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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/29/2013 12:44:18 AM
Deadly bus crash in Italy

Rescuers say 24 bodies in Italy bus plunge
Associated Press

ROME (AP) — Rescuers are saying that at least 24 bodies have been pulled out of the mangled wreckage of a tour bus that plunged dozens of yards (meters ) off a major highway in southern Italy after slamming into several cars. The bus landed in a ravine.

The Italian news agency ANSA quoted firefighters among the rescuers as also saying at least 11 people were injured in the crash Sunday night on the 116 autostrada near Avellino, some 160 miles (250 kilometers) south of Rome. Italian TV quoted people at the scene as saying about 49 people were on the bus, which was reportedly filled with Italian pilgrims returning from an excursion elsewhere in the south.

Highway police said the bus crashed into cars that had been slowed by heavy traffic.


The vehicle was returning from a pilgrimage when it plunged off a highway and landed in a ravine. Multiple injuries reported


"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?
7/29/2013 12:56:55 AM

Fla. apartment gunman described as lonely, angry

Associated Press


This photo released by the Hialeah Police Department shows Pedro Vargas. Vargas went on a shooting rampage throughout his apartment building, killing six people before being shot to death by police, Saturday July 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Hialeah Police Department)

HIALEAH, Fla. (AP) — The gunman who went on a shooting rampage at his South Florida apartment building, killing six people, was a lonely man who spoke about having pent up anger, those who knew him said Sunday.

Pedro Vargas, 42, lived on the fourth floor of a barren, concrete apartment complex in the Miami suburb of Hialeah with his elderly mother. He rarely spoke with others there, and confided to a man who worked out at the same gym that he liked to work out his anger by lifting weights and trying to get big.

"He'd just say this was the only thing that would keep him normal, pulling out all the anger in the gym," Jorge Bagos told The Associated Press.

Bagos said the gunman expressed frustration over bad experiences with women and losing all his hair from using steroids.

On Friday night, Vargas set a combustible liquid on fire in his apartment, sending the unit into flames, police said. Building manager Italo Pisciotti and his wife went running toward the smoke. Vargas opened his door and shot and killed both of them, Lt. Carl Zogby, a spokesman with the Hialeah Police Department said.

Vargas then went back into his apartment and began firing from his balcony. One of the shots struck and killed Carlos Javier Gavilanes, 33, who neighbors said was returning home from his son's boxing practice.

Vargas then stormed into a third-story apartment, where he shot and killed a family of three: Patricio Simono, 64, Merly Niebles, 51, and her 17-year-old daughter.

For eight hours, police followed and exchanged gunfire with Vargas throughout the five-story apartment complex as terrified residents took cover in bathrooms and huddled with relatives, sometimes so close to the gunfire they could feel the shots. In the final hours, Vargas took two people captive in a fifth-story unit. Police attempted to negotiate with him, but the talks fell apart and a SWAT team swarmed in, killing Vargas and rescuing both hostages.

On Sunday, neighbors struggled to remember anything more than cursory exchanges with Vargas. He was often seen taking his mother, who used a walker, to run errands and go to doctor appointments. Sometimes, he greeted residents and politely held open doors. Other times, he could be noticeably anti-social.

One woman recalled how she would see him wait for the elevator, only to then take the stairs if he saw someone was inside when it arrived. And neighbors never saw him with anyone other than his mother.

"He looked very alone," said Isael Sarmiento, 42, who lived on the same floor as Vargas, across an open, gray and red concrete terrace. "I saw it in his face sometimes, like he was someone who had spent many years alone."

No one knew what he did for a living, though an email address listed for Vargas in public records suggested he had an interest in design.

Nearly every morning, Vargas would get dressed in gym shorts and a tank top and drive to an L.A. Fitness gym, water bottle in hand, neighbors said.

"He looked like an athlete," said Consuela Fernandez.

When shown Vargas' photo, many of the men working out at the gym recalled seeing him there, doing pull ups and lifting weights for hours at a time. Bagos said Vargas worked out almost religiously, and always alone.

"Sometimes it looked like he was in his own world," Bagos said.

Vargas didn't talk much, but occasionally he would share hints of the frustrations he described taking out at the gym.

"He said he'd rather be by himself, that women were no good," Bagos said.

Vargas also described how he was dieting and wanted six-pack abs. He was tall and relatively muscular, but when Bagos suggested Vargas get a tan so that his muscles would look better, he scoffed.

