Indignance over the treatment of the nation's military and veterans has spurred a Million Veteran March, to be held nationwide on Sunday.
"Jack Kennedy said, 'You'll know the character of a nation by the way it treats its veterans.' This is a low time in the character of a nation," Boykin said.
Military analysts who recently made frequent appearances on major US media outlets to make the case for a military strike against Syria have ties to prominent defense contractors and other firms with stakes in the conflict, according to a new report.
The report by the Public Accountability Initiative, a nonprofit watchdog, details appearances by nearly two dozen commentators who spoke in favor of launching a military campaign against Syria during the recent media frenzy on the issue.
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File photo shows a nuclear power plant in South Korea’s port city of Busan.
South Korea has officially charged 100 people with corruption in a scandal over fake safety certifications for parts in the country’s nuclear reactors.
A series of shutdowns of nuclear reactors has taken place in South Korea due to fake documents.
American Bible scholar claims ancient 'confessions' prove story of Jesus Christ was entirely fabricated by Roman aristocrats
Mail Online - Updated 10/10/13, By Simon Tomlinson and William Turvill
Law and order: Scholar Joseph Atwill asserts that Christianity did not start as a religion, but was instead created as a sophisticated propaganda tool to pacify subjects of the Roman Empire
Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
(Photo credit: The Guardian)
Though former NSA contractor Edward Snowden has been indicted for leaking secrets about the U.S. government’s intrusive surveillance tactics, he was honored by a group of former U.S. intelligence officials as a courageous whistleblower during a Moscow ceremony, reports ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern who was there.
National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden, from his asylum in Russia, accepted an award on Wednesday from a group of former U.S. intelligence officials expressing support for his decision to divulge secrets about the NSA’s electronic surveillance of Americans and people around the globe.
National Security Agency Director Gen. Keith Alexander
(Credit: Reuters/Doug Kapustin /AP/Charles Dharapak)
The villainous nexus of surveillance, politics and banking rears its head again in the NSA chief's public comments
Feel this blow as a coup de grâce: The NSA not only, we now know, hoards data on our every communication, but, we now learn, wants to have broader surveillance dragnets and deeper spycraft capabilities in place to defend that other great villain of the past decade — Wall Street. The nexus of power and control linking Washington, Silicon Valley and Wall Street was made almost cinematically complete in comments from NSA Chief Keith Alexander to lawmakers this week.
Source: Waking Times - 10/11/13Dylan Charles, Editor
Both a blessing and a curse can the information age be. There is almost no way to live in our modern world without falling into someone’s stream of ideas, willingly or not. Good, bad, bad, good… there is a sea of waves to surf on out there, some of us catching more than others.
‘News’ is broadcast almost everywhere in some format, and information repeating has become a core feature of the modern homo sapiens. You’re reading an example of this right now. Someone’s always chatting, gossiping, worrying, speculating, theorizing, analyzing and considering the events that bind us together. That’s what the news really is, a conversation we have as a group about what we experience as a group, a multiple of our personal communications.