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Jan. 6th Political Prisoners Persecuted For Supporting Trump in 2024, D.C. Journalist Reports

Jan. 6th Political Prisoners Persecuted For Supporting Trump in 2024, D.C. Journalist Reports

adminApr 2, 20241 min read

Jan. 6th Political Prisoners Persecuted For Supporting Trump in 2024, D.C. Journalist Reports

January 6 judges discuss the Trump support of the defendants, implying Trump support will soon be the sole accusation against indicted Americans.

Anthony Rubin and Carlos Arellano guest hosted the Monday Alex Jones Show where they interviewed investigative journalist Corinne Cliford about the judicial attack against American’s First Amendment rights to a redress of grievance.

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EXCLUSIVE: Col. Douglas Macgregor Warns Attack On Iran Would Cause WWIII And Mass Migration


Olympic Officials Asked Ukraine to Spy on Russian Athletes – IOC Chief

Olympic Officials Asked Ukraine to Spy on Russian Athletes – IOC Chief

adminApr 2, 20243 min read

Olympic Officials Asked Ukraine to Spy on Russian Athletes – IOC Chief

“We have a special supervisory commission together with an independent company which is monitoring the internet, the media, and public declarations,” IOC president said

International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach has admitted to a pair of pranksters that Ukrainians have been asked to spy on Russian athletes online so that they could be banned from the upcoming Paris Games.   

In a video-call posted on Tuesday, in which one of the Russian duo known as Vovan and Lexus impersonated an African official, Bach claimed that by sanctioning Russian athletes, the IOC is “punishing those who are responsible for the annexation.”  

The IOC chief was apparently referring to the former Ukrainian regions of Donetsk, Lugansk, Kherson and Zaporozhye, which overwhelmingly voted to join Russia in a public referendum in 2022. They followed the Crimean Peninsula, which did the same in 2014 after a Western-backed coup in Kiev.

“No Russian anthem can be played and no Russian flag can be raised [at the Paris 2024 Olympics],” the IOC president stated.

Answering a question on whether Russian athletes who support the Ukraine conflict deserved the right to take part in the Olympics, Bach revealed that the IOC has a special commission which monitors public statements by athletes in support of the government in Moscow.   

“We have a special supervisory commission together with an independent company which is monitoring the internet, the media, and public declarations,” he stated.   

“We also offered the Ukrainian side – and not only offered, but also asked to provide us with their knowledge about the behavior of such athletes or officials,” Bach further revealed.  

He stressed that any athletes found to have expressed support for the Russian government will be banned from the Olympics.   

Russian athletes are allowed to participate in the Games as neutrals in individual sports, but are barred from team events.  

After the start of the Ukraine conflict in February 2022, the IOC recommended that athletes from Russia and its close ally Belarus should not be allowed to compete in international events. In December last year, the body ruled that a limited number of people from the two countries could participate in the Olympics as AINs (individual neutral athletes).  

In March, the international body announced that the maximum number of Russians who could qualify for the Paris Games was 55, while Belarus is limited to 28 athletes. However, according to IOC director James Macleod, the two nations are unlikely to meet the quotas, and around 36 Russian and 22 Belarusian athletes are expected to make it to the Games.  

Several top-ranking European officials, including Latvian Foreign Minister Krisjanis Karins and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, have fallen for prank calls by Russian duo Vovan and Lexus in recent months, during which the politicians revealed their thoughts on sensitive topics such as the Ukraine conflict.


Col. Douglas Macgregor Warns Attack on Iran Would Cause WWIII and Mass Migration

Oil Prices Hit Highest Level Since 2022

Oil Prices Hit Highest Level Since 2022

adminApr 2, 20242 min read

Oil Prices Hit Highest Level Since 2022

Brent futures approached $90 per barrel on Tuesday

The price of the oil benchmark Brent peaked at $89 per barrel on Tuesday, nearing levels last seen in June 2022, according to Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) data. Industry experts have attributed the surge to an Israeli airstrike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus and Tehran’s threat of retaliation. 

Brent futures had risen by nearly 2% since Monday to trade at $89.060 per barrel as of 10:25 GMT, before retreating slightly, according to the ICE figures. The US benchmark West Texas Intermediate exceeded $85.

On Monday, Iran – a major oil producer – threatened a “harsh” response against Israel. The attack on the Iranian diplomatic compound in Damascus killed seven Iranian military advisers including three senior commanders.

Israel has repeatedly targeted Iranian installations in Syria, due to Tehran’s alleged support of the Palestinian group Hamas in Gaza. Although Israel has not commented on the latest strike, the New York Times cited four unnamed Israeli officials as acknowledging that Israel was behind it.

