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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/24/2012 12:05:32 AM

Dear friends, this is so eerie. It was said 45+ years ago by Paul Harvey (1928 - 2009). What a visionary he was!
(as recently posted by Helen Elias at Mary Evelyn's 'Cofeef Klatch' forum)



"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?
7/24/2012 3:47:13 PM

Outlook for world economy darkens as Europe sinks, China struggles

LONDON: The downturn in the euro zone's private sector is becoming entrenched and Chinese factoriesare finding the going increasingly tough, business surveys showed on Thursday, painting a darker outlook for the world economy.

June was the fifth consecutive month that activity across the euro zone has declined, dragging down heavyweights Germany and France and putting pressure on the European Central Bank to take further action to support the economy.

"We are at the point where the economy is increasingly losing traction and it's hard at this stage to see what will give us a lift. The ECB will do more, that will probably involve a rate cut - which is symbolic - but is action," said Peter Dixon at Commerzbank.

With economic recovery showing increased fragility in the United States, the Federal Reserve delivered another round of monetary stimulus on Wednesday and said it was ready to do even more to help if the situation in Europe deteriorated.

Data due later from the United States is expected to show manufacturing growth in the world's largest economy slowed this month but that there was a slight fall in new claims for unemployment benefits.

The euro zone's private sector contracted at its fastest pace since June 2009, when the bloc was mired in a deep recession, according to Markit's Flash Composite Purchasing Managers' Index for June. A combination of the services and manufacturing sectors which is seen as a guide to growth, the PMI fell to 46.0, slightly better than the fall to 45.5 predicted by economists in a Reuters Poll.

But the index has been below the 50 mark that divides growth from contraction in all but one of the last 10 months. The euro fell after the data and European stocks traded lower.

Analysts struggled to find much hope in the numbers. "The only remotely positive spin that can be put on the dismal euro zone (PMI) is that there was no further deepening in the overall rate of contraction. Hardly a cause for celebration," said Howard Archer at IHS Global Insight. The data pointed towards a second quarter contraction of around 0.6 percent, Markit said.

Having held steady at the start of the year, the bloc's economy will contract 0.2 percent in the current quarter and narrowly escape recession by stagnating again in the next, according to economists polled by Reuters last week.

Earlier data from Germany, Europe's largest economy, showed its manufacturing sector contracted at its fastest pace since June 2009, while its service sector barely expanded, posting its lowest reading in seven months. In neighbouring France activity declined in both sectors, albeit it at a more moderate pace than last month.

"For the time being, and if we cannot sort out the financial crisis, the euro zone is likely to remain in recession," said Dominique Barbet at BNP Paribas. While the euro zone has not actually met the technical definition of recession by putting in two consecutive quarters of contraction, many consider growth is so poor that it might as well have.

"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?
7/24/2012 3:54:24 PM

EUROPE MARKETS / Updated July 23, 2012, 1:01 p.m. ET

European shares tumbled Monday on growing fears that Spain may require a full sovereign bailout, while the Greek market plunged 7.1% on renewed uncertainty over an international aid package.

Trading in major Italian banks was suspended for about an hour during the morning after their shares incurred steep drops, while authorities in Spain and Italy imposed a ban on short selling to stem market volatility. Spain said short-selling of all stocks will be banned for three months. Italy banned short selling of bank and insurance stocks for one week.

European-listed resource firms also headed south, as oil and metals prices traded lower across the board.

The Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 2.5% to 251.75. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 fell 2.1% to 5533.87, Germany's DAX dropped 3.2% to 6419.33, and France's CAC-40 closed 2.9% lower at 3101.53.

Spain's IBEX-35 index closed down 1.1% at 6177.40, trimming losses after the short-sale ban was imposed by the country's financial regulator.

Last week, the Spanish government lowered its gross-domestic-product estimates from this year through 2014, while the region of Valencia said it would seek financial aid as it struggles to refinance maturing debts. Over the weekend, the region of Murcia also announced it could apply for government bailout funds in September, according to La Opinion Murcia.

The new worries sent the yield on 10-year Spanish government bonds up to 7.49% Monday.

Greece also moved back into the crisis spotlight, following a weekend report in Germany's Der Spiegel magazine that the International Monetary Fund is set to stop aid payments to the country, stoking default fears. The IMF responded Monday afternoon, with a spokesperson saying the fund "is supporting Greece in overcoming its economic difficulties. An IMF mission will start discussions with the country's authorities on July 24 on how to bring Greece's economic program, which is supported by IMF financial assistance, back on track."

The so-called troika of international lenders—the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF—are due to arrive in Athens to gauge progress toward the requirements of its bailout program.

