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https://www.zerothposition.com/2018/08/25/rise-fall-sturmabteilung/

http://www.americanpartisan.org/2018/08/chinese-communist-party-funding-academic

Please Help If You Can

Posted: August 19, 2018 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

This is Jamie’s story,she explains the situation they’re in,how they got there,and her plan to help get them back on their feet.
These are good people who just had some bad luck,and I vouch for them 110%.
Even if you can only kick in 5 bucks-it will help.

Links to how you can help at bottom…

This is how I got to where I am now…

My husband and I married young he started out working construction, after a few years building houses an opportunity to learn how to run heavy equipment crossed his path and he jumped on board.  We moved from North Carolina to Indiana and he joined the Local Union. We’d been married for almost 7 years before having our first born and I’d been working as a preschool teacher for several years before giving birth.  Once we had our oldest we realized that the amount of money I was making was basically going to pay for daycare, it didn’t take long to decide it would be best if I stayed home with our son and we’d figure out how to make it work with only one income.  My husband (Jason) would work non stop all summer long and during the winter months he would be laid off.  I would pick up an odd job for a few months to make up for the loss in income and he would take over the parenting duties.  We weren’t rich but we made it work, we had another child and continued on the same way. I worked in many fields everything from Medical billing to DSL tech support. I even held down a few telemarketing jobs (it’s amazing the jobs you’ll do when you know it’s only for a few months…lol).  I got pregnant with baby number 3, the final baby. We chose for me to have my tubes tied, 3 was plenty.  It was June 2007 and building season was picking up so I quit my job with Dish network so that Jason could work full steam and I would be staying home again.  Baby number three came 3 weeks early, my insurance had lapsed(literally the day before)  and Jason’s insurance hadn’t kicked in yet.  I had a baby and my tubes tied not realizing that I wasn’t still covered, at the time I didn’t worry  too much about it, I figured we’d pay it off little by little until finished. Barely a year later the “Housing market” crashed and building came to a screeching halt.  We couldn’t afford our vehicle payments, we couldn’t afford our rent and could barely feed all 5 of us.  We packed up what little we had left and moved in with my Dad, in Iowa.  Once we got settled Jason signed up at the Union in Des Moines and my Dad paid him to help out on the farm.  We were barely getting by, we couldn’t afford to pay off the hospital bills or the two vehicles we had repossessed, we had to go on food stamps.
  After about a year and a half we found out that the coal mines in Indiana were looking for heavy equipment operators to run equipment for the above ground mines.  They paid good money and worked year round so Jason jumped on the opportunity and moved to Southern Indiana. He found us a little house to rent and a few months later my family helped us rent a U-Haul, packed us up and off to Indiana myself and the three kids went.
  Things were going good however we were so far in debt by then we couldn’t see a way out so we filed for bankruptcy.  We wiped away the debt and started over fresh.  I decided to go to college and was able to stay home full time. We had a few good years but we had no idea that the coal market was about to plummet. We had no idea that the Gvt had a plan to shut them all down, they nearly succeeded.  We are only one family out of thousands that were effected by this but we had used up the bankruptcy “safety net”.
  We lost everything all over again! Everything we had started to rebuild was gone. Jason was laid off and we could no longer afford the  truck and motorcycle payments, they got repo’ed. We couldn’t afford to have Christmas, my sister and a friend made Christmas happen for our three kids that first year. The second year we found out my then 4 year niece has brain cancer. We dropped everything and drove back to Iowa, we took the Christmas money we had saved for that year (it wasn’t much) and spent it on the trip/hotel/gifts/party for my nieces.  We wanted her to have a really amazing “party” before her first surgery (that would change her life forever).
