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  • Dunedin’s Hawksford Appoints New CEO

    Hawksford, an independent trust company which is backed by UK mid-market private equity firm Dunedin, has appointed Maxine Rawlins, a partner at Ernst & Young, to the position of chief executive from 2014 when the incumbent chief executive, Peter Murley, retires. A partner at Ernst & Young in Jersey, Rawlins currently leads the Channel Islands Tax Practice and is Head of EMEIA Asset Management Tax.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Hawksford, the leading independent trust company which is backed by UK mid market private equity firm Dunedin, today announced that Maxine Rawlins, a partner at Ernst & Young, will take on the role of chief executive, in 2014, when the incumbent chief executive, Peter Murley, retires.

    A partner at Ernst & Young in Jersey, Maxine currently leads the Channel Islands Tax Practice and is Head of EMEIA Asset Management Tax. Prior to this, she was chief executive of Maples Finance, an international trust business headquartered in the Cayman Islands. During this time she drove the significant growth of the business, including expansion into six new jurisdictions. Maxine was also director of business development and in-house legal counsel at Close Brothers. Maxine is a qualified barrister and Cayman registered attorney.

    The current chief executive, Peter MurIey, who has held his role at Hawksford since March 2010 commented: “The Board and I would like to take this opportunity to formally welcome Maxine to Hawksford. Maxine has enormous experience in our market and is a highly respected and popular leader who will make a very significant contribution to the future of this business.

    “I have made the personal decision to retire from my CEO role in 2014 after four years at Hawksford, during which the business has undergone substantial expansion with the support of our investor Dunedin and Chairman Philip Taylor.

    “My focus is now on ensuring a seamless transition for our clients and staff.”

    Earlier this year, Hawksford acquired Key Trust Company Ltd, its fourth acquisition since it was backed by Dunedin in October 2008.

    In the last two years, the business has completed the acquisitions of Trustcorp Jersey Limited, L-S&S GmbH, a Swiss private wealth law firm and the employee solutions business of Standard Bank Dubai.

    David Williams, partner at Dunedin, who sits on Hawksford’s board, commented: “We would like to join Peter and the Board in welcoming Maxine to Hawksford. She is highly experienced in her field and has successfully led businesses through periods of growth and expansion, which will be very relevant at Hawksford. Our focus remains on increasing client choice by driving international growth through a proactive buy and build strategy, and we look forward to working alongside Maxine

    The post Dunedin’s Hawksford Appoints New CEO appeared first on peHUB.

  • Sleep Tracking Startup Zeo Says Goodnight

    zeo

    One of the early pioneers in the Quantified Self movement has quietly gone out of business. Zeo, a leading maker of hardware and software used by consumers to track sleep and improve their health, has not been operating since the end of last year. A trustee has nearly completed the sale of all company assets. Zeo has been very quiet about the news up until now. In fact, Zeo’s website is still up and doesn’t mention the news.

    Zeo was founded by three students at Brown University who had a passion for using the science of sleep and technology to improve people’s lives. The company introduced its first product, the Zeo Personal Sleep Coach, in June 2009.

    The following week, the first article mentioning the term “Quantified Self” was published in Wired magazine. While the article didn’t mention Zeo, it did claim “a new culture of personal data was taking shape.” And that every facet of life from sleep to mood to pain was becoming trackable. “Even sleep – a challenge to self-track, obviously, since you’re unconscious – is yielding to the skill of the widget maker.”

    In 2011, the widget maker Zeo introduced a mobile version to its Sleep Manager product line. By wearing a special headband, with sensors to measure electrical current, the Zeo could track different phases of sleep, such as Light, Deep and REM sleep, in addition to awake time. This data was then sent to an iPhone, iPod, or Android phone, and could be automatically uploaded to a personal and private online sleep database. This data along with some analytical tools could then be used to help improve your sleep and health.

    What Went Wrong

    Former CEO, Dave Dickinson, who lead the company for the past 5 years, tells TechCrunch the problem was not the brand or the product. In fact, the company was growing before it shut down.

