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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/7/2018 5:27:18 PM
Snowflake Cold

Global cooling: Anomalous cold across vast expanses of Siberia and a foot of snow in mountains of Khakassia

snow
33 cm (more than a foot) of snow in Khakassia. In Yakutia -10°C.

4 Sep 2018 - Anomalously cold weather - pre-winter weather - across a vast expanses of Siberia. Night frosts and solid precipitation in the form of groats and wet snow from Taimyr to Altai and from the Urals to Kolyma.

West of Yakutia the temperature dropped to -10°C. In the mountains of Khakassia heavy snow fell. The meteorological station "Nenastnaya" recorded 33 cm of snow!

"Nenastnaya Station is near Priiskovoye city (Khakassia)."

Thanks to Martin Siebert for this link


Comment: See also these reports for the last 7 days from across the northern hemisphere which currently is still 17 days away from the Autumnal equinox on the 23rd of September:

As ice and snow return, summer's over in Nunavut, Canada

After summer fails to show, snow is earliest since 1982 in Yellowknife, Canada

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: UK extreme cold late summer as Atlantic ocean temperatures change

Global cooling: Heavy snowfall in summer over the Alps for second weekend in a row - Up to 8 inches in 24 hours

Snowing for the 3rd day in the past 5, atop Pikes Peak, Colorado

Early snow at Big White ski resort in British Columbia

Early snowfall in East Kazakhstan

Global cooling: Colorado gets snow in early September

Global cooling: Turkey hit by summer snowfall


(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?
9/7/2018 6:02:04 PM
Health

'Incurable' & drug-resistant: Deadly superbug colonizing hospitals across globe

superbug Staphylcocus epidermidis
© William WEST / AFP
The superbug Staphylcocus epidermidis on an agar plate in Melbourne on September 4, 2018.
Doctors are warning of a potentially fatal and "formidable" pathogen which has spread to hospitals across the globe and is resistant to all known antibiotics.

A team of researchers from the University of Melbourne in Australia discovered three multidrug-resistant strains of Staphylococcus epidermidis which emerged in recent decades and spread globally. The team studied samples from 78 medical institutions across 10 countries, releasing their findings in the journal Nature Microbiology on Monday.

"Often it just colonises the skin," researcher Ben Howden said as cited by ABC News Australia. "It doesn't necessarily lead to infection. But in a smaller number of people it can lead to a serious, invasive infection requiring complex treatment."

S. epidermidis, a relative of the better-known MRSA superbug, is found commonly on human skin, and poses no real threat to the majority of the human population. However, people who have compromised immune systems, are recovering from surgery or have implanted medical devices such as catheters or joint replacements are susceptible to the potentially-severe and sometimes fatal infection.

"The discovery is really that there's this bacteria that's been spreading in hospitals around the world somewhat unrecognised for a number of years," Howden said. "This is just another example of the use of antibiotics driving bacteria to become more and more resistant."


The study concludes that hospital practices, including inappropriate prescription of antibiotics in intensive care units may "have driven the evolution of this organism, once trivialized as a contaminant, towards potentially incurable infections."

"It can be deadly, but it's usually in patients who already are very sick in hospital... it can be quite hard to eradicate and the infections can be severe," Howden said.

"This highlights that the use of more and more antibiotics is driving more drug-resistant bacteria," he warned. "With all bacteria in a hospital environment we are driving more resistant strains and there's no doubt that antibiotic resistance is one of the biggest dangers to hospital care worldwide."
(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?
9/8/2018 6:04:29 PM

Russia warns US of pending attack in Syrian area with US troops



Washington (CNN) Russia has warned the US military twice in the last week that its forces, along with Syrian regime units, are prepared to attack in an area where dozens of US troops are located, according to several US defense officials.

Russia claims that there are militants in the area protected by US troops.
Moscow's declaration has sharply raised US commanders' concerns that American forces would be at risk if a Russian attack goes forward, CNN has learned. And it has sparked US warnings to Moscow not to challenge the US military presence.
    Several US defense officials have told CNN that concerns center on a US-led anti-ISIS coalition base at At Tanf. US troops help monitor a 55-kilometer (34-mile) exclusion zone around At Tanf. Given its location near the borders of Syria, Jordan and Iraq, the At Tanf garrison is seen as a key strategic location as the US, Iran and Russia compete for influence in the region.

