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Radio/TV • Declare Your Independence with Ernest Hancock
Program Date:

12-11-15 -- Tarrin Lupo - Scott Horton - Vin Suprynowicz (MP3s & VIDEO LOADED)

Tarrin Lupo (Author; Chiropractor; Pastoral Medicine) gives us an update on what he has been up to - Scott Horton (Scott Horton Radio) on Russia, Syria, Turkey, and America's passion for war - Vin Suprynowicz (Libertarian Author) on his new book, Mis
Media Type: Audio • Time: 59 Minutes and 19 Secs
Guests: Tarrin Lupo
Media Type: Audio • Time: 54 Minutes and 44 Secs
Guests: Scott Horton
Media Type: Audio • Time: 60 Minutes and 00 Secs
Guests: Vin Suprynowicz

Hour 1 - 3

Media Type: Audio • Time: 59 Minutes and 19 Secs
Guests: Tarrin Lupo

Hour 1 -- Tarrin Lupo (Author; Chiropractor; Pastoral Medicine) gives us an update on what he has been up to

Hour 2 -- Scott Horton (Scott Horton Radio) on Russia, Syria, Turkey, and America's passion for war

Hour 3 -- Vin Suprynowicz (Libertarian Author) on his new book, Miskatonic Mansucript

 CALL IN TO SHOW: 602-264-2800

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December 11th, 2015

Declare Your Independence with Ernest Hancock

on LRN.FM / Monday - Friday

9 a.m. - Noon (EST)

Studio Line: 602-264-2800 

 

Hour 1

2015-12-11 Hour 1 Tarrin Lupo from Ernest Hancock on Vimeo.

Tarrin Lupo

I practice functional medicine and am earning my diplomate in clinical nutrition. I love cats, liberty, gardening, and have authored 22 books and short stories. I have not published an eBook in almost 2 years. After I saw how popular my story was about how to make money with Christmas themed businesses, I decided to write a short companion eBook (see details below).

Webpages:

http://www.holistic-healing-information.com/

========================================

TOPICS:

My New eBook Is FREE for 24 hours & Save Big $: Make Your Own Supplements

My New eBook Is FREE for 24 hours & Save Big $: Make Your Own Supplements 

I have not published an eBook in almost 2 years. After I saw how popular my story was about how to make money with Christmas themed businesses, I decided to write a short companion eBook.  I am giving it away for 24 hours to bring attention to it and raise it's rank on Amazon. Please download it ,even if you don't plan on reading it. Every download helps with my ranking which means more sales later.
I also made a video about an inexpensive method to make your own supplements.

Please do me a favor and download this FREE book in the next 24 hours to help me with Amazon rankings. Click HERE.

You can make your own high quality supplements and vitamins for just pennies.  There can be a huge mark up on your favorite supplements and people don't realize how inexpensive it is to make them yourself.  In this video I take you step by step on how to make your own turmeric root powder & black pepper supplements.

Click HERE to Watch

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Hour 2

Media Type: Audio • Time: 54 Minutes and 44 Secs
Guests: Scott Horton

Hour 2 -- Scott Horton (Host of Scott Horton Radio) on Yemen, Syria, and Paris

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Hour 2

2015-12-11 Hour 2 Scott Horton from Ernest Hancock on Vimeo.

Scott Horton (ScottHorton.Org)

 

Scott comes on the show to discuss Russia, Syria, Turkey, and America's passion for war

http://news.antiwar.com/tag/yemen/

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Scott's previous interviews on the Declare Your Independence with Ernest Hancock Radio Show:

https://www.freedomsphoenix.com/Guest-Page.htm?No=00040

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TOPICS AND REFERENCES...

Face the Football Nation

News Link  •   
Entertainment: Sports
Face the Football Nation 
12-11-2015  •  NFL.Com 
Commercial that ran during last night's Thursday Night Football between the Arizona Cardinals and the Minnesota Vikings with Al Franken and John McCain, and Bob Schieffer

 
Read Full Story

==============================

Who Will Fight the Islamic State?

Peter Van Buren, December 11, 2015 - Antiwar.Com

Originally posted at TomDispatch.

In the many strategies proposed to defeat the Islamic State (IS) by presidential candidates, policymakers, and media pundits alike across the American political spectrum, one common element stands out: someone else should really do it. The United States will send in planes, advisers, and special ops guys, but it would be best – and this varies depending on which pseudo-strategist you cite – if the Arabs, Kurds, Turks, Sunnis, and/or Shias would please step in soon and get America off the hook.

