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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/12/2012 4:25:04 PM
Economic Depression Continues to Spur on Suicides in Europe
















Greece and Italy are normally associated with beautiful sea views, earthy food and vibrant culture. In the last few years, however, these countries have also experienced some of the worst economic hardships as the European and global economies have weakened.

Last month a retired Greek man, Dimitris Christoulas, shot himself in a public square in Athens. In a report issued by CBS News, the retired pharmacist committed suicide due to the debt crisis in Greece and the resultant austerity measures that have brought many Greek families to the brink of ruin. The number of suicides increased by about 40 percent in the second half of 2011 and has continued to pose a problem in Greece. NPR has stated that about 30 percent of Greek families live below the poverty line.

Christoulas’ suicide sparked a number of protests in the streets in Greece. He became an icon of the severity that has plunged so many families into poverty.

Italy has also been at the front of headlines recently for a rash of suicides intimately connected with economic problems. Just this week, three people committed suicide, leaving tragic notes that revealed their despair at their inability to find new employment. There have been 34 suicides related to economic hardships in Italy since January, according to NBC News.

The Italian government owes many entrepreneurs up to $90 million and “some have been waiting to be paid for up to two years.” And these suicides are often committed by businessmen who have watched their businesses fail, or male family members who have lost a significant source of income.

An association near Asolo in Italy started a crisis helpline for those who have felt distress, but family members of potential suicide cases are more likely to call in asking for help than the men who are at risk.

And the Mediterranean region is not the only area to be hit by rising suicide numbers in the world. Both Ireland and the United Kingdom have experienced a rise in the number of suicides over the last few years, according to the BBC, quoting a 2011 Lancet report that pinned a rise in suicides in the UK at a 10 percent increase between 2007 and 2009.

And while many people have been affected by unemployment and rising rates of depression and suicide in the eurozone, there has also been a major backlash towards continued austerity measures. Greek voters have summarily rejected any continued austerity measures. The newly-elected French president, François Hollande, has also demanded that new growth initiatives be put in place with a shift away from austerity measures that cut off families in need of assistance, as the Telegraph cites.

The tense environment in the eurozone has forced European Union leaders to call a meeting for May 25, in which they will attempt to come up with a solution to the looming Greek debt that threatens the security of the continent. Hollande and Germany’s Angela Merkel are sure to come to heads over the best way to approach the economic issues facing the European Union.

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Financial Crisis Leads to Soaring Suicide Rates in Europe

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Photo Credit: Philly boy92



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/economic-depression-continues-to-spur-on-suicides-in-europe.html#ixzz1ufn19Prh

"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?
5/12/2012 4:31:13 PM
In Developing Countries, Kids Struggle to Get Cancer Treatments










This is a guest post from Robert Landry, President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Cancer Coalition.

Imagine if you were told your child has cancer. What would you do? You’d fight. Without a doubt, you would help your child fight for their life.

Childhood cancer includes some of the most curable types of cancer. In fact, thanks in large part to advances in research over the last decades, children battling cancer have a 75-80% survival rate.

A heightened public awareness of signs and symptoms result in children being accurately diagnosed earlier. As you know, the earlier cancer is identified, the better the outcome. When you add in the available treatment options, it’s clear how the number of deaths from childhood cancer is decreasing and why most children and teenagers who are diagnosed with cancer can be treated successfully.

That is, unless you are a child living in a developing country.

Now suppose you live in a village in Paraguay. Your daughter has been sick. You don’t know why — there are any number of reasons for her fever that won’t go away. Finally, you save up enough money to take her to the city so she can be seen by a specialist. The last thing you expect to hear is, your daughter has cancer. But that’s exactly what you’re told. And then you’re told to go home, because after all, you are a poor farmer and you have no way to pay for her treatment.

This is the reality for too many people living in developing countries. Sometimes, they can’t afford to start treatment, so they are left with no choice and no hope. Other times, children are able to start treatment but are forced to stop when their family’s life savings are gone.

In developing countries, kids with cancer have just a 20% survival rate. If they lived in the U.S., they would have a 75-80% survival rate. They’re the same kids, with the same cancer. They could have the same chance.

But because of where they live, these kids have almost no chance for a cure. Hospitals may not have access to the life-saving medicines, technology or knowledge. And even if they do, the medicine and treatment is almost always too expensive for the average family to afford.

These children experience unimaginable suffering with little chance for even pain relief. There are treatments for these children. They desperately need access to the live-saving medicine. Treatments for leukemia and brain tumors, two of the most common types of childhood cancer, are desperately needed in the developing world, where more than 80% of children don’t even have a chance in the fight against cancer.

Sign this pledge to help the National Cancer Coalition bring relief to children in developing countries fighting cancer. With your help, they can help cancer patients commute to receive treatment, ship medicine to clinics around the world, and more.

