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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/28/2015 2:31:14 AM

France says will propose UN Security Council draft on Israel

Associated Press

In this March 27, 2015, photo provided by the United Nations, Laurent Fabius, Minister of Foreign Affairs of France, speaks with the media at United Nations headquarters. Fabius said Friday his country will propose a U.N. Security Council resolution in the coming weeks that could present a framework for negotiations toward resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. (AP Photo/United Nations, Rick Bajornas)


UNITED NATIONS (AP) — France's foreign minister said Friday his country will propose a U.N. Security Council resolution in the coming weeks that could present a framework for negotiations toward resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Laurent Fabius said "there is no other solution" but said he doesn't know what the United States, Israel's top ally, will agree to.

The minister spoke to reporters at U.N. headquarters before leaving for the Iran nuclear talks in Switzerland.

"France will be part and parcel in proposing a resolution in the U.N.," he said. He said discussions with partners will begin in the days ahead.

The U.N.'s top Mideast envoy, Robert Serry, challenged the Security Council on Thursday to lead the way on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, saying it should present a framework for talks that "may be the only way to preserve the goal of a two-state solution."

France had put off a previous attempt at a council resolution to wait for the results of Israel's election earlier this month. "Now look at the result," Fabius said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu caused an international uproar when he said shortly before the election that he would not allow the establishment of a Palestinian state on his watch. He has since struck a conciliatory tone.

But President Barack Obama has said he will reassess U.S. policy toward Israel after Netanyahu's remarks, meaning that the Security Council could be a potential place to act.

Fabius said France will take up the effort for a resolution as soon as Israel's new government is formed. It's needed "to avoid a complete crash" in the crisis, he said.

Support from the United States, a veto-wielding member of the Security Council, is crucial for approval of a new resolution. The United States in the past has said that only direct negotiations can end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

When asked whether he had seen any sign of change in the U.S. position in recent days, the Palestinian ambassador to the U.N., Riyad Mansour, called it a good question and pointed reporters to the U.S. ambassador.

The U.S. has not indicated whether it would support such a resolution.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/28/2015 3:31:56 AM



Climate change is spreading diseases you haven’t even heard of yet



Hollywood tradition dictates that in Act One of the outbreak narrative, we begin deep in the bowels of the CDC, cell cultures sloshing around a petri dish, a gaggle of white coats huddled around a microscope. Cut to the limb-flailing, flesh-eating symptoms, entire families frothing at the mouth — once unleashed, the pathogen will sweep the globe and consume us all before you can finish your Hail Marys: I’ve always loved you, Nancy!

But according to Daniel Brooks, who’s been studying the rise of emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) for 40 years, the Hollywood model needs to be recalibrated in light of climate change.

“It’s not that there’s going to be one ‘Andromeda Strain’ that will wipe out everybody on the planet,” says Brooks, professor emeritus at Toronto University and a senior research fellow at the University of Nebraska’s H.W. Manter Parasitology Lab. “There are going to be a lot of localized outbreaks that put a lot of pressure on our medical and veterinary health systems. There won’t be enough money to keep up with all of it. It will be the death of a thousand cuts.”

Contagion screenshot
Contagion

Brooks, whose article on the relationship between these new diseases and climate change was published last month in the journal Philosophical Transactions, claims that evolutionary history suggests EIDs spike along with major climate change events. When organisms flee their native habitats in search of more amenable climates, they expose themselves to pathogens they’ve never encountered — and to which they haven’t developed a resistance. Human activities only serve to accelerate this process, Brooks says, scattering organisms across the planet at an unprecedented rate.

The idea — called the “Stockholm Paradigm,” by Brooks and coauthor Eric Hoberg — runs counter to earlier host-pathogen theories, which generally assumed that because pathogens evolve in tandem with their hosts, they couldn’t easily switch to new ones. Under the new paradigm, diseases can and do jump hosts when given an opportunity, leading to crossover diseases we may have never dealt with before.

The most notorious example of this is the recent outbreak of the Ebola virus, which swept across West Africa last fall and has so far killed more than 10,000 people. The epidemic was ultimately triggered by humans moving into landscapes they’ve never occupied before, where they came into closer contact with fruit bats and their weird pathogens.

But even Ebola is straightforward, compared to what Brooks sees as the real danger of climate-driven disease outbreaks.

“Pathogens that jump into human beings, like Ebola or West Nile Virus — they’re only part of a larger story,” Brooks says. “If you think of every species of plant and animal on this planet that human beings depend on — every single crop, livestock, wild species, everything — all of them are going to experience some kind of emerging disease over the next 35 to 50 years.”

Daniel Brooks, happy and healthy in Hungary ... for now.
Daniel Brooks, happy and healthy in Hungary … for now.
Zsuzsanna Agoston

Regardless of the severity of each individual outbreak, humans will be left to foot the economic bill, to clean up what Brooks and his colleagues call “pathogen pollution.” And the costs could add up quickly.

