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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/13/2013 11:10:48 AM

Kerry defends NSA surveillance programs

Associated Press

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry defended the National Security Agency surveillance programs on Monday and downplayed their impact on U.S. efforts to deepen relations with two key allies in Latin America.

Brazil and Colombia, two of the United States' closest friends in the region, have been rankled by reports that citizens of Colombia, Mexico, Brazil and other countries were among the targets of a massive NSA operation to secretly gather information about phone calls and Internet communications worldwide. The disclosures were made by NSA leaker Edward Snowden.

Kerry sought to play down the rift during a press conference in Bogota before heading to Brazil on his first trip to South America as secretary of state.

"Frankly, we work on a huge number of issues and this was in fact a very small part of the overall conversation and one in which I'm confident I was able to explain precisely that this has received the support of all three branches of our government," Kerry said. "It has been completely conducted under our Constitution and the law. ... The president has taken great steps in the last few days ... to reassure people of the U.S. intentions here."

He referenced the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. "It's obvious to everybody that this is a dangerous world we're living in ... we are necessarily engaged in a very complex effort to prevent terrorists from taking innocent lives."

Colombian Foreign Minister Maria Angela Holguin said Colombia officials had traveled to Washington to learn more about the surveillance program. "We have received the necessary assurances to continue to work on this," she said through a translator.

In her opening remarks, Holguin said she appreciated Kerry's efforts to restart the Mideast peace talks.

Kerry said he doesn't think the recent flap over Israeli settlement announcements will derail the second round of Mideast peace talks this week in the region.

Israel approved building nearly 1,200 more settlement homes Sunday — the third settlement announcement in a week. It fueled Palestinian fears of a new Israeli construction spurt under the cover of U.S.-sponsored negotiations.

"The announcements with respect to settlements were to some degree expected because we have known that there was going to be a continuation of some building in certain places," Kerry said. "And I think the Palestinians understand that. I think one of the announcements was outside of that expectation and that's being discussed right now."

He restated the U.S. position that it views the settlements as illegitimate. He said the recent controversy underscored the importance of getting to the negotiating table quickly and resolving the questions with respect to settlements.

"Once you have security and borders solved, you have resolved the question of settlements," he said. "With the negotiation of major issues, these kind of hotpoint issues ... are eliminated as the kind of flashpoints that they may be viewed today."

He said he expected to talk with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the issue later today or tomorrow. "I'm sure we will work out a path forward."

Kerry arrived late Sunday in Bogota, the Colombian capital, at a time when the country is holding peace talks to end a half century-old conflict with the Western Hemisphere's most potent rebel army. The rebel force has diminished in strength thanks in considerable measure to U.S. military and intelligence support. Kerry's discussions in Colombia also focused on trade, energy and counternarcotics and he met with Colombia President Juan Manuel Santos.

"Colombia is a success story," Kerry said. "The Santos administration has taken a very courageous and very necessary and very imaginative effort to seek a political solution to one of the world's longest conflicts."

Kerry began the day by having breakfast with two negotiators from the Colombian government, which has been conducting peace talks in Havana, Cuba, with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia since last year. Formed in the 1960s, the FARC is the oldest active guerrilla band in the Western Hemisphere. Observers say the FARC currently has about 8,000 armed fighters.

After breakfast at his hotel, Kerry visited a gymnasium where members of the Colombia police and army, many who have lost limbs in the conflict, were playing rugby in wheelchairs reinforced with hard plastic instead of spokes. The chairs were designed to take a beating and during the game, and some players collided so violently that their chairs overturned on the court.

Kerry rolled up one of his pants legs, a national show of support for those who have lost their limbs in the fighting.

Then he walked to the other side of the gym to watch amputees playing volleyball. They used their hands to move themselves around the floor and spike the ball from sitting positions. Kerry got into the game and scooted along the floor in his suit, reaching from side to side to tap the ball over the net.

Before leaving for Brazil, Kerry visited the headquarters of the Colombian National Police Counter-Narcotics Directorate for a briefing on the U.S.-Colombia partnership on fighting drugs, progress that has been made during the past decade, and an update on Colombia's efforts to share its expertise in security work with other countries in the region. Colombia has helped to train more than 13,000 international police personnel from 25 Latin American countries and more than 20 other countries since 2009.

According to the State Department, Colombia has seen a 53 percent reduction in the cultivation of coca since 2007. Last year, Colombian authorities reported a record seizure of 279 metric tons of cocaine and cocaine products in the country and abroad.

