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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/4/2014 5:32:06 PM
Dear friends, here is Benjamin Fulford again with insider info on the current world scene.

Benjamin Fulford 11-3-14… “Desperate cabal loots Japanese pension funds to buy time”

"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?
11/4/2014 10:35:40 PM
Alon Ben-Meir Headshot

Senior Fellow, Center for Global Affairs, NYU

The Real Danger to Israel's Security Is Netanyahu

Posted: Updated:


AP

As prime minister, Netanyahu has consistently invoked his solemn duty to protect Israel's national security. Ironically, he has become the single most reckless individual who is imperiling the very security of the state. One need not look far and wide to discern Netanyahu's disingenuousness and misguided policies that have only undermined Israel's future security.

He uses his political skills to deceive and mislead in order to "protect himself from political defeat" while disregarding what is best for the future of the state. He surrounds himself with cronies blinded by their skewed ideological zeal with no morals or scruples to support his sinister political agenda.

To be sure, Israel under Netanyahu's stewardship is globally on the defensive, isolated, threatened from within and without, loathed and criticized by friends and foes alike, and with no prospect to achieve peace, which jeopardizes not only Israel's security but its very existence.

By what measure can Netanyahu claim that the occupation of the West Bank enhances Israel's national security? Nearly 50 years of occupation did nothing but poison the Palestinians, intensify their hatred and animosity toward Israel, and drive them to extremism, which gave birth to Hamas and an assortment of other jihadist groups.

How does the building of settlements and their expansion under the pretense of securing the borders provide Israel with better security? Thousands of soldiers are stationed throughout the West Bank to protect the settlers, making the settlements a security liability rather than an asset.

Moreover, the settlements became the source of the Palestinians' resentment and violence, and their continuing expansion closes the window for a two-state solution. The settlements diminish the prospect of establishing a Palestinian state while riskingIsrael's security and national identity and alienating the international community.

Instead of embracing the Arab Peace Initiative (API), especially now that the entire region is in turmoil and the Arab states are more eager than ever before to make peace, Netanyahu still rejects it irrespective of the fact that many current and former Israeli political and military leaders beseech him to embrace it.

By rejecting the API, Netanyahu has yet again forfeited another historic opportunity to negotiate, with some give and take, a lasting peace which more than anything else could radically enhance Israel's long-term national security.

Netanyahu habitually ignored Israel's Western allies' pleas to moderate his policies toward the Palestinians and end the occupation. Frustrated and angered by his continuing violation of Palestinian human rights while usurping their territories inch by inch, the European countries have abandoned him.

The loss of the West's moral and political support will have long-term security implications on Israel, as the country becomes increasingly isolated and ever more vulnerable to outside threats.

Engrossed by his self-grandeur and lack of sensitivity, Netanyahu betrayed Jordan's King Abdullah, Israel's closet Arab ally and the custodian of the Muslim Holy Sites, by using the Temple Mount -- the most sensitive area to both Jews and Muslims -- to assert Jewish right to the site at a time of extreme tension.

To galvanize and further strengthen his political base, Netanyahu provokes the Palestinians by his restriction on their mobility, night raids, and arbitrary incarceration, deliberately instigating them to resist, often violently.

He then uses the Palestinians' resistance to the occupation to justify his harsh treatment to the cheering of the growing right-of-center segment of the population. As Aristophanes once observed, "You [demagogues] are like the fishers for eels; in still waters they catch nothing, but if they thoroughly stir up the slime, their fishing is good."

Netanyahu and his government's systematic discrimination against Israeli Arabs has alienated them to a point where they now stridently and vociferously condemn the Israelis' inequality and openly side with their brethren in the West Bank and Gaza.

The continuation of Netanyahu's policy toward the Israeli Arabs could have disastrous national security consequences as Israel cannot count on the loyalty of nearly 20 percent of its population, especially in times of intense conflict with the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.

Rather than working in earnest in the search for peace under US auspices, Netanyahu never negotiated with the Palestinians in good faith. He recklessly defied America's call to freeze settlement building, which the US considers a major impediment to peace.

By defying his country's closest ally, whose commitment to Israel's national security is central to its very survival in a sea of hostilities, Netanyahu must now take blame for the crisis between Israel and the US and for the deterioration of their bilateral relations, which have never stooped so low in Israel's history.