  Jason went back to work but his salary was reduced by 3/4, not only was he only making less than half of what he had been but they took away the gas card, the phone allowance, the bonuses and we now had to pay for our health insurance.  So yes he was working and still making more than I could make but our expenses outweighed our intake.  We tried to hang on, I went to work for a few months and then one of our vehicles broke and we live in a rural area, I had to quit again. With one car we decided to do the best we could with what we had.
  Over the years I had some health issues arise and I ended up spending a week in the hospital, I take a medication daily that our insurance will no longer cover so I’m forced to pay out of pocket (we have appealed) and are trying to work out something else but in the meantime it’s an extra (major) expense, we are also being garnished for 20% of Jason’s wages for the truck we lost.  We tried to negotiate a lower percentage but the bank wouldn’t go any lower.  This garnishment will last 2 years at the least.
  I knew this was coming, I had gone to court and tried to fight it but I knew we were losing so I began looking for work.  I’ve been job hunting for every bit of a year.  For several months I would fill out applications and send out resumes but wouldn’t hear anything. I couldn’t land an interview so I revamped my resume and drafted an unconventional cover letter and started sending it out with every application/resume. I started to get a few interviews, I went on roughly 5 interviews. I am not picky when applying in fact some of my interviews were at Auto-Zone, Rural King and a law office. I have a diverse back ground but I haven’t held a steady job for the past 16 years.  After my interviews I began to get emails and notifications telling me that I was NOT going to be offered the position. I’ve been heart broken over this several times, jobs I really wanted or jobs I thought I’d be perfect for, I couldn’t land. I spent my 42 birthday crying over a rejection email. I decided to email a few of the managers that I had interviewed with and asked them for advice, ask them if there is anything I could do better. I was told that my work history is the set back, so I began to brain storm.
  I began to think about what I enjoy doing, what I am good at, and what experience is in my back ground.  I began looking into businesses with low over head, something I felt like I could do well and enjoy AND that my body can handle.
  I came across two choices being a Hot Shot or being a Pilot Car driver, I started looking into each business and decided that with my back ground in the trucking industry, I could be an amazing pilot car operator and there aren’t any Pilot car companies in my immediate area.
  My grandparents used to own a Trucking company and my grandma taught me how to do the books.  My dad has been an OTR Truck driver for as long as I can remember and he let us ride along(often). I love driving and do all the driving in our family.  I am not afraid to tackle the open road and have clocked many many miles.
  I have researched/learned everything I possibly could about how to become a Pilot Car, I have researched every State and all of the federal requirements.  I have made a list of absolutely everything I will need to get this company up and running, the only thing I’m missing is the money and that’s what has lead me to this Fund raising campaign. The garnishments kicked in before I had the chance to gather up the money/items I needed to get driving.
 We are sinking quickly, we are struggling to buy food and pay the bills.  I could really use some help any amount of money will help even if it’s only 5$.  I will be using this money to give myself a job. To put myself to work so that we can get back on our feet and hopefully build this into a business that will allow me to pay it forward.
Hey! Thanks for taking the time to read my story, I realize that the pictures I have posted are silly and aren’t necessarily “Pilot Car” related but even through all of this I try and keep my sense of humor and I continue to search for Silver linings.  (After 21 years of marriage I’ve found the value in keeping a sense of humor 😊.)

