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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/30/2013 10:57:34 AM

France struggles to separate Islam and the state

Associated Press

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In this photo dated Tuesday, July 23, 2013, a veiled woman walks with her children in Trappes, southwest of Paris. Police clashed last week in Trappes with crowds protesting the arrest of a man who allegedly attacked a police officer after his wife, a convert to Islam like him, was ticketed for veiling her face in public.(AP Photo/Elaine Ganley)

TRAPPES, France (AP) — Riots broke out over a full-face Islamic veil. A woman may have lost her unborn baby in another confrontation over her face covering. Tensions flared over a supermarket chain's ad for the end-of-day feast for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

France's enforcement of its prized secularism is inscribed in law, most recently in a ban on wearing full-face veils in public. Meant to ensure that all faiths live in harmony, the policy instead may be fueling a rising tide of Islamophobia and driving a wedge between some Muslims and the rest of the population.

Yet ardent defenders of secularism, the product of France's separation of church and state, say the country hasn't gone far enough. They want more teeth to further the cause that Voltaire helped inspire and Victor Hugo championed, this time with a law targeting headscarves in the work place.

A new generation of French Muslims — which at some 5 million, or about eight percent of the population, is the largest in Western Europe — is finding a growing voice in a nation not always ready to accommodate mosques, halal food and Muslim religious dress. Political pressure from a resurgent far-right has increased the tension.

Women who wear Muslim apparel "are no longer safe," said Mohera Lukau, a 26-year-old mother of three living in Trappes, a town south of Paris known for its large immigrant population, high unemployment and women who wear long robes or hide their faces behind veils.

Police clashed last week with crowds protesting the arrest of a man who allegedly attacked an officer after his wife was ticketed for veiling her face in public. Dozens of cars were set afire in two nights of unrest in Trappes and an adjoining town. A 14-year-old boy suffered an eye injury.

Weeks earlier, a man allegedly assaulted a pregnant woman and ripped off her veil— one of two separately accosted in the Paris suburb of Argenteuil. She lost her baby days later, although the link with the incident remains unclear. Insults have been unleashed on women wearing Muslim headscarves, with investigations or court cases in three attacks in Reims and three more in Orleans.

Interior Minister Manuel Valls has denounced "a rise of violence against the Muslims of France." At a dinner breaking the Ramadan fast at the Grand Mosque of Paris, he insisted that Islam and the French Republic are compatible. But he signaled the belief by some French people that Muslims want their own rules, denouncing "those who want to make France a land of conquest."

Lukau has received the message as a sign that she is not entirely welcome in her native country. She veils her head and body but not her face, and covers the heads of her daughters, two and four years old, with hijab scarves that drape over the shoulders. People tell Lukau, who is of Algerian origin, "If you're not happy, leave, go home," she said. But, she pointed out, she was born in France.

Most French people are baptized Catholic, but church attendance has been in decline for decades and secular ideals run deep. With the growth of France's Muslim population, lawmakers have increasingly turned to legislation to try to stifle public displays of Islamic faith.

In 2004, lawmakers passed a law that bans "ostentatious" religious symbols in public schools, a measure clearly directed at Islamic headscarves. It has been enforced with barely a hitch, although no one knows how many students dropped out of school rather than submit. A two-year-old law banning burqa-style veils from the streets of France has had a bumpier ride, even though only some 2,000 Muslim women cover their faces. Islam does not require face veils or even hair coverings, and most Muslim women in France wear neither.

A report by the Observatory of Secularism, installed this year by President Francois Hollande, revealed that a handful of the 705 women stopped by police for covering their faces in public chalked up more than 10 tickets each — two of them more than 25, suggesting that some are provoking authorities intentionally.

But it is not just veils that have raised controversy. A local official in Nimes, in southern France, posted on his Facebook account an ad by the Carrefour supermarket chain publicizing "oriental" dishes for the nightly breaking of the fast during Ramadan — with the comment, "Our Republic, is it still secular? Everything is on the way out." After an outcry from Muslims, the post was quickly removed.

