Seek The Truth

July 18, 2009

The most important information I have found so far:

Think Freethinkfree.ca

Bursting Bubbles of Government Deception

The Magnificent Deception

With Lawful Excuse

Security of The Person



Zeitgeist Movementthezeitgeistmovement.com

Zeitgiest: The Movie

Zeitgeist: Addendum

The Zeitgeist Movement: Orientation Presentation


Peter Joesph on BlogTalkRadio – blogtalkradio.com/Peter-Joseph




Don’t just believe me, or Alex Jones, do your research, search yourself and you will find the truth.


Corporate media forced to charge dwindling readership for news content as establishment propaganda organs wither and die while alternative media soars.

Billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch gave a strange response when asked about plans for mainstream news websites to charge for content, declaring, “The current days of the internet will soon be over.”

He was making reference to the fact that corporate media websites cannot continue to survive under their current failing business model.

The establishment media is dying and advertising revenue has plummeted as people turn to blogs and the alternative media for their news in an environment of corporate lies and spin.

This has forced sectors of the corporate media to charge the dwindling number of loyal readers they have left for news content, a practice which is set to become widespread according to Murdoch. This will only send more people over to the alternative media as the old organs of de facto state-controlled propaganda wither and die.

“Asked whether he envisaged fees at his British papers such as the Times, the Sunday Times, the Sun and the News of the World, (Murdoch) replied: “We’re absolutely looking at that,” reports the Guardian. “Taking questions on a conference call with reporters and analysts, he said that moves could begin “within the next 12 months‚” adding: “The current days of the internet will soon be over.”

Murdoch’s newspapers and TV networks, which include Fox News and the Asian Star Network, have seen profits plummet from $216m to just $7m year-on-year. MySpace.com is also floundering despite a recent move to replace the company’s entire management staff.

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If the World Health Organization (WHO) raises the pandemic threat alert to Level 6 — it’s already just one notch below that at Level 5 — companies that are now scrambling to figure out business continuity issues will have to do more than tell sick employees to stay home and healthy ones to wash their hands.

A Level 6 alert means that company officials will be asked by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to undertake a number of efforts to fight any pandemic — including the appointment of a workplace pandemic coordinator or team.

The coordinator would be responsible for monitoring employees to ensure they follow basic rules of hygiene, such as washing hands, and to make sure that breathing masks are available. And if a worker becomes sick, the pandemic monitor is supposed to ensure they go home, according to Jack Sotallaro, director of education at DRI International Inc. in Conway, Ark.

“Going to a Level 5 pretty [the current level] much says you’re able to pass the flu back and forth from people and that there’s every possibility you’ll go to a pandemic level,” said Sotallaro, whose organization educates and certifies companies for business continuity planning.

The real issue, however, may not be sick employees, but an inability to get supplies and deliveries, he said.

“If you’re in a city or a locality that gets to pandemic levels of infection — and it doesn’t have to be everywhere — you’re going to see issues like suppliers not being able to get deliveries to you because they’re sick. It’s going to be a regional issue, even if your organization is not directly affected by the flu,” Sotallaro said.

And if the flu does strike a corporation, plans will be needed that allow IT workers to manage computer systems from home, Sotallaro said. Otherwise, there isn’t much choice but to have them in the office.

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When R.N. Elliott first discovered the Elliott Wave Principle back in the 1930s, he applied it to forecast the stock market. It was only in the 1970s that EWI’s founder Robert Prechter observed that Elliott wave patterns in stocks reflect much more than just stock prices.

First and foremost, major stock market trends mirror the ups and downs of society’s overall mood state – or social mood, as Prechter termed it in the new science he called socionomics. A rising (bull) market indicates improving social mood, while a falling (bear) market signals that society’s overall mood is worsening.

Of course, social mood as the driving force behind stocks, economy and cultural trends turns the conventional idea of causality completely on its head. For example, it means that investor confidence doesn’t follow the trend in the stock market; instead, stock market trends follow investor confidence. News doesn’t create stock market trends; social mood determines both the character of human events and the trend in stocks.

And, relevant to the latest threat the world is facing, swine flu, epidemics don’t just “happen.” Historically, they occur at specific moments in human history. Here’s is a short excerpt from Robert Prechter’s two-volume set on socionomics, The Wave Principle of Human Social Behavior, Chapter 18 (bold added):

The fact is that epidemics and pandemics seem to hit populations during major negative social mood trends. …When we study pandemics of the Dark Ages or the Spanish influenza epidemic that broke out during the bear market of 1917 (which year also saw intense fighting in World War I and the Communist coup in Russia), there always appears to be a bear market in force, and the extent of the epidemic tends to correlate with the size of the setback in mood.

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Following the American Civil Liberties Union’s criticism regarding a controversial Virginia Fusion Center terrorism assessment report, Virginia Governor Timothy M. Kaine has announced that he will investigate the practices of the secretive center located in Virginia. The ACLU raised constitutional concerns about the report’s focus on First Amendment protected activities when it was made public this month. The document characterized the “diversity” surrounding a Virginia military base and the state’s “historically black” colleges as possible recruiting grounds for terrorists.

“It’s encouraging to see the governor of Virginia agreed with the ACLU that the Virginia Fusion Center’s Threat Assessment warranted an investigation,” said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. “We are hopeful that the federal government will follow suit and realize how damaging these fusion center reports can be absent strict guidelines and intense oversight. We’re looking forward to working with Congress and the Obama administration to conduct a thorough audit of these centers before more federal money is spent to support their activities.”

The federal government has facilitated the growth of a network of fusion centers since 9/11 to expand information collection and sharing practices among law enforcement agencies, the private sector and the intelligence community. According to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), there were 70 fusion centers in the United States as of February 2009.

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