If you aren’t comfortable donating through Fundly I also have https://www.paypal.me/JamieWillisUS  and a Venmo https://venmo.com/jamie-willis-16

I am also going to post an Amazon list for those who would be more comfortable helping by purchasing an item out right as oppose to giving cash.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/2IPXMTY756D8G

HW3.0 Sends

Posted: August 18, 2018 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

The “C” In PACE

Posted: August 16, 2018 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

Sympathy is Not Respect | Declination

Posted: August 15, 2018 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

“With the possibility of mutual respect taken off the table, all options become progressively worse.

The use of weaponized empathy may rip this country apart. It is extraordinarily divisive. It makes people hostile and defensive. And for good reason. After all, if you have a relative who does this to you frequently, do you really want to hang out with him? Do you really enjoy his company? Do you respect him? Clearly he does not respect you, if he blames you for things you didn’t do, and demands that you right wrongs you have not committed. The terribly irony of it all is that if he didn’t make demands upon you, you might very well offer to help him right the wrongs of your own free will, regardless of who was at fault for them. You might possess both sympathy and respect for him. And that could become the basis for a real relationship. But his attempt to make himself out to be the victim, and his assumption that you must pay the penance for being a victimizer, destroys any potential goodwill.

This problem is everywhere in modern America. It crosses lines of race, gender, sexuality, religion, and a thousand other such things. And at some point – probably in the near future – the demand for sympathy will come up dry, such that not even peer pressure and a metaphorical gun held to your head will be sufficient to compel it. Only the literal variety of gun will be work then, and that is when it will descend into pure madness. Weaponized empathy is a sociopolitical weapon of mass destruction. It almost assuredly will result in the deployment of something equally nasty. It needs to be put away before it is too late.”

Read the whole thing @

http://thedeclination.com/sympathy-is-not-respect/

http://www.americanpartisan.org/2018/08/chinese-purchase-large-mexican-radio-station-near-us-border/

By John W. Whitehead

August 13, 2018

“It takes a remarkable force to keep nearly a million people quietly indoors for an entire day, home from work and school, from neighborhood errands and out-of-town travel. It takes a remarkable force to keep businesses closed and cars off the road, to keep playgrounds empty and porches unused across a densely populated place 125 square miles in size. This happened … not because armed officers went door-to-door, or imposed a curfew, or threatened martial law. All around the region, for 13 hours, people locked up their businesses and ‘sheltered in place’ out of a kind of collective will. The force that kept them there wasn’t external – there was virtually no active enforcement across the city of the governor’s plea that people stay indoors. Rather, the pressure was an internal one – expressed as concern, or helpfulness, or in some cases, fear – felt in thousands of individual homes.”—Journalist Emily Badger, “The Psychology of a Citywide Lockdown”

It has become way too easy to lockdown this nation.

Five years ago, the city of Boston was locked down while police carried out a military-style manhunt for suspects in the 2013 Boston Marathon explosion.

Four years ago, the city of Ferguson, Missouri, was locked down, with government officials deploying a massive SWAT team, an armored personnel carrier, men in camouflage pointing heavy artillery at the crowd, smoke bombs and tear gas to quell citizen unrest over a police shooting of a young, unarmed black man.

Three years ago, the city of Baltimore was put under a military-enforced lockdown after civil unrest over police brutality erupted into rioting. More than 1,500 national guard troops were deployed while residents were ordered to stay inside their homes and put under a 10 pm curfew.

This year, it was my hometown of Charlottesville, Va., population 50,000, that was locked down while government officials declared a state of emergency and enacted heightened security measures tantamount to martial law, despite the absence of any publicized information about credible threats to public safety.

As Tess Owen reports for Vice:

One year after white supremacists paraded through the streets, the face of downtown Charlottesville was transformed once again – this time with checkpoints, military-style camps for National Guard, and state police on every corner. When residents woke up Saturday, all entrances to the downtown mall were blocked off, apart from two checkpoints, where police looked through people’s bags for lighters, knives or any other weapons. Up above, standing atop a building site, two national guard members photographed the individuals coming in and out… A National Guard encampment was set up in McGuffey Park, between the children’s playground and the basketball court, where about 20 military police officers in camouflage were snoozing in the shade of some trees. A similar encampment was set up a few blocks away.

More details from journalist Ned Oliver:

Downtown Charlottesville felt like the green zone of a war-torn city Saturday. More than a thousand local and state police officers barricaded 10 blocks of the city’s popular pedestrian district, the Downtown Mall, to prepare for the one-year anniversary of the white supremacist rally last year that left dozens injured and one dead. To enter, people had to submit to bag checks and searches at one of two checkpoints… Preparations aside, unlike last year, no white supremacist groups had said they were going to visit the city, and, by week’s end, none had. Instead, it was a normal day on the mall except for the heavy security, a military helicopter constantly circling overhead, and hundreds of police officers milling around.

