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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/30/2015 11:13:41 AM

Texas: Gay marriage proposal at church receives standing ovation in heartwarming video




A heartwarming video has been released that shows the moment a man's surprise marriage proposal to his boyfriend in a Texas church received a standing ovation.

In the
two-minute video posted online, Trevor Harper and his boyfriend were asked to share their faith story by the First United Methodist Church of Austin.

Speaking about their nine-year relationship, Harper said: "God willing, we might even get to walk down the aisle of this church we love so much, and nothing means more than that.

"But there's a lot of work to be done before that happens, and one of the most important things that needs to happen before we do that is I probably should, with the permission of your parents...."

At this point in the video Harper bends down on one knee and asks his boyfriend for his hand in marriage. When his partner says yes, the two embrace, sparking a standing ovation from the congregation and warm applause throughout the church.

While same-sex marriage was legalised throughout the US on 26 June this year, the Methodist church currently does not permit its clergy to officiate same-sex marriages.

"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?
8/30/2015 11:20:33 AM

As Another Person Dies of the Plague, a Look at What’s Behind the Increase in Cases

Korin Miller
Writer
Yahoo Health
August 28, 2015

Yersinia pestis bacteria causes the plague. (Photo: Dr. Arthur Siegelman/Visuals Unlimited/Corbis)

An elderly person in Utah has died of the plague, state officials recently announced. This marks the fourth death from the plague in the U.S. this year.

Officials believe the patient may have contracted the disease from a flea or after having contact with a dead animal, which is how the plague is commonly transferred to humans. The plague naturally occurs in Utah and is typically seen in the prairie dog populations each year, officials said in a press release. The disease is caused by Yersinia pestis bacteria.

No other information is available about the latest plague victim.

The news comes less than 10 days after officials in California announced that a Georgia resident who camped at California’s Yosemite National Park fell ill with what is believed to be the plague. That was the second case this month of a person contracting the plague after visiting the park.

The first was a child who went to the hospital with the plague after camping at Yosemite.

Related: 2nd Case of the Plague Linked to Yosemite National Park

There have been two plague-related deaths in Colorado alone this summer. One adult died in early August after contracting the plague from an unknown source. The Pueblo City-County Health Department has not revealed his or her identity but said the person may have developed the disease after coming into contact with fleas on a dead rodent or other animal. The department also noted that a dead prairie dog in the western part of the county tested positive for the disease.

In June, Colorado teenager Taylor Thomas Gaes died just days after coming down with flulike symptoms caused by the septicemic plague, which he was thought to have contracted from a flea bite, the Denver Post reports.

Related:After Colorado Teen’s Death From Plague, How Worried Should We Be About the Disease?

There have been 12 cases of the plague reported this year, in Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, New Mexico, Oregon, and now Utah. All the cases were believed to have been contracted west of what infectious disease specialists call “the plague line.”

The plague line is a geographic marker that delineates areas of the U.S. in which the plague is most likely to occur due to migrations of rodent populations that carry the disease, infectious disease specialist Amesh A. Adalja, MD, an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, tells Yahoo Health.

Adalja says the West’s plague cases could be linked to a plague outbreak that happened in San Francisco around 1900, which “seeded the American rodent populations.”

The last urban plague epidemic in the United States occurred in Los Angeles from 1924 through 1925, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The plague spread from urban rats to rural rodents and became entrenched in many areas of the western U.S.

While experts say cases of the plague are rare, Adalja admits that we’re experiencing a higher than normal year — the second highest year on record for plague cases. The highest year was 2006, in which there were 17 cases, according to CDC data. (An average of seven cases of the plague occur in the U.S. each year, the CDC reports.)

But Adalja cautions that people shouldn’t panic. “When you deal with numbers this small, any one is going to make a difference,” he says. “It’s a rare disease, and we’re still in what is considered a ‘normal’ range. These cases are occurring in a part of the country that we would expect.”

Adalja says we need more data on the activities of the patients to better determine what’s behind the rise in cases but says it could be tied to the drought that has been happening out west.

The rodent population may be looking for more food sources in campgrounds because of the drought, he says, or fleas may jump from animals that are dying due to the drought onto humans. “It likely has to do with a whole host of factors,” he says.