The Colombian government has increasingly assumed operational and financial responsibility for many U.S.-backed drug-fighting programs, has worked to dramatically reduce kidnappings and political assassinations and disrupt illegal narcotics trafficking with the help of more than $8.5 billion from the U.S. since 2000.

But U.S. assistance to Colombia has been gradually decreasing, falling from $287 million in fiscal 2008 to $161 million in fiscal 2012.


"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?
8/13/2013 11:17:40 AM

Raw: Moment Sinkhole Swallows Fla. Building

Amateur video captures the early-morning collapse of a three-story building in central Florida. Vacationers evacuated the resort building before it was swallowed up by a large sinkhole. Two adjacent buildings were evacuated as a precaution. (Aug. 12)


Publicado el 12/08/2013

Amateur video captures the early-morning collapse of a three-story building in central Florida. Vacationers evacuated the resort building before it was swallowed up by a large sinkhole. Two adjacent buildings were evacuated as a precaution. (Aug. 12)




"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?
8/13/2013 1:23:32 PM

To guests, Fla. sinkhole sounded like thunderstorm


A portion of a building rests in a sinkhole Monday, Aug. 12, 2013 in Clermont, Fla. The sinkhole, 40 to 50 feet in diameter, opened up overnight and damaged three buildings at the Summer Bay Resort. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
Associated Press

Watch video

CLERMONT, Fla. (AP) — It sounded like a thunderstorm as windows broke and the ground shook, but vacationers who were awakened at a resort villa near Orlando, Fla., soon realized the building was starting to collapse — parts of it swallowed by a 100-foot sinkhole that also endangered two neighboring buildings.

By early Monday, nearly a third of the structure at Summer Bay Resort had collapsed. All 105 guests staying in the villa were evacuated, as were those in the neighboring buildings. No injuries were reported. The villa, with 24 three-story units, was reported as a total loss.

Inspectors remained on the scene Monday afternoon to determine whether the other two buildings near the sinkhole — a common occurrence in Florida — would be safe to re-enter.

The first sign of trouble came about 10:30 p.m. Sunday. Security guard Richard Shanley had just started his shift, and he heard what sounded like shouting from a building.

A guest flagged him down to report that a window had blown out. Shanley reported it to management, and another window popped. The resort's staff decided to evacuate the villa.

Shanley said the building seemed to sink by 10 to 20 inches and bannisters began to fall off the building as he ran up and down three floors trying to wake up guests. One couple with a baby on the third floor couldn't get their door open and had to break a window to get out, he said.

"It's a scary situation," said Shanley, who guests credited with saving lives by knocking on doors to awaken them. Inside, they heard what sounded like thunder and then the storm of water, as if it were a storm. Evacuation took about 10 to 15 minutes, according to staff and witnesses.

Amy Jedele heard screams coming from one of the adjacent buildings around 10:30 p.m., and several minutes later, the sounds of sirens. She and her fiance, Darren Gade, went outside. "That's when you could hear the pops and the metal, the concrete and the glass breaking," she said.

The first portions of the building to sink were the walkways and the elevator shaft, Gade said.

"You could see the ground falling away from the building where the building started leaning," Gade said. "People were in shock to see a structure of that size just sink into the ground slowly. ... You could see the stress fractures up the side of the structure getting wider."

Then, as a part of the leaning building crumbled quickly into the ground, dust shot up around the site, amateur video of the collapse shows (http://bit.ly/1cuOc1u).

In one of the adjacent buildings, firefighters and police officers knocking on doors woke up Maggie Moreno of San Antonio. She couldn't fully open the door to her unit.

"It sounded like popcorn," said Moreno, who was visiting with her husband, daughter and two grandchildren. "The building was just snapping."

Luis Perez also was staying at a nearby building. He said he was in his room when the lights went off around 11:30 p.m. He said he was on his way to the front desk to report it when he saw firefighters and police outside.

"I started walking toward where they were at, and you could see the building leaning, and you could see a big crack at the base of the building," said Perez, 54, of New Jersey.

Over the next five hours, sections of the building sank into the ground. Paul Caldwell, the development's president, said the resort gave all affected guests other rooms. Some visitors — many of whom had to leave their wallets, purses and other belongings behind in the quick evacuation — were given cash advances by Summer Bay.

The Red Cross also distributed food, clothing and medicines to vacationers who had lost their belongings in their resort rooms.

