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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/28/2013 9:12:16 PM

Ecuador Spikes Halts Snowden's Asylum Because Julian Assange Is a Fame Hog

The Atlantic Wire

Ecuador Spikes Halts Snowden's Asylum Because Julian Assange Is a Fame Hog

Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa has declared Edward Snowden's special travel document to be invalid because he doesn't want WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to look like he's "running the show." Correa declared Snowden's travel pass, issued after the U.S. revoked his passport, was unauthorized, The Wall Street Journal's José de Córdoba and Jeanne Whalen report, after a series of messages between Ecuadorean government officials worried over Assange's role. The ambassador to the U.S., Nathalie Cely, wrote to Correa's spokesman, "I suggest talking to Assange to better control the communications. From outside, [Assange] appears to be running the show." It's like the scene in Almost Famous, when members of the band Stillwater get into an argument over their band's promotional materials: "From the very beginning, we said I'm the front man, and you're the guitarist with mystique. That's the dynamic we agreed on!"

RELATED: How Did Ecuador Become the Best Place for Edward Snowden to Hide from America?

According to the Journal, Assange wrote Ecuador's government on Monday to say he hoped he hadn't embarrassed them, apologizing "if we have unwittingly causing Ecuador discomfort in the Snowden matter." (He also held a conference call with reporters that day.) It seems it didn't work. Earlier this week, The Guardian's Rory Carroll and Amanda Holpuch report, "a senior foreign diplomat in Quito told the Guardian that some — though not all — factions in the government were annoyed with what they saw as Assange grandstanding." By Thursday, Correa said in a press conference, "What is the validity of a safe conduct pass issued by a consul in London for someone to leave from Hong Kong to Moscow? None." Assange will be interviewed on ABC News' This Week on Sunday.


"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?
6/28/2013 9:17:48 PM

Fed officials approve horse slaughterhouse in NM

FILE - This April 15, 2013 file photo shows Valley Meat Co., which has been sitting idle for more than a year, waiting for the
Department of Agriculture to approve its plans to slaughter horses. Federal officials have granted the southeastern
New Mexico company's request to open a horse slaughterhouse, adding Friday June 28,2013 that they plan to grant similar
permits to operations in Iowa and Missouri. (AP Photo/Jeri Clausing, File)


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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Federal officials cleared the way Friday for a return to domestic horse slaughter, granting a southeastern New Mexico company's application to convert its cattle facility into a horse processing plant.

In approving Valley Meat Co. plans to produce horse meat, USDA officials also indicated they would grant similar permits to companies in Iowa and Missouri as early as next week.

With the action, the Roswell, N.M., company is set to become the first operation in the nation licensed to process horses into meat since Congress effectively banned the practice seven years ago.

The company has been fighting for approval from the Department of Agriculture for more than a year with a request that ignited an emotional debate over whether horses are livestock or domestic companions.

The decision comes more than six months after Valley Meat Co. sued the USDA, accusing it of intentionally delaying the process because the Obama Administration opposes horse slaughter.

Valley Meat Co. wants to ship horse meat to countries where people cook with it or feed it to animals.

In a statement, the company said it was "encouraged that after well over a year of delay that the process has finally reached completion. Valley will now begin final preparation to hire 40 to 100 employees over the coming weeks and months so that they may go to work providing a humanely harvested, safe, legally compliant product to the world markets."

Although the USDA granted the company's certification, it was unclear when it would actually be able to begin slaughtering horses. Valley Meat Co. attorney Blair Dunn said the USDA has to send inspectors to the plant before it can begin operation. The USDA said Valley Meat would have to notify the plant in advance to get inspectors on site.

The plant would become the first horse slaughterhouse to operate in the country since Congress banned the practice by eliminating funding for inspections at the plants. Congress reinstated the funding in 2011, but the USDA has been slow in granting permits permit, citing the need to re-establish an oversight program.

The USDA said it expects to issue permits next week for Rains Natural Meats in Missouri and Responsible Transportation in Iowa.

Meantime, the USDA continues to push for an outright ban on horse slaughter, and the Obama administration's budget proposal for the upcoming fiscal year eliminates funding for inspections of horse slaughterhouses, which would effectively reinstate a prohibition on the industry. Both the House and Senate agriculture committees have endorsed proposals that would cut the funding. But it is unclear when and if an agriculture appropriations bill will pass this year.

"Since Congress has not yet acted to ban horse slaughter inspection, (the agriculture department) is legally required to issue a grant of inspection today to Valley Meats in Roswell, N.M., for equine slaughter," said USDA spokeswoman Courtney Rowe.