The idea of seeing other-than-American boots on the ground, like Washington'srecently deep-sixed scheme to create some "moderate" Syrian rebels out of whole cloth, is attractive on paper. Let someone else fight America's wars for American goals. Put an Arab face on the conflict, or if not that at least a Kurdish one (since, though they may not be Arabs, they're close enough in an American calculus). Let the U.S. focus on its "bloodless" use of air power and covert ops. Somebody else, Washington's top brains repeatedly suggest, should put their feet on the embattled, contested ground of Syria and Iraq. Why, the U.S. might even gift them with nice, new boots as a thank-you.

Is this, however, a realistic strategy for winning America's war(s) in the Middle East?

The Great Champions of the Grand Strategy

Recently, presidential candidate Hillary Clinton openly called for the U.S. to round up some Arab allies, Kurds, and Iraqi Sunnis to drive the Islamic State's fighters out of Iraq and Syria. On the same day that Clinton made her proposal, Bernie Sanderscalled for "destroying" the Islamic State, but suggested that it "must be done primarily by Muslim nations." It's doubtful he meant Indonesia or Malaysia.

Among the Republican contenders, Marco Rubio proposed that the U.S. "provide arms directly to Sunni tribal and Kurdish forces." Ted Cruz threw his support behind arming the Kurds, while Donald Trump appeared to favor more violence in the region by whoever might be willing to jump in.

CLICK HERE for the rest of the article

==============================

Vin's latest article on Shotgun News: http://www.vinsuprynowicz.com/?p=2661

What is a 'gun found at crime scene'?

(A version of this column appears in the Dec. 10 edition of "Shotgun News.")

In October, jurors ordered a Wisconsin gun store to pay nearly $6 million in damages in a lawsuit filed by two Milwaukee police officers who were shot and seriously wounded by a gun purchased at the store, The Associated Press reports.

The ruling came in a negligence lawsuit filed by the officers against Badger Guns, a shop in suburban Milwaukee which — according to the AP story — "authorities have linked to hundreds of firearms found at crime scenes." The lawsuit argued the shop ignored several warning signs that the gun used to shoot the officers was being sold to a so-called straw buyer who was illegally purchasing the weapon for someone else.

Officer Bryan Norberg and former Officer Graham Kunisch were both shot in the face after they stopped Julius Burton, 19, for riding his bike on the sidewalk in the summer of 2009. Investigators said Burton got the weapon, a Taurus .40-caliber handgun, a month earlier "after giving $40 to another man, Jacob Collins, to make the purchase at the store in West Milwaukee," reports the AP's Greg Moore, who graduated Wayne State University in downtown Detroit and joined The AP in 2011.

One bullet shattered eight of Norberg's teeth, blew through his cheek and lodged in his shoulder. He remains on the force. Kunisch was shot several times, lost an eye and part of the frontal lobe of his brain. His wounds forced him to retire.

Jurors, understandably sympathetic to the shooting victims, ordered the store to pay Norberg $1.5 million, Kunisch $3.6 million, and punitive damages of $730,000. The officers' lawyer said he anticipates years of appeals.

The case gained national attention when presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton said she'd push to repeal the law that Badger Guns' lawyers said shielded the store from such claims.

Authorities have said more than 500 firearms "recovered from crime scenes" had been traced back to Badger Guns and Badger Outdoors, making it the "No. 1 crime gun dealer in America," according to a 2005 charging document from an unrelated case. Norberg and Kunisch cited that detail in their lawsuit, saying it showed a history of negligence.

Damages unlikely to stand

"Burton pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree attempted intentional homicide and is serving an 80-year sentence," Moore of The AP reports. "Collins, the man who purchased the gun, got a two-year sentence after pleading guilty to making a straw purchase for an underage buyer."

Where to begin? No, crazy young men should not be shooting police officers -– officers who had not even seen a need to draw their own weapons — while being stopped for a minor infraction. Putting this deranged perpetrator away for 80 years (given the way our parole and probation system work) probably makes sense, if he can't be executed.

But if the shooter had to find someone else to make a "straw purchase" for him, that means he knew it was illegal for him to obtain the weapon on his own — he probably would have been turned down based on his history of psychiatric treatment, even if he weren't underage. Right?

Burton "gave $40 to another man" to buy him the Taurus pistol? Quite a bargain. In fact, that pistol lists at about $300, plus tax. Does the reporter mean Burton "gave Collins the $320 purchase price, plus an additional $40"? Why would a reporter want to make it sound like such weapons can be bought for $40?

