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Philly Drinking Water Radiation Detected
HEALTH ALERT: Radiation Detected In Philly Drinking Water
HEALTH ALERT: Radiation Detected In Philly Drinking Water
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Vatican - Roman Law Rule Washington D.C.
Vatican - Roman Law Rule Washington D.C.
What are the three city states and do they rule the world?Read more at www.youtube.com
The flag in Washington's District of Columbia has 3 red stars, each symbolizing a city state within the three city empire. The three city empire consists of Washington D.C., London, and Vatican City. London is the corporate center of the three city states and controls the world economically. Washington's District of Columbia city state is in charge of the military, and the Vatican offers spiritual guidance. The constitution of the district of Columbia operates under a tyrannical roman law known as lex fori, which in no way resembles the U.S. constitution.
When congress passed the act of 1871, it created a separate corporate government for the District of Columbia. This allowed the District of Columbia to operate as a corporation outside the constitution.
If you take a moment to study some signed treaties and charters between the United States and Britain, you will find that the United States has always been a British crowned Colony. In 1606, King James (yes, the King James who revised the bible) signed the charter of Virginia. The charter granted Americas British forefathers a license to settle and colonize America. The charter also guaranteed future kings and queens of England would have sovereign authority over all citizens and colonized land in America.
In 1783, the Paris peace treaty was signed. This treaty identifies the King of England as the prince of the United States contradicting the belief that America won the war of independence. And although King George III of England gave up most claims over his American colonies, he kept his right to continue receiving payments for his business ventures of colonizing America. If America won the war of independence, why would the agree to pay reparations to the king.
When the 13th amendment to the constitution was passed, the U.S. president was made subservient to the King of England. The 13th Amendment (the title of nobility amendment) forbids U.S. officials from using royal titles like king, or prince. For some strange reason though, the 13th amendment which was ratified in 1810 no longer appears in current copies of the U.S. constitution.
The war of independence against the British bankrupted America and turned its citizens into debt slaves of the king. In 1812, the British torched and burned the white house and all U.S. government buildings to the ground, destroying many ratification records of the U.S. constitution.
Then, nearly a century later, a corrupt U.S. congress committed the biggest theft in world history. They passed Paul Warburgs federal reserve act of 1913, handing over Americas gold and silver reserves (and total control of Americas economy) to the federal reserve bank. Most Americans still believe the FED is owned by the government, but it is not. The FED is a privately owned banking system whose majority class A shareholders include the Rothschild's, Warburgs, J.P. Morgan, the Rockefeller's and the Lehman brothers.
Most U.S. citizens believe the United States is a country and the president is its leader, but the U.S. is not a country, it is a corporation, and the president is not our leader, he is the president of the corporation of the U.S. The president, along his elected officials work for the corporation, not for the American People.
So, who owns the giant U.S. corporation? Like Canada and Australia, whose leaders are prime ministers of the queen, and whose land is called crowned land, the U.S. is just another crowned colony. Crowned colonies are controlled by the empire of the three city states. Thus, the U.S. is controlled by the three city states.
Let's get into some symbolism. At the center of each city state are giant phallic shaped stone monuments called obelisks. In D.C. the obelisk is known as the Washington monument. It was dedicated to Freemason George Washington by the Freemason grand lodge of the District of Columbia. The secretive brotherhood of Freemasons laid the Washington obelisks cornerstone in 1848 and contributed 22 masonic memorial stones. 250 masonic lodges financed the Washington monument obelisk including the knights templar masonic order.
more info:
http://www.marlegal.com/mlhist.html
http://www.worldlingo.com/ma/enwiki/en/Admiralty_law
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Roman+Law
http://www.detaxcanada.org/cmlaw1.htm
http://z10.invisionfree.com/The_Unhived_Mind_II/index.php?showtopic=120
http://z13.invisionfree.com/THE_UNHIVED_MIND/index.php?showtopic=1919
full download:
http://www.talkshoe.com/talkshoe/web/talkCast.jsp?masterId=17898&cmd=tc
Robot in reactors detects high radiation
Robot in Japanese reactors detects high radiation
Slideshow:Japan's Fukushima Nuclear Plant
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Reuters
NISA via JIJI Press – Handout provided by Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) shows engineers checking …
By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Mari Yamaguchi, Associated Press
TOKYO – Readings Monday from robots that entered two crippled buildings at Japan's tsunami-flooded nuclear plant for the first time in more than a month displayed a harsh environment still too radioactive for workers to enter.
Nuclear officials said the radiation data for Unit 1 and Unit 3 at the tsunami-flooded Fukushima Dai-ichi plant — collected by U.S.-made robots that look like drafting lamps on treads — do not alter plans for stabilizing the complex by year's end under a "road map" released by the plant operator Sunday.
