Archive for March, 2011

Answers Sought in 9/11 Rescuers’ Deaths

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

World Trade Center Rescuers Foundation

The controversy over the New York City Medical Examiners treatment of the body of Officer George Wong is not yet established or recognized by city health officials. Wong was a New York policeman whose doctor had said on his death certificate that he died of an illness caused by 9/11 toxins. But the link between dust and toxins inhaled after the towers came down and resulting long term health issues has yet to be proven. This underscores and highlights several problems the 9/11 first responders are facing.

For the last five years we have advocated the use of a standard autopsy guidelines that could document a link between toxic air at ground zero and deaths of 9/11 rescue workers. I have spoken with Dr. Howard and several other 9/11 health care leaders who all agree; that all 9/11 rescuers need to be autopsied to determine the cause of death. The autopsy may also gain information that will help treat other victims.

The New York City Medical Examiner and the officials involved in the health care issues must understand that to the rescuers, the values of duty, honor, and respect are why we answered the call. Please respect us, and honor our lost. We are not just statistics.

Continue reading here.

Richard Gage to Lead The Midwest Truth Tour

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

By Rachael Woodhouse
GCN Live.com

Richard Gage, founder of “Architects and Engineers For 9/11 Truth”, is kicking off The Midwest Truth Tour. A leader in the truth movement, he has appeared on The Alex Jones Show several times in the past.

On Wednesday, he was interviewed by Joyce Riley on The Power Hour.

He is starting in Ames, IA on this Sunday, 4/3/11. From Iowa, it’s on to Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Illinois.

Tour dates/locations:

For more information, visit AE911truth.org.

Sunday, April 3, 2011 at 7:00 pm
Ames City Auditorium
520 6th Street
Ames, IA (Des Moines area) 50010
Local contact:
James H. hufferdcruzeiro@aol.com

Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 7:00 pm
Northcentral Technical College
1000 West Campus Dr.
Wausau, WI WI 54401-1899
Local contact:
Timothy K. kostkalaw@yahoo.com

Thursday, April 7, 2011 at 7:00 pm
Room 1121 Humanities Building
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Madison, Wi 53703
Local contact:
Eric S. admin@wisbin.com

Friday, April 8, 2011 at 7:00 pm
Milwaukee Public Library
Centennial Hall – 733 N. Eighth St.
Milwaukee, WI 53233
Local contact:
Matthew N. nausmr@yahoo.com

Sunday, April 10, 2011 at 3:00 pm
Hilton Garden Inn
1818 Maple Ave.
Evanston, Ill (Chicago area) 60201
Local contact:
Mariel H. marielhummer@comcast.net

Monday, April 11, 2011 at 7:00 pm
The Center for Visual & Performing Arts
1040 Ridge Road
Munster, IN 46321
Local contact:
Beth D. bethd@libertystraightup.net

Tuesday, April 12, 2011 at 7:00 pm
Lakeview Museum
1125 Lake Ave.
Peoria, IL 61614
Local contact:
Dan S. dmsutton53@hotmail.com

Thursday, April 14, 2011 at 7:00 pm
Continuing Education and Conference Center
University of MN
1890 Buford Ave.
St. Paul, MN 55108
Local contact:
Bruce S. mn911truth@gmail.com

Saturday, April 16, 2011 at 7:00 pm
Uptown Theatre
Valentine Room
3700 Broadway St.
Kansas City, MO 64111
Local contact:
stuart A. corpservinc@yahoo.com
or flightplan@live.com

Monday, April 18, 2011 at 7:00 pm
Lawrence Technological University
College of Architecture & Design
21000 West Ten Mile Road
Southfield, MI 48075
Local contact:
Stan B. stan052737@gmail.com

Spring Madness: Are Athletes Being Short-Changed?

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

By Jim Brown
GCN Live.com

Millions of rabid college basketball fans have been glued to their TVs over the past month as March Madness reached its crescendo this Monday night. My North Carolina Tar Heels came close in an effort to win its second national title in the past five years. And the big bucks have been rolling in. There are lots of winners, with coaches getting big salaries, and colleges splitting up their percentage of huge TV and admission revenues. But there is one group that is being both exploited and shortchanged. It’s the players, themselves.

