The Kevin Trudeau Show: 3-23-13

March 23, 2013 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin contemplates the idea of running for office. What do you think? Help Kevin make the decision that could change America!

Self Help:
Where’s Your Vote?
Boost Your Immune System

Cleanses & Detoxes:
Mineral Detox
One Minute Cure Protocol
Miracle Mineral Solution
Candida Cleanse
Oral Chelation
Micro Plant Powder

Health:
Why Organic Milk Is Better For You
Missing DNA Promote Obesity
Where Have The Good Men Gone?
Men Report Sexual Impairment After Using Common Hair Loss Drug
Your PC, TV or Cell Phone May Be To Blame For Lack of Sleep
Diagnosing Rheumatoid Arthritis

Wealth:
Sorry State Of American Wage Earners
Why Inflation Hurts More Than It Did 30 Years Ago

Government:
11 Outrageous Taxes
Financial Aid for Illegal Students OK’d

NWO:
NSA Spying
30 Arrested at Rally for Wikileaks Suspect

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Support Kevin!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become A Fan of Kevin on Facebook

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

 

Click below to watch the Kevin Trudeau Show!

The U.S. Falls a Dramatic 135% on Press Freedom Index

January 26, 2012 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

January 26, 2012

Activist Post

By AP

After TIME recently named “The Protester” 2011′s person of the year, Reporters Without Borders said “Crackdown was the word of the year in 2011.”

Following a year of violent crackdowns on peaceful protests around the country, the United States fell 27 places on the Reporters Without Borders tenth annual Press Freedom Index of 2011 to 47th overall, more than doubling its 2010 standing at 20th.

Reporters Without Borders announced, “Never have journalists, through their reporting, vexed the enemies of freedom so much. Never have acts of censorship and physical attacks on journalists seemed so numerous.”

“Many media paid dearly for their coverage of democratic aspirations or opposition movements. Control of news and information continued to tempt governments and to be a question of survival for totalitarian and repressive regimes. The past year also highlighted the leading role played by citizens in producing and disseminating news.”

Reporters Without Borders said the United States “owed its fall of 27 places to the many arrests of journalists covering Occupy Wall Street protests.” America’s stunning 135% decline was unmatched in terms of the percentage of movement from the previous year.

Click here for the full report.

Customers Locked In And Arrested After Attempting To Close Their Accounts In Occupy Wall Street Protests

October 18, 2011 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

October 18, 2011

The Daily Mail

Banks across America appear to be fighting the growing protest against income disparity and rising fees as the Occupy Wall Street movement spreads worldwide.

A series of videos filmed across the U.S. in New York City; Santa Cruz, California and St Louis, Missouri, show customers staging protests and mass account closures.

However, footage has emerged showing what appears to be dozens of Citibank and Bank of America customers denied requests to close their accounts, some even being arrested after alleged clashes with branch managers.

Video footage obtained by Gawker.com earlier this month shows dozens of people corralled inside of a Citibank branch in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village, some signalling inside they are facing arrest.

A woman dressed in a business suit holding a checkbook attempts to enter but is stopped by officers outside who ask her if she was part of the protest.

After calmly insisting she is a customer of the bank, a plain-clothed officer detains her.

Police swarm as she appears to be taken back inside – one of 24 people arrested on charges of criminal trespassing, reports the website.

Citibank said in an official statement the group was ‘very disruptive and refused to leave after being repeatedly asked’.

A bank spokesman said one person asked to close an account and was accommodated and acknowledged that the branch was closed ‘until the protesters could be removed’.

The footage follows a video uploaded to YouTube on October 8, which shows three Occupy Santa Cruz protesters attempting to close their accounts at a local Bank of America branch.

Two of the women are shown walking into the branch and sitting down, one of them with a large placard.

A manager asks the women to leave and threatens to call police, claiming ‘you cannot be a protester and a customer at the same time’.

The women leave and vow to return without a sign the following day to close their accounts.

The scenes were reminiscent of a rally in St Louis on August 12, which saw several people lining up outside of a Bank of America branch in effort to close their accounts.

Video footage uploaded on YouTube shows demonstrators shouting on bullhorns outside of the branch in protest, as Bank of America employees stand outside barring the group from entering.

The spectacles come weeks after both Citibank and Bank of America unveiled plans to hike fees for its services.

Earlier this month, Citibank announced changes to its mid-tier checking accounts, which offer the potential for earning interest and a few other perks.

Starting in December, Citi will charge $20 a month on these accounts, unless the customer has combined balances of $15,000 or more in checking, savings and investment accounts or loan balances.

Click Here For The Full Report From The Daily Mail

Wall Street Protests Continue And Grow Across The Country

October 3, 2011 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

October 3, 2011

USA Today

By: Karen Matthews

Protesters speaking out against corporate greed and other issues showed no signs of giving up their campaign on Monday, with organizers urging participants to dress up as corporate zombies and to take part in a rally against police brutality.

