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Myrna Ferguson

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/16/2013 3:44:55 PM
Hi Miguel,
I had to post this here too. I think Geoffrey West is about the best reporter ever. Here is his take on the Bostom Bombings

Geoffrey West: Boston, A Potential False Flag?

Geoffrey WestStephen: Cosmic Vision News anchor Geoffrey West has spent the wee hours of this morning gathering as much information as he could find that appears to show that the Boston Marathon incident is, in all probability, another tragic false flag. Is the speed with which such information now gets ‘out there’ – and the wider acceptance of such information – all part of our consciousness awakening? The messages from our Celestial and Galactic families have indicated that as the energies rise, the period of time between thought and manifestation would decrease. As Geoffrey points out in this article, the time between an ‘event’ and its corresponding truth has been decreasing, resulting in events related to the remaining energies of the cabal seemingly now being ‘exposed’ almost instantly.

Boston, A Potential False-Flag? Use HIGH Discernment With The Mainstream Media

By Geoffrey West, Cosmic Vision News – April 15, 2013

www.greenprintforlife.org

Just like in the Sandy Hook shootings, the crimes are being exposed much more quickly. It has taken over 12 years for North Americans to begin seeing the truth about 9/11. It took a few months for the truth to emerge last year about the fires and also the movie theatre shooting in Colorado. Sandy Hook was exposed in a matter of days. The explosions in Boston were exposed in a matter of hours. People now know where to look, and they are catching the lies.

There was a Facebook sympathy page created in Facebook two DAYS ago, but has since been pulled down. Another was created this morning, a full eight hours before the explosions were heard. (these may get removed soon) Sandy Hook also had Facebook tribute pages posted before the event happened. Read more…

He gave AlexJones site, but it didn't work, here it is:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xL1dVleN00A

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/16/2013 4:55:38 PM

Doctor Running in Marathon Tended to 'Piles of Victims'

By ALYSSA NEWCOMB and ANTHONY CASTELLANO | Good Morning America5 hours ago

Dr. Vivek Shah had just crossed the 26.2-mile finish line at theBoston Marathon Monday when two bombs exploded seconds apart, forcing him to put his medical skills to work.

"I've never obviously been in combat, but people I've trained with have been and this is as close as I can imagine it would be," Shah told ABC News Radio late Monday night. "Just, basically piles of victims. Everything I saw was a traumatic amputation, basically."

Shah, an orthopedic surgeon at New England Baptist Hospital in Roxbury Crossing, Mass., said he saw injuries along the sidewalks on Boylston Street for which no amount of training could prepare him.

"In all my medical training, I have not seen things that I saw [Monday]. Everything was traumatic," Shah said.

The death toll from the twin bombings at the finish line at the Boston Marathon stands at three, including 8-year-old Martin Richard, according to ABC News' Boston affiliate, WCVB-TV. A single candle was placed in front of his home overnight in Dorchester, Mass. The boy's mother and sister were also injured as they waited for his father to finish the race.

Neighbor Jane Sherman told WCVB Martin was a typical kid who loved to ride his bike and play baseball.

"There are no words to describe how they are feeling ... we are feeling," Sherman said, adding that the family was very close knit.

Read more: http://www.wcvb.com/news/local/metro/Young-Marathon-bomb-victim-ID-d-as-Martin-Richard/-/11971628/19764940/-/n4jfhoz/-/index.html#ixzz2QciLfQlb

COMPLETE COVERAGE: Boston Marathon Explosion

Spectator Aaron Hern, 11, of Martinez, Calif., was among the younger victims injured when flying shrapnel dug into his thigh as he was waiting for his mother to cross the finish line. Hern is being treated at Boston Children's Hospital.

"He was waiting for his mom to go through the finish line to take pictures of her and shortly before she got there, the bomb went off," family friend Janene Sides told ABC News affiliate KGO-TV.

On Facebook, Aaron's mother, Katherine, said her son was in stable condition in the ICU late Monday night. Hern said Aaron would have additional surgeries and is expected to be hospitalized for seven to 10 days.

