flag] on the homeland, the U.S. military has a plan of action ready to go if either incident occurs. It has also devised an elaborate plan should a zombie apocalypse befall the country, according to a Defense Department document obtained by CNN. In an unclassified document titled "CONPLAN 8888," officials from U.S. Strategic Command used the specter of a planet-wide attack by the walking dead as a training template for how to plan for real-life, large-scale operations, emergencies and catastrophes.
Flight MH370 may have been shot down by mistake during US-Thai military operation - book 19 May 2014 The search for MH370 in the Indian Ocean may have been a ruse to hide the fact that the plane was mistakenly shot down during a military exercise, a new book claims. Flight MH370: The Mystery goes on sale today with the explosive theory, the first of doubtless many books to explore the disappearance of the missing Malaysia Airlines plane, which has confounded experts since March 8. Written by Nigel Cawthorne, with 150 books to his name, the book canvasses the idea that the plane carrying 239 people was shot down by mistake during a US/Thai military exercise.
Flight MH370: Author suggests missing plane was SHOT DOWN over South China Sea --Author Nigel Cawthorne suggests that the plane was shot down accidentally by a joint U.S.-Thai joint strike fighter team. 18 May 2014 In his new book about MH370, Nigel Cawthorne describes how a man, while working on an oil rig in the ocean at about the same time the plane's transponder went off, saw a burning plane and how this was right near the military exercise. He claims that these countries may have then sent searchers in the wrong direction in order to cover their tracks. "After all, no wreckage has been found in the South Indian Ocean, which in itself is suspicious," he adds.
Washington spends 200m pounds creating intelligence hub in Britain --The $317m (189m pounds) project, which includes an installation for the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Pentagon's main military espionage service. 18 May 2014 Washington is to spend almost 200m pounds to turn one of its British military bases -- already implicated in mass surveillance and drone strikes -- into one of its largest intelligence hubs outside the mainland United States. RAF Croughton, a US Air Force (USAF) base near Milton Keynes, which has a direct cable link to Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) at Cheltenham, is to be the site for an ultra-secure intelligence centre staffed by up to 1,250 personnel and covering operations in Africa, a current focus for US counterterrorism activities.
Heads up! USociopaths now 'predicting' the terror attacks that they're planning: 'A lot more terror attacks coming our way:' former NSA chief A former top U.S. security official fears the nation could be attacked again by terrorists. Gen. Keith Alexander, who retired in March as director of the National Security Agency after eight years on the job, said the probability of another terrorist attack on U.S. soil is increasing. "The number of attacks that are coming, the probability, it's growing." [Yeah, 'growing,' like NSA fungus] Alexander said in a New Yorker magazine interview published over the weekend. "What I saw at N.S.A. is that there is a lot more coming our way." [Gee, how do you *know* that? Unless, of course, you're the one overseeing their implementation, so US citizens clamor for further erosion of what's left of their 'rights.']
The U.S. intelligence chief's gag order does not stir trust (The Washington Post) 23 Apr 2014 At a time when U.S. intelligence agencies need to regain the confidence and support of the American people, James R. Clapper Jr., the director of national intelligence, is taking a huge backward step. In a directive dated March 20 but disclosed only Monday, Mr. Clapper has restricted the circumstances under which intelligence-community employees can talk to the news media, even about unclassified information. The directive, No. 119, "Media Contacts," is overly broad and wrongheaded and will prove counterproductive. The directive prohibits unauthorized "contact with the media about intelligence-related information, including intelligence sources, methods, activities and judgments," without regard to whether it is classified. Those who violate the directive may be subject to punishment.
Record high radiation in seawater off Fukushima plant 17 May 2014 Radiation has spiked to all-time highs at five monitoring points in waters adjacent to the crippled Fukushima No. 1 power station, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. said Friday. The measurements follow similar highs detected in groundwater at the plant. At one sampling point in the port, between the water intakes for the No. 2 and No. 3 reactors, 1,900 becquerels per liter of tritium was detected Monday, up from a previous high of 1,400 becquerels measured on April 14, Tepco said... And at a point between the water intakes for the No. 1 and No. 2 reactors, seawater sampled Thursday was found to contain 840 becquerels of strontium-90, which causes bone cancer, and other beta ray-emitting isotopes, up from a previous record of 540 becquerels.
