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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/15/2017 8:53:38 AM



Injured Palestinian Dies as Israeli Forces Raid Hospital, Say Rights Groups

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An Israel-based human rights group has shared video described as showing Israeli armed police raiding a hospital in East Jerusalem on July 21 and clashing with hospital staff as they attempted to seize a critically injured Palestinian man.

According to both B’TSelem, the human rights group that released this hospital security camera footage on August 13, and Amnesty International, the Palestinian man had been critically injured in clashes in East Jerusalem in mid-July, and died during the scuffle between hospital staff and police.

B’TSelem, the human rights group that released this hospital security camera footage, said the injured man was on his way to surgery when police tried to seize him. The footage the group shared shows a commotion in a hospital corridor. Police officers trying to grab hold of the man’s bed appear to push and shove al-Makassed hospital staff protecting him.

Amnesty International in late July reported that armed Israeli police had carried out violent raids on the hospital on July 17 and July 21.

“The conduct of Israeli forces who carried out violent raids on al-Makassed hospital harassing and intimidating staff and patients is utterly deplorable. There can be no justification for preventing medical workers from caring for a critically wounded patient,” said Magdalena Mughrabi, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa. Credit: YouTube/BT’Selem


(Yahoo News)


"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?
8/15/2017 9:29:06 AM

Syria’s Assad has become an icon of the far right in America


Syria’s Assad has become an icon of the far right in America

BEIRUT — Among the postings on what might have been the Facebook page of James Alex Fields Jr., the driver of the car that killed a counter-protester at the right-wing demonstrations in Charlottesville, Va. on Saturday, were images of far-right favorite Pepe the Frog, swastikas and a baby portrait of Adolf Hitler, according to BuzzFeed.

Perhaps more surprisingly, there was also reportedly a picture of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, in full military uniform, inscribed underneath with the word “undefeated.”

Screenshots of the now-inaccessible profile were widely circulated on social media on Saturday and Sunday, although its authenticity could not be confirmed. But the apparent fascination with Assad would fit a more general link between the far right and the Syrian regime that has grown increasingly pronounced in recent months and played a role throughout this weekend’s white nationalist rally in Virginia.

Assad’s politics -- and those of his father before him -- have historically been associated more with the left than the right. His late father, President Hafez al-Assad, was the closest Middle East ally of the Soviet Union throughout the Cold War. The son has enjoyed the stalwart support of international leftists throughout his attempt to crush the six-year-old rebellion against his rule.

In recent months, however, Assad has become an icon also for the far right, whose leaders and spokesman have heaped praise on the ferocity with which he has prosecuted the war, his role in fighting the Islamic State and his perceived stance against Muslims and Jews.



(Yahoo News)


"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?
8/15/2017 10:17:14 AM

PRIESTS SHOULD BE CHARGED IF THEY DON’T REPORT CHILD SEX ABUSE DISCLOSED IN CONFESSION, SAYS AUSTRALIAN INQUIRY


BY


Catholic priests should face criminal charges if they fail to report allegations of child sex abuse disclosed during confession, according to an Australian inquiry.

The measure was among 85 proposed changes published in a report Monday by the Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which was set up in 2013 to investigate claims of child sex abuse in multiple Australian institutions, including Boy Scouts, the Salvation Army and various churches and religious groups.

The Catholic Church regards what is said in confession as strictly confidential, and priests face automatic excommunication if they reveal what they have been told by people in their confessions.


Pope Francis listens to the confession of a man in the park of Quinta Da Boa Vista in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on July 26, 2013.LUCA ZENNARO/AFP/GETTY

Catholic bishops in Australia have said they will fight the measure. Recommendations made by the royal commission will be put to Australian legislators to decide whether they should become law.

The commission, Australia’s highest form of inquiry, heard that more than 1,000 Catholic institutions and a total of 1,880 alleged perpetrators were identified in sexual abuse allegations between 1980 and 2015. Various other institutions were also implicated; the commission heard 1,100 abuse complaints against the Anglican Church of Australia during the same time period.

