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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/13/2014 4:03:26 PM

Hi Michael,

It seems funny but unfortunately is true. Of all the comments about this tragicomic reality I am left with a simple explanation about 'Georgism' as found at Wikipedia:

Georgism is an economic philosophy and ideology which holds that people own what they create, but that income from things found in nature (economic rent), most importantly from land, belongs equally to all.[1] The philosophical basis of Georgism dates back to early proponents such as John Locke[2] and Baruch Spinoza,[3] but the concept was widely popularized by the economist and social reformer Henry George (1839–1897).[4] Georgism, a term later coined by followers of George's philosophy, is sometimes associated with the idea of a single tax on the value of land and nature.

Georgists argue that a tax on land value is economically efficient, fair, and equitable; and that it can generate sufficient revenue so that other taxes (e.g. taxes on profits, sales or income), which are less fair and efficient, can be reduced or eliminated. A tax on land value has been described by many as a progressive tax, since it would be paid primarily by the wealthy, and would reduce economic inequality.[5][6]


Miguel


"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?
3/13/2014 4:06:10 PM

House backs bill to sue president over laws

Associated Press

President Barack Obama listens during his meeting with Ukraine Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, March 12, 2014. Obama welcomed Ukraine's new prime minister as the U.S. seeks to highlight ties with the former Soviet republic now caught in a diplomatic battle between East and West.(AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Casting Barack Obama as a president run amok, the House voted on Wednesday for a bill that would expedite congressional lawsuits against the chief executive for failure to enforce federal laws.

The vote was 233-181 in the Republican-led House as GOP lawmakers excoriated Obama for multiple changes to his 4-year-old health care law, steps he's taken to allow young immigrants to remain in the United States and the administration's resistance to defend the federal law banning gay marriage.

Ignoring a White House veto threat, the GOP maintained that the bill was necessary as the president has selectively enforced the nation's laws.

"Throughout the Obama presidency we have seen a pattern: President Obama circumvents Congress when he doesn't get his way," said Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., chairman of the Judiciary Committee.

Democrats countered that the legislation was merely election-year rhetoric to address a non-existent problem. The measure stands no chance in the Democratic-led Senate.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., defended Obama and said Republicans weren't satisfied with a "do-nothing Congress," they wanted to "have a do-nothing president."

Under the bill, the House or Senate would have a fast track for any civil lawsuit against the president if that president "failed to meet the requirement of Article II, section 3, clause 17, of the Constitution of the United States to take care that a law be faithfully executed."

Once litigated in district court, any appeals would be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Republicans cited the Obama administration's delays on several deadlines of the Affordable Care Act that the president signed into law in March 2010. Obama has drawn criticism for his June 2012 decision to allow young immigrants brought to the country illegally as children to gain legal status and remain in the United States if they attend school or join the military.

Republicans also have assailed Obama for tougher action on the environment.

"The president's dangerous search for expanded powers appears to be endless," said Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va.

Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., sponsor of the bill, read a series of statements by Obama when he was an Illinois senator in which he warned of the encroachment of the executive on the powers of the other branches of government.

In urging support, Gowdy said Congress is "not held in high public esteem right now. Maybe we would be respected more if we respected ourselves."

Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, highlighted past unilateral actions by chief executives, including President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation declaring the freedom of all slaves and President Harry S. Truman's integration of the military.

The Obama administration said in a statement that the bill exceeds constitutional limits, and Congress cannot assign additional powers to itself.

More specifically, spokesman Jay Carney criticized Republicans for stalling on immigration overhaul but finding time for the bill on lawsuits that he said would impede the president in limiting deportation of young immigrants.

It's "pretty amazing that today House Republicans went in the opposite direction by passing legislation targeting the deferred action for childhood arrivals policy that removed the threat of deportation for young people brought to this country as children, known as DREAMers," Carney said.