By not reining in his loose-tongued ministers, Netanyahu has become complicit in their outrageous verbal attacks on US officials. The absurdity of these ministers, including Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, and Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, is surpassed only by their blindness to grasp the indispensability of the US to Israel.

What makes matters worse is that the Netanyahu government has lost its credibility in the US, whose political, economic and military support helped Israel become a formidable regional power, which Netanyahu and many of his supercilious ministers take for granted.

The irony is that Netanyahu invokes national security concerns even when he personally came under intense criticism from American officials, one who anonymously called him "chicken****" and a "coward." "I am under attack," he toldthe Knesset last week," simply because I am defending the State of Israel. If I didn't stand firm on our national interests, I would not be under attack."

Finally, what has and continues to adversely impact Israel's national security is the country's political factionalism that prevents the emergence of a cohesive policy toward the Palestinians which has plagued Israel.

Netanyahu's government is no different than previous ones; it consists of disparate political parties with different political agendas, led by self-conceited individuals.

Every minister believes that he or she should be the next prime minister, but none has the courage, vision, and the leadership qualities to lead, and none have a clue where Israel should be in 10 or 15 years down the line.

This includes the other two party leaders, Justice Minister Tzipi Livni (Hatnua) and Finance Minister Yair Lapid (Yesh Atid). Although both hold moderate views toward the Palestinians, the fact that they never challenge Netanyahu to change course and did not leave the coalition government means they have become complicit in Netanyahu's ill-advised policy and its dire implications to Israel's national security.

Leave it to Netanyahu to successfully manipulate and play one party leader against the other, knowing that they cherish their jobs and titles more than taking real responsibility to serve the nation.

Although Israel has legitimate national security concerns, Netanyahu subordinates it to his narrow ideological agenda and uses it as a tool to manipulate the public.

His unwillingness to develop a genuine national security strategy, which must rest on peace and be supported by all political parties, ensures that what follows is at best paralysis and at worst a misguided policy that will lead to disaster.


"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?
11/4/2014 11:15:36 PM

Tens of thousands march for Putin in shadow of Ukraine war

AFP

Kremlin supporters march on November 4, 2014 in the center of Moscow during National Unity Day (AFP Photo/Andrey Makhonin)


A huge, highly organised march through the centre of the capital to mark national Unity Day came at a time of growing social and economic tensions in Russia, as well as diplomatic isolation over the Kremlin's role in Ukraine.

The march -- deliberately, observers say -- eclipsed a more modest gathering of hardline nationalists on Moscow's outskirts.

Unity Day was introduced under Putin to mark the 1612 expulsion of Polish occupiers and has grown in importance, alongside a rise in both state-sponsored nationalism and its less controlled far-right version.

Putin, speaking at the Kremlin, said Russians pulled together in the face of outside pressure, in an apparent reference to Western sanctions imposed over the crisis in Ukraine.

"This year we've had to face difficult challenges," he said. "No threat will force us to renounce our values and ideals."

Earlier in the day a visibly pleased Putin laid flowers at the Red Square monument to Kuzma Minin and Dmitry Pozharsky, who helped rid Moscow of the Poles four centuries ago.

Police estimated that some 75,000 turned up for the march and rally in solidarity with the Russian strongman's policies, although they are often accused of exaggerating support for the authorities.

With music blaring through the streets, thousands of Russians, including representatives of all main political parties, marched through Moscow's main Tverskaya Street in a carefully choreographed show that harked back to Soviet times.

Camouflage-clad children were seen among the participants.

"Together we are a force," read one banner, while another proclaimed: "We trust in Putin."

Many expressed support for pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine, where Western governments accuse Russia of stirring up war to bring West-leaning Ukraine to its knees.

"We are united with our brothers in Novorossiya (New Russia)," said Sergei Mironov, leader of the pro-Kremlin A Just Russia party, referring to Moscow's name for the separatist-held regions.

"This is a year of trials when our strength gets tested," said a commentator on state-controlled television broadcasting the event.

Smaller rallies were held across the country.

Analysts say the Kremlin has stirred patriotic sentiment with its annexing of Ukraine's Crimea peninsula in March and backing for separatist insurgents in eastern Ukraine.

But they warn that the nationalism card, with its increasingly militaristic overtones, risks backfiring on Putin, whose rule has been characterised by prevention of spontaneous and potentially uncontrollable political movements.

