View Full Version : here it is total insanity
Serpo
17th August 2013, 07:02 AM
Woman struck in the face with a baseball at a Little League game is SUING 11-year-old catcher who threw it for $150,000
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2163345/Elizabeth-Lloyd-hit-face-baseball-Little-League-game-SUING-catcher-aged-11-150-000.html (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2163345/Elizabeth-Lloyd-hit-face-baseball-Little-League-game-SUING-catcher-aged-11-150-000.html)
Serpo
17th August 2013, 07:05 AM
Craigslist sperm donor forced to pay child support to lesbian couple – despite giving up parental rights to the baby BEFORE she was born
http://www.secretsofthefed.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/article-2255241-16B3F735000005DC-186_634x592-300x280.jpg (http://www.secretsofthefed.com/sperm-donor-forced-to-pay-child-support-to-lesbian-couple/article-2255241-16b3f735000005dc-186_634x592/)
http://www.secretsofthefed.com/sperm-donor-forced-to-pay-child-support-to-lesbian-couple/
ps who in their right mind would donate sperm to this couple............................
(http://www.secretsofthefed.com/sperm-donor-forced-to-pay-child-support-to-lesbian-couple/)
Serpo
17th August 2013, 07:09 AM
Texas SWAT team destroys organic farm during raid
http://rt.com/usa/texas-swat-organic-rad-587/
Serpo
17th August 2013, 07:16 AM
and this...............
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kA9yn82LGLghttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kA9yn82LGLg
General of Darkness
17th August 2013, 07:28 AM
Damn Serpo, the world is bat shit crazy these days.
Serpo
17th August 2013, 07:33 AM
Aint it General.......
kinda starting to feel like the final minute of the final hour..............
Hitch
17th August 2013, 08:18 AM
Craigslist sperm donor forced to pay child support to lesbian couple – despite giving up parental rights to the baby BEFORE she was born
http://www.secretsofthefed.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/article-2255241-16B3F735000005DC-186_634x592-300x280.jpg (http://www.secretsofthefed.com/sperm-donor-forced-to-pay-child-support-to-lesbian-couple/article-2255241-16b3f735000005dc-186_634x592/)
http://www.secretsofthefed.com/sperm-donor-forced-to-pay-child-support-to-lesbian-couple/
ps who in their right mind would donate sperm to this couple............................
(http://www.secretsofthefed.com/sperm-donor-forced-to-pay-child-support-to-lesbian-couple/)
Oh this one here burns me up. How in the heck is this possible in this day and age? How can these two bitches even look in the mirror each day? Doesn't anyone have any sense of morality anymore?
I'm telling you, any way they can, they want MEN slaves. Pretty soon, just being a single guy will be a crime.
EE_
17th August 2013, 08:40 AM
Police Seizing Cash And Property From Citizens Without Charges
Written by: Daniel Jennings Current Events August 16, 2013 25 Comments
Police in many parts of the United States are routinely seizing cash and valuables from citizens without arrest or trial. Worst of all, police officers in Texas and Virginia have actually been stopping motorists and seizing their cash.
Having a large amount of cash on you or in your car is now apparently a crime in some parts of the United States. Worse, laws set up to seize cash from drug dealers are being used to seize money from people stopped for minor traffic violations.
A disturbing article in The New Yorker magazine mentions several instances of police seizing cash from citizens. The cops used a legal doctrine called forfeiture to seize the cash. The frightening thing is that the cash and valuables can be taken without an arrest or even criminal charges. They can simply seize it on probable cause and in many cases that have nothing to do with drugs.
State and federal laws now authorize forfeiture for a wide variety of crimes, many of them quite minor. You can have property or cash seized for such offenses as cockfighting, drag racing, gambling, illegal fishing, and more. The most bothersome detail is that many police departments consider forfeiture money part of their budgets.
The Monroe, North Carolina, police department wants to use $44,000 in drug money to buy a drone to spy on local residents, New Yorker reporter Sarah Stillman noted. Stillman thinks the drone would be used to patrol local roads looking for more vehicles to seize.
Perhaps the worst case involved Jennifer Boatright and Ron Henderson, a couple from Houston. When the two drove from Houston to Henderson’s hometown on the Texas/Louisiana state line, they made the mistake of bringing all their savings in cash. They wanted to use the money to buy a used car.
The couple was pulled over by the local police in Tenaha, Texas. The officer, Barry Washington, searched the couple’s car and discovered the cash. Once he saw the cash, Washington took the two to the police station on the pretext that they were smuggling marijuana (there was none in the car).
