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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/31/2013 1:04:18 AM
Protests cancel Kelly event

NYC Police Commissioner Ray Kelly booed offstage at Brown over 'stop and frisk'

Dylan Stableford, Yahoo News




New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly's lecture Tuesday at Brown University was halted after audience members disrupted the talk in protest of NYC's controversial "stop and frisk" policy.


Kelly was invited to the Ivy League institution to give a speech titled “Proactive Policing in America’s Biggest City.” It was to cover "his eleven-year tenure as the head of the NYPD, and the strategies that have enabled the New York City Police Department to drive crime down by more than 30% since 2001 while defending New York from another terrorist attack." Those strategies include "stop and frisk," the department's practice of stopping and questioning hundreds of thousands of mostly black and Hispanic men each year.

But things at Brown didn't quite go as planned. About a half-hour into the event, Kelly was met with catcalls from the audience.

“Racism is not for debate!” one person could be heard shouting. “We’re asking you stop stopping and frisking people!”

A Brown University official tried to restore order, urging the audience to hold their comments until the Q&A, but to no avail.

Other audience members cheered, and a visibly angry Kelly left the podium.

The school later issued a statement on its website condemning the conduct of its students.

"This afternoon, officials at Brown University closed a lecture by New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and cleared the auditorium," the statement said. "That decision came after nearly 30 minutes of disruption by activist students and members of the local community. Loud shouting, persistent interruption, and coordinated chants made it impossible for the lecture to take place."

"This is a sad day for the Brown community," Brown University President Christina H. Paxson wrote in a separate letter. "I appreciate that some members of our community objected to the views of our invited speaker. However, our University is — above all else — about the free exchange of ideas. Nothing is more antithetical to that value than preventing someone from speaking and other members of the community from hearing that speech and challenging it vigorously in a robust yet civil manner."

According to the Brown Daily Herald, about 100 students protested outside the lecture hall before the speech. Some students circulated a petition asking that the school donate Kelly's speaking fee to nonprofits working to end racial profiling.

In August, a federal judge ruled that the "stop and frisk" policy was largely unconstitutional. The city appealed the ruling, and Kelly defended the practice as necessary.

"We have record low numbers of murders in New York City, record low numbers of shootings," Kelly said on NBC's "Meet the Press." "We're doing something right to save lives."

According to the NYPD, 52 percent of the 4.4 million people stopped from January 2004 through June 2012 were black, 31 percent Hispanic and just 10 percent white. And 88 percent of those stopped by police were not arrested.

"We are sensitive to this," Kelly said of the statistics. "Nobody wants to be stopped. At the very least, you're giving up your time. But we need some balance here. The stark reality is that violence is happening disproportionately in minority communities. And that unfortunately is in big cities throughout America."



The NYPD commissioner is forced to leave the stage after students launch verbal attacks against "stop and frisk."
Visibly angry




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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/31/2013 1:53:56 AM

Police say 5 arrested in Tiananmen Gate attack

Associated Press

Two passengers on a bus talk about the suicide car crash near Tiananmen Gate as the bus drives past the spot where, on Monday, a sport utility vehicle crashed and caught fire, in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013. Chinese police are circulating a list of eight suspects wanted in connection with the apparent suicide car crash near Tiananmen Square in Beijing that killed five people and injured dozens, a hotel manager said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

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BEIJING (AP) — Police announced Wednesday the arrests of five people in connection with this week's suicide car crash in the heart of China's capital, calling it a planned terror attack — Beijing's first in recent history — and identifying the attackers as members of a Muslim minority.

Police said the five suspects were detained the same day as the Monday noon attack at the Forbidden City gate across from Tiananmen Square, in the culturally and politically sensitive section of Beijing where China's Communist Party leaders live and work.

A statement on the Beijing police microblog said the perpetrators had also been identified as a man with an ethnic Uighur name, his wife and his mother. The five suspects arrested on suspicion of conspiring in the attack also were identified with typically Uighur names.

An attack in one of the eastern population centers is "something that the Chinese authorities have been worried about for a long time," said University of Michigan expert Philip Potter.

