Month: December 2021

  • KEYSTONE STATE COVID EXPRESS

    KEYSTONE STATE COVID EXPRESS

    A TALE OF TWO ISSUES.. Merged together into a mixed bad of madness in the midst of a pandemic that is driving people to the edge of darkness in their minds…

    x x x

    One one hand, surging COVID cases is leading Pennsylvania into hospital turmoil.. the abyss of a cold dark winter and beds and ERs overrun..

    Meanwhile, courts have ruled it is improper to force children in schools to wear masks…

    There may be many districts that still force kids to do so, but as a whole government agencies can no longer require it was by edict..

    A front page from Lancaster County showcasing the brutal irony of two headlines coupled together above the fold..

  • Legendary Anne Rice dead at 80

    Legendary Anne Rice dead at 80

    Her son broke the news on her official social media account..

    She died 19 years to the day after her husband..

    It was complications due to stroke..

    May she Rest In Peace. Or will she?!

  • Is there a need for the United States military to do a rapid response to UFO sightings?

    Is there a need for the United States military to do a rapid response to UFO sightings?

    Teams of Pentagon and intelligence community experts would rapidly respond to military UFO sightings and conduct field investigations under newly unveiled defense legislation set to pass Congress.

    Lawmakers also want scientific and technical experts to analyze data about the objects, or what the military calls unidentified aerial phenomena, or UAP, as well as any recovered materials or medical effects, according to the text of the annual defense authorization bill released Tuesday.

    More

    The bill requires all of the findings to be collected under a new joint UAP office and delivered to Congress in annual reports and biannual briefings to defense committees, marking the most significant UFO legislation ever passed in the U.S. following high-profile encounters with unknown objects reported by the Navy.

  • Aftermath of December devastation

    Aftermath of December devastation

    Tornado Hunter Jeff Piotrowski turns aftermath documenter on Twitter…

    Image
  • Frightening December tornado rampage may break records

    Frightening December tornado rampage may break records

    Latest on Tornado Outbreak:

    1. Historical Tornado outbreak. At least 30 tornadoes suspected across 6 states.
    2. One tornado potentially on the ground for 250 miles. (All-time record)
    3. Debris estimated to have climbed up to 30 thousand feet.
    4. Death toll likely at least 70-100 in Kentucky alone.
    5. Mayfield, Kentucky one of the worst areas hit. Search and rescue looking for survivors in these areas. Massive power outages.
    6. Early estimates are EF-4 or EF-5.

    Meanwhile further threats today along the mid Atlantic and East coast..

  • December tornado shock: Nursing home in Arkansas hit , storms ravage night air

    December tornado shock: Nursing home in Arkansas hit , storms ravage night air

    Two people have died and five others suffered injuries after a tornado ripped through a nursing home in northeast Arkansas, an official said. At least 20 more people were reported trapped after the tornado struck.

    More..

    Severe weather developed late Friday from the lower Mississippi Valley to central Ohio ahead of a strong cold front, with the greatest threat for nighttime tornadoes stretching from Arkansas to Indiana. In Monette, Arkansas, emergency crews went to a nursing home damaged by storms, said LaTresha Woodruff, spokesperson for Arkansas Emergency Management. She said there were reports of injuries and entrapments at the Monette Manor nursing home.

    Agenda free TV gone live..

    https://youtu.be/Sx4CNefXiQU

    An Amazon warehouse also hit..

    Developing ..

  • Jury cancels Smollett

    Jury cancels Smollett

    Jussie Smollett was convicted Thursday of staging a hate crime nearly three years after he claimed two Donald Trump-loving bigots beat him up, tied a noose around his neck and doused him in bleach in a failedbid to raise his public profile.

    It took nearly an hour for the actor to return to Chicago courthouse to hear the jury’s guilty verdict.

  • PEARL HARBOR 20 YEARS AFTER THE 60TH AFTER 9/11

    PEARL HARBOR 20 YEARS AFTER THE 60TH AFTER 9/11

    This is how FOX NEWS reported on Pearl Harbor in 2001, 20 years ago during the 60th anniversary of Pearl Harbor.. during that time, survivors were comparing the attacks of 9/11 to what they saw in 1941.

    NEW YORK — Two were getting ready for church. Another was on vacation, just waking up. A fourth munched on breakfast while waiting for friends to take him to a beach party.

    Then they got word: The Japanese had struck Pearl Harbor in a sneak attack, triggering America’s involvement in World War II. That “Day of Infamy” — Dec. 7, 1941 — became known as the most dramatic and monumental of the last century in America, one that singularly changed the course of history.