There were no signs before Sunday that a sinkhole was developing, Caldwell said. He said the resort underwent geological testing when it was built about 15 years ago, showing the ground to be stable.

Caldwell said he was awaiting further inspections to determine if there was any damage to the second and third buildings. The resort — with condominiums, two-bedroom villas and vacation houses in addition to standard rooms — has about 900 units spread over a large area about 10 miles west of Walt Disney World. It is set on a secluded 64-acre lake.

Problems with sinkholes are ongoing in Florida. They cause millions of dollars in damage in the state annually. On March 1, a sinkhole underneath a house in Seffner, about 60 miles southwest of the Summer Bay Resort, swallowed a man who was in his bed. His body was never recovered.

But such fatalities and injuries are rare, and most sinkholes are small. They are caused by Florida's geology — the state sits on limestone, a porous rock that easily dissolves in water, with a layer of clay on top. The clay is thicker in some locations, making them even more prone to sinkholes.

Last week, Florida received a $1.08 million federal grant to study the state's vulnerability to sinkholes. Other states sit atop limestone in a similar way, but Florida has additional factors like extreme weather, development, aquifer pumping and construction.

___

Alma Rodriguez in Clermont, Fla., 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?
8/13/2013 4:02:35 PM

California teen is home after harrowing rescue


The father of a Lakeside teen who was rescued in Idaho last weekend after being kidnapped by a family friend who also allegedly murdered her mother and younger brother asked the media Monday to grant his family privacy while his daughter recovers from her "tremendous, horrific ordeal."

SAN DIEGO (AP) — A 16-year-old girl who was rescued during an FBI shootout with her captor in the Idaho wilderness is resting at home with family and friends to begin what her father says will be a slow recovery.

"She has been through a tremendous, horrific ordeal," said Brett Anderson, who declined to answer questions after reading a brief statement Monday. He pleaded for privacy.

Christopher Saincome, Hannah's grandfather, said his son-in-law wanted to take Hannah with him to Tennessee, where he recently moved. Saincome urged him to have her stay in the San Diego area, where she grew up and has a large circle of friends.

"I think she needs to be here with friends," Saincome said. "I know she's taking it very tough. One of her best friends is with her, talking to her."

Anderson is a gymnast at El Capitan High School in Lakeside, an east San Diego suburb of 54,000 people, where she also participated in an advanced dance class. The incoming junior recently celebrated a birthday with about two dozen friends at a San Diego cabaret bar.

Her world turned upside down Aug. 4, when, according to authorities, a longtime family friend abducted her after killing her mother and younger brother and abandoning them in his burning house in Boulevard, a remote town 65 miles east of San Diego on the U.S.-Mexico border. James Lee DiMaggio, 40, died in the shootout Saturday with FBI agents at an alpine lake.

Hannah Anderson didn't know her mother and brother were dead until she was rescued, San Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore said.

"I can't make it any clearer: She was a victim in this case. She was not a willing participant," Gore said at a news conference with Hannah's father at sheriff's department headquarters, which served as a command post during a massive 6-day search that spanned much of the western United States and parts of Canada and Mexico.

Gore said DiMaggio fired his rifle once or twice with Hannah nearby during Saturday's showdown, and is believed to have shot first. He refused to say how many times DiMaggio was shot or elaborate on the rescue. He also declined to address how 44-year-old Christina Anderson and 8-year-old Ethan Anderson died, describe Hannah's captivity or say whether she tried to escape.

The sheriff said the crime was "not spur of the moment" but would not elaborate. Sheriff's Capt. Duncan Fraser said last week that investigators believe DiMaggio may have had an "unusual infatuation" with the girl.

DiMaggio was like an uncle to the children, driving Hannah to gymnastics meets and Ethan to football practice. He was close to their parents for nearly two decades.

The search for Hannah Anderson probably would have taken longer if a sharp-eyed retired sheriff and three other horseback riders in the rugged backcountry hadn't seen the pair Wednesday. Gore called it the "key event" in the search.

Mark John, who retired as a Gem County sheriff in 1996, shared his suspicions with the Idaho State Police after encountering DiMaggio and the girl on the trail. That enabled investigators to focus efforts on a specific portion of the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness, a roadless 3,600-square-mile preserve in the heart of Idaho.

Initially, it was the lack of openness on the trail and a reluctance to engage in the polite exchange of banter. They were also puzzled why Anderson and DiMaggio were hiking in the opposite direction of their stated destination, the Salmon River.

