In Shift From Obama, Trump Leans on Military in Fight Against Terrorism

In a break from his predecessor, President Donald Trump is giving more power to the military in carrying out the campaign against the Islamic State, and counterterrorism more broadly.

Military and national security experts say Trump seems to be largely following President Barack Obama’s strategy to defeat the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, and other terrorist groups—relying on American special operations to assist local forces who do the bulk of the fighting in countries like Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan.

But critics of Obama’s approach to fighting ISIS say he and his political aides were too involved with operational and tactical issues, and that Trump’s decision to delegate decisions to the military could allow for faster defeat of the terrorist group.

“I have seen a dramatic shift in a very positive way—away from the political micromanaging of the Obama years to freeing up generals and troops to destroy ISIL and help our partners,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said in an interview with The Daily Signal.

“The strategy shift to allow more authority to commanders in the battlefield is welcome news to me and bad news for ISIL,” Graham said.

‘Can’t Delegate Risk’

While military leaders, and local forces doing the fighting against ISIS, welcome the opportunity to be more responsive to changes on the battlefield, some experts say Trump is assuming more risk by being hands-off.

Trump has been criticized for what looked to be a quick approval process for the military to conduct a January raid against terrorists from al-Qaeda’s branch in Yemen that resulted in the death of an American commando and several civilians.

Airwars, a nonprofit group that monitors civilian deaths from coalition airstrikes in Syria and Iraq, reports that in the month of March the number of reported civilian fatalities has increased to more than 1,000, from 465 in December, the last full month of the Obama administration.

Most recently, the senior U.S. commander in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Stephen J. Townsend, on Tuesday said that an American airstrike “probably had a role” in leading to the collapse of a building in Mosul that killed potentially hundreds of civilians.

“The Iraqis during the Obama years were constantly complaining we were not being aggressive enough in airstrikes, and I was one who argued the administration was a little too micromanaging,” said Andrew Exum, who was the U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense for Middle East policy in the Obama administration, in an interview with The Daily Signal.

“The Mosul strike shows that as soon as you take more aggressive action and civilians are killed, it’s not like our Iraqi partners shoulder the blame—the blame falls on the U.S.,” Exum added. “You can delegate authority, but you can’t delegate risk. The risk associated with these types of strikes doesn’t stay at the tactical and operational role. It rapidly comes up to the strategic, political level.”

Pentagon officials have stressed this week that the rules of engagement that govern the military’s decisions around risk to civilians have not changed in the Trump administration.

Townsend did acknowledge the military has moved to speed up the process of providing airstrikes to help Iraqi troops and American special operations advisers in Mosul, with the goal to “decentralize” decision-making. Commanders in the field are able to request airstrikes without waiting for approval from more senior officers.

“This is part of a trend where it appears President Trump will empower Cabinet secretaries more than Obama did,” said Thomas Spoehr, the director of The Heritage Foundation’s Center for National Defense. “If you are in the Pentagon and you are more actively involved in making decisions, it causes you to be reflective because you own that decision. They know you can create more terrorists than you can kill if you cause a bunch of civilian casualties.”

‘There to Help’

Defenders of this approach note that reports of greater civilian casualties come at a time of more intense military operations in Mosul and by forces fighting ISIS in Syria.

Iraqi forces, with the help of the U.S. coalition, have mostly secured the east side of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, but the fight for the west side of the city has entered a different phase, and it’s happening in tight, urban quarters where ISIS fighters purposely locate themselves near civilians.

“You can expect more risk of civilian casualties as the fight develops into confined spaces,” said Graham, who noted he has made 42 trips to Iraq and Afghanistan as a senator. “Mosul is house to house, street to street, and airpower in an urban environment is always tough to deploy. ISIS is an enemy that consciously puts civilians in harm’s way. The people of Mosul know we are there to help.”

Exum said in the Obama administration, the approval process for “dynamic airstrikes”—or those that are made and decided upon as action calls for, and not deliberately pre-planned—“never touched Washington, D.C.”