The National Cancer Coalition works tirelessly to give hope for healing and relief from suffering to people in developing countries who are facing cancer. With help from donors, NCC connects life-saving medicines to the people who desperately need them. Read more about NCC’s work here.

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Photo credit: National Cancer Coalition



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/in-developing-countries-kids-struggle-to-get-cancer-treatments.html#ixzz1ufoSb4Uf

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/12/2012 4:39:34 PM

JPMorgan $2 billion loss hits shares, dents image

By David Henry and Douwe Miedema | Reuters

P Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon speaks during a session at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos January 27, 2011. REUTERS/Vincent Kessler
NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co lost $15 billion in market value and a notch in its credit ratings on Friday while a chorus of regulators and politicians reacted to its surprise $2 billion trading loss by demanding stiffer oversight for the banking industry.

Republican Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee called for a hearing into the losses that the largest U.S. bank disclosed Thursday, while Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro told reporters: "It's safe to say that all the regulators are focused on this."

The debacle sparked new fears about big banks and prompted Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Richard Fisher, who has called for the breakup of the top five U.S. banks, to say he is worried the biggest banks do not have adequate risk management.

The fallout extended across much of the banking sector, with shares of some of Wall Street's top names declining on Friday. Among others, Citigroup dropped 4.2 percent, Goldman Sachs fell 3.9 percent and Bank of America slipped 1.9 percent.

JPMorgan was far away the worst performer, however, falling 9.3 percent on a day when some 212 million of its shares traded, the most volume in its history.

Fitch Ratings downgraded JPMorgan's debt ratings by one notch and put all of the ratings of the bank and its subsidiaries on negative ratings watch.

While Fitch saw the size of the loss as manageable, "the magnitude of the loss and ongoing nature of these positions implies a lack of liquidity," the ratings agency said. "It also raises questions regarding JPM's risk appetite, risk management framework, practices and oversight; all key credit factors."

"Fitch believes the potential reputational risk and risk governance issues raised at JPM are no longer consistent with an 'AA-' rating," it said.

Standard & Poor's put JPMorgan and its banking units on a negative outlook, but affirmed its current ratings.

Chief Executive Jamie Dimon's reputation also took a hit. For a leader lauded for steering his bank through the fallout from the 2008 financial crisis without reporting a loss, the incident was embarrassing, especially given Dimon's criticism of the so-called Volcker rule to ban proprietary trading by big banks.

"We know we were sloppy. We know we were stupid. We know there was bad judgment," Dimon said in an interview with NBC television to be broadcast on Sunday.

He said it wasn't clear whether the bank had broken any laws or violated any rules. "We've had audit, legal, risk, compliance, some of our best people looking at all of that."

Dimon recorded the segment to go with a wide-ranging interview he had done on Wednesday for NBC's Sunday "Meet the Press" program.

The New York Times reported that the Securities and Exchange Commission has opened a preliminary investigation into JPMorgan's accounting practices and public disclosures about the trading loss.

In a conference call disclosing the problem on Thursday, Dimon said the $2 billion in losses could rise by a further $1 billion, and acknowledged they were linked to a London-based credit trader Bruno Iksil. Nicknamed the 'London Whale', Iksil amassed an outsized position which hedge funds bet against, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal in April.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, meanwhile, had been aware of JPMorgan's big trading loss and is currently monitoring the situation, according to a source close to the situation.

The Fed, which is JPMorgan's primary regulator, aims to ensure banks are sufficiently capitalized to withstand such trading mistakes, not to prevent them, the source said.

'STAKES ARE TOO HIGH'

The exact nature of the trading loss is still unclear, although sources said a host of asset managers, arbitrageurs and hedge funds were on the other side of the bet, viewing it as good value and a effective way to insure portions of their portfolio.

Blue Mountain, a hedge fund with offices in New York and London, was among those on the other side of JPMorgan's trade, according to two people familiar with the situation.

Dimon will undoubtedly be pressed by investors for more details about what exactly went wrong when he hosts the bank's annual shareholder meeting on Tuesday in Tampa, Florida.

A national union on Friday urged shareholders to approve a stockholder resolution calling for an independent board chairman at JPMorgan. Dimon currently holds the chairman and CEO titles.

"The stakes are too high to leave Jamie Dimon unsupervised," said Gerald McEntee, president of the American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees, which sponsored the proposal. "Dimon denied that the ‘London Whale' was making risky bets, and now that this has turned out to be a fish story, shareholders need to step in."

Dimon had parlayed his bank's reputation as a white knight during the financial crisis into a position as the de facto representative fighting against excessive post-crisis regulation.

"What concerns me is risk management, size, scope," said Dallas Federal Reserve Bank's Fisher answer to a question about JPMorgan's trading loss. "At what point do you get to the point that you don't know what's going on underneath you? That's the point where you've got too big."

The trader at the center of the storm, Iksil, who graduated in engineering from the Ecole Centrale in Paris in 1991, was not available for comment. The Frenchman, and the Chief Investment Office (CIO) where he works, are known by rival credit traders for taking extremely large positions.

