killuminati
kaijanaalexes:

My bro @CHASEnDREams_ sent me this. An article from the 70s about how the Gov’t Created the AIDS virus. Real shit.

kaijanaalexes:

My bro @CHASEnDREams_ sent me this. An article from the 70s about how the Gov’t Created the AIDS virus. Real shit.

thetruthfordummies:

2012 is the year of consciousness, so listen to it and stand up for what’s right. Stand only for truth.

thetruthfordummies:

2012 is the year of consciousness, so listen to it and stand up for what’s right. Stand only for truth.

Turn off your televisions. Ignore the Newt-Mitt-Rick-Barack reality show. It is as relevant to your life as the gossip on “Jersey Shore.” The real debate, the debate raised by the Occupy movement about inequality, corporate malfeasance, the destruction of the ecosystem, and the security and surveillance state, is the only debate that matters. You won’t hear it on the corporate-owned airwaves and cable networks, including MSNBC, which has become to the Democratic Party what Fox News is to the lunatic fringe of the Republican Party. You won’t hear it on NPR or PBS. You won’t read about it in our major newspapers. The issues that matter are being debated, however, on “Democracy Now!,” Link TV, The Real News, Occupy websites and Revolution Truth. They are being raised by journalists such as Glenn Greenwald and Matt Taibbi. You can find genuine ideas in corners of the Internet or in books by political philosophers such as Sheldon Wolin. But you have to go looking for them.

sweetsyren:

misha-bawlins:

itsnotfiftyitsfive0:

Oh my god I am laughing so hard at this. What a huge load of bullcrap. Can you imagine the queues at the airports if the officials had to go through every folder on every person’s MP3player, laptop, phone etc.? How the fuck exactly are they gonna search for pirated files?

My god ACTA is the dumbest and least executable thing I’ve ever heard.

They can actually do that now, without ACTA.  If an airport official is suspicious of you for any reason they have the authority to search your tech if they so decide.  What ACTA will do will make it their duty to search your tech should you fall under any sort of suspicion.  It’s only the definition of the already in place permission that has changed.

ACTA is a problem, yes, but not for this reason. The problem with ACTA is privacy in your own home and the fact that they would take it away from you.

kaijanaalexes:

Break free from the matrix. It was designed for us to be slaves. WAKE UP.

kaijanaalexes:

Break free from the matrix. It was designed for us to be slaves. WAKE UP.

I am convinced, that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. We must rapidly begin to shift from a thing oriented society, to a person oriented society. When machines and computers, profit motives, and property right are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, militarism, and economic exploitation are incapable of being conquered. Our only hope today lies in our ability to recapture the revolutionary spirit, and go out into a sometimes hostile world, declaring eternal hostility to poverty, racism and militarism.
Martin Luther King Jr. (via cultureofresistance)
theinvisiblecommission:

King was killed not because he had a dream, rather, because he had a plan.

theinvisiblecommission:

King was killed not because he had a dream, rather, because he had a plan.

I suspect the real purpose of this bill [NDAA] is to thwart internal, domestic movements that threaten the corporate state. The definition of a terrorist is already so amorphous under the Patriot Act that there are probably a few million Americans who qualify to be investigated if not locked up. Consider the arcane criteria that can make you a suspect in our new military-corporate state. The Department of Justice considers you worth investigating if you are missing a few fingers, if you have weatherproof ammunition, if you own guns or if you have hoarded more than seven days of food in your house. Adding a few of the obstructionist tactics of the Occupy movement to this list would be a seamless process. On the whim of the military, a suspected “terrorist” who also happens to be a U.S. citizen can suffer extraordinary rendition—being kidnapped and then left to rot in one of our black sites “until the end of hostilities.” Since this is an endless war that will be a very long stay.

This demented “war on terror” is as undefined and vague as such a conflict is in any totalitarian state. Dissent is increasingly equated in this country with treason. Enemies supposedly lurk in every organization that does not chant the patriotic mantras provided to it by the state. And this bill feeds a mounting state paranoia. It expands our permanent war to every spot on the globe. It erases fundamental constitutional liberties. It means we can no longer use the word “democracy” to describe our political system.

The supine and gutless Democratic Party, which would have feigned outrage if George W. Bush had put this into law, appears willing, once again, to grant Obama a pass. But I won’t. What he has done is unforgivable, unconstitutional and exceedingly dangerous. The threat and reach of al-Qaida—which I spent a year covering for The New York Times in Europe and the Middle East—are marginal, despite the attacks of 9/11. The terrorist group poses no existential threat to the nation. It has been so disrupted and broken that it can barely function. Osama bin Laden was gunned down by commandos and his body dumped into the sea. Even the Pentagon says the organization is crippled.

So why, a decade after the start of the so-called war on terror, do these draconian measures need to be implemented? Why do U.S. citizens now need to be specifically singled out for military detention and denial of due process when under the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force the president can apparently find the legal cover to serve as judge, jury and executioner to assassinate U.S. citizens, as he did in the killing of the cleric Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen? Why is this bill necessary when the government routinely ignores our Fifth Amendment rights—“No person shall be deprived of life without due process of law”—as well as our First Amendment right of free speech? How much more power do they need to fight “terrorism”?

Fear is the psychological weapon of choice for totalitarian systems of power. Make the people afraid. Get them to surrender their rights in the name of national security. And then finish off the few who aren’t afraid enough. If this law is not revoked we will be no different from any sordid military dictatorship. Its implementation will be a huge leap forward for the corporate oligarchs who plan to continue to plunder the nation and use state and military security to cow the population into submission.

Chris Hedges, 

Why I’m Suing Barack Obama

(via cultureofresistance)