    Dickinson says the problem was the business model. “The business model is more important than the brand. Consumer health devices are a very capital-intensive business. You have to find enough money to address the consumer, funds to address the physicians, and also the retailers, and that’s up and above the device business having to fund inventory.”

    Zeo had two business model options on the revenue side. Become a SAAS-like business with subscriptions and recurring revenue or make enough money from a customer who bought just one unit. But that was very difficult when the company started pricing its mobile product at $99, with ‘sub-optimal’ profit margins.

    The Newton, Massachusetts-based company had raised more than $30 million over eight years. Dickinson says raising capital was not the problem.

    Sleep Tracking As A Commodity

    Another problem for Zeo was that sleep tracking became a commodity. Devices like the FitBit, lark, and Jawbone Up use an accelerometer to determine sleep and awake cycles, using wrist actigraphy. These products brand their products as sleep trackers just like Zeo.

    Dickinson says Zeo had peer-reviewed scientific studies, including one published in the Journal of Sleep Research, showing his technology was 7/8th as accurate as data from the a sleep lab, considered to be the gold standard for measuring sleep. The study also says data from wrist actigraphy to measure tiny motions in devices are much less accurate. But that didn’t seem to matter for enough consumers.

    The Competition

    Dickinson says he admires what the Fitbit and others like it have done. Those devices are not limited to one health issue like sleep, which was another problem for Zeo. Those other products work for different health and wellness areas, such as the well established desire to lose weight and become physically fit. Consumers already spend billions of dollars to achieve those goals. And they are already educated and motivated to improve their weight and fitness.

    Part of Zeo’s business model required it to educate the consumer on the importance of sleep and how sleep awareness and data can improve your health. Arianna Huffington, Editor-in-Chief of the Huffington Post, our AOL sister site, has been a crusader on the importance of sleep to your health. But according to Dickinson, “sleep is still lagging behind as important to your wellness. So in that respect, Zeo was early in terms of its mission.”

    The Product

    I used the device for several months last year and thought it was amazing. While wearing the headband took some getting used to, for me and my wife, the data it revealed was eye-popping. In addition to learning that I wasn’t getting enough sleep, which I knew already, I learned about the different types of sleep I was getting.

    Most nights, I would get a half hour to an hour of “Deep Sleep” (dark green in the chart below) after going to bed. This is the phase of sleep the helps you feel restored and refreshed.

    I would also see several periods of REM sleep, important for overall mental health, mood, and the ability to retain knowledge. The bulk of my time asleep, like most people, was spent in “Light Sleep,” which is better than not sleeping but doesn’t do as much for my health as Deep or REM sleep.

    I was able to see graphics like this on my iPhone in the morning.

    Here’s a good night with a sleep score of 90 out of 100 and more than 8 hours of sleep.

    And here’s a bad night, with a score of 47 with just 4 and a half hours of total sleep.

    If I woke up in the morning during REM sleep, it was hard to get out of bed. If I didn’t get enough Deep Sleep, I didn’t feel I had a good night sleep.

    Zeo claimed the real value of the program was I could get personalized online sleep coaching. But this required logging in to the website and entering more information about my sleep and other variables I wanted to track. If I could have entered the data right on my iPhone, I would have likely used it more. Since it required logging in on the website, it proved too much friction for me.

    I also stopped wearing the headband after a while because it does feel a bit awkward. The former CEO says the company was aware the device was too invasive for some customers.

    But if a less invasive sensor was made and it was easier to enter custom data and get actionable information, I would have used it every night.

    What’s Next

    Dickinson can’t comment on exactly what’s next for Zeo, after all the assets are sold. But he is hopeful that there may be an opportunity for the company to re-emerge in the future.

    An article appeared in the MobiHealthNews in March, that reported the Better Business Bureau had listed Zeo as being “out of business” but with no official announcement by the company, the news hasn’t been widely known.

    It is still possible to log-in to Zeo’s “My Sleep” site that contains your sleep data. An article on the Quantified Self website today tells users how they can download their data in case the site goes offline.

