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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/7/2018 4:52:22 PM

Cosmic radiation from giant star system heading towards Earth – NASA (VIDEO, PHOTO)

Edited time: 5 Jul, 2018 10:36


An image of Eta Carinae. ©ESA/NASA / NASA

A star system containing two gigantic suns is blasting cosmic rays into space and NASA scientists have found that the radiation is making its way towards Earth on intergalactic winds.

High-energy observations in the sprawling southern constellation of Carina had puzzled scientists for some time. But now a NASA orbital telescope has helped pin the energy source on Eta Carinae, a double-star system around 7,500 light years away from Earth.

It is already known that rays with energies greater than 1 billion electron volts are sprayed into our solar system. However, the erratic movement of the energy and sheer size of the great expanse previously made it difficult to locate some of the sources. Colliding stellar winds within Eta Carinae, which is surrounded by an hourglass dust nebula, have now been confirmed as a reason for the energy patterns in the region.

“We know the blast waves of exploded stars can accelerate cosmic rays to speeds comparable to that of light, an incredible energy boost,” said NASA astrophysicist Kenji Hamaguchi. “Similar processes must occur in other extreme environments. Our analysis indicates Eta Carinae is one of them.”


Using the NuStar telescope, NASA was able to collect data on violent shock waves from colliding winds that result in cosmic rays, some of which have been seen to bounce off the Earth’s magnetic field.

“We’ve known for some time that the region around Eta Carinae is the source of energetic emission in high-energy X-rays and gamma rays,” said Fiona Harrison, NuSTAR telescope researcher. “But until NuSTAR was able to pinpoint the radiation… the origin was mysterious.”

Launched in 2012, the NuStar orbiter has been used to map selected regions of space and act as a census for collapsed stars. The telescope has also been tasked with investigating mysterious black holes, and last year documented the ‘energy eating’ phenomena in the Milky Way.


(RT)


"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?
7/7/2018 5:34:59 PM
Star of David

Crime against humanity: Israeli forces 'beat, drag woman' defending her village from demolition

IDF beat villager
© Twitter)
Israeli forces violently attacked Palestinian demonstrators protesting the demolition of the occupied Bedouin village of Khan al-Ahmar.
The soldiers beat and dragged a local woman as she attempted to stop them from razing the village of Khan al-Ahmar, footage of the incident shows.


View image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on Twitter

This is how Israeli forces are preparing to demolish the entire Khan al-Ahmar village near Jerusalem http://aje.io/2v2ae


One villager told Arab48:

"The soldiers brutally attacked the residents of Khan al-Ahmar and protesters as they tried to prevent the demolition of their homes."

The protesters waving Palestinian flags also tried to block a bulldozer, while some climbed onto it in protest.

This video might cause you some pain, but that's our life for 70 years under the israeli occupation.

Ethnic cleansing.

On Tuesday, the UN urged Israeli authorities against the forced eviction of some 181 people living in the settlement, slamming the move as "discriminatory" and incompatible with international law.

Israeli authorities claim the village and its school were built illegally and in May, the supreme court rejected a final appeal against its demolition.

Palestinian girl cry after arresting her father and demolishing her home in the bedouin village of Khan Al Ahmar .


But activists say the villagers had little alternative but to build without Israeli construction permits as the documents are near impossible for Palestinians to obtain for that part of the occupied West Bank.

Khan al-Ahmar is located east of Jerusalem near several major Israeli settlement blocs and close to a highway leading to the Dead Sea.

RT Mondoweiss "RT theIMEU: Breaking: Israeli forces violently attacked Palestinian demonstrators protesting the demolition of the occupied Bedouin village of Khan al-Ahmar, which will forcibly displace 200 residents to make way for the continuous exp… pic.twitter.com/lEJpIRMwHU"


Activists are concerned continued Israeli settlement construction in the area could effectively divide the West Bank in two.

In another Bedouin village in the same region, Abu Nuwar, Israel carried out a series of demolitions on Wednesday on what it described as illegally built structures.


The village is made up mainly of makeshift structures of tin and wood, as is traditionally the case with Bedouin villages.

Comment: This is the finale of a long campaign against the residents of Khan al-Ahmar and the Bedouin population of the Negev.

(sott.net)


"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?
7/8/2018 10:01:56 AM

#IDAdam, the white man who called police on a woman at their neighborhood pool, loses his job

The nation is embroiled in a debate about the disparate treatment of black people after several incidents of apparent “overpolicing” across the U.S.

The temperature in Winston-Salem, N.C., crested at 90 degrees on July 4 — the same day Jasmine Edwards and her son, both African Americans, sought the cool waters of the pool in their private community.

