Why Is It, That People Find These Groups So Interesting?
This has been called a void that we want to somehow fill, an emptiness within every one of us that calls out for a higher being or state of consciousness. One of the most extreme ambiguities of the existence of secret societies is and has traditionally been, why do folks join? Why is it, that folks find these groups so fascinating? What is it that we are trying to find? There are the common and plain answers to these questions. This hope makes us struggle for more and thus we become the most powerful and fittest of the species – therefore evolution. Some psychological consultants accept that this is an evolutionary facet of our lives, that inside us there's an incessant urge to enhance and a deep-rooted hope. And we will not reject that. Many loaded families were concerned in such drug trades, gems, oil, arms, slaves and during prohibition alcohol too. Things have modified a lot in one hundred and 50 years. I will not say I am proud of these kind of things, as the Russell Family lineage is in my folks tree also yet that was then and this is now naturally.
Power and wealth in America is so wide spread the President hasn't got it all. I spotted in the last election the opponents against Bush were, John Kerry, who is really in the same blood line, as Bush and even me. John Edwards? Well figure that one out King Edward right? Therefore when a person condemns the Bush Administration and then puts up another competitor of the same blood line, then by their definition they're not opponents at all right? If in reality the conspiracy theoreticians actually wanted Bush out of office and voted for John Kerry and John Edwards they're hypocrites to the maximum.
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Cell Phones and Brain Cancer – The Interphone Study
Interphone Witnesses testified about research into cell phone use and its potential impact on human health, as well as the potential side effects such as brain cancer and salivary gland tumors. To download this video in high resolutions go to :
http://files.me.com/magda.havas/67eagr
Duration : 0:9:58
Access Denied: The Policy of Global Internet Filtering
Rob Faris, the OpenNet Initiative’s Research Director and John Palfrey, one of the project’s Principal Investigators, lead a discussion of Internet filtering and provided a glimpse of the results of ONI’s first global survey of Internet censorship.
In the last year ONI has studied forty countries and found a substantial increase in Internet censorship, colored by complex and dynamic political, legal and social processes. The research will be documented in the forthcoming MIT Press book: Access Denied: the Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering.
The OpenNet Initiative is a partnership between the Citizen Lab at the Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School, the Advanced Network Research Group at the Cambridge Security Programme at Cambridge University, and the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford.
Duration : 1:8:57
John Doherty & John Whelan on ‘The New EU Telecoms Package’
About the Speech:
The wide number of proposals in the Telecoms Package are designed to coordinate action amongst regulators to create a pro-competitive single market without regulatory borders and to reinforce competition. It is intended that this will facilitate high speed internet networks for all Europeans and stimulate economic growth.
In particular, the package will provide for:
- more powers to the Commission including issuing legally binding decisions to ensure the harmonisation of regulation across Member States;
- the establishment of a new telecoms agency;
- ensuring access to optical fibre by smaller telecoms operators;
- the possibility of introducing a functional separation between services and network activities of telecoms operators;
- the introduction of the notion of universal broadband services to consumers;
- wireless services will be made EU-wide operable by harmonising radio spectrum use; and
- the Telecoms Package will provide for the switching of bandwidth from a part of the frequencies now used for broadcasting, to provide wireless broadband services in the future.
These policy objectives of the Telecoms Package are of particular interest to industry regulators, consumer groups, Irish government departments and electronic communication/telecoms operators.
About the Speakers:
Stephen Banable is a national expert with the European Commission in DG Information Society and Media with responsibility for mobile regulatory issues and implementation of the telecoms regulatory framework. Currently he is responsible for the Commission’s proposal for a regulation on international roaming charges.
John Doherty is Chairperson of the Commission for Communications Regulation.
John Whelan is a solicitor specialising in information technology and telecoms regulation at A&L Goodbody.
Duration : 0:27:57