"Why, when there are Catholic feasts, is no one upset? Why, when there are Jewish feasts, is no one upset? Why, when there are Chinese feasts, is no one upset? Why, when there are Muslim feasts, is that upsetting?" asked Abdallah Zekri, the Nimes representative of the French Council for the Muslim faith. "Muslims are French citizens and live in France."

While several European countries embrace secular values, France has been at the forefront of enforcing them, with the separation of church and state enshrined in law since 1905. But France is also home to the greatest tensions over them. Some defenders of secularism say the country needs to be educated about keeping religion out of public life — and needs one more law to protect secularism in private companies.

"When the rules aren't clear, things can get out of hand," said Alain Seksig, a member of the High Council of Integration who led a government-mandated mission on secularism that encourages rules for companies concerning dress and other religious practices.

"Laicite," the French word for secularism, is a la mode today. Associations throughout France work to uphold it. Far-right groups use it as a mantra, and leftists embrace it as well. There is even a secularism prize.

Defenders often evoke Voltaire, the 18th-century Enlightenment philosopher whose writings condemn religious fanaticism and espouse tolerance. Or Victor Hugo, who advocated education free of the grip of the then-powerful Roman Catholic Church.

But the concept is meant to protect religion from government, as well. Many Muslims say that France's obsession with secularism is trampling on their rights and more moderate advocates for secularism agree, arguing that the 1905 law is being twisted. Conceived to ensure freedom of conscience, it is doing the opposite, they contend.

Hicham Benaissa of the National Center for Scientific Research said today's secularism "appears to be a sort of (protection) against the religious influence of Islam" when "its spirit is to protect the faiths."

In the latest case to provoke calls for new regulations, a pre-school fired a woman who refused to remove her headscarf. An appeals court ruling in March calling the firing illegal spurred a demand for laws protecting secularism in private companies that would govern, for instance, dress and schedule requirements for prayer time or religious holidays.

A resulting bill to regulate religion in companies, sponsored by the opposition conservatives, failed. President Hollande says there's a need to "protect" children in private pre-schools, but his Socialist Party does not appear ready for a new law quite yet. Another report, released in June by the Observatory, tried to tone down the controversy, suggesting that slights to secularism have been exaggerated and dialogue, not a new law, may solve problems.

Guylain Chevrier, a member of the High Council on Integration who trains social workers, says the government is being too soft, trying "to put a Band-Aid on the situation."

"One educator offered a prayer rug to a child," he said. "Religion has no right to be mixed up in the private lives of citizens."

For Lukau, such laws are encouraging the separatism they are trying to prevent. She believes they are driving Muslims away from the mainstream, leading to the growth of private Muslim schools and propelling Muslims to open their own businesses.

The law and the media "with their constant finger-pointing at Muslims are the reason the French population has become aggressive," she said.

Because of her robes, Lukau sells cosmetics from her home. "I myself couldn't apply for a job in an office."

_____

Follow Elaine Ganley on Twitter.com/Elaine_Ganley


"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?
7/30/2013 11:02:47 AM

Explosions rock propane plant in central Florida, seven injured

Reuters
3 hours ago

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Lake County fire-fighters rest after working to extinguish a fire at the remains of a propane plant after massive explosions at the plant in Tavares, Florida July 30, 2013. REUTERS/David Manning

By Barbara Liston

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - Dozens of explosions rocked a propane tank servicing plant in central Florida, northwest of Orlando, late on Monday, injuring seven workers, at least three critically, and prompting the evacuation of nearby homes, authorities said.

No one outside the plant was hurt by the blasts, which began at about 10:30 p.m. local time at the Blue Rhino propane gas filling station in the town of Tavares, about 40 miles northwest of Orlando, said John Herrell, a Lake County sheriff's spokesman.

Fifteen workers out of the two dozen on duty were initially reported missing, but all subsequently were found unscathed, Herrell said. Two others were safe from the outset.

"Obviously it was a very, very dangerous scene" when firefighters arrived, Herrell said.

The chain reaction of explosions, ripping through 20-pound propane cylinders one after another - one tank every few seconds at its peak - unleashed tall columns of flames into the night sky. Homeowners several miles away reported feeling shocks from the explosions.

