A Scott Ritter Investigation: Agent Zelensky 

By on Jul 18, 2023

Stunning Whistleblower Drops Bombshells About Hunter, a One-Eyed FBI Mole, and Joe Biden’s Crimes

By on Jul 7, 2023

Must Watch — MONOPOLY: AN OVERVIEW OF THE GREAT RESET – FOLLOW THE MONEY

By on Jul 7, 2023

Man Eats Uranium, Drinks and Swims In Reactor Water, Ignites Plutonium In His Bare Hand

By on Jul 5, 2023

by Michael Suede • June 27, 2012 Apparently radioactive material isn’t as dangerous as the EPA has made it out to be. Galen Winsor is a nuclear physicist of renown who worked at, and helped design, nuclear power plants in Hanford, WA; Oak Ridge, TN; Morris, IL, San Jose, CA; Wimington, NJ. Among his positions of expertise he was in charge of measuring and controlling the nuclear fuel inventory and storage. Galen Winsor has traveled and lectured all over America, spoken on national talk radio, and made several videos exposing the misunderstood issues of nuclear radiation. He shows that fear of radiation has been exaggerated to scare people … so a few powerful people can maintain total control of the world’s most valuable power resource. Filmed by Ben Williams in 1986. In the video, you can watch Galen lick a pile of highly radioactive uranium off the palm of his hand and...

Requiem for Independence

By on Jul 5, 2023

MICHAEL BELCHER JUL 3, 2023 Growing up through the 1980’s one became accustomed to the Hollywood tactical employment of laser beams in movies and television to signal that a character was under the gun – a long gun, to be specific. This red dot would be noticed by the afflicted actor, and the behavior would change accordingly to signify defeat, often with a melodramatic flare. These days the operators of cinematic gunplay have transitioned to the hyper-realistic use of infrared lasers and Night Observation Device Systems (NODS). The action is fast paced – the violence of action is palpable. The laser, however, is invisible to those so afflicted. There is no change of behavior with the presence of the green dot. Just a dampened 120 decibels, suppressed flash, impact thud, and a confirmed “tango down.” This transition through cinematic history provides an adept analogy for where we find...