ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

The Jesuit Owl: Common to CIA Headquarters, the Pentagon and Capitol Buliding!

Amplify’d from www.vaticanassassins.org

The Jesuit Owl: Common to CIA Headquarters, the Pentagon and Capitol Buliding!

Here is yet one more proof the Jesuit Order rules the Vatican’s “Un-Holy Roman,” Fourteenth Amendment, Corporate-Fascist, Socialist-Communist, American Empire (1868-Present) overseen by Illuminzed/Jesuitized Scottish-Rite Freemasonry.  The symbol of the Owl—utilized by the Company of Jesus for centuries—is to be found at CIA Headquarters, at the Pentagon and at the Capitol Mall in Washington, District of Catholics—which, since its incorporation in 1871, has been “Rome on the Potomac!”

Owl on Natioinal Press Club Symbol

Owl's Head Shape, CIA Headquarters, Langley, Virginia

Pentagon with Owl in the Center, Picture 1

Pentagon with Owl in Center, Picture 2

Pentagon with Owl in Center, Picture 3

Pentagon with Owl in Center, Picture 4

The Owl in the Center of the Pentagon, Picture 5

Owl Laid Out at U.S. Capitol Building Mall, Roman "Capitoline Hill,"Washington, D.C.

Owl Laid Out at U.S. Capitol Bulliding Mall, Roman "Capitoline Hill," Washington, D.C.

Bohemian Grove Ceremony, "Cremation of Care," Northern California, 70 Miles North of the Jesuit Order's University of San Francisco

Roman Catholic Priests, Bohemian Grove, Northern California, 1927

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Australian Brother Steve: Jesuits Destroying White Apostate Protestant Australia

Amplify’d from www.vaticanassassins.org

Australian Brother Steve: Jesuits Destroying White Apostate Protestant Australia

Australian Judges at Red Mass in Honor of Popish English Traitor Sir Thomas More, Sydney, 2008

Hi Eric
You are correct in calling me a “brother” as I am a true grace believing Christian.
I was once a works-oriented Christian, but in coming out of works for righteousness, it has caused me to understand grace at a deeper level.  However, I do not believe in making a license out of grace, which I did in small ways at first, in backlash against years of works that nearly did me in mentally.
I have a loving wife of Irish / English decent.  We have 4 beautiful children, two girls, two boys.  Australia is still a great place to live, but unfortunately our land like the USA is being sold out by our traitorous bought-and-paid-for politicians.  We are being inundated by Asians and Moslems.  Our industry is being shipped to China, India, Japan and Malaysia, not to mention Brazil.  The only reason we still have any economy is because of our great mineral wealth—take that away and we are finished.  We once made our own Televisions and Radios, and good ones too.
The elite are attacking our food bowl Murray / Darling rivers area, saying farmers can’t take too much water out.  Carbon trading, etc.  We are fighting them at every angle.
God have mercy on us – come Lord Jesus!
Will continue to read and listen to your research.
God bless you Eric and protect you and your family—may you prosper and be in good health—through Christ Jesus our intermediary.
Steve
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These Are They 144,000: Occupations In Heaven by John Thiel

Ever wondered what it will be like in heaven? Some think its all about sitting on a white fluffy cloud playing a harp... No... It will be much more exciting and engaging than that. Have a listen! And remember, our preparation for heaven starts here...

2010-09-18 - John Thiel - The Occupations of Heaven

101002 - Order and Dependability of Heaven


Surfer's face impaled by board at Maori Bay, near Muriwai on the North Island | Courier Mail


N.J. Pushes for Controversial Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Amplify’d from www.christianpost.com

N.J. Pushes for Controversial Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

By Stephanie Samuel|Christian Post Correspondent

New Jersey lawmakers are moving to pass an anti-bullying legislation to address teen suicides amid concerns that the bill is exclusive and may punish teachers who express religious beliefs.

Nearly two months after a string of youth suicides led to a national outcry, the New Jersey legislature is close to passing an amendment that will create an Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights. Provisions that expand the definition of bullying to include inflicting emotional harm, add additional criminal charges for bullying, and institute an annual "Week of Respect" will make this law the most comprehensive anti-bully law in the nation.