- Ultra-nationalist march -

The Kremlin's desire to keep nationalist passions within controllable limits was visible in the high profile given to the Unity Day march, while pushing the less loyal ultra-nationalists into an obscure and distant neighbourhood.

Police estimated that only about 2,000 turned up for that event, far below the 10,000 to 20,000 organisers had been hoping to attract -- a result, they said, of pressure from the authorities.

Nationalists of all stripes including those both for and against the rebels in Ukraine had agreed to put differences aside in a show of unity.

Carrying traditional nationalist black-and-yellow banners, hundreds of participants -- mostly young men -- chanted "Russians forward" as they marched through the bleak southeastern Moscow neighbourhood of Lyublino.

Some marchers chanted obscenities, and others sported a banner reading "Russians against the war with Ukraine."

"I want Belarus, Ukraine and Russia to unite," said one participant, Alexander Dyomin, 57, echoing the ultra-nationalist desire for pan-Slavic unity.

Some 30 people were detained, a lawyer for the ultra-nationalist movement, the Russians, Dmitry Makarov, said on Echo of Moscow radio.

- New brand of nationalism -

Putin, who has put restoring military pride and a sense of Russia's swagger at the centre of his long presidency, sees nationalism as one of his most potent weapons for maintaining a strong base of support.

"The biggest nationalist in Russia is me," Putin said last month.

But observers say the Kremlin may find itself unable to keep stage-managing these passions.

The relatively small number of far right groups may not be the Kremlin's problem ultimately, some say. The real challenge might come from the unpredictable results of ordinary Russians falling for the nationalist message that Putin, with his policies in Ukraine, has done so much to encourage.

"It is a new nationalism, a nationalism of thousands of people who have fought in a war" in Ukraine, Yegor Prosvirnin, editor of the nationalist website Sputnik & Pogrom, told AFP.

"Russia is pregnant with a new nation, the Russian nation."


"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?
11/5/2014 10:52:49 AM

Amnesty International Says Israel Showed ‘Callous Indifference’ in Gaza


Left, Palestinian men burying members of a family who were killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza this summer. Right, Israeli residents took cover from a rocket attack by Palestinian militants. A 50-day war was fought before a cease-fire was reached in August.
CreditSergey Ponomarev for The New York Times; Gil Cohen Magen/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images


JERUSALEM — Amnesty International published a report early Wednesday accusing Israel of war crimes in its 50-day war with Hamas in the Gaza Stripthis summer, saying its military showed “callous indifference” to civilians in airstrikes on homes that felled entire families.

The report also said that “
Palestinian armed groups fired thousands of indiscriminate rockets and mortar rounds into civilian areas of Israel,” suggesting violations of international law by both sides.

But virtually all of its 49 pages were devoted to eyewitness testimony and expert analysis of weaponry in eight Israeli attacks that killed 104 people, 59 of them under 18. Amnesty found evidence of military targets in at least four of the cases, but argued that these were nonetheless “grossly disproportionate.”

Among the victims, the report said, were people who had fled their homes after Israeli warnings of danger there, and were staying with relatives after having found no space at United Nations shelters. Though the Israeli military phoned Gaza residents or dropped lighter missiles — called “a knock on the roof” — to warn of some impending bombings, Amnesty said it found no such notice given in these cases.

An Israeli military spokesman said all eight cases were among more than 90 under after-action review by the military itself, which has moved more swiftly than in previous conflicts
to conduct criminal investigations and other probes into soldiers’ and commanders’ conduct. Israel’s foreign ministry said in a statement that the report “accuses Israel of wrongdoing while producing no evidence” and “ignores documented war crimes perpetrated by Hamas,” the militant Islamist movement that dominates Gaza.

Israeli officials said during and since the bloody battle that Hamas endangered civilians and committed the war crime of human shielding by conducting military operations from homes as well as hospitals, mosques and schools, including several run by the United Nations where weapons were found.

“The report does not mention the word terror in relation to Hamas or other armed
Palestinian groups, nor mention tunnels built by Hamas to infiltrate Israel and perpetrate terror attacks,” read the statement from Israel’s embassy in London, where the Amnesty report was released. “By ignoring the nature of the enemy Israel faced in Gaza — a terror group recognized as such by the European Union, the United States and others — Amnesty’s report fails to contribute to the important discussion needed to solve the conflict.

