News Burst 23 January 2020 ~ January 23, 2020


News Burst 23 January 2020

  • It has been speculated that impeachment is really about blocking Trump from getting another Supreme Court justice. Mark Levin presented this theory in December, telling the story of his neighbor who believes Democrats are hoping the impeachment “black mark” will cripple Trump’s ability to fill another vacancy. The most likely scenario is a vacancy left by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who has been battling cancer. “‘And should she have to leave the bench, by hook or by crook, they want to be able to say that not only will we not allow this president or, for that matter, any Supreme Court Justice in the remaining—whatever number of months—of his presidency, but we will never allow an impeached president to appoint anybody else to the Supreme Court, whether he wins reelection or not.’”
  • Ian Henderson, member of OPCW team on Douma, Syria, spoke today at the UN. He re-stated his belief that no chemical attack occurred & called the final OPCW report a “complete turnaround in the situation from what was understood by the majority of the team and the entire Douma [puppetts] team.”
  • Bezos was in an encrypted WhatsApp chat room in 2018 when he opened an “infected video file” sent to him from the Saudi heir’s account, instantly installing malware on his phone. Within hours, large amounts of data had been exfiltrated. Saudi answered GTFO.
  • Don’t have a job and can’t afford a house? No worries, you will never have it but in US you can have your fully furnished pod [Nippon style]. Or, buy a shipping container home on Amazon, only $ 37k and it’s free delivery!
  • The Trump administration plans to add seven more countries to its travel ban list, namely Belarus, Eritrea, Kyrgyzstan, Myanmar, Nigeria, Sudan and Tanzania.
  • Madonna cancels eighth show of her world tour: “I must listen to my body and rest,” the star tells fans in Lisbon, Portugal. Pop stars like Madonna have had ‘puppets’ performing for them for years. Is something else happening behind the scenes?
  • Very few musicians reach the top without giving away total control of themselves. Most big stars have clones. A sudden, severe case of TDS (such as with Eminem) is often one of the tells.
  • Thirty-eight ceasefire violations were reported during the day in Syria’s governorates of Latakia, Aleppo, Idlib and Hama. Eight people, including one child, were killed and 13 civilians were wounded when western suburbs of Aleppo were shelled.
  • French intellectual Renaud Camus has been given a 2 month suspended prison sentence for saying that mass immigration into Europe represents an “invasion.” Camus will only avoid jail by paying 1800 euros to two “anti-racist” organizations, SOS Racisme and the LICRA (International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism).
  • Italy’s Luigi Di Maio resigns as Five Star leader.
  • “We heard from people who are very close to Bob Mueller who found him a different person, a changed person, after two years of this investigation” -Carol Leonnig, WaPo. ((Because Robert Mueller was replaced with a puppet/clone when he was sent to GITMO))
  • The censorship continues, as a George Soros-linked group Avaaz has joined forces with the mainstream media to ensure climate skeptics are silenced on YouTube. They are engaging in a politically-motivated campaign to force YouTube to demonetize and hide any video that denies climate change. Regardless of the facts or scientific evidence revealed in the videos, if one doesn’t submit to the religion of climate change, they will be silenced if Avaaz has anything to do about it.
  • [Cover and Discover] – Deaths from China’s new flu-like virus rose to 17 on Wednesday, heightening global fears of contagion from an infection suspected to have come from animals. The previously unknown and contagious coronavirus strain emerged from the central city of Wuhan, with cases now detected as far away as the United States. Officials believe the origin to be a market where wildlife is traded illegally.
  • [Cover and Discover] – A price list circulating on China’s Internet for a business at the Wuhan market lists a menagerie of animals or animal-based products including live foxes, crocodiles, wolf puppies, giant salamanders, snakes, rats, peacocks, porcupines, civets, camel meat and other game – 112 items in all.
  • [Cover and Discover] – The civets are thought by the World Health Organisation to have been an intermediate host carrying a virus from bats that jumped to humans in a wet market in Guangdong province near Hong Kong that led to the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) in 2002-03. Sars killed 774 people worldwide and infected 8,098 in total.

