Monday, May 6, 2013

WATCH: The World First Gun That Everyone Can Print online, Shooting Real Buttlets




Liberator - Dawn of the Wiki Weapons
The first 3-D-printed gun has been fired, and the directions to print a gun can be downloaded online by anyone.
(Globalnews) TORONTO -- It's called The Liberator and it's the world's first 3D printed gun. The Liberator is the brain child of law student Cody Wilson's company Defense Distributed in Austin, Texas. The blueprints for the gun were released on his website Defcad.org Monday, ready to download for free and be printed by anyone who has access to a 3D printer.
"Where there's a computer, there'd be a weapon," Wilson told 16×9. "Well, literally where there's a 3D printer."
The gun, smaller than a 9mm, is made almost entirely of plastic, except for a metal firing pin, and could cost about $60 to make. It's capable of firing between eight and nine rounds until the barrel breaks. Not a problem, Wilson said, people can just print another barrel.
Wilson previously printed gun parts, like a lower receiver for the AR-15 and has been working on this project for almost a year.
But he is also quick to point out that this project is political and about access to information. "You know, I don't think you should be armed, right? But I think you should have to choice to be."
There are few rules for what someone can or can not make with 3D printing. According to the National Firearms Act in the United States, it is legal for someone to make their own gun, but to distribute or sell it requires a license.
Wilson received his manufacturing licence from the Bureau for Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) earlier this year, allowing him to distribute his plans online. So far, people from all around the world have downloaded his blue prints.
But many are worried about how the technology will be used. A heated gun debate in the United States and shootings like the one in Newtown, Connecticut have dominated headlines amidst cries for stricter regulations and background checks.

Lew Rockwell & Adam Kokesh ~ The Alex Jones Show : Monday, May 6 2013

The Alex Jones Show:(Commercial Free Audio) Monday, May 6 2013: Lew Rockwell & Adam Kokesh

& Today 5/6/2013
Bilderberg 2013
On the Monday, May 6 edition of Alex Jones' worldwide broadcast, Alex covers the latest on Israel's invasion of Syria as the region teeters toward all-out war. He also breaks down his plan to protest the secretive Bilderberg confab in the United Kingdom following his call for the corporate media to cover the event. On today's broadcast, Alex welcomes back author and editor Lew Rockwell. Mr. Rockwell served as Ron Paul's congressional chief of staff from 1978 to 1982 and was vice-chair of the exploratory committee for Paul's run for the 1992 Republican Party nomination for President. Surprise Guest Adam Kokesh on his armed march to Washington, D.C. on July 4th 2013, Independence Day.

Touré: 'Open Borders' Will Reduce 'Muslim Poverty That's Threatening Our Security'





MSNBC's co-host of The Cycle, Touré, declared his support on Monday for "the open borders movement." While he says that the Senate's immigration reform plan is a welcome development, it will never go far enough in making it easier for immigrant labor to come to America. Touré added that, just as currency and employment are borderless, immigration should also be borderless. He noted that chronic poverty plaguing foreign nations and fueling terrorism would be alleviated by open borders.

"The answer to our immigration issue is open borders," Touré declared. "Tear down the fences. Rip up the red tape. Yup; I'm embracing the open borders movement."

Touré said that the concept of open borders has been an economic principle for years. "Want to build cars in China? No problem. Want to make widgets in India? Go for it," Touré said. "If it's good for the global, corporate rich guys, why isn't it good for the people? Especially, working-class people who want to vote with their feet and move out of corrupt, or mismanaged, or impoverished nations to go to countries that work for them?"

Touré said that some economists have claimed the "open borders movement" would more than double the world's GDP. He insisted that taxes collected and the demand injected into the economy by limited, legal immigration is already a benefit.

Furthermore, Touré claimed, immigrants "don't compete with US workers, they complement them -- helping them do their jobs better."

Touré added that those who claim open borders would result in an influx of dangerous individuals are falling prey to a canard. He said that the 9/11 hijackers and the Boston bombers entered the country legally. "It's Muslim poverty that's threatening our security," Touré asserted, "not our immigration system."

He said giving Islamic immigrants the ability to work in the US would diminish their anger, poverty, and general misapprehensions about America. "Just like corporations without borders has given the fat cats a better bottom line, people deserve the chance to be a full part of the global marketplace," Touré concluded. "Open borders will improve the world."

3D Printed GUN soon to be Available to the MASSES

What is the 3-D Printed Gun Shooting Real Bullets that Everyone Can Download Online . The first 3-D-printed gun has been fired, and the directions to print a gun can be downloaded online by anyone
The ultimate fallacy of 'gun control' is that the criminals who want guns can already get them, it's not hard. Black market, street vendors, and increasingly on the internet you can get a gun, unregistered from anywhere to anywhere. Therefore gun control is a non-solution, and 3d printing is a non-issue.

The Mark of The Beast : A Microchip You Wear on the Inside

The Future, Now: A Microchip You Wear on the Inside


 Bloomberg Businessweek's Sam Grobart visits the Boston labroatories of MC10, a biotechnology company manufacturing wearable electronics that allow real-time health information to be stored from both inside and outside the human body. This feature and more from the bleeding edge of technology and innovation appear every Monday at 9:30 PM ET/PT on Bloomberg Television or on-demand at Bloomberg.Com.