“Instead,” the statement adds, “Amnesty serves as a propaganda tool for Hamas and other terror groups.”

During the 50-day war, six civilians, including a 4-year-old boy, were killed on the Israeli side, along with 67 soldiers. Nearly 2,200 Palestinians, including more than 500 children, were killed in Gaza, according to the United Nations; some 100,000 buildings were damaged or destroyed.

“The repeated, disproportionate attacks on homes indicate that Israel’s current military tactics are deeply flawed and fundamentally at odds with international humanitarian law,” said Philip Luther, director of Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa program, said in a statement accompanying the report, which was released just after midnight.

Israel on Tuesday reopened its crossing points into Gaza, two days after closing them in response to a rocket having been fired from Gaza into Israel on Friday night, a violation of the Aug. 26 cease-fire. Robert Serry, the United Nations special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, announced Tuesday that its reconstruction effort had begun in Gaza, with 700 families being allowed to purchase materials to repair their homes by Monday evening.

But Robert Turner, the Gaza director of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, told reporters Tuesday that he did not yet see a functioning Palestinian government on the ground, and reiterated concerns over Israel’s continued restrictions on Gaza travel and trade. Reuters quoted Mr. Turner, whose agency runs education, health and other services for 70 percent of Gaza’s population, as saying, “If we do not have political stability, I think if we do not have a national Palestinian government, I think if we do not have at least an easing of the blockade, yes, there will be another war.”

The Amnesty report, the most detailed yet on the war by an international group, calls for both Israel and the Palestinians to join the International Criminal Court so it can prosecute cases from this summer, and urges Israel to participate in an inquiry by the United Nations Human Rights Council that it has so far boycotted out of concern for predetermined bias.

Amnesty said its employees had been barred by Israel from entering Gaza since 2012, and thus relied on two fieldworkers who visited the site of each bombing multiple times. Military experts enlisted by Amnesty reviewed photographs and videos from the sites, according to the report, and surmised that 1- and 2-ton bombs were used.

The bulk of the report comprises survivors’ accounts.

“We couldn’t hear the kids, their voices had completely gone — that’s when I realized they were all dead,” Khalil Abed Hassan Ammar, a doctor, is quoted as saying about the July 20 strike on his home in Gaza City. “I only recognized Ibrahim, my eldest child, when I saw his leg and the shoes he was wearing. I had bought them for him two days before.”

The Israeli foreign ministry questioned why the fieldworkers who conducted the interviews were not named in the report, and their credibility “never questioned.” It said “extreme bias” was displayed in Amnesty’s recommendations.

“Hamas is not mentioned, as if the group has no responsibility for the bloodshed; meanwhile, the report dismisses Israel’s security challenges,” the statement said.


A version of this article appears in print on November 5, 2014, on page A8 of the New York edition with the headline: Amnesty International Says Israel Showed ‘Callous Indifference’ in Gaza.
||

"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?
11/5/2014 10:55:31 AM

Israelis, Palestinians clash at Jerusalem holy site

Reuters


A masked Palestinian protester uses a sling shot to throw stones at Israeli troops during clashes, following an anti-Israel demonstration over the entry restrictions to the al-Aqsa mosque, at Qalandia checkpoint near the West Bank city of Ramallah October 31, 2014.


JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli security forces entered a Jerusalem holy compound and clashed with Palestinian stone throwers on Wednesday, officials said.

Daily clashes between Israeli security forces and Palestinians in the streets of East Jerusalem and the Old City compound have stoked fears of a new Palestinian Intifada, or uprising.

Israeli police said Palestinians began throwing stones and firecrackers at police officers minutes before the sacred plaza, known to Jews as the Temple Mount and Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, was to open for visitors.

The complex houses Islam's al Aqsa mosque and is where two biblical Jewish temples once stood.

Reuters television footage showed a few Israeli border policemen running through the compound while a group of Jewish worshippers and tourists waited outside to enter.

"Police entered the area, pushed the masked rioters back, and they fled back into al Aqsa. Police closed the front gate of the mosque but did not enter," said police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld.

The officers used stun grenades to disperse the crowd and the situation was now under control, he said.

Omar Alkeswani, a Palestinian manager of al Aqsa, said police entered al-Aqsa and that 20 people were wounded in the clash.

(Reporting by Ali Sawafta, Dedi Hayun, Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by Nick Macfie)


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

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