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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/28/2013 11:07:08 AM

Quebec town mourns victims of fuel-tanker train disaster

Reuters

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Mourners walk the perimeter of the red zone as rescue workers line the streets following a memorial service to honour the victims of the train derailment in Lac Megantic, Quebec July 27, 2013. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi

By Christinne Muschi

LAC-MEGANTIC, Quebec (Reuters) - Hundreds of mourners filled the streets of Lac-Megantic, Quebec, on Saturday, as the families of the 47 people killed in North America's worst railway disaster in two decades attended a memorial service at a local church.

A trumpeter on the street played Ave Maria to the mourners as they gathered outside St Agnes church to watch the service on a massive screen.

"It's still difficult," said Chantal Guay, a local resident who was among the crowd outside church. "We're all family in Lac-Megantic, everyone knows each other. I knew them all - all the missing and all the dead."

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Quebec Premier Pauline Marois and politicians from all levels of government attended the memorial service.

Three weeks ago a runaway train hauling 72 crude oil tanker cars careened into the center of town, derailed and then exploded into a series of fireballs, destroying dozens of buildings, including apartments and a popular downtown bar.

Although police say they consider Lac-Megantic's core to be a crime scene, prosecutors have not yet laid any charges in connection with the July 6 train crash.

Inside the packed Roman Catholic church, makeshift shrines for the victims lined the altar, overflowing with pictures, hand-written notes and flowers. Family members bowed their heads as the names of all 47 victims were read out.

"Brothers and sisters, what happened? What did happen here in our town of Lac-Megantic," said Steve Lemay, the community's young parish priest. "An unspeakable disaster dragging us all into indescribable suffering. Our town, its heart devastated, has lost its children."

Investigators have so far found 42 bodies amid the rubble, with another five people missing and presumed dead. Many of the dead were young people, out for the night at a local bar, just meters away from the epicenter of the blasts.

The community memorial was organized to bring comfort to the survivors, with Lemay and the town's mayor, Colette Roy-Laroche, handing out hosta plants to the families of the victims as sign of their resilience.

Rescue workers and police, along with the dozens of volunteers who helped run shelters for the displaced in the days after the crisis, were also honored for their work.

Helene Draper, who lost a cousin and numerous friends in the disaster, was overwhelmed by the support of people who came from across Quebec and around the world to attend the service.

"I'm very proud to see that all these people are still here for us," she said, clutching a single white rose to her chest. "This is our chance to turn the page on this tragedy, to start to heal."

The deadly accident has prompted Canadian transportation regulators to impose emergency new rules on rail safety, and has resulted in numerous lawsuits.

The train, owned by Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway, was parked on the main line outside of Lac-Megantic by its sole operator, who left it unattended for the night. It then began moving, gaining speed as it rolled downhill.

The blackened remains of Lac-Megantic's core, just half a block from St Agnes church, is still fenced off as the search for bodies and evidence continues. As the bells tolled, Marois spoke briefly with reporters gathered outside the church.

"I am here to speak for Quebec and the Quebecois people," she said, her voice cracking. "To each and every person who lost a child, who lost a husband or wife, or someone they cared about - Quebec is whole-heartedly with you."

(Writing and additional reporting by Julie Gordon; editing by Jackie Frank)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/28/2013 11:10:37 AM

Kenya's elephants may vanish in 10 years, warns prominent naturalist

Christian Science Monitor

Kenya’s elephants could be wiped out by poaching in 10 years, unless urgent measures are taken to end the crisis, International wildlife conservationists warned here this week.

A demand for ivory and rhino horns in the lucrative Asian black market has attracted cartels to Africa that are presently carrying-out cold blood killings of the animals, the conservationists say. In Kenya, the situation is at its worst now, according to Richard Leakey, an internationally famed paleontologist and founder of WildlifeDirect, a conservation charity.

“There has never been such a level of killing as we are experiencing today. Unless we do something now elephants will be gone from the wild within the next decade,” says Dr. Leakey, speaking at a presentation in the Kenyan capital.

“I believe partnerships with private sectors are critical. We cannot afford any further delay and we have to be tough," Leakey added.

RECOMMENDED: Think you know Africa? Take our geography quiz.

In 1979, when 1.2 million elephants roamed Africa, Kenya had 167,000, according to the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS). Today, Africa has an estimated 300,000 pachyderms, representing about a 75 per cent loss since 1979, figures compiled by WildlifeDirect.

