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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/17/2011 5:08:23 PM
Japan Tsunami More to Come

From Simion, The Evolutionary Collective, of 7th dimension light beings, through Jill Mara on March 11, 2011.

Japan Earth quakeRe: 8.9 Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan on March 11, 2011

We are Simion, the Evolutionary Collective. This case of the Earth Quake and resulting Tsunami that has inundated Japan is one in a chain of Earth changes that will occur in the year ahead. No one on Earth can say they were not warned of these scenarios.

The natural Earth shakes and rumbles will continue and become increasingly severe. The effects on human life will vary depending on the location, of course, however they are all signs that it is time to prepare. These occurrences should be no surprise at all to those that have been paying attention. The question is how will you decide to react?

The Earth is going through a drastic readjustment and this is not without physical evidence. Humanity is also going through some shakes and rumbles that are mirroring the Earth’s experience. None of this is to become fearful over. All is happening for a very positive reason. It is time to wake up! Rise and shine people of Earth, and smell the change in the air. What will you do with this change? Ignore it? Pretend this is something that happens every 100 years, and ignore the signs of the domino effect that is on the horizon? Will you become alarmed and let your fear of change overwhelm you?

As we have said, many events will occur that will cause lives to pass over. This is only one of many to come. What is important is how you relate to these events. Can you use your intuitive abilities to see through the seeming disaster and look to the message these upheavals reveal. The messages are from the Earth, the cosmos, and the human heart.

Anyone finding themselves in the middle of Earth rumbles, such as this tsunami, has a choice as to how they will react to it. Some will see only the disaster and others will find where they need to be to bring light to the place of ache. These events are not negative end of the world scenarios. They are signs of the great awakening of your Mother Earth. Can you find a place in your being to celebrate her progress? Can you give respect to the power of her movement? Her force is more potent than all of humanity put together, but humanity can assist her, or fight her. With respect and admiration, humanity can alleviate the effects of the rumbles of Earth. With fear and anger, humanity will only increase the damages to themselves.

This tsunami is mild compared to what is to come, so how you all react to this one will aid you in preparing for the next. No, we cannot tell you the when and where. For one, those answers are not fixed. The possibilities are relatively fluid. We can only say that at present the wave of consciousness from Mother Earth and the cosmos is aptly strong enough to move her into a forceful shift the result of which will be many drastic physical changes that ultimately will push her into a new dimension. The old world will be left behind in ashes and a new world will be born fresh. Many on the islands of your world will be passing on before the final push of Mother Earth. This death is not the negative experience that you project it to be. For most, this will be a godsend. They will be free to move to their next level wherever is best for them.

The best that each individual can do for those presently in the middle of this deluge is to send them energetic thoughts of courage and peace that they may have the courage to help one another and transcend the darkness of despair. What you call disasters have the potential to bring you to your lowest state of mind, or raise you to your highest emotional response of unconditional sharing. Sending light thoughts and emotions to the people enveloped in the pain of loss, will aid them in finding that light within themselves, and in the material objects and beings that surround them. Many are struggling for life, or are in fear on the loss of loved ones. They are confused and disoriented, in the physical state, and in the astral realm. Send these souls your guiding light through your consciousness channel. Know that it can be so.

These are the moments that you can change your world. Tragedy can be an opening to an amazing force of light to be revealed on your planet. The opening of the Earth’s attention can force a great uplifting, or it can seed more darkness. Pity and emotional anguish will not benefit these souls. What they need is love and gratitude for their sacrifice, as those involved are taking on the potential for the diminishment of more pain on Earth. The more love they can reveal by their state of sacrifice, the more their lives will have meaning.

Remember that the frequencies on the planet are increasing in amplification, and so every event such as this is a dose of power as not seen before. What will you do with this power? What would you like the rest of the world to do when it is your turn to make a sacrifice? Your world is changing. Have you truly acknowledged this yet? There is much that you will be forced to give up. You can give up willingly and purposefully and make these events easier to handle, or you can fight it, and do it the hard way.