Hern is one of at least 145 people -- 10 children -- injured in the attack, according to the latest ABC News count. At least 17 are in critical condition.

PHOTOS: Boston Marathon Explosions Near Finish Line

Hern's injuries are similar to what doctors at two Massachusetts hospitals described Monday night, hours after the explosions. Some of the most critical patients sustained lower extremity injuries from debris.

Dr. Ron Walls, chair of emergency medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital, said doctors did not identify any shrapnel, such as ball bearings, but saw a lot of "street stuff" that had injured their patients.

"Rocks, bits of metal, soda cans, anything that is really close to a blast like that can be fragmented," he said. "Everything we saw was ordinary material that could have been propelled by the device."

Of the 31 patients who were transported to Brigham and Women's Hospital after the blast, nine are in critical condition and one person has "life-threatening" injuries, Walls said.

It was a similar scene at Massachusetts General Hospital, where trauma surgeon Dr. Peter Fagenholz said he found "a lot of small metal debris" in victims.

RELATED: Knocked Down Marathoner Thought It Was His 'Last Trip'

Of the 29 patients he said were seen at the hospital, eight were in critical condition.

"The most common serious injuries are combined lower extremity injuries," he said, which included bone and soft vascular trauma.

Fagenholz said several amputations had been performed at the hospital today and he had seen at least one ruptured ear drum.

"A number of patients will require repeat operations tomorrow and serial operations over the next couple of days," Fagenholz said.

Children Among the Victims of Blasts

On a public school holiday in Boston, Patriots' Day, children were also hit hard by the explosions.

Some of the youngest victims were taken to Boston Children's Hospital, where officials said their conditions ranged from good to serious.

Other injured included a 7-year-old boy who was being seen in the emergency room for a minor leg injury and a 12-year-old with a femur fracture, hospital officials said.

The 42-year-old parent of a patient was also being treated in the emergency department and three additional patients were in good condition, according to the hospital's evening update.

At Tufts Medical Center, nine people were being treated for "significant but not life-threatening injuries," WCVB reported.

Four of the surgical cases were serious orthopedic and neuromuscular trauma to the lower legs, with open fractures, while other patients suffered shrapnel wounds and ruptured eardrums, hospital officials said.

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"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?
4/16/2013 4:59:43 PM

"Cowardly" Boston blasts strike core of human activity

Reuters3 hours ago

BERLIN (Reuters) - The Boston marathon bomb blasts that claimed the lives of at least three people on Monday were "ghastly and cowardly" attacks striking at the core of the freest of human activities, world athletics head Lamine Diack said on Tuesday.

Two bombs ripped through the crowd at the finish line of the world's oldest annual marathon, killing three people, maiming others and injuring more than 100 in what a White House official said would be treated as an "act of terror".

It was the worst bombing on U.S. soil since security was tightened after the attacks of September 11, 2001.

"This ghastly and cowardly attack strikes at the very core of the freest of human activities," International Association of Athletics Federations' president Diack said in a statement.

"Whether as a fun runner or elite competitor, road running exemplifies the honesty of basic human movement, strength and resilience.".

More than 20,000 runners were taking part in the race in Boston with thousands more lining the city streets.

"We stand firm with the race organizers of the Boston Marathon...and the people of Boston at this time of tragedy and condemn this mindless attack," Diack added.

"What makes this incident so vile and its planning so incomprehensible is that marathons the world over are about selfless acts of human generosity."

International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge said the blasts would trigger a common resolve among those left behind.

The Olympics have had their share of tragedy with the 1972 Munich Games killings of 11 Israelis by Palestinian gunmen and the deadly 1996 Atlanta Olympics bomb blast.

"My thoughts and the those of all the Olympic Movement are with the victims, their friends and their families today," Rogge said.

"A marathon is a special almost magical event that unites different communities with one shared goal, and I am sure that this incident will serve to bring together all those who took part and all those who support such an event with a common resolve."

