Thursday, May 31, 2012

Bill Murray is Ready to See You Now (Interview by Dan Fierman)

He is one of the greatest comic actors alive. A man who's navigated his career with a peerless instinct for quality and self-respect. The man behind movies—from Caddyshack to Stripes, from Rushmore to Lost in Translation—that seem to have defined a dozen different moments in our cultural life. But he is also a man beholden to no one, not the studios, not the audience, not even an agent. And as he sits down with Dan Fierman to discuss everything from the lameness of Ron Howard to the genius of Kung Fu Hustle, you can be pretty sure he's going to tell you exactly what he thinks



When I arrived, he was standing alone in the corner of a New York hotel room, talking on a cell phone and wearing a ratty black polo, jeans, and yellow "tape measure" suspenders. I had been waiting for over an hour, which didn't seem like an unreasonable amount of time. Bill Murray famously does not give interviews—he's sat down for exactly four prolonged media encounters in the past ten years—and when he does, it's never clear what you're going to get. You just have to pray he's in a good mood.
The very thing that makes Bill Murray, well, Bill Murray is what makes sitting down with him such an unpredictable enterprise. Bill Murray crashes parties, ditches promotional appearances, clashes with his friends, his collaborators, and his enemies. If you—movie director, journalist, dentist—want to speak to him, you don't go through any gatekeeper. You leave a message on an 800 number. If Bill Murray wants to speak with you, he'll call you back. If his three and a half decades in the public sphere have taught us anything about the 59-year-old actor, it's that he simply does not give a good goddamn.
His career is known to most any fan of modern comedy: the years on SNL; the series of epochal comedies like StripesGroundhog Day, and Caddyshack. And his current artistic period, which could be described as Reclusive National Treasure. He lives in Rockland County, New York, emerging only to make movies for directors he's interested in: Wes Anderson, Jim Jarmusch, Sofia Coppola. This summer he'll release a period indie called Get Low, in which he plays an undertaker throwing an early funeral for Robert Duvall. Today, Murray was in an expansive mood. Then, after he spoke about Ghostbusters 3, Barack Obama, and Garfield, he decided the interview was over and was gone. As best as I can tell, he was not fucking with me. But who knows? Bill Murray doesn't need you to be in on his joke. His life is all one performance-art piece—and he does everything for an audience of one.
Bill Murray: How long do these things last? [picks up recorder] How much time is on these things?
GQ: A lot. They're digital.
Digital? I was thinking of recording myself sleeping. Would this work?
Well, assuming you don't make more than an hour and a half of noise each night, you'll be okay.
I dunno. That's why I need the recorder. Sometimes I snore, like when I get really tired. Smoke a cigar or something, you know. I have a brother with sleep apnea. That's terrifying. Jesus. But anyhow…you have questions.
I do. Here's my first one: Why the 800 number?
Well, it's what I finally went to. I have this phone number that they call and talk. And then I listen.
And you just weed 'em out?
I just sort of decide. I might listen and say, "Okay, why don't you put it on a piece of paper? Put it on a piece of paper, and if it's interesting, I'll call you back, and if it's not, I won't." It's exhausting otherwise. I don't want to have a relationship with someone if I'm not going to work with them. If you're talking about business, let's talk about business, but I don't want to hang out and bullshit.
But that's so much of how Hollywood does business.
Yeah, well, that always kind of creeped me out. And I don't like to work. I only like working when I'm working.
Well, I remember, you took a big break. It was in the late '80s, right?
It was in the middle of the '80s. Actually, I've taken a couple of breaks. I've retired a couple of times. It's great, because you can just say, "Oh, I'm sorry. I'm retired." [laughs] And people will actually believe that you've retired. There are nutters out there that will go, "Oh, okay!" and then leave you alone.
I'm always interested in how you pick your projects, because that's one damned random filmography. For Get Low, I dimly suspect that it came down to the line "One thing about Chicago, people know how to die."
[laughs] Well, that was appealing. No, [producer] Dean Zanuck and I had the nicest phone conversation, and I thought, Hmm… And then I saw the making-of DVD of his last movie. This really should be kept secret, but you can learn a lot by watching the making-of DVDs. Every actor should do it. You figure out what you're dealing with. And I thought, You know, this guy is all right. And it turned out beautifully. Where the hell did we take it? That's right. Poland. There's kind of a famous cinematography festival, in a place called Lodz, and God, they went nuts for it. These cinematographers were all, [deadpan Eastern European accent] "Oh yeah, dis good."
Like comedians, nodding at a joke.
Exactly! Oh yeah. [nods, stone-faced] "That's funny." They were just like that.
You have a lot of lines in this one that get tons of laughs I doubt were on the page. It's all in the rhythm, the delivery. How do you pitch something like that? How do you make something out of nothing?
I have developed a kind of different style over the years. I hate trying to re-create a tone or a pitch. Saying, "I want to make it sound like I made it sound the last time"? That's insane, because the last time doesn't exist. It's only this time. And everything is going to be different this time. There's only now. And I don't think a director, as often as not, knows what is going to play funny anyway. As often as not, the right one is the one that they're surprised by, so I don't think that they have the right tone in their head. And I think that good actors always—or if you're being good, anyway—you're making it better than the script. That's your fucking job. It's like, Okay, the script says this? Well, watch this. Let's just roar a little bit. Let's see how high we can go.


