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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/11/2012 1:28:53 AM
More on the "rock raft" found floating off New Zealand

Bizarre rock 'ice shelf' found in Pacific

Click image for more photos

"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?
8/11/2012 4:07:00 PM

Over 150,000 Refugees Flee Syria

















Over 1.5 million Syrians have fled their homes as the 17-month conflict between the government troops of President Bashar al-Assad and rebel forces continues. Over 21,000 people have died according to the UK-based activist group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Fighting in recent weeks has centered on Syria’s largest city, the commercial hub and UNESCO heritage site Aleppo. Refugees have been “streaming” out of the city, says the United Nations refugee agency. Almost 150,000 refugees have been registered in four countries neighboring Syria: 50,227 refugees are registered in Turkey, 45,869 in Jordan, 36,841 in Lebanon and 13,730 in Iraq. About 6,000 residents of Aleppo have entered Turkey just in the past week.

The number of those killed and wounded keep rising, with the activist Local Coordination Committee reporting that 83 people were killed on Friday, including 51 in Aleppo. The opposition Syrian National Council also says that shelling by Assad’s forces had ruined part of a 13th century citadel.

The Obama administration is preparing new sanctions against Assad’s inner circle as well as Iranian individuals and organization. The US Treasury has added Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based militant group, to the list of countries and persons to be targeted with sanctions. The US is also expected to announce an additional $5.5 million in humanitarian aid to Syria, which will bring the amount of aid to $82 million. British Foreign Secretary William Hague has also said that the UK will give an extra $7.8 million in non-lethal equipment to the Free Syrian Army (FSA); among the equipment will be radio and satellite equipment and portable power generators.

Former Algerian foreign affairs minister Lakhdar Brahimi is the likely choice to be the special United Nations and Arab League envoy after Kofi Annan resigned from the position last week. The 78-year-old Brahimi has previously served as a UN special envoy to Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein as well as in Afghanistan, before and after Taliban rule. Annan had resigned after months of deadlocked negotiations in the UN Security Council, with Russia and China consistently vetoing harsher measures against Syria including calls for Assad to step down.

A Turkish journalist reports that the number of defections from the Syrian military continue to rise with a number of officers and soldiers among those fleeing to Turkey.

As Peter Beaumont, foreign affiairs editor of the Observer, writes in the Guardian, while “the Free Syrian Army or its allies, some of them jihadi groups, have committed war crimes and serious human rights abuses,” condemnation of these has been far less vocal. The Assad regime is certainly responsible for atrocious war crimes including the murder of unarmed protesters and the torture of minors but “as organisations including both Amnesty and Human Rights Watch have made clear…. there is no excusing war crimes, whomever commits them.”

Related Care2 Coverage

Syria Prime Minister Said To Defect

Syria: Obama Signs Covert Order Authorizing Support For Rebels

200,000 Flee Aleppo; Syria’s Economy Withering

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Photo by FreedomHouse



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/over-150000-refugees-flee-syria.html#ixzz23FpSNEcw

"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?
8/11/2012 4:23:43 PM
What Is Canada Really Doing About Climate Change?








Environment Minister Peter Kent was out last week hailing Canada’s reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and proclaiming that the country is halfway to the targets set for 2020 by the Copenhagen Accord.

Kent failed to mention that the reduction in emissions happened in provinces where large emitters are facing economic challenges that have slowed production. He also left out the fact that development in the Alberta energy sector will cause emissions to rise, and that a report released by Environment Canada actually shows that the emissions reduction have little or nothing to do with anything the federal government has done.

“Over one-third of the reduction is simply an accounting change. And most of the actual progress is the result of provincial and territorial leadership and the fact that we’ve been in a recession. The Conservatives can’t claim any credit – except maybe for their economic mismanagement,” said Megan Leslie, the Official Opposition Critic for the Environment.

Meanwhile, facing a fight between Alberta and British Columbia, the Prime Minister came out and said that science will be the deciding factor in the Northern Gateway Pipeline project.

Harper also said that it is in the country’s best interests to “diversify” its export market, that it’s important that Canada is able to get our resources to Asia and indicated this is something BC needs to remember.

He noted that the pipeline project is under review by the National Energy Board, but failed to mention that his Cabinet will make the final decision on such projects if they are deemed to be of national importance.