We suggest you accept these changes and give thanks to Mother Earth for protecting you for so many years. She will show those a way through that need to continue and will usher others onto their next experience in another life. Be grateful for these changes as they are signs of a new world awakening. Awaken with your Mother and be ushered to where you need to be as the events roll through her core. Align yourselves with the Earth’s heart and the center of the galaxy, where the new frequencies emanate from, and you will find your way. You have our appreciation and blessings for your bravery.

"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?
3/20/2011 9:21:17 PM

Gadhafi vows 'long war' after US, allies strike



Warplanes and cruise missiles bombard Libya as Operation Odyssey Dawn heats up. Antiaircraft fire in Tripoli

TRIPOLI, Libya – Anti-aircraft fire erupted in the Libyan capital on Sunday, marking the start of a second night of international strikes as a defiant Moammar Gadhafi vowed a "long war." The U.S. military said the allied bombardment so far, using a rain of Tomahawk cruise missiles and strikes by long-range bombers, had been successful in diminishing Gadhafi's air defenses.

Libya's rebels were jubilant after the first round of strikes before dawn on Sunday, which came as the overwhelming firepower of Gadhafi's forces had threatened to crush their month-old uprising.

The strikes gave immediate, if temporary, relief to the besieged rebel capital, Benghazi, in eastern Libya, which the day before had been under a heavy attack that killed at least 120 people.

Airstrikes early Sunday, apparently from French aircraft, devastated a Libyan tank force 12 miles (20 kilometers) south of Benghazi. At least seven demolished tanks were still smoldering in a field hours later, five of them with their turrets and treads blown off, alongside two charred armored personnel carriers and around a dozen damaged jeeps and SUVs of the type often used by Gadhafi fighters.

Rebel fighters climbed on the remains on the tanks, shooting assault rifles in the air in celebration. It was not known how many people were killed in the strike — any bodies had been taken away in the morning — but shredded boots and foam mattresses and tomato paste cans strewn around the scene suggested the Gadhafi forces had been camped at the site when they were hit.

"It was a matter of minutes and Gadhafi's forces would have been in Benghazi," said Akram Abdul-Wahab, a 20-year-old butcher in the city.

Soon after nightfall Sunday, heavy anti-aircraft fire rattled over Tripoli, with tracer fire arching into the sky, punctuated by the explosion of shells. The fire suggested a second night of strikes had begun, but it was not immediately known what they targeted.

On state TV, the Libyan armed forces repeated its claim that it ordered a cease-fire — though it appeared that its units continued fighting after a similar cease-fire call the night before.

The rebels hope that the allied intervention will turn the tide in Libya's conflict, breaking sieges by Gadhafi's forces on several opposition-held cities and eventually leading to the Libyan leader's ouster after nearly 42 years in power.

But the Western allies have sent mixed signals over their vision for the end game of their intervention in Libya. France has taken the most aggressive tone, with its U.N. ambassador saying the ultimate goal was to get rid of Gadhafi.

But the top U.S. military officer took a more cautious stance, reflecting American worries about getting dragged deeper into the conflict.

Asked on NBC's "Meet the Press" whether it was possible that the mission's goals could be achieved while leaving Gadhafi in power, Adm. Mike Mullen said, "That's certainly potentially one outcome." Pressed on this point later in an interview on CNN's "State of the Union," Mullen was more vague, saying it was too early to speculate. He said the Libyan leader is "going to have to make some choices about his own future" at some point.

Libya said 48 people were killed in the first round of strikes, including many civilians. That brought criticism of the campaign from the head of the Arab League, which last week took the unprecedented step of calling for a no-fly zone. On Sunday, Arab League chief Amr Moussa criticized the allied strikes, saying they went beyond what the Arab body had supported.

"What happened differs from the no-fly zone objectives," Moussa told reporters in Cairo. "What we want is civilians' protection not shelling more civilians."

Nevertheless, France on Sunday said warplanes in the Arab Gulf nation of Qatar would participate in the air campaign, a sign of continued Arab support.

The U.N. resolution authorizing military action in Libya allows "all necessary means" to protect civilians. That goes far beyond a simple no-fly zone, giving the U.S. and Europeans a free hand in the next stages to attack Gadhafi's ground forces besieging rebel cities or other military targets.