Shares of National Bank of Greece sank 11% in Athens.

Euro-zone fears also hammered Italian stocks, where the FTSE MIB index slumped 2.8% to 12706.36, its lowest closing level since March 2009. The yield on the 10-year Italian government bond rose 0.17 percentage point to 6.31%, according to Tradeweb.

"Italy is obviously in the firing line as all peripheral countries are under pressure," said Peter Dixon, a strategist at Commerzbank in London. "Because Italy has much bigger public debt, Italy matters more than the other. The epicenter of the earthquake may be one place, but the impacts may be elsewhere."

Euro-zone consumer confidence data did little to help boost the mood in Europe. The index fell to -21.6 in July from -19.8 in June, its lowest level in almost three years.

Bucking Monday's negative trend, shares of Philips Electronics surged 5% after results showed the conglomerate swinging to a profit in the second quarter and beating analyst expectations.

—Andrea Tryphonides contributed to this article.

"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?
7/24/2012 4:30:33 PM

Euro on the Brink – Again?

2012 JULY 24
Posted by Stephen Cook

Euro on the Brink – Again?

Stephen: I know we’ve read this all before (and more than once, twice, thrice!) but this story acknowledges one critical thing: that there’s simply not enough cash in the bank to pay the bills – right across Europe (well, the world, actually)

Spain, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Ireland…even the Euro emergency fund…essentially empty. And today, Germany’s AAA (Triple A) credit rating is set to be cut – and they’re supposed to be the ones with the big bank bucks. Or, at least, ‘access’ to it.

It can’t be that much longer before the new financial system is in place and debt forgiveness is the new news. Now there’s a headline the world wants to see!

Spain Bailout Would Cost More Than What’s Available In Existing Emergency Funds

By David McHugh, Huffington Post – July 23, 2012

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/23/spain-bailout_n_1695907.html

FRANKFURT, Germany — Europe is on the brink again. The region’s debt crisis flared on Monday as fears intensified that Spain would be next in line for a government bailout.

A recession is deepening in Spain, the fourth-largest economy that uses the euro currency, and a growing number of its regional governments are seeking financial lifelines to make ends meet. The interest rate on Spanish government bonds soared in a sign of waning market confidence in the country’s ability to pay off its debts.

The prospect of bailing out Spain is worrisome for Europe because the potential cost far exceeds what’s available in existing emergency funds. Financial markets are also growing uneasy about Italy, another major European economy with large debts and a feeble economy.

Stocks fell sharply across Europe and around the world. Germany’s DAX plunged 3.18 percent. Britain’s FTSE dropped 2 percent and France’s CAC 40 fell 2.89 percent. In midday trading on Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 1.35 percent. The euro slipped just below $1.21 against the dollar, its lowest reading since June 2010.

The interest rate on its 10-year bond hit 7.56 percent in the morning, its highest level since Spain joined the euro in 1999.

Concern over Spain increased Monday after the country’s central bank said the economy shrank by 0.4 percent during the second quarter, compared with the previous three months. The government predicts the economy won’t return to growth until 2014 as new austerity measures hurt consumers and businesses.

On top of that, Spain is facing new costs as a growing number of regional governments ask federal authorities for assistance. The eastern region of Valencia revealed Friday it would need a bailout from the central Madrid government. Over the weekend, the southern region of Murcia said it may also need help.

Spain has already required an emergency loan package of up to (EURO)100 billion ($121 billion) to bail out its banks. But that aid hasn’t quelled markets because the government is ultimately liable to repay the money. It had been hoped that responsibility for repayments would shift from the government to the banks. But that shift is a long way off – a pan-European banking authority would have to be created first and that could be years away.

Yet it is far more than Spain’s struggle that has unnerved markets.

Greece is still struggling with a mountain of debt and international creditors will visit the country Tuesday to check on the country’s attempts reform its economy. There is concern that officials from the European Commission, European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund will find that that Greece is not living up to the terms of its bailouts and could withhold future funds.

Italy has also been caught up in fears that it may be pushed into asking for aid. Italy’s economy is stagnating and markets are worried that it may soon not be able to maintain its debt burden of (EURO)1.9 trillion ($2.32 trillion) – the biggest in the eurozone after Greece. Interest rates on Italy’s government bonds rose steeply Monday while its stock market dropped 2.76 percent.

The collapse in stock prices in Italy and Spain prompted regulators to introduce temporary bans on short-selling – a practice where traders sell stocks they don’t already own in the hope they can make a profit if the stock falls in price.

Pascal Lamy, director of the World Trade Organization, said after a meeting with French President Francois Holland that the situation in Europe is “difficult, very difficult, very difficult, very difficult.”