Between January and May of this year, 117 elephants and 21 rhinos have been killed by poachers. In 2012, 384 elephants were killed compared to 278 in 2011 and 178 in 2010, according to Kenyan figures and the British newspaper The Telegraph. The Kenyan agency says there are between 30,000 and 38,000 elephants now living in Kenya, although no physical count has been done. Some conservationists think this figure could be lower.

The warning came with the launch in Nairobi of a conservation partnership called Hands off our Elephants on July 24, that brings together government, private sector, activist and community groups and individuals. The initiative seeks to create awareness about poaching and demands an escalation of anti-poaching efforts.

Hilary Clinton, former US secretary of state, announced a similar initiative in the US, according to a WildlifeDirect statement.

John Heminway, an American filmmaker and writer, said the news about the decline of the large and intelligent mammals has been on the wall for at least a decade. But he argues the intensity of poaching has increased in recent months.

Mr. Heminway's film, "Battle for the Elephants," was set to premiere in Nairobi July 26. The film outlines an elaborate illegal trade in ivory trophies and other illicit ivory products through East African ports to Asian countries such as China.

In China, an estimated 80 per cent of middle class families, those earning around $32,000 a year, have admitted purchasing ivory, according to Heminway. Of these, some 65 per cent are aware the purchases are of illegal ivory from poached elephants in Africa, he said.

Judi Wakhungu, Kenya’s presidential cabinet minister for the envirnment described the partnership as the beginning of the public awareness campaign to eradicate poaching and trade in ivory products.

“The security of elephants is a good indicator of the state of other species in our county,” said Dr. Wakhungu.

With increased poaching, Kenya has officially said that all poaching cases will be prosecuted as economic crimes. Kenya has also revised the punitive penalties upwards, with some as high as $62,5000 joined to prison time of up to 15 years.

Paula Kahumbu, executive head of WildlifeDirect Kenya, urged governments in Africa, Thailand, China and the USA to aid anti-poaching efforts by banning all sale of ivory, since legal markets were cover-ups for the illegal trade.

RECOMMENDED: Think you know Africa? Take our geography quiz.

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/28/2013 11:14:47 AM

North Korea rolls out missiles for war anniversary


In this image made from video, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, right, salutes during a military parade marking the 60th anniversary of the Korean War armistice in Pyongyang, North Korea, Saturday, July 27, 2013. Goose-stepping soldiers, columns of tanks and a broad array of ominous-looking missiles poised on mobile launchers were paraded through the streets of Pyongyang on Saturday in a painstakingly choreographed military pageant intended to strike fear into North Korea's adversaries and rally its people behind young ruler Kim Jong Un on the 60th anniversary of the armistice that ended the Korean War. (AP Photo/KRT via AP Video)

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PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) — North Korea marked the 60th anniversary of the truce that ended the Korean War with a lavish and painstakingly choreographed military parade through Pyongyang's main square, a solemn gathering led by leader Kim Jong Un at a newly opened war museum that features prominently the USS Pueblo spy ship captured in 1968 and a fireworks display that filled the night sky and drew huge crowds who watched from along the Pothong river.

This year's parade, which also included floats and thousands of civilians waving colorful fake flowers, appeared to offer more flash and pageant than new revelations of the secretive North's military capabilities, though one unit prominently carried kits marked with the bright yellow nuclear symbol, a reminder of the North's claims that it is preparing itself against a nuclear attack by the United States and is developing a nuclear arsenal of its own.

The extravagant assembly of weapons and goose-stepping troops on Saturday was reminiscent of the marches held by the Soviet Union and China at the height of the Cold War. It is one of the few chances the world gets to see North Korea's military up close. Although Pyongyang frequently uses the occasion to reveal new, though not always operational, hardware, there didn't appear to be any major new weapons in Saturday's parade.

Overlooking a sea of spectators mobilized in Kim Il Sung Square to cheer and wave flags, leader Kim Jong Un saluted his troops from a review stand. He was flanked by senior military officials, the chests of their olive green and white uniforms laden with medals. As fighter jets screamed overhead, a relaxed looking Kim smiled and talked with China's vice president. China fought with North Korea during the war and is Pyongyang's only major ally and a crucial source of economic aid. Kim did not make a speech.

Saturday's parade marked a holiday the North Koreans call "Victory Day in the Fatherland Liberation War," although the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a truce and the Korean Peninsula remains technically at war.

In Washington, President Barack Obama marked the day with a speech at the Korean War Veterans Memorial on the National Mall, saying the anniversary marks the end of the war and the beginning of a long and prosperous peace.