"Once this threshold has been crossed, it is a difficult thing to constrain," Potter said, predicting tighter surveillance and scrutiny of Uighurs in eastern cities.

All three attackers died when their vehicle exploded beneath the portrait of Mao Zedong hanging from Tiananmen Gate. Two tourists, including a Filipino woman, were killed by the vehicle as it sped down a crowded sidewalk, and 38 people were injured, including three Filipino citizens and a Japanese man.

Knives, iron rods, gasoline and a flag imprinted with religious slogans were found in the vehicle, police said.

Uighurs (pronounced WEE-gur) are Muslim Turks native to the restive northwestern region of Xinjiang where extremists opposed to Chinese rule have been battling security forces for years.

The statement said the five detained had helped plan and execute the attack, and were caught 10 hours after it was carried out. It said they had been on the run and were tracked down with the help of police in Xinjiang and elsewhere. It didn't say where they were captured, but said police had found jihadi flags and long knives inside their temporary lodgings.

"The initial understanding of the police is that the Oct. 28 incident is a case of a violent terrorist attack that was carefully planned, organized and plotted," the statement said.

The attack appears to mark a new boldness on the part of militants inspired by radical Islam and follows a particularly bloody summer of clashes in Xinjiang, including an attack on a police station, that have left at least 56 people dead this year. The government typically calls the incidents terrorist attacks.

China has up to now been largely successful at limiting both the volume and effectiveness of domestic terrorist attacks, while containing them mainly to Xinjiang. However, the Chinese government had warned that radicals might be planning attacks outside of Xinjiang.

Xinjiang borders Afghanistan and unstable Central Asian states with militant Islamic groups, and Uighurs are believed to be among militants sheltering in Pakistan's lawless northwestern region.

China says much of the violence is orchestrated by Uighur activists based in the West or in Pakistan and other neighboring countries, but has provided little evidence publicly. The U.S. initially placed one group, the East Turkistan Islamic Movement, on a terrorist watch list following the Sept. 11 attacks, but later quietly removed it amid doubts that it existed in any organized manner.

Uighur extremism is generally seen as fueled by heavy-handed Chinese rule in Xinjiang and discrimination against them by China's ethnic Han majority who make up more than 91 percent of the country's population. Many Uighurs say they face routine discrimination, irksome restrictions on their culture and Muslim religion, and economic disenfranchisement that has left them largely poor even as China's economy booms.

Uighurs say they've seen little benefit from the exploitation of Xinjiang's natural resources while good jobs tend to flow to ethnic Han migrants. The 9 million Uighurs now make up about 43 percent of the population in a region more than twice the size of Texas where they used to dominate.

They frequently say they're made to feel like second-class citizens, facing difficulties obtaining passports or even traveling outside Xinjiang. Hotels and airlines are reported to have unofficial bans on catering to Uighurs, and many employers refuse to hire them.

"Hotels won't take us and you can't rent if your ID shows a Xinjiang residence. People look at us with a lot of prejudice," said Yusuf Mahmati, 33, a Uighur fur trader plying his wares on a busy Beijing sidewalk across from a crafts and curios market.

Uighurs in Beijing say police have stepped up identity checks and other forms of scrutiny since Monday's attack, and the overseas advocacy group World Uyghur Congress on Tuesday urged caution and expressed concerns that Beijing could use the incident to demonize Uighurs as a group. A Sweden-based spokesman for the group said 93 Uighurs have been detained without charge in Beijing in security sweeps following Monday's attack.

Beijing-based Uighur economist Ilham Tohti urged the government to make public its findings if it indeed has evidence that Uighurs were involved in a terrorist attack.


China arrests five in Tiananmen attack


Police are calling the suicide car bombing near Beijing's Tiananmen Square a carefully planned terrorist attack.
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?
10/31/2013 9:50:47 AM

War without borders: The growing threat of commando-style raids across the world

Watch video

Power Players

The wars of the future will not be waged between countries but by militias and criminal groups operating within large cities across the world, war expert David Kilcullen predicts.

Kilcullen, who was a key adviser to U.S. and international forces on counterinsurgency strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan, told “Power Players” that the world will likely see an escalation of conflicts similar to the 2008 Mumbai attacks in the coming 30 years.