Read More http://www.gq.com/entertainment/celebrities/201008/bill-murray-dan-fierman-gq-interview#ixzz1wUY8MQmM

Regina’s Mosaic Festival features tastes from around the world




REGINA — Bullet soup, Indian tacos, buffalo stew and bannock burgers — the traditional prairie dishes served at the First Nations pavilion — are a sampling of eclectic smorgasbords from around the world that will be featured at Mosaic.
Hosted at the First Nations University of Canada, the First Nations pavilion will provide a taste of its culture and proud traditions that include colourful powwow dance performances from four tribes — Nakota, Dakota, Cree and Saulteaux.
In addition to hoop dances performed by Terrence Littletent and Jacob Pratt, Metis dancers from Kitchener Community School and First Nations crafters will showcase their talents, said Doreen Oakes, the pavilion’s co-chair.
“It’s going to be a lot of fun — it’s been a lot of work,” Oakes said laughing. “This is our first time hosting it here at this campus.”
The celebration of cultures begins today when 19 pavilions open at 5 p.m.
“Mosaic is by far our most visible event,” said Michael Cassano, president of the Regina Multicultural Council. “It allows everyone in the city of Regina to get out and participate in various cultures and foods and entertainment and, of course, the fine hospitality at each and every venue.”
The three-day passports are $14 for adults, $9 for youths and seniors. The cost covers bus transportation to pavilions around Regina.
Preparations for Mosaic begin in September when entertainers start meeting to prepare the special programs.
“This is almost like their Olympics — they have been gearing up and practising,” Cassano said. “It does take a lot of effort on behalf of the dancers and performers and their parents as well.”
To supplement local entertainment, a number of pavilions are bringing in performers from across Canada, the United States and Jamaica.
“We’re drawing from every corner of the world, which is fitting because this is all about the world,” Cassano said.
He estimates between 7,000 and 9,000 volunteers are involved in Mosaic.
“If you are not volunteering at a pavilion, you certainly know someone who is because Regina is like that,” he said.
In a fitting salute to volunteers, their names will be put into a draw for a chance to win three WestJet travel vouchers. The lucky winners will be able to travel the world after Mosaic is over for another year.
Since the festival began 45 years ago, it has grown from a handful of pavilions in one small venue to 19 pavilions spread across Regina.
Although the Bangladesh and Chinese pavilions won’t participate this year, Cassano expects they will be back next year, “bigger and better than ever.”
The Scandinavian Club of Regina — expected to set up a pavilion next year — has audited planning meetings for Mosaic in preparation.
“People should be prepared to be greeted with a smile, to be greeted with respect — as if you were entering someone’s home,” Cassano said. “That’s the nice thing about it. Each and every one of the volunteers is doing it, not because of the pay, not because they have to, but because they really want to show you what their culture is all about.”


MOSAIC 2012 Pavilion locations:

Austrian Edelweiss, Austrian Canadian Edelweiss Club
Balaton Hungarian, Regina Hungarian Cultural & Social Club
Caribbean, Al Ritchie Memorial Centre
Chilean, Ukrainian Orthodox Auditorium
Ethiopian, Core Ritchie Centre
Filipinas Philippine, Banner Hall, EVRAZ Place
First Nations, First Nations University of Canada
Francophone, Carrefour des Plaines
German, German Club
Hellenic Greek, Show Sale Arena, EVRAZ Place
India, Orr Centre
Irish, Caledonian Curling Club
Italian, G. Marconi Canadian Italian Club
Korean, Caledonian Curling Club
Kyiv Ukrainian, Agribition Building, EVRAZ Place
Latin American, Highland Curling Club
Miorita Romanian, Regina Seniors Citizens Centre
Poltava Ukrainian, Regina Performing Arts Centre
Scottish Celtic, Tartan Curling Club


