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22 sept


Health Risks of Cell Phone Use


Sporen van reuzen

In de mythologie vinden we talloze verwijzingen naar reuzen waarmee de mens ooit eens de aarde deelde. Denk bijvoorbeeld maar aan de Nefilim waarover de Bijbel spreekt. “In die dagen waren er reuzen op aarde," zo lezen we in Genesis 6:2.

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Our food supply is in peril & it's not right


Prof. Frank Drake, Founder of SETI, about Chilbolton message

Prof. Drake conducted the first SETI experiment in the early 60s. In 1974, he and Carl Sagan sent out the so-called "Arecibo Message" - a binary code describing human features like DNA structure and location in the solar system. Despite millions of dollars invested in the search for ET intelligence, no alien has ever answered the radio call. But in 2001, a similar binary message appeared in a crop field near a radio telescope in Chilbolton, England. Could this have been the message? Robert Fleischer, coordinator of Exopolitics Germany, confronted Frank Drake with the crop field binary message. Here's what Prof. Drake has to say about it...


Tim Hawkins - The Government Can


Antidepressants Exposed on British TV


Loose Change 911 An American Coup


Inside Story - Rising hunger


Murder in New York: Malcolm X and the birth of Afro-Americanism Screener


Eerste ronde gedwongen griepvaccinaties VS op 15 oktober

Legertechnicus bevestigt invoering RFID-microchips tijdens vaccinaties - Geruchten: nanochips ook IN de vaccins

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UFO over The City of Panama


VPR (Vertical Players Repertory) Tales of Hoffmann


UFO Aliens are back over Kumburgaz Istanbul Turkey


Agent Orange: An Exposure

During the Vietnam war, between 1962 and 1971, the United States military sprayed 77,000,000 litres (20,340,000 US gallons) of chemical defoliants in South Vietnam as part of a defoliant program. 20 percent of South Vietnam's jungles were sprayed over a nine year period. The first objective was to reduce the dense jungle foliage so that Communist forces might not use it for cover and to deny them use of crops needed for subsistence. In 1965, 42 percent of all herbicide spraying was dedicated to food crops. The second objective was spot clearing in sensitive areas such as around base perimeters. It was also used to drive civilians into RVN-controlled areas.
In 1963, the United States (suspecting the negative effects) initiated a study on the health effects of Agent Orange that by 1967 confirmed that the chemical caused cancer, birth defects and other serious health problems. The outcome of the study had no effect what so ever on the use of Agent Orange. According to Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 4.8 million Vietnamese people were exposed to Agent Orange, resulting in 400,000 deaths and disabilities, and 500,000 children born with birth defects. The most affected zones are the mountainous area along Truong Son (Long Mountains) and the border between Vietnam and Cambodia. The affected residents are living in sub-standard conditions with many genetic diseases.

The use of Agent Orange still has an effect on the citizens of Vietnam, poisoning their food chain and creating concern about its effect on human beings. This chemical has been reported to cause serious skin diseases as well as a vast variety of cancers in the lungs, larynx, and prostate. Children in the areas where Agent Orange was used have been affected and have multiple health problems including cleft palate, mental disabilities, hernias, and extra fingers and toes.

Until the 21st century much of the data on the effects of Agent Orange in Vietnam, was compiled by Vietnamese scientists in Vietnam and largely unavailable to the worldwide English reader. However, general public perception in Vietnam is that the effects are severe and clearly visible in children of veterans and people in affected areas. Veterans have become increasingly concerned about the effects of Agent Orange to humans. While in Vietnam, the veterans were told not to worry, and were persuaded that the chemical was harmless. In the last few years, this opinion has changed, and studies show the true effects Agent Orange has on humans.

Until recently, the US government has not addressed the effects of Agent Orange in Vietnam. In 2002, Vietnam and the US held a joint conference on Human Health and Environmental Impacts of Agent Orange. Following the conference the US National Institute of Environmental and Health Sciences (NIEHS) began scientific exchanges between the US and Vietnam and began discussions for a joint research project on the human health impacts of Agent Orange.

These negotiations broke down in 2005 when both sides could not agree on the research protocol and the research project was canceled. However, more progress has been made on the environmental front. In 2003 the first US-Vietnam workshop on remediation of dioxin was held.

Starting in 2005 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency? (EPA) began to work with the Vietnamese government to measure the level of dioxin at the Da Nang Airbase. Also in 2005 the Joint Advisory Committee on Agent Orange made up of representatives of Vietnamese and US government agencies was established. The committee has been meeting yearly to explore areas of scientific cooperation, technical assistance and environmental remediation of dioxin.

One of the biggest breakthroughs on the issue came as a result of President George W. Bush's state visit to Vietnam in November 2006. In the joint statement between President Bush and President Triet regarding the visit further cooperation on long-term environmental and human health impacts of Vietnam War era dioxin was raised.

In late May 2007, President Bush signed into law a supplemental spending bill for the war in Iraq and Afghanistan that included an earmark of $3 million specifically for funding for programs for the remediation of dioxin 'hotspots' on former US military bases and for public health programs for the surrounding communities.


Government Spending Documentary


Trail of Tears 2009 Alabama Route

Video taken along County Line Road in Madison Alabama on 19 Sep, 2009. Trail of Tears Commemorative Motorcycle Ride http://www.al-tn-trailoftears.net/

The group of riders was smaller this year than in years past due to a dispute by another group that prefers a route other than the historical path taken by the Native Americans that passed through what is now Madison, Alabama. The riders seen in this video will terminate their ride in Waterloo, Alabama where the natives were forced to board boats for their extradition from the area.The Indian Removal Act of 1830 called for the voluntary or forcible removal of all Indians from the eastern United States to the state of Oklahoma. May of 1838 marked the deadline for voluntary native removal. The military was prepared to use force and did so under the command of General Winfield Scott. General Scott ordered the round-up and removal of over 17,000 Cherokees who refused to leave. So began the Cherokee "Trail of Tears," one of the darkest episodes in relations between the United States and Native Americans. The process was swift and brutal. Detachments of soldiers arrived at every Cherokee house and drove men, women, and children out of their homes with only the clothes on their backs. They were placed in concentration camps where conditions were horrendous. Food and supplies were limited and disease was rampant. Many perished. By late June of 1838, the upper Tennessee River had become too low for navigation due to a drought. The U.S. government hired wagonmaster J.C.S. Hood to transport 1,070 Native Americans by foot and wagon from Ross's Landing in Chattanooga, Tennessee to what is now Waterloo, Alabama - about 230 miles. Much of the journey followed what is now U.S. Highway 72. Upon reaching Waterloo, the survivors were in despicable condition. Migration had to be suspended until the river was high enough for navigation. Many died in Waterloo and others escaped into the hills. Many area residents can trace their native American ancestry to those who fled. As many as 4,000 deaths occurred because of this forced removal of civilized Native Americans from their rightful homes.In the end, members of the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole nations suffered the same fate as the Cherokees. Join us as we honor those from the past who traveled this Trail of Tears. Let us learn from this mistake, accept each other as we are, and walk together in peace.


Population Reduction after economic collapse


BlackWater mercenaries slaughtering unarmed civilians in Iraq


U.S vehicle runs over everything in iraq


"Humane Meat" - Pictures Worth a Thousand Words


Anti-ObamaCare Petition 1.3 Million Signatures


Swine Flu Exposed


Amsterdam koloniseert Mars - ScienceFlash Nieuws uit de ruimte


UFO Amazing Footage over Monte Pego, Spain


UFO Files Newly Release by the UK Goverment ABC Nightline


A Sea of Sacrifice - Whales


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