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News on the Net

News from around the world

Most Recent Articles by News on the Net:

Stolen Promises

-Ralph W. Eckard The purpose of this article is to address what has become a much debated and argued issued regarding land that was gifted and deeded to our nations veterans. It is intended that this will be the first of a number of articles addressing this matter. Articles will continue until such time that our elected officials and individuals employed by the Depart of Veterans Affairs to protect the interest of our nations veterans do their duty and at honorably.
- Thursday, November 26, 2009


Blind sled dog to retire after 4 years

CHURCHILL, Manitoba, (UPI) -- A blind Canadian sled dog who continued pulling for four years in northern Manitoba is retiring to move closer to her doctor, her owners said.
- Thursday, November 26, 2009



Fort Hood: Death by Political Corectness

Soon after the mass murder of September 11, 2001, Senators Joe Lieberman and John McCain emerged as early advocates for the invasion of Iraq. In response to that provocation, both men routinely cited "intelligence" that has since been proven false, flawed or "fixed" around an agenda sought by Jewish nationalists in pursuit of an expansive Greater Israel.
- Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Even Monbiot says the science now needs “reanalyising”

Climate Fear Promoter George Monbiot Concedes Devastating Impact of UN's ClimateGate: 'I'm dismayed and deeply shaken' -- 'It's no use pretending that this isn't a major blow. The emails extracted by a hacker from the climatic research unit at the University of East Anglia could scarcely be more damaging' – November 24, 2009
- Tuesday, November 24, 2009

The Hockey Stick was never accurate—and CRU knew it

The infamous "hockey stick" temperature graph purporting to show a runaway acceleration in global temperatures beginning in 1850 was never accurate--and the Climatic Research Unit knew it wasn't accurate when they published it.
- Monday, November 23, 2009


Canada: The Killer H1N1 Vaccine – Michel Chossudovsky

A new development in the H1N1 Vaccine Saga is unfolding in Canada. Whereas health officials are pushing for an acceleration of the vaccination program, there is evidence of so-called “unusual adverse reactions” including three recently recorded deaths directly resulting from the vaccine.
- Saturday, November 21, 2009

Re “Duncan her doughnut.” (letter, Nov. 19):

The mobsters who used to Run the numbers game, control the liquor business and shakedown the buyers and the sellers of restaurant meals got tired of being hounded by the police and decided to redirect their talents.
- Friday, November 20, 2009


U.N. Cover-Up on Iran?

By Joseph Klein Israel’s United Nations ambassador, Gabriela Shalev, accurately described the Islamic Republic of Iran, in her remarks at Yeshiva University last week, as a “convergence of terrible elements,” including aggressive nuclear ambitions, sponsorship of terrorism, and Holocaust denial.
- Thursday, November 19, 2009

Galileo silenced again

imageWillie Soon and David R. Legates Four centuries ago, “heretics” who disagreed with religious orthodoxy risked being burned at the stake. Many were the dissenting views that could send offenders to a fiery end. In 1633, the astronomer Galileo Galilei may have come within a singed whisker of the same fate, for insisting that the sun (and not the Earth) was at the center of the solar system. In the end, he agreed to recant his “heresy” (at least publicly) and submit to living under house arrest until the end of his days.
- Wednesday, November 18, 2009

A bubbling ball of gas

The Sun is a bubbling mass. Packages of gas rise and sink, lending the sun its grainy surface structure, its granulation. Dark spots appear and disappear, clouds of matter dart up - and behind the whole thing are the magnetic fields, the engines of it all.
- Wednesday, November 18, 2009


Dear Canada Free Press

I would like to see the books opened up to the public in all these WCB Boards. I say this because I think small business is footing the bill while the only users at these boards who are treated well are the good old boys and girls in the big government unions.
- Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Newsweek Admits 74 Percent of Gore Letters Are Critical, But Fails to Publish Any

Newsweek has done it again: a few weeks after acknowledging half its letters were critical of Joe Biden (but publishing none of them), they proclaimed their Al Gore cover was unpopular. Forty-six percent of their letter writers wrote on the subject of Gore, and 74 percent of them were critical. Still, Newsweek ran only positive letters. The first, most prominent one (in larger red type) read: "Until each nation makes responsibility for this earth a priority, we will continue to devastate it – and ourselves."
- Monday, November 16, 2009



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