"We are hearing the booms here inside the restaurant," said Jessica McClure, 23, a waitress at a Denny's restaurant 7 miles north of the scene in the town of Eustis.

She said a bright orange glow from the fire was visible in the distance as she arrived at work at about 11 p.m.

What caused the explosions was not immediately known, Herrell said.

He said seven workers were injured.

Three men from the Blue Rhino plant were flown by helicopter to the Orlando Regional Medical Center, all of them in critical condition with burns, Sybrina Childress, a spokeswoman for the trauma center told Reuters.

Lake County emergency dispatchers said homes located within a mile of the facility were ordered to evacuate as a precaution.

Aerial views of the facility from footage shot by a local television station about 90 minutes after the first explosions showed a large fire, apparently being fed by continuing explosions, surrounded by smaller blazes.

After another 30 minutes, the main fire appeared to be dying down, and the wreckage of what appeared to be burned-out trucks could be seen.

Speaking by telephone to local NBC affiliate WESH-TV, former plant supervisor Don Ingram said the company took in propane tanks used for home gas grills, cleaned them, checked the valves and refilled them. He said that tanks were stacked on plastic pallets four and five high behind the filling station.

Herrell said an estimated 53,000 propane cylinders were kept on the property.

He said a late crew typically refills 4,000 to 5,000 tanks overnight. The nearest residential neighborhood is located about a quarter-mile from the facility behind a row of trees, Ingram said.

(Reporting by Barbara Liston in Orlando; additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Writing by Steve Gorman; editing by Jackie Frank and Elizabeth Piper)


"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?
7/30/2013 11:07:16 AM
This is outrageous!

'The Great Firewall of Porn': This program blocks you from visiting any website that isn't pornography


Generally, a company or a school will set up a firewall to stop its computer users from visiting pornographic websites. But what if you developed a program that blocked any website that didn't have pornography on it, and only allowed users to surf to sites showing a little (or a lot) of T & A?

That is the idea behind The Great Firewall of Porn, a brilliant bit of software from British hacker Sicksad firstspotted by website Hack A Day. The Great Firewall of Porn was constructed by Sicksad to prevent visitors from accessing any non-porn websites, turning the usual idea of the proper firewall on its head.

It is also a canny protest against the UK government and Prime Minister David Cameron, who has proposed a new law that would require British Internet users to "opt in" to being allowed to view pornography on the web when choosing an Internet Service Provider. Unless they tick a box when signing up for Internet service, in other words, British computer users will not be able to view porn on their home networks.

Critics of the law contend that such a filter constitutes undue government censorship and repression of free speech. Based on a video posted by Sicksad introducing his version of a UK Porn Filter, it would seem that the hacker agrees.



"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?
7/30/2013 11:09:15 AM

Ariel Castro's Son Says Life Sentence Appropriate


CLEVELAND July 29, 2013 (AP)

The son of the Cleveland man who admitted kidnapping, raping and enslaving three women for about a decade said Monday his father belongs in prison for the rest of his life.

In an interview on NBC's "Today" show, Anthony Castro also said he has nothing to say to his father, Ariel Castro, and will not visit him in prison.

Fifty-three-year-old Ariel Castro is expected to be sentenced Thursday to life in prison plus 1,000 years after pleading guilty last week to 937 counts in a deal that spared him the death penalty.

"I think it's the best possible sentence," Anthony Castro said. "I think if he really can't control his impulses and he really doesn't have any value for human life the way this case has shown, then behind bars is where he belongs for the rest of his life."

APTOPIX Missing Women Found.JPEG

Anthony Castro, 31, said his father was violent, and Anthony often cried himself to sleep because he had welts on his legs from beatings. Still, he said, he wasn't prepared to hear the details of what his father did to the women.

"I was shocked because of the magnitude of such a crime," Anthony Castro said. "I don't think I could ever imagine anyone doing that that, let alone to find out it was my own flesh and blood, my father."

Ariel Castro's attorneys didn't immediately return calls seeking comment Monday.

The three women disappeared between 2002 and 2004 when they were 16, 14 and 20 years old. They escaped in May when one of them kicked out part of a door and called to neighbors for help.