Oil prices have rallied in recent months on fears that the Israel-Palestine conflict could spread to the broader Middle East. The region is a crucial supplier of energy and a key oil shipping route.  In mid-March the price of Brent climbed to $85 per barrel as Yemen’s Houthi militants stepped up their rocket fire on merchant ships in the Red Sea, calling it retaliation for the actions of Israel and its supporters.

According to a projection by Bloomberg Economics, oil prices could reach $150 per barrel if Iran joins the conflict.  

ICE data suggests that Brent last traded above the current level in June 2022 ($98.460 per barrel on June 28, 2022), during the early stages of the Western sanctions campaign against Russia, a major oil exporter, over the Ukraine conflict.

The advance in crude prices has also been underpinned by OPEC+ production cuts, strong economic data from China, and economists’ expectations of a global deficit this year.


Col. Douglas Macgregor Warns Attack on Iran Would Cause WWIII and Mass Migration

The American Journal: Iran Vows Revenge After Israel Kills Top General

The American Journal: Iran Vows Revenge After Israel Kills Top General

adminApr 2, 20241 min read

The American Journal: Iran Vows Revenge After Israel Kills Top General

Tensions in the Middle East continue to spiral out of control under Biden’s puppet presidency.

“The American Journal” is live every weekday from 8-11 am CST.

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Staff at Taxpayer-Funded Colorado Virus Lab Bitten by Covid-Infected Hamsters And Bats… And They Refused to Alert The Public

Staff at Taxpayer-Funded Colorado Virus Lab Bitten by Covid-Infected Hamsters And Bats… And They Refused to Alert The Public

adminApr 2, 20244 min read

Staff at Taxpayer-Funded Colorado Virus Lab Bitten by Covid-Infected Hamsters And Bats… And They Refused to Alert The Public

CSU handles bat coronaviruses.

Another high-level bioweapons laboratory is under the gun after it was revealed that there have been at least 50 serious safety incidents since 2020.

The lab, located at Colorado State University (CSU), handles some of the world’s deadliest viruses, including coronaviruses that reportedly transferred from test animals to lab scientists via bites by hamsters.

Other incidents at the CSU lab include one in which workers were splashed in the face with blood from tuberculosis-positive mice, and another in which they were scratched by rabies-infected cats.

None of these 50-plus incidents were ever reported publicly, even though the public has a right to know if deadly diseases are circulating among the general population through infected lab workers going about their everyday lives following exposure.

Experts say there is a “disturbing lack of transparency” at the CSU lab, the disturbing news of which will only further erode the general public’s trust in America’s public health institutions.

In late 2022, there was another incident in which a bat infected with MERS-CoV, a type of coronavirus, bit a researcher while it was being put back inside its cage. This incident harkens back to what is believed to possibly have happened prior to the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) “pandemic.”

(Related: It was just revealed that Colorado’s star forensic scientist, Yvonne “Missy” Woods, has been committing data fraud for many years – how many of the people she helped convict are actually innocent?)

CSU handles bat coronaviruses

One of the world’s premier infectious disease and veterinary medicine institutions, CSU has been studying bats since the 1980s, believe it or not. Scientists at the lab have apparently been tampering with coronaviruses during this time, much like their counterparts in Wuhan were doing.

The White Coat Waste Project learned all this disturbing information about CSU after filing a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, which uncovered details including meeting minutes, emails and internal reports about the lab’s operations.

What these FOIA-obtained documents clearly show is a pattern of accidents between May 2022 and July 2023 involving disease-ridden animals such as cats, bats and rodents attacking workers and possibly infecting them with serious illnesses.

This increase in accidents is now being blamed on the heightened stress of the “pandemic,” which reportedly caused employees at the lab to “rush” their work.

On at least two separate occasions in 2020 at the height of the COVID “pandemic,” researchers at the CSU lab working with SARS-CoV-2-infected hamsters were bitten by the rodents. Some of the employees also contracted Zika virus from experiments involving infected mosquitoes.

According to Dr. Bryce Nickels, cofounder of the nonprofit group Biosafety Now and a genetics professor at Rutgers University, none of this disturbing information would be known were it not for the FOIA requests made by the White Coat Waste Project.

“This is ridiculous, and once again underscores a disturbing lack of transparency. Irrespective of their funding sources, researchers have an ethical obligation to report any lab accidents that could pose risks to the public,” Nickels said.

