FORENSIC MEDICINE – Mosa Plays: The Wolf Among Us (Episode 1 – Part 2) – Video


FORENSIC MEDICINE - Mosa Plays: The Wolf Among Us (Episode 1 - Part 2)
Part of the series on The Wolf Among us, you can find the first one by going through my channel, I highly recommend watching them in order this way. Like Comment and Subscribe it really does...

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FORENSIC MEDICINE - Mosa Plays: The Wolf Among Us (Episode 1 - Part 2) - Video

20 05 2014 Radio Liberty in Belorussian 1534 on 5930 Biblis, 6105 Lampertheim – Video


20 05 2014 Radio Liberty in Belorussian 1534 on 5930 Biblis, 6105 Lampertheim
For more information on the shortwave listening hobby, please visit: http://swldxbulgaria.blogspot.com QTH: Troyan, Bulgaria Receiver: Sony ICF-2001D Antennas: beverage.

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20 05 2014 Radio Liberty in Belorussian 1534 on 5930 Biblis, 6105 Lampertheim - Video

20 05 2014 Radio Liberty in Russian to EaEu 11780 Biblis, 13745 Lampertheim – Video


20 05 2014 Radio Liberty in Russian to EaEu 11780 Biblis, 13745 Lampertheim
For more information on the shortwave listening hobby, please visit: http://swldxbulgaria.blogspot.com QTH: Troyan, Bulgaria Receiver: Sony ICF-2001D Antennas: beverage.

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20 05 2014 Radio Liberty in Russian to EaEu 11780 Biblis, 13745 Lampertheim - Video

Jeffrey Tucker (Liberty.Me/LFB) – Zeitgeist, Porcfest, War, GMOs, Racism – Video


Jeffrey Tucker (Liberty.Me/LFB) - Zeitgeist, Porcfest, War, GMOs, Racism
Jeffrey Tucker from Mises.org, Laissez-Faire Books, and Liberty.Me joins Voluntary Virtues to discuss a variety of topics! http://Liberty.me http://lfb.org/ Thanks for subscribing, sharing,...

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Jeffrey Tucker (Liberty.Me/LFB) - Zeitgeist, Porcfest, War, GMOs, Racism - Video

Individual Liberty is Better than New World Order Collectivism | G. Edward Griffin – Video


Individual Liberty is Better than New World Order Collectivism | G. Edward Griffin
Subscribe (it #39;s FREE!) for more videos posted daily! http://bit.ly/Subscription-Link Charlie in the Box asks G. Edward Griffin to explain collectivism in an interview in Fresno, CA on April...

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Individual Liberty is Better than New World Order Collectivism | G. Edward Griffin - Video

Liberty baseball team bucks recent history to reach District 11 4A semifinals

High school baseball's second season hasn't been kind to Liberty in the last half-dozen years.

The Hurricanes have qualified for every Lehigh Valley Conference tournament since the league went to a four-team tournament in 2009 but reached just one title game. Four times in that span they followed an LVC tournament loss by dropping a District 11 Class 4A quarterfinal.

This year's Liberty team lacks the pitching and lineup depth or overall speed some of coach Andy Pitsilos' other recent teams featured. The current Hurricanes have something many of those teams could not collect a postseason win, which came Wednesday in a 7-3 victory over Whitehall.

That win moved Liberty into today's district semifinals with Parkland, Emmaus and Stroudsburg. Seeding aside, the Hurricanes are the least-likely member of the 4A final four.

Liberty entered districts 0-5 against Whitehall, Parkland and Emmaus, the three teams that joined it in the LVC playoffs last week. The Hurricanes changed that with one of their best all-around efforts Wednesday against the Zephyrs.

"They work hard. They gut it out. They're always there," Pitsilos said. "Being there means they have a shot to be somewhere else."

Fifth-seeded Liberty (15-7 overall) will look to continue turning around its pre-district results tonight against No. 1 Parkland (7 p.m., Hackett Park). The Trojans (18-5) won the lone regular-season meeting between the teams in early April, scoring seven runs in the fifth to snap a 1-1 tie en route to an 8-1 win.

Liberty will have to play a clean game and execute the way it did Wednesday, when starting pitcher Matt Leon dropped a perfect sacrifice bunt to contribute to a four-run inning. Parkland has allowed eight runs in its last seven games, posting four shutouts during that stretch.

The first 4A semifinal will feature No. 3 Emmaus and No. 7 Stroudsburg (12:30 p.m., Limeport Stadium). The Green Hornets (19-3) will turn to undefeated ace Josh LeMaster (8-0, 0.73 ERA) as they seek their first trip to the district final since 2011.

Stroudsburg (17-6) will be going after its third district win of the week. The Mounties blanked No. 10 Northampton on Monday and blasted No. 2 East Stroudsburg South on Wednesday without using junior ace Mike Nikorak.

