The most important news for Tuesday, December 29th, 2009....
Ron Paul fears that the U.S. government will use the Flight 253 bombing incident to strip even more liberties away from the American people.
Democrat Congresswoman Sheila Jackson is demanding that airport security officials make much greater use of "behavioral monitoring" in order to keep American travelers safe.
Who was the "well-dressed man" that helped the underwear bomber board Flight 253?
The man charged with the attempted Christmas Day bombing of Northwest Airlines Flight 253 has told FBI agents that there are more just like him in Yemen who would strike soon.
The mainstream media is now claiming that Yemen is the true home of al-Qaeda.
A "regional wing" of al-Qaeda, known as "al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula", has claimed responsibility for the failed Christmas Day attack.
Effective immediately, passengers headed to the United States from Canada will not be allowed to travel with carry-on bags.
Thanks to Barack Obama, Interpol agents are now immune from being prosecuted for violating American laws.
According to a new report, Iran would launch a counterattack on Israel and on all U.S. bases in the Gulf region if Israel strikes Iran's nuclear program.
Millions of Americans experienced a very happy and prosperous Christmas, but millions of other Americans experienced the other side of Christmas.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is urging the Obama administration to provide Moscow with data about U.S. missile defense developments as part of an information exchange under a new arms treaty.
Russia is saying that it will develop more non-nuclear offensive combat systems to keep balance with American plans for an anti-missile shield.
A new poll says that 68 percent of Americans believe that decisions by the Obama administration are bad for America.
Moderate Democrats are saying that it is "unlikely" that any cap and trade bill will get through the Senate next year.
Former Democratic Party chairman Howard Dean said on December 8th that "cooperation" between European socialists and the Democratic Party has "intensified significantly" over the last several years.
As we look forward to 2010, the truth is that the U.S. economy absolutely fell apart in 2009.
Has the mainstream media decided that bloggers are the cause of their financial problems?
The U.K. government is considering having all bus passengers use "electronic tags" to pay for their bus fares.
Is the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (better known as Darpa) leading the effort to merge man with machines?
Can memories and preferences be stored in the heart? According to some heart transplant patients, they apparently can.
Health Canada wants to let manufacturers put small amounts of a cancer-fighting drug into potato chips and similar products to fight a cancer-causing chemical in those foods.
A study published in the International Journal of Biological Sciences has demonstrated the extreme toxicity of three genetically modified corn varieties from the American seed company Monsanto.
As many as 20,000 officials in the U.K. have been given power to enter people's homes without a warrant and search for information.
A European Parliament investigator says that big pharma's influence on the WHO must end.
A group of Shiite Muslims attacked an Assyrian Christian town in Northern Iraq on Christmas morning, but because this was an attack against Christians it was went virtually non-reported in the mainstream news.
Lastly, seven former and current Walmart employees are suing the retail giant after one of its Pennsylvania stores installed a surveillance camera in a unisex bathroom used by employees and customers.























