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Luis Miguel Goitizolo
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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/3/2012 12:55:25 AM
Extremely cold weather kills dozens across Europe

The Irish Times - Wednesday, February 1, 2012

A steam train makes its way through a forest in the Harz national park near Schierke in central Germany yesterday. Temperatures in Berlin are forecast to drop to -13 tonight.Photograph: AP

DANIEL McLAUGHLIN

A SEVERE cold snap gripping central and eastern Europe has killed dozens of people in recent days, as blizzards swept the region and temperatures plunged following a relatively mild start to the winter.

More than 60 people have died as a deep freeze settled across countries stretching from the Baltic to the Black Sea, with the death toll highest in Ukraine and transport chaos most severe in Romania and Bulgaria.

Ukraine’s emergencies ministry said 30 people had perished from the cold in the last five days, as the mercury dipped to -33 degrees and forecasters predicted no respite from the chill until the weekend at the earliest.

Officials in Kiev said most of those who died were homeless people who could not find shelter at night, despite the provision of extra accommodation and food kitchens.

Hospitals across the country have also treated more than 600 people for frostbite and other cold-related problems.

Kiev administration chief Oleksandr Popov ordered the capital city’s schools and colleges to close until the end of the week, as ageing heating systems and power networks struggled to cope with the surge in demand.

At least 15 people have died in Poland since a sharp drop in temperatures last weekend, bringing the country’s death toll for the month of January to 27, with most of the victims succumbing to exposure, flu and pneumonia as well as carbon monoxide poisoning from faulty heaters.

Several people have also died in the Baltic states, the Czech Republic, Serbia, Bosnia and Romania and Bulgaria, where until now temperatures had been well above normal for mid-winter.

Blizzards crippled transport across Romania, Bulgaria and Serbia late last week, with the Romanian government forced to deploy the army to rescue thousands of people trapped in snow-bound cars and trains in the south of the country. The chaos did nothing to boost the government’s popularity as it struggles to survive a wave of anti-austerity street protests.

Snowfall blocked the main bridge across the Danube linking Romania with Bulgaria, and ice on several stretches of the river threatened cargo traffic.

Flights were cancelled and diverted and Black Sea ports were closed due to the weather.

Ice covered the Black Sea off the Romanian coast, and a salt-water lake in northern Bulgaria froze for the first time in almost 60 years, as Sofia and several smaller Bulgarian towns endured record low temperatures.

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo
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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/3/2012 1:00:21 AM

Severe Cold Spell Kills Dozens Across Europe



Rescue helicopters are airlifting supplies and evacuating dozens of people from snow-covered villages in Serbia and Bosnia, as the death toll from Europe's severe cold spell has rises over 80. (Feb. 1)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo
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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/3/2012 3:43:52 PM
Death toll rises as temperatures plunge in Europe

222 dead as cold snap grips Europe

AFP12 hrs ago

Deadly cold snap grips Europe

More than 200 deaths are blamed on a week of frigid weather in countries from Ukraine to Italy. More cold expected

Temperatures plunged to new lows in Europe where a week-long cold snap has now claimed more than 220 lives and forecasters warned that the big freeze would tighten its grip at the weekend.

In the southwest Czech Republic, the mercury dropped as low as minus 38.1 degrees Celsius (minus 36.5 Fahrenheit) overnight and even Rome received a rare dusting of snow.

In the last seven days, a total of 222 people have died from the cold weather, according to an AFP tally.

Ukraine's emergencies ministry raised the death toll substantially from a previous 63 to 101, of whom 64 died on the streets.

Almost 1,600 people have requested medical attention for frostbite and hypothermia and thousands have flocked to temporary shelters that have been set up across the country for people to find warmth and food.

The ferocious temperatures killed eight more people over the last 24 hours in Poland, bringing the death toll to 37 since the deep freeze began a week ago, police said.

Temperatures plunged to minus 35 Celsius in some areas of Poland, while in Bulgaria parts of the River Danube have frozen over, severely hindering navigation.

Elsewhere in Bulgaria, another six people were found dead from the cold, bringing the overall tally to 16 in the last week, according to local media. No official figures have been released.

Most of the dead in the European Union's poorest country were villagers found frozen to death on the side of the road or in their unheated homes, the reports said.

More than 1,000 Bulgarian schools remained closed for a third day Friday amid fresh snowfalls and piercing winds in the northeast of the country.

In neighbouring Romania two more people died, bringing the overall toll to 24, and hundreds of school remained closed. Forecasters warned of heavy snowfall for the weekend.