Ireland, Greece and Portugal have already taken bailout loans after they could no longer afford to borrow on bond markets. Yet those countries are tiny compared to Italy and Spain, the third- and fourth-largest economies in the eurozone. Analysts say a full bailout for both could strain the other eurozone countries’ financial resources.

Spain has already received a commitment of up to (EURO)100 billion from other eurozone countries to bail out its banks, which suffered heavy losses from bad real estate loans. Eurozone finance ministers signed off on the aid Friday and said (EURO)30 billion would be made available right away. But that incremental step cuts little ice with investors. If Spain’s borrowing rates continue to rise, the government may end up being locked out of international markets and be forced to seek a financial rescue.

“Events since Friday have been a clear wake-up call to anyone who thought that the Spanish bank rescue package had bought a calm summer for the euro crisis,” analyst Carsten Brzeski said.

The eurozone’s bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, has only (EURO)500 billion in lending power, with (EURO)100 billion potentially committed to Greece. Italy and Spain together have debt burdens of around (EURO)2.5 trillion. And the ESM hasn’t yet been ratified by member states plus eurozone governments have made it clear they won’t put more money into the pot.

That once again pushes the European Central Bank into the frontline against the crisis.

On Saturday, Spain’s Foreign Minister José Manuel García Margallo pleaded for help, saying that only the European Central Bank could halt the panic. But the ECB has shown little willingness to restart its program to purchase the government bonds of financially troubled countries. The central bank has already bought more than (EURO)200 billion in bonds since May 2010, with little lasting impact on the crisis.

The central bank has also cut its benchmark interest rates to a record low of 0.75 percent in the hope of kick-starting lending. Yet many economists question how much stimulus this provides as the rates are already very low – and no one wants to borrow anyway.

There has been speculation the ECB could eventually have to follow the Bank of England and the U.S. Federal Reserve and embark on a program of “quantitative easing” – buying up financial assets across the eurozone to increase the supply of money. That could assist governments by driving down borrowing costs as well.

But so-called QE is fraught with potential legal trouble for the ECB – a European treaty forbids it from helping governments borrow.

In the case of Greece, the country is dependent on foreign bailout loans to pay its bills. A cutoff of aid over its inability to meet the loan conditions would leave it without any source of financing – and could push it to exit the euro so it can print its own money to cover its debts.

Germany’s economy minister, Phillip Roesler, said the prospect of Greece leaving the euro was now so familiar it had “had lost its horror” and that he was skeptical Athens would meet conditions for continuing rescue money.

The deteriorating situation follows a summit June 28-29 that many hoped would convince markets political leaders were getting a handle on things. The summit agreed on easier access to bailout money and to set up a single banking regulator that could take the burden of bank bailouts off national governments. Yet many of those changes will take months or years to introduce – and there has been no increase in bailout money.

It is an echo of a similar summit in July 2011, when leaders agreed on a second bailout and debt reduction for Greece, only to see borrowing costs spike dramatically as leaders headed off for August vacations.

Stephen Lewis, chief economist at Monument Securites Ltd, said that “events are following a pattern often repeated in the course of the eurozone’s troubles, in which the powers-that-be hail progress only to see confidence, almost instantaneously, plumb fresh depths.”

"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?
7/25/2012 6:01:37 PM
Dear friends, this was posted yesterday by Steve Beckow and at first, my reaction was one of rejection, so filled with hatred and violence these past days have been worldwide. On second read, however, I was less amazed at this view of the present moment, as there has been, if not a stop, at least a decrease in the number and force of natural disasters that until recently would have killed hundreds, if not thousands, of people. So my reading was that were it not for the outburst of tragic events like the Aurora killings and other painful episodes - which, of course, could have been even worse if certain facts had not intervened - it would seem as if the worst in the matter of negative facts were already coming to an end and we were beginning to see a light at the end of the tunnel.

Peace Descends and You Can Hear a Pin Drop

2012 JULY 24
Posted by Steve Beckow

We have no manmade disasters to distract us anymore

How quiet it is without the cabal causing hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes, wildfires, and floods.

You can hear a pin drop.

Yes, more and more it appears as if they’re instigating smaller catastrophes like the recent Denver shooting, almost certainly a Manchurian-Candidate operation. Their ability to cause havoc appears to have been thwarted quite a bit.

How much of our lives revolved around an ever-increasing response to disasters crafted by the Illuminati and our responses to them – Haiti, Chile, Japan, New Zealand, Australia, the U.S.

And now, because the galactics have destroyed their weather-warfare weapons, blown up their underground command centers, and removed so many of them from the Earth, we’re left here in a seemingly-quiet room, wondering what’s happening.