There’s certainly not a shortage of income. This year in the NCAA tourney, television income is estimated to be some $750 million, with an additional $50 million from ticket sales and sponsorships. The cost of a thirty second spot for Monday night’s championship game exceeds $1 million. And college football is awash with the same increasing yearly income. More bowl games and the ever-increasing television revenue allows most college football programs to cover the cost of a growing array of minor sports.

One sign of the growing sports revenues is the dramatic increase in coaches’ salaries. The University of Kentucky hired basketball Coach John Calipari from the University of Memphis with a salary package of $35 million over the next 10 years. Head coaches whose teams made the NCAA tournament have an average salary of $1 million. And that doesn’t include all the perks like free cars, country club memberships, housing subsidies, access to private jets, and generous severance packages.

In college football, the numbers are even higher. LSU football fans are still incensed over former Coach Nick Sabin taking a salary package estimated at close to $ 4 million at arch rival Alabama. South Carolina Football Coach Steve Spurrier was enticed to take the job with a free country club membership at Augusta, home of this week’s Masters Golf tournament, which includes the use of a private jet to get him there for a quick 18 holes. LSU is paying assistant football coaches as much as $700,000 a year or more. The University of Tennessee announced it would pay two assistant football coaches $650,000 or more, each, for the coming year.

The average compensation for these NCAA tourney coaches is almost triple that of the typical university president, which shows us the perverted priorities of these institutions of higher learning. Little wonder that American industry has not been standing up too well in world competition.

Fans pay through the nose to attend major college athletic events. As an LSU football season ticket holder, I personally pay $840 just for the right to buy my season tickets. The seat ticket itself is $54 per game. So there are big bucks coming into major college programs all over the country. Top-level college sports are big business. LSU, for example, receives some $100 million in revenue each year from ticket sales, television rights, concessions, parking and logo sales, which is about five times what the school receives from tuition.

All this income comes from one source…the athletes. Yet only college expenses — room, food, tuition, books, and maybe a summer job — the basics are paid to these young men and women. No pocket money to go to the movies, no gas money, no extras whatsoever. So we have college athletic programs raking in millions on the backs of talented, disciplined, hardworking athletes, without sharing the revenue with those responsible for generating it. Such a system is ill-defined at best and hypocritical at worst. The universities, administrators, and coaches are reaping great value — even luxury — provided by their recruits, and the players, themselves, are given only a Spartan subsistence.

It was a little better than 40 years ago when I was lucky enough to attend the University of North Carolina on an athletic scholarship. I was given a housing and food allowance that exceeded my costs, as well as “laundry money” that allowed for weekend dates, gas, and a few frills above the basic scholarship costs. What I received then was equivalent to some $250 in pocket money if the same were allowed today. But it’s not. The NCAA tightened up the rules, and college athletes get less today than athletes like me received some years back.

Supporters of the present system will argue that there is the opportunity for these athletes to move on to the pros and make big financial returns. But we all know that very few make it to that level. They may not even end up with the basic skills necessary to succeed in other workplaces, since only a minority of student-athletes in major sports even graduate. LSU football and basketball players generally graduate at a rate of less than 40%.

There is a system in place now that’s allows our young college athletes to be exploited, and the exploitation is being committed by their adult mentors. What a deal — your body in exchange for a pittance of basic expenses. A little monthly expense money is not about to corrupt the system. Providing $300 a month to all athletes on full athletic scholarship seems reasonable. March Madness, as is always the case, turned out to be a financial bonanza — but not for the kids that many of us paid to watch. They deserve a better shake and a small piece of this huge financial pie.

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“The coaches own the athletes’ feet, the colleges own the athletes’ bodies, and the supervisors retain the large rewards. That reflects a neoplantation mentality on the campuses that is not appropriate at this time of high dollars.” – Walter Byers, former executive director of the NCAA.

Peace and Justice,

Jim Brown
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Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers and websites throughout the South. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates at www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s nationally syndicated radio show live each Sunday morning from 9:00 – 11:00 a.m. CST on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream here.

Was the Gabrielle Giffords shooting a “Made For TV” production?

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Vince Bodie | Additional content by Rachael Woodhouse
Daily Paul

Was the Giffords shooting staged? Is Jared Loughner a real person…or a paid actor? Why does this incident seem so similar to John F. Kennedy’s murder? And who was the real target? These are all questions that tireless freedom advocate Joyce Riley sought answers to on the radio today.