Source of Fukushima's nagging radioactive leak finally discovered - TEPCO 16 May 2014 The source of the radioactive leak at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was finally identified by the facility's operator, TEPCO, to be in the primary containment vessel of reactor 3, authorities reported. In January, the crew of the plant first noticed that water was leaking through to the drain on the first level of the building housing the reactor. Engineers probed the space with a camera and found the water leakage to be near a pipe joint that connects directly to the containment vessel.
Lifelong health checks planned for 20,000 workers at Fukushima plant 17 May 2014 The government will look for increased rates of leukemia and other cancers linked to radiation exposure as part of a lifelong study of 20,000 workers mobilized in the recovery effort after the 2011 nuclear disaster. The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare study is projected to still continue 60 years from now because many of the workers are in their early 20s. The individuals taking part in the study worked at the plant between March 14 and Dec. 16 of 2011...when the government raised the safety limit for radiation exposure in cases of emergency from 100 millisieverts to 250 millisieverts.
Fire forces evacuation of San Onofre nuclear plant 14 May 2014 An out-of-control brush fire at Camp Pendleton was creeping closer to the San Onofre nuclear power plant, prompting evacuations. Southern California Edison said in a tweet that "about a dozen non-essential employees evacuated" from the plant because of the fire. The plant is located off Interstate 5 at the Orange-San Diego county line north of Camp Pendleton.
First case of MERS contracted on U.S. soil: Illinois resident catches deadly virus from another sufferer in U.S. and becomes the third American to fall sick --MERS was first identified in Saudi Arabia and has no known cure, treatment or vaccine 17 May 2014 The deadly MERS-CoV virus has spread to a third U.S. citizen and officials believe that, for the first time, the man was infected while in the United States. Officials from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control believe an Illinois man likely contracted the respiratory disease from an Indiana man, who became infected with the disease while working as a health care worker in Saudi Arabia. CDC officials said the two men met on two occasions before the original patient was found to be infected with MERS Co-V, ABC News reported.
CDC: First case of MERS infection transmitted inside the U.S. 17 May 2014 The first case of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome believed to be transmitted within the United States has been identified in an Illinois man who was infected and is no longer sick, a doctor with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Saturday. The unidentified Illinois man had "extended face-to-face contact" during a 40-minute business meeting with an Indiana man who was diagnosed with MERS after traveling from Saudi Arabia, Dr. David Swerdlow told reporters during a telephone briefing.
US ordered not to force feed Guantanamo prisoner 16 May 2014 A federal judge in Washington has ordered the U.S. military to at least temporarily stop force-feeding a hunger striking prisoner at the Guantanamo Bay navy base. U.S. District Court Judge Gladys Kessler says the military must not force feed prisoner Abi Wa'el Dhiab at least until a hearing on Wednesday. The order issued Friday also directs the military not to forcibly remove the prisoner from his cell at the U.S. base in Cuba.
Are Western energy giants' interests behind Ukraine violence? 17 May 2014 Economic interests, such as untapped shale gas resources, already sliced and diced by Western energy giants, are behind the Kiev government's 'anti-terrorist' operation against the pro-federalist regions, foreign policy expert Nebojsa Malic tells RT. The eastern Donetsk and Lugansk regions cut ties with Kiev and declared independence from Kiev after a popular vote last Sunday. Yet federalist activists have no doubt that a new wave of government crackdown is on its way...It's in the Donetsk Region that Shell signed, in January 2013, a 50-year profit sharing deal with the government of Ukraine to explore and drill for natural gas in shale rock formations. US energy giant Chevron signed a similar deal for $10 billion last year, but it is focusing on developing shale gas reserves in the West of Ukraine.
