The fact that the illegal alien parents of a baby born in America are NOT subject to the jurisdiction thereof and owe allegiance to a foreign power they can NOT produce an American citizen! To put it beyond doubt that all persons, white or black, and whether formerly slaves or not, born or naturalized in the United States, and owing NO allegiance to any alien power, should be citizens of the United States and of the state in which they reside.
The criminal act of entering a country uninvited, unannounced, and in violation of that country's laws is NEVER rewarded with citizenship!
There is NO such thing as an anchor baby!
ELK v. WILKINS
Const. art. 2, § 1; art. 1, § 8. By the thirteenth amendment of the constitution slavery was prohibited. The main object of the opening sentence of the fourteenth amendment was to settle the question, upon which there had been a difference of opinion throughout the country and in this court, as to the citizenship of free negroes, (Scott v. Sandford, 19 How. 393;) and to put it beyond doubt that all persons, white or black, and whether formerly slaves or not, born or naturalized in the United States, and owing no allegiance to any alien power, should be citizens of the United States and of the state in which they reside.
Amendment XIV Section 1.
All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
Indian Citizenship Act of 1924
Before the Civil War, citizenship was often limited to Native Americans of one-half or less Indian blood. In the Reconstruction period, progressive Republicans in Congress sought to accelerate the granting of citizenship to friendly tribes, though state support for these measures was often limited. In 1888, most Native American women married to U.S. citizens were conferred with citizenship, and in 1919 Native American veterans of World War I were offered citizenship. In 1924, the Indian Citizenship Act, an all-inclusive act, was passed by Congress.
The assemblywoman has been indicted and faces 30 years if convicted for a slew of crimes associated with a long-running scam to siphon off funds meant for victims of Hurricane Sandy – and her benefits go far beyond medical and dental insurance!
Harris, 57, defrauded the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) of $25,000 using the money to pay for cruise vacations, shopping – and Victoria Secret lingerie.
The Democrat has been charged by the Department of Justice with wire fraud, making false statements, bankruptcy fraud, witness tampering and obstructing justice for defrauding after the hurricane swept through New York and New Jersey wiping out infrastructure and damaging, sometimes destroying, homes and businesses, forcing residents to rebuild or relocate.
Mayor Bill de Blasio will sue the country’s five biggest oil companies alleging climate change and global warming led to Hurricane Sandy and its catastrophic fallout and the companies should pay for the city’s resiliency upgrades.
The de Blasio administration will announce Wednesday that the city will sue for reparations and force the companies to pay for the city’s resiliency efforts, which have taken years to complete, when the storm, in 2012, devastated the city, killing 53 people across the state costing more than $19 billion.
The mayor will also call on several of the city’s pension funds to divest from oil companies, two sources with knowledge of the announcement confirmed to POLITICO, a 'source' that is known to be less than accurate!
WHY does America continue to destroy the environment with drilling, fracking, and mining?
There are two types of biofuel: biodiesel and ethanol.
Ethanol is made from grains (corn, barley, wheat, etc) or sugar cane, but can also be made from the inedible parts of most plants. It is frequently used as a biofuel, but usually blended with petrol. Cars designed to run on petrol can only tolerate a 10% addition of ethanol to petrol; flexible fuel cars can use an up to 80% ethanol mix. In Brazil, where vast amounts of sugar cane are grown for biofuel, some cars can run on 100% ethanol.
Biodiesel is a renewable, biodegradable fuel manufactured domestically from vegetable oils, animal fats, or recycled restaurant grease. It is a cleaner-burning replacement for petroleum diesel fuel. Biodiesel meets both the biomass-based diesel and overall advanced biofuel requirement of the Renewable Fuel Standard.
Hemp oil can and should replace both Ethanol and biodiesel.
Scientific Name: Cannabis sativa
Common Name: Hemp
Family: Cannabaceae
Why? The hemp plant can be completely processed. Every part can be used to replace every product created with fossil fuels, and even make plant-based plastics, durable paper and military grade fabric.
Hemp can yield 3 to 8 dry tons of fiber per acre - Four times more than an average forest can yield. Hemp cultivation requires no chemicals, pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizer.