"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?
3/13/2014 4:16:31 PM

Searchers scour rubble after gas explosion kills 7

Associated Press

Rescuers search for survivors after NYC building explosion

NEW YORK (AP) — Rescuers working amid gusty winds, cold temperatures and billowing smoke pulled four additional bodies overnight from the rubble of two Manhattan apartment buildings, as the death toll rose Thursday to at least seven from a gas leak-triggered explosion that reduced the area to a pile of smashed bricks, splinters and mangled metal.

The explosion Wednesday morning in East Harlem injured more than 60 people, with searchers still trying to locate at least five others a day later. Crews used generator-powered floodlights and thermal imaging cameras to identify heat spots — bodies or pockets of fire — at the site on Park Avenue and 116th Street. Police guarding the scene wore surgical masks and neighborhood residents covered faces with scarfs amid the thick, acrid air.

"This is a difficult job, a challenging job," Fire Department spokesman Jim Long said. He said it was "a very terrible and traumatic scene."

Firefighters perched on surrounding rooftops Thursday morning, dousing the still-smoldering debris from above, drawing clouds of thick smoke that swirled over Park Avenue and wafted through the neighborhood.

Construction equipment with iron jaws picked up the smoldering debris, first depositing it on the pavement, then hoisting it onto trucks that hauled it away. The debris was a wrecked collection of what were once apartment buildings, from structural beams and wood to pieces of windows and residents' belongings.

Searches of the street were completed Wednesday evening and no victims had been found there, city officials said. Workers initially were hampered from fully accessing the building space because of a sinkhole caused by a subsurface water main break. The weather also posed a challenge, with temperatures dropping into the 20s and rain falling, but workers remained at the site.

The fiery blast erupted at about 9:30 a.m., around 15 minutes after a neighboring resident reported smelling gas, authorities said. The Con Edison utility said it immediately sent workers to check out the report, but they didn't arrive until it was too late.

The explosion shattered windows a block away, rained debris onto elevated commuter railroad tracks close by, cast a plume of smoke over the skyline and sent people running into the streets.

"It felt like an earthquake had rattled my whole building," said Waldemar Infante, a porter who was working in a basement nearby. "There were glass shards everywhere on the ground, and all the stores had their windows blown out."

Hunter College identified one victim as Griselde Camacho, a security officer who worked at the Silberman School of Social Work building. Hunter, in a statement on its website, said Comacho, 45, had worked for the college since 2008.

Also killed was Carmen Tanco, 67, a dental hygienist. Her cousin News 12 cameraman Angel Vargas said the family started a frantic search when she didn't show up for work Wednesday.

Mexican officials said two of the victims came from the country's central state of Puebla. Authorities in Puebla identified them as Rosaura Barrios Vazquez, 43, and Rosaura Hernandez Barrios, 22. New York City Police had put Hernandez Barrios' age at 21. The Puebla authorities did not say whether the women were related.

The bodies of three unidentified men also were pulled from the rubble, authorities said.

At least three of the injured were children; one, a 15-year-old boy, was reported in critical condition with burns, broken bones and internal injuries. Most of the other victims' injuries were minor and included cuts and scrapes.

A tenant in one of the destroyed buildings, Ruben Borrero, said residents had complained to the landlord about smelling gas as recently as Tuesday.

A few weeks ago, Borrero said, city fire officials were called about the odor, which he said was so bad that a tenant on the top floor broke open the door to the roof for ventilation.

"It was unbearable," said Borrero, who lived in a second-floor apartment with his mother and sister, who were away at the time of the explosion. "You walk in the front door and you want to turn around and walk directly out."

The fire department said a check of its records found no instances in the past month in which tenants of the two buildings reported gas odors or leaks.

Jennifer Salas lived in one of the buildings. She told The New York Times that her husband, Jordy Salas, and their dog were in the building at the time of the collapse and were missing.

"There's six floors in the building; each floor has one apartment," she said. "Last night it smelled like gas, but then the smell vanished and we all went to sleep."

Salas' family continued to hold out hope Thursday that he'd be found alive.