Adam Bloom was there, too, confident in his charge of helping enforce neighborhood rules as the ‘pool chair’ of the Glenridge Homeowners Association. He asked Edwards to show identification to prove she belonged. Then he called the police.

And the four of them — two officers, Edwards and Bloom — stood outside the pool gate, unsure how the latest incident of police response to public blackness would unfold.

Police had already arrived when Edwards began filming the incident in a video she later posted to Facebook. At the beginning, she tells officers that Bloom walked past other residents at the pool to single her out.

“Nobody else was asked for their ID. I feel this is racial profiling,” Edwards says in the video. “I am the only black person here with my son in the pool.”

Edwards could not be reached for comment. Bloom’s attorney, John Vermitsky, said in a statement provided to The Washington Post that the pool chair was doing his job by enforcing the rules and has since suffered from the backlash to the video. Sonoco, a South Carolina-based packaging company, said Bloom “is no longer employed by the Company in any respect.” The Glenridge Homeowners Association also accepted Bloom’s resignation.


A community swimming pool in North Carolina. (iStock)

The incident unfolded in a leafy, exclusive neighborhood in northwest Winston-Salem. A massive four-bedroom home for sale on Bloom’s street is listed on the real estate website Zillow for more than $400,000. “Great sense of community and perfect for families,” the listing says.

In the video, Edwards presses for any regulation to justify Bloom’s call to police — namely, that ID must be carried in a swimsuit. Bloom, keeper of swimming pool regulations, is unable to point to posted regulations that suggest the rule.

A sign on the wall says residents and their guests were allowed and must sign in, but Bloom was unsure if there was a lifeguard on duty to accept sign ins, given the holiday.

But like the black boy mowing a lawn, black men waiting at Starbucks, three black women renting an Airbnb, the black manconducting real estate business, a black woman falling asleep in a Yale common room, and others, Edwards was on the receiving end of a burden of proof of belonging that they all say was tailor-made for them because of their race.

So Bloom had a solution. The pool had a key-card entry. Could she prove she had one?

Of course, Edwards says. She is in the pool in the first place.

“Am I going to jump over the fence? I’m with a baby,” Edwards scoffs. “Am I going to throw the baby over?” She produces the key for the officer. The door clicks open.

The officer is satisfied. “I apologize for the time and the altercation that occurred, okay?” the officer tells Edwards. She apologizes for the time the officers spent there.

Bloom, however, is not satisfied. “A form of ID would have been helpful to validate,” he says to the officer.

“It would be nice if you apologized,” Edwards shoots back.

The officer went over the same territory — that a key card was good enough for him.

“They kind of make their way around sometimes . . . but that’s good enough for me today,” Bloom says.

The next moment earned Bloom the derisive and viral hashtag of #IDAdam, joining #PermitPatty and #BBQBecky, when Edwards reveals his name.

“Do you want to apologize, Adam, for what you did?” Edwards asks. Bloom said providing the address would have been “fine,” but he ignores the calls for an apology.

Vermitsky, the attorney, alleges in the statement that his client got involved when a female board member, who is not named, approached Bloom saying Edwards was not familiar to her, and had allegedly given an address on “a road in the neighborhood where houses were not yet built.”

Because Bloom could not reference the sign-in sheet, he approached Edwards, the statement says, and was given what turned out to be her correct address. The ID request, the attorney alleges, was to square the discrepancy in addresses.

Vermitsky said Bloom has removed swimmers from the pool for not having valid membership four times per season over seven years, and those removed have been of varying ages and races. The statement also condemns racism as “abhorrent, wrong and [having] no place in a free country.”

The attorney called the video incomplete and misleading, and said Bloom has received death threats and has relocated his wife and three children to a “safe location.”

The Glenridge Homeowners Association said Thursday in a statement provided to The Post that it accepted Bloom’s resignation as pool chair and board member, effective immediately.

“We sincerely regret that an incident occurred yesterday at our community pool that left neighbors feeling racially profiled,” the association said in its statement.

“In confronting and calling the police on one of our neighbors, the pool chair escalated a situation in a way that does not reflect the inclusive values Glenridge seeks to uphold as a community.”

The association added that it would reinstate the sign-in sheet and ensure policies were consistent for all residents.

Vermitsky told the Winston-Salem Journal that Bloom’s resignation did not confirm any wrongdoing.

“I think the situation is unfortunate that conclusions are being reached by people who have seen a 46-second video of their interaction,” Vermitsky told the paper. “He called the police to make sure that the interaction didn’t escalate.”