“The micromanaging criticism really wasn’t about airstrikes,” Exum said. “It was about movement of men, weapons, and material around the battlefield. The Obama administration gave wide, wide latitude to the commander [Gen. Joseph Votel] of U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) in terms of collateral damage.”

Experts emphasize that Obama also earned pushback for controversial use of airpower, most notably when the U.S. in 2015 struck a hospital run by Doctors Without Borders in Kunduz, Afghanistan, killing staff members and patients.

“In the the Obama years, there were a lot of airstrikes done, a lot of them controversial and close calls,” said Michael O’Hanlon, a national defense and foreign policy expert at the Brookings Institution, in an interview with The Daily Signal.

“Part of what you saw later on in the administration was the White House trying to throw sand in the gears in a way that did not really change the strategy, but reduced the odds of a mistake. Some of us felt this was almost the Obama team trying to be a little too precious. You are trying to persuade yourself there’s this big constraint on our action but in the end you are still pulling the trigger.”

Escalating Military Efforts

Though Trump is not straying too far from Obama’s counterterrorism strategy, experts say they see other signs of the new administration more heavily relying on military power.

Earlier this month, the U.S. sent an additional 400 troops to Syria to assist in the looming fight to take back Raqqa, ISIS’ self-declared capital—a near-doubling of the number of American troops already there.

The amount of U.S. advisers in Iraq supporting the Mosul offensive has also risen in recent months.

The strategy in both these missions hasn’t changed from the Obama administration, where local forces do most of the fighting, and the Americans assist with advising and logistical support.

“The Trump administration seems to be not as hung up on troop numbers, which I think can be healthy as long as there is good transparency between the president and his military leadership,” Exum said.

In addition, the Trump administration has loosened the rules for American special operations raids and airstrikes in Yemen, targeting the al-Qaeda affiliate there. The New York Times reported the U.S. has launched more airstrikes in Yemen this month than during all of last year.

The Times said Thursday that the U.S. has removed similar constraints in Somalia, declaring parts of the country an “area of active hostilities” to intensify fighting against the al-Shabab, a terrorist group linked to al-Qaeda.

The Washington Post reported this week the Trump administration is weighing a proposal by Defense Secretary James Mattis to escalate U.S. involvement in an ongoing war in Yemen between Iranian-backed Houthi rebels and a coalition of Persian Gulf states led by Saudi Arabia.

The Post said Mattis is advocating “limited” U.S. military support to an offensive by the United Arab Emirates to retake a Red Sea port from the Houthis, in a move to more aggressively confront Iran.

“This would be a complete change in attitude and a reversal in policy, and it’s about time someone stood up to the Iranians,” Graham said.

Preparing for ‘Day After’

Brian Katulis, a senior fellow for national security at the Center for American Progress, said Obama’s limited support to the Saudi coalition did little to stem a two-year-old war that has resulted in significant civilian casualties.

But he recommends more broadly that the Trump administration needs to support its increasing military efforts with a “day after” strategy to help resolve underlying political and sectarian disputes that drive violence in places like Iraq, Syria, and Yemen.

Katulis wonders how much Trump will value diplomacy given his budget request that increases military spending and cuts State Department funding.

“The U.S. under successive administrations has not used its leverage to achieve their goals in places like Yemen,” Katulis told The Daily Signal in an interview. “The Trump administration would be making a big mistake of simply escalating some military operations in the absence of linking it to a long-term plan to stabilize the country. We could unwittingly be enmeshed in a campaign that contributes to Yemen’s collapse and humanitarian disaster.”

Graham agrees that Trump must accompany military actions with a diplomatic and political plan.

“You never win a war by bombing and leaving,” he said.

As an example of the approach Graham says the U.S. should take to counterterrorism, the South Carolina senator is calling for the Trump administration—if the American-backed coalition is successful in dislodging ISIS—to leave behind a residual force in Iraq to help the country rebuild.

