Social networking and other social media represent an exploding trend on the Internet that plays especially well into the hands of Libertarians and other independent political and cultural movements. Fox News Judge Napolitano interviews young Libertarians Caitlyn Corb and Austin Peterson, the New Media Program Manager at the Atlas Economic Foundation.

Ron Paul, "When the Replublicans were in charge they were doing the same thing: running up deficits, expanding the role of government, and expanding the department of education, and the whole mess. So, the people are catching on...They're realizing the government and our country is bankrupt. Nobody believes that they can give thirty million new people medical care and not charge them and lower the deficit. I mean it is astounding that they do this with a straight face."

We offer this historic compilation, thanks to YouTube, of a variety of notable Americans lauding freedom, from black to white, from then to now, from Left to Right. Enjoy!

"If we lose freedom here there's no place to escape to. This is the last stand on earth," President Ronald Reagan.

We have arrived at a critical juncture in history where national republics are being incrementally dissolved into what Henry Kissinger, Gordon Brown and many others are referring to as a "new world order." It's no longer about Left or Right, or even socialism or capitalism: it's about a single world system run by technocrats who keep us safe from global financial meltdown, global terror, global climate change, global peak oil and so on. What is the real agenda of the powerful forces that out of the blue propelled Barack Obama from nowhere to everywhere? [read more]

President Obama was boosted into power on a "Change You Can Believe In" platform. But too many months into his administration it's now becoming apparent that Obama supporters are just going to have to settle for believing in change...because they have trouble seeing it. For many disgruntled democrat voters the Obama agenda looks too much like the Bush agenda, plus a very questionable health care bill. As a result some of them are now joining the Tea Party to...  [read more]

So is the Tea Party about racism? Says who!

The American people in general, Republicans and Democrats and certainly independents, have about had it with "the status quo." And now that they're out in numbers saying they want change, real change, not just "change you can believe in," they are being smeared as racist, militia-loving, birther-supporting, Branch Davidian-sympathizing, and even more than that. Let's face it, these days anybody on the streets is being smeared. Anybody who criticizes the government for whatever reason is being smeared. Nine years into the perpetual war on terror and ten years into a debt that 60 years won't pay off Americans are demanding better, not more, government. 

Check out this video and tell us: Does this Tea Party look racist to you?

 

Greg Palast Confronts The Generalissimo of Globalization

Investigative journalist Greg Palast travels to Geneva to ask some hard questions about the WTO's latest attempts to win a losing game.

Editor: In this very professional nine minute documentary Palast takes us from the World Trade Organization (WTO) protests in Seattle in November 1999 to present-day questioning of WTO leaders. Back in 1999 editor Thomas Friedman dissed the protestors, calling them ridiculous yuppies looking for a 1960s fix. Palast disagrees. You decide.

Some voters in Arkansas’ 1st Congressional District will believe Princella Smith is just too young to be a congresswoman. Doing business on Capital Hill requires wisdom and life experience; at 26-years-old, Smith is a baby. Of course, age was not an issue for Edward Rutledge, who at 26 signed the Declaration of Independence. Nor was age an issue for Amelia Earhart, who at 25 set an altitude record for female aviators.

robinhoodusatoday 

Besides, according to Article 1, Section 2, of the U.S. Constitution the only qualifications required to serve in the House of Representatives are that a person “have attained the age of 25 years, and been seven years a citizen of the United States, and who shall, when elected, be an inhabitant of that state in which he shall be chosen.” Princella Smith certainly passes constitutional muster. It is, however, her vast experience that makes her not only more than qualified, but perhaps the best choice to represent the people of the 1st District.

Princella Smith has clerked at the U.S. Department of Labor, was e-campaign director for then Maryland Lt. Governor Michael Steele’s Senate campaign, national spokesperson for “American Solutions,” the issues advocacy group begun by former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich; she was even a prime-time speaker at the Republican National Convention in New York.

However, the road to Washington is both long and is scattered with more obstacles than just age.