At the police station, the local district attorney, Lynda K. Russell, told Henderson and Boatright that they faced charges of money laundering and child endangerment. The two would go to jail, and their children would be turned over to social workers. Then Russell made the couple an offer they couldn’t refuse; if they turned over all of their cash, they could stay out of jail and keep the children.
The two turned over the money in exchange for signing a waiver under which police would drop charges. There was no trial or hearing of any sort. Instead, police simply took the cash. The only way the couple could get the cash back was to hire a lawyer and sue the town.
If You Carry Cash, You’re a Target
Anybody who carries a large amount of cash, such as those trying to avoid tracking of financial transactions, are now a target for forfeiture. They include a man named James Morrow, who was pulled over in Tenaha for driving too close to the white line. Police took $3,900 in cash from him; Morrow was planning to use the money to pay for dental work.
Police accused Morrow of being a drug dealer and refused to let him call his bank to prove he had taken the money out. Police also seized Morrow’s car and phone, then told him to walk home. He had to walk to Walmart and borrow a phone from a stranger to call his mother for a ride.
Such actions don’t just happen in Texas. In Virginia, Victor Ramos Guzman, a church secretary, and his brother were pulled over by a state trooper. The two had $28,000 in cash on them. The cash had been collected from church members and was going to be used to buy property for the house of worship. The trooper seized the cash and reported the case to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). By reporting the Guzman brothers, who were legal residents of the United States, the Virginia state police could keep 80% of the cash under federal law.
Stillman’s article indicates that anybody carrying a large sum of cash or valuables such as gold can be a target for forfeiture. Worse, authorities could raid your house to get their hands on cash or gold kept there. Obviously preppers would be a major target for such operations.
The operations can be very profitable; authorities in Tenaha, Texas, seized $1.3 million from travelers in a six-month period. Most of the money was taken from drug smugglers who avoided jail by paying up, but a number of law abiding citizens got robbed as well.
Tenaha wasn’t even the worst example. In Caddo County, Oklahoma, a private company named Desert Snow LLC was hired to train a “drug interdiction task force.” The training consisted of Desert Snow employees stopping drivers and stealing up to 25% of their cash. In Hunt County, Texas, police officers received $26,000 a year bonuses from a forfeiture fund.
Policemen Turned into Tax Collectors
The worst aspect of forfeiture is that it turns police officers into tax collectors. The major role of police shifts from law enforcement and protecting the public to bringing in revenue.
Instead of catching criminals, police are on the lookout for those with cash so that they can seize it. They often target minorities, especially Hispanics, who often carry large amounts of cash and may not be legal citizens. Many of the victims are working people, who lose all or part of their life savings.
As more and more local governments around the country get cash strapped, expect forfeiture to get worse. Smaller communities, which depend heavily on sales and property tax for revenue, are more likely to use it.
What Can You Do to Protect Yourself?
So what can you do to protect yourself and your family from forfeiture? The best advice is to limit the amount of cash that you carry. Don’t carry more than a few hundred dollars with you. Instead, keep the money in a bank and use ATMs to withdraw it when you want to make a purchase. Internet banks like Bank of Internet and Everbank let you make withdrawals for no fees.
Beyond that, don’t attract attention to yourself; make sure cash is well hidden and nobody suspects you have it. That way you can avoid the attention of the robbers with badges. Keep the cash and valuables well hidden and make sure nobody knows about them, particularly the police.
http://www.offthegridnews.com/2013/08/16/police-seizing-cash-and-property-from-citizens-without-charges/#
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=TU_nh51FU14
Libertytree
17th August 2013, 09:26 AM
The insanity is that stories like these and even more outlandish happen every single day, multiple times a day. It's like some weird tsunami of craziness that just keeps on coming.
Blink
17th August 2013, 09:29 AM
The insanity is that stories like these and even more outlandish happen every single day, multiple times a day. It's like some weird tsunami of craziness that just keeps on coming.
Yeah and nobody seems to be catching on to it......
messianicdruid
17th August 2013, 10:31 AM
Yeah and nobody seems to be catching on to it......
Reminds me of Philip K Dick's quote:
"Insanity - to have to construct a picture of one's life, by making inquiries of others."
gunDriller
17th August 2013, 11:30 AM
The insanity is that stories like these and even more outlandish happen every single day, multiple times a day. It's like some weird tsunami of craziness that just keeps on coming.
it's like an encyclopedia about Rogue Police that writes itself.
i became interested in that subject when i was pulled over by the head of the local SWAT team for signalling my turns too far ahead, and for using my windshield wipers on a rainy day. the guy was on a fishing expedition, MAJOR fishing expedition.
i mentioned the subject of the massive roll-outs that the police have for minor matters, e.g. 6 cops for 1 homeless guy who doesn't pay for a restaurant meal. i said "looks like a job creation scheme to me".
i queried one of the senior cops about this practice at the local internet cafe. basically asked him point blank, "why do you guys do that ?"
he stopped going to that cafe. then i saw him at the YMCA. he had a very pained look on his face. i don't think he likes me, although it could just be something else.