“The U.S. should be part of an international effort to help the Iraqis hold and reconstruct their territory,” Graham said. “I think President Trump is open-minded to the idea.” (For more from the author of “In Shift From Obama, Trump Leans on Military in Fight Against Terrorism” please click HERE)

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Alabama Congressman Files One-Sentence Bill to Repeal ObamaCare

By Fox News. An Alabama congressman introduced a one-sentence bill in the House Friday to repeal ObamaCare.

Republican Rep. Mo Brooks introduced the bill as the Obamacare Repeal Act, AL.com reported.

“Effective as of Dec. 31, 2017, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is repealed, and the provisions of law amended or repealed by such Act are restored or revived as if such Act had not been enacted,” the bill states. (Read more from “Alabama Congressman Files One-Sentence Bill to Repeal ObamaCare” HERE)

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After Repeal Failure, GOP Senators Propose ObamaCare Subsidy Patch

By Jessie Hellman. As House Republicans struggle to find a way to repeal ObamaCare, the two GOP senators from Tennessee are looking to temporarily fix an issue that may strike the health insurance exchanges next year.

A bill introduced by Sens. Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker would allow people to use their ObamaCare subsidies to purchase any state-approved plan on the private market if there are no insurers selling policies on the federal exchange in their county.

Big insurers such as UnitedHealth and Aetna have mostly left the individual market over the years, citing financial reasons. Thirty-two percent of counties across the country only have one insurer offering ObamaCare plans.

Meanwhile, 34,000 people living in metro-area Knoxville, Tenn., will have no options on the exchanges after Humana announced it would not participate in 2018.
More insurers may decide to drop out of the market next year given the uncertainty of the GOP’s repeal effort.

“We need to act. We’re talking about giving people peace of mind, particularly if you’re a low-income person and you have a fear that in 2018 you won’t have any health insurance,” Alexander told reporters Thursday. (Read more from “After Repeal Failure, GOP Senators Propose ObamaCare Subsidy Patch” HERE)

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Massachusetts Sheriff Demands That Elected Leaders of Sanctuary Cities Be Arrested

A Massachusetts law enforcement official testifying before Congress on Tuesday called for leaders of sanctuary cities to be arrested.

Bristol County Sheriff Thomas Hodgson told the House Subcommittee on Illegal Immigration that sanctuary cities “have become magnets for illegal aliens, some of which have violent criminal records.”

“If these sanctuary cities are going to harbor and conceal criminal illegal aliens from ICE, which is in direct violation of Title 8 of the U.S. Code, federal arrest warrants should be issued for their elected officials,” Hodgson said. “Our citizens would be safer if we never stopped enforcing immigration law and if we never formed or turned a blind eye toward sanctuary cities.”

He also took aim at a Massachusetts legislator who passed along rumors of a planned ICE raid in Brockton on Tuesday and Wednesday . . .

“This is the most outrageous, outrageous example of what is going on across the United States that is undermining my job and every other law enforcement officer in the United States,” he said. (Read more from “Massachusetts Sheriff Demands That Elected Leaders of Sanctuary Cities Be Arrested” HERE)

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Riots, Fear, Anger Predicted by AI: Simulation ‘Detects Your Emotions Under Stress’

It is true that how you react to a situation will determine whether or not you achieve a successful outcome.

During an emergency, the strength and resolve of your mindset, and of your psychological state, will ultimately be the driving factor in whether you become a survivor or a victim. Your supplies and plans will be secondary to that. During a large-scale breakdown, keeping calm under stress and resisting crowd forces to join into mayhem will be among the most valued traits.

If the animal overtakes rational man, the battle is lost. Society will immediately devolve into the worst behaviors, and people will get hurt before order is restored.

Now, a new generation of artificial intelligence is using a facial recognition feed of users’ features to detect emotional states during a major crisis scenario (while immersed in a VR simulation). While the software hasn’t evolved to a stable level yet, it is determining the threshold for which violence, chaos and absolute unrest sets in. Experts believe that AI now understands when a person is upset enough to resort to rioting, and may be directing people to keep their calm instead.

via the London Guardian:

An immersive film project is attempting to understand how people react in stressful situations by using artificial intelligence (AI), film and gaming technologies to place participants inside a simulated riot and then detecting their emotions in real time.

