A year after the collapse of the World Trade Center on September 11, scientists and physicians in New York City are still trying to figure out what tens of thousands of people inhaled that day. Christie Whitman, head of the Environmental Protection Agency, says there is nothing to worry about, but New York politicians Jerrold Nadler, Hillary Clinton and Chuck Schumer don’t agree.
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According to new research, the Kyoto Protocol to halt climate change, which the U.S. refuses to sign, won’t work because it’s based on a scientific fallacy. The protocol allows countries to meet their targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions over the next decade by planting forests to soak up carbon dioxide. But the soil in these new forests will actually release more carbon than the trees absorb in the first 10 years. “Countries will be able to claim carbon credits for the forests. But that won’t reflect what is happening in the atmosphere,” says Riccardo Valentini of CarboEurope.
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Fox News in New York aired video of a UFO that was accidentally taped by a camcorder near Albany Airport. The cameraman thought it was hundreds of feet long, and it appeared to be very slender, needle-shaped, with missile-like fins fore and aft. It moved extremely rapidly from right to left above the clouds. According to the photographer, the original videotape was requested for study by the FBI. The object bears a striking resemblance to a “rod” such as the ones extensively researched and photographed by Jose Escamilla. To explore this comparison, go to Roswellrods.com.

Does our government really know that UFOs are here? Richard Dolan says they definitely do and proves it in “UFOs and the National Security State,” click here.
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Human rights group Amnesty International wants to know the contents of the gas used to end the Moscow theatre siege. Dr. Andrei Seltsovsky describes it as a general anaesthetic. He hasn’t named it, and referred to it in a press conference only as "the substance." Vil Mirzayanov, a former Soviet chemical weapons expert, says the gas is a derivative of BZ, a chemical weapon manufactured by both the Russians and U.S. during the Cold War. It causes disorientation and hallucinations and was tested by on U.S. soldiers in the 1960s.
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