Read more: http://www.leaderpost.com/entertainment/Regina+Mosaic+Festival+features+tastes+from+around+world/6704518/story.html#ixzz1wTGCbDBN

Saskatchewan government joining other provinces in lawsuit against tobacco industry







REGINA — The Saskatchewan government is preparing to launch a lawsuit against the tobacco industry for health care costs, it announced in a media release on Thursday.
The government has proclaimed The Saskatchewan Tobacco Damages and Health Care Costs Recovery Act, enabling the province to launch legal action against the tobacco industry to recover the costs of treating tobacco-related illnesses.
The proclamation comes on May 31, which has been designated as World No Tobacco Day by the World Health Organization.
“We intend to join other Canadian provinces in pursuing legal action to recover health care costs from tobacco manufacturers,” Justice Minister and Attorney General Gordon Wyant said in the media release.
“This act gives us the legal authority to launch a lawsuit on behalf of the people of Saskatchewan.”
The provincial government has enlisted a consortium that includes the law firms of Bennett Jones, LLP and Siskinds, LLP to launch a lawsuit on behalf of Saskatchewan. The consortium also represents the governments of New Brunswick, British Columbia, Manitoba, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.
“While the lawsuit will seek cost recovery, we also want to remind residents about the harmful effects of tobacco use,” Health Minister Dustin Duncan said in the release.
“We introduced legislation to protect our citizens against the harm of second-hand smoke, and we have been providing public education about the risks of tobacco use as well as cessation support to those trying to quit.”
“We intend to hold the tobacco industry accountable for the damaging effects of its products on the health of Saskatchewan residents,” Wyant said.
Saskatchewan will join the governments of British Columbia, New Brunswick, Ontario, and Newfoundland and Labrador, who have launched similar lawsuits.



Read more: http://www.thestarphoenix.com/Saskatchewan+government+joining+other+provinces+lawsuit+against+tobacco+industry/6708317/story.html#ixzz1wTEgMVYH

Reginans show support for Quebec students

Adriane Paavo (L) of Regina with a Quebec flag during a Casserole Night protest at Albert Street and 13th Avenue in Regina on May 29, 2012 in support of Quebec students. The movement sprang up in response to the Quebec government's introduction of Bill 78, a new law introduced last week to quell student protests over tuition fee increases.

Photograph by: Don Healy , Regina Leader-Post







Read more: http://www.leaderpost.com/news/Adriane+Paavo+Regina+with+Quebec+flag+during+Casserole+Night+protest+Albert+Street+13th+Avenue/6704592/story.html#ixzz1wTDhC3zw

Crews dealing with gas leak in South West Regina




REGINA — A natural gas leak has forced the evacuation of four apartment buildings in southwest Regina.
SaskEnergy crews are working on the leak located along Harbour Landing Drive north of Jim Cairns Boulevard.
Workers were called to the scene after construction workers in the area lit a six-inch distribution line at 4015 Harbour Landing Dr.
SaskEnergy spokeswoman Vanessa Beaupre the gas is going straight up from the site of the break — a good sign in that crews know where the gas is going and it is not travelling underground. SaskEnergy are attempting to squeeze the line at the point of the break.


Check back for updates . . .

Read more: http://www.leaderpost.com/news/Crews+dealing+with+leak+southwest+Regina/6708050/story.html#ixzz1wTCcMqpO

2011 Canadian Census



Follow this link to view 
2011 Canadian Census Data

World Wonders Project by Google


(World Wonders Project)

(Behind the Scenes)

(Website Demo)

Superhuman Powers (X-Men) - Is It Real?


Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Mega Disasters- Yellowstone Volcano Super Eruption full documentary


3D Multi Touch Bar Top ...... Sweeeeeet!!!!


