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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/11/2014 6:33:31 PM

Massive Times Square Digital Billboard Shows Video Of WTC 7 Destruction During 9/11. Over 2200 Architects And Engineers Demolish The ‘Official’ 9/11 Commission Report

sauid involvement 911Over 2200 Architects And Engineers Demolish The ‘Official’ 9/11 Commission Report


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Michael Caron

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/11/2014 6:59:11 PM
Quote:
Well If I pointed the finger at a World Leader like the President I will say that I do not know all that there is to know about what is going on. I did not like the direction that things were going in the world with all of the violence and killing of innocent people.

I will say now that I am encouraged after hearing the President speak this evening. I like the tougher stance that he is taking. Bad people need to be taken out...not controlled. I still say that it is not good to tell the world what we will not do to the bad people. I would go a step farther than the President did in his speech and say what ever it takes.
10_1_136.gifHi Ken,
I, like millions of others watched and listened to the President's speech with interest. However, I also enjoyed what I did not hear. President O'Bama has been sited as being a very meticulous speaker. When he said that we will go after ISIL wherever they are, there is one point that many listeners did not catch. He hesitated slightly before he said, "Wherever they are" I believe there is a training cell in Minneapolis, Minnesota as well as another cell in Michigan. Strategy is the key to any decisive win. How many people knew that he had plans to take out Bin Laden? There were a lot of people in the Senate as well as the House that did not know. Once the finger pointing is stopped and the dust has cleared, people will realize that this president had his plans set in place from the first day that he walked in to the Oval Office. He has key people that he knows are loyal to him, both in political office as well as at large, and I would say that he knows where every ISIS cell in America is and whenever a plane leaves a nearby airport, he knows exactly where it will land. There are always informants at airports, both here and abroad. With today's technology, it would be very simple to plant a location device on people at the airports. You look for a group of people that are met by one or two people and escorted to a military vehicle. They easily get through the scanner when boarding the plane in the U.S, because whatever weapons they need are already loaded in the cargo section of the plane. Once the planter makes the assumption that this group is headed for an ISIS camp he fakes a sneeze, bumping into one of the recruits. He begs forgiveness and the escort pushes him away, not before he grabs the escort and pleads for foregivness and either drops the bug in his pocket or presses it on his coat or uniform. So, for the next few months, there will be spotters at several airports planting bugs on suspicious people coming and going. I believe that this was how Bin Laden was caught. There was a messenger that met with Bin Laden in different locations and he, along with several others had bugs planted on them. Two days after he visited Bin Laden at the compound, Bin Laden was dead. This may sound like Science Fiction, however it is a safe and cheap way to accomplish a task. With all this in mind, I believe that there will be times in the future where many of us may feel that the job is not getting done, when everything is falling in to place.
GOD BLESS YOU
~Mike~
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Michael J. Caron (Mike) TRUTH IN ADVERTISING!! Friends First. Business Later.
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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/12/2014 12:38:13 AM

So fascinating, Mike. All of it. And all of it very likely happened as you say.

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?
9/12/2014 12:48:48 AM

Syrian opposition welcomes Obama's announcement

Associated Press



Wochit
Syria, Iran Slam US Strategy In Fighting Militants



DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Syrian and Iranian officials criticized the Obama administration on Thursday for excluding them from an international coalition coming together in the battle against the Islamic State group, while a state-run Syrian daily warned that unauthorized U.S. airstrikes on Syria may trigger the "first sparks of fire" in the region.

The strongest reaction, however, came from Russia, Syrian President Bashar Assad's main international ally. A Russian Foreign Ministry statement said such military action without a U.N. Security Council resolution "would be an act of aggression and flagrant violation of international law."

Syria's main Western-backed opposition group, meanwhile, welcomed Obama's first-ever authorization of U.S. airstrikes in Syria, saying it stands "ready and willing" to partner with the international community to defeat the militants.

But the Syrian National Coalition said that airstrikes need to be coupled with a strategy for ultimately toppling Assad.

Kurdish politicians in Iraq similarly praised Obama's announcement of wider airstrikes and assistance to Iraqi forces.

"We welcome this new strategy," said Hoshyar Zebari, a Kurdish politician and one of Iraq's newly-appointed deputy prime ministers. "We think it will work with the cooperation of the indigenous local forces like Iraqi Security Forces, the Kurdish peshmerga and other forces."

"There is an urgent need for action. People cannot sit on the fence. This is a mortal threat to everybody," he told The Associated Press.