The commission said that in some cases, abusers had admitted to their crimes during confession but had gone on to reoffend, as they knew they would not be reported to police.

“We are satisfied that, where the elements of the reporting obligation are met, there should be no exemption, excuse, protection or privilege from the offence granted to clergy for failing to report information disclosed in or in connection with a religious confession,” said the report in its executive summary.


Victims and relatives of children who claim they were sexually abused by the Catholic Church hold placards as they stand outside the venue for Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Response to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney, Australia, February 29, 2016.DAVID GRAY/REUTERS

The head of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, Archbishop Denis Hart of Melbourne, said in a statement that “confession in the Catholic Church is a spiritual encounter with God through the priest.”

“It is a fundamental part of the freedom of religion, and it is recognized in the Law of Australia and many other countries. It must remain so here in Australia. Outside of this all offences against children must be reported to the authorities, and we are absolutely committed to doing so,” said Hart in the statement.

Many jurisdictions recognize what is known as priest-penitent privilege or clergy privilege, which protects from judicial inquiry certain forms of communication between a religious official and members of their congregation.

In the United States, prosecutors are forbidden from probing the nature of religious confessions. In 2014, the Louisiana Supreme Court ruled that a priest may be compelled to disclose what he heard in the confessional; the case involved a 2008 incident in which a 14-year-old girl said she had told the priest that she was abused by a member of the parish. The same court later overturned the ruling.

According to the Catholic Church's teachings, the priest is merely a mediator during confession; the conversation is actually between the person confessing and God.

Australia’s highest-ranking Catholic priest, Cardinal George Pell—a close adviser to Pope Francis—was
charged in June with multiple counts of sexual assault relating to his time as a priest in Victoria. Pell indicated in July that he would plead not guilty at his trial, which recommences in September.

(Newsweek)

"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?
8/15/2017 10:35:43 AM

Here's what we know about the reported 100,000 Russian troops going to NATO's borders

t-15 armataHeavy IFV T-15 object 149 Armata (in the streets of Moscow on the way to or from the Red Square). Vitaly V. Kuzmin via Wikimedia Commons

The New York Times reported in late July that 60,000 to 100,000 Russian troops would be sent to Belarus and western Russia in September for the Zapad military exercises. And in May, the Washington Post cited US military estimates of 70,000 to 100,000 as taking part in the exercises.

The Economist even recently citedNATO estimates last week of more than 100,000, and m any US generals and western politicians, including Estonia's defense minister, have alsoexpressed concern that Russian troops might permanently stay in Belarus.

"People are worried this is a Trojan horse," US Army Gen. Ben Hodges told Reuters in July. "They say, 'We're just doing an exercise,' and then all of a sudden they've moved all these people and capabilities somewhere."

But Dmitry Gorenburg, a senior research scientist at CNA, wrote in The National Interest that these reports were "panicked accounts." Olga Oliker, a senior adviser and director of the Russia and Eurasia Program at The Center for Strategic and International Studies, also told Business Insider that she agreed with Gorenburg's take.

The Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment.

In reality, the Zapad exercises, which were also held in 2009 and 2013, take place every 4 years. For the 2013 exercises, western officials estimated that 70,000 Russians participated.

Part of the reason for these disparities in estimations, Gorenburg said, is because Moscow claims the number of troops will be less than 13,000 in 2017, but there is disagreement over whether to count civilian officials and security agents as part of the overall number.

Russia may also conduct smaller exercises in the area that are not technically part of Zapad.

There's also a tendency for the west to count full units as having participated in the exercises when in fact only parts of units were there, Gorenburg said.

Either way, that "100,000 figure is pretty off the wall," Mark Galeotti, a senior research fellow at the Institute of International Relations Prague, told Business Insider in an email.