16 year old builds tiny home to guarantee mortgage-free future


Low-income Houses from Recycled goods





Samsung Galaxy S3: Top 5 reasons it will change the game


Here’s why it promises to smash records and tear up the smartphone market rulebook forever…
1 Simultaneous international launch means its impact is undiluted

The S2 managed to annex magazine, tech site and newspaper column inches and rack up over 20 million sales despite a botched, staggered release that meant it landed on some US carriers six months after it debuted in Europe.
This time Samsung is giving its flagship a simultaneous global release. With no dilution of its impact at launch, that ought to equate to the Galaxy S3 making a massive splash early on.
Team this with Sammy's rumoured vast ad-spend and the resulting massive visibility for the S3 and it means it’s odds-on to power to a sales record for an Android phone and come close to the kind of numbers usually reserved for iPhones.
2 It’ll engender an age of quad-core apps
The huge sales that the Galaxy S3 is set to rack up will provide a huge financial fillip for devs to create apps that take advantage of its graphical muscle. We think you can start pencilling the first massively immersive, graphically rich games in about 12 months time.
That’s not to say that it’ll kill off the likes of Angry Birds and its 79p, casual ilk. More’s the pity. But quad-core phones like the S3 must mean the clock is ticking for them…
3 It’s going to take 'phablets' to the mass market

The Galaxy Note has done sales of over five million since landing last October. That’s much more than was expected. But still a long way from the numbers needed to say that larger screen devices have come of age.
With a display mooted to be between 4.6 and 4.8-inches, the S3 is a phablet in all but name. And by hipping the mass market to the joys of acres of screen real estate, the S3 could be the gateway device that pushes that much maligned form factor to bigger things.
4 It’ll give NFC the push it needs

In keeping with Samsung’s status as an Olympics sponsor, the S3 will surely be touted as the event’s official phone.
What will this mean? Well, we think part of the deal will be that it’ll pack NFC support to be used by punters around the Olympic site to pay for low-ticket items and salty sustenance at high-street retailers and restaurants by swiping their phone over a reader.
More importantly, let’s assume the S3 does 30 million units. That’s tens of millions of extra handset owners with NFC-capable phones in their pockets. We think on sheer numbers alone, the S3 will be critical in taking the tech overground.
5 Brand recognition


Part of the S2’s success was down to Samsung’s greater brand visibility compared with other Android phone makers, not least HTC.
That, teamed with the penetration achieved by the S2 and the Note, and the fact that sales of HTC’s One range don’t seem to be matching their glowing reviews, mean that all the stars are aligning for the S3 to blow a huge hole in the market.







Samsung Galaxy S3 (Review)

Samsung officially unveiled the Galaxy S3 May 3rd, 2012, ending a 15-month wait for a successor to the mobile market-slaying, 20 million-selling S2.
The South Korean phone-maker is set to tear the wrapping off its 2012 flagship phone at 7pm at a press call in London’s Earls’ Court. If you haven’t got an invite to that, though, or if yours appears to be lost in the post, a livestream of the event will be available via the Samsung Unpacked app.
Alternatively, if you’re in the vicinity of London’s, ahem, glamorous West End, you can head to the Phones4U store in Oxford Street where they’ll also be showing Sammy’s official stream.
Without doubt the year’s most anticipated Android phone, the S3 features an Exynos quad-core processor and 4.8-inches of Super AMOLED Plus HD display real estate.
Tech-world rumours also suggest that the Android Ice Cream Sandwich-toting smartie will sport a 12 megapixel camera and a waterproof coating.
But....
Uh-oh. It seems Samsung’s imminent launch of the Galaxy S3 is getting off to a bumpy start, as stock shortages and huge demand means many customers may face a wait of up to three weeks to receive their handsets.
Several major UK networks and vendors have officially confirmed reports of delays, mainly due to not having enough pebble blue units to go around to meet an unprecedented number of pre-orders.
Turns out the "special hyperglaze material" used in the pebble blue edition is causing the phone-maker a bit of a manufacturing headache.
Samsung said in a statment: "In order to meet the highest internal quality standards and to provide the best quality Galaxy S 3 to customers, a short supply of pebble blue version is expected in some regions in the next two to three weeks."
Vodafone has cited “shipping delays” as the cause of the shortages, but said “all customers who have pre-ordered the white 16GB version of the Samsung Galaxy S3 should expect to receive their new phone on the UK launch date, 30 May”.
O2, meanwhile, said it has temporarily suspended pre-orders for pebble blue model to manage demand, but did not provide specifics as to how long existing pre-orders might take to be fulfilled.
Three has told us that the blue S3 will be delayed following Samsung’s announcement. At the time of writing, the model is ‘out of stock’ on the network’s website.
We’re still awaiting word from Orange and T-Mobile on the status of their shipments. But the likely answer is they are in the same boat as everyone else and are hamstrung by limited supply.
Recently, we revealed that some 600,000 backplates for the blue edition of the S3 have been discarded due to unnamed manufacturing issues. We’re guessing the special paint Samsung used to achieve the brushed-metal effect on the blue variant is the problem.
Surprisingly, Samsung’s UK customer service has told uSwitch reader @Adamjft96 that it is manufacturing units as normal and has already shipped the launch batch to retailers. So the shortages are likely being exacerbated by excessive demand.




