The Kevin Trudeau Show: 10-27-09

October 27, 2009 by Brandy  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin gives you the truth behind the food you eat everyday!

Food Inc.
Orange Juice Scam
Chocolate Better Than Aspirin for Heart Attacks
Wine Protects Skin from Radiation
Psychic Warfare
Ted Kennedy’s Confession

Plus, the author of Vitamin D3 and Solar Power for Optimal Health, Marc Sorenson, joined Kevin to explain how vitamin D3 & the sun can save YOUR life!!

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Ted Kennedy Deathbed Confession

October 27, 2009 by JP  
Filed under Health

October 27, 2009

National Enquirer

As life slipped away, Ted Kennedy had a teary reunion with first wife Joan, downed his last Chivas and murmured:  “It was my fault…I’m going to tell Mary Jo that.”

Before Sen. Ted Kennedy lost his battle with brain cancer on Aug. 25, he made a final conscience clearing deathbed confession, asking for forgiveness for causing the death of young Mary Jo Kopechne in the tragic Chappaquiddick accident 40 years ago.

“Mary Jo’s death haunted Ted throughout his life,” revealed a family friend. “He never made amends with her parents before they died, and it weighed heavily on him.”

But as he drifted in and out of consciousness in his final hours, Ted seemed to find peace as he spoke of seeing Mary Jo again and finally being able to tell her he was sorry for leaving her to die in the water.

The startling confession – as well as the poignant untold details of the 77-year-old senator’s final days and hours – was revealed exclusively to The ENQUIRER by close Kennedy family sources.

“Ted achieved his dying wish not to pass away in a hospital,” continued the family friend. “He died in his own bed, with his three dogs at his feet. And from a window, he was able to see his boat bobbing at the dock in the moonlight.

“He defied his doctors’ expectations and lived 14 months after being diagnosed with brain cancer. It gave him a chance to reflect and say his goodbyes.”

One of the people Ted asked to see in his final days was first wife Joan.

“A week before he died, he sent her a message and she slipped quietly into his home in Hyannis Port,” divulged an insider. “Ted told Joan that before he died, he wanted her forgiveness for the way he’d treated her.

“He had always agonized over whether his behavior that night at Chappaquiddick and his continual drinking had anything to do with her becoming an alcoholic.

“He said he prayed Joan would be strong enough to beat her problems with alcohol.”

As Ted was too weak to attend the memorial service for his beloved sister Eunice Kennedy the rapidly fading Lion of the Senate was so disoriented from his morphine drip that Ted asked a family member: “Is it MY funeral that’s taking place?’”

Click here for the full report

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The Kevin Trudeau Show: 10-7-09

October 7, 2009 by Brandy  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin will NOT be talking about the man attacked by a pack of raccoons nor will he be talking about Dancing with the Stars! He’s going to give you the REAL stories in the news:

The Herpes Cure Controversy
The Autism Debate
Ted Kennedy’s Secret
The Secret Meeting Between White House & Fox News
Chemotherapy Kills!

Plus, Congressman Ron Paul joined Kevin to explain how the Federal Reserve is hurting YOU. Click here to join Kevin’s Book Club and purchase Ron Paul’s book, End The Fed, at a special book club price!

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


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Senate Passes $636 Billion Defense Spending Bill

October 7, 2009 by JP  
Filed under Government

October 7, 2009

Reuters

By Andy Sullivan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Senate on Tuesday approved $636 billion to fund military operations for the fiscal year that started on October 1, $3.9 billion less than requested by the Obama administration.

Lawmakers must resolve differences with a similar spending bill passed by the House of Representatives before President Barack Obama can sign it into law.

Following are some key provisions of the bill, which passed by a vote of 93 to 7:

* $128.2 billion would fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Congress in prior years funded the two wars separately from regular Pentagon operations.

* The bill would end production of Lockheed-Martin Corp.’s F-22 fighter plane and the VH-71 presidential helicopter, also made by Lockheed. The Pentagon has said it does not need these aircraft.

* The bill likewise contains no funding for an alternate engine for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, which is being built by General Electric Co and Britain’s Rolls-Royce Group Plc.

However, the engine program could survive despite a White House veto threat. The House has approved $560 million for the program and lawmakers from both chambers have agreed to include that money in a separate bill that sets the Pentagon’s budget.

* The bill allocates $2.5 billion to continue production of Boeing Co.’s C-17 cargo plane — another program the Pentagon had sought to shut down.

* It prohibits the Obama administration from transferring international terrorism suspects currently held at the Guantanamo Bay military prison to the United States.

* It includes $2.7 billion for hundreds of lawmakers’ pet projects, from a World War Two museum to a civic-education center named for the late Senator Edward Kennedy, that the Pentagon did not request. Such “earmarks” serve as a lightning rod for budget hawks concerned about runaway federal spending, but senators turned back several attempts to strip them out.

* $7.7 billion for missile defense, a $1.4 billion cut from last year.

* $154 billion for operations and maintenance, which is $2.4 billion less than the Pentagon wants.

* $125 billion to pay salaries and other personnel costs for 1.43 million active-duty troops, including an increase of 22,000 troops for the Army, and a reserve force of 845,000.

* The bill provides $3.65 billion to build two DDG-51 destroyers, one more than the Pentagon wants.

Click here for the full report.

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