"I don't like the heat," Bagos remembered Vargas saying. "The heat makes me mad."

Lately, Vargas seemed to keep even more to himself. When Bagos tried saying hello, Vargas would turn and walk in the other direction.

"I thought he was going through problems and I kept away from him," he said.

Police said Vargas had no known criminal history, and they'd never responded any calls from the home. His past, they said, was "unremarkable."

"Nobody seems to know why he acted the way he acted," Zogby said.

On Sunday, residents stayed away from the building or kept inside their apartments. A few lingered in the stairways, staring from time to time at Vargas' apartment. The front door was half burnt and a black mix of water and ash from the blaze was scattered along the walkway.

___

Follow Christine Armario on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/cearmario


"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?
7/29/2013 1:15:58 AM

Italy: Police Arrest More Than 100 in Mafia Crackdown



Police officers in central Rome lead away one of dozens arrested for organised crime in Ostia on July 26, 2013.

Police officers in central Rome lead away one of dozens arrested for organised crime in Ostia on July 26, 2013.

From Livia Borghese, for CNN – July 27, 2013

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/07/26/world/europe/italy-mafia-crackdown/index.html

Rome (CNN) — More than 100 people suspected of Mafia involvement were arrested Friday in Italy as police launched two separate operations near Rome and in the country’s southern Calabria region.

Police made 51 arrests in Ostia, a coastal community on the outskirts of the capital, for alleged crimes connected to the Sicilian Mafia, known as Cosa Nostra, police said in a statement.

An additional 65 people were detained in a separate operation in Calabria, where those arrested are suspected of links to the powerful ‘Ndrangheta Mafia.

The operation in Ostia is one of the largest ever carried out against organized crime in the Rome area, a police news release said.

More than 500 police officers, as well as maritime and dog units, were involved, police said.

The alleged crimes under investigation in Ostia range from extortion to murder, to international drug trafficking to illegally controlling the slot machine market and business activities related to the beach, police said.

Police say their operation has delivered a “mortal blow” to the leadership of the Mafia organization in the capital.

Entire Mafia clans have been hit by the arrests, they say. Among those detained are alleged Mafia boss Carmine Fasciani.

Members of another Mafia clan, Vincenzo Triassi and his wife, have been arrested on the Spanish island of Tenerife thanks to coordination with Interpol, another police statement said.

They are being held in a Spanish jail awaiting extradition proceedings, police said.

Politicians, businessman, lawyers, doctors and even members of the prison police were arrested in the second operation, which targeted Mafia leadership around Lamezia Terme, a city in Calabria, another police news release said.

Those arrested are accused of crimes including murder, criminal association and extortion, it said.

Every year, the release said, the criminal gang made millions of euros through a system of insurance fraud, with the funds used to finance the acquisition of arms and drugs.

“We are particularly satisfied with the investigation,” Rodolfo Ruperti, police chief of the city of Catanzaro, whose force carried out the Lamezia Terme operation, told CNN by telephone.

He said the inquiry shone a spotlight on the “gray area” of relations among politicians, businessmen and Mafia groups suspected of carrying out dozens of murders in past years.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/29/2013 1:38:16 AM

Spacecraft Sees Giant 'Hole' In the Sun (Video)


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The European Space Agency/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, or SOHO, captured this image of a gigantic coronal hole hovering over the sun’s north pole on July 18, 2013, at 9:06 a.m. EDT.

A space telescope aimed at the sun has spotted a gigantic hole in the solar atmosphere — a dark spot that covers nearly a quarter of our closest star, spewing solar material and gas into space.

The so-called coronal hole over the sun's north pole came into view between July 13 and 18 and was observed by the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, or SOHO. NASA released avideo of the sun hole as seen by the SOHO spacecraft, showing the region as a vast dark spot surrounded by solar activity.

Coronal holes are darker, cooler regions of the sun's atmosphere, or corona, containing little solar material. In these gaps, magnetic field lines whip out into the solar wind rather than looping back to the sun's surface. Coronal holes can affect space weather, as they send solar particles streaming off the sun about three times faster than the slower wind unleashed elsewhere from the sun's atmosphere, according to a description from NASA.

"While it’s unclear what causes coronal holes, they correlate to areas on the sun where magnetic fields soar up and away, failing to loop back down to the surface, as they do elsewhere," NASA's Karen Fox at the agency's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., explained in an image description.