The first night of strikes began with assaults by French warplanes, followed by a barrage of 112 cruise missiles fired by U.S. and British warships and submarines in the Mediterranean targeting radar systems, communications centers and surface-to-air missile sites. A wave of bombings mainly from American aircraft — including B-2 stealth bombers and F-15 and F-16 fighter-bombers — then targeted Libyan ground forces and air defenses, the U.S. military said.One senior military official said the early judgment was that the attacks had been highly successful, while not fully eliminating the threat posed by Libyan air defenses. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence data.

The strikes early Sunday hit one of Libya's main air bases, on Tripoli's outskirts, the opposition said. Also hit, it said, was an air force complex outside Misrata, the last rebel-held city in western Libya — which has been under siege the past week by Gadhafi forces. Those forces have been bombarding the city from the complex, which houses an air base and a military academy.

Despite the strikes, Gadhafi forces resumed bombarding Misrata after daylight on Sunday, said Switzerland-based Libyan activist Fathi al-Warfali.

"Misrata is the only city in western Libya not under Gadhafi's control; he is trying hard to change its position," said al-Warfali, who told The Associated Press he was in touch with residents in the city.

Gadhafi vowed to fight on. In a phone call to Libyan state television Sunday, he said he would not let up on Benghazi and said the government had opened up weapons depots to all Libyans, who were now armed with "automatic weapons, mortars and bombs." State television said Gadhafi's supporters were converging on airports as human shields.

"We promise you a long war," he said.

He called the international assault "simply a colonial crusader aggression that may ignite another large-scale crusader war."

Throughout the day Sunday, Libyan TV showed a stream of what it said were popular demonstrations in support of Gadhafi in Tripoli and other towns and cities. It showed cars with horns blaring, women ullulating, young men waving green flags and holding up pictures of the Libyan leader. Women and children chanted, "God, Muammar and Libya, that's it!"

"Our blood is green, not red," one unidentified woman told the broadcaster, referring to the signature color of Gadhafi's regime. "He is our father, we will be with him to the last drop of blood. Our blood is green with our love for him."

In Benghazi, the rebel capital and first city to fall to the uprising that began Feb. 15, people said the strikes happened just in time. Libyan government tanks and troops on Saturday had reached the edges of the city in eastern Libya in fierce fighting that killed more than 120 people according to Gibreil Hewadi, a member of the rebel health committee in Benghazi. He said the dead included rebel fighters and civilians, among them women and children.

Sunday, the city was quiet. As part of the international assault, French warplanes hit targets in the Benghazi area.

Mohammed Faraj, 44, a former military man who joined the rebels, held a grenade in each hand as he manned a checkpoint on the outskirts of the city.

"Me and all of Benghazi, we will die before Gadhafi sets foot here again," Faraj told The Associated Press. "Our spirits are very high."

Asked on ABC's "This Week" if the allied effort aimed to get rid of Gadhafi, France's ambassador to the United Nations, Gerard Araud, said "We want the Libyan people to be able to express their will, I've said ... and we consider that it means that Gadhafi has to go."

Still, the top U.S. military officer said the goals of the international campaign are "limited" and won't necessarily lead to the ousting of Gadhafi.

Asked on NBC's "Meet the Press" whether it was possible that the mission's goals could be achieved while leaving Gadhafi in power, Adm. Mike Mullen said, "That's certainly potentially one outcome." Pressed on this point later in an interview on CNN's "State of the Union," Mullen was more vague, saying it was too early to speculate. He said the Libyan leader is "going to have to make some choices about his own future" at some point.

___

Lucas reported from Benghazi, Libya. Associated Press writers Maggie Michael in Cairo and Lolita C. Baldor and Robert Burns in Washington 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?
3/22/2011 12:19:22 AM

Cruise missile blasts Gadhafi's compound near tent

Gadhafi's compound blasted by allies

The Libyan leader's location remains unknown as allied forces hit a symbolic target in their assault. Details

"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?
3/22/2011 12:31:38 AM
Images of disaster in Japan lend visual power

Japan disaster reveals tsunami mysteries

The phenomenon is seen in a new light after striking the world's most well-wired country. 'Couldn't stop watching'

By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television WriterDavid Bauder, Ap Television Writer Sun Mar 20, 5:13 pm ET

NEW YORK – Sometimes it's a fast-moving ooze: A street becomes a stream, grows into a river and then a raging mountain of moving debris. Sometimes, it's a wet curtain of water crashing over a shoreline, tossing trees, ships and cars casually aside as a child would a stack of Legos.