How? It does so by way of Phytoremediation… a natural decontamination from plants. Hemp is really good at this, especially when it comes to radiation. Hemp is more efficient and effective, than other plants, at removing, breaking down, and neutralizing harmful contaminants.
Growing hemp filters and decontaminates the soil, it also helps to replenish the nitrogen and nutrients found in soil that plants need to grow and thrive.
High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) - The European Union called the project a global concern and passed a resolution calling for more information on its health and environmental risks. Despite those concerns, officials at HAARP insist the project is nothing more sinister than a radio science research facility.
The American Meteorological Society policy statement on planned and inadvertent weather modification, dated October 2, 1998, indicates, "There is no sound physical hypothesis for the modification of hurricanes, tornadoes, or damaging winds in general, and no related scientific experimentation has been conducted in the past 20 years." In the absence of a sound hypothesis, no Federal agencies are presently doing, or planning, research on hurricane modification.
This weapon was brought into the world over a hundred years ago by Nikola Tesla and patented by Bernard Eastlund. US Patent #4,686,605 - For example, in the late 1950's and early 1960's both the United States and U.S.S.R. detonated a series of nuclear devices of various yields to generate large numbers of charged particles at various altitudes, e.g., 200 kilometers (km) or greater. This was done in order to establish and study artificial belts of trapped electrons and ions. These experiments established that at least some of the extraneous electrons and ions from the detonated devices did become trapped along field lines in the earth's magnetosphere to form artificial belts which were stable for prolonged periods of time. For a discussion of these experiments see "The Radiation Belt and Magnetosphere", W. N. Hess, Blaisdell Publishing Co., 1968, pps. 155 et sec.
Still another approach is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,042,196 wherein a low energy ionized gas, e.g., hydrogen, is released from a synchronous orbiting satellite near the apex of a radiation belt which is naturally-occurring in the earth's magnetosphere to produce a substantial increase in energetic particle precipitation and, under certain conditions, produce a limit in the number of particles that can be stably trapped. This precipitation effect arises from an enhancement of the whistler-mode and ion-cyclotron mode interactions that result from the ionized gas or "cold plasma" injection.
The technology is covered under US Patent 4,686,605 on the “Method and Apparatus for Altering a Region in the Earth’s Atmosphere, Ionosphere, and/or Magnetosphere.”
An increase of 1 Celsius in the atmosphere is more than enough to initiate a significant weather perturbation. Bear in mind that all gases move from high to low pressure, and gas pressure is directly proportional to its temperature. Colorado admits it has a weather modification program. The most recent weather modification policy statement of the American Meteorological Society (AMS 1998) states that, "Whereas a statistical evaluation is required to establish that a significant change resulted from a given seeding activity, it must be accompanied by a physical evaluation (emphasis added) to confirm that the statistically observed change was due to the seeding." Texas also has a weather modification program - does your state? Nebraska has a weather modification 'injury' law!
The European Union requested an investigation of HAARP to establish "its legal, ecological and ethical implications before any further research and testing." The United States has repeatedly refused such an investigation on the grounds of 'national security.'
The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program, or HAARP, is a scientific endeavor aimed at studying the properties and behavior of the ionosphere. Operation of the research facility was transferred from the United States Air Force to the University of Alaska Fairbanks on Aug. 11, 2015, allowing HAARP to continue with exploration of ionospheric phenomenology via a land-use cooperative research and development agreement. The USAF claimed this facility was closed in 2015.
Don't believe they are controlling the weather?
Watch this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2O-DVgcvWQ (posted May of 2014) from about 3:00 to 3:20 of the video Dr. Walker admits the HAARP devices were designed to control the ionosphere and they have moved on to others ways of controlling it!
With that in mind, here are the extreme weather patterns in North America, primarily the US, since 1896.
There is plenty of information on Youtube look for HAARP, Ionospheric Heaters, or air force controls the weather! It's not a conspiracy theory - they have admitted they are 'experimenting' with Earth!
They can create earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and devastating weather!
1) Mu Radar – 1 megawatt facility in Japan (34°51'14.80"N 136° 6'19.45"E).