However, he expects plague cases to dwindle shortly, as the weather turns colder and people spend less time outdoors. Plague cases are typically seasonal, with most occurring between late spring and early fall.

Symptoms can vary depending on the type of plague a person contracts. But a high fever is present in nearly all cases, as well as flulike symptoms. People with pneumonic plague may also develop a bloody cough, and those who contract bubonic plague usually experience painful swollen lymph nodes.

The plague is serious — if left untreated, it can have a death rate of 50 percent or higher.

The FDA approved the drug Levaquin in 2012 to treat the plague, joining other antibacterial drugs, such as streptomycin, doxycycline, and tetracycline, which are approved for the treatment of the infection. A vaccine for the plague is also in the works, according to the CDC, but nothing is expected to be available to the public in the near future.

"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?
8/30/2015 2:20:22 PM

Hungary court orders arrest of 4 men in migrant truck deaths

Associated Press

CBS News Videos
Europe's immigrant surge gets worse by the day


KECSKEMET, Hungary (AP) — Four men suspected of being involved in the deaths of 71 migrants found in a truck in Austria were placed under preliminary arrest on Saturday by a Hungarian court.

The preliminary arrests will be in place until the suspects are indicted or Sept. 29, at the latest, said Ferenc Bicskei, president of the Kecskemet Court.

The court agreed with prosecutors that the severity of the crime and the risk that the suspects would flee justified their arrest. Bicskei said the four suspects appealed the decision, saying they had not committed any crimes.

The three Bulgarian suspects are aged 29, 30 and 50, officials said, while the fourth suspect — an Afghan — is 28 years old.

The refrigerated truck with the dead migrants was found Thursday in the safety lane of the main Budapest-to-Vienna highway. The suspects were detained later that day in southern Hungary, near the border with Serbia, where Hungary is building a 4-meter (13-foot) high fence.

Hungary's Defense Ministry said Saturday it had completed the first phase of construction — three coils of razor wire stretched along the 174-kilometer (109-mile) boundary.

The human trafficking case is being heard in Kecskemet, in central Hungary, because the truck set off from that city before picking up the migrants near the border with Serbia, Gabor Schmidt, a spokesman for the Bacs-Kiskun county chief prosecution office, told reporters outside the courthouse before the hearings.

Schmidt said Hungarian authorities are investigating the suspects' involvement in the human trafficking aspects of the case, while their suspected connection to the deaths of the migrants is being investigated by Austrian authorities.

He said the prosecution strongly suspects the four men cooperated in the transportation of the migrants from Hungary to Austria, adding that human smuggling carries a sentence of between two and 16 years in prison.

The four handcuffed men were taken into the court building through a side entrance.

The defense lawyers of the suspects were not present and will be notified of the court decisions, court spokesman Szabolcs Sarkozy said.

It wasn't clear how long the bodies had been inside the truck, but police believe the migrants may already have been dead by the time the truck crossed into Austria overnight Wednesday. Austrian officials believe they suffocated.

Autopsies were being conducted, with results expected in several days.

Helmut Marban, a police spokesman in Austria said the truck was being checked "millimeter by millimeter" by investigators gathering evidence for the court case.

A Syrian travel document was found earlier in the vehicle, indicating that at least some of the dead were refugees fleeing violence in Syria.

In a separate case, Austrian police said that they stopped a truck on Friday near Braunau, on the German border, with 26 people from Syria, Afghanistan and Bangladesh crammed inside.

They said Saturday that three severely dehydrated small children were among the passengers, and were taken to a hospital.

"According to doctors, they would not have withstood this ordeal for very much longer," police official David Furtner told the Austria Press Agency. The suspected smuggler, a 29-year-old Romanian man, was arrested.

About 150,000 migrants have been detained already this year in Hungary, more than triple the figure recorded in all of 2014. Many apply for asylum but leave for richer countries in the European Union like Germany before their requests are decided.

Others try to avoid the police and frequently rely on human traffickers to continue their journey toward the West.