Make no mistake, this was a militarized exercise in intimidation, and it worked only too well.

For the most part, the residents of this city—once home to Thomas Jefferson, the nation’s third president, author of the Declaration of Independence, and champion of the Bill of Rights—welcomed the city-wide lockdown, the invasion of their privacy, and the dismantling of every constitutional right intended to serve as a bulwark against government abuses.

Yet for those like myself who have studied emerging police states, the sight of any American city placed under martial law—its citizens essentially under house arrest (officials used the Orwellian phrase “shelter in place” in Boston to describe the mandatory lockdown), military-style helicopters equipped with thermal imaging devices buzzing the skies, tanks and armored vehicles on the streets, and snipers perched on rooftops, while thousands of black-garbed police swarmed the streets and SWAT teams carried out house-to-house searches—leaves us in a growing state of unease.

Watching the events of the lockdown unfold, I couldn’t help but think of Nazi Field Marshal Hermann Goering’s remarks during the Nuremberg trials. As Goering noted:

It is always a simple matter to drag people along whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. This is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in every country.

As the events in Charlottesville have made clear, it does indeed work the same in every country.

Whatever the threat to so-called security—whether it’s civil unrest, school shootings, or alleged acts of terrorism—government officials will capitalize on the nation’s heightened emotions, confusion and fear as a means of extending the reach of the police state.

These troubling developments are the outward manifestations of an inner, philosophical shift underway in how the government views not only the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, but “we the people,” as well.

What this reflects is a move away from a government bound by the rule of law to one that seeks total control through the imposition of its own self-serving laws on the populace.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t take much for the American people to march in lockstep with the government’s dictates, even if it means submitting to martial law, having their homes searched, and being stripped of one’s constitutional rights at a moment’s notice.

In Charlottesville, most of the community fell in line, except for one gun-toting, disabled, 71-year-old war veteran who was arrested for purchasing cans of Arizona iced tea, a can of bug spray and razor blades, all of which were on the City’s list of temporarily prohibited, potentially “dangerous” items. Incidentally, the veteran’s guns (not among the list of prohibited items) caused no alarm.

Talk about draconian.

This continual undermining of the rules that protect civil liberties will inevitably have far-reaching consequences on a populace that not only remains ignorant about their rights but is inclined to sacrifice their liberties for phantom promises of safety.

Be warned: these lockdowns are just a precursor to full-blown martial law.

The powers-that-be want us acclimated to the sights and sounds of a city-wide lockdown with tanks in the streets, military encampments in cities, Blackhawk helicopters and armed drones patrolling overhead.

They want us to accept the fact that in the American police state, we are all potentially guilty, all potential criminals, all suspects waiting to be accused of a crime.

They want us to be meek and submissive.

They want us to report on each other.

They want us to be grateful to the standing armies for their so-called protection.

They want us to self-censor our speech, self-limit our movements, and police ourselves.

As Glenn Greenwald notes in The Intercept:

“Americans are now so accustomed to seeing police officers decked in camouflage and Robocop-style costumes, riding in armored vehicles and carrying automatic weapons first introduced during the U.S. occupation of Baghdad, that it has become normalized… The dangers of domestic militarization are both numerous and manifest. To begin with… it degrades the mentality of police forces in virtually every negative way and subjects their targeted communities to rampant brutality and unaccountable abuse… Police militarization also poses grave and direct dangers to basic political liberties, including rights of free speech, press and assembly.

Make no mistake: these are the hallmarks of a military occupation.

Militarized police. Riot squads. Camouflage gear. Black uniforms. Armored vehicles. Mass arrests. Pepper spray. Tear gas. Batons. Strip searches. Surveillance cameras. Kevlar vests. Drones. Lethal weapons. Less-than-lethal weapons unleashed with deadly force. Rubber bullets. Water cannons. Stun grenades. Arrests of journalists. Crowd control tactics. Intimidation tactics. Brutality.