[…]Riot was inspired by global unrest, and was specifically inspired by [immersive filmmaker Karen] Palmer’s experience of watching live footage of the Ferguson protests in 2015. “I felt a big sense of frustration, anger and helplessness. I needed to create a piece of work that would encourage dialogue around these types of social issues. Riots all over the world now seem to be [the] last form of [community] expression,” she said.

[…]Designed as an immersive social digital experience, the objective is to get through a simulated riot alive. This is achieved through interacting with a variety of characters who can help you reach home. The video narrative is controlled by the emotional state of the user, which is monitored through AI software in real time.

[…] We see looters, anarchists and police playing their parts and “interacting” directly with us. What happens next is up to us: our reactions and responses determine the story, and as the screen is not enclosed in a headset, but open for others to see, it also creates a public narrative.

Currently,Riot’s pilot interface can recognise three emotional states: fear, anger and calm.

Is there ultimately something we can learn about ourselves in simulations of how we would react under stress, and to the harsh environments of an unstable society during which some actors will resort to ugly extremes?

The emotional state is directly influenced by physiological reactions by the body under stress – and the ultimatum fight or flight response kicks in. As Lizzie Bennett wrote:

The Physiological Basics

Pupils dilate to take in as much light as possible
Blood-glucose levels increase
Veins in the skin contract allowing extra blood flow to the muscles
Smooth muscle relaxes to allow extra oxygen for the lungs
Heart rate increases
Blood pressure increases
Non-essential systems shut down (digestion for example)
The only focus is the task in hand

Such information may be useful to training; and, indeed, a computer-fed feedback loop could help an individual doing repeated simulations to learn to keep calm, maintaining such factors as blood pressure and heart rate under thresholds for calm and sober reactions.

Awareness of these factors may increase your control over them, to aid in your advantage.

The other side of the coin is predictive behavior, real-time surveillance analysis of the population, and the programming of artificial stimuli to make people react. Now they know what makes them tick – and they know what type of event, real or manufactured, might make them react.

“We have been doing research in emotion detection from facial expression, voice, body gesture, EEG, etc for many years,” said Meng. He hopes the project’s success will make people see the benefits of AI, leading to the development of smart homes, building and cities.

The only question is whether they want to provoke a crowd into riots (maybe to demonize the opposition) or whether they want to calm and pacify the crowds (maybe to keep people from caring about the effects of oppressive laws or bad policy).

The near-future now promises to regulate our lives this way – this technology will be used to direct people in real-life living environments, with inputs from smart devices nudging your behavior, socially engineering your meaningful activities, and perhaps your thinking.

How will you prepare for a future of tracking and behavior monitoring? Will it alter your preps, change your thinking or lead you to alternate strategies? (For more from the author of “Riots, Fear, Anger Predicted by AI: Simulation ‘Detects Your Emotions Under Stress'” please click HERE)

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The Cumulative Effective Tax Rate

Early Americans would roll over in their graves if they heard about modern-day America’s topsy-turvy departure from many of the hard-won freedoms and liberties of the American Revolution. They would be unable to make sense of all the different taxes we pay today, and especially the government’s legal entitlement to a portion of an American’s labor via an income tax. There was no such tax on labor for the earliest Americans; it was unconscionable to tax someone’s personal property, which one’s labor was then considered. The concept of paying one’s “fair share” did not exist until after mid-20th century.

In general, operating expenses of private corporations and the federal, state and corporate-county municipal governments are passed on to the end users (public) in the form of taxation.