“Either these diseases are going to reduce the population of the animals or the plants, and that’s going to hurt people economically, or it’s going to cost people a lot of money to try to treat them,” he says. “Either way, because most of the world’s biodiversity is where most of the world’s poor people live, disproportionately poor societies are going to be hit the hardest.”

And while you may not hear about them in the headlines like West Nile and Chikungunya, outbreaks in other species are already happening all the time. For example, in recent years, a black yeast-like fungus (Exophiala cancerae) has several times virtually wiped out the mangrove land crab population along the Brazilian coast. Not only do poor coastal Brazilians consume mangrove land crabs as a primary food source, says Walter Boeger, coauthor of a 2012 study on the fungus, but they also sell them as a cash crop. A Google search for “Lethargic Crab Disease” yields little beyond a scientific abstract, and yet as a consequence of this EID, some of the poorest, hungriest Brazilians have become even poorer and hungrier.

Brooks also points to a group of nematodes, Setaria tundra, that has destroyed reindeer populations across northern Scandinavia and Finland. Driven by climate change and severe short-term weather events, the resulting disease outbreak is “a direct threat to sustainability and food security,” according to the 2013 Arctic Biodiversity Assessment.

“What’s happening now is irreversible,” Brooks says. “Just as it’s becoming more and more difficult to predict the weather, it’s going to be more and more difficult to predict what species will move to what places, and who’s going to survive, and which populations are going to go up and down.”

world-war-z
worldwarzmovie.com

There may not be zombies roaming the streets — and Brad Pitt may not be ramrodding a Jamboree through Philadelphia — but it’s a grim scenario all the same. And it’s important that everyone stays calm, Brooks says, lest we regress to a more primitive stage of our own evolution [insert Congress joke here].

“A lot of us are concerned that the natural history of human beings is that when they see a potential crisis approaching, they freeze. And then when the crisis is upon them, they scatter,” he says. “If you’ve ever seen any wild primates, that’s exactly how they are.”

Instead, Brooks and his colleagues have proposed a number of proactive steps to help mitigate the cost of future EIDs. Foremost among them: the immediate compilation of a complete global inventory of species, which biologists have been advocating for decades without managing to convince anyone to bankroll it. In order to more successfully predict where EIDs will strike next, scientists from a slew of different fields would need access to information on pathogens and their hosts alike.

“Here’s the irony,” Brooks says. “The countries that have the money and the technology to actually make a difference don’t feel the crisis, and the countries that feel the crisis don’t have the money to do anything.”

Funny, I don’t remember a scene in Contagion in which Congress approves massive funding to inventory life on the planet, pathogens included. Maybe that’s because it’s pretty far-fetched, even for Hollywood. Brooks concedes that it would be a monumental undertaking. And terribly expensive, he says — but it will never be cheaper than it is now.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/28/2015 10:44:39 AM

Unheard, student group that revealed racist SAE video, causes change at Oklahoma

Yahoo News

Associated Press Videos
Okla. Univ. Unveils Racist Chant Probe Findings

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At a news conference announcing the findings of an investigation of the racist chant that prompted the shuttering of Sigma Alpha Epsilon’s Oklahoma University chapter and the expulsion of two fraternity members, OU President David Boren saluted the student activists of Unheard, who first brought the now widely viewed SAE video to light.

“I want to commend the students and leaders of that group because they brought things to my attention that we needed to address,” Boren said Friday. He joked that, at a meeting ahead of the press conference in which SAE members apologized to representatives from Unheard and other black student leaders, he'd told members of Unheard, “I wish you’d change your name to ‘Heard,’ because they have been heard.”

Unheard, which was founded at OU at the start of the current semester, gained national recognition earlier this month for tweeting the cellphone video seen round the world: of Sigma Alpha Epsilon members emphatically chanting racial slurs and lynching references to the tune of “If You’re Happy and You Know It,” while on the bus to a fraternity event.



But the group had been actively pushing for change since January, when it presented a list of grievances in a letter to Boren (PDF). The letter, among other things, called on the school to hire more black faculty members “beyond the African American studies department”; to combat low retention and graduation rates among black students, who make up a little more than 5 percent of the undergraduate population; and to provide more funding for programs that support black students at the University of Oklahoma.

The video sparked national outrage, prompting accusations of inherent racism at SAE and calls for the abolition of Greek life altogether. But it also brought OU’s own specific issues with race and diversity into the public eye, with African-American students speaking out in the press about their experiences with racism on campus, and the football team demanding change by refusing to practice.