Bullied students and gay rights advocacy groups praised the bill during Monday’s public hearing.

“We are very grateful for the harmony that exists in Trenton to help our kids,” Steven Goldstein, chairman of Garden State Equality, said in rally on the state Assembly steps.

Greg Quinlan of family advocacy group New Jersey Family Policy Council praised the effort, proclaiming, “We need to put a culture of dignity and respect in schools.”

But he lamented that the bill has some holes that may limit its effectiveness. Quinlan, a director of government affairs for NJFPC’s legislative arm, Family First, said the bill is “segregated” to prevent and treat bullying of particular groups.

The bill enumerates classifications such as race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, gender, gender identity and expression as it relates to homosexuality, and mental, physical and sensory disability as characteristics that generally cause bullying, harassment and/ or intimidation.

Quinlan pointed out, “Obesity is not on the list. Ex-gays like myself are not on the list.”

He stressed that “bullying is bullying” and all forms of bullying should be recognized in the bill language.

Staff of the bill sponsors pointed out that the detailed list of bullied characteristics is simply stated as examples. The bill also carries catch all language which includes “any other distinguishing characteristics.”

Nevertheless, Quinlan is worried that the bill will censure teachers and students from exercising their first amendment rights to express their beliefs for fear that it may lead to disciplinary action. He noted that a teacher who might say, “There is no gay gene,” may be written up as a expressing a bullying comment. Also, expressions of faith may be construed as excluding or berating other faiths.

Quinlan has drafted his own model of anti-bully legislation, which eliminates any list and defers to catch all statement of bullied characteristics. He also said his model is simplified and avoids over burdening the state school system with additional costs.

The current state Senate anti-bullying bill will toughen state law enacted in 2002. The bill carries provisions that mandate teachers, administrators and school staff to receive bullying training in addition to the suicide training already mandated.

Administrators will be required to collect data of the number of bullying incidents and actions taken to resolve these incidents. The data will be reported each quarter and calculated to give each school a bully grade. Administrators will also be required to appoint anti-bully specialists. Districts will be required to establish anti-bullying programs.

Some of the suggestions may be too costly, Quinlan noted. State law stipulates that bills must be accompanied with a budget in order to be approved by state assembly. The Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights bill is to be reviewed by the state Senate’s budget committee as soon as tomorrow.

According to statistics quoted in the bill, more than a third of all U.S. students were bullied in 2009. Of those students, half reported that bullying was a weekly or daily problem.

As such, the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights bill has garnered bi-partisan support within the New Jersey legislature. Of the state bodies, 28 members of the Senate and 46 members of the assembly have signed on to co-sponsor the bill. Their support will be more than enough to pass the bill.

Read more at www.christianpost.com
 

Christian Jailed in Afghanistan to Face Judge on Sunday

Amplify’d from www.christianpost.com

Christian Jailed in Afghanistan to Face Judge on Sunday

ISTANBUL (Compass Direct News) – An Afghani amputee in prison for his Christian faith since May will face a judge this Sunday (Nov. 21) without legal representation or knowledge of the charges against him, according to local sources.

Authorities arrested Said Musa, 45, on May 31, days after the local Noorin TV station broadcast images of Afghan Christians being baptized and worshiping. Though there were other arrests in May and June during the ensuing man-hunt against Christians, Musa is the only known Christian facing a court case.

Turning from Islam is a capital offence under strict Islamic laws still in place in Afghanistan, which was wrested from the Taliban regime’s hard-line Islamist control in 2001.

The subject of Afghans leaving Islam for Christianity became national news following the Noorin TV broadcast and ignited a heated debate in the country’s parliament and senate. In early June, the deputy secretary of the Afghan parliament, Abdul Sattar Khawasi, called for the execution of converts.

“Those Afghans that appeared on this video film should be executed in public,” he said, according to news sources. “The house should order the attorney general and the NDS [National Directorate of Security] to arrest these Afghans and execute them.”