Man holds up bank for just one dollar FIND OUT WHY HERE



A former Coca-Cola truck driver who claims he has never been in trouble with the law, has robbed a bank for just $1 to receive free healthcare while in prison.

James Richard Verone, who is charged with the $1 robbery of a RBC Bank in North Carolina, has never been in trouble with the law before.
Mr Verone, who was unemployed and facing several health problems, walked into the bank and handed the bank teller a note that read: This is a bank robbery. Please give me $1.
He then sat in the bank waiting for the police to arrive.
The 59-year-old, who had no health insurance, has a growth on his chest, two ruptured disks and a problem with his left foot, said he committed the robbery because he believed prison was the best place he could go to for medical attention.
"I'm sort of a logical person and that was my logic. That is what I came up with," he said.
"I wanted to make it known that this wasn't for monetary reasons but for medical reasons."
Mr Verone, who did not use a weapon during his robbery, said he hopes he is sentenced to three years in prison so he continues receiving healthcare.
"If it is called manipulation, then out of necessity because I need medical care, I guess I am manipulating the courts to get medical care."

Welcome to the 2012 Illuminati Games


Monday, May 28, 2012

Canada protest spreads as arrest list hits 2,500 benchmark



Ontario students have pledged to take to the streets in solidarity with their protesting fellows in Montreal and other cities of Quebec. The students are defying emergency laws the authorities are imposing to curb down the wave of dissent.
Students in Quebec have been protesting for more than 100 days now, with violent clashes between police and protesters reported on several occasions. The latest demo on Wednesday night resulted in a police crackdown on demonstrators.
About 700 people were detained throughout the province, which pushed the total number of detentions over the months over 2,500. That is at least five times more than during the 1970 crisis, when martial law was declared in Quebec in response to the actions of radical nationalists.
The protest against the hike of tuition fees was mainly focused in the province’s largest city Montreal, but it is now spreading outside of Quebec. A group of students the neighboring province of Ontario pledged their support of the movement Friday.
“The most important thing we can do in Ontario to support the struggle in Quebec is to bring the spirit of democracy and activism into the province of Ontario,” said student and activist Xavier Lafrance as cited by the Toronto Sun. “The spirit is in the air. Mr. McGuinty needs to be aware that it can and will happen in Ontario.”
Calling the rally scheduled for June 5 the “beginning in Ontario,” Sandy Hudson, Chairperson of the Canadian Federation of Students – Ontario, said the group is expecting to “build a movement and have capacity.”
On May 18, Quebec provincial government issued a controversial emergency regulation called Bill 78 designed to undermine the students’ ability to impose school shutdowns. It restricts public gatherings larger than 50 people, provides fines for protest leaders endorsing unsanctioned events and forbids covering of faces on demos, among other things.
The regulation’s effect on freedom of assembly is drawing an increasing number of older protesters to join their students. The Montreal Gazette cites Henri Fernand, 65, who took part in Wednesday’s rally in his wheelchair as saying: "The youth is our future and I'm proud of them. I'm here in solidarity with the students."


'Black Out, Speak Out:' Canadian internet campaign targets 'undemocratic' bill

A sweeping omnibus bill introduced last month to the Canadian parliament has been harshly condemned as “undemocratic.” Over 13,000 websites across Canada are planning to protest with a June 4 blackout to highlight their cause.
Bill C-38 – otherwise known as the “Jobs, Growth and Long-Term Prosperity Act” – is a 425-page document that has been described by critics as “a statutory juggernaut.” 
What was submitted as a budget bill to the Canadian House of Commons will introduce, amend or repeal nearly 70 federal laws.
With the ruling Conservative Party calling the shots, critics have accused the legislation of tightening the screws on organized labor by way of a provision that would require unions to publicly list all recipients of contracts valued at $5,000 or more.
A line buried deep in the document also ominously states, "The Fair Wages and Hours of Labour Act is repealed."
The change would eliminate a 1985 law forcing companies bidding on federal contracts to pay “fair wages and overtime.”
Opposition New Democratic Party MP Pat Martin called the proposal a “solution without a problem.”
“The only conclusion I can come up with is that it's a war on labor and the left. It's what the Americans did with the right-to-work states and the end result is $8 or $9 an hour is now the average wage in places like North Carolina," the Canadian Press cites him as saying.
The bill will also overhaul the country’s immigration rules, its temporary foreign workers program and its employment insurance system. In a further blow to the middle class, provisions in the legislation would effectively raise the country’s retirement age from 65 to 67 in a decade's time.