    Now it shares that classification with Sept. 11, 2001, a fact not lost in the memories of the surviving veterans.

    Daniel S. Fruchter, an Army corporal in 1941, said the first thing that sprang to mind Sept. 11 was the catchphrase that spread after the Japanese struck: “Remember Pearl Harbor — Keep America Alert.”

    “A widow of a Pearl Harbor survivor called on the 11th and said, ‘It’s happening again,’” said Fruchter, 83, now state chairman of the New York Pearl Harbor Survivors Association. “I thought that, too: ‘Here we go again.’ I was mad at our own lack of alertness and our lack of knowing what’s going on in the world around us.”

    Sixty years ago Friday, Fruchter was eating what he thought was his last breakfast as a soldier. He was scheduled to leave Hawaii the next day, and was thinking about his plans for a seaside celebration that afternoon.

    “I never went to that beach party,” he said. “Life changed.”

    Fruchter stayed, of course, and with his colleagues set to work preparing for war. “I didn’t feel,” he remembered. “We were just doing our jobs. We were busy.”

    Fruchter and an Army buddy didn’t get their first look at the devastation until midnight. Only then did they begin to understand the gravity of what had happened.

    “For the first time, we could actually see the damage,” he said. “That night, standing on top of the crater overlooking Honolulu and all of Pearl Harbor, we saw the fleet burning.”

    The “Keep America Alert” message also flashed through the mind of Navy vet Bernard “Bing” Walenter, now 81, after Sept. 11.

    “If everyone would start remembering Pearl Harbor, maybe we could stop a few of these surprise attacks,” said the former machinist striker and current state chair of California’s Pearl Harbor Survivors. “Here it’s still happening, after all this time.”

    Walenter was working in the machine shop of the USS Medusa when the Japanese attacked.

    “It’s hard to say what it felt like at the time. I was confused. I couldn’t believe what was happening,” he said. Walenter spent Dec. 7 of 1941 refilling one of the vessel’s guns with powder — though they never fired a shot that day.

    Across the island of Oahu, George L. Murray, then an off-duty, vacationing staff sergeant in the Army’s Chemical Corps, was just waking up when he heard the news.

    “The shock scared the hell out of us,” said Murray, 83, who chairs the Alabama chapter of Pearl Harbor Survivors. “We were stunned. It was an unexpected war.”

    Like Fruchter, Murray was reminded of Pearl Harbor on the morning of Sept 11.

    “It was similar in that it was a surprise attack,” he said. “That stunned us again. You sit down and watch TV and can’t believe something like that was happening. One surprise attack in your lifetime is enough.”

    But not everyone who lived through both events sees a link between them.

    “I felt a lot of anger on Sept. 11, but I didn’t associate it with the attack on Pearl Harbor,” said Julius Finnern, 82, of Wisconsin, a national secretary for Pearl Harbor Survivors. “Other than the fact that both were sneak attacks, I found very little comparison.”

    Unlike the vast majority of Americans who were blindsided by the attacks of Sept. 11, some vets said they weren’t completely shocked when Pearl Harbor was hit.

    “We were pretty well-adjusted to the idea that we were at war with the Japanese,” said Francesco Costagliola, then a Naval ensign on the USS Phoenix cruiser. “It wasn’t that much out of the realm of reality … It was just the first day of a long, hard war.”

    As they do each year, these and scores of other Pearl Harbor veterans will observe Friday’s annivesary of the attack. Some will travel to Hawaii, while others will attend local memorial events.

    And how will survivors react to this year’s anniversary, the first since September’s disaster?

    “After all these years, I don’t expect I’ll feel any different as I have in the past,” Murray said. “I’m angry about it, but you have to get over it. The world keeps turning, and you have to turn with it.”

    After all, for Pearl Harbor survivors and other World War II veterans, Dec. 7 has been fraught with emotion every year since 1941.

    “I get real weepy-eyed,” Finnern said. “But I am proud. You’d better believe I am.”

  • Zoom doom: 900 employees fired virtually

    Zoom doom: 900 employees fired virtually

    The future is now!

    Live by the virtual. Fired by the virtual…

    Better.com CEO Vishal Garg announced the mortgage company is laying off about 9% of its workforce on a Zoom webinar Wednesday abruptly informing the more than 900 employees on the call they were being terminated just before the holidays.

    “If you’re on this call, you are part of the unlucky group that is being laid off,” Garg said on the call, a recording of which was viewed by CNN Business. “Your employment here is terminated effective immediately.” He then said employees could expect an email from HR detailing benefits and severance.