Strongest EQ in Europe M3.4 Iceland
Strongest EQ in US M3.9 Alaska
Strongest EQ on the Planet M5.6 Turkey
Deepest EQ M4.8 538 km Argentina News Burst 23 January 2020

News Burst 22 January 2020 ~ January 22, 2020


News Burst 22 January 2020

  • Facebook said on Saturday it was trying to figure out how the name of China’s president Xi Jinping appeared as “Mr Shithole” in posts when translated into English from Burmese, apologizing for any offense caused and saying the problem had been fixed.
  • The FBI has been investigating a funeral home in the United States accused of selling hundreds of dead bodies to medical training companies without the knowledge of the families. The scandal has shed light on a huge, unregulated and global industry. The families of around 2,000 victims are still searching for details of what became of the bodies of their loved ones after they were entrusted to the Sunset Mesa funeral home in Colorado. This is the tip of the iceberg.
  • Iranian security services fear protest “crackdown” videos would fuel outrage in western media so the priest in command shutted down the internet; broad internet outages were reported, some lasting as long as a week or more nationwide, following Tehran authorities ordering the blockage of external access. This the the maximum expression of the religion.
  • The new leader of Islamic State has been confirmed as Amir Mohammed Abdul Rahman al-Mawli al-Salbi, according to officials from two intelligence services. He is one of the terror group’s founding members and has led the enslavement of Iraq’s Yazidi minority and more…
  • 8kun: Diagnostics done. Hypothesis confirmed. The “e0001” and time sync issues should be resolved now. Sorry about that!
  • Anthony Manson is a serial burglar. Manson, 50, was arrested for nine burglaries in NYC on Dec. 23, according to police. He appeared before a judge on Christmas and was released—only to be arrested again for six more burglaries on Jan. 3, police said. Of course, he was released once again, and then decided to visit a Manhattan sunglass store on Wednesday and rip that business off. [Criminal Enhancement Act, or the new bail reform law.]
  • Soft Disclosure [History]: Russia’s leader believes the narrative is shifting in ways that make the Soviet Union a villain. “The largest and most complete collection of archive documents, film footage and photo materials on the Second World War will be created in Russia and will be accessible to our citizens and the whole world,” Putin said. Many of the ruling elites are up in arms, already claiming Putin is lying and trying to rewrite history. There is a possibility the archive may include intelligence that might give a better idea of exactly how that war came to be and who the players were behind the scenes.
  • Disgraced lawyer Michael Avenatti was transferred from a federal lockup in California to the notorious Metropolitan Correctional Center in Lower Manhattan last week — and is being held in Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman’s former cell, it was revealed Monday.
  • Soft Disclosure [Medical]: A new type of immune cell which kills most cancers has been discovered by accident by British scientists, in a finding which could herald a major breakthrough in treatment. Researchers at Cardiff University were analyzing blood from a bank in Wales, looking for immune cells that could fight bacteria, when they found an entirely new type of T-cell. That new immune cell carries a never-before-seen receptor which acts like a grappling hook, latching on to most human cancers, while ignoring healthy cells. In laboratory studies, immune cells equipped with the new receptor were shown to kill lung, skin, blood, colon, breast, bone, prostate, ovarian, kidney and cervical cancer.
  • US health authorities announced the first case of a person on American soil sickened by a new virus that emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, and intensified airport health screenings. The man, a US resident in his 30s who lives near Seattle, is in good condition, according to federal and state officials.
  • The FAA has issued a statement somewhat rejecting Boeing’s timeline, suggesting there is no timeframe for the return of the 737 MAX, reiterating that safety is the first priority.
  • On New Year’s Day 2020, Twitter account @HindsightFiles began posting documents from data firm Cambridge Analytica (CA) which expose the extensive infrastructure used to manipulate voters on a global scale. More than 100,000 documents are said to be released in the coming months, revealing Cambridge Analytica’s activity in a shocking 68 countries, including elections in Malaysia, Kenya, and Brazil. The Guardian reported that the documents come from Brittany Kaiser, a former employee of Cambridge Analytica who turned whistleblower and star of the documentary The Great Hack.

Strongest EQ in Europe M3.6 Italy
Strongest EQ in US M4.4 Alaska
Strongest EQ on the Planet M5.3 Costa Rica
Deepest EQ M4.5 538 km South of Fiji News Burst 22 January 2020