In Rome, residents experienced only their second day of snow in the last 15 years, with white flakes covering palm trees, ancient Roman ruins and Baroque churches across the capital.

Up to five centimetres (two inches) of snow fell in some districts and ancient monuments like the Colosseum were closed to visitors for fear of damage to the structure.

Temperatures in the Alpine region of Piedmont in northern Italy went as low as minus 30 degrees Celsius and drivers were advised to avoid regions in the centre of the country due to heavy snowfall and resulting traffic problems.

However trains resumed normal service across the country except in and around Bologna and on a local line near Rome, the state railways said in a statement after days of delays that affected thousands of passengers.

Three people have died due to the extreme weather in recent days, including a homeless man found in the centre of Milan on Thursday.

Estonia and France announced their first casualties of the freeze, with a man found frozen to death on a street in Talinn and an 82-year-old man suffering from Alzheimer's dying of hypothermia in the eastern French village of Lemberg after wandering out of his home in pyjamas.

Rescuers in Serbia ploughed through snowdrifts to get food, supplies and aid to residents of mountain villages, where thousands of people have been trapped by the inclement weather.

"To help a woman who needed to reach a hospital we were breaking through two-metre (six-foot) snow drifts, which lasted for two and a half hours," said Vedran Taskovic, a rescuer in the southeastern town of Vranje.

"Eventually, we had to make a sleigh of nylon bags to get her to the road, as she couldn't walk."

Swathes of Britain were bracing for snow after temperatures plunged to minus 11 degrees Celsius overnight in Chesham, southeast England, with authorities warning that the cold could catch people off-guard after a warmer-than-normal winter so far.

The French, who have cranked up their heating systems were on Monday expected to break an all time power consumption record set in 2010, with consumers being asked in some regions to turn off appliances for at least four hours per day to avoid blackouts.

The cold snap has also killed people in the Baltic countries of Latvia and Lithuania, Austria and even Greece.

burs/yad/mb

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo
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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/4/2012 6:02:29 PM
Secret Oil Spill Has Been Poisoning The Gulf For 7 Years










The
BP oil spill happened suddenly, and its devastation was palpable: quickly spreading sheens of toxic oil that poisoned birds, fish and marine mammals, and trashed Gulf Coast beaches.

But the BP spill wasn’t the first major oil spill to poison the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico. In fact, a slower but no less deadly spill started years earlier and is still flowing today, according to an ongoing investigation by Waterkeeper Alliance.

Aided by satellite imagery and research conducted by SkyTruth and aerial observation by SouthWings, the Waterkeeper Alliance and its local Waterkeeper organizations learned that an offshore platform and 28 wells belonging to Taylor Energy Company LLC have been quietly leaking oil into the Gulf for years.

Waterkeeper Alliance and several Gulf Coast Waterkeeper organizations filed suit against Taylor Energy under the citizen suit provisions of the Clean Water Act and Resource Conservation Recovery Act in Federal Court on Thursday.

“The plaintiffs filed suit to stop the spill and lift the veil of secrecy surrounding Taylor Oil’s seven-year long response and recovery operation,” explained Marc Yaggi, Executive Director of Waterkeeper Alliance. “Neither the government nor Taylor will answer basic questions related to the spill response, citing privacy concerns.”

The spill, located approximately 11 miles off the coast of Louisiana, started after an undersea landslide during the aftermath of Hurricane Ivan in 2004. Waterkeeper estimates that hundreds of gallons of oil have leaked from the site each day for the last seven years.

“The Taylor Oil spill is emblematic of a broken system, where oil production is prioritized over concerns for human health and the environment,” said Justin Bloom, Eastern Regional Director of Waterkeeper Alliance. “Nearly two years after the BP Deepwater Horizon Spill, none of the comprehensive reforms recommended by the National Oil Spill Commission have been enacted and Congress has yet to pass a single law to better protect workers, the environment or coastal communities.”

Uncovering the ongoing Taylor Energy spill illuminates the danger of President Obama’s recent call for increased offshore drilling on 38 million acres of the Gulf of Mexico as well as the Arctic. The Taylor spill is in relatively shallow and accessible waters compared to the deepwater environments on which Big Oil has set its sights, yet it’s continued unchecked for years.

Waterkeeper and its allies allege that oil exploration and extraction technology has dramatically outpaced the development of safety and recovery technology and it appears that the current regulatory regime is incapable of protecting us from a runaway industry.

Related Reading:

BP Oil Spills Into The Gulf Of Mexico. Again.

