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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/18/2014 8:59:27 PM

What would you do in their case, Jim? Would you be satisfied with only a plausible explanation of the problem, however valid? What about your children? Would they stop crying at night from hunger? The cruelest part is there seems to be no solution to their plight.


Quote:
They keep voting to keep their slave owners empowered. These poor folks are so ignorant they are unable to see what the real problem with JOBS and salaries are, a steady flow of low wage, low educated, immigrants seeking a government handout.

Raising minimum wage to a $100 an hour will not fix these people's problem. They are a product of social engineering by the same folks they help elect to office. If you raise the minimum wage to $15 bucks an hour EVERYTHING will increase in cost. Her $400 a month rent will increase accordingly if she is lucky enough to land one of even fewer jobs that will be available. Watch the included video the WalMart exec gives the answer to the problem. A ROBUST ECONOMY will grow the middle class. A piss along economy as we currently have will shrink the middle class even further.

The number of single parent households should also be highlighted as government gerrymandering too. As they. are a poor replacement for a father or a mother in this calamity of social interference by do gooders and destroying the family unit.


"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?
3/18/2014 9:09:33 PM

After Crimea, world anxious about next Putin move

Associated Press

PUTIN WANTS CRIMEA


MOSCOW (AP) — With Crimea in Russia's pocket, the world anxiously awaits Vladimir Putin's next move.

Beyond the prize of the Black Sea peninsula, a picture is emerging of what the Russian president ultimately wants from his power play: broad autonomy for Ukraine's Russian-speaking regions and guarantees that Ukraine will never realize the Kremlin's worst nightmare — joining NATO.

The big question is whether Putin is willing to invade more areas of eastern Ukraine to achieve these goals.

In a televised address to the nation Tuesday, Putin said that Russia doesn't want a division of Ukraine. At the same time, he cast Ukraine as an artificial creation of the Soviet government that whimsically included some of Russia's historic regions.

Putin's speech made it clear that he wants the West to recognize Russian interests in Ukraine.

For the West, it all boils down to a tough dilemma over compromising with Moscow to avert military conflict or taking a hard-line stance and risking a Russian invasion of Ukraine. Putin has sent clear signals he could take extreme measures if he doesn't get his way on keeping Ukraine out of NATO and ensuring that Ukraine remains in Russia's political and economic orbit.

Sunday's referendum in Crimea, which overwhelmingly supported joining Russia, has also raised fears that Ukraine's eastern provinces could try to hold their own independence votes.

Protesters have seized administrative buildings in several eastern cities and hoisted Russian flags over them. Some clashed with supporters of the Kiev government, raising the danger that the Kremlin could use such violence as a pretext to send in troops.

The volatile situation plays to Putin's chief stated reason for military intervention in Ukraine: protecting ethnic Russians across the former Soviet empire. He has vowed to "use all means" to do that in Ukraine.

The Russian military has also conducted a series of massive war games alongside the 2,000-kilometer (1,240-mile) border between the two countries in an apparent demonstration of its readiness to intervene.

"Putin is prepared to keep on pushing," said Fiona Hill, a Russia expert at the Brookings Institution in Washington. "I wouldn't be at all surprised if he moves into other points into eastern Ukraine."

While the West has ruled out a military response, some in Russia have struck a bellicose tone. A Kremlin-linked TV host ominously reminded viewers of his weekly news program Sunday that Russia is the only country capable of reducing the U.S. to "radioactive ashes."

The rhetoric by Dmitry Kiselyov, who is seen as a Kremlin mouthpiece, seemed to convey a grim warning to the United States and its allies that the Russian leader would stop at nothing to achieve his goals.

Fyodor Lukyanov, head of the Council of Foreign and Defense Policies, an association of political experts, said European Union and U.S. sanctions wouldn't stop Putin.

"If they want a (economic) war, so be it — this is the current thinking in Moscow," said Lukyanov.

Putin has held regular conversations with President Barack Obama and other Western leaders — and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met with Secretary of State John Kerry for six hours of talks in London last week — with no visible result.

On Monday, the Russian Foreign Ministry put out a statement outlining its vision of a deal:

— Broad autonomy for Ukraine's regions that would turn the nation into a federation and would be approved by a nationwide referendum.

— The ministry suggested that Ukraine's neutral status must be guaranteed by Russia, the United States and the EU and sealed by the U.N. Security Council, with the implicit goal of preventing Ukraine's membership in NATO.

Oleksandr Chalyi, former first deputy foreign minister of Ukraine, said the underlying cause of the conflict was Russia's concern that Ukraine would join NATO. He urged the U.S. government to agree to Russia's proposal to guarantee Ukraine's neutrality.

In a conference call hosted by the Wilson Center in Washington, Chalyi offered this scenario for defusing the conflict: "In the next days, the next hours, Russia receives a very clear message from Washington and Brussels on their proposals on the Ukrainian future: permanent neutral country with international binding guarantees."