Until a week ago, a tsunami was one of the most mysterious of natural events, its devastating power usually evident only in the aftermath. Yet from the first moments the earth started to shudder on March 11, Japan's tsunami was one of the most recorded disasters ever to be captured on film, lending a visual power to story-telling unmatched since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks almost a decade ago.

Quake footage was available almost instantly: Office workers running outside as building chunks slam to the ground; skyscrapers swaying like evergreens in a windstorm; pictures falling off walls; store stock spilling to the floor. One man kept recording as his living room seemed to fall apart around him. His camera caught his shaky steps as he finally rushed outside.

But as dramatic as the earthquake images were, the tsunami video — some of it live — was breathtaking. A handful of tourists captured the Indonesian tsunami in 2004, but there was much less variety and inferior film quality. Technology — particularly cell-phone cameras — was not what it has become today.

Japan, too, is unique — a nation that not only produces electronics but also focuses on technology, camera phones, handheld video and digital cameras. And it may also be the most well-wired country for recording such disasters. With its geologic history, seismic monitors and robotic cameras are mounted throughout the archipelago.

Japanese news crews quickly took to the streets and skies after the earthquake, leaving them well-positioned to capture the tsunami.

At times, they were too well-positioned: A video that surfaced late last week showed a local news crew abandoning a car with the tsunami approaching and rushing into a building as water began swirling around their feet.

What, though, do these images do? Do they change how we perceive the event? Do more higher-quality images of catastrophe make it seem more real or more movielike? Will we remember the 2011 Japan tsunami differently than its calamitous predecessors because we saw so much of it so quickly?

In the days that followed the earthquake, CNN producers constantly monitored social media sites to find newly posted material, and dozens of Japanese citizens sent footage directly to CNN, said Parisa Khosravi, senior vice president for CNN news-gathering worldwide.

"In this case, it certainly captured images that no one expected to see," she said. The story gave CNN its best ratings since President Barack Obama's inauguration in 2009, the Nielsen Co. said.

Viewers couldn't get enough — even those who were personally touched by it.

"I tried, but couldn't stop watching," said Maisararam from Banda Aceh, Indonesia, who lost her husband and three daughters in Indonesia's 2004 tsunami. "It was exactly the same, except they have this horrible footage, events unfolding right before your eyes."

One particularly arresting video showed water and debris rapidly rising as a group of people struggled to make it up a path to higher ground; CNN stopped rolling the shot — the fate of the crew unknown. In another instance, men who had raced to the top of a parking garage kept recording the tsunami even as one openly wondered whether he would survive or not.

The wealth of visual material stood in contrast to events at the earthquake-damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex where six reactor units have had fires, explosions or partial meltdowns. As the water receded and attention turned to the crippled nuclear plant, the story became one of those events that television is poorly equipped to tell.

Images are elusive. Except for a handful of aerial shots, the drama at the plant has largely been seen in fuzzy video taken from many miles away. Occasionally, water is dumped on damaged nuclear reactors from the air, yet it's so difficult to see that it must be highlighted by editors in the pictures.

Evacuation zones have also led American TV networks to pull many of their teams out of the immediate area for safety reasons over radiation poisoning.

But no one knows what is really happening at the plant, or what will happen, and how much radiation is being exposed to how many people. That leads to less-than-illuminating reports, such as Lester Holt revealing on the "Today" show that his shoes tested positive for radiation.

Other than lost footwear, what did the incident really teach us?

Television frequently returned to old-fashioned and visually dull habits out of necessity, bringing a succession of experts before cameras to report the nuclear threat.

The uncertain aspects of the story quickly led to on-air debates over whether television was "hyping" the nuclear danger. NBC's "Nightly News" pointed a finger at the media in a report that minimized any danger to the United States. Fox News Channel's Shepard Smith labeled "sad and pathetic" Americans who bought anti-radiation pills in large numbers.