His father-in-law, Jorge Ortega, told The Associated Press that the 21-year-old was last seen Wednesday morning when he returned from his night job at a Bronx restaurant.

Ortega said his distraught daughter, who is six months pregnant and whom he identified as Jennifer Mendoza, went to the hospital Wednesday but was resting at his home on Thursday.

Ortega said Jordy Salas' father was up all night waiting for any news.

Edward Foppiano, a Con Ed senior vice president, said there was only one gas odor complaint on record with the utility from either address, and it was last May, at the building next door to Borrero's. It was a small leak in customer piping and was fixed, he said.

The block was last checked on Feb. 28 as part of a regular leak survey, and no problems were detected, Foppiano said.

One of the side-by-side buildings had a piano store on the first floor, the other a storefront church.

City records show that the building Borrero lived in was owned by Kaoru Muramatsu, proprietor of the piano business. A phone number listed for Muramatsu rang unanswered.

Records at the Department of Housing Preservation and Development indicate the agency responded to complaints from a tenant and cited Muramatsu in January for a broken outlet, broken plaster, bars over a fire escape, a missing window guard and missing carbon monoxide and smoke detectors.

City building records don't show any work in progress at either address, but the building owned by the Spanish Christian Church had obtained permits and installed 120 feet of gas pipe last June.

Con Ed said it remains to be seen whether the leak was in a company main or in customer-installed inside plumbing. The gas main that serves the area was made of plastic and cast iron, and the iron dated to 1887, Foppiano said.

"Age is not in and of itself an issue with cast iron," he said, noting that Con Edison has a cast iron replacement program and the pipe was not slated to be removed in the next three-year period.

A National Transportation Safety Board team arrived in the evening to investigate. The agency investigates pipeline accidents in addition to transportation disasters.

NTSB team member Robert Sumwalt said investigators would be looking at how Con Edison handles reports of gas odors and issues with the pipe and would be constructing a timeline of events.

Just before the explosion, a resident from a building next to the two that were destroyed reported smelling gas inside his apartment and thought the odor might be coming from outside, Con Ed spokesman Bob McGee said.

On Wednesday night, the American Red Cross served meals to more than 130 people living in seven buildings impacted by the blast. The Salvation Army provided accommodations in one of its shelters.

The explosion destroyed everything Borrero's family owned, including the ashes of his father, who died a few years ago. Borrero said he assumes his 5-year-old terrier, Nina, was killed.

But "I have my mother and sister," he said. "I'm happy for that."

___

Associated Press writers Julie Walker, Jonathan Lemire, Jake Pearson, David B. Caruso, David Crary, Leanne Italie, Meghan Barr and Mike Casey 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?
3/13/2014 4:25:47 PM

Why CIA, senators still feuding over 9/11 secrets

Associated Press

During an interview Tuesday morning, CIA Director John Brennan denied allegations by Senator Dianne Feinstein that his agency hacked into senate computers. (March 11)


WASHINGTON (AP) — The festering dispute between the CIA and Senate investigators that exploded in public this week shows just how hard it can be to learn from the past and move on.

More than 12 years after the Sept. 11 attacks, the government still is struggling with what kind of public reckoning is due for harsh interrogation techniques introduced by President George W. Bush and banned by his successor, President Barack Obama.

Some questions and answers about how the Senate and the CIA got here and what happens next:

___

Q: What are the CIA and the senators quarreling about?

A: The CIA likes to hold its secrets close. It's the job of the Senate Intelligence Committee, along with its House counterpart, to keep tabs on the spy agency. Those interests have collided during the Senate committee's exhaustive review of the CIA's detention and interrogation program. Since 2009, the committee has worked on a classified report about waterboarding and other harsh methods used to interrogate suspected terrorists in overseas prisons. This week, the head of the Senate committee, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., went public with complaints that the CIA was interfering with the investigation.

___

Q: Why is Washington still arguing about this?