"The Administration has requested Congress to reinstate the ban on horse slaughter. Until Congress acts, the Department must continue to comply with current law."

A return to domestic horse slaughter has divided horse rescue and animal welfare groups, ranchers, politicians and Indian tribes about what is the most humane way to deal with the country's horse overpopulation and what rescue groups have said are a rising number of neglected and starving horses as the West deals with persistent drought.

The Humane Society of the United States and Front Range Equine Rescue said it would follow through on plans to file suit to try to block the resumption of horse slaughter.

"The USDA's decision to start up domestic horse slaughter, while at the same time asking Congress to defund it, is bizarre and unwarranted," Jonathan Lovvorn, senior vice president and chief counsel for animal protection litigation at The HSUS, said in a statement. "Slaughter plants have a history of polluting their communities and producing horse meat that is tainted with a dangerous cocktail of banned drugs. We intend to hold the Obama administration accountable in federal court for this inhumane, wasteful and illegal decision."

Proponents of a return to domestic horse slaughter point to a 2011 report from the federal Government Accountability Office that shows horse abuse and abandonment have been increasing since slaughter was banned in 2006, leaving fewer humane options for horse owners who can't afford to care for or euthanize their animals. They say it is better to slaughter the animals in humane, federally regulated facilities than have them abandoned to starve across the drought-stricken West or sold at auction houses that then ship them to inhumane facilities in Mexico.

The number of U.S. horses sent to other countries for slaughter has nearly tripled since 2006, the report says. Many humane groups agree that some of the worst abuse occurs in the slaughter pipeline. Many are pushing for a ban on domestic slaughter and a ban on shipping horses to Mexico and Canada.

Gov. Susana Martinez, a horse lover, said "creating a horse slaughter industry in New Mexico is wrong and I am strongly opposed."

New Mexico Land Commissioner Ray Powell, a veterinarian, called on local, state and federal leaders to "work together to create solutions and provide sustainable funding to care for or humanely euthanize these unwanted horses. Continuing to ignore the plight of starving horses, creating a new horse slaughter plant, or exporting unwanted horses to Mexico won't solve this problem."

___

Mary Clare Jalonick in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.


"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?
6/29/2013 10:23:05 AM

Slavery: The Fishing Industry’s Shameful Bycatch

Takepart.com

It certainly was poignant this week to see snapshots from Senegal of President Obama and the First Lady looking out at the Atlantic Ocean from a doorway through which tens of thousands of slaves once passed in manacles before being shipped to the Americas to start their horrific new lives.

But slavery by any name is still very much alive and well in 2013, with an estimated 27 million men, women, and children around the world forced into labor in the global economy, doing everything from picking tomatoes to assembling smart phones, mining, working in private homes—and in virtual enslavement on commercial fishing boats.

Last month, the Vatican that decried the fact that, despite the publicity of such slave-like conditions on fishing boats going back nearly fifteen years, they still exist. And we’re not talking just in the remote corners of the South China Sea, but off the coasts of developed countries including New Zealand, Ireland, and Scotland.

It’s estimated that 10 to 15 percent of commercial fishermen around the world work under conditions that make them virtual modern day slaves.


Already one of the most dangerous jobs on the planet, many of these bluewater fishers face daily exploitation and abuse. Most often they are untrained and illiterate and live in dismally unsafe and unhygienic conditions described as worse than prisons.

Two men often share a cardboard bunk, work 18-hour shifts and if they are paid—most are not—t’s probably with frozen fish that have no value in local markets. Their identify papers are taken when they board and never returned, making escape problematic.

Most often they are flagged from China, South Korea or Thailand and fish for shrimp off the coast of West Africa, tuna in the South Pacific and Indian Oceans and toothfish in the seas near to Antarctica.

Men are often recruited from small rural villages, where they must pay their life savings (usually $300 or less) in return for the promise of a good-paying job on the high seas. (It’s a scam very similar to Asian and Eastern European women who try to buy their way out of poverty and end up as sex slaves.) Instead they find themselves smuggled across borders and sold to illegal fishing syndicates. They often spend their first nights in dark rooms, padlocked from the outside, with hundreds of other men in similar straits.

It is a global phenomenon. Cambodians end up working on Thai trawlers; Ukrainians on Russian crabbers; men are recruited from rural parts of China, Vietnam and the Philippines and end up on boats far from home.

"It was horrendous," said Duncan Copeland, a senior campaigner at the Environmental Justice Foundation, in 2012 to The Guardian. "The men were working in the fish hold with no air or ventilation in temperatures of 40-45 degrees. It was rusty, greasy, hot and sweaty. There were cockroaches everywhere in the galleys and their food was in disgusting boxes. All they had for washing was a pump bringing up salt water. They stank. It was heartbreaking."