    As word about Zeo’s status has spread, Dickinson says they have received tremendous support and inquires from all over the world from disappointed customers and sleep researchers who had planned to use the units for the research.

    He wrote a post on the MobiHealthNews site last week that included some additional lessons learned. He concluded by writing “motivating behavioral change through data visualization can be very powerful, but it is more of an art than a science. We will need far more artists, user interface experts and psychologists to help make our data work harder to motivate better health.”

  • Dropbox picks up single sign-on — business users drop passwords

    As cloud-based storage gains traction vs. physical storage, there have been many big-name providers popping up, such as Google Drive and Amazon Cloud. However, Dropbox continues to be an extremely popular option for both personal and business users alike.

    While already popular for business use, the company announced on April 10, 2013, that it was working on single sign-on for business users.  This would enable Dropbox to better integrate with the corporate world — a huge step towards broader corporate adoption and acceptance.

    Surprisingly, on May 21, 2013 (only about a month after announcing that it was being worked on), Dropbox released the single sign-on option.

    But What exactly is Single Sign-on?

    Single sign-on enables business users to access Dropbox based on their centralized corporate login without needing to login to Dropbox separately. In a corporate setting, this is a huge win for both the user and the admin.

    It is a win for the user as it is one less password for them to remember. It is a win for the admin, as they will have less lost and forgotten password issues to resolve. More importantly, these wins translate to productivity and cost savings for the company.

    Convenience and economics aside, single sign-on also provides increased security. Dropbox single sign-on will work seamlessly with existing password policies such as frequency of password changes and password requirements. It will also allow admins to easily add and restrict access to users.

    So what are you waiting for administrators? It’s available now — start making your user’s lives easier and impress your boss in the process.

    Photo Credit: Sergej Khakimullin/Shutterstock

  • Want a better rating? Dig for oil

    Middle East countries which are energy exporters have better investment ratings than  oil importers in the region, Fitch says, and that gap is widening.

    Paul Gamble, director in the sovereigns group at Fitch, told a briefing this week that the ratings gap has never been bigger and that:

    If you look at the outlooks, it has the potential to widen further.

    The energy exporters – Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Ras Al-Khaimah – all are rated investment grade by Fitch. Saudi Arabi’s rating has a positive outlook while the others have at least a stable outlook.  Of the energy importers, meanwhile, two are on negative outlook – Egypt and Tunisia – while Morocco, Israel and Lebanon are stable. Only Israel and Morocco are investment grade.

    Many of these countries may be too dependent on their energy sectors. But most energy exporters have based their budget calculations on a low price for oil, giving them room for manoeuvre if oil prices do fall, Gamble says:

    The buffers are huge …budgets (are) based on unrealistically low oil prices

    So despite a huge social spending boost following the Arab Spring uprisings, most Gulf oil powers can still boast healthy surpluses – the Saudi surplus this year is estimated at over 7 percent while Kuwait’s will be a whopping 20 percent for the financial year that started in April, analysts polled by Reuters predict.

    Bahrain has been more optimistic on the oil price, however, with a budget based on oil at $120 a barrel, Gamble said – oil is currently trading around $104.

    Fitch is due to review Bahrain in the next couple of months, after affirming the country’s ratings last July. Gamble pointed out, however, that the country’s BBB rating was already the lowest among its energy-exporting peers.

    Israel started producing gas this year but Gamble said the country would not gain fiscal revenues from production until 2016, while the country is not likely to start exporting before 2017, beyond the rating agency’s forecasting horizon.

     

     

     

  • Wanderful Media Adds $9m Funding to Fuel Growth

    Wanderful Media, an online local discovery shopping company, has secured an additional $9 million in funding from existing investors. This addition brings the company’s total funding to $36 million. Wanderful Media is a Silicon Valley-based company online discovery shopping business.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Wanderful Media™, an online local discovery shopping company, today announced an additional $9 million in funding from existing investors. This addition brings the company’s total funding to $36 million and comes on the heels of the April launch of the completely reimagined Find&Save® , an online community offering a comprehensive collection of local savings.