(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; Editing by John Mehaffey)


"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?
4/16/2013 5:06:17 PM

Boston Marathon update: More than 170 injured, bomb contained ball bearings

Video from the Boston Globe shows the 1st explosion that rocked the finish line at the Boston Globe Monday. (April 15)

BOSTON—Law enforcement officials cautioned that they are just beginning the potentially lengthy process of tracking down the culprit behind two bombs that left more than 170 people injured and three dead near the finish line of the Boston Marathon Monday. Seventeen of the injured are in critical condition in area hospitals, officials said Tuesday, with several of them facing amputations.

Officials have not said anything publicly about the nature of the bombs, but doctors treating the injured said Tuesday that it appeared the bombs were loaded with metal bearings that embedded into the skin of their patients. The AP reported, citing anonymous law enforcement sources, that the bombs were made of pressure cookers stuffed with ball bearings.

Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis said at a press conference Tuesday that no one is in custody for the crime, but that law enforcement are interviewing witnesses.

Officials also made a plea to the public to turn in any photographic or digital evidence they have from the scene. "There have to be hundreds if not thousands of photographs or videos or observations there were made at the finish line yesterday," Massachusetts State Police Superintendent Timothy Albert said. "I would encourage you to bring [it] forward." They directed people with information to call 1-800-494-TIPS.

FBI Special Agent in Charge Richard DesLauriers said investigators are "just beginning upon that path" of processing the crime scene and following up on leads from the public.

Gov. Deval Patrick said that no additional explosive devices were found in the area during the FBI's sweep, refuting reports that as many as five were found and deactivated.

The injuries from the explosions include dismemberment and local hospitals say they are treating shrapnel wounds, open fractures and limb injuries. At Massachusetts General Hospital, doctors performed four amputations, and two more patients are at risk for needing amputations. An 8-year-old boy from Dorchester is one of the three known dead, and several of the injured are also children.

So far, officials have identified just one victim of Monday’s bombings at the Boston Marathon: 8-year-old Martin Richard of nearby Dorchester. According to Rep. Stephen Lynch, who has known the family for 25 years, Richard was at the race with several members of his family, including his father, Bill, who had run the race in the past but had skipped the marathon this year because of an injury.

The family had gone to get ice cream and had returned to watch runners along Boylston Street when they witnessed the first blast, according to Lynch. He said the family immediately tried to move off the sidewalk into the street, in an attempt to get away from buildings out of fear of another blast. That’s when the second bomb struck, killing Richard and severely injuring his mother, Denise, and his six-year-old sister, Jane. His father was hit by what Lynch described as “ball bearings” from the bomb, but was not severely injured, while Richard’s older brother, who has not been identified, was uninjured. Lynch told Yahoo News the family was “struggling as anybody in this situation would” and was planning to issue a statement to the media later today.

"This was a cowardly and heinous act," President Barack Obama said Tuesday morning in a brief address. He said the bombs are being investigated as an act of terrorism, but emphasized that authorities do not know who is responsible for it. "We will find whoever harmed our citizens and we will bring them to justice," he said.

On Tuesday morning, Boylston Street remained closed, but Boston officials reopened some of the perimeter around the site of the explosions. Davis called the area "the most complex crime scene we've dealt with in the history of our department." A 12-block area remains closed to the public.

Meanwhile, in New York, a busy terminal in LaGuardia airport was evacuated due to a suspicious package Tuesday morning.

There were still signs of the chaos that blanketed the Copley Square area after the explosions went off at 2:50 p.m. Along Huntington Avenue, a stretch packed with hotels where many Boston Marathon runners stayed Monday night, dozens of SWAT vehicles were positioned in spaces where tourists usually board the city’s famous Duck Boat tours. And the side streets leading to Boylston were cordoned off with police tape, as investigators waved off bystanders trying to take photos of the scene.

The shopping mall at the Prudential Center, one of the city’s busiest tourist spots, was reopened but was eerily empty—without the usual stream of workers who use the mall to commute to their offices at the Prudential Tower, one of the city’s tallest buildings.

Along side streets, runners still dressed in their blue and yellow Boston Marathon jackets wandered the streets—some with their suitcases, as they tried to figure out a way to get to the airport, others trying to get in a daily run.