The arrests of 700 people on Brooklyn Bridge over the weekend fueled the anger of the protesters camping in a Manhattan park and sparked support elsewhere in the country as the campaign entered its third week.
Occupy Wall Street started with fewer than a dozen college students spending days and nights in Zuccotti Park, a plaza near the city’s financial center. But a day after Saturday’s mass arrests, hundreds of protesters were resolute and like-minded groups in other cities had joined in.

Group spokesman Patrick Bruner urged protesters on Monday to dress up as corporate zombies and eat Monopoly money to let financial workers “see us reflecting the metaphor of their actions.”

As the encampment slowly began waking up Monday morning, several dozen police officers stood in formation across the street.

One camper set up a table with tubes of makeup and stacks of fake money and was applying white makeup to the face of a young woman.

John Hildebrand, 24, an unemployed teacher from Norman, Oklahoma, sat up in his sleeping bag around 10 a.m. He said he arrived Saturday after getting a cheap plane ticket to New York.

“My issue is corporate influence in politics,” he said. “I would like to eliminate corporate financing from politics.”

He said was returning home on Tuesday and planned to organize a similar protest there.

One supporter, William Stack, sent an email to city officials urging that all charges be dropped against those arrested.

“It is not a crime to demand that our money be spent on meeting people’s needs, not for massive corporate bailouts,” he wrote. “The real criminals are in the boardrooms and executive offices on Wall Street, not the people marching for jobs, health care, and a moratorium on foreclosures.”

Police said the department will continue its regular patrols of the area. And “as always, if it is a lawful demonstration, we help facilitate and if they break the law we arrest them,” NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said.
Wiljago Cook, 33, of Oakland, California, who joined the protest on the first day, said “exposing police brutality wasn’t even really on my agenda but my eyes have been opened.”

She and her boyfriend and two neighbors all quit their jobs to come and planned “to stay as long as it seems useful,” said Cook, who had worked for a nonprofit theater group.

She was wearing zombie makeup that included a red streak down her forehead. “It’s a cheeky and fun way to make the same point that we’ve been making,” Cook said of her painted face.

A map of the country displayed on the plaza identified 21 places where other protests were organized.

Wall-Street style demonstrations with names like Occupy Los Angeles, Occupy Chicago, and Occupy Boston were staged in front of Federal Reserve buildings in those cities. A group in Columbus, Ohio, also marched on the capital city’s street. And signs of support were rearing up outside the U.S. In Canada, a Wall Street rally is planned for later this month in Toronto.

“It was chaos here” two weeks ago, said Jackie Fellner, a marketing manager from Westchester County, north of the city.

Campers take turns organizing a “general assembly” on the plaza where they divide tasks among themselves. They have “a protocol for most things,” said 19-year-old Kira Moyer-Sims of Portland, Oregon, including a makeshift hospital and getting legal help for people who are arrested. They rally around a website called OccupyWallSt.org, and they even started printing a newspaper — the Occupied Wall Street Journal.

The campers also have been fueled by encouraging words from well-known figures, the latest actor Alec Baldwin, who posted videos on his Twitter page that had already been widely circulated. One appeared to show police using pepper spray on a group of women, another a young man being tackled to the ground by an officer.

“This is unsettling,” Baldwin wrote. “I think the NYPD has a PR problem.”

Fellner said she has an issue with “big money dictating which politicians get elected and what programs get funded.”

But “we’re not here to take down Wall Street,” she insisted. “It’s not poor against rich.”

Still, the protesters chose Wall Street as their physical rallying point, speaking against corporate greed, social inequality, global climate change and other concerns.

Beside the mass arrest Saturday, police arrested about 100 people Sept. 24 when protesters marched to other parts of the city and got into a tense standoff with officers.

Some said protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge were lured onto the roadway by police, or they didn’t hear the calls from authorities to head to the pedestrian walkway. Police said no one was tricked into being arrested, and that those in the back of the group who couldn’t hear were allowed to leave.

The NYPD released video footage Sunday to back up its stance. In one of the videos, an official uses a bullhorn to warn the crowd. Marchers can be seen chanting, “Take the bridge.”

Click here for the full report from USA Today

The Kevin Trudeau Show: 3-21-11

March 21, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin contemplates the idea of running for office. What do you think? Help Kevin make the decision that could change America!

Self Help:
Where’s Your Vote?
Boost Your Immune System

Cleanses & Detoxes:
Mineral Detox
One Minute Cure Protocol
Miracle Mineral Solution
Candida Cleanse
Oral Chelation
Micro Plant Powder

Health:
Why Organic Milk Is Better For You
Missing DNA Promote Obesity
Where Have The Good Men Gone?
Men Report Sexual Impairment After Using Common Hair Loss Drug
Your PC, TV or Cell Phone May Be To Blame For Lack of Sleep
Diagnosing Rheumatoid Arthritis

Wealth:
Sorry State Of American Wage Earners
Why Inflation Hurts More Than It Did 30 Years Ago

Government:
11 Outrageous Taxes
Financial Aid for Illegal Students OK’d

NWO:
NSA Spying
30 Arrested at Rally for Wikileaks Suspect

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Support Kevin!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become A Fan of Kevin on Facebook
Kevin’s Film Club
Kevin’s Book Club

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

 

Click below to watch the Kevin Trudeau Show!