A: When Obama took office five years ago, he quickly acted to ban "enhanced interrogation" methods, close the secret prisons and release the Bush-era legal opinions that had authorized the program. Just two months later, Feinstein's committee began its investigation, and soon discovered how arduous a task it can be to unravel the past. The committee has had to plod through 6.2 million pages of CIA documents, shared under strict ground rules that allow investigators to review them only at a CIA-controlled secure site in northern Virginia.

___

Q: Why is Feinstein so upset with the CIA?

A: Feinstein alleges a long pattern of CIA cover-ups:

—Destroying videotapes of some of the first enhanced interrogations of Sept. 11 suspects.

—Dumping millions of pages of electronic documents on the Senate investigators with no index or organization.

—Secretly taking back hundreds of the pages from the document cache.

—Snooping through the Senate investigators' computers to see if they had read an internal CIA review, and accusing those investigators of viewing it illegally.

___

Q: What does CIA Director John Brennan say?

A: He denies hacking into the Senate investigators' computers and says the agency has cooperated.

He says that Senate investigators may have "improperly obtained and/or retained" sensitive CIA documents, in violation of the ground rules for how the classified materials would be handled. The agency's acting general counsel has asked the Justice Department to look into whether Senate staffers committed a crime.

___

Q: Will anybody be charged with a crime?

Both sides have asked the Justice Department for a criminal investigation, but that's no guarantee that will happen. This involves a murky area of the law and it's not clear that prosecutors will want to get in the middle of this government dispute.

___

Q: Is this another partisan fight between Democrats and Republicans?

A: Not this time. It's more complicated.

Feinstein, typically a staunch defender of intelligence agencies, is squaring off against a CIA director who appears to have strong backing from his boss, the president. Brennan was Obama's counterterrorism adviser before taking the CIA job.

Brennan also served in the CIA during the Bush years, when the harsh interrogations were carried out.

___

Q: What are Republicans saying about all this?

A: Not much, yet.

Many say they are waiting for more facts to come out. The top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen. Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, indicated he differs with Feinstein on her accusations against the CIA, but he hasn't elaborated.

The committee's Republican members declined to help write the classified report, seeing it as too critical. Yet some Republicans, such as Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., have spoken out against the interrogation methods.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, says he is concerned about the allegations of snooping on Senate investigators. Lawmakers tend to put aside partisan differences if they believe that Congress' power is coming under threat from the executive branch.

___

Q: What does the Senate report say?

A: That's still secret. What's publicly known is that it's 6,300 pages and that the CIA disputes significant parts. It describes treatment "far different and far more harsh" than what's previously been described, according to Feinstein. She calls the detention and interrogation programs "brutal" and "un-American."

The report casts doubt on the intelligence value of the detention and interrogation program. The CIA disagrees and has contended the program helped track down Osama bin Laden.

___

Q: What kind of brutality is Feinstein talking about?

A: It's not clear what new information might be in the report. In addition to waterboarding — pouring water over the face of a bound prisoner to create the sensation of drowning — Feinstein has referred previously to abuses including beating a prisoner, who later died in custody, with a heavy flashlight; staging a mock execution; threatening to kill a detainee's family; and choking a suspect to the point of unconsciousness.

___

Q: Will the report ever see daylight?

A: Expect to get a look at parts of it. Feinstein's committee is making final revisions and updates. Congressional investigators want the Obama administration to declassify the report's 20 conclusions and its executive summary, which runs more than 300 pages. Brennan has promised to work with the Senate on declassifying portions of the report, and Obama supports its release as well. He's ready to move on.

___

Associated Press writers Kimberly Dozier and Eric Tucker contributed to this report.

___

Follow Connie Cass on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ConnieCass

Follow Nancy Benac on Twitter at http://twitter.com/nbenac



What's behind the ugly CIA-Senate feud


Dianne Feinstein accuses the agency of snooping on senators, and destroying post 9/11 interrogation video.
Director fires back



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

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