    At Tanf US base
    Datos del mapa ©2018 GeoBasis-DE/BKG (©2009), Google, Mapa GISrael, ORION-ME

    Right of self-defense

    There is concern the Russians could use aircraft or their naval warships in the eastern Mediterranean to launch a missile attack against what they say are militants, sparking a confrontation that could inadvertently draw in US forces if Russian targeting is not precise.
    So far, no buildup of Russian ground forces has been observed in recent days, officials said.
    US officials would not say how Moscow conveyed its warning to Washington.
    Defense Secretary James Mattis and Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are aware of the latest intelligence, officials said. US troops in the area, as always, have the right of self-defense if they are attacked and would not need to ask permission from higher levels of the government before acting.
    While the situation is described by one US official as "concerning," there clearly is US interest in discussing Moscow's warning to ensure the Russians have a clear view of any potential US military response.
    Video shows Russian special troops in Syria
    Video shows Russian special troops in Syria 02:28
    "We have absolutely advised them to stay out of At Tanf," one US official said. "We are postured to respond."
    "The United States does not seek to fight the government of Syria or any groups that may be providing it support. However, if attacked, the United States will not hesitate to use necessary and proportionate force to defend US, coalition or partner forces," a defense official told CNN.
      US officials, however, are stopping short of discussing what military weapons and measures are in place for the protection of US troops.
      Russian complaints about the presence of potential Al Qaeda or ISIS fighters in the buffer zone are not new, the US officials point out. But with an imminent Russian-backed assault by Syrian regime forces in the Idlib area in the north, there is concern Moscow could see this as an optimum time to conduct multiple offensive operations.


      (edition.cnn.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?
      9/8/2018 9:03:13 PM

      US Officially Commits to “Indefinite” Military Presence in Syria


      By
      Jason Ditz

      According to State Department officials, President Trump has recently abandoned his desire to “get out” of Syria and bring US troops home. He has signed a new strategy, which includes new military goals, and eliminates all timelines for removing troops from Syria.

      US troops are in several parts of Syria, mostly in the Kurdish-held northeast. An estimated 2,200 US troops are in Syria, though official numbers are being withheld from the public. Special Envoy James Jeffrey said the old plan was to leave Syria by year’s end, but now the troops are committed to an “indefinitely extended” stay.

      The new goals are substantial as well, with the US now focusing on forcing Iran out of Syria and “enduring defeat” for ISIS. Jeffrey says the US is “not in a hurry” and that Trump is now on board with this idea.

      Pentagon officials have long presented the operation in Syria as more or less permanent, and have resisted all talk of pullout, including from President Trump. This mirrors their policy in Iraq, where US troops are similarly positioned in unknown numbers on a more or less permanent basis.

      Trump, interestingly, has not commented on this fairly dramatic change in his position on US troops in Syria. It is unclear why Trump hasn’t spoken on the matter, but there is no sign such comments are coming in the near future. (ANTIWAR.COM)

      By Jason Ditz / Republished with permission / ANTIWAR.COM



      (activistpost.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?
      9/8/2018 11:26:44 PM
      Colosseum

      Libya in Chaos Seven Years After NATO's 'Liberation', But Who Cares?

      ruined building Libya
      © Esam Omran Al-Fetori / Reuters
      A historic building ruined during a conflict, Benghazi, Libya, February 28, 2018
      Libya remains a lawless land, with rival militias fighting battles in the streets of Tripoli and over 1 million people in need of aid. But the West's 'liberal interventionists' aren't interested in the catastrophe they created.

      "Hundreds escape prison amid deadly clashes in Tripoli," a headline on the BBC News website declared this week.

      Over 60 people have died in the current fighting with many more injured and hundreds of ordinary citizens displaced. The latestdisturbances began after the Tarhuna's 7th Infantry ''Kaniat' Brigade made advances into the capital from the south and clashed with a coalition of Tripoli militias.

      It's really hard to keep up with who's fighting who. If you think the situation in Syria is complicated, you haven't been paying much attention to Libya. As the BBC article acknowledged: "Libya has faced continuing chaos since NATO-backed militia forces, some of them rivals, overthrew long-serving ruler Colonel Gaddafi in October 2011."

      Libya has rival governments but even they don't control the majority of the country. There is no 'rule of law', only the rule of the gun. Libya's regression from the country with the highest Human Development Index figure in the whole of Africa just ten years ago, to a fragmented and very dangerous failed state, is hard to take in. Last year, the UN Agency IOM reported thatslave markets had returned to the country.