    Wanderful Media is experiencing rapid growth with its Find&Save product, now available in all 50 of the top 50 designated market areas (DMAs). With Find&Save, Wanderful Media gives retailers a proven way to engage shoppers around local sales and products, with the intent of driving them across the threshold of retail stores. Find&Save provides shoppers a fun way to easily flip through all the latest sales in their area, keep track of what they need, and want, and share their discoveries with other shoppers wherever they are, via tablet, mobile or web.

    “The retail and shopping landscape is evolving and Wanderful Media’s decision to ‘double-down’ on mobile and social has pushed us to the forefront of innovation in this area,” said Ben T. Smith, IV, CEO of Wanderful Media. “The latest round of funding emphasizes the continued enthusiasm from our core group of investors in the market potential and in our overall product strategy.”

    With access to more than 100 million unique visitors per month throughout its network, Wanderful Media represents a media industry initiative to transform the $4 billion business of traditional advertising circulars through digital innovation – just as joint media ventures such as CareerBuilder and Cars.com strengthened the industry’s position through the use of new technology.

    About Wanderful Media
    Wanderful Media is a Silicon Valley company reinventing local online discovery shopping. Providing reach into more than 80 percent of U.S. markets through trusted media brands, Wanderful Media helps retailers bring consumers into local stores and gives consumers the most convenient way to discover local merchandise. Wanderful Media is an independent company financed by a powerful group of media companies that includes Advance Digital, A. H. Belo Corporation, Community Newspaper Holdings Inc., Cox Media Group, The E. W. Scripps Company, Gannett Co. Inc., GateHouse Media Inc., Hearst Corporation, Lee Enterprises, MediaNews Group, The McClatchy Company, and The Washington Post Co. Wanderful Media is headquartered in Los Gatos, Calif.

    # # #

    Useful Links
    Wanderful Media Website
    Wanderful Media on Twitter
    Wanderful Media on Facebook

    Tweet this
    @wanderfulmedia adds another $9M in funding on the heels of its successful @findnsave launch http://bit.ly/UrsZfL

    Contacts:
    Libra White, Wanderful Media, 408-502-2431, [email protected]
    Scott Lechner, Kulesa Faul for Wanderful Media, 650-340-1987, [email protected]

    The post Wanderful Media Adds $9m Funding to Fuel Growth appeared first on peHUB.

  • FF&P Completes Successful Exit for Investors

    Fleming Family & Partners and Garber Hannam & Partners Limited have announced announce a final distribution to the shareholders of FF&P Russia Real Estate Limited. The payment means RREL has now returned over $213 million to shareholders, including international private equity companies and clients of FF&P Asset Management.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Fleming Family & Partners (“FF&P”) and Garber Hannam & Partners Limited (“GHP”) are pleased to announce a final distribution to the shareholders of FF&P Russia Real Estate Limited (“RREL”).

    The payment means RREL has now returned over $213 million to shareholders, including international private equity companies and clients of FF&P Asset Management. UK investors achieved a 2.1x return on their initial investment which sets RREL apart from most other Russian-based commercial real estate vehicles, in terms of returns.

    RREL was launched by FF&P in 2003 as the first institutional fund focused on Russian commercial real estate investments. RREL acquired various commercial real estate assets in Moscow including the Gogolevsky 11 and Lesnaya 3 office centres, and warehouse assets at Sholokhovo and Tomilino. These were sold to international and domestic buyers including Hines Global REIT and Raven Russia plc.

    FF&P sold its Russian business, including the real estate management team which advised RREL, to GHP in 2012.

    Surviving the global financial crisis

    RREL operated successfully throughout the difficult market conditions created by the global financial crisis. Throughout this period, its assets remained fully-leased to a strong international tenant base and held up their value. This meant that, despite the challenges posed by the global credit crunch, the team nevertheless succeeded in securing several refinancing facilities for the assets with international banks.

    Oleg Myshkin, Managing Partner at GHP Real Estate noted that RREL is one of very few vehicles in the Russian property market to have completed the full investment cycle and returned significant profits to its shareholders. He attributed this success to the strong, multi-disciplinary team at GHP which has built significant experience and expertise in institutional management, over the course of advising RREL and its sister company, FF&P Russia Real Estate Development Limited (“RRED”).