But Karam Gulkham, a lifeguard manager at the pool, told the Journal that Bloom’s reasoning to involve police, or even to doubt Edwards belonged in the pool all the way to the end, was not so clear.

“Apparently it was not enough for him,” Gulkham told the paper. “I don’t know why he felt it wasn’t enough.”


(The Washington Post)



"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?
7/8/2018 11:45:03 AM

Fires destroy homes and spark mass evacuations amid Southern California heat wave



Scenes from fires near Alpine.

Record heat sparked several destructive brush fires across Southern California that burned numerous homes in San Diego and Santa Barbara counties.

Powerful sundowner winds on the Santa Barbara County coast helped fuel the Holiday fire, which burned several homes Friday night in the hills above Goleta and threatened many others.

The fight continued into Saturday morning, with an evacuation order extending to more than 2,000 residents. Firefighters raced into the hillside neighborhood trying to defend homes and help with evacuations. Officials said some homes had been lost but a total number was not immediately available.

Officials described a chaotic scene as the fire burst out of control around 8:40 p.m., catching some residents off guard. County 911 lines were jammed with calls, and emergency officials said they contacted 1,200 lines to urge evacuations.

The Santa Barbara County Fire Department said that more than 100 homes were threatened and that residents above Cathedral Oaks Road should flee.

Temperatures remained around 100 degrees as the fire fight moved into the night. Powerful evening winds were pushing the fire in different directions, making it impossible to control.

Authorities said the incident began as a structure fire before the flames spread to vegetation.

An evacuation center was set up at Goleta Valley Community Center, at 5679 Hollister Ave.



(Los Angeles Times)

Meanwhile, a fast-moving fire in the San Bernardino National Forest on Friday afternoon prompted authorities to tell Forest Falls residents to flee their homes. The fire covered more than 200 acres and was burning quickly into the San Gorgonio Wilderness, according to the San Bernardino County Fire Department. An evacuation center was set up at Inland Leaders Charter School, at 12375 California St. in Yucaipa. Highway 38 was closed.

The most serious of the fires burned along Interstate 8 near Alpine. The fire jumped through the community of West Willows, engulfing buildings and burning along a traffic median on the side of the freeway.

Authorities said that more than 400 acres had been burned and that hundreds of people had been evacuated. Officials were still trying to tally the exact number of homes lost, though it appeared at least a dozen structures were burned. Live television coverage from Alpine showed numerous homes and other structures burning as winds pushed the fire through foothill communities.

Resident Enrique Camargo said he ran toward the fire area to check its progress after the evacuation order was issued. As he checked on the fire, he said, his wife was home packing the car.

He said he was still not sure if they would follow through with evacuating.

“Let’s see what happens,” Camargo said.

Another resident, who asked that his last name not be used, said in a cellphone call Friday about 1:30 p.m. that he was perhaps 600 yards from the fire. He had no idea if his home was OK.

“I can’t get to my house,” Randy said. Authorities “won’t let me get to my house.”

The San Diego County Sheriff’s Department said immediate evacuations were needed in the Highland Mobile Home Park and the surrounding community. Officials said evacuees could go to Viejas Casino at 5000 Willows Road.

By 5 p.m., authorities said that they were getting the upper hand and that forward progress of the fire had been stopped.

“We have made great progress, but there is still a lot of work to be done,” said Cal Fire Capt. Kendal Bortisser.

Another fire forced evacuations near Camp Pendleton.

The blaze broke out about 11:30 a.m. and an hour later was continuing to burn in the Mainside area between Santa Margarita Trail and De Luz Road, the Marine Corps tweeted.

Officials said evacuations were in place for Lake O’Neill, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service and the De Luz Child Development Center. Those displaced were being sent to a McDonald’s on base.

A truck fire along the Cajon Pass spread to nearby brush, threatening structures in the Devore Heights area, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said. The fire quickly grew to 100 acres and was burning off Highway 15 and Kenwood Avenue, north of San Bernardino. Two outside lanes of the 215 Freeway, north of the 15 Freeway, were closed as a result.

Firefighters also handled smaller blazes in the Angeles National Forest, Montecito Heights, Sylmar and Pacoima near the Hansen Dam.

Many parts of Southern California hit new high temperature marks Friday, with a few spots reaching the hottest readings ever recorded. Among the places that set all-time records were Van Nuys Airport (117 degrees), Burbank Airport (114), Santa Ana (114) and Ramona (115), according to the National Weather Service.

“We expect today to be the hottest day,” Keily Delerme, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard, said Friday. Even coastal areas saw temperatures in the high 80s and low 90s.