With the public growing increasingly frustrated at the slow response to the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crises, parliament grilled Prime Minister Naoto Kan and officials from plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co.
"You should be bowing your head in apology. You clearly have no leadership at all," Masashi Waki, a lawmaker from the opposition Liberal Democratic Party, shouted at Kan.
"I am sincerely apologizing for what has happened," Kan said, stressing that the government was doing all it could to handle the unprecedented disasters.
TEPCO's president, Masataka Shimizu, looked visibly ill at ease as lawmakers heckled and taunted him.
Workers have not gone inside the two reactor buildings since the first days after the plant's cooling systems were wrecked by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Hydrogen explosions in both buildings in the first few days destroyed their roofs and littered them with radioactive debris.
But a pair of robots, called Packbots, haltingly entered the two buildings Sunday and took readings for temperature, pressure and radioactivity. More data must be collected and radioactivity must be further reduced before workers are allowed inside, said Hidehiko Nishiyama of Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.
"It's a harsh environment for humans to work inside," Nishiyama said.
Officials said the radiation findings should not hamper the goal of achieving a cold shutdown of the plant within six to nine months as laid out in a timetable TEPCO announced Sunday. Rather, the new information would help the company in figuring out how to push ahead with the plan.
"We have expected high radioactivity inside the reactor buildings, which was confirmed by data collected by the robot," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said. "Even I had expected high radioactivity in those areas. I'm sure TEPCO and other experts have factored in those figures when they compiled the roadmap."
TEPCO official Takeshi Makigami said the robots must pave the way for workers to be able to re-enter the building.
"What robots can do is limited, so eventually, people must enter the buildings," Makigami said.
The robots were set to investigate Unit 2 later Monday.
As work continues inside the plant to reduce radiation levels and stem leaks into the sea, the Defense Ministry said it would send about 2,500 soldiers to join the hundreds of police, outfitted with protective suits, who are searching for bodies in tsunami debris around the plant.
Around 1,000 bodies are thought to be buried in the muddy piles of broken houses, cars and fishing boats. As of Sunday, searchers had located 66 bodies and recovered 63, police said.
The combined earthquake and tsunami have left more than 27,000 people dead or missing.
The robots being used inside the plant are made by Bedford, Massachusetts company iRobot. Traveling on miniature tank-like treads, the devices opened closed doors and explored the insides of the reactor buildings, coming back with radioactivity readings of up to 49 millisieverts per hour inside Unit 1 and up to 57 millisieverts per hour inside Unit 3.
The legal limit for nuclear workers was more than doubled since the crisis began to 250 millisieverts. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recommends an evacuation after an incident releases 10 millisieverts of radiation, and workers in the U.S. nuclear industry are allowed an upper limit of 50 millisieverts per year. Doctors say radiation sickness sets in at 1,000 millisieverts and includes nausea and vomiting.
The robots, along with remote controlled miniature helicopters, have enabled TEPCO to photograph and take measurements of conditions in and around the plant while minimizing the workers' exposure to radiation and other hazards.
Read more at news.yahoo.com
TEPCO's plan for ending the crisis, drawn up at the government's order, is meant to be a first step toward letting some of the tens of thousands of residents evacuated from the area around the company's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant return to their homes.
Vatican Clarifies Bishop's Punishment
Vatican Clarifies Punishment Against Belgian Bishop
Vatican Clarifies Punishment Against Belgian Bishop
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Read more at www.nytimes.com
The Vatican has ordered a Belgian bishop who resigned last year over a sexual abuse scandal to no longer act as a priest in public, at least temporarily, and warned that he might risk further church sanctions. The former bishop of Bruges, the Rev. Roger Vangheluwe, resigned after he admitted he had sexually abused a boy; it later was established that the victim, who is now in his early 40s, was his nephew. The Vatican on Tuesday clarified the punishment against the cleric after Belgian bishops reported over the weekend that he had merely been sent outside Belgium for spiritual and psychological counseling. The pope has the final say on the punishment. The Vatican’s press office said Pope Benedict XVI would eventually decide on a sentence based on the diagnosis for Father Vangheluwe and prognosis from the psychological treatment he is receiving and taking into account “the suffering of the victims and the need for justice.”
Separation of church and state is wise
Separation of church and state is profoundly wise
While noble in principle, churches can behave very badly when they believe they exercise civic power, writes John Crown
'Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof"
First amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America, 1791
The constitutional separation of church and state has shown a timeless wisdom. The United States, a country originally founded by members of the same Protestant and Catholic faiths that were slaughtering each other in religiously inspired wars and burning each other at stakes in Europe for holding perceived heretical views, declared itself a country where religious liberty would be protected, and where neither religious persecution nor religious interference in civic matters would be tolerated.