Solutions other than educating fish buyers are few. Some European countries have tried to limit purchasing only from boats that have the “certified” approval of their flagged homeland, but it’s a system that is apparently easy to beat.

Knowing where you’re fish comes from is a big problem in southern Europe, given its proximity to West African fish, shrimp, prawn and lobster fishermen.

But it’s also an issue in the U.S., where some of America’s largest supermarkets—including Costco, Giant, Trader Joe’s and Wal-Mart—which, according to the AFL-CIO, have all bought seafood originating from factories with substandard working conditions.

Onshore fish farms are proving to have no better working conditions. Over the past 20 years the boom in shrimp farms across southeast Asia that today provides about 90 percent of the world’s shrimp, has similarly led to a boom in scathing reports from groups like Human Rights Watch about labor abuses, underage workers and more slave-like conditions.

"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?
6/29/2013 10:40:08 AM

Remains of missing boy found in southwest Colo.

In this June 26, 2013 photo provided by the La Plata County’s Sheriff’s Office, searchers look for evidence pertaining to a missing boy, Dylan Redwine, who disappeared in southwest Colorado last November. About 45 officers spent five days searching a 12-mile stretch of Middle Mountain Road looking for clues in the case. La Plata County investigators hope some of the first clues found since a 13-year-old boy disappeared last November will help solve the mystery. Sheriff's spokesman Dan Bender said in a statement Wednesday, June 26, 2013 that further investigation, interviews and laboratory testing will determine if any of the items are related to the disappearance of Dylan Redwine. (AP Photo/La Plata County’s Sheriff’s Office)

Associated Press


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DURANGO, Colo. (AP) — Teams looking for a 13-year-old boy last seen in November during a visit with his father have found his remains in southwest Colorado, La Plata County sheriff's officials said Thursday.

Authorities said Wednesday that a five-day search for signs of Dylan Redwine ended with the teams finding several undisclosed items.

Some of the items included bones, they said Thursday. The Colorado Bureau of Investigation told La Plata County sheriff's officials Thursday that testing indicated the remains were Dylan's.

"The parents are obviously devastated. It's not the kind of news we were hoping to give them. We were hoping to find him alive," Durango police Lt. Ray Shupe said. "Our hearts are broken that this is the end result."

The criminal investigation into his disappearance is continuing, sheriff's office spokesman Dan Bender said. District Attorney Todd Risberg said it was too early to say whether charges might be filed. No suspects or persons of interest have been named.

Dylan's family didn't return phone messages from The Associated Press. His father, Mark Redwine, told some Denver media outlets he was focusing on giving Dylan a proper burial.

The boy lived in the Monument area with his mother, Elaine Redwine, but arrived in La Plata County on Nov. 18 for a court-ordered visit in Vallecito with his father, Mark Redwine. The father said he returned home from running errands Nov. 19 to find Dylan was gone.

About 45 officers spent five days searching a 12-mile stretch of Middle Mountain Road looking for clues in the case this week. The search had been planned as a follow-up after snow melted this spring.

The latest search was conducted in the deep canyons and dense forest of the Middle Mountain area, north of Vallecito Lake.

"The search area varies from hundreds of feet off the road to 5 feet off the road you have cliffs," Bender told the Durango Herald (http://bit.ly/13a31Tu ).

The remains were found about 8 to 10 miles from Mark Redwine's home via rural roads, Bender said.

Shupe declined to comment on what else searchers found with Dylan's remains, or how and when Dylan might have died.

"Now that we've found him, our next mission is to find exactly what happened to him," he said.

The case drew national attention, including an appearance by the parents on the "Dr. Phil" show. During the show, Elaine Redwine and Mark Redwine each accused the other of responsibility for their son's disappearance.

Bender said investigators earlier spent five days building a dam in a fruitless attempt to search the reservoir, and searches have occurred weekly since the snow melted.

___

Information from: Durango Herald, http://www.durangoherald.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?
6/29/2013 10:43:40 AM

Egypt prepares for worst ahead of Sunday protest



Associated Press


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CAIRO (AP) — As the streets once again fill with protesters eager to oust the president and Islamists determined to keep him in power, Egyptians are preparing for the worst: days or weeks of urban chaos that could turn their neighborhoods into battlegrounds.

Households already beset by power cuts, fuel shortages and rising prices are stocking up on goods in case the demonstrations drag on. Businesses near protest sites are closing until crowds subside. Fences, barricades and walls are going up near homes and key buildings. And local communities are organizing citizen patrols in case security breaks down.

