JTF.ORG - PUBLIC VIDEO
CHAIM BEN PESACH - PUBLIC VIDEO
DR. JAMES D. MANNING - PUBLIC VIDEO
ATF sends 100 agents to Houston to help stop flow of guns to Mexican cartels
WALTER CRONKITE NEAR-DEATH
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Hosea Chapter 5
TOTAL GUN BAN - PUBLIC VIDEO
TOTAL GUN BAN IN THE U.S. PUBLIC VIDEO
BANNING KNIVES IN THE U.S.
BANNING KNIVES IN THE U.S.
GLENN BECK - STUART VARNEY - DANIEL HANNAN
GERALD CELENTE - ECONOMY TODAY
OBAMA WILL PAY FOR MY GAS AND MORTGAGE
RUSH LIMBAUGH - ECONOMY
DR. JAMES D. MANNING - PUBLIC VIDEO
DR. JAMES D. MANNING - PUBLIC VIDEO
MICHAEL SAVAGE - PUBLIC AUDIO
MICHAEL SAVAGE - AL GORE - AUDIO
MICHAEL SAVAGE - PUBLIC AUDIO
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Payoff was U.S. promise of Egyptian access to weapons
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Senator calls for vetting of candidates' eligibility
GOP's Coburn likes plan to require birth certificates
9:46 pm Eastern
© 2009 WorldNetDaily
Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla. |
Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., says it's the responsibility of the states to make sure political candidates are eligible for the offices they seek, but he's in favor of both state and federal demands that future presidential candidates have a formal procedure to document their qualifications.
The relatively strong statement from Coburn on the issue of the eligibility of a president came in a recent letter to a constituent who contacted WND.
WND has reported on a federal plan in the U.S. House by Rep. Bill Posey, R-Fla., that would require documentation of eligibility from presidential candidates, and Coburn confirmed he would view that positively.
"The bill requires any federal candidates' campaign committee filing with the Federal Election Commission to produce a copy of the candidate's birth certificate," he wrote. "If the bill makes it to the Senate, I will likely support it."
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HE SHOULD RESIGN
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'Criminalizing choices … is not appropriate in a free society'
2:52 pm Eastern
© 2009 WorldNetDaily
Rep. Barney Frank |
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., wants to legalize marijuana and has introduced legislation that would accomplish his goals.
"Criminalizing choices that adults make because we think they are unwise ones, when the choices involved have no negative effect on the rights of others, is not appropriate in a free society," he said in his new announcement about his plans for two bills.
One proposal would remove federal penalties for using marijuana and the second would let people in states where "medical marijuana" is allowed use it freely.
The cosponsors on the bills include Reps. Ron Paul, R-Texas and Maurice Hinchey, D-N.Y.
"To those who say that the government should not be encouraging the smoking of marijuana, my response is that I completely agree," Frank's statement said. "But it is a great mistake to divide all human activity into two categories: those that are criminally prohibited, and those that are encouraged."
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Khamenei in tough sermon defends presidential election, warns protesters
June 19, 2009, 3:26 PM (GMT+02:00)
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in stern, uncompromising mode
In his first public appearance since the disputed presidential election of June 12, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Iran's enemies sought to shake the people's confidence and trust in the Islamic regime. They suffered an earthquake and the Islamic regime won a celebration. Revolutionary Guards commander Mohsein Rezai was the only one of the three losing presidential candidates to be present at the mass-attended Friday sermon at the main mosque in Tehran.
The street rallies, Khamenei charged, were used as the cover for Western "armed terrorist groups" who attacked Bassij militiamen and Tehran University of Tehran students. He said the "street riots" are the wrong way and must stop, or else their leader would be held responsible for the consequences.
Without trust, the voters would not have turned out in such numbers, said Khamenei. He asked rhetorically: How can voting be rigged when there is a difference of 11 million votes [between the candidates]?" and won loud cheers. He criticized the mutually vituperative campaigns of winner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and loser Mir Hossein Mousavi and attacked the allegations of corruption against Rafsanjani and his family. But he said he and the president were close on foreign policy. This was an expression of support for Ahmadinejad's approach to the US.
They shouted "Death to America!" when the supreme leader poured contempt on what he called US repression in Afghanistan, its destruction of Iraq and treatment of the Palestinians.
Khamenei attacked the United Kingdom as the most treacherous of Iran's enemies.
The audience shouted: "Death to the UK, Israel and the US!"
Three months ago, he said, "I heard whispers of a rigged vote." He accused the Zionist-ruled media of stirring up treasonable crowd demonstrations. "But the vote was free and transparent. All the candidates and their campaigns were within the revolutionary establishment. None of the four came from outside. There was no campaign for and against the Islamic regime. The election showed religious democracy for all the world to see and how it brought the people together in solidarity behind the Islamic revolution."
The audience cheered loudly when Ahmadinejad's name was said and again when he said corruption should be fought.
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