It is somewhat of a seller's market at the moment: journalists are banging at my door (figuratively), documentary makers wish to speak with me, well-known authors in the midst of books are writing, etc. I am laying low abroad until arrests are made
Last January, the Washington Post carried an interesting article by a person named Asha Rangappa, who is a former FBI agent. The article explored what would happen if a U.S. president became a threat to national security. She wrote her article in the
The House of Representatives has begun to gather evidence in an effort to determine if President Donald Trump has committed impeachable offenses. The Constitution defines an impeachable offense as "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdeme
Studies have shown that people who believe in top-down government action to protect the environment are actually less likely to take personal steps in their own lives to reduce their negative impact.
"Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes… known instruments for bringing the many unde
"It's sadly ironic that "feminism" has such disdain for femininity. Our society now heaps the most praise on women when they exhibit traditionally male traits such as strength, independence and excellence in STEM occupations. The woman who
The butler who managed Jeffrey Epstein's posh Paris pad claims he waited on a rotation of famous faces including Prince Andrew, Bill and Melinda Gates, as well as Steve Bannon, according to a report.
Since he became president, Donald Trump has killed thousands of people in Afghanistan and the Middle East in wars that are illegal under our form of government, given that he has never secured the constitutionally required congressional declaration o
I spent 15 minutes reading tuna cans in the grocery store the other day. I could have spent hours if I decided to look up each type online.
Keeping the price in mind, I wanted a smaller variety of tuna to avoid high mercury content and something w
http://www.ted.com Peter van Uhm is the Netherlands' chief of defense, but that does not mean he is pro-war. At TEDxAmsterdam he explains how his career is one shaped by a love of peace, not a desire for bloodshed -- and why we need armies if we want
A Gantz-led government will possess the needed political legitimacy, popular mandate and strategic tools to achieve what Netanyahu couldn't: a war on Gaza, and annexation of the West Bank.
Five years ago in the pages of this very column I examined "The Ratings Game: Rating agencies as weapons of economic warfare." In that article I explained how the major credit ratings agencies--Standard & Poor's (S&P), Moody's, and Fitch Rat
Stockbroker, financial commentator, and gold proponent Peter Schiff's disdain for bitcoin is well known. The gold bug hasn't held back in his criticism of the flagship cryptocurrency, calling it a "Ponzi Scheme" earlier this year. He now seem
"Anyone who cares for someone with a developmental disability, as well as for disabled people themselves [lives] every day in fear that their behavior will be misconstrued as suspicious, intoxicated or hostile by law enforcement."--Steve Silberm
Trust me, I'm a doctor. So goes the well-worn phrase, and as Statista's Martin Armstrong reports, a survey by Ipsos MORI reveals, medical practitioners are indeed the most trusted group of professionals in Britain.
(Natural News) Will you get shorter when you get old, lose your memory, and be on a dozen different medications? Will you need hip replacements, and knee replacements, and need to receive organ donations just to carry on? Will you be put on blood thi
"Men," wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., "are idolaters, and want something to look at and kiss and hug, or throw themselves down before; they always did, they always will; and if you don't make it of wood, you must make it of words."
Do central bankers really think negative interest rates are rational?
"Calculation Error," which Bloomberg terminals sometimes display1, is an apt metaphor for the current state of central bank policy. Both Europe and Asia are now awash in $13
Can the disposable be sustainable? A smartphone does lots of things, many of them astounding. One thing it doesn't do is last very long. Generally two or three years before it gets thrown away. Usually because it's not worth buying a new battery
Everyone has beliefs and habits that they carry into adulthood with them. Some of these are harmless remnants of childhood, like holding your breath as you go through a tunnel or skipping over cracks in the sidewalk.