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Liberty baseball team bucks recent history to reach District 11 4A semifinals

Liberty Honor Armed Forces During Hoops for Troops Night May 27

May 23, 2014 - Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) New York Liberty NEW YORK, NY - May 23, 2014 - The New York Liberty and the Garden of Dreams Foundation will honor children and families from veterans service organization Wounded Warrior Project during a special halftime ceremony on Hoops for Troops Night recognizing servicemen and women on Tuesday, May 27 at 7:00 p.m. Wounded Warrior Project is a partner organization of the Garden of Dreams Foundation, which works with all areas of The Madison Square Garden Company to make dreams come true for children facing obstacles.

Liberty legend Kym Hampton will join the families at center court where each armed forces member will receive a commemorative "Challenge Coin" branded with Garden of Dreams, Knicks and Liberty logos. The children of each family will receive a Liberty jersey.

The Liberty invited members of various military organizations throughout the tri-state area to attend Tuesday's game, including Services for the Underserved Inc., Veterans Association of America, Inc., The Coalition to Salute America's Heroes, United War Veterans Council, Veteran Ticket Foundation, Samaritan Village, National Military Family Association and New Era Veterans Inc. Over 500 servicemen and women, and their families are scheduled to be in attendance.

The Liberty initiative is part of the WNBA's larger Hoops for Troops program that honors military members this Memorial Day and Fourth of July. Hoops for Troops will take center stage for the Liberty at Madison Square Garden when New York faces the Minnesota Lynx on July 6 at 2:00 p.m. in the first game of a doubleheader aired on ESPN2. The court will be adorned with WNBA Hoops for Troops logos while the Liberty and the Lynx will both be donning special shooting shirts and red, white and blue sneakers from Nike for the event.

The Garden of Dreams Foundation works with The Madison Square Garden Company to positively impact the lives of children facing obstacles. Through ongoing programs that use the magic of MSG - including the Rangers, the Knicks, the Liberty, MSG Entertainment and MSG Networks - the Foundation develops strong, long-term relationships that truly change lives. Since its inception in September 2006, Garden of Dreams has created thousands of once-in-a-lifetime experiences that have brought joy and happiness to more than 250,000 children and their families, including those facing homelessness, extreme poverty, illness and foster care.

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Liberty Honor Armed Forces During Hoops for Troops Night May 27

Letter: Give Libertarians a look

Keen, have you ever heard of a situation where a parent, no matter how good a job he's done of raising his kid, finds himself in a situation where the kid's done something really bad and it's become necessary to put your hand on the kid's shoulder to make the point just how bad this is? That little pressure of your palm next to his neck is in both your minds an extreme physical measure, compared with the talkings-to you've administered in the past and you both know it. It's as close as you'll ever come to hitting the kid but, again, in your minds, things have come to the pretty pass that made it exigent you make your point.

Now, what about the kids of people who aren't nearly the good parent you are? We're surrounded by them, other people's kids, and can you deny that it seems like many don't listen to anything but a good smack in the kisser because that's either the way they were raised or that's just the way some people seem to be.

Okay, so much, for now, for not hitting people; what about whose stuff is whose?

You were born, probably, in the '50s; you don't say and it's not really important exactly when. Presumably, you were born in this country or raised here; you don't say and, again, it's not important. It's likely, though, that some time after you started to walk, your parents told you not to play in the street. (Maybe they even smacked you one time when you didn't listen.) It wasn't until years later, maybe, that you wondered how that street got there?

It's not a natural outcropping, Keen.

Somebody put it there and that somebody was us, way back when. An integral part of our parents' parents agreeing to get together and live was fixing up the place so it was livable. Streets and roads were early on the list as were places to do the public business. Places, you know, like courts? Like the Supreme Court, where you beat Waubaunsee County when they messed with you? Streets and roads and public buildings and lots of other things situated on land that, in a large number of cases, was somebody else's stuff. It doesn't take a lawyer or nuclear physicist to figure out that somebody had to give (or get smacked) and the world's full of stories of givers who didn't take kindly to the notion. Guys just like you.

Now, instead of typing forever on what could turn into a long, philosophical rambling about all of this stuff, I'm going to stop and ask you: unless each and every person in the state thinks and acts just like you and is as smart as you are (at least), what makes you think that you'll ever get things working the way you want--short of having yourself appointed dictator?

Your libertarianism, how is getting that to work going to be any less insurmountable a problem than the one the Communists faced in Russia almost 100 years ago and how's it going to turn out any better, in practice, when you have to concede that mere changes in government form or economic form, imposed on a populace that hasn't changed an iota, are doomed?

I can guarantee you that when you come to take my stuff, I resist and you smack me, I'm not going to like it.

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Letter: Give Libertarians a look