"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?
8/30/2015 2:30:50 PM

Police investigate motive in ambush of Houston area deputy

Associated Press

Mourners gather at a gas station in Houston on Saturday, Aug. 29, 2015 to pay their respects at a makeshift memorial for Harris County Sheriff's Deputy Darren Goforth who was shot and killed while filling his patrol car. On Saturday, prosecutors charged Shannon J. Miles with capital murder in the Friday shooting. (James Nielsen/Houston Chronicle via AP)


HOUSTON (AP) — Investigators were trying to determine Sunday what may have motivated a 30-year-old man accused of ambushing a uniformed suburban Houston sheriff's deputy filling his patrol car with gas in what authorities believe was a targeted killing.

Shannon J. Miles was charged Saturday with capital murder in the fatal shooting of Darren Goforth, a 10-year veteran of the Harris County Sheriff's Office.

Goforth, 47, was pumping gas at a Chevron station on Friday night when the gunman approached him from behind and fired multiple shots, continuing to fire after the deputy had fallen to the ground.

The deputy had gone to the station in Cypress, a middle-class to upper middle-class suburban area of Harris County that is unincorporated and located northwest of Houston, after responding to a routine car accident earlier Friday.

Harris County Sheriff Ron Hickman said the attack was "clearly unprovoked," and there is no evidence so far that Goforth knew Miles. Investigators have no information from Miles that would shed light on his motive, Hickman said.

"Our assumption is that he was a target because he wore a uniform," the sheriff said.

The killing has evoked strong emotions in the local law enforcement community, with Hickman linking it to heightened tension over the treatment of African-Americans by police. Goforth was white and Miles is black.

The nationwide "Black Lives Matter" movement formed after the killing of a black man by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, has sought sweeping reforms of policing. Related protests erupted recently in Texas after a 28-year-old Chicago area black woman, Sandra Bland, was found dead in a county jail about 50 miles northwest of Houston three days after her arrest on a traffic violation. Texas authorities said she committed suicide but her family is skeptical that she would have taken her own life.

Hickman and Harris County District Attorney Devon Anderson on Saturday pushed back against the criticism of police. There must not be open warfare on law enforcement, Anderson said.

"We've heard Black Lives Matter, All Lives Matter. Well, cops' lives matter, too," Hickman said.

Local law enforcement officers were worried after the Goforth killing that others could be targeted, he said.

"It gives us some peace knowing that this individual is no longer at large and that he wasn't somebody that would be targeting the rest of the community," Hickman said.

Miles is likely to be arraigned in court on Monday.

"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?
8/30/2015 2:45:10 PM

POPE PRAISES LESBIAN AUTHOR FOR SPREADING “CHRISTIAN VALUES”

Pope wishes LGBT author "ever more fruitful work in the service of young generations"

koreanet / Flickr

by KIT DANIELS | INFOWARS.COM | AUGUST 28, 2015

Pope Francis has blessed a lesbian author for “spreading authentic human and Christian values.”

In his message to writer Francesca Pardi, who authored
“Why Do You Have Two Mommies,” the pope also wished her and her partner “ever more fruitful work in the service of young generations.”

Pardi, who’s not even Catholic, sent Francis copies of her books after she came under fire from Christian groups.

“My books present different types of families without setting any of them up as a model,” Pardi
told AFP, praising the pope for showing “respect and dignity” towards her, her wife and their four children. “It was not important for me that it was the pope who said it, I am not a Catholic.”

“But it is important to see that we are not up against a wall; a dialogue is possible.”

Vatican officials are now scrambling to downplay the pope’s blessing, especially as Francis was already taking heat for promoting global government and “man-made climate change.”

Earlier this month
an irate Catholic interrupted a church meeting about global warming in California to accuse the Catholic Church of selling its soul to push a government agenda.

“This is the biggest instance of heresy… I’m here to advocate for traditional Catholicism… how dare you,” the man yelled before accusing some of the speakers of advocating abortion.

He wasn’t alone; Catholics around the world were also attacking the pope over his encyclical asking them to support larger government to stop “global warming.”

“I’m concerned the Pope is going to alienate many, many people with this encyclical because of his personal political viewpoints: people who would be faithful Catholics but disagree with his personal politics, but don’t understand the Pope is not infallible on science or politics,” a Catholic with the screen name zz912 wrote on Catholic.com.


(INFOWARS)

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

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