Skip to main content

Right to know – Is it that difficult to tell the truth?



According to Natural News, CNN, one of the leading news channels in the world, has often been caught faking news. The network became famous for its supposedly live broadcasts during the first Gulf War in 1991, when it sent its journalists (supposedly) to the front lines to cover the drama as it unfolded. In this broadcast, for instance, it appears as though then CNN correspondent Charles Jaco and another reporter, Charles Rochelle, were caught in a potential SCUD attack in the middle of a broadcast.

It turns out that Jaco, Rochelle and their crew weren't in Saudi Arabia at all. They were on a sound set near the CNN headquarters in Atlanta, a faked broadcast that the cable news channel eventually had to quietly admit.

For more information, log onto:


In another incident, the State of Connecticut refused to divulge whether the accused killer Adam Lanza was taking medication, or alternately withdrawing from it, when he killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook last December. The State maintains that it has the right to retain this information from the public.

In a bizarre justification for the State's denial of the release of Lanza's medical records and toxicology report, Patrick Kwanashie, the Assistant Attorney General for the State of Connecticut, claims that even conclusive "causal" linkage between psychiatric drugs and the shooter's murderous behavior would be irrelevant and constitute an "illegitimate use of information."

He stated:

"No matter how the outcome of the use of antidepressants, or the causal link between the use of antidepressants and kind of violence that took place in Newtown, that's not a legitimate use of information, that information. You can't generalize just from one case. Even if you can conclusively establish that Adam Lanza - his murderous actions - was caused by antidepressants”

To know more, log on:


To see some fascinating and interesting clips regarding the horrifying truth about the CNN issue and more, one can easily log onto:






 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Comments