The Power Hour
with Joyce Riley covered the shooting Wednesday (March 30th) with Ed Chiarini and Stephanie Sledge (The Government Rag), and looked at the possibility that the whole thing was staged with actors. This is a “must listen”, ground-breaking interview.

Here is a bio on Ed Chiarini:

Ed is a contributing writer to http://beforeitsnews.com and blogger on http://wellaware1.com/blog/. He has been an illustrator, web designer, Avionic Technician with the USAF, patented inventor, founder of Wellaware.net. and lecturer on Internet dangers and how parents can effectively monitor their children’s online activity. Having been an advertising industry insider, Ed has many keen insights into propaganda techniques and false reporting. You can visit his YouTube page at: http://youtube.com/DallasGoldbug

Ed co-producer of the documentary “JFK: The Case for Conspiracy”. His current project: http://WellAware1.com. which is part Investigative Journalist focusing on cover ups and media manipulation of facts, and part cyber watchdog.

Check The Power Hour podcast page for March 30th to hear the interview.

Ed’s previous appearance on the show was amazing. He specializes in detecting video and photography that has been manipulated by the media before being aired, including events like 9/11. Here are links to that show:

March 11, 2011 – Hour 2
March 11, 2011 – Hour 3

The Power Hour/GCN news team is still on the evidence trail. There is more to come on this breaking news story, so stay tuned to the program and check GCN daily for new breaks in this developing story.
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The Power Hour with Joyce Riley can be heard every weekday on GCN from 7:00 – 10:00 a.m. CST. The Power Hour is one of GCN’s top-rated programs, heard in 15 markets including Las Vegas and Kansas City, and is the No. 2 program on all of GCN on the “Listen Live” phone lines. (Listen Line Number: 760-569-7704.)

The Dangers of Polypharmacy

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

By Ben Fuchs
GCN Live.com

It turns out that, while we’ve known for years that daily low dose aspirin causes stomach bleeding, the risk is even higher if you’re practicing polypharmacy, that is, taking multiple medications.

Aspirin achieves its beneficial effects by blocking the production of chemicals called prostaglandins. The problem is that prostaglandins (which we can call PGs) are also involved in helping stimulate the production of the stomach lining. This is a perfect example of the abject failure of prescription medicine. You take aspirin to lower PGs, which reduces blood clotting – but you increase your risk of a completely separate and new symptomology.

Now, according to a study from the University of Oxford in England, it turns out that if you’re taking Plavix (another anti-clotting drug) with your aspirin, you’ve now increased your risk of stomach bleeding and of having that bleeding include the first part of the small intestine. It’s bad enough to have bleeding in the digestive tract, but if now that bleeding includes the upper part of the small intestine, now you’ve really got a problem, because most of our nutrients are absorbed in the upper part of the small intestine. Which of course, means now you’ll be malnourished, which will increase digestive symptoms and cardiovascular symptoms and on and on and on in a downwardly spiraling vicious cycle.

According to the scientists who conducted the Oxford study, people taking any daily dose of aspirin were at almost twice the risk of having stomach bleeding than people not taking aspirin. What makes this strategy for taking low-dose aspirin especially bad is that there are much better nutritional strategies for accomplishing exactly what we’re trying to achieve with aspirin… and Plavix… and Coumadin… and other blood thinners. If the goal is to have a healthy heart and cardiovascular system, this isn’t the way to do it.

One important example of cardioprotective essential nutrients are Omega-3 essential fatty acids. These have been shown to dramatically improve mortality from a heart attack. A study published in the Journal Circulation, found that among patients who had recent heart attacks there was a 41% reduced risk of mortality, with no side effects or toxicity.

Now, what would you suppose would happen if some pharmaceutical company came out with a drug that decreased mortality 41% with ZERO side effects? Or even better, a drug that reduced mortality by 41% and the side effects were better skin, better eyesight, and improvement in arthritis? These are all important and well-documented benefits of Omega-3 supplementation and that, in a nutshell, explains the importance of nutrition and the relationship supplementation has to prescription drugs.

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Ben Fuchs (“Pharmacist Ben”) is the host of The Bright Side. The program airs Monday – Friday, from 10:00 – 11:00 a.m. CST.