      Economic and societal collapse has had a devastating impact on the life of ordinary Libyans.

      Take health care. A 2017 Service Availability and Readiness Assessment survey, conducted by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Ministry of Health, found that 17 out of 97 hospitals are closed and only four hospitals were functional between 75-80% of their capacity. Over 20% primary health care facilities are closed and the rest are not "well ready for service delivery".

      In May 2016, the WHO also expressed 'great concern' over the deaths of 12 newborns in the Sabah Medical Centre neonatal intensive care unit in Sabha, southern Libya. It records: "The deaths occurred as a result of a bacterial infection and lack of specialized health staff to provide medical care."

      The education system is also in a state of collapse or near-collapse. In 2016, it was reported that the start of the school year was postponed because of a "lack of books, lack of security and many other factors."

      It was noted that the Libyan school year had not been regular since the fall of Gaddafi. This year, UNICEF said that 489 schools were affected by the conflict and that around 26,000 students had been forced to change schools due to closures.

      UNICEF also says that 378,000 children in Libya are in need of humanitarian assistance, 268,000 are in need of safe water, sanitation and hygiene and 300,000 are in need of education in emergency support. Overall 1.1m people in Libya are in need of humanitarian assistance.

      Given the dire situation it is no surprise that so many Libyans have left, or are leaving. In 2014, it was reported that between 600,000 and 1m had fled to Tunisia.

      If we add those who went to Egypt and elsewhere, the figure is likely to be in excess of 2 million, quite staggering when you consider that the 2011 population of Libya was around 6 million.

      As I argued in a previous op-ed, the Western assault on Libya was an even worse crime than the invasion of Iraq because it came later. There was really no excuse for anyone, seeing how the 'regime change' operation of 2003 had turned out, supporting a similar venture in North Africa.

      Yet, those responsible for what happened have faced no comeback. The UK Prime Minister at the time, David Cameron, is blamed for Brexit (by Remainers), but not for what he did to Libya and the claims he made to justify the military action. This is despite a House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee report concluding, five years later, that "the proposition that Muammar Gaddafi would have ordered the massacre of civilians in Benghazi was not supported by the available evidence."

      Nicolas Sarkozy, the French President in 2011, faces a trial (or trials) in relation to three different investigations, including accepting money from Gaddafi to help his election campaign, but he has not yet been prosecuted for his role in the war.

      Bernard-Henri Levy, the philosopher considered by some to be the intellectual godfather of the Western intervention - and whoboasted "we are the first to say that Qaddafi is no longer the legal representative," is performing a one-man anti-Brexit play, as the country he helped 'liberate' burns.

      Stateside and in 'liberal' circles across the West, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are lionised for not being Donald Trump, but what the duo did to Libya is far worse than anything Trump has done up to now.

      And the British Home Secretary under whose watch control orders on members of the anti-Gaddafi Libyan Islamic Fighting Group were lifted, one Theresa May, is now Prime Minister, and trying to take the moral high ground against Russia. To add insult to injury, it is a politician who opposed the NATO action in 2011, Jeremy Corbyn, who is under constant media attack and painted as beyond the pale. Just how wrong is that?

      Returning to the current violence, a UN-brokered ceasefire to end the fighting in south Tripoli is reported at time of writing to be holding, but bearing in mind how previous ceasefires have collapsed, we can't be optimistic. Part of the problem is that the country is awash with arms. The sad truth is that Libya is broken and probably will never be put back together again. A great crime has been committed, but you would never think it, judging by the lack of media coverage.

      We've had a lot of debate this summer in Britain about Israel's 'right to exist'- and whether challenging this makes one 'anti-Semitic' but the reality is that Libya - as a modern, functioning state - has ceased to exist. And no one in elite, establishment circles seems the least bit bothered. Consider how many column inches were devoted to 'saving' Libya in the build up to NATO's 'humanitarian' intervention seven and a half years ago, with the lack of opinion pieces about the country today.

      Try googling the names of some of the leading media war hawks and 'Libya' and you see they tend to go as silent after 2011 - shifting their attention to propagandising for 'regime change' in Syria. The only conclusion one can draw is their sole interest in the country was seeing Muammar Gaddafi toppled. After that was achieved, who cares?
      (sott.net)


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

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