News Burst 21 January 2020 ~ January 21, 2020


News Burst 21 January 2020

  • “Last year, after I briefed a group of state AGs about Google’s power to rig elections, one of them said, ‘I think you’re going to die in an accident in a few months.’ A few months later, my beautiful wife Misti died a violent death. Makes you wonder.” – The wife of a Google whistleblower, who exposed meddling in the 2016 election, died Friday night just days after she was seriously injured in a car crash. Psychology professor Robert Epstein.
  • Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte has approved a plan to declare Luzon island, home to Taal Volcano, a ‘no man’s land’, effectively ending the possibility of its former residents ever returning to their lives there. “They lived on the volcano itself with 47 craters. That’s really dangerous. It’s like having a gun pointed at you,” Renato Solidum, the head of the volcanology institute, said.
  • China on Monday reported a third death and 139 new cases of pneumonia over the weekend, caused by the outbreak of a new coronavirus strain that medical experts are still struggling to understand. [MSM started already to spread panic.]
  • “Apocalyptic” dust storms swept across drought-stricken areas of Australia over the weekend, with thunder and giant hail battering the east coast, as extreme weather patterns collided in the bushfire-fatigued country. The southern city of Melbourne was lashed by huge hailstones late Sunday (Jan 19) and fire-ravaged parts of Victoria state overnight received heavy rainfall, prompting new extreme weather alerts.
  • A theme park in China faced backlash after it inaugurated a new bungee jumping attraction by pushing a pig off a tower on Saturday. A video of the event, posted online, showed the pig being pushed off a platform while tied to a bungee rope, amid cheering from a crowd of onlookers. The animal can be heard squealing as it struggled in the air. The pig was later seen on top of the jumping platform, seemingly unconscious.
  • Six Iraqis including two police officers were killed and scores were wounded in Baghdad and other cities on Monday in clashes with security forces, medical and security sources said, as anti-government unrest resumed after a lull of several weeks.
  • Moscow warns Tehran against making ‘reckless steps’ to quit the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), Russia’s deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov said. He added that Russia urges Iran to comply with its obligations to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
  • Top Catalan politicians are already languishing in jail over their role in the ‘illegal’ 2017 referendum. Years later, in 2020, the prosecutions are still continuing. This week, it’s the former chief of the Catalan police who has been put on trial. Essentially, he was put in a position where he had to choose: did he take orders from Barcelona, or Madrid? As the chief of Catalan police, he listened to the Catalan authorities. For making that decision, he’s being accused of sedition and prosecutors are asking for an 11-year jail sentence. Catalonia is one of Spain’s richest regions.
  • Malaysia has returned 150 shipping containers loaded with plastic waste. The containers, imported illegally, held more than 3,700 tons of plastic waste, and originated from 13 countries. Forty-three came from France, 42 from the UK, 17 from the US, and 11 from Canada. Another 110 containers will be sent back in the near future, 60 of them to the United States.
  • A hacker has dumped a massive list of Telnet credentials and passwords for over 500,000 servers, routers, and so-called smart devices on the Dark Web, exposing the persistent vulnerability of cloud service providers. The list, published on a popular hacking forum, includes IP addresses, usernames and passwords for the Telnet remote service, which is used on numerous Internet of Things (IoT) devices around the world.
  • Five people have died and three have been hospitalized with severe burns after a hot water pipe burst at a hostel in Russia. The pipe burst around 2 am local time on Monday, sending steam and boiling-hot water throughout the small hostel, located on the basement floor of an apartment complex. The pipe in question was constructed nearly 60 years ago and in reviews, hostel guests had complained that rooms had no windows.
  • The European Space Agency (ESA – Expect Same Answer) has fired up its prototype oxygen plant to begin producing the element out of simulated moondust, with a view to creating a sustainable breathable air production facility on the Moon. Based on samples brought back from the Moon over the years, it turns out that lunar regolith (moon rock) is made up of 40 to 45 percent oxygen by weight, making it the satellite’s single most abundant element, which is incredibly fortunate for future human colonization plans.
  • The knife crime epidemic in London continues after three men, believed to be from the Sikh community, were stabbed to death, prompting calls for a change of mayor amid claims Sadiq Khan has “lost control of our streets.”

Weekely Asteroid

  • 2020 AQ1 200 m diameter, 2.5 million miles away, travelling 61500 mph
  • 2013 DU 100 m diameter, 3.5 million miles away, travelling 14200 mph

Strongest EQ in Europe M3.8 Greece
Strongest EQ in US M3.8 Tennessee
Strongest EQ on the Planet M6.1 South Sandwich Islands
Deepest EQ M4.6 153 km Tonga News Burst 21 January 2020