At a meeting earlier this week, members of Unheard along with the Black Student Association’s Freshman Action Team moderated a conversation about “Being Black at OU.” Students from all backgrounds shared their own tales of racism on campus — one African-American student recalled being asked if she had “horse hair” earlier that day; a white student said she was once invited to a party and told not to bring her black friends — and discussed ways to facilitate more diversity and cohesion at Oklahoma.

Following the discussion, OU junior and Unheard member Cori Womack told the Oklahoma Daily, “I feel like our objective was complete today. We have heard solutions that we can implement that can break some of these barriers down so that the university can be a much more cultivated place.”


At his press conference Friday, President Boren said that in a plan to further Unheard’s efforts he'd be instituting a mandatory diversity and sensitivity training program for all OU students.

“It’s important that when we make serious mistakes as individuals or as organizations, we are held accountable for them,” he said. “We pay a price and then we move forward.”

The university’s investigation had traced the origins of the racist chant in the video back to a national fraternity leadership cruise from four years go, where SAE members learned the offensive lyrics and later taught them to new recruits at the OU chapter, Boren reported.

Two days earlier, attorney Stephen Jones (who famously represented Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh and was hired by OU’s SAE chapter in the wake of the video scandal) told the Associated Press that he had reached an agreement with university officials to not expel any more fraternity members. Boren did not confirm any agreement, but said that 25 of the disbanded fraternity’s members were being disciplined, including the two already expelled, and no further action was planned.

It’s “the close of the chapter as far as our response,” Boren said. Now the school’s focus, with the help of Unheard and other groups, is “rebuilding trust in the community.”

Related video:

Racist SAE chant learned at national fraternity event: OU president (video)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/28/2015 11:05:41 AM

Yemen's Aden a key battleground in conflict

Associated Press

A Yemeni man carries a box of ammunition he took from a military depot in Aden, Yemen, Friday, March 27, 2015. Shiite rebels, known as the Houthis, has seized the city since Wednesday. Looters have then taken weapons and ammunition from two abandoned army camps. (AP Photo/Yassir Hassan)


SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt (AP) — Yemen's city of Aden, a vital Arabian Sea port for centuries, is emerging as a key battleground in the fight between a Saudi-led Arab coalition backing the country's president and Shiite rebels and their allies.

The coalition is eyeing landing ground troops in the city to help secure a return of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who was forced to flee the country by boat from the city this week. On Friday, heavy gunbattles raged in northern neighborhoods of the city between pro-Hadi militias and military units loyal to Hadi's predecessor, ousted autocrat Ali Abdullah Saleh, who is allied to the Shiite rebels known as Houthis.

Snipers of Saleh's forces were firing from rooftops, and bodies of fighters were seen in the streets, witnesses said. In a further sign of the chaos, looters were hauling away weapons from some bases in the city.

The city is largely a stronghold of supporters of Hadi, who hails from the south. His militiamen and soldiers hold the heart of the city, though they were in some disarray after Hadi's escape Wednesday and the capture by the Houthis of his defense minister. Hadi arrived Friday in Egypt for a weekend Arab summit.

Saleh's forces hold Aden's international airport and had two bases in the northern sections of the city, though they have largely abandoned those bases, fearing airstrikes. In a further complication, the district of Mansoura, also north of the city, is partially controlled by al-Qaida militants.

That makes any arrival by Arab troops a complicated mission. The heart of Aden is located on an extinct volcano off the coast, connected to the mainland by a narrow peninsula. The curve between the mountain and the coast forms a natural harbor where the port is located. The airport, held by Saleh's men, lies on the narrow peninsula, between the heart of the city and the northern neighborhoods on the mainland.

That port had been the source of the city's importance for centuries, as a way station for ships plying between the Middle East, Asia, Africa and Europe. Aden also lies 100 miles (120 kilometers) east down the coast from the vitally strategic Bab al-Mandab strait, the entrance to the Red Sea and from there to the Suez Canal. It's one of the world's busiest shipping lanes, a major route for oil from the Gulf and cargo between Europe and Asia.

Many Americans will remember Aden as the port where the USS Cole was bombed in an al-Qaida attack on Oct. 12, 2000, during a refueling stop. The explosion was carried out by suicide bombers in a small boat and killed 17 sailors.

Aden was colonized by the British for more than 100 years, leaving a legacy of colonial architecture in the neighborhoods ringing the slopes of the volcano rising out of the Arabian Sea waters. Old colonial villas are part of a presidential compound on rocks jutting out into the sea, used by Hadi in his last days in the city. The old Jewish school in the neighborhood of Crater, an ornate building that is now home to the city's tax department, testifies to the city's past when its minority Jewish community was at the heart of economic and commercial activity.

When the territory gained independence in 1967, Aden became the capital of South Yemen, distinct from the north. More than two decades of independence under a communist rule left secular traditions that southerners long felt distinguished them from the more tribal and religiously conservative north. Though Aden remains relatively liberal, those traditions have been eroded by an influx of northerners since reunification in 1990 and particularly since the north defeated the south in a 1994 attempt to regain independence.