For yet another time since President Mohammed Morsi took office last year, his palace in Cairo's upscale Heliopolis neighborhood is set to become the focus for popular frustration with his rule. Some protests outside the capital have already turned deadly, and weapons — including firearms — have been circulating more openly than in the past.

"We're worried like all Egyptians that a huge crowd will come, and it will get bloody," said Magdy Ezz, owner of a menswear shop across from the walled complex, a blend of Middle Eastern and neoclassical architecture. Besides ordinary roll-down storm shutters, storefronts on the street are sealed off with steel panels.

"We just hope it will be peaceful. But it could be a second revolution," he said. "If it lasts, we'll have to keep the store closed. But it's not like business has been booming here anyway, especially since the problems last year."

Last winter, the area saw some of Cairo's deadliest street violence since the 2011 uprising, with Islamists attacking a sit-in, anarchists throwing gasoline bombs, and police savagely beating protesters.

Morsi's opponents aim to bring out massive crowds starting Sunday, saying the country is fed up with Islamist misrule that has left the economy floundering and security in shambles. They say they have collected 15 million signatures — around 2 million more than the number of voters who elected Morsi — calling for him to step down, and they hope the turnout will push him to do just that.

Morsi's Islamist allies say they will defend the mandate of the country's first freely elected president, some with their "souls and blood" if necessary, while hard-liners have vowed to "smash" the protests.

On Friday, thousands of Morsi supporters launched a counterdemonstration, which some plan to continue as an open-ended sit-in at a mosque near the presidential palace — the endpoint of the main protest march two days later.

Both camps say they intend to be peaceful, but demonstrations could rapidly descend into violence — especially if the two sides meet. Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood group has said five of its members were killed in clashes with protesters in Nile Delta provinces over the past days. On Friday, two people were killed in clashes in the port city of Alexandria and at least five Brotherhood offices were torched, while the nation's highest religious authority, Al-Azhar, warned against "civil war."

At the Brotherhood's national headquarters in Cairo's Muqattam district, workers added a final layer of mortar to a brick wall topped with grating to reinforce the main gate. A bank on the corner was completely boarded up. Some fear protesters could descend on the neighborhood to attack the headquarters, as happened last spring when supporters and opponents of the president fought street battles that left 200 wounded.

"The police have to get this place secured. It's their job and I'm sure they will," said Hadi Saad, a designer who lives around the corner from the headquarters. "The demonstrations will be very big across the country, no matter if (Morsi) stays or goes, so we should be prepared here as well."

Other neighbors said they don't expect a repeat of violence in the area, a hill overlooking the rest of the city. Only a handful of police patrolled the neighborhood ahead of the weekend protests, corralling a 100-car queue to the main avenue's gas station.

Engineer Hasan Farag, also a neighbor, said residents were "hoping for the best." Some have begun to resent the Brotherhood's presence, however, and a petition to force the offices out has been circulating.

"The neighborhood is divided — some don't mind the headquarters being here, others do," Saad said.

Security has been redoubled at the presidential palace in Heliopolis. Walls set up last year still block some traffic access, and curved concrete slabs designed to prevent climbing now protect the main gates. Shipping containers also line much of the perimeter, and nearby apartment buildings have blocked off their parking lots and side streets with barbed wire. On Friday, authorities built a new wall of concrete blocks to surround the complex.

Peter Soliman, a communications student who lives in the neighborhood, said most residents don't know what to expect.

"Of course, parents are worried about their children going out to demonstrate by the palace, especially if the Brotherhood shows up," he said. "People fear things will turn bloody and divide the country."

Other Heliopolis residents and protest organizers say neighborhood watch groups are already being formed.

In the city center, concrete walls continue to block off the Interior Ministry and southern access routes to Tahrir Square, epicenter of the uprising that overthrew longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak. Protesters began gathering at the square ahead of the weekend, saying they plan to dig in for a protracted conflict.

The nearby Semiramis Hotel is taking no chances, even though Tahrir is expected to be a sideshow compared to Sunday's march to the palace. The site of repeated clashes between stone-throwing youths and riot police this past year, the luxury hotel has just finished fortifying itself with a spiked metal fence topped with razor-sharp blades.

To the south, in the leafy Garden City neighborhood — an area that has sometimes seen spillover violence from Tahrir — some residents were securing their homes.

Metalworker Sameh Haddad used an arc welder to put the final touches on an apartment building's new wrought iron gate before hurrying to other appointments. "For once, business has been great," he said.

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

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