Hill of the Brookings Institution said NATO wouldn't repeal its decision to keep the door open for future Ukraine membership.

"That's not going to happen," she said. "I don't see that NATO would do that."

It all means that many believe the two sides are staring at a deadlock that could potentially explode into violence.

"The Russians have now made the situation impossible with two demands: One demand is territorial change through the use of force. That is what just happened in Crimea," said Francois Heisbourg, an analyst at the Paris-based Foundation for Strategic Research think tank. "The other demand is something which is actually quite unheard of in international practice since the end of the Second World War, and that is the demand by an outside power to make Ukraine into a federation."

Lukyanov said Russia's imminent annexation of Crimea would make it hard for the West to negotiate any compromise — but that the Kremlin apparently expects unrest in eastern Ukraine eventually to push Washington and the EU into striking a deal.

"The economy will keep deteriorating, and the political situation will grow more radical," he said. "Turning it into a federation could be the only way to make the country functional."

___

Lara Jakes in Washington, Lynn Berry in Moscow, Jamey Keaten in Paris and David Rising in Berlin contributed to this report.




After Crimea, the global community is beginning to piece together what the Russian president really has his eye on.

Big question




"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?
3/18/2014 11:32:12 PM
First casualty in Crimea

Ukraine suffers first Crimea casualty as conflict in 'military stage'

AFP

Ukrainian armored personnel carriers (APCs) are seen near the village of Salkovo, in Kherson region adjacent to Crimea, March 18, 2014. Putin, defying Ukrainian protests and Western sanctions, on Tuesday signed a treaty making Crimea part Russia but said he did not plan to seize any other regions of Ukraine. (REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko)


Simferopol (Ukraine) (AFP) - Ukraine said one of its soldiers was killed in Crimea Tuesday in the first case of bloodshed since Russian troops and pro-Kremlin militia seized the rebel peninsula almost three weeks ago.

"The conflict is shifting from a political to a military stage," Ukraine's Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk told an emergency government meeting.

"Russian soldiers have started shooting at Ukrainian military servicemen, and that is a war crime," he said at the nationally televised session.

He was speaking after President Vladimir Putin signed a treaty claiming Crimea as Russian territory following the Black Sea region's overwhelming vote on Sunday in favour of switching from Ukrainian to Kremlin rule.

Regional defence ministry spokesman Vladislav Seleznyov told AFP the soldier had died after being shot in the neck when a group of gunmen stormed a Ukrainian military base in the northeast of Crimea's main city of Simferopol.

Seleznyov said another soldier was wounded but did not specify whether the base was stormed by Russian soldiers or pro-Kremlin militia who also patrol the peninsula.

The defence ministry spokesman said pro-Russian forces had by late Tuesday taken complete control of Ukraine's Simferopol base.

"The centre has been taken under their full control. All the servicemen inside were lined up in a row and their documents seized," he said.

"They were all informed that they were under arrest."

Seleznyov said he could not immediately say how many Ukrainian soldiers had been arrested or the number of pro-Russians involved in the attack.

There was no immediate reaction to the reported death from either Russian authorities in Moscow or the peninsula's rebel leadership.

Russian forces took de facto control of the peninsula at the beginning of March after the toppling last month of the pro-Kremlin regime in Ukraine and the rise to power of a new Western-backed administration that is seeking closer ties with the European Union.

Ukraine's navy chief Sergiy Gayduk had told the same government meeting that an officer had been shot and injured in the leg "during an attack against a base in Simferopol."

He did not specify where or when the attack happened or who was behind it and it was not immediately clear if it was the same incident.

An AFP reporter outside a Ukrainian military unit in a suburb northeast of Simferopol heard a burst of gunfire coming from the building and saw two ambulances driving into the area

The region around the military unit was sealed off by what appeared to be pro-Moscow militants.

"Armed attempts to take over (Ukrainian) military units have multiplied in recent days," Gayduk said.

Related video




Kiev says soldiers may use weapons as both sides suffer casualties for the first time since Putin sent troops to Crimea.
Who's to blame?




"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?
3/19/2014 10:46:38 AM

'NSA can retrieve, replay phone calls'

AFP



Civil liberties activists hold a rally against surveillance by the National Security Agency (NSA) at the Justice Department in Washington on January 17, 2014 (AFP Photo/Nicholas Kamm)

Washington (AFP) - The National Security Agency has technology capable of recording all the phone calls of an entire country and replaying them later, a report based on leaked documents said Tuesday.

The Washington Post, citing documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, said the technology functions like a time machine by being able to reach into the past.

The report said the NSA can collect 100 percent of the calls of a country and reach as far back as one month with the tools called MYSTIC and RETRO.

The leaked documents say the tools can "retrieve audio of interest that was not tasked at the time of the original call."

The Post said that at the request of US officials, it withheld details that could be used to identify the country where the system is being used or other countries where it may be used in the future.

If accurate, the program would be more powerful than any other NSA program by allowing the spy agency to tap into the entire network from a country.