A partial list of the transparent as well as all the unseen hidden taxes include: federal and state income tax, county taxes, federal and state sales tax, accounts receivable tax, alcohol tax, alternative minimum tax, building permit tax, cigarette tax, corporate tax, dog license tax, education tax, estate tax, excise tax on imports, food license tax, fuel permit tax, gift tax, hotel tax, inheritance tax, inventory tax, car rental tax, IRS interest charges, IRS penalties and levies, license tax, labor tax (withholding), marriage license tax, Medicare tax, municipal state tax on insurance premiums, worker’s compensation and unemployment tax, property tax, recreational vehicle tax, sales tax, self-employment tax, road usage tax for truckers, school tax, Social Security tax, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), telecommunications tax, travel tax, utility tax, vehicle licensing registration tax, vehicle sales tax, watercraft registration tax, well permit tax, hospitality tax and last but not least, the hidden tax of inflation of a debt-based central banking system and all finance charges.

I’m sure I must have missed something!

While on a TV talk show in 1981, President Reagan mentioned that 46 different taxes contributed to the price of one loaf of bread. Imagine how many more taxes have been added since then. How many taxes and fees are hidden in an airline ticket? Seldom considered is how the cost of doing business has the effect of decreasing one’s purchasing power as more and different kinds taxes make up the retail price you end up paying.

The retail price accounts as the total of the multiple costs of doing business. Throughout a company’s chain of events from production to sales and marketing, labor costs take a huge bite; they are the wages, taxes and fees imposed on the labor of every employee from the factory-floor worker to CEO. Materials, essential resources, and the interest amounts on a company’s business loans are all rolled into the price you pay.

Americans take a beating from taxes that appear to now exponentially erode earnings (personal property). “Bracket creep,” as it is called, over time automatically moves a taxpayer into new, higher tax brackets. For example, in 1970, private pensions and Social Security retirement were not considered taxable income, though today, they are. These sort of official changes often move people into a higher income bracket with subsequent increased amounts due to state and federal governments.

What if mainstream media routinely reported on the cumulative total of what everyday American pays annually in taxes? Would you connect the dots to the direct impact this has on your personal finances, e.g., actual disposable income and increasing dependence on credit? The addition of all taxes, transparent and not so transparent, (hidden taxes mentioned above, upfront fees and regulation costs of federal and state regulatory compliance, federal fines (like what British Petroleum passed on to consumers after the Gulf oil spill) lead this writer to the educated guess that the average American pays somewhere in the range of a cumulative 30 to 60 percent of their annual gross earnings in taxes, depending on their tax bracket.

Are you powerless when it comes to this topic? I don’t think so. Knowledge is power, and power can lead to informed action. (For more from the author of “The Cumulative Effective Tax Rate” please click HERE)

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After Trump Threatens to ‘Fight’ Freedom Caucus, Conservatives Vow to ‘Keep Promises’

After Republicans pulled a bill to repeal and replace Obamacare last week, conservative members of the House Freedom Caucus are shrugging off criticism leveled at them by Republican colleagues — including from President Donald Trump himself.

In a Thursday morning tweet, Trump said the Freedom Caucus “will hurt the entire Republican agenda if they don’t get on the team,” and vowed to “fight” conservative members in 2018 midterm elections.

“When people say the Freedom Caucus is jeopardizing the president’s agenda, guess what jeopardizes the president’s agenda?” said Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., a freshman Freedom Caucus member. “Losing the House and Senate jeopardizes the president’s agenda. You have to keep your promises and our promises are to repeal Obamacare.”

“The Freedom Caucus is trying to keep our promises,” Biggs said in an interview with The Daily Signal. “I don’t think going to Democrats, especially when they are trying to impeach the president, seems rational or realistic.”

About half of the more than 30 members of the Freedom Caucus joined at least 17 centrist Republicans in refusing to back the GOP leadership’s health care bill.

Centrists worried the bill imperiled too much of Obamacare, and conservatives said it did not go far enough.

Despite the bill’s failure, and signals that the White House wants to move on to other issues, Freedom Caucus members insist they want to work with Trump to craft a bill Republicans can unite around.