We are already under martial law, held at gunpoint by a standing army.

Take a look at the pictures from Charlottesville, from Baltimore, from Ferguson and from Boston, and then try to persuade yourself that this is what freedom in America is supposed to look like.

A standing army—something that propelled the early colonists into revolution—strips the American people of any vestige of freedom.

It was for this reason that those who established America vested control of the military in a civilian government, with a civilian commander-in-chief. They did not want a military government, ruled by force. Rather, they opted for a republic bound by the rule of law: the U.S. Constitution.

Unfortunately, with the Constitution under constant attack, the military’s power, influence and authority have grown dramatically. Even the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, which makes it a crime for the government to use the military to carry out arrests, searches, seizure of evidence and other activities normally handled by a civilian police force, was greatly weakened by both Barack Obama and George W. Bush, who ushered in exemptions allowing troops to deploy domestically and arrest civilians in the wake of alleged terrorist acts.

Now we find ourselves struggling to retain some semblance of freedom in the face of police and law enforcement agencies that look and act like the military and have just as little regard for the Fourth Amendment, laws such as the NDAA that allow the military to arrest and indefinitely detain American citizens, and military drills that acclimate the American people to the sight of armored tanks in the streets, military encampments in cities, and combat aircraft patrolling overhead.

We’ve already gone too far down this road.

Add these lockdowns onto the list of other troubling developments that have taken place over the past 30 years or more, and the picture grows even more troubling: the expansion of the military industrial complex and its influence in Washington DC, the rampant surveillance, the corporate-funded elections and revolving door between lobbyists and elected officials, the militarized police, the loss of our freedoms, the injustice of the courts, the privatized prisons, the school lockdowns, the roadside strip searches, the military drills on domestic soil, the fusion centers and the simultaneous fusing of every branch of law enforcement (federal, state and local), the stockpiling of ammunition by various government agencies, the active shooter drills that are indistinguishable from actual crises, the economy flirting with near collapse, etc.

Suddenly, the overall picture seems that much more sinister.

The lesson for the rest of us is this: once a free people allows the government to make inroads into their freedoms or uses those same freedoms as bargaining chips for security, it quickly becomes a slippery slope to outright tyranny. And it doesn’t really matter whether it’s a Democrat or a Republican at the helm, because the bureaucratic mindset on both sides of the aisle now seems to embody the same philosophy of authoritarian government.

Remember, a police state does not come about overnight.

It starts small, perhaps with a revenue-generating red light camera at an intersection.

When that is implemented without opposition, perhaps next will be surveillance cameras on public streets. License plate readers on police cruisers. More police officers on the beat. Free military equipment from the federal government. Free speech zones and zero tolerance policies and curfews. SWAT team raids. Drones flying overhead. City-wide lockdowns.

No matter how it starts, however, it always ends the same.

Remember, it’s a slippery slope from a questionable infringement justified in the name of safety to all-out tyranny.

These are no longer warning signs of a steadily encroaching police state.

As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, the police state has arrived.

Robert Gore's avatarSTRAIGHT LINE LOGIC

Net neutrality was going to be the perfect set up for big tech to engage in regulatory capture. From Tho Bishop at mises.org:

The de-platforming of Alex Jones and InfoWars is a subject that has a number of layers to it, including the responsibilities social media companies have to free speech — particularly in a world where the lines between Big Tech and Big Government are increasingly blurred. While I’ll leave others to debate those particular subjects, these developments — and reactions to it — do help provide clarity to another heated tech-related debate: the hypocrisy of “net neutrality” advocates.

After all, there is a ton of overlap between those who advocated Title II regulation of the internet and those celebrating the deplatforming of Alex Jones. This is particularly true among the most powerful players in this debate, including legislators and leaders in the industry.

Consider, for example, the…

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