One of the victims, 27-year-old Amanda Berry, made her first public appearance on Saturday night when she was invited on stage by rapper Nelly during an outdoor concert in Cleveland.

Another victim, Gina DeJesus, spoke to a Cleveland television station briefly on Sunday, thanking volunteers who are building a 6-foot privacy fence around her house.


"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?
7/30/2013 4:08:49 PM
Fleeing Violence, Refugees Suffer More in Australian Camps












The sinking of a boat packed with migrantsbound for Australia last Wednesday night off the coast of Indonesia has left 11 dead, including at least one young child from Sri Lanka. At least 200 people may have been on the boat whose capsizing, along with reports of abuses and inhumane conditions on refugee camps in Papua New Guinea, has cast a harsh light on the tough newasylum policy announced last Friday by Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.

Under the new policy, all asylum seekers via boat to Australia will be sent to — warehoused in — refugee-processing centers in Papua New Guinea. Those whose refugee claims are found to accord with the United Nations Convention on Refugees will be allowed to resettle on Papua New Guinea (a former colony of Australia with a population of 7 million, most of whom are subsistence farmers), but will then forfeit any right to asylum in Australia.

Some 16,000 asylum seekers have arrived via boat in Australia since January, most from Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Most go through Indonesia and then, often after paying huge fees to smugglers and via overfilled, poorly equipped boats, seek to get to Christmas Island, the part of Australian territory that is closest to Java.

Asylum Policy: Controversial Issue in Upcoming Elections

Asylum policy, a contentious issue in Australian politics for the past twelve years, has emerged as an important issue in the country’s upcoming November elections. Declaring that there is a “national emergency at our borders,” Tony Abbott, the leader of the opposition party (which currently is ahead in the polls), has most recently called for a “military solution” for people smugglers. Under his proposed plan, Operation Sovereign Borders, the chief of the defense would appoint commanders to deal not only with smugglers but also with asylum boats and refugees.

Under the new asylum plan (the “PNG solution”) announced by Rudd, Papua New Guinea will receive investment from Australia, an arrangement that has roused criticism that the government is simply giving funds to other countries, at a cost to Australian taxpayers. In dealing with those seeking asylum, Australia has indeed entwined itself in the affairs of other countries. Australians hold positions in a number of departments (finance, police, utilities and planning) on the Pacific Island nation of Nauru, where 125 asylum seekers were arrested after rioting and a fire earlier in July.

The refugees on Nauru — many Iranian, Palestinian, Lebanese and Iraqi – were protesting the time taken to process asylum claims. The poor conditions of the centers were again brought to light last Tuesday after Australian broadcaster SBS ran a report about abuse among refugees on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea. The former head of Occupational Health and Safety, Rod St. George, told SBS that rape and sexual abuse between asylum seekers routinely occurred with the full knowledge of asylum staff. He described torture among detainees, some of whom “forced other asylum seekers to sew their lips together” and said that, if the detention center had been “a dog kennel,” Australian authorities would have shut it down.

Hunger strikes and incidents of self-harming have also increased at two of the largest immigration detention centers on Australian soil.

Violations of Human Rights of Asylum Seekers

The Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) says that the “PNG solution” could very well risk ”breaching Australia’s legal obligations” and that the conditions at the detention center on Manus Island “may violate fundamental human rights.” But because Nauru and Manus Island are both within Australia’s jurisdiction, the AHRC has been denied access to visit the refugee camps. The U.N. High Commission on Refugees is investigating the legality of Australian’s new asylum policy, which it has called “troubling.”

One thing is clear about the “PNG solution.” This plan and the recent report of abuses suffered by refugees make it all too clear why Australian must have open borders and free movement for all, as Alana Lentin writes in the Guardian. The issue of migration otherwise dehumanizes refugees as “others” and also becomes “an expensive, largely performative, and ultimately futile exercise in securing borders.”

The one thing that many Australians seem to agree on is that boats crowded with people fleeing violence and poverty will keep on coming. Refugees should not be criminalized, detained in camps and deported but given a chance to work to build a better life and certainly not to suffer more than they already have.


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Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/fleeing-violence-refugees-suffer-more-in-australian-camps.html#ixzz2aXt8VF3a

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

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