About 30 Arrested at Rally for Wikileaks Suspect

March 21, 2011 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

March 21st, 2011

AOL News

By: Ben Nuckols

Hundreds rallied outside a Virginia Marine Corps base to protest the treatment of an imprisoned Army private suspected of providing classified data to Wikileaks.

About 30 people were arrested today at the rally protesting the pretrial detention of Pfc. Bradley Manning. About two-dozen rallies were held around the world.

Manning is being held in solitary confinement at the Quantico base’s brig. He’s confined to his cell 23 hours a day and forced to strip naked before bed. The military says the conditions of his detention are justified.

Protesters chanted “Free Bradley Manning” and confronted dozens of police officers in riot gear outside the entrance to the base. A short scuffle ensued. The arrests were made after protesters refused to vacate the intersection at the base entrance.

Click here for the full report from AOL News

Illegal Immigrant Killed Nun, Released By Feds

August 4, 2010 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

August 4, 2010

The Washington Times

By: Stephen Dinan

The Virginia man suspected in a drunken-driving crash that killed a Catholic nun in Prince William County this weekend is an illegal immigrant and repeat offender who was awaiting deportation and whom federal immigration authorities had released pending further proceedings, police said Monday.

Carlos Montano, a county resident, has been charged with involuntary manslaughter and drunken driving. Mr. Montano had been arrested two other times on drunken-driving charges, and on at least one of those occasions county police reported him to federal authorities.

“We have determined that he is in the country illegally. He has been arrested by Prince William County Police in the past, said police spokesman Jonathan Perok.

He said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement was notified at the time of one of those arrests. “At the time of this incident, the accident yesterday, he was in the deportation process and was out on his recognizance for court proceedings.”

The crash at around 8:30 Sunday morning killed Sister Denise Mosier and injured two other nuns as they were driving to a retreat at the Benedictine Monastery in Bristow, Va. The two injured nuns were in critical but stable condition late Monday, according to St. Gertrude High School in Richmond run by the Benedictine Sisters of Virginia.

Mr. Montano was being treated for injuries he received in the crash and was expected to be released from the hospital into police custody as early as Monday evening.

Messages left with ICE and the Homeland Security Department were not returned, but the incident raises questions about the agency’s policy of detaining only some illegal immigrants awaiting deportation.

“I have been saying for months now that this administration’s new policy of concentrating almost solely on ‘criminal aliens,’ and not enforcing the laws by deporting known illegal aliens, would have devastating consequences. Now, we see the tragic results this ‘virtual amnesty’ policy of the Obama administration has caused,” said Rep. Harold Rogers of Kentucky, the ranking Republican on the House Appropriations homeland security subcommittee.

“A life could have been saved had ICE just simply done their job to begin with,” Mr. Rogers said. “By implementing selective amnesty one case at a time, the U.S. government is literally putting lives at risk.”

The Obama administration has issued a policy of putting a higher priority on convicted criminals and suspected terrorists.

In a June 30 memo, John T. Morton, assistant secretary of homeland security for ICE, said agents should focus their capture and deportation efforts on illegal immigrants who were suspected of terrorism, had been convicted of violent crimes or were repeat offenders, gang members or “aliens who otherwise pose a serious risk to public safety.” He did not define what rose to the level of serious risk.

The latest ICE statistics show that the agency has stepped up deportations of criminals, but has slowed deportation of other illegal immigrants. The agency also is holding fewer illegal immigrants at any one time than it did last year, according to the statistics.

Critics have long demanded that ICE increase its bed capacity. In the years after the Sept. 11 attacks, some proposals called for a capacity increase to 60,000 beds to try to keep illegal immigrants off the streets while awaiting deportation. The president and Congress, however, never funded that request, and so far in fiscal 2010 ICE is holding 30,349 people on an average day.

The incident comes at a thorny time for the Obama administration and the immigration issue.

Early last week, a judge halted key parts of Arizona’s new immigration law, delivering a partial victory to the Justice Department, which had argued that the law intruded on federal jurisdiction.

But late last week, a draft memo obtained by Sen. Charles E. Grassley, Iowa Republican, showed that the administration has pondered ways to work around Congress and use its authority to extend legal status to many illegal immigrants. The memo called one of the methods it explored “a non-legislative version of ‘amnesty.’”

In the days since, Republicans have demanded that the administration rule out an end run around Congress.

Administration officials have said they won’t use the powers to offer blanket legal status.

“This administration believes that the only way to deal with immigration is to do it comprehensively, to do it through Congress with Democrats and Republicans working together,” White House press secretary Robert Gibbs told Fox News in an interview last week after the memo surfaced.The Virginia man suspected in a drunken-driving crash that killed a Catholic nun in Prince William County this weekend is an illegal immigrant and repeat offender who was awaiting deportation and who federal immigration authorities had released pending further proceedings, police said Monday.

click here to read full article