For Luz Lyle, the heat wave already has proved to be unbearable. Standing by a bus stop in downtown early Friday, when the temperature hovered around 77 degrees, she said she was happy to be going to work because her office has air conditioning.

The hot days this week have forced her to hand over water guns to her children. Sometimes, she joined in on the water fights while blasting the air conditioner inside her home.

“All day long,” Lyle, 53, said. “All night long.”

Inside downtown’s Grand Central Market around noon, hordes of people made their way through the various stalls. The clamoring sound of plates and pots echoed while giant fans stationed along the aisles blew cool air. Tourists stopped by one of the fans for a moment, hoping for a respite from the heat.

Outside, Allyson Schaefer was applying sunscreen while the rest of the crowd ordered hot food — and hot coffee. It was 90 degrees.

“I just have to get through today,” Schaefer, 25, said as she sat under the shade of a large red umbrella.

Schaefer, who is from Texas, lamented the timing of her Southern California visit. She said she came to visit a friend — not to experience a Southland heat wave. On Saturday, she hopes to find refuge in San Diego. Until then, she said, she’ll stick to her plan.

“Drink lots of water and put on sunscreen,” she said.

“You have very dry conditions and a north wind,” Delerme, the meteorologist, said. “As the wind goes downhill, it dries it more and makes it warmer. That’s why it’s such an extreme event.”

The dry heat raises the danger of new fires sprouting throughout the region. A red flag warning was in effect from Friday night through Saturday, with the most at-risk areas in the foothills and mountains.

Single-digit humidity paired with dry fuels also creates the possibility of “extreme fire behavior,” she added.

“If there’s a fire, it won’t take long for it to spread out,” she said. “It’s just going to be dry.”

Los Angeles has a network of cooling centers for people who lack access to air conditioning and need a place to escape dangerous, higher-than-normal temperatures. Recreation and Parks facilities — such as recreation centers, museums and senior centers — as well as libraries were available as cooling centers during regular hours.

“Extreme heat can be dangerous — especially for young people and seniors,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said in a statement. “When temperatures rise this high, our libraries, recreation centers and senior centers give Angelenos who need to escape the heat a friendly, welcoming, safe place to stay cool and healthy.”

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power also said it would install temporary water fountains in the Tujunga Wash area, San Julian Park, Gladys Park, La Plaza de Cultura y Artes and the Exposition Park area.

In San Diego, the county’s Fire-Rescue Department planned to have extra firefighters, brush engines and water tankers on duty to deal with any heat-related blazes. Critical fire weather conditions also were possible in Ventura County, the valleys and the Central Coast.

Although temperatures in Yolo and Napa counties were expected to reach the low 90s on Friday, fire officials said Friday’s higher humidity levels would help firefighters battle the County fire, which has burned 88,375 acres and destroyed nine structures. The blaze is 37% contained.

“We expect temperatures to max out at about 92 degrees, with humidity at 19% to 25% later this afternoon,” said Anthony Brown, a spokesman with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. “That helps us out because with the humidity level up, the vegetation doesn’t dry out.”

Wearing heavy gear, firefighters can quickly become exhausted working 12- to 24-hour shifts. Brown said the slightly lower temperatures Friday would “help with the fatigue of firefighters” before the heat picks up Saturday.

Thousands of firefighters are assigned to the County fire. Meanwhile, the Pawnee fire, which has burned 15,000 acres in Lake County, is 92% contained.

A dip in temperatures allowed crews to make significant gains on containing both blazes, fire officials said.

The heat in the Sacramento Valley could reach triple digits over the weekend before dropping early next week, the National Weather Service said. A similar drop is forecast in Southern California, where temperatures are expected to fall by about 10 degrees in Los Angeles by Sunday.


(
latimes.com)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/8/2018 6:10:31 PM
Russian Flag

Western media pundits resort to hurling racist abuse: 'Russian team too white to win World Cup'

russia world cup
© Carl Recine / Reuters
Russian joy: kryptonite to russophobes
While most of us focus on the football, many Western media outlets have used the past few weeks to promote their "issues" agenda. Amid the virtue signaling, readers are being misled about the make-up of Team Russia.

Before a ball was kicked, you could have filled a book with nasty, obnoxious, mean-spirited and loathsome takes on this year's FIFA World Cup. They ranged from predictions of Russia using chemicals to slow down England players (BBC) to British Foreign Minister Boris Johnson equating the event to the "Hitler" Olympics of 1936.

While people here laugh at this sort of plainly outrageous nonsense, other forms of deceit invoke feelings of anger. And one which seems to especially irk Russians is the false representation of alleged ethnic conformity within their side.