Dozens of documents leaked by Snowden have sparked outrage in the US and abroad about the vast capabilities of the intelligence programs.

US officials have defended the programs as needed to thwart terrorist attacks, but President Barack Obama has ordered reforms for the surveillance programs.



Citing documents leaked by Edward Snowden, the Washington Post reveals the agency's MYSTIC and RETRO tools.
Powerful program




"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?
3/19/2014 10:52:29 AM

Threats did not sway Putin, now US tries pain

AFP

Russia's President Vladimir Putin addresses a joint session of parliament on Crimea in the Kremlin in Moscow, on March 18, 2014 (AFP Photo/Alexei Nikolsky)

Washington (AFP) - US President Barack Obama's threats of "costs" did not sway Vladimir Putin's calculations on Crimea.

Now he must see if the pain he plans to escalate on Russia will be sufficiently acute to do any better.

The White House's initial strategy of seeking to defuse the crisis, offering Russia an "off-ramp" and warning of consequences has run its unsuccessful course.

Putin's swift absorbtion of Crimea and his fiery speech Tuesday, which seemed to put a full stop on the post-Cold War era, forced the Obama administration into a new phase.

The plan now is to hike up the economic cost to Moscow and punish its move into the Ukrainian region by deepening its isolation.

Washington must also try to keep the crisis from careening dangerously out of control -- all while bolstering new allies in post-Soviet Europe and firming the West's resolve.

In the longer term, the White House faces an uncomfortable self-examination of how it got here. Yet another US look at how to handle President Putin is in order.

The strategic implications meanwhile of the worst East-West crisis since the Cold War threaten to consume much of the political bandwidth of Obama's remaining second term.

- Sanctions with teeth? -

Obama will head to Europe next week on a trip which is suddenly the most important by a US president in many years.

He called G7 leaders to meet him in The Hague and will try to lock in Russia's isolation and convince European states to build a sanctions regime with teeth.

"We can calibrate our response based on whether Russia chooses to escalate or to de-escalate the situation," Obama said Monday.

Washington sanctioned 11 officials, including members of Putin's inner political circle, on Monday, drawing only sneers from Moscow.

But the White House promises more to come.

Its economic leverage however over Moscow is finite, despite a widening trade relationship which has seen US firms such as Boeing and Exxon Mobil become players in the Russian market.

Europe, with its huge trade and energy relationships with Moscow, holds the key.

"The Europeans are in a better position to do damage to the Russian economy," said Anton Fedyashin, a Russia expert at American University.

But will European leaders, for all their tough talk, follow through with measures that will also inflict a cost on their own fragile economies?

"I seriously doubt that most European countries are going to say, 'Yes, we are ready to support that plan,'" Fedyashin said.

So far, Washington has targeted individuals and not the wider Russian economy. But it has hinted politically powerful tycoons should beware.

Longer term, it must decide whether to attempt the kind of banking sanctions which humbled Iran's economy.

Even if it does not, US officials hope that keeping such a threat on the table could dampen Russian economic confidence and force Putin's hand.

"I wouldn't, if I were you, invest in Russian equities right now -- unless you are going short," said White House spokesman Jay Carney.

- Iron-clad -

Russia's incursion into Crimea and the fear of a move further into eastern Ukraine sent a Cold War chill through Europe.

It prompted US Vice President Joe Biden to slip behind the old Iron Curtain with an unequivocal strategic message.

"I want to make it unmistakingly clear to you and to all our allies in the region that our commitment to mutual self-defense under Article 5 of NATO remains iron-clad," Biden told Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski on Tuesday.

Obama will pick up the banner next week and Washington has already sent six extra F-15 fighters to step up NATO air patrols over the Baltic.

The Crimea crisis may also bring NATO, which has struggled to define a post-Cold War role, back to its geostrategic roots. Tough questions are pending about sinking European defense budgets and Obama's own plans to trim Pentagon accounts.

The president's political foes are calling on him to revive plans to station US missile defense interceptors in Poland and the Czech Republic.

But a senior US official effectively scotched the idea, saying missile defense "has never been about Russia."

- Bankroll Ukraine -

Obama has repeatedly asked Congress to pass $1 billion in loan guarantees for Ukraine.

But officials have been coy on reported Ukrainian requests for military aid to avoid provoking the Kremlin.

Obama will also next week urge allies to do more to help Ukraine navigate an economic crisis exacerbated by the loss of a huge loan from Russia.

The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank will be at the forefront -- but the bill is not cheap: Ukraine needs 25 billion euros over two years.

Even as he cranks up the heat on Putin, Obama will seek to cool military tensions between two powers which control 90 percent of the world's nuclear arms.

A move into eastern Ukraine "would be as egregious as any step that I can think of," Secretary of State John Kerry said in a clear warning to Moscow.

Such a scenario would "require a response that is commensurate with the level of that challenge."

But can anyone really know how seriously Putin now takes American threats?



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

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