Serpo
17th August 2013, 03:30 PM
Interesting to see they are looking again at the Princess Diana death and saying something about the British military may of killed her
http://news.sky.com/story/1129902/dianas-death-police-passed-new-information
Cebu_4_2
17th August 2013, 04:12 PM
Under the Queens directive... who was Diannes husband to be? Not quite Royalty.
Serpo
17th August 2013, 04:20 PM
Of course ,we dont want commoners that dont suck blood messing up the lineage....
Neuro
17th August 2013, 04:49 PM
Police Seizing Cash And Property From Citizens Without Charges
Written by: Daniel Jennings Current Events August 16, 2013 25 Comments
Police in many parts of the United States are routinely seizing cash and valuables from citizens without arrest or trial. Worst of all, police officers in Texas and Virginia have actually been stopping motorists and seizing their cash.
Having a large amount of cash on you or in your car is now apparently a crime in some parts of the United States. Worse, laws set up to seize cash from drug dealers are being used to seize money from people stopped for minor traffic violations.
A disturbing article in The New Yorker magazine mentions several instances of police seizing cash from citizens. The cops used a legal doctrine called forfeiture to seize the cash. The frightening thing is that the cash and valuables can be taken without an arrest or even criminal charges. They can simply seize it on probable cause and in many cases that have nothing to do with drugs.
State and federal laws now authorize forfeiture for a wide variety of crimes, many of them quite minor. You can have property or cash seized for such offenses as cockfighting, drag racing, gambling, illegal fishing, and more. The most bothersome detail is that many police departments consider forfeiture money part of their budgets.
The Monroe, North Carolina, police department wants to use $44,000 in drug money to buy a drone to spy on local residents, New Yorker reporter Sarah Stillman noted. Stillman thinks the drone would be used to patrol local roads looking for more vehicles to seize.
Perhaps the worst case involved Jennifer Boatright and Ron Henderson, a couple from Houston. When the two drove from Houston to Henderson’s hometown on the Texas/Louisiana state line, they made the mistake of bringing all their savings in cash. They wanted to use the money to buy a used car.
The couple was pulled over by the local police in Tenaha, Texas. The officer, Barry Washington, searched the couple’s car and discovered the cash. Once he saw the cash, Washington took the two to the police station on the pretext that they were smuggling marijuana (there was none in the car).
At the police station, the local district attorney, Lynda K. Russell, told Henderson and Boatright that they faced charges of money laundering and child endangerment. The two would go to jail, and their children would be turned over to social workers. Then Russell made the couple an offer they couldn’t refuse; if they turned over all of their cash, they could stay out of jail and keep the children.
The two turned over the money in exchange for signing a waiver under which police would drop charges. There was no trial or hearing of any sort. Instead, police simply took the cash. The only way the couple could get the cash back was to hire a lawyer and sue the town.
If You Carry Cash, You’re a Target
Anybody who carries a large amount of cash, such as those trying to avoid tracking of financial transactions, are now a target for forfeiture. They include a man named James Morrow, who was pulled over in Tenaha for driving too close to the white line. Police took $3,900 in cash from him; Morrow was planning to use the money to pay for dental work.
Police accused Morrow of being a drug dealer and refused to let him call his bank to prove he had taken the money out. Police also seized Morrow’s car and phone, then told him to walk home. He had to walk to Walmart and borrow a phone from a stranger to call his mother for a ride.
Such actions don’t just happen in Texas. In Virginia, Victor Ramos Guzman, a church secretary, and his brother were pulled over by a state trooper. The two had $28,000 in cash on them. The cash had been collected from church members and was going to be used to buy property for the house of worship. The trooper seized the cash and reported the case to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). By reporting the Guzman brothers, who were legal residents of the United States, the Virginia state police could keep 80% of the cash under federal law.
Stillman’s article indicates that anybody carrying a large sum of cash or valuables such as gold can be a target for forfeiture. Worse, authorities could raid your house to get their hands on cash or gold kept there. Obviously preppers would be a major target for such operations.
The operations can be very profitable; authorities in Tenaha, Texas, seized $1.3 million from travelers in a six-month period. Most of the money was taken from drug smugglers who avoided jail by paying up, but a number of law abiding citizens got robbed as well.