“The Freedom Caucus’ job is simple: to do what we promised the American people we’d do,” Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., told The Daily Signal in a statement. “Our group has worked tirelessly to try to improve the AHCA to ensure it will actually bring down costs for everyday Americans. We believe this is our job and our duty and not something we can let fall by the wayside and move on to the next policy battle. We’re open to working with any and everyone that is willing to work toward a solution.”

Freedom Caucus members say it would be a mistake for Trump to rely on Democrats and centrist Republicans to advance other parts of his agenda, including tax reform, and passing a short-term spending bill before April 28.

“There are competing factions in the White House and whoever got Trump’s ear on this one is just not serving him well,” said Rep. Dave Brat, R-Va., a Freedom Caucus member, in an interview with The Daily Signal. “The Democrats aren’t letting any of Trump’s appointments through, and there is no evidence the Democrats will show any taste for repealing Obamacare in any way, shape, or form.”

“The Freedom Caucus is basically the base of the Trump vote,” Brat added. “So whoever is advising him to go back to the old formula that has failed for year after year, that’s just terrible counsel.”

Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, a founding Freedom Caucus member, seconded that view, warning Trump via Twitter to “remember who your real friends are.”

Biggs insists he still believes Trump shares his conservative principles, and he is hopeful the president decides to follow them.

“The Freedom Caucus more than any group of Republicans in Congress are the ones who supported Trump to be president,” Biggs said. “Some in our group really went out on a limb and took it on the chin and supported Trump because he said he stood for the principle of repealing Obamacare, he stood for building a wall, he talked about a balanced budget, reforming taxes, everything we stand for.”

“Each person has their own level of capacity to accept or reject stress,” Biggs added. “I didn’t run for reelection in 2018. I ran for election in 2016 because I believed certain things, I made the case I would do things, and I have been out here busting my tail trying to do those things. If I can do those things, reelection will take care of itself.”

Some Freedom Caucus lawmakers, however, believe the group demanded too much in the Obamacare debate, and is limiting its relevance moving forward unless it becomes more accommodating.

Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas, left the caucus over the weekend, and Rep. Trent Franks, R-Ariz., in an interview with Politico, wondered if caucus members overplayed their hand.

“If we see the thing fail completely — nothing but shards around us — then we probably saw the Freedom Caucus overplay their hand… and I say that as a grateful member of the Freedom Caucus,” Franks told Politico.

More cautious members fear that Trump wields a powerful megaphone, and his base of supporters are mostly the Freedom Caucus’ own constituents, meaning conservative lawmakers could be blamed if Republicans fail to repeal and replace Obamacare.

They acknowledge the sensitivity of negotiations, because moving the legislation too far to the right could discourage centrist Republicans, especially those in the Senate who represent states that expanded Medicaid.

Trump again targeted the Freedom Caucus in a Thursday night tweet, this time singling out the group’s leaders.

Yet other Freedom Caucus members embrace the targets on their backs, a hunted position they are used to occupying.

“Trump’s tweets reaffirm that the Freedom Caucus is having a major impact on public policy in Congress — that the Freedom Caucus is not a force to be ignored,” said Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., in an interview with The Daily Signal. “This Twitterverse is the new Washington. I have zero worries about it. If you want me to vote for a piece of legislation, either persuade me it is good for America or change it so that it is good for America.”

Despite apparent cracks in the relationship, Brat maintains that Trump and the Freedom Caucus should form a natural alliance.

“The two themes Trump ran on is the forgotten man and draining the swamp,” Brat said. “The Freedom Caucus is all of that and that’s what we are moving forward on.” (For more from the author of “After Trump Threatens to ‘Fight’ Freedom Caucus, Conservatives Vow to ‘Keep Promises'” please click HERE)

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Ex-CIA Director Says North Korea May Be Prepping to Kill 90% of Americans

The mainstream media, and some officials who should know better, continue to allege North Korea does not yet have capability to deliver on its repeated threats to strike the U.S. with nuclear weapons. False reassurance is given to the American people that North Korea has not “demonstrated” that it can miniaturize a nuclear warhead small enough for missile delivery, or build a reentry vehicle for an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capable of penetrating the atmosphere to blast a U.S. city. . .