The U.S. began launching limited airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Iraq early last month at the request of former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. The American firepower provided a significant boost to Iraqi forces, including the Kurdish peshmerga fighters, battling to win back land lost to the militant group.

The Sunni extremists seized roughly a third of Iraq and Syria in their rampage this summer, declaring a self-styled caliphate in areas under their control where they apply their strict interpretation of Islamic law.

In a prime-time address to the nation from the White House late Wednesday, Obama announced he was authorizing U.S. airstrikes inside Syria for the first time, along with expanded strikes in Iraq as part of "a steady, relentless effort" to root out Islamic State extremists and curb their reign of terror.

He also again urged Congress to authorize a program to train and arm Syrian rebels who are fighting both the Islamic State militants and Assad's forces.

Obama did not say when U.S. forces would begin striking at targets inside Syria.

Syrian Minister for Reconciliation, Ali Haider, warned that "any action without the approval of the Syrian government is an aggression on Syria." Speaking to reporters Thursday, he said international law dictates that any military action needs Damascus' approval, and should also be coordinated with the government.

Obama has ruled out any partnership with Assad in the fight against the Islamic State militants, saying the Syrian leader will "never regain the legitimacy" he has lost.

"I wonder how an international coalition can be formed and Syria, which is targeted by terrorism in depth, is shunned aside?" Syrian lawmaker Sharif Shehadeh told The Associated Press in Damascus. He said violating Syrian sovereignty will have "negative repercussions on regional and international security." He did not elaborate.

The state-run al-Thawra newspaper warned in a front-page editorial that Obama's authorization of airstrikes in Syria might be "the first sparks of fire in the region."

Syrian officials have always insisted that the uprising in Syria, which erupted in March 2011 and eventually escalated into civil war, was carried out by armed "terrorists" — using the term as shorthand for all rebels.

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani, whose country is a staunch ally of Assad, also said Thursday that regional and international cooperation will be vital — even though Tehran has not been invited to join the international coalition against the Islamic State group. Rouhani spoke on an official visit to Tajikistan.

In Tehran, foreign ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham said the coalition has "serious ambiguities," the official IRNA news agency reported Thursday. She added that Iran has doubts about the seriousness of the coalition, accusing some unnamed members of supporting terrorism in Iraq and Syria.

The new U.N. envoy to Syria, meanwhile, said "the top priority now is to fight terrorism." Speaking on his first visit to Damascus following a meeting with Assad on Thursday, Staffan de Mistura said he will strive "with a renewed energy" to move toward a political settlement to the Syrian conflict.

Assad was quoted by the state-run news agency as saying that recent events in Syria and the region have made fighting terrorism a priority. He did not comment on Obama's speech.

De Mistura, a Swedish-Italian diplomat, is stepping into a mission that has frustrated two high-profile predecessors: Finding a resolution to a conflict that has killed more than 190,000 people and has driven a third of Syria's population — some 9 million people — from their homes.

A year ago, Obama gave a speech in which he was widely expected to announce punishing U.S. airstrikes against Assad's forces, after blaming them for a deadly chemical weapons attack near Damascus. Obama backed down at the last minute.

The U.S. president is now authorizing airstrikes not against Assad, but against a group committed to his removal from power. In doing that, the U.S. runs the risk of unintentionally strengthening Assad's hand, potentially opening the way for the Syrian army to fill the vacuum left by the extremists.

Hadi Bahra, chief of the Syrian National Coalition opposition group, said mainstream rebels desperately need support to fight the extremists.

"Today, we are one step closer to achieving that goal," he said.

He said the Syrian Coalition "stands ready and willing to partner with the international community," not only to defeat the extremists, but also "to rid the Syrian people of the tyranny of the Assad regime."

___

Karam reported from Beirut. Associated Press writers Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Vivian Salama in Baghdad and Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow contributed to this report.








As the U.S. pushes Arab leaders to join its campaign to quash the Islamic State, it feels territorial pushback.
'First sparks of fire'



"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?
9/12/2014 1:45:12 AM

Despite economic fears, EU sanctions Russia again

Associated Press



WSJ Live
EU to Implement New Sanctions Against Russia



BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union on Thursday slapped more sanctions on Russia for helping separatists destabilize Ukraine, limiting Russia's access to its financial market, hitting the country's vital oil industry, curbing high-tech exports and targeting more officials with travel bans and asset freezes.

Many EU members had been loath to increase the sanctions against Russia for fear of jeopardizing their close trade relationships with Moscow. But a compromise struck in a video conference call with top EU leaders broke a deadlock that had paralyzed the 28-nation bloc from taking tougher action over the past ten days.