2) Arecibo Observatory – 2 megawatt facility in Puerto Rico (18°20'38.97"N 66°45'9.77"W).
3) HIPAS – 70 megawatt facility east of Fairbanks, Alaska (64°52'21.18"N 146°50'18.78"W).
4) Sura – 190 megawatt facility in central Russia (56° 7'10.32"N 46° 2'4.41"E).
(you can copy and paste the coordinates into google maps)
1896 Eastern North America heat wave killed 1,500 people in August 1896.
1901 eastern United States heat wave killed 9,500 in the eastern United States.
1936 – The 1936 North American heat wave during the Dust Bowl, followed one of the coldest winters on record—the 1936 North American cold wave. Massive heat waves across North America were persistent in the 1930s, many mid-Atlantic/Ohio valley states recorded their highest temperatures during July 1934. The longest continuous string of 100 °F (38 °C) or higher temperatures was reached for 101 days in Yuma, Arizona during 1937 and the highest temperatures ever reached in Canada were recorded in two locations in Saskatchewan in July 1937.
1950s – A prolonged severe drought and heat wave occurred in the early 1950s throughout the central and southern United States. In some areas it was drier than during the Dust Bowl and the heat wave in most areas was within the top five on record. The heat was particularly severe in 1954 with 22 days of temperatures exceeding 100 °F (38 °C) covering significant parts of eleven states. On 14 July, the thermometer reached 117 °F (47 °C) at East St. Louis, Illinois, which remains the record highest temperature for that state.
1972 – The heat waves of 1972 in New York and Northeastern United States were significant. Almost 900 people perished; the heat conditions lasted almost 16 days, aggravated by very high humidity levels.
1980 – An estimated 1,000 people perished in the 1980 United States heat wave and drought, which impacted the central and eastern United States. Temperatures were highest in the southern plains. From June through September, temperatures remained above 90 °F (32 °C) all but two days in Kansas City, Missouri. The Dallas/Fort Worth area experienced 42 consecutive days with high temperatures above 100 °F (38 °C), with temperatures reaching 117 °F (47 °C) at Wichita Falls, Texas on 28 June. Economic losses were $20 billion (1980 dollars)
1983 – During the Summer of 1983 temperatures over 100 °F (38 °C) were common across Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio, Minnesota, Nebraska, and certain parts of Kentucky; the summer of 1983 remains one of the hottest summers ever recorded in many of the states affected. The hundred-degree readings were accompanied by very dry conditions associated with drought affecting the Corn Belt States and Upper Midwest. The heat also affected the Southeastern U.S. and the Mid-Atlantic states as well that same summer. New York Times represented articles about the heat waves of 1983 affecting the central United States. This heat wave was associated with the I-94 derecho.
1988 - intense heat spells in combination with the drought of 1988, reminiscent of the dust bowl years caused deadly results across the United States. Some 5,000 to 10,000 people perished because of constant heat across the United States although-according to many estimates-total death reports run as high as next to 17,000 deaths.
1995 – The 1995 Chicago heat wave produced record high dew point levels and heat indices in the Chicago area and Wisconsin. The lack of emergency cooling facilities and inadequate response from civic authorities to the senior population, particularly in lower income neighborhoods in Chicago and other Midwestern cities, lead to many hundreds of deaths. A series of damaging derechos occurred on the periphery of the hot air dome.
1999 – a heat wave and drought in the eastern United States during the summer of 1999. Rainfall shortages resulted in worst drought on record for Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, and Rhode Island. The state of West Virginia was declared a disaster area. 3,810,000 acres (15,400 km2) were consumed by fire as of mid-August. Record heat throughout the country resulted in 502 deaths nationwide. There were many deaths in urban centers of the Midwest.
2000 – in late Summer 2000, a heat wave occurred in the southern United States, breaking many cities' all-time maximum temperature records.