“Public reporting of lab accidents should be standard practice, not an issue up for debate.”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Ia.) also commented on the matter by stating that these types of incidents, including “lab leaks,” are “inevitable,” adding that “we don’t want the next outbreak to happen in our own backyard or near our military bases.”

The CSU lab in question is located in Fort Collins, population 168,500, which is north of Denver close to the border of Colorado and Wyoming. CSU is reportedly planning to construct another bat lab later this year using $6.7 million in taxpayer funding.

The latest news about the mad science taking place at state-funded laboratories across the United States can be found at Bioterrorism.news.


EXCLUSIVE: Col. Douglas Macgregor Warns Attack On Iran Would Cause WWIII And Mass Migration


Tech Startup Working on Building a Robot That Uses AI-Powered ‘Brain’

Tech Startup Working on Building a Robot That Uses AI-Powered ‘Brain’

adminApr 2, 20245 min read

Tech Startup Working on Building a Robot That Uses AI-Powered ‘Brain’

Physical Intelligence among a growing number of startups working on general robotics.

Artificial intelligence and robotics startup Physical Intelligence is working on bringing AI to the physical world through a robot with a brain.

Over the past 15 years or so, AI systems that work entirely in software have grown far more sophisticated than their moving counterparts. Non-AI-powered robots, meanwhile, can easily manufacture anything in factories and clean up after people at home but only carry out a relatively small range of tasks compared to the increasingly general nature of AI-powered chatbots.

In a move to bridge the gap between artificial intelligence and the physical world, Physical Intelligence has emerged with $70 million in seed funding. The company, founded by a team of renowned robotics and AI experts, aims to develop foundation models and learning algorithmsthat can power a wide range of robots and physically-actuated devices.

The massive investment – from big names including OpenAI and Sequoia Capital – reflects the immense potential the financial world see in Physical Intelligence’s vision to create a universal robot model that can bring AI to the physical world and enable other kinds of robots to perform tasks across various applications.

(Related: Tech firms developing and deploying AI that can deceptively MIMIC HUMAN BEHAVIOR.)

Formed this year by a team of robotics and AI experts, the company plans to create software that can add high-level intelligence to a wide variety of robots and machines. Or, as co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Karol Hausman puts it in Physical Intelligence’s first public interview since founding the company: “We aim to bring AI to the physical world with a universal model that can power any robot or any physical device basically for any application.”

Physical Intelligence’s thesis is that the time is right for a new approach to building robotics AI models. The company looks to merge the techniques used to build language models with its own techniques for controlling and instructing machines. The end goal would be to create an AI that works as a type of general-purpose robotics system.

Physical Intelligence among a growing number of startups working on general robotics

Hausman spent the last few years as a scientist working on robotics at Google. His fellow co-founders include Sergey Levine, who has done pioneering robotics work as a professor at the University of California, Berkeley; Chelsea Finn, a professor at Stanford University; Brian Ichter, a former Google research scientist; and Lachy Groom, a former executive at the payments company Stripe and prominent tech investor.

Physical Intelligence wants to develop software that can be applied across many types of robotics. To do this, it has set to work creating its own AI model designed to bring basic human abilities to machines.

“I think it’s really cool what people are building with humanoids,” Groom said. “But what fundamentally makes humans interesting is the brain, not our hardware. We are the ultimate generalists.”

Efforts to improve the software that powers robots have been going on for decades. Notably, a company called Willow Garage, formed in 2006, spent several years trying to build a type of general-purpose software that could be shared across robots and give them a unified set of basic functions. While its software was picked up by several companies and robotics developers, Willow Garage’s work did not lead to a huge leap forward in robotic intelligence, and the company wound down its operations in 2014.

Other companies like Rethink Robotics tried to build systems that could learn to do jobs by copying movements shown to them by humans. Some startups have recently implemented AI that uses repetition to teach robotic arms to pick up objects and perform tasks similar to those done by humans in warehouses.

Other companies have begun building androids designed to mimic human movements. One of these startups, Figure AI, was able to raise $675 million to help it build robots to work in logistics and manufacturing facilities. Notable investors include Jeff Bezos, Microsoft, OpenAI and Nvidia.

Physical Intelligence faces stiff competition from some of these companies, especially Figure AI and electric vehicle giant Tesla. They are also either researching or manufacturing androids and working on general-purpose robotics software.

“Realistically, I think we are going to need a long and very serious research effort to make this happen,” says Levine. “But there are enough signs that the biggest obstacles to use robots in the real world are now solvable.”


EXCLUSIVE: Col. Douglas Macgregor Warns Attack On Iran Would Cause WWIII And Mass Migration