Neo-Nazi Right Sector gunmen attempt to enter Ukraine's largest nuclear power plant 17 May 2014 Ukrainian police stopped a group of armed men from entering Europe's largest nuclear power plant, located in southeastern Ukraine. In video footage allegedly showing the attempted break-in, the men say they are members of the Right Sector group. The gunmen were stopped Thursday at the entrance of the city of Energodar, near Zaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant, the facility's press service said in a Friday statement on its website...Security at the plant and throughout Energodar has been heightened.
Moscow demands OSCE take measures to free journalists detained by Kiev 18 May 2014 Moscow has called on the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) to take measures to free the two Russian journalists captured near the town of Kramatorsk, eastern Ukraine. Russia strongly condemns the detention of LifeNews journalists Oleg Sidyakin and Marat Saichenko by Kiev forces in the city of Kramatorsk, the country's permanent representative to the OSCE, Andrey Kelin, said. Earlier, Kiev acknowledged that Oleg Sidyakin and Marat Saichenko were detained by the Ukrainian military.
Russian journalists detained by Kiev forces near Kramatorsk in E. Ukraine 18 May 2014 A photo of handcuffed Russian journalists from LifeNews channel, captured on Sunday by Kiev's armed forces, has appeared on social networks. The two reporters were stopped at a checkpoint near Kramatorsk and contact with them has since been lost. The same LifeNews journalists - Oleg Sidyakin and Marat Saichenko - came under fire from Kiev's army last week, along with RT's video agency crew. On May 18, reporter Sidyakin and cameraman Saichenko were performing their professional duties, covering events in southeastern Ukraine, when they "went missing," the channel said in a statement.
Explosions heard in Slavyansk, reports of fighting 17 May 2014 Military action has reportedly resumed in the town of Slavyansk in Ukraine's Donetsk Region, with local residents reporting on social media loud explosions and a large number of signal bombs in the sky. At least one self-defense activist was wounded as fighting resumed between Kiev forces and self-defense units, Hromadske TV reported, citing local residents.
Kiev proclaims post-referendum Donetsk, Lugansk regions 'terrorist organizations' 16 May 2014 New authorities in post-coup Kiev have listed the self-proclaimed republics of Donetsk and Lugansk as terrorist organizations. The two regions proclaimed themselves sovereign states after the controversial May 11 referendums. Criminal cases have been launched to investigate the “formation of the terrorist organizations.”
Homeland Security holds drill in New Milford, CT 15 May 2014 The U.S. Department of Homeland Security held a training exercise Wednesday night at Candlelight Farm airport. Candlelight Farm owner Carl Dunham said Thursday he was contacted by Homeland Security weeks ago about doing a training landing at the heliport on his property, which lies along Candlewood Mountain Road. Three helicopters landed at the heliport during Wednesday's exercise, he said.
Gallup seeks fixes after 2012 Republican bias, miss 17 May 2014 Eighteen months after the Gallup Organization incorrectly showed Mitt Romney leading President Barack Obama on the eve of the 2012 presidential election, the embattled polling firm unveiled additional research aimed at fine-tuning their methodology before the 2016 campaign. The results, the second phase of Gallup's review of its 2012 Republican bias, were released for the first time here Friday morning at the American Association for Public Opinion Research's annual conference...Both New Jersey and Virginia polls also underestimated Democrats' composition of the electorate, compared to the exit polls. Democrats held a 12-point edge over Republicans in the 2013 exit poll in New Jersey, but Gallup's pre-election 'survey' showed Democrats with just a two-point edge among likely voters.
U.S. Fines General Motors $35 Million for Lapses on Ignition-Switch Defect 16 May 2014 General Motors will pay 35 million in a civil settlement with the federal government over its failure to report in a timely manner a defective ignition switch in 2.6 million smaller cars, the Department of Transportation announced on Friday. In addition, regulators said that as part of the consent order, G.M. agreed to make "significant and wide-ranging internal changes to its review of safety-related issues in the United States, and to improve its ability to take into account the possible consequences of potential safety-related defects."
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