CRY FREEDOM RADIO.COM Throwing Off The Chains and Bringing People Together for Change! – Video


CRY FREEDOM RADIO.COM Throwing Off The Chains and Bringing People Together for Change!
CRY FREEDOM RADIO.COM is a NEW Internet Radio Station based in the North West of England that has been created to act as a broadcasting and website hub for all truth and activist information,...

By: Lisa Cry Freedom

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CRY FREEDOM RADIO.COM Throwing Off The Chains and Bringing People Together for Change! - Video

Choosing Freedom, the conscious pursuit of personal values: Dr. Shirley Gallagher at TEDxCorkWomen – Video


Choosing Freedom, the conscious pursuit of personal values: Dr. Shirley Gallagher at TEDxCorkWomen
Dr. Shirley Gallagher is an environmental chemist who worked in industry for many years. Business as usual practises and lip service on sustainable action got her motivated to walk the walk....

By: TEDx Talks

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Choosing Freedom, the conscious pursuit of personal values: Dr. Shirley Gallagher at TEDxCorkWomen - Video

Freedom Idol – P2P LOW COMBAT Money Making Guide 2014! [600k-800k/hr] – Video


Freedom Idol - P2P LOW COMBAT Money Making Guide 2014! [600k-800k/hr]
Hello everyone and welcome back to another money making guide, in this video i will show you how to make money killing unicows and how to get there. the wiki guide for tower of life - http://runes...

By: Freedom! Idol

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Freedom Idol - P2P LOW COMBAT Money Making Guide 2014! [600k-800k/hr] - Video

PNoy awarded Freedom Medal in Germany for 'successful reforms'

President Benigno Aquino III was presented the Friedrich Naumann Foundation Freedom Medal in Berlin on Saturday during his official visit to Europe and the United States.

According to a news release from the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom (FNF), Aquino received the medal for "his successful reforms in the areas of education, anti-corruption and rule of law."

FNF Chairman Dr. Wolfgang Gerhardt said Aquino in behalf of the Filipino nation serves as an inspiration worldwide.

"You are the embodiment and the instigator of this inspiration. Your straight path, the daang matuwid, is our motivation too," Gerhardt said.

Aquino, upon receiving the award said the recognition helps him further realize the importance of his work which focuses on solidarity.

"We need solidarity in defense for freedom. We have to assist each other in pursuit of all freedoms. We will forever be grateful for the recognition of our efforts in advancing the cause of humanity," he said.

The Friedrich Naumann Freedom Medal is awarded to outstanding personalities who engage themselves for more democracy, human rights and market economy in partnership with the Foundation.

Other awardees are Bulgarian Prime Minister Simeon Saxe-Coburg Gotha, Western Cape Prime Minister Helen Zille and Liberal International President Hans van Baalen.

Aquino is currently in Europe where he seeks to attract investors as well as to rally support for the Philippine position on the West Philippine Sea. Andrei Medina/JST, GMA News

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PNoy awarded Freedom Medal in Germany for 'successful reforms'

BCB Live! Fluoride Action Conference Recap, Eugenics, IQ Destruction, Oh My! – Video


BCB Live! Fluoride Action Conference Recap, Eugenics, IQ Destruction, Oh My!
September 16, 2014 In today #39;s BCB we recap our recent visit to the 5th annual citizen #39;s conference on fluoridation which took place in Crystal City Virginia....

By: The Bull City Bulletin

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BCB Live! Fluoride Action Conference Recap, Eugenics, IQ Destruction, Oh My! - Video

'The Case Against the Supreme Court' pushes for reforms

Erwin Chemerinsky has made an exemplary career out of teaching, writing and lecturing about the U.S. Supreme Court. And though he has strongly liberal views, he is widely admired for his ability to explain the work of the court in a way that is thoughtful, clear and fair.

But in his new book, he says he regrets having painted "a generally favorable picture" of the court for generations of law students. "I discovered in my own mind I have been making excuses for the Court," says Chemerinsky, dean of the UC Irvine Law School. "The Supreme Court is not the institution that I once revered."