2001 In early August an intense heatwave hit the eastern seaboard of the United States and neighboring southeastern Canada. For over a week, temperatures climbed above 35 °C (95 °F) combined with stifling high humidity. Newark, New Jersey tied its all-time record high temperature of 41 °C (106 °F) with a heat index of over 50 °C (122 °F).[10]
2002 April a summer-like heat wave in spring affected much of the Eastern United States.
2006 A North American heat wave affected a wide area of the United States and parts of neighboring Canada during July and August 2006. Over 220 deaths were reported. Temperatures in some parts of South Dakota exceeded 115 °F (46 °C). Also, California experienced temperatures that were extraordinarily high, with records ranging from 100 to 130 °F (38 to 54 °C). On 22 July, the County of Los Angeles recorded its highest temperature ever at 119 °F (48 °C). Humidity levels in California were also unusually high, although low compared with normal gulf coast/eastern seaboard summer humidity they were significant enough to cause widespread discomfort.[12] Additionally, the heat wave was associated a series of derechos that produced widespread damage.
2008 - The eastern United States experienced an early Summer heat wave from 6–10 June 2008 with record temperatures. There was a heat wave in Southern California beginning late June,[17] which contributed to widespread fires. On 6 July, a renewed heat wave was forecast, which was expected to affect the entire state.
2010 From 4 to 9 July, the majority of the American East Coast, from the Carolinas to Maine, was gripped in a severe heat wave. Philadelphia, New York, Baltimore, Washington, Raleigh, and even Boston eclipsed 100 °F (38 °C). Many records were broken, some of which dated back to the 19th century, including Wilmington, Delaware's temperature of 103 °F (39 °C) on Wednesday, 7 July, which broke the record of 97 °F (36 °C) from 1897. Philadelphia and New York eclipsed 100 °F (38 °C) for the first time since 2001. Frederick, Maryland, and Newark, New Jersey, among others topped the century mark (37.8 Celsius) for four days in a row.
2011 The North American heat wave brought record heat to the Midwestern United States, Eastern Canada, and much of the Eastern Seaboard.
2012 In March, one of the greatest heat waves was observed in many regions of North America. First very warm air pushed northward west of the Great Lakes region, and subsequently spread eastward. This air mass movement was propelled by an unusually intense low level southerly jet that stretched from Louisiana to western Wisconsin. Once this warm surge inundated the area, a remarkably prolonged period of record setting temperatures ensued.[31] NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) reported that over 7000 daily record high temperatures were broken over the U.S. from 1 March thru 27 March.[31] In some places the temperature exceeded 30 °C (86 °F) with anomalies up to +22 °C. Temperature records across much of southern Canada were also demolished.
2012 In late June, much of North America began experiencing a heat wave, as heat spread east from the Rocky Mountains. During the heat wave, the June 2012 North American derecho (one within a series) caused violent storms that downed trees and power lines, leaving 3 million people in the eastern U. S. without power on 30 June. The heat lasted until Mid-August in some parts of the country.
2013 In late June, an intense heat wave struck the Southwestern United States. Various places in Southern California reached up to 122 °F (50 °C).[38] On 30 June, Death Valley, California hit 129.2 °F (54.0 °C) which is the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth during the month of June. It was five degrees shy of the world record highest temperature measured in Death Valley, which was 134 °F (57 °C), recorded in July 1913.
2013 Around Canada Day, the same heatwave that hit the Southwestern United States moved north and hit southern British Columbia, Washington and Oregon. Temperatures in BC hit 40 °C (104 °F) in Lytton on 1 July 2013, and on 2 July 2013, the city of Penticton hit 38 °C (100 °F), with both Summerland and Osoyoos hitting the same. The Tri-Cities in Washington were among the hottest, with temperatures around 110 °F (43 °C)
2015 Between June 28 – July 3, in The Northwest United States, and southern British Columbia, a heat wave
2016 During June, record heat appeared in Arizona, southern Nevada, and southern California. Burbank, California reached 111 °F, Phoenix, Arizona reached 118 °F, Yuma, Arizona reached 120 °F and Tucson, Arizona reached 115 °F, its warmest temperature in more than 20 years, on June 19. Riverside, California reached 114 °F, Palm Springs, California reached 122 °F, Las Vegas, Nevada reached 115 °F, Death Valley reached 126 °F, Needles, California tied its all-time record high of 125 °F while Blythe, California set a new all-time record high of 124 °F on June 20
2017 In June, the North American heat wave grounded more than 40 airline flights of small aircraft, with American Airlines reducing sales on certain flights to prevent the vehicles from being over the maximum weight permitted for safe takeoff[56] and Las Vegas tying its record high at 117 degrees Fahrenheit.