But more than anything, it was their gear — or lack of it. Neither was wearing hiking boots or rain gear. DiMaggio, described as an avid hiker in his home state of California, was toting only a light pack. It even appeared Anderson was wearing pajama bottoms.

On Friday, police found DiMaggio's car, hidden under brush at a trailhead on the border of the wilderness area. A day later, searchers spotted the pair by air, and two FBI hostage teams moved in on the camp at Morehead Lake, about 8 miles inside the wilderness border and 40 miles east of the central Idaho town of Cascade.

Rescue teams were dropped by helicopter about 2 1/2 hours away from where Anderson and DiMaggio were spotted by the lake, said FBI spokesman Jason Pack. The team had to hike with up to 100 pounds of tactical gear along a rough trail characterized by steep switchbacks and treacherous footing.

___

Associated Press writers Todd Dvorak in Boise, Idaho, Julie Watson in San Diego, Tami Abdollah in Los Angeles and Rebecca Boone in Cascade, Idaho, 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?
8/13/2013 4:49:52 PM
This Polar Bear Starved to Death Because of Climate Change















All that remained of a 16-year-old polar bear found by scientists in northern Svalbard in Norway in July was “skin and bone.” The bear had starved to death because of climate change, says Dr. Ian Stirling of Polar Bears International. With the sea ice where the bears hunt for seals melting at a record-setting rate, the animals who are the iconic symbol of the Arctic are more and more not able to catch the main source of their diet.

While it is not entirely possible to pinpoint one cause of the polar bear’s death, Douglas Richardson, head of living collections at the Highland Wildlife Park, says that 16 is not “particularly old” for a male polar bear in the wild; most typically live into their early 20s.

Scientists who examined the bear’s body say that he was otherwise healthy. Some researchers from the Norwegian Polar Institute had actually seen the bear in the southern part of Svalbard, an Arctic island archipelago, back in April, and noted that he appeared healthy. In previous years, the bear had been captured in the same place, suggesting that he was used to return there to hunt. But his severely emaciated body was found instead in northern Svalbard, 250 kilometers away. Scientists speculate that the bear may have walked two or three times that distance as it followed the fjords inland and headed north in its hunt for food.

Warmer temperatures are certainly altering the bear’s habitat and creating poor conditions for ice. As Prond Robertson of the Norwegian Meteorological Institute, points out, “the sea ice break up around Svalbard in 2013 was both fast and very early.”

New NOAA Report Confirms Extremely Fast Rate of the Sea Ice Melting

A new report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) makes it all too clear how very fast the sea ice is melting due to climate change.

A team of American and British scientists conducting annual tests found that, last year, greenhouse gas emissions reached record levels in the Arctic and Greenland while temperatures in the Arctic increased at about twice the rate as those at lower latitudes. As a result, by June of 2012, snow cover fell to its lowest levels since such records were kept.

By September of 2012, the sea ice cover had shrunk to the lowest levels since satellite records were recorded. The sea ice cover is now 18 percent lower than the previous low in 2007 and a shocking 54 percent lower than in 1980.

“Record-breaking events” including unusually warm temperatures are becoming the new normal, the NOAA report underscores. They are also occurring inland in the Arctic. On July 11, 2012, 97 percent of Greenland’s ice sheet experienced surface melting. This past year, Alaska’s permafrost temperatures and those in the Canadian Arctic were at record highs in 2012.

The polar bear’s existence is closely tied to the sea ice. With the ice melting at such an accelerated rate, between one-third and a half of polar bears will perish in the next three generations in about 45 years, says the IUCN. The U.S. and Russian governments are even more pessimistic, saying that the losses of polar bears could be even higher — two-thirds could soon be gone — as the ice melts.

Otherwise, Polar Bears are Almost “Indestructible,” But…

Richardson of Highland Wildlife Park emphasizes that the 16-year-old made found in Svalbard is not the only one suffering such a fate. Rather, he says that “there are an increasing number of bears in this condition: they are just not putting down enough fat to survive their summer fast.”

“Once polar bears reach adulthood they are normally nigh on indestructible, they are hard as nails,” Richardson also comments. Sadly, and tragically, they have more than met their match in the face of greenhouse gas emissions and rising global temperatures that are causing the sea ice to melt, depriving the bears of food and the earth of a priceless species.


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Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/a-polar-bear-starves-to-death-climate-change-is-the-culprit.html#ixzz2bruvizxV

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

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