With the mission to set the record straight, he weighs the court's role in America's history and pronounces it a failure. Rather than stand up for "liberty and justice for all," the court has regularly stood with the powerful and against the weak. The justices have ruled for slave-holders, segregationists, corporate bosses and the very wealthy, he writes, and ignored the rights of workers, consumers, dissidents and the victims of government abuse.

He cites infamous cases and lesser-known abominations. The Dred Scott decision of 1857 struck down the "Missouri Compromise" and ruled former slaves could not be free even in the "free states" of the North. The Civil War soon followed. In 1927, the American eugenics movement got a boost when the revered Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes endorsed the forced sterilization of a supposedly "feeble minded white woman" from Virginia named Carrie Buck. "Three generations of imbeciles are enough," Holmes wrote in an opinion cited by the Nazis a decade later. And during World War II, as Americans fought overseas against the brutal racist policies of the Germans and Japanese, the Supreme Court upheld the mass detention of tens of thousands of Americans of Japanese descent on the West Coast.

And what about the Warren Court? Chemerinsky agrees the court of the 1950s and '60s is the great exception. It began with the Brown v. Board of Education ruling that declared racial segregation unconstitutional. And in the years that followed, the liberal majority struck down poll taxes, wielded the "one person, one vote" rule to equalize political power in the states and breathed new life into the Constitution's protections for accused criminals.

"These three areas ending segregation, increasing equality in voting and expanding the rights of criminal defendants are unquestionably successes for the Supreme Court that made society better," he writes.

But the progressive court did not accomplish as much as it could have, he says. For one, it did little to enforce the desegregation of schools. And the progressive era did not last long. Richard Nixon ran for president in 1968 on a "law and order" platform and blamed the liberal court for the rising tide of crime and violence in America's cities. He also replaced four justices in his first term. By the mid-1970s, the liberal era was over.

Since Nixon's election, the court has had three chief justices, all of them conservative Republicans. Warren Burger was Nixon's choice to replace Earl Warren. William Rehnquist, a Nixon appointee, was elevated by Ronald Reagan. And John Roberts, a former Rehnquist clerk, was chosen by George W. Bush.

When Chemerinsky turns to the Roberts Court, he shows its leanings are in line with much of what has come before. In recent years, the court has blocked lawsuits against corporations and high government officials and struck down campaign-funding laws so as to give corporations and the wealthy more freedom to use money to sway elections. It voided a key part of the Voting Rights Act and barred about 1.6-million women employees from suing Wal-Mart for unequal pay.

Chemerinsky concedes he will be accused of "liberal whining." And conservatives will note he has little to say about disputed decisions such as the Roe v. Wade ruling that legalized abortion or the more recent gay-rights rulings.

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'The Case Against the Supreme Court' pushes for reforms

Jackie-O Motherfucker + Cheesedrop + Pink Alien live @ Tripoteca San Francisco 2014 – Video


Jackie-O Motherfucker + Cheesedrop + Pink Alien live @ Tripoteca San Francisco 2014
live @ Tripoteca - psychedelic film arts festival @ Eco-System, San Francisco, 10th of september 2014 tripoteca.com facebook.com/tripoteca Live music by: J...

By: adistu

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Jackie-O Motherfucker + Cheesedrop + Pink Alien live @ Tripoteca San Francisco 2014 - Video

MARKET REPORT: Eco City puts brakes on its shares

By Geoff Foster for the Daily Mail

Published: 15:58 EST, 19 September 2014 | Updated: 15:58 EST, 19 September 2014

Shares of the London-based developer and supplier of the 40,000 customised six-seater Mercedes-Benz Vito van were suspended at the companys own request, at a rock bottom 0.32p, after the firm admitted that its 76.6 per cent-owned subsidiary One80 intended to appoint an administrator.

The news heightened fears about Ecos financial position as One80 owns the intellectual property rights to the rear-wheel steer technology and other design rights used on the Mercedes Vito taxi, which helps it comply with stringent people carrier rules laid down by the Public Carriage Office.

Hazard warning lights have been flashing at Eco City for weeks, if not months. Its shares have reversed off a cliff and are down more than 80 per cent this year. They peaked at 8p in 2008. Only last month the board admitted to a funding crunch and said it had launched a strategic review that could call in to question the companys very survival.

