President
Bush last week signed into law a bill which will see the federal
government begin to screen the DNA of all newborn babies in the
U.S. within six months, a move critics have described as the first
step towards the establishment of a national DNA database.
When
Deborah Jeane Palfrey (aka the "DC Madam," who was found
hanged in Tarpon Springs, Florida on Thursday) sat down in May
2007 for an interview with Carol Joynt, host of the Q&A Cafe
interview series, most everything was up in the air.
Today
Alex welcomes in-studio guest Texe Marrs, author of over 40
books, including Codex Magica, and a documentary filmmaker.
Alex and Texe discuss the agenda to create artificial oil, water
and food scarcity as part of the agenda to sink the middle class
and the "suicide" of the DC Madam. Alex also welcomes
back historian Michael A. Hoffman to discuss the history of
the Illuminati and the Zionist influence.
MSNBC’s
Keith Olbermann began his commemoration of this anniversary
by saying there had been nothing comparable to Bush’s
“misleading, disingenuous, deliberately deceptive”
speech since Neville Chamberlain’s declaration of “peace
for our time” after capitulating to Hitler in 1938.
Six
weeks ago, President Bush signed a secret finding authorizing
a covert offensive against the Iranian regime that, according
to those familiar with its contents, "unprecedented in
its scope."
Thousands
of immigrants marched through cities across the United States
on Thursday, but smaller crowds suggested their cause had lost
momentum in this election year.
The conduct
of social workers who rushed through the adoption of a baby
girl before her natural father could prevent it was damned as
"disgraceful" by three senior judges yesterday.