News Burst 20 January 2020 ~ January 20, 2020


News Burst 20 January 2020

  • Internal emails from Boeing staff members working on the 737 MAX were made public earlier this month have revealed new safety problems for the company’s flagship 777X, a long-range, wide-body, twin-engine passenger jet, currently in development that is expected to replace the aging 777-200LR and 777-300ER fleets
  • Ahead of Tuesday’s opening arguments in the Senate impeachment trial, House Democrats – seven impeachment managers led by Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff – filed their legal brief today. The 111-page summons urges the Senate to “eliminate the threat that the President poses to America’s national security” as it lays out the case against President Trump. President Trump’s legal team outlined the fiery response to its impeachment summons, calling the two articles of impeachment passed by the House last month “a dangerous attack on the right of the American people to freely choose their president.”
  • Opioid overdoses may have leveled off last year after soaring over the last ten, but Americans are still dying in droves from another, far more popular substance: alcohol. According to a series of studies cited by MarketWatch, the number of Americans drinking themselves to death has more than doubled over the last two decades, according to a sobering new report. That far outpaces the rate of population growth during the same period.
  • A peace conference on Libya is kicking off in Berlin at the Federal Chancellery attended by the rival faction heads commander Khalifa Haftar and head of the UN-endorsed government in Libya Fayez al-Sarraj.
  • On Saturday, the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said that the black boxes from the downed jetliner were to be sent to Ukraine for examination. Instead, Iran is decoding the flight recorders from the Boeing 737 and has not taken a definitive decision to send them for analysis abroad.
  • Puerto Rico Governor fired the island’s emergency management director after a video showing aid sitting unused in a warehouse went viral on social media. Some of the aid has allegedly been sitting in the warehouse since Hurricane Maria struck in 2017. “There are thousands of people who have made sacrifices to help those in the south, and it is unforgivable that resources were kept in the warehouse,” Vázquez said in a statement. Trump was right after all. VIDEO
  • Thousands of anti-government protesters flooded the streets of the French capital Paris on Saturday, chanting slogans to berate the sweeping social security system reforms initiated by the pro-business government of French President Emmanuel Macron. The march led by Yellow Vest protesters in downtown Paris was marred by violence, and saw police using batons and tear gas on activists, who hurled objects in return.
  • Ed Buck, a reportedly a pervert with a “thing” for getting young black male prostitutes high through date-rape drugs and involuntary meth injections, resulting in 2 deaths. Schiff was very close with Buck and not only visited this drug den 17 times, they were constantly together at rallies, parties, social events, political fundraisers, and other events.
  • After a week which tragically witnessed a sudden uptick in refugee and migrant incidents and drowning deaths in the Mediterranean, a dramatic video has been published online showing the Turkish Coast Guard resorting to extreme measures while intercepting migrant boats. VIDEO
  • Protesters from across Lebanon flocked to Beirut on Saturday to attend a rally against economic mismanagement and the weakening national currency, dubbed “Saturday of outrage”. Clashes with law enforcement ensued as demonstrators attempted to storm the parliament building’s fences, police fired tear gas and water cannons to disperse them. More than 165 people were injured in the clashes, according to the Lebanese Red Cross. Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun has ordered the army to the capital to protect peaceful protesters and keep the situation under control. Mass protests engulfed Lebanon last October amid a crippling economic crisis, people have been demanding urgent reforms.
  • WhatsApp, the Facebook-owned messaging app was facing issues in parts of India, Brazil, and parts of the Middle-East including UAE. The map also shows that Europe is also facing severe outage. First #whatsappdown of the year!
  • Qatar Airways, Emirates and several other Gulf airlines still fly in Iraqi and Iranian airspace even as other international carriers have rerouted planes since the United States and Iran traded military strikes. They have few alternative routes to choose from in an area where much of the airspace is kept clear of civilian aircraft for military use.
  • Hong Kong protests: thousands join rally in Central to demand universal suffrage in upcoming election.
  • Hong Kong protests: two plain-clothes police officers beaten up, tear gas fired and rally organiser arrested as mayhem breaks out in Central. Several rounds of tear gas fired after police shut down event in Central while eight people arrested. Protesters in Chater Garden had urged foreign governments to consider sanctions against Hong Kong administration if democracy demands not met.
  • Harry and Megan coverup for the Prince of the Pedos is becoming pathetic.
  • Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is as of now including in the U.S. Senate impeachment trial rules a “kill switch” that effectively allows for the president’s legal team to seek an immediate verdict or dismissal of the case should Democrats engage in any shenanigans like they did in the House process.