And let's not fail to note that the law against serving a "straw man purchaser" creates a "thought crime." What Jacob Collins went to jail for was legally buying a gun while intending to deliver it to someone else. If I buy a gun intending to make it part of my personal collection, but then get tired of it or see a chance to make a profit and so give it away or sell it to someone else two years later — a private sale without any "background check" — that's perfectly legal. Six months after I buy it? Perfectly legal. Two months later? I'm probably OK. Six days after I buy it? It could now be up to a judge and a prosecutor and possibly a jury stacked through "voir dire" questioning to decide whether I "harbored the thought" of transferring it to someone else on the day I signed the "yellow form." I could go to prison based on what they think I thought.

If this doesn't make you uncomfortable, it's probably because you've never bought a gun. But buying booze for someone else is also illegal. Ever take a bottle of wine to someone else's house? Are you sure they didn't later give a glass to anyone under 18? Look up Martin Niemoller.

The federal law referred to — the 2005 Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, which bars victims of the criminal use of guns from suing manufacturers and gun dealers whose legal products work as they're supposed to — is still in effect. As socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders, who voted for the measure, told CNN earlier this year: "If somebody has a gun and it falls into the hands of a murderer and that murderer kills somebody with the gun do you hold the gun manufacturer responsible? Not any more than you would hold a hammer company responsible if somebody beat somebody over the head with a hammer."

So what are the chances the appeals court will throw out these damages? Or, should they be upheld, what are the chances the families of innocent Americans shot by police officers can now successfully sue the outfits that sold those cops their guns and ammo, since they "should have known full well that cops often use their weapons to shoot innocent, unarmed persons"?

I wonder how all the cops who crowded that Milwaukee courtroom in October and applauded this damage award would react if told "Sorry, following the deaths of John Geer of Springfield, Va. — shot by police while standing in the doorway to his own home, scratching his nose — and 50-year-old Walter Scott of North Charleston, S.C. — shot in the back as he ran away from North Charleston Patrolman Michael Slager — none of our former suppliers will sell us any more ammo, ladies and gentlemen. So let's get out those old wooden batons and keep them handy."

Who's dropping all these expensive guns?

While we're at it, let's also deconstruct that favorite "firearms found at crime scenes" statistic. Does that generally refer to incidents where a street gang armed with machine guns massacres a couple police officers, and then — while speeding away — drops one of their fully automatic AK-47s so it can later be "found at the crime scene"? No. This is a term of art which usually refers either to a suicide gun or a self-defense revolver found in the bedroom drawer of a house where someone was just busted for "domestic abuse" or "possession of marijuana" – someone who never thought of going for that self-defense tool to use it against police, or anyone else.

"Weapons found at crime scenes" generally do not belong to habitual criminals. As John Lott — former chief economist at the United States Sentencing Commission and author of "More Guns, Less Crime" — wrote in the Wall Street Journal of Jan. 17, 2013, "Guns are very rarely left behind at a crime scene. When they are, they're usually stolen or unregistered. Criminals are not stupid enough to leave behind guns that are registered to them. Even in the few cases where registered guns are left at crime scenes, it is usually because the criminal has been seriously injured or killed, so these crimes would have been solved even without registration."

Now that you know what a "weapon found at a crime scene" usually refers to, do you think a popular gun shop that's sold a number of firearms later "found at crime scenes" –- sales completed only after performing the legally required background checks — has necessarily done anything wrong? Or do you think a news outlet parroting that term without explanation is trying to prejudice you against the specific business in question, or against gun stores in general?

After reading the initial news stories, did you think this gun shop should be closed down? You did, didn't you? What if I told you the biggest Chevy dealer in Milwaukee sold "most of the cars that were involved in hit-and-run accidents in Milwaukee in recent years"? (I made that up, by the way; I have no idea.) Would you conclude that specific Chevy dealer should be shut down? Why not? Because, perhaps, you think the drivers were responsible; that every American adult is going to get a car somewhere — that no irresponsible driver is going to be better behaved just because they buy a Ford or a Toyota; that the statistic only reflects the fact that my hypothetical Chevy dealer sells more cars locally than anyone else, that it's not the fault of a car dealership if some tiny fraction of their customers use those automobiles in an irresponsible way?

I wish I had better advice to offer on how we should deal with the people who we describe with the imperfect metaphor "mentally ill" –- people who (for better or worse) have been increasingly "mainstreamed" out onto our sidewalks over the past 40 years. I certainly don't think the "boot camp" atmosphere of our mandatory youth propaganda camps (some still call them "public schools") — where the disciplining of misfits is increasingly administered by locker-room gang chieftains, as in the old Red Army — has helped.

What this case really exposes, I fear, is that all this "background check" rigmarole inconveniences millions of Americans who have an uncontestable right to own and carry a firearm, without doing much to keep guns out of the hands of lunatics and bad guys — any more than our airport metal detectors (the ones designed to accustom law-abiding Americans to being strip-searched and disarmed) did anything to stop a bunch of Muslim fanatics from hijacking four passenger jets and killing thousands of innocent people on Sept. 11, 2001.

