Jim Marrs asks the question, given that the UFOs that disrupted the electronics on the Minuteman missiles in North Dakota did so by using electromagnetic pulses, and the human brain is sensitive to such pulses, could they also do things that affect our minds? This provocative question begins his interview with Robert Salas, which evolves into a powerful discussion of the motives of the operators of the UFOs, and those of our government in keeping their presence here secret. Robert also tells a frightening story of an attempt by the Air Force to get him to discuss the matter with a psychiatrist, which he feels would have led to his being labeled as unreliable.read more

One of the world?s leading experts on bankruptcy and economic upheaval, who has recently testified before the House Ways and Means Committee on the bailout, shares his thoughts about the economy and what is wrong with it with Unknowncountry.com subscribers.

Jay Westbrook is the Benno C. Schmidt Professor of Law at the University of Texas and the author of ?The Fragile Middle Class? about Americans and Debt, and ?As We Forgive Our Debtors,? about bankruptcy law. Professor Westbrook offers sharp insights into our present economic dilemma, and innovative ideas about what we need to do to fix this crisis.
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Behind closed doors, many of us are seeing the value of our investments and retirement plans wrecked. We are seeing our jobs become insecure or losing our jobs. Many of us are losing our homes. And ALL of us are stressed! There have even been some suicides, as people discover that the new bankruptcy laws, created by the same banks that are now failing us and pushed through congress by the awful Tom DeLay, make starting fresh all but impossible.

This offering from the Menninger clinic provides some excellent and down-to-earth advice about how to bear this stress.
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Smoking and drinking?they go together and they’re both worse for women.

When it comes to alcohol, the dividing line between a little and a lot depends on many things, including sex. Women are more vulnerable than men to alcohol?s long-term effects. Exposure to smoke more quickly leads to cancer in women as well.

Women break down alcohol more slowly than men do. If a woman and a man drink identical glasses of wine with the same meal, she will have a higher blood level of alcohol, and for a longer time. This means her tissues are exposed to more alcohol per drink than a man’s.
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