[But] North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un has been photographed posing with what appears to be a genuine miniaturized nuclear warhead for ballistic missiles. And North Korea does, in fact, have two classes of ICBMs—the road mobile KN-08 and KN-14—which both appear to be equipped with sophisticated reentry vehicles.

Even if it were true that North Korea does not yet have nuclear missiles, their “Dear Leader” could deliver an atomic bomb hidden on a freighter sailing under a false flag into a U.S. port, or hire their terrorist allies to fly a nuclear 9/11 suicide mission across the unprotected border with Mexico. In this scenario, populous port cities like New York, New Orleans, Los Angeles, and San Francisco, or big cities nearest the Mexican border, like San Diego, Phoenix, Austin, and Santa Fe, would be most at risk. . .

In February and March of 2015, former senior national security officials of the Reagan and Clinton administrations warned that North Korea should be regarded as capable of delivering by satellite a small nuclear warhead, specially designed to make a high-altitude electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack against the United States. According to the Congressional EMP Commission, a single warhead delivered by North Korean satellite could blackout the national electric grid and other life-sustaining critical infrastructures for over a year—killing 9 of 10 Americans by starvation and societal collapse.

Two North Korean satellites, the KMS-3 and KMS-4, presently orbit over the U.S. on trajectories consistent with surprise EMP attack. (For more from the author of “Ex-CIA Director Says North Korea May Be Prepping to Kill 90% of Americans” please click HERE)

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Fire Collapses Portion of Interstate Highway in Atlanta

A bridge on Interstate 85 in Atlanta collapsed on Thursday as a fire raged beneath it, authorities said, sending black smoke into the air and briefly causing a fireball before the structure fell in on itself.

There were no immediate reports of casualties in the incident, which snarled traffic for miles (km).

“We are trying to assess the damage and determine how quick we can repair it,” Republican Georgia Governor Nathan Deal told a news conference.

Black smoke billowed so thickly from the bridge in the heart of Atlanta that area residents told local media they thought a storm was coming or that the sun had set early when the fire started at around 6 p.m. local time.

Then flames rose several stories high from under the bridge before a section collapsed around 7:30 p.m., even as dozens of firefighters fought it, causing a brief fireball. (Read more from “Fire Collapses Portion of Interstate Highway in Atlanta” HERE)

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Elon Musk Launches Neuralink, a Venture to Merge the Human Brain With AI

SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk is backing a brain-computer interface venture called Neuralink, according to The Wall Street Journal. The company, which is still in the earliest stages of existence and has no public presence whatsoever, is centered on creating devices that can be implanted in the human brain, with the eventual purpose of helping human beings merge with software and keep pace with advancements in artificial intelligence. These enhancements could improve memory or allow for more direct interfacing with computing devices.

Musk has hinted at the existence of Neuralink a few times over the last six months or so. More recently, Musk told a crowd in Dubai, “Over time I think we will probably see a closer merger of biological intelligence and digital intelligence.” He added that “it’s mostly about the bandwidth, the speed of the connection between your brain and the digital version of yourself, particularly output.” On Twitter, Musk has responded to inquiring fans about his progress on a so-called “neural lace,” which is sci-fi shorthand for a brain-computer interface humans could use to improve themselves.

These types of brain-computer interfaces exist today only in science fiction. In the medical realm, electrode arrays and other implants have been used to help ameliorate the effects of Parkinson’s, epilepsy, and other neurodegenerative diseases. However, very few people on the planet have complex implants placed inside their skulls, while the number of patients with very basic stimulating devices number only in the tens of thousands. This is partly because it is incredibly dangerous and invasive to operate on the human brain, and only those who have exhausted every other medical option choose to undergo such surgery as a last resort. (Read more from “Elon Musk Launches Neuralink, a Venture to Merge the Human Brain With AI” HERE)

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Is THIS What Really Happened Regarding Candidate Trump’s ‘Wiretaps’?

“Stop the presses,” as they used to say in the old days, “for this one!”