    On behalf of FF&P, Richard Hill, co-head of FF&P Advisory, said “We are delighted with the outcome for our clients against the backdrop of an extremely difficult global market over the last few years and the challenges presented by operating in a complex real estate market. This is testament to the expertise, commitment and energy of the real estate team in Moscow combined with the guidance of the company’s experienced board of directors throughout the investment cycle.”

    The story continues
    GHP Real Estate continues to manage RRED, which was launched by FF&P in 2007 with $153 million of capital. RRED has acquired two A-class development projects in St. Petersburg, namely the Electro office centre (www.electrospb.com) and the Trinity mixed use complex (www.trinityspb.com) both of which are fully financed and under construction, as well as a warehouse project in Tomilino, close to Moscow. RRED’s shareholders principally comprise international private equity companies, sovereign wealth funds and clients of FF&P Asset Management.

    For further information, please contact:

    Cubitt Consulting: James Isola +44 (0)207 367 5100 [email protected] (on behalf of Fleming Family & Partners)

    GHP Russia Real Estate Management at +7 495 411 5300 or [email protected].

    Notes to Editors

    Fleming Family & Partners (“FF&P”) is an international wealth manager which advises wealthy individuals and families on how best to grow and maintain their capital, and how to transfer it between generations. The firm offers an institutional level of professional advice and service to individuals, and an investment process designed to manage risk in a way that is appropriate to each individual client’s needs and objectives.

    FF&P Asset Management Limited invests clients’ funds in a range of asset classes, primarily through third party managers, designed to make use of the best abilities available in any given class and allowing clients to benefit from economies of scale. It also offers clients innovative, higher risk opportunities as appropriate. As well as benefiting from FF&P’s core asset management skills, clients also have access to its capabilities in private office and trust services, in private equity funds, in corporate finance advice and in financial planning.

    FF&P was founded in 2000, following the sale of Robert Fleming Holdings to JP Morgan Chase Manhattan. It now manages assets of around £4 billion and beyond the founding Fleming family looks after an additional 50 core, discretionary clients.

    FF&P Asset Management Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority.

    Garber Hannam & Partners Limited (“GHP”) is a financial group which focuses on wealth management, real estate investment, direct investments, M&A and financial advisory. It strives to achieve long-term goals for the benefit of its clients and combines strategic investments and efficient asset management. The Group’s presence in the UK, Russia, Switzerland, Japan, Luxemburg and Guernsey provides a diverse range of investment opportunities for the company and our clients.

    GHP has had a presence in Russia since 1992. In 1998, the company was called Fleming UCB and was affiliated to the international investment bank Robert Fleming & Co. Between 2000 and 2012, the company was a subsidiary of FF&P. In 2008, the company established its asset management business, the assets under the management of which have increased to 20 billion Roubles ($670 million).

    In 2012 the company was sold by FF&P to management and renamed Garber Hannam & Partners Limited.

    The post FF&P Completes Successful Exit for Investors appeared first on peHUB.

  • Blue Coat to acquire Solera and sweeten network-security story as cyberattacks continue

    There’s been lots of investor interest recently in backing startups focused on making IT more secure, at least in part because of the barrage of news of cyberattacks against government agencies and companies, including a defense contractor. Now comes more security investment activity. Blue Coat Systems, a vendor of network gear for security and WAN optimization, is bolstering its hardware and software strategies with the acquisition of Solera Networks.

    Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    Among Solera products is a BlackBox Recorder that, true to its name, records all network activity, which analysts can play back after attacks to see what happened. Solera Deepsee software conducts deep-packet inspection to reveal the nature of applications and associated files in play inside a network. It also brings up timelines of suspicious activity, runs analytics and enables integration with other network tools, such as Palo Alto Networks. Dashboards and other visual features are available. Solera also makes appliances that monitor traffic, storage boxes and a virtual appliance available as a VMware virtual machine.