2017 In September a heat wave affected a large portion of the Eastern United States; it is notable for producing unusually hot temperatures the latest in a calendar year in places. The heat wave also affected parts of Eastern Canada.
Do you still believe these are 'normal' weather patterns?
US Patent #0462795 on July 16, 1891 – Method Of Producing Rain-Fall to US Patent #8373962 on February 12, 2013 – Charged seed cloud as a method for increasing particle collisions and for scavenging airborne biological agents and other contaminants
(1) Ionospheric Modification Theory; G. Meltz and F. W. Perkins;
(2) The Platteville High Power Facility; Carrol et al.;
(3) Arecibo Heating Experiments; W. E. Gordon and H. C. Carlson, Jr.; and
(4) Ionospheric Heating by Powerful Radio Waves; Meltz et al.,
all published in Radio Science, Vol. 9, No. 11, November, 1974, at pages 885-888; 889-894; 1041-1047; and 1049-1063, respectively, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
In such experiments, certain regions of the ionosphere are heated to change the electron density and temperature within these regions.
I find it interesting reading through these notable blizzards most focus on the eastern states and little is said about the tragedies that happen in the mid-west! I had to do some deep digging to find blizzards that crippled the central states, or western states as some call them. Almost all snow fall records can be found at the NOAA. According to weather.gov
FREQUENCY OF HEAVY SNOWFALLS
Snowfalls of 16 inches or more...............once in 15 years
Snowfalls of 13-15 inches or more............once in 5 years
Snowfalls of 8-12 inches or more.............once every two years
Snowfalls of 5 inches or more................twice a year
I have included this only as a reference to the deceit of NOAA and Weather.gov! Do some research the truth is out there, it is up to you to find it! The Air Force IS controlling the weather, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions!
The Buffalo Hunters Storm 1872
The first documented Plains blizzard in which large numbers of people lost their lives was the January 1872 Buffalo Hunters' Storm, which swept up so quickly that unprepared buffalo hunters, many just arrived from the East, were found dead from the Platte River of Nebraska to the Texas Panhandle.
The Easter Storm of April 1873
The deaths of not only ranchers and thousands of cattle in the open country of the Central Plains but also a boy in Central City, Nebraska, who died trying to reach a print shop one block away.
In the Great Blizzard of 1886
100 people and 100,000 cattle died in western Kansas during a series of storms that struck less than a week apart. In southwestern Kansas, a man froze to death in a light linen overcoat with a flyer in his pocket advertising Kansas as the Italy of America. A young woman in Clark County, Kansas, became separated from her family on a half-mile journey and died within an arm's length of the door of her brother's house, her hands tangled in her hair.
The Great Blizzard of 1888
More than 400 people in the Northeast died during the Great Blizzard, the worst death toll in United States history for a winter storm. On March 11 and March 12 in 1888, this devastating nor'easter dumped 40 to 50 inches (100 to 127 cm) of snow in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York. Huge snowdrifts buried houses and trains, and 200 ships sank in waves whipped up by fierce winds. In March 1888, the United States was hit by an unprecedented blizzard, dumping as much as 40-50 inches of snow in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The Children's Blizzard - 1888
The Children's Blizzard earned its tragic name because of its timing. On Jan. 12, 1888, temperatures dropped from a relatively balmy few degrees above freezing to a wind chill of minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 40 degrees Celsius) in the Dakota Territory and Nebraska. Because of the warm day, thousands were caught unprepared for cold weather, including school children sent home by their teachers during the storm. The death toll was 235.
The Great Blizzard of 1899
From Georgia to Maine, a punishing storm shut down the Eastern Seaboard beginning Feb. 11, 1899. The wintry weather brought record-low temperatures, some of which still stand today, as well as record snowfall. The snow showers started in Florida and moved north, dropping 20 inches (50 centimeters) in Washington, D.C., in a single day and a record 34 inches (86 cm) in New Jersey.