"Here today, we can say with confidence, that war was no tie, Korea was a victory," with 50 million South Koreans living in freedom and "a vibrant democracy" in stark contrast to dire conditions in the North, Obama said.

He said the U.S.-South Korea partnership remains "a bedrock of stability" throughout the Pacific region, and gave credit to the U.S. service members who fought all those years ago and to the men and women currently stationed there.

Chang Yong-seok, a senior researcher at the Institute for Peace and Unification Studies at Seoul National University, said North Korea intended to use the anniversary to highlight Kim Jong Un's leadership.

' 'It was a political performance meant to show off that Kim Jong Un remains powerful and strong," said Chang Yong-seok, a senior researcher at the Institute for Peace and Unification Studies at Seoul National University.

He said Kim standing side by side China's vice president was a reminder of the Cold War when North Korea and China stood against South Korea and the U.S., he said. It also indicated that North Korea wants to demonstrate its ties with China are on a path to recovery, which could send a message to the U.S.

"The fact that China's vice president was standing next to Kim Jong Un could have a symbolic meaning. That North Korea joining hands with China against South Korea, Japan and the U.S. reminds of the Cold War era. North Korea probably wanted to show off that its relationship with China is improving," Chang said. "It is like telling the U.S. that even if you don't want to talk to us, you'll end up having dialogue with us" as North Korea gets close with China.

Kim's rule, which began in late 2011 after the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, has been marked by high tensions with Washington and Seoul. He has overseen two long-range rocket launches and a nuclear test that drew widespread condemnation and tightened U.N. sanctions.

North and South Korea have turned to tentative diplomacy in recent weeks, but March and April saw North Korean threats of nuclear war against Washington and Seoul in response to annual South Korean-U.S. military drills and U.N. condemnation of Pyongyang's February nuclear test, the country's third. Long-stalled North Korean nuclear disarmament talks show no sign of resuming.

Last year's parade in Pyongyang, held to commemorate the April celebrations of the 100th birthday of the late national founder Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Un's grandfather, created a buzz among military watchers when the North rolled out a mysterious long-range missile known abroad as the KN-08. Most outside observers now believe the missiles were mock-ups, but they were carried on mobile launchers that appeared to have been obtained from China, possibly against U.N. arms trade sanctions.

Meanwhile, in South Korea, President Park Geun-hye vowed not to tolerate provocations from North Korea — Seoul says North Korean attacks in 2010 killed 50 South Koreans — but she also said Seoul would work on building trust with the North. "I urge North Korea to give up the development of nuclear weapons if the country is to start on a path toward true change and progress," Park said in a speech.

North Korea is estimated to have a handful of crude nuclear bombs, but many analysts don't think it has yet mastered the technology needed to build warheads small enough to fit on long-range missiles.

The North's parade tradition goes back to the founding of the country in 1948. Few countries — including North Korea's communist models — continue to trot out their military forces in public squares with such pomp and pageantry. But Pyongyang has stuck with them because its leaders believe they are a good way to show the world those things about the military they want to reveal, while at the same time sending a potent message domestically of the power of the ruling elite.

"The beauty of a parade is that weapons systems don't actually have to work in order to be impressive — a missile launcher looks good even when the missile won't launch," said David Stone, an expert on the Soviet and Russian militaries at Kansas State University.

That can be risky, however.

Almost as soon as last year's parade was over, military experts around the world said they thought the stars of the show — the long-range KN-08 missiles — were mock-ups of a design that is still being perfected and probably couldn't actually fly, despite North Korea's claims that it has the capability to strike the United States with nuclear-tipped ICBMs.

__

Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim, Youkyung Lee and Elizabeth Shim in Seoul, South Korea, and Darlene Superville in Washington contributed to this report.

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/28/2013 10:18:19 PM

Feds force school district to allow transgender girl to use boys’ bathrooms, locker rooms

The Daily Caller

It’s all the rage these days for transgender students (or their parents) to sue or make a big fuss because their genitalia doesn’t match the bathrooms and locker rooms they prefer to use.

The latest flare-up occurred in a quiet, expensive suburb northeast of Los Angeles. The Arcadia Unified School District in Arcadia, Calif. finalized an agreement with the U.S. Department of Education to terminate a Title IX investigation into allegations of discrimination against a transgender middle schooler, reports the Los Angeles Times.

The agreement resolves a complaint pressed by the Department of Education and filed on behalf of an unnamed student who was born female but wants to be a male.