Strongest EQ in Europe M5.0 Greece
Strongest EQ in US M3.0 Oklahoma
Strongest EQ on the Planet M6.0 China and Indonesia
Deepest EQ M4.7 537 km South of the Fiji Islands News Burst 20 January 2020

News Burst 17 January 2020 ~ January 17, 2020


News Burst 17 January 2020

  • Prince Harry and Meghan Markle fleeing the palace is a fairy tale to take the media heat off of Prince Andrew. How far and wide this scandal goes depends on how Buckingham Palace acts. But that is not easy since Prince Charles has his own connections to an earlier sex trafficker named Jimmy Savile, who was knighted. Now, the royal reporters and US media are focused on Harry and Meghan and their whereabouts in the colonies. The only Epstein stories appearing in the US is how the feds in a lower Manhattan lockup really became the Keystone Kops.
  • A new ‘impossible’ type of particle has been picked up by the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA) experiment’s particle detector balloon. According to researchers, particles which appeared to be “extremely high-energy neutrinos” detected by ANITA’s sensors have demonstrated the ability to travel ‘through’ our planet, something that should be impossible.
  • Jeffrey Epstein’s estate was sued on Wednesday by the U.S. Virgin Islands, which claimed that the late financier sexually abused and trafficked in dozens of young women and girls on his private Caribbean island. The Virgin Islands said his misconduct was much more extensive, continuing to as recently 2018 and involving girls as young as 11 or 12.
  • Twenty men in the United Kingdom have been convicted of raping and abusing more than a dozen teenage girls in the northern city of Huddersfield. The sentences have totaled 221 years in prison. Similar cases have erupted across South Yorkshire, with the National Crime Agency (NCA) reporting earlier this year that they believe upwards of 1,510 girls are believed to have been sexually exploited in the region over a 16-year period. The NCA said it had identified 110 people suspected of being part of child-grooming gangs in Rotherham, the largest town in South Yorkshire.
  • Cryptos are now manipulated like the banks/currencies system, yesterday [they] spammed BCHSV/USD was the best performing and today is loosing 20%.
  • Dutchsinse website/YT/Twitter and all the rest are showing no contents, not banned or closed or what… just valid but empty URLs. Apparently he’s only on Twitch.
  • Nicholas Wilson, a financial services whistleblower who was fired by UK law firm, Weightmans, after exposing millions of pounds in unfair customer charges, claims the City of London relies on “dirty money” and says the world economy would collapse if the City stopped laundering it. Mr Wilson, a former litigation manager, said: “The EU wanted to tighten up on money laundering and the UK was the only country who voted against it… Capitalism relies on a swash of dirty money which is moved around and supports investment around the world.”
  • Weekly Asteroid: In April 2017, a shiny fireball flew over the skies of Kyoto, Japan, raising questions about its potential origin and cosmic identity. Later, it was determined that the bright intruder belonged to a near-Earth asteroid called 2003 YT1. 2003 YT1, or 164121, is a binary asteroid that was discovered in 2003 and classified as a near-Earth object and potentially hazardous space rock, approximately 2 kilometres in diameter.
  • During a speech to the Annual Evaluation Meeting for 2019 at the Bestepe National Congress and Culture Centre in Ankara Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced that the country will be sending troops to Libya under an agreement with the Government of National Accord. Erdogan added that Turkey will use both military and diplomatic means to ensure “stability” in Libya.
  • “The black boxes of the downed Boeing will be decoded in Ukraine. On January 15, the chairman of Iran’s aviation bureau and all specialists will come here, and decoding of the black boxes will start on January 20,” head of the Kiev Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Expertise Alexander Ruvin said after returning from Tehran.
  • A raid on a residential complex in Jerusalem has uncovered a “cult”-like group where dozens of women and children were being held against their will – including some girls who had their fingers placed into fires to “make them understand what hell is,” Israeli police say. The operation, which was carried out in an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood Monday, resulted in the arrests of the alleged ringleader and his eight female accomplices. They are suspected of isolating some 50 women in the complex, along with children ranging in age from 1-5, and keeping them out of contact with their families and the outside world.
  • Thousands of porn actors have reportedly been affected and face the danger of their sensitive information, from passports and credit cards to the most intimate details, such as scars and body measurements, could go public. This potentially puts them under the threat of extortion, stalking, shaming and job loss. The personal data and copies of documents of more than 4000 adult industry actors became accessible to strangers amid a data leak from an international porn company.
  • The timing of the media fuss over the alleged “Russian hack” of Burisma coincides with the resumption of the impeachment process by the Senate, say American academics, suggesting that the story could be a mere distraction aimed at evoking the specter of “Trump-Russia” collusion amid the 2020 election cycle.

News Burst 17 January 2020