Was this "wall of separation" good for the American Republic? It would seem so. Secular, religiously tolerant democratic government was virtually unknown at this time in Europe, and soon millions were fleeing the established, theocratic monarchies of that continent to make new lives in the new American Republic, which grew from a scattered set of colonies to become the dominant nation on the globe. Meanwhile, the confessional states of Europe stagnated, ultimately depending on a very un-Christian form of colonial exploitation to revive their own economies.
Was this separation also good for religion in America? The answer is a resounding "yes". As judged by regular religious attendance, the United States is one of the most devout of the developed nations, with a far higher rate of church-going than is found in Spain, France, Germany, England or Scotland, and with a similar level as Italy, the self-same countries whose theocracies the emigrants fled.
The conclusion seems inescapable. Religion and politics are like sheep and cattle. They shouldn't mix. Jesus Christ himself admitted as much when he admonished his followers to "give unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's and to God the things which are God's"
Yet the message isn't as yet universally accepted. The Middle East is replete with repressive theocracies, states where women are oppressed, where homosexuality can result in execution, and where an unmarried couple having coffee together risk being whipped by the police.
A theocracy within our own European heartland also found itself in trouble last week. The United States Diplomatic Service re-served the Vatican with legal papers drawn up by an American lawyer (ironically from St Paul, Minnesota) over allegations that it colluded in the cover-up of clerical sex abuse in a school for the deaf in Milwaukee.
Like a deadbeat dad dropping his hands to his sides when the court messenger appears at the door with the child-support summons, the Vatican had previously simply refused to accept these documents, saying, in the understated words of their spokesman, that they "were undesired and unwanted".
While some may feel that the crimes of a minority are being endlessly resurrected and regurgitated in a deliberate, orchestrated and malfeasant attempt to discredit the majority of decent clerics and the institution itself, the importance of the "wall of separation" is again emphasised. The institutional church, like any other organisation which is comprised of us morally frail humans, tends to acts in its own interests. The very purpose of democracy, and of accountability before the law, is to minimise our human tendency to put self-interest first.
The grudging, sluggish cooperation of the institutional church with abuse enquiries in our own Republic and other states, shows that, although it was founded on some of the greatest principles the world has ever seen and although it has contained within it ranks some of the kindest and most heroic figures in history, it can behave very badly indeed when it believes that it has civic authority.
"Congress shall make no law . . ."
Amen to that.
Professor John Crown is a consultant oncologist and is a candidate for the Seanad on the NUI panel. www.johnCrown.ie; Facebook John Crown for Seanad; Twitter: ProfJohnCrown
Read more at www.independent.ie
Originally published in
Former bishop admits abusing his nephews
Former bishop admits abusing his nephews
By Tom Heneghan in Brussels
A FORMER Belgian bishop at the centre of one of the Roman Catholic church's biggest paedophile scandals said he had abused two nephews but insisted he had no plans to abandon the priesthood.
In his first television interview since the scandal broke a year ago, Roger Vangheluwe (74) claimed he paid one nephew tens of thousands of euro in support, but denied it was meant to keep him silent.
He called 13 years of sexual abuse of the child which started at five as no more than "a little piece of intimacy" and said the abuse of a second nephew was very short.
He said he fully realised he did wrong and often went to confession about it. Vangheluwe resigned a year ago. He claimed the abuse "started as a game'.'
"I had the strong impression that my nephew didn't mind at all. To the contrary," he said. "It was not brutal sex. I never used bodily, physical violence."
Walter Van Steenbrugge, the lawyer for the nephew, denied Vangheluwe's claim that he paid the victim, now in his forties, €25,000 several times over.
Justice minister Stefaan De Clercq said the church authorities "had to take measures to stop the irresponsible behaviour of the former bishop".
The Vatican has ordered Vangheluwe to no longer work as a priest while officials determine his punishment.
- Tom Heneghan in Brussels
Read more at www.independent.ie
Irish Independent
Healesville's pedophile priest defrocked
Healesville's pedophile priest defrocked
by Emily Webb
Read more at lilydale-yarra-valley-leader.whereilive.com.au
A FORMER Healesville priest found guilty of sex abuse has been defrocked by the Vatican.
Paul Pavlou, a priest and teacher at St Brigid’s parish from 2005 to 2006, pleaded guilty in 2009 to one charge of committing an indecent act with a 14-year-old boy and another charge of possessing child pornography.
Melbourne Vicar-General Bishop Les Tomlinson confirmed that Pavlou had been officially removed from the priesthood.
A Healesville father, whose son was abused by convicted paedophile priest David Daniel - also a priest at St Brigid’s in the 1990s - said it was about time Pavlou was stripped of his right to be called a priest.
“It should have been done as soon as Pavlou was convicted,” the man said.
The father said the Catholic Church needed to adopt a policy of truth so children were protected.
Broken Rites victim support group spokesman Dr Bernard Barrett said most church abuse victims remained silent, expecting they would not be believed.