In June authorities forced Musa to renounce Christianity publicly on television but have continued to hold him in prison without revealing accusations against him. In prison, Musa has openly said he is a follower of Jesus.

In a hand-delivered letter penned last month to the church worldwide, U.S. President Barack Obama and the heads of NATO’s International Security Assistance Forces, Musa wrote that he was physically and verbally abused by his captors and other prisoners at Ouliat Prison in Kabul.

In broken English, he wrote: “I am very and very in a bad condition in the jail,” and elsewhere in the letter, “I am alone between 400 of terrible wolves in the jail, like a sheep.”

In the two-page letter, a copy of which Compass received in late October, Musa addressed Obama as “brother” and pleaded with the international community: “For [the] sake [of the] Lord Jesus Christ please pray for me and rescue me from this jail otherwise they will kill me because I know they [have] very very very cruel and hard hearts.”

Musa wrote of being sexually abused, beaten, mocked, spat on and deprived of sleep because of his faith in Jesus. He wrote that he would be willing to suffer for his faith in order to encourage and strengthen other Christians in their faith.

Musa also described how he had repented for denying his faith publicly: “I acknowledge my sin before [the] Lord Jesus Christ: ‘Don’t refuse me before your holy angels and before your father because I am a very very weak and [sinful] man.’”

In his letter, Musa alluded to the lack of justice he faced in prison, saying that the prosecutor had given the judge a false report about him and demanded a bribe from the Christian.

Integrity Watch Afghanistan, an anti-corruption monitor, recently reported that corruption in Afghanistan is rampant and has doubled since 2007. Most Afghans polled in its 2010 report said that state corruption was fueling the Taliban’s growth. Bribes are frequently required for everything from health care to dealing with state bureaucracy.

Prison Transfer
Days after the letter was circulated, quiet diplomacy resulted in authorities transferring Musa to a different prison, to keep him separate from prisoners who would likely abuse him for his faith. He is now held at the Kabul Detention Center in the Governor’s Compound.

A state-assigned lawyer has refused to represent him because of his faith. No other lawyer has been willing to represent him, though he has sought legal help.

Musa, known as Dr. Musa, has worked for the International Committee of the Red Cross in Kabul for 15 years fitting people for prosthetic limbs. He also has a prosthetic leg. Married and the father of six young children, he has been a Christian for eight years. His name is also phonetically spelled Sayed Mossa.

For the first two months of his detainment, sources said, Musa’s employer and family could not find out where authorities were holding him. During that time his wife received threats that she must leave Musa. Authorities have so far denied his family access to his file, which includes the charges against him. It is believed that the charges could include apostasy and possibly espionage.

Local Christians and religious freedom monitors have expressed concern that Musa may be made an example.

“The court case against Said Musa is unique,” said one religious freedom advocate, a Christian, under condition of anonymity. “Authorities usually don’t want court cases against Christians. This is high profile, as Musa has been on TV and was put under pressure to deny his faith publicly. This is a kind of a test case to see which law prevails in the country: sharia [Islamic law] or international agreements.”

Afghanistan’s population is estimated at 29 million, with very few Christians among them. Afghan converts from Islam are not accepted or recognized by the predominantly Muslim society. In recent months experts have expressed concern over political threats against local Christians, and many, including those exposed by Noorin TV’s broadcast, have fled the country. Christians who remain are afraid, according to sources.

“Dozens of Afghan Christians left their homes, as the authorities were actively looking for Christians after the television programs,” said the religious freedom monitor.

In the face of societal stigmatization, Christians who dare to meet do so in small groups at homes. Sources report that since the hostilities in May and June, Afghan Christians are very intimidated.

Afghanistan ranks sixth on Christian support oganization Open Doors’ World Watch List of countries where Christians are persecuted.

The country has signed the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights stipulating religious freedom, and the nation’s constitution also provides a measure of religious liberties under Article 2. Article 3 limits the application of all laws if they are contrary to the “beliefs and provisions of the sacred religion of Islam.”