Under the compromise hashed out by leaders including Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron, Germany's Angela Merkel and France's Francois Hollande, the sanctions could be reversed within weeks if the cease-fire in eastern Ukraine holds.

In Washington, President Barack Obama announced the U.S. is also moving ahead with tougher economic sanctions on Russia that will affect the country's financial, energy and defense sectors.

If Russia follows through with its commitments to help end the crisis in Ukraine, the sanctions can be rolled back, Obama said. Otherwise, both the U.S. and the EU said the sanctions would be increased further.

The EU sanctions will take effect Friday following their publication in the EU's official journal, the bloc said in a statement.

The Russian stock market sank at the news of sanctions, with benchmark MICEX down 1.3 percent after rising in the morning. The Russian ruble fell to an all-time low of 37.53 against the U.S. dollar.

In a sharp rebuke, Russia's Foreign Ministry said by adopting further sanctions the EU "has effectively made a choice against a peaceful settlement of the crisis in Ukraine."

"Such steps look particularly improper and short-sighted now when a fragile peace process in Ukraine has gotten under way, a prisoner exchange has started," the ministry said, adding that Russia will respond to the new sanctions.

Russia has consistently denied what the U.S. and Europe call Moscow's actions to destabilize Ukraine — sending arms or soldiers to help pro-Russian separatists fight government troops in eastern Ukraine.

The cease-fire between the separatists and the Ukrainian military took effect Friday but has been riddled by violations. On Thursday, two volleys of Grad rocket fire rang out in the rebel-held eastern city of Donetsk.

A spokesman for Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council, Col. Andriy Lysenko, told journalists that a large swath of Ukraine near the Sea of Azov had come under full rebel control. While that likely happened before the cease-fire, it was an unusual admission by Ukraine of the scale of a coastal rebel offensive that Kiev and NATO say was backed by Russian arms and soldiers.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has sought to portray the cease-fire deal — reached as the rebels waged a major offensive that pushed back Ukraine's troops — as a victory rather than a defeat, saying Wednesday that about 70 percent of the Russian troops in eastern Ukraine had since withdrawn.

NATO, however, said Thursday that its intelligence still shows about 1,000 Russian troops with sophisticated weaponry like heavy artillery on Ukrainian soil. An estimated 20,000 other Russian troops are amassed just east of the border, the alliance said.

The new sanctions cut the EU's current ban on credits and loans to Russian entities from a maturity of more than 90 days now to those over 30 days. Curbing access to western capital markets could weigh down Russia's already-flagging economic growth.

In addition to hitting five of Russia's biggest banks, the EU said the capital market restrictions will now also hit three major Russian defense firms and three major oil companies. The names of the targeted entities will be released Friday.

The export of high-tech items that can be used for both military and civilian purposes — so-called dual-use goods — will also face further restrictions. In addition, 24 more individuals, including Russian decision-makers and oligarchs as well as rebel leaders from eastern Ukraine, will be banned from traveling to the 28-nation bloc and their assets will be frozen, the EU said.

That brings the total number of people subject to EU sanctions to 119.

Overall, Brussels has been more reluctant than Washington to sanction Russia because of its broad economic ties. Moscow is an important gas supplier for many EU nations and it is the bloc's third-largest trading partner overall. The EU's sanctions, however, have more impact than those imposed by the U.S. since the EU is by far Russia's largest trading partner.

Matteo Napolitano, a director in Fitch Ratings' sovereign division, warned that the sanctions and the risk of further measures could see international banks further reduce their exposure to Russia, sparking renewed capital flight, slamming investment and depleting Moscow's foreign exchange reserves.

"The sanctions are really having a meaningful impact," he said at a conference in London.

In retaliation for earlier sanctions, Moscow banned food imports from the West, closing a market worth 10 billion euros ($13 billion) a year for European producers.

Russia has also issued a veiled threat that it could ban Western airlines from using Russian airspace — a move that would lead to higher fuel costs and delays for flights to Asia by European airlines.

In Ukraine's capital of Kiev on Thursday, people held posters and laid flowers to commemorate terror victims killed in the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States and in the July 17 downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine this year.

Ukraine has accused the separatists of shooting down Flight 17.

___

Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow; Peter Leonard in Donetsk, Ukraine; Laura Mills in Kiev, Ukraine; Carlo Piovano and Pan Pylas in London; Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow and Julie Pace in Washington, D.C., contributed reporting.

___

Follow Juergen Baetz on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/jbaetz








The sanctions will further curb access to European capital markets for Russian banks and firms.
1,000 Russian troops still in Ukraine



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

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