The complaint alleges that school officials prevented the female student from using the boys’ bathrooms and locker rooms in sixth and seventh grades just because she doesn’t have a penis. The complaint also alleges that school officials didn’t allow the student to stay in a cabin with boys during a district-sponsored overnight camp. Instead the student was allegedly required to stay in a cabin separate from both male and female students.

The Arcadia school board unanimously approved the agreement this week, promising to take immediate steps to ensure that the transgender student will now be treated like other male students. In addition, the district promised to treat gender-based discrimination as a form of sex discrimination henceforth.

“I am glad that my school district has agreed to put in place the protections that I, and other transgender students, need to feel safe and welcome in school,” said the student in a press release circulated by the National Center for Lesbian Rights. “Knowing that I have the school district’s support, I can focus on learning and being a typical high school student, like my friends.”

An eight-page agreement letter from the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights summarizes many additional details of the original complaint. The student has “identified as a boy from a very young age” and “began consistently to assert” the hairstyle, clothing choices and manners typically favored by males in elementary school. The student adopted a masculine first name, started identifying with masculine pronouns and used a gender-neutral bathroom.

It was apparently in the sixth and seventh grades when the student wanted to use the boys’ bathrooms and locker rooms, and was denied. The cabin incident occurred in seventh grade.

The student is headed to ninth grade in the fall. Federal bureaucrats will be keeping a watchful eye on the district until at least 2016, notes Politico.

There has been a raft of recent stories with this same basic storyline across the country.

For example, in June, the Colorado Civil Rights Division decided that is is illegal discrimination to prohibit a transgender first-grader from using the girls’ bathroom at a public elementary school. The Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund filed a complaint that led to the ruling on behalf of the first-grader’s family.(RELATED: Transgender first-grader wins civil rights suit after girls’ bathroom ban)

The student, Coy Mathis, was born biologically male but wears girls’ clothes all the time and had also been using the girls’ bathroom at Eagleside Elementary in Fountain, Colorado near Colorado Springs.

“Compartmentalizing a child as a boy or a girl solely based on their visible anatomy,” the ruling asserted, “is a simplistic approach to a difficult and complex issue.”

Earlier this month, a transgender student in Florida complained to local media that a trade school wouldn’t allow him to use the women’s restroom. The student, Alex Wilson, was born male and is four years into a hormone therapy process designed to transform him into a female. He hasn’t undergone gender reassignment surgery. (RELATED: Florida transgender student barred from using women’s bathroom)

The school stepped in after an unidentified student protested Wilson’s use of the ladies room. Wilson was offered the use of a private bathroom. However, he deemed it unacceptable because, he explained, it is located in an inconvenient storage area.

Meanwhile, the state of Massachusetts is something of a transgender hotbed.

An 11-page set of guidelines recently distributed by The Bay State’s Department of Education mandates that transgender students are to be permitted to use the bathroom they feel most comfortable using. The rules apply to every public high school, middle school and elementary school in the state. (RELATED: New Massachusetts rules allow transgender students to choose their own bathroom)

Just in time for that ruling, a student at Middleborough High School has become the first transgender prom queen in the entire history of Middleborough, Mass. (pop. 23,000 or so), the cranberry capital of the world.(RELATED: Mass. high school crowns its very first transgender prom queen)

Strangely, though, a transgender high school student who applied to prestigious, private, all-female and typically very progressive Smith College was rejected because the school only accepts women. (RELATED: Transgender student denied admission to all-female Smith College)

Smith returned Calliope Wong’s application — and application fee — earlier this month.

“As you may remember from our previous correspondence, Smith is a women’s college, which means that undergraduate applicants to Smith must be female at the time of admission,” admissions dean Debra Shaver wrote in a letter to Wong.

Wong has identified as female for several years. However, on the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) Wong seems to have checked the gender box saying male.

Smith’s rejection places reliance on the laws of Connecticut, Wong’s home state. The state categorizes Wong as male and would only recognize Wong as a female after expensive, complex sex reassignment surgery.

“Yes, I was born into a body with typically male parts,” Wong blogged last fall. “But I identify and am living as female. Prevailing scientific and medical opinions support the fact that who I am identity-wise is different from the gender identity typically associated my physical body.”

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/28/2013 10:29:41 PM

Egypt's Brotherhood stands ground after killings

Reuters
34 minutes ago

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Supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi shout slogans during a protest at the Rabaa Adawiya square, where they are camping, in Cairo July 27, 2013. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

By Maggie Fick and Yasmine Saleh

CAIRO (Reuters) - Thousands of Muslim Brotherhood supporters stood their ground near a Cairo mosque on Sunday, a day after at least 72 were shot dead by Egyptian security forces, braced for a move against them by the army chief who ousted Islamist President Mohamed Mursi.