    The deal follows news earlier this month of Blue Coat’s acquisition of the SSL product line from Netronome. The thinking behind that deal was to offer enterprises more visibility into both inbound and outbound traffic and apply policy across all traffic, according to a Blue Coat statement.

    Also this month, McAfee agreed to pay around $389 million for network-security provider Stonesoft.

    In the midst of the attention on cybersecurity among other enterprise IT hot spots, it’s not surprising to see vendors rushing to bolt on products and services and then pinging potential customers to promise the solution to their problems (and then announcing sales gains). The real indicator people should be on the lookout for, though, is a drop in cyberattacks, and judging by some recent headlines, that might still be a ways off.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Chrome 27 released, now 5 percent faster

    Google has released Chrome 27 for Windows, Mac and Linux. And while the previous build was less than exciting, this one delivers multiple improvements which see the browser’s page display time improve by 5 percent.

    Much of this acceleration is down to smarter scheduling, with Chrome 27 making more intelligent decisions about what it loads, and when. Previously, for instance, the browser might tie up bandwidth downloading a vast number of images in parallel. Now it focuses on visible images, and limits parallel downloads to a maximum of 10, so the details you need should be displayed noticeably faster.

    Another significant enhancement comes from moving Chrome’s resource scheduler into the browser process, which means it has much more knowledge about your system state. In particular, it can spot and take better advantage of network idle time, preloading images just as soon as it has the opportunity.

    Elsewhere, the official release blog post talks about “improved spell correction, and numerous fundamental improvements for Omnibox predictions”. We’ve yet to confirm these in practice, but anything Google can do here will be welcome.

    Developers will appreciate the new chrome.syncFileSystem API, which helps them create apps which can save and synchronize data on Google Drive. (Although as the API notes point out, this is about app-specific syncable storage, not some general API which will access whatever files happen to be on your Google Drive.)

    And of course there’s the usual selection of security fixes, 13 this time. 10 of these, all rated “High”, were “Use-after-free” issues, memory corruption flaws which at their worst may allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code. (Chrome isn’t alone, though — similar issues were uncovered in IE recently, and it seems that the area is a hot topic for security researchers right now.)

    On balance, then, while Chrome 27 may look exactly the same, it has some very welcome changes under the hood. The browser is now available for Windows, Mac and Linux.

  • A new social platform for Microsoft channel partners

    The Microsoft partner network (MPN) is Microsoft’s ‘official’ body for channel partners. A Microsoft partner is one of the 640,000 companies worldwide that build, sell, or consult with Microsoft products. Most of these companies operate in the small-medium enterprise (SME) space, selling services related to Azure, .NET and SQL, Office 365, and SharePoint.

    The MPN isn’t a revenue earner for Microsoft in itself, but the reason for its being is pretty clear. A successful partner ecosystem means lots of lovely license sales for Microsoft. With Office 365 subscriptions to push (and Windows likely following this model sooner rather than later) the MPN is a pretty important area for Redmond guys right now.

    Offline there is a lot of support (marketing, financial, networking) available to partners, but online is where things are much more interesting. There are a number of private portal sites for partners, offering access to useful digital assets. But the only public tool is something called PinPoint — a searchable directory of partners.

    The site seems to be moving away from a straight directory service, towards more of an online store. As the releases of Office and SharePoint 2013 (and of course Windows 8) show, apps are very important to the future of many of Microsoft’s biggest products. The jury is still out on apps in Office and SharePoint, but any success will in part depend on the process of downloading, installing, and maintaining them. PinPoint seems to be an almost ready made solution.

    This leaves a bit of a gap for people wanting to find a Microsoft partner to work with, a gap that a new site called PartnerPulse hopes to fill. PartnerPulse is a new way for potential customers to find, review, and compare Microsoft channel partners. Partners can join for free, create a profile, and use social tools to market themselves.

    More than this though, PartnerPulse is a social marketing platform, one that is as much about what customers say about partners as what partners say about themselves. Sites like PartnerPulse, as well as those catering for non Microsoft vendors (VendorStack being a good example), are part of a wider trend in the enterprise world for peer reviews and social analysis.