Two American media outlets have notably spread disinformation on the subject over the past month, Mother Jones and RFE/RL. The former's facepalm-worthy scene-setter told us how "Russia's national team is too Russian, which is one reason it will bomb out of the World Cup." Meanwhile, the US state broadcaster told us last weekend how "Russia's World Cup team bucks multi-ethnicity seen on Swiss, other teams."


Comment: Half the Swiss team is ethnic Albanian, from Kosovo, formerly Serbia, formerly Yugoslavia. US journalists and think-tankers are making a virtue out of literally plundering a country's resources.


Complete nonsense. But first, let me explain Mother Jones' theses. The writer, one Clint Hendler, appears to be slating Russia for not having enough black players. And, as a consequence, he - rather embarrassingly - believed the "Sbornaya (a term for the national side) will be defeated in the first group stage, delivering an embarrassing rebuke of the nation's insular approach to what has long been a very global game."

National choices

RFE/RL's attempt to bolster the false narrative came a fortnight later, after Russia had defeated Egypt and Saudi Arabia, dashing Mother Jones' hopes. Here we read how the squad is strikingly "bereft of non-Russian players." And the central quoted figure is our old friend Slava Malamud, who earlier this year assured his followers that St. Petersburg's SKA would win the KHL hockey championship because they were "[Vladimir] Putin's team, [and] this is Putin's election year." Of course, CSKA Moscow eliminated them soon after and they, in turn, were beaten by AK Bars of Kazan in the final.

Malamud mentions how "Peter Odemwingie - the son of Nigerian immigrants who was born and raised in Russia - refused to play for Russia several years ago, opting instead to play for Nigeria." But this isn't accurate. Odemwingie was born in Uzbekistan when it was still a Soviet republic, before moving to Nigeria at the age of two. He attended secondary school in Russia for a period, but began his professional football career in Nigeria with Bendel Insurance. He was capped at the age of 21 - suggesting that the Super Eagles snapped him up before he ever appeared on Russia's radar.

Incidentally, Odemwingie, who played for three seasons at Lokomotiv Moscow in his late 20s, recently stated how "racism in Russia has been exaggerated." The player noted that supporters who travelled here for the tournament would change their opinion of the country: "In general, there's no such problem [as racism] in Russia," he told RIA Novosti news agency. "Many people will come to the World Cup in Russia. Their perceptions should be changed. They will communicate with people and see things as they really are."

But don't expect to read his views on an American news site anytime soon.


Comment: Or British for that matter, which have been breathlessly explaining these last few weeks to their stunned readership that Russians are only 'being temporarily nice coz Putin forced them all to...'


Different folks

Anyway, let's circle back to the original point about the supposedly mono-ethnic Russian World Cup squad. While Team Russia are not as multiethnic as France, Switzerland or England, they are actually one of the most diverse squads in the competition, and hardly as uniform as Japan, Iran or Senegal, to name a few.

For instance, the right-back Mario Fernandes was born in Brazil and qualified under residency rules after five years with CSKA Moscow. Meanwhile, sub-goalkeeper Vladimir Gabulov and star midfielder Alan Dzagoev are Ossetians. As it happens, the team manager, Stanislav Cherchesov, is their compatriot.

Veteran center-half Sergey Ignasevich has Belarusian and Chuvash roots, while goal hero Artem Dzyuba boasts Ukrainian and Chuvash origins. Also, winger Alexander Samedov has an Azeri father. Indeed, he turned down entreaties from Baku before declaring for Russia.

Daler Kuzyayev is of Tatar descent. And then there is Denis Cheryshev, a breakout hero of the past few weeks, who grew up in Spain and has admitted to feeling more Spanish than Russian.

Even among the Slavic Russian players, there is a tremendous geographic range. Yury Gazinsky hails from the far-eastern territory of Khabarovsk, while the Miranchuk twins, Anton and Aleksey, were born and raised in the Kuban - their hometowns separated by 9,300km of road, or a nine-day train ride.

In Russia, there are almost 200 nationalities and 147 million people, but the squad can only contain 23 footballers. Nevertheless, it's fair to say the Russian selection is broadly representative and hardly confined to ethnic Russians. In fact, the team that plays Croatia on Saturday night will be far more diverse than its opponents.

In this case, it's pretty clear that the US outlets are analyzing Russia from a Western migration perspective. But, centuries ago, when Western European powers were raping and pillaging the global south, the Russian empire was conquering parts of Asia and the Caucasus. As a consequence, it's hardly surprising when these historical differences are reflected on the football field.

Comment: Yes, it's a no-brainer, but that's not self-evident for people with no brains.

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

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