'Bill C-38 undoes decades of environmental law’

Environmentalists are also up in arms as the bill would repeal the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act.  It would also jettison red tape for major resource development projects, shorten the list of protected species, and overhaul the country’s Fisheries Act so that the federal government would only regulate the country’s major waterways.
The Green Party of Canada warned that if the bill passed in its current form, it would “undo decades of environmental law," and “profoundly degrade the Canadian government’s ability to defend our environment.”
As the battle of the mega-bill is just getting started, some 13,000 websites across Canada will go “black” next Monday to rally the public against it.
Campaign organizers have called potential supporters to join “a committed group of organizations representing millions of Canadians” as they darken their websites “in defense of nature and society.”
While many websites will go offline, campaign organizers have asked volunteers unable shut down entirely to at least feature a splash page explaining why their site appears black.  

‘Rise of tyrannical policies’

The bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Quebec, Dennis Drainville, was anything but diplomatic in his condemnation of the bill.
Drainville accused the Harper government of “using every tyrannical tool they can find to ensure that their corporate agenda and ideological policies become the law of the land.”
“In the last 12months I have seen clearly the rise of tyrannical policies and the application of such mind and state control that the people of Canada, unless they soon react, will find themselves not only slaves to  a corporate and political domination they never chose but they will experience the extinguishing of any of the hopes and dreams that they once had for a nation firmly based upon the foundations of compassion, justice and peace.”
“For God’s sake, for all of our sakes, wake up Canada,” the letter concluded.
Writing for the National Post, conservative columnist Mat Gurney called the federal government’s decision to insert a slew of unrelated laws and regulations into a so-called budget bill as “sneaky,”  “undemocratic” and unnecessary “for a majority government.”
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has claimed the Tory government is not bypassing public oversight by cramming such broad legislative changes into a budget bill. But critics warn that omnibus bills are designed to keep specific changes from being studied at the relevant parliamentary committees.
Growing opposition to the new bill comes on the heels of another controversial act passed earlier this month, which has many in the Canadian province of Quebec up in arms.
Bill 78, an emergency law that lays down strict government regulations for demonstrations numbering more than 50 people, has been condemned as a draconian law that restricts the right of free assembly. The law followed mass protests in Quebec that have been raging for over 100 days, with 2,500 arrests made so far. Students originally took to the streets to protest a massive 75 per cent tuition fee hike, though students are also taking to the streets  to challenge the emergency law.
Student activists in the province of Ontario are also planning a June 5 protest in solidarity with their peers in Quebec. A recently formed Student Solidarity Network in Ontario claims that tuition fees in the province have risen by as much as 71 per cent since 2006.
And a controversial “Internet spying bill” proposed by the current administration has further increased fears the government is trying to chip away at civil liberties.
While Prime Minister Stephen Harper has attempted to rebrand the bill as an anti-child pornography act, civil liberties groups say the expensive domestic spying program would allow the Canadian government to monitor its citizens’ online activities.

America Will Collapse - How Soon?


Why American Riots Will Be The Worst In The World


FEMA Camps Activated and on 72 Hour Notice


Obama Executive Order a Prelude to Martial Law and Suspension of Elections?


Media blackout...US border to be removed Under new agreements. North American Union has arrived.


Human Rights Record of United States in 2011




The State Department of the United States released its Country Reports on Human RightsPractices for 2011 on May 24, 2012. 
As in previous yearsthe reports are full of over-criticalremarks
on the human rights situation in nearly 200 countries and regions as well as distortionsand accusations concerning the human rights cause in China.
Howeverthe United Statesturned a blind eye to its own woeful human rights situation and kept silent about it
The HumanRights Record of the United States in 2011 is hereby prepared to reveal the true human rightssituation of the United States to people across the world and urge the United States to face upto its own doings.


For the entire article please follow this link
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndy/2012-05/26/content_15392452.htm

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