“It seems that this measure of religious freedom does not apply to those who have turned away from Islam,” said the religious freedoms monitor. “They are seen as apostates, traitors of their faith and country.”

Read more at www.christianpost.com
 

Airport Scanners May Cause DNA Damage

Amplify’d from ohlundonline.blogspot.com


Airport Scanners May Cause DNA Damage

Technology Review reports how terahertz waves in airport scanners tear apart DNA.

Apparently terahertz radiation damages biological systems because terahertz waves interfere with processes such as gene expression and DNA replication.

Before bombarding us with terahertz genotoxic waves via airport scanners, we ought to have the right to know what level of terahertz exposure is safe. Read more at ohlundonline.blogspot.com
 

FBI Houston: British National Sentenced to Prison for Transporting Child Pornography


Metallica Guitarist Accidentally Kicks a Child

Amplify’d from gawker.com

Metallica Guitarist Accidentally Kicks a Child

Metallica Guitarist Accidentally Kicks a ChildDuring a Sydney performance of "Seek and Destroy," Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett is kicking balloons around the stage. He winds up, swings his foot, and—uh oh. Was that a child that just went flying?

Liveleak published video from an audience member. As Hammett staggers across the stage, seeking and destroying balloons, a small child stands at the stage's edge wearing sound-proof earmuffs and yellow pants. (Maybe a roadie's kid?) Hammett swings his foot, kicks a balloon, and suddenly the child is flying through the air. Later, someone picks the kid up and carries him away.

Uh, yikes! Of all things to accidentally kick during "Seek and Destroy," a small child is among the worst possibilities. Here's hoping the baby's OK, and that this all turns into a really funny story a decade or two from now. [Liveleak]


Send an email to Maureen O'Connor, the author of this post, at maureen@gawker.com.

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TSA Investigating ‘Don’t Touch My Junk’ Passenger

Several groups have called for a National Opt-Out day on Nov. 24, traditionally the busiest travel day of the year, to protest the TSA’s attempt to force passengers to undergo invasive scans or face an intrusive pat-down.

Amplify’d from www.wired.com

TSA Investigating ‘Don’t Touch My Junk’ Passenger

The TSA has launched an investigation of a passenger in San Diego who left the airport after opting out of an invasive body scan and criticizing the proposed alternative pat-down.

John Tyner, a 31-year-old software programmer, recorded the encounter on his mobile phone and posted it to his blog. From there, it quickly went viral, tapping a groundswell of frustration over TSA’s procedures.

But far from backing down, the TSA told local reporters that it’s now investigating the passenger, who may face an $11,000 fine if the agency sues him.

“What he’s done, he’s violated federal law and federal regulations which states once you enter and start the process you have to complete it,” TSA’s San Diego security director told the Fox 5 News.

Tyner was at the San Diego airport last Saturday with his father-in-law and brother-in-law on their way to South Dakota for a three-day pheasant-hunting trip. Tyner said he checked the TSA website beforehand and didn’t see San Diego International Airport on a list of facilities using new invasive scanners that take a strip-search image of passengers beneath their clothes. But once in the security line, he saw that the airport was indeed using the scanners. He was in line to go through a metal detector when an agent directed him through the new body scanner instead.

“There was a certain percentage of people who were willingly going through the scanner,” Tyner told Threat Level. “Then, every time the scanner was empty, they would just grab the next person in the line for the metal detector and send them through the scanner.”

Due to privacy and health concerns, Tyner opted out of the scan in favor of a pat-down. But when the TSA agent explained in detail the agency’s new policy for “enhanced” pat-downs — which includes using the front of hands and fingers to touch passengers in their groin — Tyner balked.

“If you touch my junk,” he told the agent, “I’ll have you arrested.”

The agent called his supervisor, who told Tyner that if he wasn’t comfortable with the enhanced pat-down “we can escort you back out and you don’t have to fly today.”

Tyner told the agent, “I don’t understand how a sexual assault can be made a condition of my flying.”

When the agent replied that a pat-down was not considered a sexual assault, Tyner said, “It would be if you were not the government.”