General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi made his first appearance since Saturday's bloodshed, smiling before television cameras at a graduation ceremony for police recruits in starched white uniforms.

He received a standing ovation and was hailed by Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim as "Egypt's devoted son". Fawning coverage in state and private media reflected Sisi's rising political star, in a country ruled by former military officers for six decades before Mursi's election in 2012.

Saturday's dawn killings, following a day of rival mass rallies, fuelled global anxiety that the most populous and influential Arab nation risked broader conflagration.

The European Union said it was sending foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton to meet on Monday with Sisi and the interim president he installed, as well as officials of the Freedom and Justice Party, the Brotherhood's political wing.

Ashton said she would press for a "fully inclusive transition process, taking in all political groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood".

The Brotherhood accuses the military of reversing the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak, and demands that Mursi, Egypt's first freely elected president, be reinstated.

Mursi has been in army detention since his July 3 overthrow and the military-backed interim government has placed him under investigation on charges including murder. Authorities also say they will move soon to clear the Brotherhood's tent vigil.

"It's a source of terrorism that's threatening the whole society, and that's being confirmed by the day," Mostafa Hegazy, adviser to interim President Adli Mansour, told reporters.

EGYPT POLARISED

Army vehicles surrounded entrances to the square outside the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque in northern Cairo, where Brotherhood supporters used pictures of the bearded Mursi to shelter from the fierce sun.

"We are right, legitimacy is on our side and hopefully at the end God will lead us to triumph and we will not give up," said Mostafa Ali, 29, from the Nile delta town of Mansoura.

The Interior Ministry has rejected witness accounts that police fired on the crowds and a public prosecutor has launched a probe into the violence, investigating 72 suspects for an array of crimes including murder and blocking streets.

Cairo was quiet on Sunday, but violent clashes rattled the Suez Canal city of Port Said, where security sources said two people were killed, including a 17-year-old, in fighting between pro- and anti-Mursi camps. Twenty-nine people were wounded.

The violence has polarized Egypt, with its secular and liberal elite showing little sympathy for the Brotherhood or qualms about the military's return to the political frontline.

Speaking to Reuters, interim Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy said deepening divisions would lead to "more tragedies". He blamed the Brotherhood for the violence, but said they should be part of the country's political future.

"If they decide to withdraw from politics, it will be disappointing, if they decide to pursue violence, then you are looking at a completely different confrontation," Fahmy said. "Even if I personally reject their positions or ideology, they have to find their place in Egypt's political life."

In a first sign of doubt from within the interim cabinet installed after the military takeover, Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs Ziad Bahaa El-Din said the government must not copy the "oppressive" policies of its foes. "Excessive force is not permitted," Bahaa El-Din wrote on Facebook.

The Tamarud youth protest movement, which mobilized millions of people against Mursi and has fully backed the army, expressed alarm at an announcement by Interior Minister Ibrahim that he was reviving Mubarak's hated secret political police, shut down after his fall.

"CAN'T REWRITE HISTORY"

The military says it does not want to retain power and aims to hand over to full civilian rule with a "road map" to parliamentary elections in about six months. But the very public role of Sisi as face of the new order has sown doubt.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said the Saturday killings suggested a "shocking willingness" by police and politicians to ratchet up violence against backers of Mursi. U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay said confrontation was "leading to disaster".

"Egypt stands at a crossroads," Pillay said in a statement. "The future of this great country that gave so much to civilization depends on how its citizens and authorities act over the following days and months."

Nearly 300 people have died in violence since Sisi deposed Mursi. The National Defence Council - comprising the interim president and heads of the security forces - said it was committed to freedom of expression and protest, providing they were peaceful. It urged Mursi supporters to "stop practicing violence and terrorism".

Besides the Cairo bloodshed, some of the worst violence has been in the lawless Sinai peninsula, which borders Israel and the Palestinian Gaza Strip, where Islamist militants have attacked security forces almost daily.

State news agency MENA said on Sunday that 10 "terrorist elements" in north Sinai had been killed and 20 arrested in security sweeps over the past 48 hours.

Islamist politician and former presidential candidate Mohamed Selim al-Awa offered a compromise that would see Mursi reinstated but with new elections within months. It was rejected by the interim presidency and Egypt's biggest liberal and leftist coalition, the National Salvation Front (NSF).

"It's clearly a non-starter," said NSF spokesman Khaled Dawoud. "You can't rewrite history; Mursi is out and there is already a road map."

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