The Sneakiest Anti-Environment Moves By House Republicans

Gulf Coast Residents Still Sick From BP Oil Spill

Image: Cover photo from the Gulf Monitoring Consortium Report

Read more: , , , , , , , ,



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/secret-oil-spill-has-been-poisoning-the-gulf-for-7-years.html#ixzz1lRBLUVw7

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo
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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/4/2012 6:08:33 PM
Drowning in Plastic









I’ve been living in Central America the last few months — Costa Rica, for the most part. There have been many interesting experiences along the way, but perhaps the most significant for me is access to the ocean. The Pacific Coast is just a couple hours away by bus. I’m almost 30 and, though I’ve lived all over the world, have never swum in the ocean before. The closest I came was dipping a toe into the East China Sea.

This week, I took a day off in order to make the trip to the beach town of Puntarenas. My companion and I walked along the beach looking for a suitable spot to lay out our stuff, but it wasn’t an easy search. The sand was littered with all kinds of trash, some ancient and weather-beaten, some apparently quite new. We finally found what seemed like an acceptable spot and laid out our blanket. When I sat down, I noticed a few feet from us an empty plastic motor oil container. (It could have been worse, check out this beach on Mexico’s Caribbean Coast.)

It wasn’t a great initial impression, but we’d traveled a long way to swim, so I shook it off and headed out to the water. Before I was up to my waist, I noticed something odd about the water. Oh, there was the odd piece of trash floating by: a strip of a plastic bag, the plastic rings from a six-pack. But I was seeing something much smaller. It was like the water was dirty, with little greyish specks — millions of them, within my field of vision. These weren’t plankton. As I looked closer I could tell they were tiny little pieces of plastic.

After all, we all know plastic isn’t biodegradable, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t still degrade. It degrades in a very unnatural way, slowly breaking up into tinier and tinier pieces, which, nevertheless, remain plastic. When the pieces are small enough they can be taken into the bodies of even small marine creatures, and carried up the food chain. Even human beings who eat a moderate amount of sea food have a certain amount of plastic in their body. These small irritants can cause all sorts of bodily problems, including cancer.

Of course, neither one of us could bring ourselves to dunk our head below water and add to our bodies’ plastic counts. We left after only 10 minutes of desultory wading, to make the two-hour trip back to our town.

You’ve heard of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, I’m sure. Scary as it is, you might be thinking to yourself, “But at least I live on the Atlantic coast.” No such luck, friend. Plastic is everywhere. This Popular Mechanics article from only a year and a half ago discusses a 20-year study that revealed just how widespread the plastic contamination actually is.

Sure, you can go to a private resort and the beach looks pristine. People pay a lot of money to make sure they don’t go for a dip and find a used condom floating in the surf. But the plastic is still there, too small to see. Ubiquitous. Killing us.

An interesting side-note in that article I linked above is a map of the world’s ocean currents, which are basically a series of rough loops. I mentioned dipping my toe in the East China Sea. There’s a big loop which basically swings by most of China’s East Coast and most of North America’s West Coast. A friend of mine followed in my footsteps, deciding to move to China after I’d lived there for not quite a year. He, too, visited the ocean. In an email, he marvelled at the amount of trash on the beach and in the water. But he was surprised to find most of it — easily seen from the labels — had actually floated over from North America.

Likewise, Chinese trash ends up on Mexican or Canadian beaches, adding to and mixing with the local variety. The lesson is, there’s only one ocean. All countries (even the land-locked) contribute to polluting it, and all suffer the loss of its use. Though a motor oil container or condom is an upsetting sight, the real danger is the constant increase in the concentration of those invisible plastic particles every bit of trash is eventually worn down to. To swim in the clear, blue ocean, is already a risky business. For the next generation, it may be downright impossible.

I’m reminded of an old Native American proverb, “We do not inherit the Earth from our ancestors, but borrow it from our children.” Our legacy of plastic has already taken a severe toll on our oceans. I feel a little ripped off — the vast, pure ocean that all humankind had available to them until recently has been stolen away before my time. But of course, even with my switch to reusables a number of years ago, I’ve produced an incredible amount of plastic in my life. I stole it from myself.

Here’s a somewhat less profound, but perhaps equally relevant proverb: “Don’t pee in the public pool.”

Related stories:

Soup of Plastic Covers Two-Thirds of Ocean’s Surface

Random Acts of Caring: Help Reduce Plastic Waste

Watch the Long Journey of the Plastic Bag [Video]

Read more: , , , , , , , ,

Photo credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/drowning-in-plastic.html#ixzz1lRCu9eyj

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