Princella is a conservative Republican running for office in a district that hasn’t elected a Republican since 1872, which, no doubt, explains why the district is filled with crumbling schools, high unemployment, and deep-seated racial tensions. Smith is also black and the district she seeks to represent resides in a Southern state that has never elected a black person to a congressional or state-wide office.

The good news is that Arkansas is still a place where values matter. What Princella has going for her is that while she may not share party affiliation with many of the voters of the 1st, she shares their values; she is one of them.

The 1st is a large district extending from the Mississippi River to northern Arkansas near the Missouri border and encompassing 26 counties. Miss Smith was born and raised in Wynne, Arkansas, a rural farming county in the Delta and one of the poorest regions in the country. Her father is a pastor and former school board member. Her mother is a vice-principal at one of the local high schools. The people of Wynne know the Smiths and more importantly they know Princella. People from all over the district watched her grow-up; some of them coached her to a college basketball scholarship, others watched her clean toilets to make spending money; some cheered her academic success, and many proudly tuned in to their televisions when she began appearing on the cable news as a political commentator. Smith is home grown, which presents a challenge to local Democrats.

For generations the Democratic Party machine has controlled elections in the 1st District by using the black churches to turn out large numbers of black voters. We will now see what happens when these black church going voters have a choice between a young, dynamic, black candidate from good, home-grown stock and a candidate from the party machine that makes, (and breaks), the same promises that Democrats.

We will also see if the Republican Party agrees with Smith that, “the Republican Party must become a party of energy, of ideas, of passion and citizen participation.”

The “Grand Old Party” is increasingly seen as precisely that: old! This is, after all, the party that saw fit to dust off a tired 73-year-old John McCain to run against a young, energetic, and charismatic Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential election. Besides Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), Republicans are hard pressed to point to very many young, smart, and charismatic voices; Princella Smith is all three.

She also possesses common sense, a trait displayed in Washington far too infrequently. For instance, she recognizes that increased entitlements must be paid for through higher taxes. Increased entitlements, coupled with tax cuts lead to increased debt. Talking about tax cuts without talking about spending cuts is a failure of Congress to exercise its fiduciary responsibility.

Smith is also a proponent of the flat tax. “I would like to replace the monstrous tax code with a single sheet of paper that every American can fill out,” She says. “One flat tax-rate that everyone-corporations included-will pay.”

Yes, Princella Smith is only 26. However, given the propensity of our older and wiser representatives to spend money the country doesn’t have–running up trillion dollar deficits for as far as the eye can see-I find a bit of comfort in Smith’s youthful enthusiasm. “I am fighting on behalf of my generation,” she says. “It’s my generation that is going to have to pay this debt!”

Run, Princella, run!

 

From a bygone era former President Eisenhower (1952 - 1960) talks about "the supreme goals of our free society." He issues a warning about an impending Technocracy where the nation is ruled by a scientific-technological elite. Read the excerpt below and watch the video clip to judge for yourself how accurate was Eisenhower's foresight.

"Partly because of the huge costs involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity. For every old blackboard there are now hundreds of new electronic computers. The prospect of domination of the nation's scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present -- and is gravely to be regarded.

"Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite.

"It is the task of statesmanship to mold, to balance, and to integrate these and other forces, new and old, within the principles of our democratic system – ever aiming toward the supreme goals of our free society."

Gerald Celente, a frequent guest on Fox News and renowned trends forecaster, is connecting the bailout of Greek and American banks and the rioting in Greece with current economic and political trends in the United States. Says Celente:

”... the second American Revolution has already begun, it began in 2009, on April 15th with the tea parties and the tax protests. They were laughed at by the major media. Then we saw it again in July of 2009, on the Fourth of July, when hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets. We saw it at the protests for healthcare reform. We saw it with over a million people, nearly a million people marched on Washington on September 12th of 2009. This is going on worldwide. The people are protesting..”

Is the celebrated founder of The Trends Research Institute too pessimistic or is he a "hard realist" giving Americans a heads-up?