“You’re supposed to keep moving after running a marathon,” said Kathi Russo, a runner from Salisbury, N.C., who had crossed the finish line about 20 minutes before the first blast went off.

Russo, who was running her sixth Boston Marathon, spent hours Monday night trying to get back to her hotel, which was about two blocks from the second bombing site. She described a scene of “chaos” as hundreds of runners were pushed away from the blast site, not quite aware of what had happened.

Russo’s friend, Dianne Allen, was running in a later wave about half a mile away from the site when officials began to stop runners. Allen said people had no idea what happened until word of the bombings began trickling through the crowd, thanks to the few runners who had been carrying their cell phones.

It took Allen several hours to get back to their hotel, where she and Russo were reunited. They said several members of the group they were traveling with had been standing near the finish line and were injured—including a 16-year-old girl, who had a broken fibula, and a husband and wife, who suffered broken legs and burns.

“We don’t know a whole lot more about that,” Allen said. “It’s been hard to get information.”

Back in Washington, the White House released a statement saying that President Barack Obama had been briefed overnight about the explosions, and that later this morning he would receive a briefing from Assistant for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism Lisa Monaco, FBI Director Robert Mueller and other senior members of his team. The president ordered that all flags at public buildings be flown at half staff.

The race draws many runners from overseas—potentially part of its appeal as a target. Some foreignconsulates in Boston urged visitors from abroad to reach out to their families to let them know whether they were safe. Some also updated their social media—notably their Twitter feeds—with the latest from the investigation and useful telephone numbers or other resources.


"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?
4/16/2013 5:17:19 PM

Huge 7.8-Magnitude Earthquake Hits Near Iran-Pakistan Border

Iran-earthquake-004Hundreds feared dead as tremors felt as far as north India and Gulf states after quake strikes near Iranian city of Khash

By Jason Burke in Delhi, The Guardian - April 16, 2013

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/apr/16/earthquake-hits-iran-pakistan-border

Hundreds of people are feared dead after a huge earthquake hit the border regions between Iran and Pakistan.

Tremors were felt across the Gulf region, across Pakistan and well into north-west India at around 10.45 GMT on Tuesday.

The US Geological Survey said it had measured the earthquake at magnitude 7.8 and gave its location as 50 miles east-south-east of the town of Khash, in Iran.

Though the area is largely desert and mountains, there are several major cities, including Zahedan, only 125 miles away, which has more than half a million inhabitants.

An Iranian official quoted by Reuters said hundreds of dead were expected as a result of the quake. “It was the biggest earthquake in Iran in 40 years and we are expecting hundreds of dead,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The 7.8 figure means an extremely powerful quake, on a level with that in Sichuan province, China, in 2008 that killed an estimated 68,000 people.

People in the city of Zahedan poured into the streets when the earthquake struck, Iran’s Fars news agency reported.

All communications in the area have been cut, the Iranian Red Crescent’s Mahmoud Mozaffar told state television, and rescue teams have been dispatched to the affected area.

“In the aftermath of this earthquake five evaluation teams from the Khash and Saravan branches were sent to the area to assess damage,” Mozaffar said.

There has been no serious damage in the Iranian city of Saravan, the Fars news agency said.

In Delhi, more than 1,500 miles from the suspected epicentre in Iran, office workers evacuated buildings as fittings shook and windows rattled. Tremors lasted for around 30 seconds.

“It was very frightening. Everything started moving. I ran into the street,” said Rajiv Khanna, an office worker in the south of the Indian capital.

There were reports of tremors felt in Qatar, Bahrain and Abu Dhabi in the Gulf, in Multan in Pakistan and elsewhere.

In 2003, a major earthquake near the Iranian city of Bam, not far from Tuesday’s epicentre, killed 30,000.

Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant was not damaged by the earthquake, an official at the Russian company that built the plant said. The official at Atomstroyexport said he had spoken to a colleague at the plant after the quake and that no damage was reported.

Bushehr, Iran’s sole nuclear power plant, is near the Gulf coast in western Iran, while the quake struck in eastern Iran near the border with Pakistan.

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

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