These holes are not uncommon, but their frequency changes with the solar activity cycle. The sun is currently reaching its 11-year peak in activity, known as the solar maximum. Around the time of this peak, the sun's poles switch their magnetism. The number of coronal holes typically decreases leading up to the switch.

After the reversal, new coronal holes appear near the poles. Then as the sun approaches the solar minimum again, the holes creep closer to the equator, growing in both size and number, according to NASA.

The $1.27-billion (1 billion euros) SOHO satellite was launched in 1995 and is flying a joint mission between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA). It watches solar activity from an orbit about the Lagrange Point 1, a gravitationally stable spot between Earth and the sun that is about 932,000 miles (1.5 million kilometers) from our planet.

Follow Megan Gannon on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on SPACE.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?
7/29/2013 10:31:10 AM
Global Warming Turning the North Pole Into the North Pool

















Oh no! What will Santa do now that the North Pole is becoming a giant pool? That’s right, folks. According to the North Pole Environmental Observatory, the summer ice is melting away at unprecedented rates, forming a shallow lake at the top of the world.

Here’s a time lapse video showing how the ice thaws over time:



According to Live Science, the temperature in the Arctic is indeed warmer than average this summer:

In early July, temperatures were 2 to 5 degrees Fahrenheit (1 to 3 degrees Celsius) higher than average over much of the Arctic Ocean, according to the National Snow & Ice Data Center.

The lake is purely made of melted ice, not sea water poking through to the surface. The extent of the sea ice has been shrinking for decades. Because the ice is also losing its thickness, some scientists expect the Arctic ocean to be largely free of summer ice by 2020.

There are at least two reasons to be alarmed about global warming:

1. The Water Heats Up And The Ice Melts

As the overall temperature of the water increases with global warming, it naturally expands a little making the oceans rise. So the most obvious consequence of higher sea temperatures is a rapid rise in sea level. This causes flooding of coastal habitats for humans as well as plants and animals, shoreline erosion, and more powerful storm surges that can devastate low-lying areas. Sound familiar?

Global warming also causes glaciers and ice sheets to melt. In 1995 the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued a report that contained various projections of the sea level change by the year 2100. They estimate that the sea will rise 50 centimeters (20 inches) with the lowest estimates at 15 centimeters (6 inches) and the highest at 95 centimeters (37 inches). In case you weren’t sure, twenty inches is a lot.

Now there are new fears.

2. Release Of Arctic Methane Could Cost Trillions Of Dollars

From The Guardian:

Rapid thawing of the Arctic could trigger a catastrophic “economic timebomb” which would cost trillions of dollars and undermine the global financial system, say a group of economists and polar scientists.

(….)

The release of a single giant “pulse” of methane from thawing Arctic permafrost beneath the East Siberian sea “could come with a $60tn [£39tn] global price tag”, according to the researchers who have for the first time quantified the effects on the global economy.

Even the slow emission of a much smaller proportion of the vast quantities of methane locked up in the Arctic permafrost and offshore waters could trigger catastrophic climate change and “steep” economic losses, they say.

According to Peter Wadhams, head of the Polar ocean physics group at Cambridge University and one of the authors of the paper published in the journal Nature detailing this research:

“This massive methane boost will have major implications for global economies and societies. Much of those costs would be borne by developing countries in the form of extreme weather, flooding and impacts on health and agricultural production.”

Every story of course has a good side, and this one is no exception.

New Arctic Shipping Routes

Because of sea ice melt, business is capitalizing on the new Arctic shipping routes.

Richard Milne at The Financial Times reports that melting sea ice is raising the prospect of an important new route for trade between Asia and Europe that shaves thousands of miles off the trip.

Arctic shipping has increased fourfold in recent years and is now set for a record year. That’s because some ships can now take the Northern Sea Route (NSR), which goes from the Atlantic to the Pacific using the Bering Strait between Siberia and Alaska. As of last week, 204 ships had been granted permission to take the NSR this year. In 2012, the number was 46.

The Southern Route, via the Suez Canal and India and China, can take 10 – 15 days longer.

So do the advantages of global warming outweigh the risks? And where will Santa go, once there is no North Pole?


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Photo Credit: thinkstock



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/the-north-pole-has-become-the-north-pool-video.html#ixzz2aQfRCMRc



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

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