The incident with a Seattle Police Officer punching a 17-year-old woman in the face has caused much controversy. I commend the young women involved for their courage in standing up to legal plunder.
All such NAZI`A should be exposed to their families and anyone that may know them..like their Mother if they have one.We need to show the people who these common SOB`S are...maybe you know one of them.Maybe one of them is your neighbor,or,goes to you
Federal agents drive 3 1/2 hours to harass and intimidate Congressional Candidate Charles Black. Agents demand private citizens to unload and disarm their firearms on a public gun range. They then demand that a 10 year old girl stop videotaping them.
With Puerto Rico on the fast track to becoming a U.S. state, the U.S. National Guard has wasted no time in training its people that if and when they join the union, Posse Comitatus will not be offered as part of the package deal.
Cradling an M-16 rifle, Army National Guard Lt. Anthony Santiago stares down cars at a police checkpoint in his latest mission: helping to stem a vicious crime wave in Puerto Rico's central mountains. "In Iraq, your enemy is going to try to kill you,
The US currently incarcerates a higher share of its population than any other country in the world. A reduction in incarceration rates just to the 1993 level would lower correctional expenditures by $16.9 billion per year, with the large majority o
A federal judge has ruled that border agents cannot seize a traveler's laptop, keep it locked up for months, and examine it for contraband files without a warrant half a year later.
Legislators to appeal to Americans used the name “Patriot
Act” to market perhaps the most insidious bill in U.S. History. The Act was passed quickly after 9-11 and most Congressman admitted they did not read it. There were so
many w
A federal appeals court has dealt a blow to a civil-liberties lawsuit against the New York Police Department, saying the police force is within its rights to keep secret its surveillance of protesters ahead of the Republican National Convention in 20
Prepaid cellphones have long been used by unsavory criminal types, which is understandable! They're anonymous, inexpensive, and did I mention anonymous already? But now that we know the alleged Times Square bomber had one, regulators have gotten out
Foreign Ministry reports circulating in the Kremlin today are warning that an already explosive situation in the United States is about to get a whole lot worse as a new law put forth by President Obama is said capable of seeing up to 500,000 America
Soon, keeping your head down won’t be enough to stump high-tech security cameras, thanks to Pentagon-funded researchers developing mini-cameras that can nab threats by hunting down — and scanning — their eyeballs.
ALIPAC has documented the following 17 states are following Arizona's lead in response to citizen pressure.
ARKANSAS, IDAHO, INDIANA, MARYLAND, MICHIGAN, MINNESOTA, MISSOURI, NEBRASKA, NEVADA, NEW JERSEY, OHIO, OKLAHOMA, PENNSYLVANIA, RHODE ISLAN
A new class of man-made materials could hold the key to creating X-ray-like cameras that can see through walls and clothing.
Called metamaterials, these substances could harness terahertz radiation, light with energies between infrared waves and m
by Hunter Ansell - The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren't enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without bre
Google Inc. has been vacuuming up fragments of people's online activities broadcast over public Wi-Fi networks for the past four years, a breach of Web etiquette likely to raise more privacy worries about the Internet search leader.
In a move that's being heavily criticized by the American Civil Liberties Union, the Obama administration will ask Congress to delay terror suspects' probable cause hearings as a way to allow interrogators additional time for questioning before the i
Arizona's tourism officials are growing increasingly concerned at the prospect of huge hotel and convention dollar losses because of fallout from the state's new immigration law. Phoenix alone faces lost business worth about $90 million over the next