“I could well see that happening in cities across the planet, including cities in the United States,” said Kilcullen, who’s just published a new book, “Out of the Mountains: The Coming Age of the Urban Guerrilla.”

“Mumbai to my mind is actually the state of the art of maritime, littoral terrorism, and, in fact, we've seen a number of groups … figure out how to copy that kind of attack,” he said. “They looked at how the city flowed, the sort of metabolism of the urban environment, and infiltrated that in a way to deliberately disrupt the city.”

Kilcullen largely attributes the changing nature of war to a “massive explosion in connectivity” in recent years, in addition to demographics – with large, coastal cities being most at risk.

“The new thing that's dramatically exploded in the last decade is connectivity,” Kilcullen said. “In the year 2000, there were 30,000 cell phones in Nigeria. Today there's 113 million, and that's pretty typical.”

“So the stuff that happens in one country doesn't stay there; it immediately comes home to where we live,” said Kilcullen, who points to the globalized economy and immigration as other factors that bring conflicts closer to home.

The rising tide of connectivity is further complicated by a continuing trend of urbanization, particularly in the developing world, where Kilcullen says an additional 3 billion people will live between now and 2050.

“Urban overstretch, whether it results in warfare or just crime, is actually going to be one of the primary challenges that people are going to be dealing with,” Kilcullen said.

And he cautioned that the military can’t be the primary solution.

“In the end, it boils down to partnerships with local population, and designing solutions that work for them to make them feel safe, and whenever you can do that without involving the military, that's the better option,” he said.

For more of the interview with Kilcullen, and to hear his first-hand opinion on how counterinsurgency techniques fell short in securing Iraq, check out this episode of “Power Players.”

ABC News’ Alexandra Dukakis, Gary Westphalen, Melissa Young and Bob Bramson contributed to this episode.




An incident in 2008 gives a good idea of what conflict will be like for the next 30 years, says an expert.
Who's most at risk?




"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?
10/31/2013 9:59:15 AM
Massive income disparity

Louisiana parish provides extreme example of inequality



Gazebo in front of City Hall in Lake Providence, Louisiana (Photo by Visions of America/UIG via Getty Images)

In a speech marking the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, President Barack Obama called economic inequality "the great unfinished business" of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy. And Louisiana's East Carroll Parish provides an extreme example of the inequality found in much of the country.

The richest 5 percent in the parish earn $611,000 per year on average, according to U.S. Census Bureau data, while the poorest 20 percent make $6,800. According to the Tax Policy Center, those earning $611,000 are among the top 1 percent in the United States. Those with income of $6,800, meanwhile, are among the bottom 5 percent.

The unemployment rate is 16 percent, or more than double the national average.

But according to John Sutter, who recently traveled to the town of Lake Providence in the parish for CNN's Change the List project, few of its 7,500 residents are complaining.

"I was hard pressed to find people in Lake Providence who think income inequality, specifically, is a problem," Sutter wrote on CNN.com. "This is the way things are, they say."

Delores Gilmore, a 44-year-old overnight prison guard who lives on the south side of the lake, earns $8.50 per hour working 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. to make ends meet.

"The first of the month, I pay the rent," she said. "The next check, I pay my light bills. Sometimes I won't pay my rent and I pay the light bill from last month — if they cut if it off. Then I pay the rent the end of the month. ... I get it done. By the grace of God, I get it done."

Gilmore may not complain about the income division, but she does dream about being on the other side, Sutter writes:

Gilmore, a stern but funny lady who answers the door saying, "What now?!" and carries a switch to church in case her kids act up, never wore shoes in the imagined house, only socks. Her real living room floor is made of splintered plywood. But the floors in the dream home were smooth as a skating rink. In the dream, Gilmore ran through the halls and slid across the floor in her socks — just like Tom Cruise in "Risky Business."