Is the letter written by Freedom Watch’s Chairman and General Counsel Larry Klayman, Esq., real news or fake news? That’s something everyone in the USA ought to be entitled to know the legally correct answer to and, as the familiar colloquialism goes, “where the bodies are hidden,” e.g., the real facts of what happened!

Here is the four-page letter Attorney Klayman wrote to Chairman David Nunes, Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in the U.S. House of Representatives. Attorney Klayman was so insistent that the Chairman and that Committee received his incriminating letter, he sent it several ways: Facsimile, Federal Express and Mail.

What could be so important about information Klayman was presenting? Remember he’s a licensed attorney, who is subject to legal sanctions for his inappropriate actions, so for him to go out on a limb with the information he presented truly is ‘earth shaking’ not only for him and his career, but also for those involved who are the perpetrators of Klayman’s allegations and apparent proofs.

Since my computer ‘censors’ won’t permit me to copy and paste any part of Klayman’s letter, I refer readers to paragraph 2 on page 1.

Paragraph 1 on page 2 offers some interesting insights:

Regrettably, neither Chairman Nunes nor anyone else on the Committee raised the serious questions I suggested be posed to FBI Director Comey at the hearing on March 20, 2017. In the interests of justice and a full hearing of the important issues before it, these questions must be asked in open session at the subsequent hearing now scheduled for March 28, 2017. Indeed, Chairman Nunes has asked that persons with important and relevant information come forward. That is exactly what whistleblower Dennis Montgomery has done, through me, his undersigned counsel.

In the following paragraphs on page 2, Attorney Klayman goes on to elaborate what whistleblower Montgomery has as documentation: “47 hard drives and over 600 million pages of information” Montgomery left the NSA and CIA with which, according to Klayman, “expose that the spy agencies engaged for years in systematic illegal surveillance on prominent Americans, again including the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, other justices, 156 judges, prominent businessmen such as Donald Trump, and even yours truly.”

On page 3, paragraph 2, Attorney Klayman states:

It was there that Montgomery laid out how persons like then businessmen Donald Trump were illegally spied upon by Clapper, Brennan, and the spy agencies of the Obama administration. He even claimed that these spy agencies had manipulated voting in Florida during the 2008 presidential election, where illegal tampering resulted in helping Obama to win the White House.

In paragraph 4 on page 3, Attorney Klayman alleges:

It would appear the FBI’s investigation was ‘buried’ by FBI Director Comey, perhaps because the FBI itself collaborates with the spy agencies to conduct illegal surveillance.

And further down in paragraph 7,

My [Klayman’s] expressed purpose: to have Chairman Nunes of the House Intelligence Committee ask Comey, under oath, why he and his FBI have seemingly not moved forward with the Montgomery investigation while, on the other hand, the FBI Director recently claimed publicly, I believe falsely, that there is ‘no evidence’ of surveillance on Donald Trump and those around him by the Obama administration. Indeed there is.

Attorney Klayman ends his legally-challenging letter to the Committee and its Chair with this admonition, which is indicative of the swamp that exists within the halls of Congress and Washington, DC, federal agencies:

Do you intend to get at and investigate the full truth, or as has regrettably been the case for many years in government, sweep the truth under the carpet?

Applause, applause, and kudos to Attorney Klayman and whistleblower Montgomery!

Where is the real fake news and media on this one? Why aren’t they knocking on Attorney Klayman’s door for interviews, especially 60 Minutes and the networks nightly news anchors? What’s truly wrong with letting people know the depth and scope of the illegalities government agencies are undertaking upon unassuming citizens in the USA? If this were happening in some foreign country, wouldn’t it be headline news? Maybe not, because this all could be part of the cabal’s New World Order takeover plan so many politicians are clandestinely involved with.

Readers, please do your homework, then demand accountability and transparency from Congress, federal agencies and judges. (For more from the author of “Is THIS What Really Happened Regarding Candidate Trump’s ‘Wiretaps’?” please click HERE)

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