New Vito taxi sales have slumped and its share of the new London licensed taxi market has suffered as a result.

Back in May 2013 its share of the market stood at 40 per cent-plus as it took business away from the iconic Black Cab manufacturer Manganese Bronze, which went into administration before being bought by Geely, the Chinese carmaker.

Eco City has also been hit by the emergence of the smartphone cab-booking app, Uber. The spread of Uber across the world caused a wave of protests from London cabbies who complained that the US firm was undercutting them and allowing potentially unlicensed cab drivers to take trade.

London mayor Boris Johnson also upset the apple cart by introducing rules this year that all new taxis in London should be capable of emitting zero emissions from 2018. Eco City continues to experience challenging trading conditions requiring it to seek additional funding. It is in negotiations with a potential backer that may or may not lead to additional funds, which will help it remain on the road. Former cabbie, founder and major 11.4 per cent shareholder Peter DaCosta, will be hoping that lighted For Hire signs on Vitos will not be lost for ever.

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MARKET REPORT: Eco City puts brakes on its shares

Kia creates eco-karma with electric Soul

Antuan Goodwin/CNET

The first things that you notice about any electric vehicle is just how quietly they move as well as the seemingly effortless acceleration. The Kia Soul EV is no exception. With a zero-to-60 time of about 12 seconds and a top speed of 90 mph, the Kia isn't mind-bogglingly fast, but something about the lack of powertrain noise or vibration and the delivery of torque without interruptions for gear changes makes the EV feel more nimble than the numbers imply.

So how about those numbers? The 2015 Kia Soul is powered by an 81.4 kW AC synchronous permanent magnet motor that outputs a stated 109 horsepower and 210 pound-feet of torque. Like all full-electrics, the Soul EV's party trick is that it is able to deliver all 210 pound-feet of that torque from a dead stop, which makes it feel more responsive than a gasoline-powered engine of similar spec, simply because you never have to wait for it to build engine revs and power.

Kia tells me that the Soul's motor uses multilayer magnets to boost efficiency and reduce the engine whine, but it would probably take back-to-back rides to tell if the electric Kia was actually any quieter than the Ford Focus Electric or the Nissan Leaf. Suffice it to say that the Soul EV was extremely quiet during my testing at both city and highway speeds. At speeds below 12 mph or when reversing, the Soul gets a bit artificially noisy, thanks to an audible Pedestrian Warning System that softly beeps to announce the vehicle's presence.

The Soul EV gains about 300 pounds over its gasoline-powered sibling, but also gains about 60 pound-feet of instantly accessible torque. Antuan Goodwin/CNET

Despite weighing in at 302 pounds more than the gasoline-powered variant, the electric Soul surprisingly felt more planted. This is possibly due to the lack of weight transfer that comes with the interruption of power between gear changes -- because the Soul EV uses a single-speed transmission between the motor and the front wheels -- and possibly due to the 620-pound battery pack mounted under the floor, lowering the tall, compact crossover's center of gravity.

The Soul EV's suspension has been updated to compensate for the increased weight and altered weight distribution of the EV powertrain.

The flat 27 kWh battery pack is composed of lithium polymer cells and affords the Soul EV a stated range of about 93 mile from a full charge. During my testing, I was pretty spot on with the automaker's estimate, finishing up my approximately 40 mile trip with 56 percent of the battery's reserve remaining and the trip computer estimating a range of 56 miles more.

The 40 miles of my test took me through the suburbs of Palo Alto, up to highway speeds, and onto a nice and twisty bit of road as we made our way across the San Francisco peninsula to the coast. I tested the Soul's top speed of 90 mph and I hustled the EV up a steep and twisty road through the Santa Cruz mountains -- I basically drove like an auto journalist. This wasn't 40 miles of hyper-miling, so the Soul's ability to deliver on its advertised range was even more impressive.

I didn't take it easy on the Soul EV during my short test, but it delivered on the promised range. Antuan Goodwin/CNET

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Kia creates eco-karma with electric Soul