Friends, colleagues and fellow traders describe an unassuming man, a far cry from the brash image normally associated with traders staking huge bets in fast-moving financial markets, including derivatives.

"He's a really nice bloke. A quiet bloke. He's not an arrogant trader, he's quite the opposite. He's very charming," one former colleague at JPMorgan said of Iksil, whom he said was married with "a couple of kids."

A friend and former JPMorgan colleague said Iksil and his team were not carrying out so-called prop trading, where a bank makes bets with its own money, in disguise and its activities were known about at the highest levels.

"The CIO does not do prop trading, let's be clear on that... It involves taking positions in the form of investments, trades, credit-default swaps, or other, with the aim of rebalancing the risks ofJPMorgan's balance sheet.

"The information comes from the very top of the bank and I do not even think that the CIO team members at Bruno's level are given the full picture," the ex-colleague said.

Iksil was brought into the CIO unit to head its credit desk, an asset class it had not previously covered, a person who worked in the unit said. It built up large credit positions over several years through trades which were vetted by management and the losses now likely resulted from a combination of these trades going wrong, the person said.

The CIO desk had grown rapidly in the past five years and was given free range to trade in a whole range of financial products, the only exception being commodities, they added. The CIO is run by New York-based Ina Drew, who is Chief Investment Officer.

Credit market traders said other banks have comparable functions to JPMorgan's CIO. The French banks, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank and UBS were all cited as examples of large treasury functions that hedge credit exposures in similar ways.

"The argument that financial institutions do not need the new rules to help them avoid the irresponsible actions that led to the crisis of 2008 is at least $2 billion harder to make today," U.S. Representative Barney Frank said in a statement.

The Democrat co-authored the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law designed to avoid a repeat of the recent credit crisis.

(Reporting by David Henry in NEW YORK, Rick Rothacker in CHARLOTTE, North Carolina, Dave Clarke in WASHINGTON, Svea Herbst-Bayliss in BOSTON and Vidya Ranganathan in SINGAPORE, Douwe Miedema, Sinead Cruise and Christopher Whittall in LONDON, Lionel Laurent in PARIS; Writing by Alexander Smith and Paul Thomasch; Editing by Alwyn Scott, Jon Boyle and Tim Dobbyn)

"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?
5/12/2012 4:44:05 PM
Great Pacific Garbage Patch Leads To Boom In Ocean Bugs










The world’s biggest garbage dump isn’t in China or New York City. It’s in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The direct result of our addiction to “disposable” plastic containers and our refusal to reduce, reuse, recycle, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is an island of floating garbage some estimate to be the size of Texas.

Since petroleum-based plastics can take decades or even centuries to degrade, they get caught in the vortex of ocean currents that converge in the North Pacific. Unfortunately, this make-shift island causes real problems for members of the ocean ecosystem, both above and below the surface.

In addition to killing birds and fish who try to eat it, new research suggests that the floating trash is giving a certain variety of marine insect an ideal place to breed out on the open ocean, which could have a big impact on the natural environment. A 100-fold upsurge in human-produced plastic garbage in the ocean is altering habitats in the marine environment, according to a study led by a graduate student researcher at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego.

“Sea skaters” or “water striders”—relatives of pond water skaters—inhabit water surfaces and lay their eggs on flotsam (floating objects). Naturally existing surfaces for their eggs include, for example: seashells, seabird feathers, tar lumps and pumice. In the new study researchers found that sea skaters have exploited the influx of plastic garbage as new surfaces for their eggs. This has led to a rise in the insect’s egg densities in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre.

Researchers say that the increase in ocean trash, documented for the first time in a marine invertebrate in the open ocean, may have severe consequences for animals across the marine food web. Although this might seem like good news for the skater’s main predator, crabs, it could spell disaster for its prey, including tiny animals like zooplankton and fish eggs.

“We’re seeing changes in this marine insect that can be directly attributed to the plastic…We’re concerned that this might change the flow of energy in this ecosystem, potentially favoring the low-biodiversity rafting community at the expense of the high-biodiversity water column community,” said Scripps graduate student Miriam Goldstein, lead author of the study and chief scientist of SEAPLEX, a UC Ship Funds-supported voyage.

Related Reading:

10 Most Common Types Of Ocean Trash

Tsunami Wreckage Headed For The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

6 Problems Caused By Shrinking Biodiversity

Read more: , , , , , ,

Image via Thinkstock



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/great-pacific-garbage-patch-leads-to-boom-in-ocean-bugs.html#ixzz1ufrvCH1T

"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?
5/12/2012 4:53:27 PM

Spectacular solar storms

A huge sunspot that dwarfs the Earth is unleashing a series of powerful solar flares as it moves across the surface of the sun, NASA scientists say, May 10.


Photo By SDO/NASA (via Twitter @Camilla_SDO)

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

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