Meanwhile, Postmedia journalist Mike De Souza accessed an internal memo that showed scientists were discouraged from talking about a report linking human activity to major weather events.

With the government push to have Canada become an energy superpower, climate change denial and fudging the truth are both easier than admitting that the country is a major polluter and working to actually green the economy.

Related Stories

Canadian Scientists Mourn the Death of Evidence

Muzzled Scientists = 80% Reduction in Media Coverage of Climate Change

Can A Creationist Be A Good Minister Of Science?



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/what-is-canada-really-doing-about-climate-change.html#ixzz23FtK6h8R


"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?
8/11/2012 4:29:27 PM

End is near for Syria's Assad, says German spy chief

"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?
8/11/2012 4:31:07 PM

Thousands file claims after Chevron refinery fire


RICHMOND, Calif. (AP) — Several thousand Richmond residents have filed legal claims againstChevron Corp., seeking compensation for a refinery fire that fouled the region's air for hours and sent more than 4,000 people to seek medical care for breathing problems and irritated eyes.

Hundreds of residents showed up at a makeshift claim center in Richmond on Friday, and many more submitted claims throughout the week by calling a special hotline Chevron established after Monday's explosion and fire. The company said a total of about 3,800 people had submitted claims through Friday afternoon.

Most of the claims appear to be asking for modest amounts, reflecting the fact that there have been no reports of serious injury and nearly all seeking medical care were treated and released after a few hours in the hospital.

"It's not about the money," said Chanel Harris, who was seeking reimbursement for the cost of taking her three young children to the emergency room of the nearby Kaiser Hospital. "It's about holding Chevron accountable."

Harris spent about an hour in line and another 10 minutes talking to a claims adjuster inside the Nevin Community Center in Richmond. She said she won't know how much she's seeking until Kaiser sends a bill.

Harris and others with medical insurance who sought care immediately after the incident are expecting reimbursements for their deductibles, drugs and other expenses.

Monica Morales, 26, waited for about two hours with her three children ages 6 weeks to 7 years old to file her claim. She's seeking about $500.

Others were told by a Chevron representative to expect even less, perhaps as little as $25 for a Kaiser copay.

"We are going to pay all appropriate and reasonable expenses," Chevron spokesman Sean Comey said.

Others, like Percy Gallon who showed up without receipts and other proof of expenses, were told they faced an uphill battle to receive anything.

"It's disappointing," said Gallon, a 61-year-old Richmond resident who said he lived out of the area when others received payments of about $1,000 each after a fire at the refinery in the 1990s. "I want in on this one."

The Chevron center in this gritty, blue-collar town about 15 miles northeast of San Francisco will remain open from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 8 a.m. until noon Saturday. Handling claims face-to-face is a new approach for Chevron, which has had dozens of accidents small and big in the more than 100 years its refinery has been located in Richmond.

"It's all part of our attempts at community outreach," said Chevron spokeswoman Melissa Ritchie. She added the company typically processed claims on the phone after previous accidents.

Richmond lawyer Nick Haney, who had long lines outside his office earlier in the week, said he expects to represent about 3,000 residents with legal claims. Haney said he hopes to negotiate a settlement with the company before filing lawsuits.

Mike Meadows, a Walnut Creek lawyer who has helped settle lawsuits for tens of millions of dollars against Chevron and other refineries because of previous mishaps, said he isn't participating in this incident because of the expected low payouts.

"The liability is pretty clear," Meadows said. "And I'm sure the victims showed up to the doctors with legitimate complaints." But he said most of the health problems caused by the fire likely were minor irritants rather than significant injuries.

The Bay Area Air Quality Management District said it was still investigating the fire's effects on the region's air quality.

"While air samples taken near the facility detected normal background levels of toxic air contaminants, there was the potential for significant smoke in the area that impacted residents in the downwind neighborhoods," the district said in a statement Thursday. "The likely source of health impacts from the fire is particulate matter from smoke."

The district said it found one dangerous chemical, acrolein, above safe levels in the air, although safe levels of the chemical often are exceeded in the Bay Area. Acrolein can cause runny noses and irritate eyes.

In all, five separate investigations will be done to determine the cause and effects of the Richmond refinery fire.

The same U.S. Chemical Safety Board team that investigated the oil spill in the Gulf Of Mexico, for one, was standing by with state and company inspectors waiting for structural and environmental tests to see if it was safe to enter the unit.

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

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