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Bilderberg Wrap-Up
Appearing briefly during the first half-hour, radio host
Alex Jones reported on the wrap-up of the Bilderberg meeting in Chantilly, VA. According to his sources, the group approved a
plan for a global regulatory banking system, and continued the push for a cashless society.
Oil Update
Author
Jerome Corsi presented a news segment about the rise in oil prices. He believes gas could reach $4.50 a gallon within the next two months. More
here.
Recap
ET Interference
During the middle two hours, visionary and conduit for divine messages,
Marshall Vian Summers discussed how ET forces are influencing world events and capitalizing on human frailty in order to gain control of Earth. He first received "briefings" from angelic sources known as the "Allies of Humanity" back in 1997, with a second set of material arriving in 2005.
The Allies have been observing interfering ET presences on Earth, and seek to make humanity aware of their activity, Summers said. These ETs of several races are here in search of resources, and have been influencing people in power, as well as creating hybrid beings, since they can't breathe our atmosphere, he detailed.
Earth is considered by these ET groups to be a "biological storehouse," but the Allies warn of accepting ET technology-- we shouldn't give "the keys to our kingdom" for "trinkets from space," Summers commented. Knowledge or a "deeper intelligence within us" can keep people free from the ET intrusion, he added. For more, see the
Declaration of Human Sovereignty.
The last hour of the program featured Open Lines.
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Jordan Maxwell Update
First hour guest, researcher
Jordan Maxwell discussed how his
exposé of the Illuminati and its occult roots has brought fear and threats into his life. He reported that his phone line is tapped by the NSA/CIA and they occasionally break into his calls and talk about him.
Bionic Hand Wins Prize

A bionic hand known as the
i-LIMB, which has five individually powered fingers, has won the top engineering prize in the U.K. The hands, which can be fitted with realistic outer skin, are already in use by 200 people including soldiers who fought in Iraq. More at
BBC News.