No one thought that peace, as it descended on the planet, would be so difficult to adjust to. What do we do without a war to distract us and mobilize us? What do we think about when there are no disaster victims to relieve and care for?

Well, we know our co-creative powers are expanding. We know that our ability to love and feel compassion for the collectivity is increasing. We know that the abundance programs are not far off and, when they come, they must be extended to all regions of the Earth.

We know that the more lightwork we do, the more people will ascend in December. We know that, even though the galactics will do so very much of the heavy lifting in terms of terra-forming, ridding the Earth of all forms of pollution, and reshaping our ability to effect change by giving us new technologies, etc., they will still leave much of the task to us. They have to do so because we have to demonstrate that we’re prepared to take responsibility for our own planet.

You’ve heard Sierra describe how she was used as a psychic to locate lost individuals, knowing all the time that the galactics could do the job without her but that they wanted us to play a role – and by universal law they were obliged to let us lead. You’ve heard our galactic sources say over and over again that we must play a part in what’s to come.

SaLuSa: “We do encourage you to take matters forward yourselves. This is because you have to take responsibility for the situations you have allowed to occur. It does not mean you have to do it all, and that is far from it as we of the Galactic Federation have a most important role to play.” (1)

The Arcturian Group: “All is proceeding according to plan. All is moving quickly forward into new ways of seeing and being. That which is finished is finished. However remember that it is you who are creating your new world, not us. Many tend to await the arrival of others to change things. It is your enlightened awareness that is manifesting as your outer world. You are the creators. That is why we often cannot answer questions asked about what is going to happen, because we do not know what you are choosing to create. We too are watching and waiting as you create a new, enlightened world.” (2)

What can we do? As individuals and as organizations, we can begin to plan how, with the arrival of abundance, the benefits will be brought to faraway places that have no idea that any of this is happening. Diseases must be cured, food must be distributed, irrigation must be extended, orphans must be cared for, victims of cruelty and torture must be healed – a huge humanitarian effort will arise in just a few short weeks and months. All of this must be planned.

Communication must be achieved on a global scale. Graham Dewyea just reported that InLight Radio’s audiences passed the 100,000 mark. We need ten more InLight Radios and twenty more largescale blogs on Ascension 2012. This site, and those who also do the job already, have not the capacity to report all that will be happening. We need others to start their own communication channels – to specialize in areas like science, technology, medicine, nutrition, education, finance, etc., to catch the stories that we miss or cannot post because of space or volume considerations.

They also serve who only stand and wait – people can actually assist by simply visualizing the changes they wish to see.

SaluSa: “Your participation in the changes requires no more than your dedication, in visualizing the happiness and joy they will bring to all life upon Earth. Stay in the Light and live your life to your best ability, as if you had already ascended.” (3)

“Individually concentrate on how you visualize the future where you are free and your sovereignty is restored, and you will be helping it to manifest.” (4)

Matthew Ward: “To help create a world of true abundance for all, visualize crowds of people radiating health and happiness, and your world with clear skies and pure water in rivers, ponds, oceans; expanses of golden grain; trees laden with ripening fruit; vast gardens filled with vegetables, verdant pastures, and parks with vibrant flowers; all kinds of animals grazing and meandering among the people. And KNOW that the wondrous world of abundance in your visions already IS!” (5)

You saw how Syria simply imploded last week. Is there anyone who wondered how we’d get from a large and strong Syrian military to a regime dealt a deathly blow in a short period of time? Now we see it can be done although no one wishes anyone to be harmed. Archangel Michael predicted it would happen in a very short period of time and it did.

And so can other seemingly-troublesome, well-dug-in situations turn around quickly as well.

It’s time for us to be up and moving, thinking, planning, inviting, connecting, communicating. It’s time to create the Nova Earth we’ve merely been reading about so far. It’s time for us to create it.

It’s time to shoulder our tools and raise the foundation and superstructure of a new society, either actually or imaginatively. Apparently either works. In this short interregnum of peace before the main event begins, it’s time to gather ourselves and start, whatever that may look like for each of us.

Footnotes

(1) SaLuSa, May 18, 2012, athttp://www.treeofthegoldenlight.com/First_Contact/Channeled_Messages_by_Mike_Quinsey.htm

(2) Arcturian Group, April 22, 2012, at http://www.onenessofall.com

(3) SaluSa, Apr. 16, 2010.

(4) SaluSa, Apr. 14, 2010.

(5) Matthew’s Message, Jan. 11, 2010, at http://www.matthewbooks.com/mattsmessage.htm

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

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