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Archive for August 16th, 2009

NY mom Tasered at traffic stop files notice to sue

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

A mother who was zapped with a stun gun in front of her children during a New York traffic stop has filed notice she’ll sue the sheriff’s department.

A police video captured by a dashboard camera shows Deputy Sean Andrews yanking Audra Harmon out of her minivan by the arm and knocking her down with two Taser shots in January.

Harmon was charged with disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and speeding. Her lawyer says prosecutors dismissed the charges after watching the videotape.

Harmon claims Andrews was improperly trained. She says a Taser isn’t supposed to be used against people who pose no threat.

In a notice of claim filed Thursday with the Onondaga (ahn-uhn-DAH’-guh) County clerk, Harmon accuses Andrews of wrongful conduct. She’s seeking unspecified monetary damages.

Andrews won’t comment.

Source: Chron National News

Video From The Post Stanard

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German health expert’s swine flu warning. Does virus vaccine increase the risk of cancer?

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

The swine flu vaccine has been hit by new cancer fears after a German health expert gave a shock warning about its safety.

Dr. Wolfgang Wodarg is a politician and a specialist In lungs, hygiene and environmental medicine. He is the chairman of the health committee in The German parliament and European Council

Lung specialist Wolfgang Wodarg has said that there are many risks associated with the vaccine for the H1N1 virus.

He has grave reservations about the firm Novartis who are developing the vaccine and testing it in Germany. The vaccination is injected “with a very hot needle”, Wodarg said.

The nutrient solution for the vaccine consists of cancerous cells from animals and “we do not know if there could be an allergic reaction”.

But more importantly, some people fear that the risk of cancer could be increased by injecting the cells.

The vaccine – as Johannes Löwer, president of the Paul Ehrlich Institute, has pointed out – can also cause worse side effects than the actual swine flu virus.

Wodrag also described people’s fear of the pandemic as an “orchestration”: “It is great business for the pharmaceutical industry,” he told the ‘Neuen Presse’.

Swine flu is not very different from normal flu. “On the contrary if you look at the number of cases it is nothing compared to a normal flu outbreak,” he added.

The chairman of the health committee in the European Council has urged for a careful and calm reaction to the virus.

Up until now, the producers of the vaccine did not know how many orders they would have by the autumn, but the German Government is now a guaranteed customer.

Even the pharmaceutical companies are trying to exploit the fear of the swine flu pandemic.

Source: Global Research

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Looking To Sell Balloons To Homeland Secerity

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

It’s not often that a balloon makes people feel uncomfortable.

But the inflatable aircraft that has been floating above the St. Clair River in recent weeks, across the border from Sarnia, Ont., is no ordinary balloon.

Officially, the “balloon” is called an Aerostat. It’s a Helium-inflated aircraft that looks like a flying wing, and had been floating between 150 and 300 metres above the ground in Port Huron, Mich., since the end of last month, until a storm damaged its fabric and it was taken down for repairs.

The company that owns it, Sierra Nevada Corporation, reportedly wants to test out the new technology to see if it can sell it to U.S. Homeland Security for use as a patrolling device.

But Bradley M. Lott, a retired U.S. Marine Corps major general who is running the Aerostat testing in Port Huron, said the company’s plan is to see what the aircraft can do and how it can be used in a variety of situations — including for use in rescue operations after natural disasters or airline accidents.

Lott said the Aerostat was designed by the Colorado-based Global Near Space Systems, and built by Delaware’s ILC Dover — the company that built and designed the space suits that NASA astronauts used when walking on the Moon in 1969.

The Aerostat has to follow Federal Aviation Administration flight rules and must be pulled down out of the sky each night at 11:30 p.m. It is permitted to go back up at 6:30 a.m.

The device carries a “technologically-advanced payload,” Lott said, which could be configured to carry a camera, communications equipment or other materials.

But that payload — and the powerful camera that has been training its eye on the St. Clair River while the Aerostat has being tested — is exactly the problem issue for Sarnia residents who already put with surveillance from helicopters, boats, the U.S. Coast Guard, and other patrols along the Ontario-Michigan border. Not to mention the flying drones that will start patrolling the border next year.

“It’s unbelievable that they think they need this on a friendly nation’s border,” said Adam Bush, a 24-year-old Sarnia resident who opposes the Aerostat’s presence on the other side of the river.

But it goes beyond the issue of U.S. defence concerns for many Sarnia residents, who say they simply do not want to be spied upon — or potentially be spied upon — by cameras from across the border.

Having a camera peering into Sarnia is “a clear violation of our privacy and our sovereignty,” said Mayor Mike Bradley, when explaining the issue over the phone to CTV.ca.

“It’s extremely creepy,” said Bush, who has helped organize a cheeky protest against the Aerostat, aptly named “Moon the Balloon.”

Lott said the Aerostat is, in fact, not spying on anybody and is simply tracking the river, while it is being tested.