Yet his own network showed this headline Friday: "Growing Concern Over Radiation Plume Drifting Over Western United States."

But radiation is not a television event; it is, for the most part, something you cannot see — ambiguous, invisible, diffuse.

There was nothing ambiguous about the tsunami footage. In an era of unremitting visuals, it was imagery like none other — another example, in a time of technological change, of how we can watch the world unfold, even in its saddest, most frightening moments.

___

Associated Press correspondent Fakhrurradzie Gade in Banda Aceh, Indonesia, contributed to this report.

See full article and photos here:http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110320/ap_on_en_tv/us_tv_japan_images

"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?
3/22/2011 12:45:32 AM

Tsunami disruption spreads deep into Japan


Tsunami effects spread deep into Japan

Empty store shelves and long gas lines are common outside the quake-stricken areas. Coupon rations

MORIOKA, Japan (AFP) – Ten days after Japan's tsunami disaster, towns far from the impact zone are still experiencing shortages that have thrown the neat, ordered lives of local residents completely out of gear.

Gas station queues stretching for several kilometres, long waits at supermarkets, empty store shelves and shuttered businesses have become a part of the landscape in post-tsunami Japan.

At the foot of the Mount Iwate volcano, the people of Morioka city -- almost 100 kilometres (60 miles) west of the devastated coast -- are still trying to adjust to the sudden absence of many things they had simply taken for granted.

At a gas station on the outskirts of the city, motorists waited hours on end before finally reaching the gas pump, clutching a 2,000 yen ($25, 17 euros) daily rationing coupon in their hands. The coupon is barely enough to buy a third of a tank on an average-sized city car.

One man wasted so much gas queuing up that his car ran dry and needed several people to push it up to the station.

Kabuya Kubo said she had waited for nearly six hours to put gas in her tank. Ever since the tsunami, she has had to bike to work whenever the car runs low on fuel -- a one-hour trip, versus 15 minutes by car.

"Now, again, I realize that electricity, gas, all of that is really important," she said. "Because there's no gas, I can't go anywhere that's far away. It's difficult."

Most gas stations have been cordoned off or closed for the better part of the day due to disruptions in the supply system caused by the March 11 earthquake and ensuing tsunami that devastated Japan's northeastern coastline.

The tidal wave that intruded 10 kilometres (six miles) inland in certain areas engulfed large tracts of arable land in the agriculturally rich prefectures of Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima.

"There are no more meat and vegetables. I'm eating instant meals all the time," said Naohiko Seki. "I would like to regain my old life, but when I think about people who suffered from the tsunami, I tell myself I shouldn't complain."

A ramen noodle restaurant on the main shopping street downtown only offered a single type of plain fried rice for sale. There were no customers in sight at 2:00 pm and the usually busy room stood empty.

"Ever since the disaster, our suppliers haven't been able to reach us. We haven't been getting many customers recently," said cook Toshiyo Sasaki.

"Our restaurant is usually open 24/7 but now we can't stay open all the time. We have reduced working hours because we can't get the products we need."

As fresh produce grows scarcer, restaurants are serving more prepared foods and noodle- or rice-based dishes than ever before.

Convenience stores, usually open around the clock, had row after row of empty shelves, where prepared foods like the normally ubiquitous 'onigiri' rice balls, water and milk products once stood.

Popular French bakery Pompadour opened at 1:00 pm and had sold out its entire stock of bread and pastries in two hours.

Outside a shopping mall, a handful of school students held up signs about the tsunami disaster and asked customers for donations to buy food and clothes for the victims.

A group of green-clad boy and girl scouts on the main shopping street also urged passersby to donate -- and many did, even encouraging their young children to drop a few coins in the box.

Yoshii Sato said he was a "little afraid" for his very young daughter.

"It's really strange. The stores have almost no baby food and other items. It makes me uneasy and anxious. I am worried because I don't know whether or not I will be able to buy what my child needs," he said.

Still, Sato stressed that others had to cope with much worse.

"In Morioka, we are getting by okay, but toward the coast, many more people have lost their homes and are forced to suffer. We feel very sad for them."

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

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