The White Hurricane - 1913
A blizzard with hurricane-force winds, this devastating storm is the deadliest natural disaster to ever hit the Great Lakes region. More than 250 people died when the winter whopper, called a November gale, struck the Great Lakes on Nov. 7, 1913. Waves on the lakes reached 35 feet high (10 meters) and the storm's sustained wind speed reached 60 mph (96 km/h) for more than half a day.
The Knickerbocker Storm - 1922
Winter 1935 (December 1935 – February 1936) Temperature,
in degrees Fahrenheit. Record warmest and coldest is
based on a 112-year period of records, 1895–2006.
This blizzard gained notoriety for its heavy, wet snows, which collapsed the roof at one of the most popular venues in Washington, D.C. The storm takes its name from the cave-in at the Knickerbocker Theater, which killed 98 people and injured 133. As much as 3 feet (90 cm) of snow fell in the Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania during the blizzard, which hit Jan. 27 and Jan. 28 in 1922. An official snow depth was recorded between 28 and 33 inches.
In Banner County, as reported from the HARRISBURG 12WNW weather station on 1925-12-14 a record 30.0" fell in one day.
The Armistice Day Blizzard - 1940
An exploding bomb (weather lingo for a large pressure drop) went off over the Midwest on Nov. 11, 1940, as cold Northern air collided with warm Gulf Coast moisture. The raging blizzard quickly chilled the air, and fierce winds built 20-foot (6 m) snowdrifts. A total of 145 deaths were linked to the storm, including about 25 duck hunters who were not prepared for the cold weather forecasters had not predicted the severity of the coming storm. The storm winds reached the velocity of 60 miles an hour and even the telegraph and telephone lines went down.
Plains Blizzard of 1948-49
In a series of storms that ravaged Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, the Dakotas, and Nebraska starting in November 1948 with the snows ending around April 1, 1949. The estimated loses were nearly $190,000,000! A mere 76 lives lost were attributed to fighting the blizzards, in storm-related accidents, and by freezing. There is no information on the actual death toll, many perished from lack of shelter that were never added to the death count. Many bodies were not found until the snow melted, months later. An estimated 119,000 cattle and 134,000 sheep were lost, with millions endangered by the deep snow. There had been eighteen storms in twenty seven days dropping more than 40 inches of snow over these western states, including the Mojave desert.
The Great Appalachian Storm - 1950
A winter storm marked by heavy rains, winds and blizzard conditions, the Great Appalachian Storm formed over North Carolina before looping around Ohio, devastating much of the Southeast along the way. The Nov. 24, 1950, storm, responsible for 353 deaths, became a case study for tracking and predicting winter weather.
Chicago Blizzard of 1967
On January 26, the blizzard occurred in northeast Illinois and northwest Indiana, dumping 23 inches of snow. The snowstorm created havoc, leaving around 800 Chicago Transit Authority buses and 50,000 automobiles abandoned on the city streets and expressways.
The Super Bowl Blizzard - 1975
The Super Bowl Blizzard takes the trophy for most unusual: A record low-pressure system (961 millibars), it sparked tornadoes in the Southeast before heading into the upper Midwest, where heavy snows and cold killed more than 100,000 farm animals. Unlike many winter storms, which sweep in from Canada, the Super Bowl Blizzard started in the Pacific and crossed the Rocky Mountains. As it headed over the Plains on Jan. 9, 1975, the first of 45 tornadoes spun up. The two-day outbreak killed 12 people and injured 377. In the Midwest, the front mixed with Arctic air from the north and warm Gulf of Mexico moisture, the classic ingredients for a winter blizzard. Heavy snows and winds killed 58 people.
The Great Storm of 1975
This intense blizzard occurred January 9-12. The storm created 45 tornadoes, dropped over two feet of snow and killed more than 60 people. The storm resulted in more than $63 million of property damage: $43 million from the tornadoes and $20 million from the snow.
