.

Does Barack Obama need the Democratic Party to be president?  

McCain pressed to take top conservative as running mate

Conservatives are quietly pressing Sen. John McCain to go with a dyed-in-the-wool conservative for his running mate. Full Text, Subscribers


Hillary retains ties with senior aide implicated in Filegate

Sen. Hillary Clinton continues to work with a senior aide implicated in the theft of private FBI files of prominent Republicans. A federal judge singled out Cheryl Mills as "loathsome" in connection with the wrongful access by the Clinton White House of the files of members of the Reagan and the first Bush administrations. Full Text, Subscribers

Despite persecution of Christians, Bush courts
N. Korea

The Bush administration wants to launch reconciliation with North Korea amid that communist country's crackdown on Christians. Full Text, Subscribers


Federal air security agency accused of being lax

A major federal agency charged with protecting air passengers continuously loses items that can be used by terrorists. Full Text, Subscribers


Obama quietly buys support of superdelegates

Sen. Barack Obama is attempting to overcome Hillary Clinton's lead in superdelegates by using his financial advantage: he is donating money to the campaigns of superdelegates. Full Text, Subscribers



SCARBOROUGH:
Spy thriller on Middle East
offers unique insights

Charles Sutherland and Jonathan Slevin have delivered both a reference book on the Middle East and an international thriller in their novel "Clash of The Gods."



ALLEN:
Pass Colombia Free Trade Agreement now
The U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement (CFTA) will benefit the people of both America and Colombia and must be passed by Congress without political posturing.

LONDON:
Carter's misguided peace gambit
Could there possibly be a more naive person on the globe than former president Jimmy Carter?

STEYN:
God and guns underline American freedom
Our lesson today comes from the songwriter Frank Loesser: "Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition."

ADVERTISEMENT
Cancer treatments banned by U.S. government

Baltimore, MD-- As unbelievable as it seems, the key to stopping many cancers has been around for over 30 years. Yet it has been banned. Blocked. And kept out of your medicine cabinet by the very agency designed to protect your health—the FDA.  

In 1966, the senior oncologist at a prominent New York hospital rocked the medical world when he developed a serum that "shrank cancer tumors in 45 minutes!" Headlines hit every major paper around the world. Scientists and researchers applauded. Time and again this life saving treatment worked miracles, but the FDA ignored the research and shut him down.  

You read that right! That was over 39 years ago. How many other treatments have they been allowed to hide?  

Click here to learn more







Copyright © 2008 News World Communications
Console Login
Privacy Policy