Bradley, however, is additionally upset that no one in Sarnia was consulted as to whether the city wanted the Aerostat flying over its horizon.

He’s even written to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, though Bradley said he has not yet received a response about the Aerostat issue.

Lott said he has tried to reach out to Bradley about his concerns — a gesture which the Sarnia mayor acknowledges, though he does not believe that the Aerostat is keeping its camera trained solely on the St. Clair River.

“No one here is buying the argument that they are not looking at buildings,” Bradley said.

Lott insists that the Aerostat is being governed by the “ethical behaviour of an ethical company” and he said Sierra Nevada Corp. is trying to “be as open as we can be” about their operations, inviting TV crews to check out the aircraft and its payload up-close.

But the controversy has shown no signs of deflating in Sarnia.

On Saturday evening, Bush will head down to the Sarnia waterfront to help lead Moon the Balloon, knowing full well that the Aerostat will not be in the sky.

More than 1,400 people have signed up for the protest on a Facebook page, though Bush acknowledges he is not sure how many of them will actually show up.

Around 5 p.m., they will form a line, turn their backs to the U.S. border, drop their drawers, and point their rear ends at Michigan.

Bradley said he will not be attending, though he knows how upset Sarnia residents are about the issue.

“I would say it has engaged the public here,” he said.

Source: CTV

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Swine flu jab link to killer nerve disease

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

A warning that the new swine flu jab is linked to a deadly nerve disease has been sent by the Government to senior neurologists in a confidential letter.

The letter from the Health Protection Agency, the official body that oversees public health, has been leaked to The Mail on Sunday, leading to demands to know why the information has not been given to the public before the vaccination of millions of people, including children, begins.

It tells the neurologists that they must be alert for an increase in a brain disorder called Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS), which could be triggered by the vaccine.

GBS attacks the lining of the nerves, causing paralysis and inability to breathe, and can be fatal.

The letter, sent to about 600 neurologists on July 29, is the first sign that there is concern at the highest levels that the vaccine itself could cause serious complications.

It refers to the use of a similar swine flu vaccine in the United States in 1976 when:

  • More people died from the vaccination than from swine flu.
  • 500 cases of GBS were detected.
  • The vaccine may have increased the risk of contracting GBS by eight times.
  • The vaccine was withdrawn after just ten weeks when the link with GBS became clear.
  • The US Government was forced to pay out millions of dollars to those affected.

Concerns have already been raised that the new vaccine has not been sufficiently tested and that the effects, especially on children, are unknown.

It is being developed by pharmaceutical companies and will be given to about 13million people during the first wave of immunisation, expected to start in October.

Top priority will be given to everyone aged six months to 65 with an underlying health problem, pregnant women and health professionals.

The British Neurological Surveillance Unit (BNSU), part of the British Association of Neurologists, has been asked to monitor closely any cases of GBS as the vaccine is rolled out.

One senior neurologist said last night: ‘I would not have the swine
flu jab because of the GBS risk”.

Continued at The Daily Mail

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Trade Your Guns For Food?

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

When Jacquelyn Weaver heard that Fort Worth and Dallas Police would be buying back guns from community members on Saturday, she thought it was a great idea. The 18-year-old never expected she and her brother would end up dodging bullets themselves.

It happened just after 3 a.m. This morning. The Weavers went with four of their friends to the Whataburger on Cherry Lane in Fort Worth.

Jacquelyn says two men in their early 20’s sitting on a curb in front of the fast food restaurant confronted the group. Words were exchanged, then she says a third man in his mid-20’s got out of a four-door, white sedan and opened fire with a silver handgun.

About 12 shots rang out. Many hit the wall of the restaurant. One bullet grazed the arm of Anthony Young, 20, Fort Worth.

Two of the bullets hit Colt Weaver, 20, in the leg. Another bullet entered his back and punctured his lung.

“He like fell to the ground real slow and I ran over there and said: That’s ok. I’m here. I’m here Colt,” explains Jacquelyn. “I got there as quick as I could and I saw him laying face down in a puddle of blood,” says Colt’s father, James Weaver.

City leaders in Dallas and Fort Worth say that’s the kind of violence they’re trying to prevent with the gun buy-back programs held today in both cities.

“Wholeheartedly I know that it will. I think that people will think twice about guns, about using a gun,” says Pastor Jack Crane of Truevine Baptist Church in Fort Worth.

“Collectively together we’re going to take 350, maybe 400 guns off the streets of both Dallas and Fort Worth,” says Dallas City Councilman Dwaine Caraway.

Jacquelyn Weaver says the $50 grocery card given to each person who turned in a gun is a small price to pay to make sure others don’t suffer like her brother.

The Western Hills High School graduate is expected to survive, but the former standout wrestler just as easily could have been killed. “It’d keep more people from not being in the ICU,” says Jacquelyn.

Anyone with information about the shooting is asked to call the Fort Worth Police Department.

Source: CBS 11 Tv

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