These "panicked accounts" all stemmed from reports about Russia using 4,000 train cars to transport troops back and forth from the exercises, which could indicate those large western estimates.

Russian S-400 Triumph medium-range and long-range surface-to-air missile systems drive during the Victory Day parade, marking the 71st anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two, at Red Square in Moscow, Russia, May 9, 2016. Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters

But Sim Tack, a Stratfor analyst, told Business Insider that estimates of 100,000 or more Russian troops were taken from a Ukrainian blog, informnapalm.org, which is run by amateur journalists. Gorenburg also told Business Insider that these concerns from western officials came largely from the Ukrainian blog.

"A lot of people have just copied that [Ukrainian blog]," Tack said, which Estonia's Defense Minister Margus Tsahkna first started spreading.

"I don't know [the Ukrainian blog's] exact calculations, they just threw out the 100,000 number," Tack said, adding that they basically figured Moscow would pack each rail cars to the brim with 72 soldiers, and that they multiplied the final number by 1.5 times on the assumption that the Kremlin was keeping the real number of rail cars secret.

Gorenburg also said that, while the famed Russian 1st Guard Tank Army was reported to be participating in 2017, Russian officials have yet to confirm it. Tack said that the tank army would partake in the exercises, but it would only be a small contingent of the corps-sized force.

In any event, "it's hard to know how many troops will be in the [2017 Zapad exercises]" because of the disagreement over who should be counted, Galeotti said.

"What we do know is that the total number of Russian troops on Belarusian territory is not expected to exceed 3,000 personnel," Gorenburg wrote, and "the likelihood of this exercise serving as cover for some larger nefarious aim, whether it is an attack on Ukraine or Lithuania or a stealth occupation of Belarus, is practically zero."

It's "highly unlikely the Russians would park troops in Belarus uninvited," Galeotti said. "Minsk has already made it clear that it would not welcome this," and Moscow doesn't have the budget to maintain troops there.


(businessinsider.com
)


"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?
8/15/2017 11:26:12 AM

Russia unveils new fleet of 'invisible' supersonic fighter jets - and boasts that they will be the envy of air forces around the world


    • · Russia's new Sukhoi-57 is said to rival America's F-22 and China's Chengdu J-20
    • · Kremlin officials say the stealth fighter jet will be hard to track on enemy radars
    • · Air force chief has boasted: 'Every country probably wants planes such as this'
    • · Jet will undergo another year of testing before it enters military service in 2019

Russia has unveiled its new fleet of 'invisible' supersonic fighter jets, boasting that they are already the envy of air forces around the world.

The £120million Sukhoi-57, which will have a top speed of 1,615 mph, is said to rival America's F-22 and China's Chengdu J-20,


Kremlin officials say the fifth-generation stealth jet has been 'christened like a baby after its birth' as Su-57 and will undergo another year of testing before it enters military service in 2019.



Russia has unveiled its new fleet of 'invisible' supersonic fighter jets (pictured), boasting that they are the envy of air forces around the world. Two of the jets are pictured on Saturday during an air display event as part of an aviation festival marking the 105th anniversary of the establishment of the Russian Air Force


Russia has unveiled its new fleet of 'invisible' supersonic fighter jets (pictured), boasting that they are the envy of air forces around the world. Two of the jets are pictured on Saturday during an air display event as part of an aviation festival marking the 105th anniversary of the establishment of the Russian Air Force


The £120million Sukhoi-57 (pictured), which will have a top speed of 1,615 mph, is said to rival America's F-22 and China's Chengdu J-20


The £120million Sukhoi-57 (pictured), which will have a top speed of 1,615 mph, is said to rival America's F-22 and China's Chengdu J-20

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The country's air force chief Viktor Bondarev described the aircraft as a 'wonderful machine' and last month said: 'Every country probably wants planes such as this, and we have them.'



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4788856/Russia-unveils-new-invisible-supersonic-fighter-jets.html#ixzz4pp0rg0rx
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(dailymail.co.uk)


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

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