Yet we keep trying "more of the same."

Vin Suprynowicz, a former award-winning editorial writer and columnist for the daily Las Vegas Review-Journal, is the author of "Send in the Waco Killers" and "The Ballad of Carl Drega." His new novel about the War on Drugs, "The Miskatonic Manuscript," is due out this month.


Hour 3

Media Type: Audio • Time: 60 Minutes and 00 Secs
Guests: Vin Suprynowicz

Hour 3 -- Vin Suprynowicz (Libertarian Author) on his new book, Miskatonic Mansucript

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Hour 3

2015-12-11 Hour 3 Vin Suprynowicz from Ernest Hancock on Vimeo.

Vin Suprynowicz 
Libertarian Author comes on the show to discuss his new book, Miskatonic Mansucript

Webpage: VinSuprynowicz.Com

 

The Miskatonic Manuscript / from the Case Files of Matthew Hunter and Chantal Stevens

Available on Amazon (Kindle) Now:

And Also Available on AbeBooks NOW!

http://www.vinsuprynowicz.com/?p=2514

Book releases today, Dec 11th, 2015...

ABE-cover-upload

What if Rhode Island horror writer H.P. Lovecraft didn't just imagine the "resonator" in his 1920 short story "From Beyond"? What if Henry Annesley actually built the machine that allowed him to see into the Sixth Dimension -– and allowed creatures from The Other Side to invade us here?

Facing Draconian prison sentences, their Cthulhian Church banned by the federal drug warriors for employing holy sacraments that actually work, Windsor and Worthington Annesley turn to a desperate search for their great-uncle's resonator, hoping it may be the game-changer they need.

Does the secret lie in a lost Lovecraft notebook? Can rare book dealers Matthew Hunter and Chantal Stevens find it in time? If they do, the Annesley Brothers vow to finally ask the question that victims of the Drug War have been waiting a hundred years to hear:

"What if they fought a War on Drugs . . . and someone fought back?"

From the author of "The Testament of James" comes another adventure from the case files of Matthew Hunter and Chantal Stevens, complete with rampaging tyrannosaurs, naked jungle girls, man-eating spiders, and some seriously heavy drugs . . . "The Miskatonic Manuscript."

It ain't your grandpa's used book store.

# # #

Our cover illustration, "Bidge turns to give the alarm," is copyright (c) Boris Vallejo.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Deep in the Nevada desert, in a hidden mansion full of old books and vintage clothes, guarded by four-and-a-half anthropomorphic cats and a family of Attack Roadrunners, Vin Suprynowicz went cold turkey from a 40-year newspaper career. They said he'd never write anything over a thousand words, again. But with the help and encouragement of the Brunette and a few close friends, he came back. With "The Testament of James," he proved them wrong. Now comes the second drug-enhanced adventure of Matthew Hunter and Chantal Stevens, "The Miskatonic Manuscript." In an earlier life, Vin wrote "Send in the Waco Killers," "The Ballad of Carl Drega," and the freedom novel "The Black Arrow."

PRAISE FOR THE FIRST ENTRY IN THE SERIES,
'THE TESTAMENT OF JAMES'


"The characters who populate the book are quirky, literate, cunning and engage in snappy, irreverent and amusing dialogue — from book dealer Matthew, who must keep patiently explaining why certain books cost more than they did when new, to pink pistol packing Chantal. . . . Even the cats have personalities."

-– Thomas Mitchell, formerly The Editor, Las Vegas Review-Journal

"Testament's pace is anything but slow, proceeding like clever dinner conversation amongst your brightest friends. . . . Matthew Hunter has a love interest and partner in Chantal Stevens, characters who will continue their book sleuthing heroics in future installments. There's psilocybin use and cats with names like Mr. Cuddles and Tabbyhunter providing clues to impending danger. . . . The Testament of James is a quick, entertaining read to either remind you you're not crazy, or start you on a journey to truth and enlightenment."

-– Doug French, banker, economist, student of Murray Rothbard

"Now and then I see reviewers refer to a novel as a 'romp.' I don't know that I've ever done so before, but I'll do so now. . . . The pacing is perfect and the reader (this reader, anyway) is left both satisfied with the story and wanting more of the characters and of the world it happens in."

– Thomas Knapp

"As a mystery, this book works superbly. Its view of 'bookmen' (hunters, sellers, and collectors) is a delight."

– John Walker, programming entrepreneur, co-founder of Autodesk

"Entertaining, funny, and thought-provoking."

-– A.D. Hopkins, member, Nevada Newspaper Hall of Fame

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