The Storm of the Century - 1993
Can a storm be a both blizzard and a cyclone? Yes, and it's nasty. The Storm of the Century wreaked havoc from Cuba to Canada. As strong as a hurricane, covering an entire continent, the storm was responsible for 310 deaths, $6.6 billion in damage, and shut down the South for three days. Coming a week before spring, on March 12, 1993, the hit was hard to take. However, the Storm of the Century marked the first successful five-day forecast by the National Weather Service of a storm's severity, and a State of Emergency was declared in some regions before snow even started falling. Thousands of areas were left without power, property damage was extensive, and airports from Nova Scotia to Georgia were shut down during the storm.
The Blizzard of 1996
From January 6 to 8, one of the most devastating snowstorms struck the U.S. East Coast and caused more than 150 deaths. The blizzard and flooding caused an estimated 4.5 billion of property damages. President's Day Blizzard of 2003
This blizzard lasted from February 14 to February 19 and shut down cities from Washington DC to Boston and caused $20 million in damage. Cities from Washington DC to Boston were blanketed with 15 to 30 inches of snow.
The Dalton weather station in Cheyenne County on 2006-12-21 reported 27.0" of snow fall in 24 hours.
Snowmadgeddon - 2010
Two blizzards in February 2010 broke snowfall records in the mid-Atlantic region. After the second snowstorm in February, 68.1 percent of the country was blanketed by snow. The term "snowmadgeddon," around since 2009, stuck when President Barack Obama used it at the Democratic National Committee's winter meeting during the storm.
His first reporting job was with the Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star. He also worked at the Richmond Times-Dispatch, The Washington Post, The New York Times and Time
In November 2013, The Washington Post wrote a lengthy article detailing a payola scandal in which Allen would give favorable Politico coverage in return for advertising dollars.
As of 2017, a weekly sponsorship of Playbook costs between $50,000 and $60,000
In November 2015, Allen made an apology after the website Gawker reported that he offered to let Chelsea Clinton screen interview questions in advance of a proposed interview. The offer was made in a January 2013 email exchange between Allen and Hillary Clinton's aide Philippe Reines. He also promised in the email that the interview would be "no surprises" and "no risk.
Definite liberal socialist democrat views!!
The following should give you enough information to do your own research and draw your own conclusions! Journalists and Editors:
Daniel Lippman
Anna Palmer
Jake Sherman
Susan Glasser
Garrett Graff
Stephen Heuser
These statements are made by wikipedia. Don't believe anything until YOU have researched it enough to make an informed decision.
Despite these accusations, a 2012 study found that the percentage of Politico readers that identify as Democrats – 29% – is the same as the percentage that identifies as Republicans. Who are the other 42% of readers?
In September 2014, Politico formed a joint venture with German publisher Axel Springer SE.
The attendance of anti-Trump Senator Lindsey Graham is an obvious sign that Bilderberg will be scheming on how to prevent Trump from defeating Bilderberg's chosen candidate – Hillary Clinton.
In November 2016, Politico editor Michael Hirsh resigned after publishing the home address of white supremacist Richard B. Spencer on Facebook.
Among the journalists who have worked for Politico are Mike Allen, John Bresnahan, Carrie Budoff Brown, Alex Burns, Dylan Byers, Josh Gerstein, Andrew Glass, Susan Glasser, Darren Goode, Maggie Haberman, James Hohmann, Anna Palmer, Manu Raju, Daria Knight, Lois Romano, Darren Samuelsohn, Jack Shafer, Jake Sherman, Ben Smith, Eli Stokols, Glenn Thrush, Kenneth Vogel, and Ben White.
I personally have been able to debunk many articles from politico! To say I find it concerning that many politicians quote politico as though it is based on FACTS when clearly it is NOT is a huge understatement!
The irony is that it was mainstream outlets that have had their predictions proven chronically wrong for the last 18 months—not us, American Resistance, or Breitbart—and no site has been more guilty than Politico. The preferred source of political news for Beltway operatives, for this entire cycle, Politico was not only wrong about most everything, it also did everything possible to denigrate Donald Trump, who they constantly assured us, could never win anyway.