    So what does this mean? Well PartnerPulse gives every partner a profile. Every profile hosts any number of Pulses, which are short messages posted by anyone. Pulses can consist of text, images, URLs, or ratings. But Pulses can also be summed, and calculated. Text can be analysed for sentiment (are the contents generally positive or negative). Ultimately partners can be scored based on their Pulses. Who has the most Pulses, who has the most positive Pulses?

    This is a new way for companies to think about marketing online, to think about reviews and ratings. Klout and Kred have made great strides in this area for individuals. Sites like PartnerPulse now want to do it for companies as well. If 640,000 members of the Microsoft Partner Network want to differentiate themselves, they need to sit up and take notice. Online marketing isn’t just about Google adverts, or sponsored blog posts. It is about people, reputations, scores, and reviews. PartnerPulse is trying to give Microsoft partners a platform, it will be interesting to see how they use it.

    Photo Credit: nopporn/Shutterstock

  • Associated Press chief starts to sound like Alex Jones: ‘Government is unconstitutional…’

    The mainstream media has a lousy reputation for upholding the Bill of Rights, especially when it comes to the Second Amendment’s right to keep and bear arms, the Fourth Amendment’s right to privacy and the Tenth Amendment’s limitation on federal power. But when an…
  • AMA wants to force widespread mandatory vaccine trials due to lack of volunteer participation

    The medical establishment is having trouble getting people to volunteer for new vaccine trials these days, which has prompted some in the medical industry to suggest that unwilling members of the public actually be forced to participate in order to promote the “greater…
  • Oregano is a very healthy culinary choice

    Oregano is a popular herb employed as a pleasant addition to various dishes for many Italians and Greeks. It certainly seems like a very sensible idea to prepare certain meals using oregano, once you understand the important health benefits it brings to the table. This…
  • Authorities never have ‘issues with authority’

    (NaturalNews)It’s simple. Authorities invented the idea that other people have issues with authority. Psychiatrists rank right up there among the elitists setting the standards. They, for example, have concocted a little fictional doodad called Oppositional Defiance Disorder…

  • Chinese herb eradicates cancer in 40 days, says new research

    The key to curing the type of pancreatic cancer that afflicted Apple visionary Steve Jobs just might be found in an ancient Chinese herb that has long played a crucial role in traditional Chinese medicine. A new study published in the journal Science Translational Medicine…
  • Environmental toxins are in water, food and garden: Dirty Dozen list from the EPA and how you can reduce exposure

    The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) states that environmental toxins and Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) are linked to health problems. The EPA lists a “Dirty Dozen” that can cause health issues, such as the brain, thyroid, and cause violence…
  • When a painful stomach ache strikes, arm yourself with these foods and drinks

    Stomach aches are never a welcome occurrence. They often come on suddenly, due to number of factors, such as the proliferation of GMO and contaminated foods, daily stressors, and busy lifestyles which don’t allow adequate time for healthy food preparation. Whatever the…
  • DHS to be granted total dictatorial power in immigration bill, all laws nullified, voters silenced

    There has been a lot of rhetoric on both sides of the issue regarding the current “immigration reform bill” that the Senate has taken up, but one thing you likely haven’t heard about at all is the scope and breadth of power the massive 850-page-plus measure contains…
  • Globalist corporation Apple pays virtually NO tax in any country

    Despite being one of the top electronics corporations in the world, Apple, Inc. has been paying no corporate income taxes to any country overseas in which Apple does business, even though it has earned tens of billions of dollars. The finding, unearthed by U.S. Senate…
  • Nurture genius by bucking the system – Autistic boy with higher IQ than Einstein discovers his gift after removal from state-run therapy

    In yet another example of how an out of control goliath state system can cause more harm than good, a teenage boy who was diagnosed with autism at a young age has risen to stellar heights after quitting the special ed system with the help of his concerned mother. State…
  • Over 800 world scientists agree: GM crops are nothing short of a bio-war on our food

    You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to understand why genetically modified foods are dangerous, but if you look closely, you may just find the name of one listed among the names of more than 800 scientists from around the globe who have joined forces in an open letter…