The TSA supervisor told him, “By buying your ticket you gave up a lot of rights.”

Tyner’s brother-in-law had already been directed through the scanner and complied. His father-in-law was on the other side of security. Tyner isn’t sure if he went through the metal detector or the scanner. But while Tyner was being interrogated, he saw numerous passengers pass through the metal detector and go on to their flights without undergoing a pat-down.

Tyner told the agents he was happy to go through the metal detector and even submit to a regular pat-down, but not one that involved a groin check. His father-in-law, a former deputy sheriff, told the agents to be reasonable.

“Just let him go through the metal detector and this will all be over,” his father-in-law said. But the agents insisted that regardless of the fact that Tyner had initially been set to go through the metal detector before agents directed him to the scanner, once he rejected the scanner, he had to undergo the enhanced pat-down. He could either submit, or leave the airport and not fly. Tyner chose the latter option and was escorted to the American Airlines ticket counter to get a refund.

He was on his way out of the airport when a man in a sport coat approached and told him he could not leave the airport until he’d completed the security screening, even if he had no intention of getting on an airplane. The man, whom Tyner believes was with the TSA, told him that he’d be subject to prosecution and a civil fine if he left without being screened. Tyner told the man to sue him and walked out of the airport.

Tyner said although his father-in-law continued the trip without him, he later told Tyner he was proud of him for standing up for what he believed was right. Tyner has received calls from lawyers with the American Civil Liberties Union and the Rutherford Institute to discuss the issue and says he has also received offers of support from the public to help pay any fine or legal defense costs he may face.

On Monday, the TSA defended its actions.

“We want to be sure that everyone on a plane can be assured that the people with them received the same screening process,” Michael Aguilar, the TSA’s security director in San Diego, told reporters, despite the fact that screening actually varies greatly among passengers, some of whom are allowed to pass through metal detectors without a pat-down or scan.

Aguilar added that Tyner’s recording of the incident created suspicion that he might have staged the incident. Aguilar insisted that the TSA had no plans to change its procedures.

But a growing movement among pilot associations and traveler-rights groups suggests the TSA is under increasing pressure to reconsider that stance.

Several groups have called for a National Opt-Out day on Nov. 24, traditionally the busiest travel day of the year, to protest the TSA’s attempt to force passengers to undergo invasive scans or face an intrusive pat-down.

The U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation is also holding a hearing on Wednesday to discuss TSA oversight.

Privacy groups such as the Electronic Privacy Information Center are seeking a court order to halt the use of invasive scanners, saying the scanners are illegal and violate passenger privacy.

They also say the government has done little to ensure that images taken by the devices are not saved. The TSA has asserted that security scanners cannot store pictures, but security personnel at a courthouse in Florida were found to not only have saved about 35,000 images but shared some of them among colleagues in order to humiliate one of their co-workers. On Tuesday, Gizmodo released 100 of the images, which the government released after EPIC sued it in a Freedom of Information Act request.

Scientists have expressed concern that radiation from the devices could have long-term health effects on travelers. EPIC filed a separate FOIA request last summer to obtain reports and other information the TSA used to determine the health effects of the devices before deploying them in airports. The civil liberties group announced on Tuesday that it was suing the agency to comply with the request.

Consumer rights advocate Ralph Nader told reporters on a call on Tuesday that the technology was ineffective — since it fails to detect all explosives — and has not been subjected to proper analysis to determine the health risks.

“As more people experience the invasive scanners and pat-downs, including congressional members and celebrities, the more attention the issue will get,” he said.

Kate Hanni, founding director of FlyersRights.org, said that her organization’s hotline has “been blown up with calls complaining about the scans and pat-downs.” Members with the 30,000-strong organization expressed concerns about health risks and about whether the TSA conducts background checks on agents to screen pedophiles out of the agency.

James Babb, co-organizer of WeWon’tFly.com, one of the grassroots campaigns behind the National Opt-Out day, told reporters on the call, “I believe the TSA has suckered Americans into a false sense of security with these scanners of dubious value.”

Read more at www.wired.com