Thomas Terral, a 71-year-old businessman who lives on the other side of the lake, is among the top 5 percent:

He lives a life of relative luxury — nothing that would seem outlandish by national standards, but it is a far cry from life south of the lake. His living room has the vibe of an upscale ski lodge, with the heads of various animals — one is a bighorn sheep, I think -- staring at you from elevated angles. In the office, a bear rug has its mouth open, fangs showing. Terral shot it with a bow and arrow on a hunting trip in British Columbia. On the coffee table is a copy of Forbes magazine. Cover story: "Peace Through Profits."


Terral's family owned several farm-related businesses, including one that they sold in 2010.

"I felt like my mission was to supply as many jobs as I could," Terral said. "Of course, we were a small company, and I think the most employees we had was a little under 70 — 68 or so. What we did was probably the best thing we could do to help the situation."

"By 'the situation,'" Sutton writes, "he means the poverty south of the lake."



The only thing more shocking than this U.S. parish's income disparity is local attitudes about it.
'I was hard-pressed to find...'




"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?
10/31/2013 10:09:08 AM
Watchdog: Syria has destroyed chemical production facilities

Syria meets deadline to destroy chemical production facilities

Reuters


United Nations (U.N.) vehicles transporting a team of experts from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), leave their hotel in Damascus October 22, 2013. REUTERS/Khaled al-Hariri

By Dominic Evans

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syria has destroyed or rendered inoperable all of its declared chemical weapons production and mixing facilities, meeting a major deadline in an ambitious disarmament program, the international chemical weapons watchdog said Thursday.

The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, which won the Nobel Peace prize this month, said its teams had inspected 21 out of 23 chemical weapons sites across the country. The other two were too dangerous to inspect, but the chemical equipment had already been moved to other sites that experts had visited, it said.

Syria "has completed the functional destruction of critical equipment for all of its declared chemical weapons production facilities and mixing/filling plants, rendering them inoperable," it said, meeting a deadline to do so no later than November 1.

The next deadline is November 15, by when the OPCW and Syria must agree to a detailed plan of destruction, including how and where to destroy more than 1,000 metric tonnes of toxic agents and munitions.

Under a Russian-American brokered deal, Damascus agreed to destroy all its chemical weapons after Washington threatened to use force in response to the killing of hundreds of people in a sarin attack on the outskirts of Damascus on August 21.

It was the world's deadliest chemical weapons incident since Saddam Hussein's forces used poison gas against the Kurdish town of Halabja 25 years ago.

"This was a major milestone in the effort to eliminate Syria's chemical weapons program," Ralf Trapp, an independent chemical weapons disarmament specialist, said.

"Most of the sites and facilities declared by Syria to the OPCW have been inspected, their inventories verified, equipment for chemical weapons production disabled and put beyond use, and some of the unfilled weapons have also been disabled."

At one of those locations the OPCW said it was able to verify destruction work remotely, while Syrian forces had abandoned the other two sites.

Trapp said it was "important to ensure that the remaining facilities can be inspected and their equipment and weapons inventoried and prepared for destruction as soon as possible".

The United States and its allies blamed Assad's forces for the attack and several earlier incidents. The Syrian president has rejected the charge, blaming rebel brigades.

Under the disarmament timetable, Syria was due to render unusable all production and chemical weapons filling facilities by November 1 - a target it has now met. By mid-2014 it must have destroyed its entire stockpile of chemical weapons.

The OPCW mission is being undertaken in the midst of Syria's 2-1/2 year civil war, which has killed more than 100,000 people. The unprecedented conditions had raised concerns that the violence would impede the disarmament, but the OPCW says Syrian authorities have been cooperating with the weapons experts, who have been able to visit all but three of the chemical sites.

Syrian authorities said that "the chemical weapons program items removed from these sites were moved to other declared sites", an OPCW document said. "These sites holding items from abandoned facilities were inspected."

The OPCW has not said which sites it has been unable to visit, but a source briefed on their operations said one of them was in the Aleppo area of northern Syria and another was in Damascus province.

One major chemical weapons site is located close to the town of Safira, south-east of Aleppo. Assad's forces have bombarded the town in recent weeks in an attempt to expel rebel fighters including al Qaeda-linked brigades.

(Additional Reporting by Anthony Deutsch; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Will Waterman)



Syria has reportedly destroyed all of its declared equipment for producing chemical weapons.
Major deadline met




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

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