Tenaha wasn’t even the worst example. In Caddo County, Oklahoma, a private company named Desert Snow LLC was hired to train a “drug interdiction task force.” The training consisted of Desert Snow employees stopping drivers and stealing up to 25% of their cash. In Hunt County, Texas, police officers received $26,000 a year bonuses from a forfeiture fund.
Policemen Turned into Tax Collectors
The worst aspect of forfeiture is that it turns police officers into tax collectors. The major role of police shifts from law enforcement and protecting the public to bringing in revenue.
Instead of catching criminals, police are on the lookout for those with cash so that they can seize it. They often target minorities, especially Hispanics, who often carry large amounts of cash and may not be legal citizens. Many of the victims are working people, who lose all or part of their life savings.
As more and more local governments around the country get cash strapped, expect forfeiture to get worse. Smaller communities, which depend heavily on sales and property tax for revenue, are more likely to use it.
What Can You Do to Protect Yourself?
So what can you do to protect yourself and your family from forfeiture? The best advice is to limit the amount of cash that you carry. Don’t carry more than a few hundred dollars with you. Instead, keep the money in a bank and use ATMs to withdraw it when you want to make a purchase. Internet banks like Bank of Internet and Everbank let you make withdrawals for no fees.
Beyond that, don’t attract attention to yourself; make sure cash is well hidden and nobody suspects you have it. That way you can avoid the attention of the robbers with badges. Keep the cash and valuables well hidden and make sure nobody knows about them, particularly the police.
http://www.offthegridnews.com/2013/08/16/police-seizing-cash-and-property-from-citizens-without-charges/#
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=TU_nh51FU14
How is this anything different from armed robbery, or kidnapping for ransom?
Hitch
17th August 2013, 04:57 PM
How is this anything different from armed robbery, or kidnapping for ransom?
It's no different, Neuro. It's wrong and happening in our country. The country we all wish was free.
Serpo
17th August 2013, 06:33 PM
Lavabit.com owner: 'I could be arrested' for resisting surveillance orderhttp://http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/08/13/20008036-lavabitcom-owner-i-could-be-arrested-for-resisting-surveillance-order?lite
Serpo
17th August 2013, 06:39 PM
http://vimeo.com/57126054http://vimeo.com/57126054
Hatha Sunahara
17th August 2013, 10:42 PM
Thats from the movie Samsara. I just watched that a few nights ago. Can't reccommend that movie highly enough. Made by the same people who made Baraka.
Hatha
Hatha Sunahara
17th August 2013, 10:57 PM
it's like an encyclopedia about Rogue Police that writes itself.
i became interested in that subject when i was pulled over by the head of the local SWAT team for signalling my turns too far ahead, and for using my windshield wipers on a rainy day. the guy was on a fishing expedition, MAJOR fishing expedition.
i mentioned the subject of the massive roll-outs that the police have for minor matters, e.g. 6 cops for 1 homeless guy who doesn't pay for a restaurant meal. i said "looks like a job creation scheme to me".
i queried one of the senior cops about this practice at the local internet cafe. basically asked him point blank, "why do you guys do that ?"
he stopped going to that cafe. then i saw him at the YMCA. he had a very pained look on his face. i don't think he likes me, although it could just be something else.
You know that their job is to relieve the population of its assets, don't you? It's legal for them to rob you because the courts interpret the laws to make it legal. The courts are corrupt, so the cops take advantage of this opportunity to rob the people to their heart's content. The cop you confronted with that question won't talk to you because he knows you see through this, and he's on very low moral ground. I don't see how any cop can continue to be a cop with these kind of policies to enforce unless they are irredeemably corrupt individuals. I think the worst of them are the ones who pretend to be upright citizens themselves. How can any of them show their faces in public when their job is to rob the public? They have to be heavily armed and ruthless to do what they do. They are in a vicious circle. The more they break the law, the more they remove themselves from the rest of humanity. A lot of them know there is a limit to their misbehavior, and they are testing those limits. So we'll see more egregious examples of their lawlessness. Maybe we already do. They seem to have assumed a right to conduct summary executions, only they use the 'officer safety' excuse now. Eventually, they will just shoot people and laugh and explain nothing. They already do that. Think about the FBI shooting Ibragim Todashev in Orlando. That was unmistakably an execution.
Hatha
Twisted Titan
18th August 2013, 12:28 AM
QFT Hatha
But the day will soon come when a good many of them are going to be the exposed to "frontier justice" by men and women that have long memories.
Lots of these of these Womps tend to live a good distance away from the area they terrorize.
I want to be a fly on the wall when the realize there is no "back up" when shit turns thick.
Serpo
18th August 2013, 02:22 AM
America's Cup
Two crew, Rob Waddell and Chris ward went overboard
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFjxEfg_mEwhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFjxEfg_mEw
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