The latest conflict in Yemen and worries about the security of Bab al-Mandab drove oil prices sharply up this week, but one expert said there was no major direct risk.

Yemen is a minor producer of oil and gas, and the disruption of its exports would not have much impact on global markets, said Richard Mallinson, geopolitical analyst at Energy Aspects research consultancy in London. The port is now closed because of the violence, but shipping that would sometimes use it for stopovers can find other options.

"I don't see much direct risk to shipping traffic in that strait," he said.

"The Houthis and other groups are focused on the intricacies of the domestic conflict," he said. "There isn't a group I can see where their primary aim would be to disrupt shipping and also have the ability to do it."

___

Chang reported from Cairo. Hendawi spent a week in Aden on assignment earlier this month.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/28/2015 3:45:11 PM

Iran and powers close in on 2-3 page nuclear deal, success uncertain

Reuters



US Secretary of State John Kerry (L), US Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz (2L), Robert Malley (3L), of the US National Security Council, European Union High Representative Federica Mogherini (C), Head of Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation Ali Akbar Salehi (2R), Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif (R) and others wait for a meeting at the Beau Rivage Palace Hotel on March 27, 2015 in Lausanne. REUTERS/Brendan Smialowski/Pool

By John Irish, Louis Charbonneau and Parisa Hafezi

LAUSANNE, Switzerland (Reuters) - Iran and major powers are close to agreeing a two- or three-page accord with specific numbers as the basis of a resolution of a 12-year standoff over Tehran's nuclear ambitions, officials have told Reuters.

As the French and German foreign ministers arrived in Switzerland on Saturday to join talks between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, Western and Iranian officials familiar with the negotiations cautioned that they could still fail.

Kerry and Zarif have been in Lausanne for days to try to reach an outline agreement by a self-imposed deadline of March 31 between Iran on the one hand and the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China on the other.

"The sides are very, very close to the final step and it could be signed or agreed and announced verbally," a senior Iranian official familiar with the talks told Reuters on condition of anonymity. Other officials echoed the remarks while warning that several crucial issues were still being hotly debated.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told reporters on arrival: "I hope we can get a robust agreement. Iran has the right to civil nuclear power, but with regard to the atomic bomb, it's 'no'."

"The talks were long and difficult," he added. "We have moved forward on certain points, but on others not enough."

18 MONTHS OF TALKS

The negotiations, under way for nearly 18 months, aim to hammer out an accord under which Iran, which denies any ambition to build nuclear weapons, halts sensitive nuclear work in exchange for the lifting of sanctions, with the ultimate aim of reducing the risk of a war in the Middle East.

Ahead of another meeting with Zarif on Saturday, Kerry said he expected the discussions to run late. Zarif added that the meetings would run through "evening, night, midnight, morning".

The British and Russian foreign ministers were due to arrive in Lausanne over the weekend, along with a senior Chinese official.

If agreed, the document would cover key numbers for a comprehensive agreement between Iran and the six powers, such as the maximum number and types of uranium enrichment centrifuges Iran could operate, the size of uranium stockpiles it could maintain, the types of atomic research and development it could undertake, and details on the lifting of international sanctions that have crippled Iran's economy.

Two officials said it was likely that most of the outline agreement would be made public, though some said certain sections would be kept confidential.

Several Iranian officials denied that Iran was close to agreeing an outline document, but a Western diplomat who confirmed the Reuters story said the comments were aimed at a domestic audience.

COMPREHENSIVE DEAL BY JUNE

One of the key numbers is expected to be the duration of the agreement, which the officials said would have to be in place for more than 10 years. Once it expired, there would probably be a period of special U.N. monitoring of Tehran's nuclear program.

The framework accord should be followed by a comprehensive deal by June 30 that includes full technical details on the limits set for Iran's sensitive nuclear activities.

It remains unclear whether the framework deal will be formally signed or agreed verbally. The Iranians have expressed concern that a written agreement would limit their negotiating space when the technical details are worked out.

The officials cautioned that, even if such a preliminary deal was done in the coming days, there was no guarantee that agreement would be reached on the many technical details.

Some details have been out in the open for months. An Iranian government website said in November that Washington could let Iran keep some 6,000 early-generation centrifuges, down from nearly 10,000 now in operation.

Along with the timetable for the lifting of U.N. sanctions, officials say the biggest sticking point in the talks remains centrifuge research and development. They say Iran wants to conduct advanced centrifuge research at the underground Fordow site, but the Western powers dislike the idea of Iran operating centrifuges there.

The deal would call for U.S., European Union and U.N. sanctions to be lifted according to a specific schedule, though some could be lifted very quickly, the officials said.

(Editing by Kevin Liffey)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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