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B J Williams

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/6/2014 12:38:16 AM
Thank you, Miguel. I must stay alert and keep up.


BJ http://www.fanafivillage.com FANAFI - Find A Need And Fill It, Napoleon Hill, Think and Grow Rich
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B J
B J Williams

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73 Posts
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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/6/2014 12:45:06 AM
So lets just send out the love to everyone. Because Love is the Answer. It surely is.

I agree to sending out the love. That is the only answer that I know.
BJ http://www.fanafivillage.com FANAFI - Find A Need And Fill It, Napoleon Hill, Think and Grow Rich
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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/6/2014 12:54:13 AM

Ukraine Truce Teeters as Kerry, Merkel Warn on Sanctions

November 05, 2014

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said Ukraine is sticking to a Sept. 5 cease-fire. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Ukraine’s two-month-old truce is in peril amid new fighting as insurgents raised doubts about a cease-fire and the U.S. and Germany sounded warnings that Russia risked more sanctions over the conflict.

A move by Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko to revoke the special status of the rebel-held areas will scuttle the truce struck in Minsk, the breakaway regions said in a joint statement today. German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged the European Union to consider more sanctions, while U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry warned “pressure will increase” if the Sept. 5 agreement isn’t implemented.

The standoff is coming to a head after the Nov. 2 elections held by separatists in the regions of Donetsk and Luhansk prompted condemnation from Ukraine and its allies in the U.S. and Europe for undermining peace efforts. Russian President Vladimir Putin today said Ukraine’s “civil war” isn’t subsiding as cities continue to come under shelling and the civilian death toll is rising.

“Quite clearly, the de-escalation process has been overturned and we are now seeing escalation,” said Samuel Charap, a senior fellow for Russia and Eurasia at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Washington D.C. “Tensions are rising.”

Conflicting Views

Russia says the ballots can pave the way to new talks, even as Ukraine accuses Putin’s government of massing troops and military vehicles on the border and says the rebels are attacking Ukrainian positions.

The votes amounted to “blatant violation” of the law, Kerry told reporters in Paris today. Merkel said the EU should consider expanding the list of Russian-linked individuals under sanctions to punish those responsible for “illegitimate” elections in eastern Ukraine.

Poroshenko said yesterday he’ll ask parliament to annul a law granting more autonomy to the eastern regions that was at the center of the cease-fire negotiated by Ukraine, the rebels, Russia and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. Ukraine says the truce has been broken almost every day since it was signed.

The Minsk agreement has to be revised, the separatists said in the statement.

No Deal

“The law on the special status and the law on amnesty agreed with the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic were an obligation for Kiev,” they said. Canceling the laws will “in fact cancel the Minsk Protocol.”

They also said rebel forces are “meticulously” adhering to the cease-fire and supporting the peace process. That contrasts with statements from the government in Kiev, whose Foreign Ministry said yesterday that more than 100 servicemen have been killed and 600 wounded in eastern Ukraine since the truce was signed.

“There is a significant likelihood of an intensification of fighting between Ukrainian and Russian and separatist forces in the next six months prior to the ‘freezing’ of the conflict,” Bath, U.K.-based security consultancy Maplecroft said in a report issued yesterday.

Rebels carried out 17 artillery attacks against government troops today, according to the Defense Ministry in Kiev. Two teenagers were killed and three wounded when a shell struck near a school in Donetsk, the city council said.

‘Peaceful Means’

Ukraine will stick to the cease-fire and seek to solve the conflict “exclusively by peaceful means,” Poroshenko said yesterday, adding that Ukraine has set up new military units to protect the cities of Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk and Mariupol.

Two Ukrainian soldiers died and nine were wounded in the last 24 hours, military spokesman Andriy Lysenko said in Kiev. Poroshenko ordered the army to bolster road blocks as rebels stepped up attacks on the main highway between Donetsk and Mariupol, he said.

The risk of an invasion is growing, particularly near the Sea of Azov port Mariupol, and Russia has sent agents and instructors to rebel-held areas, Markiyan Lubkivsky, an adviser to Ukrainian Security Service head Valentyn Nalyvaychenko, told RBK-Ukraine news service today.

Illegal, Illegitimate

EU foreign policy Chief Federica Mogherini condemned the separatist ballots yesterday as “illegal and illegitimate” and said they won’t be recognized. Mogherini said the 28-member bloc was continuing to evaluate sanctions it has imposed on Russian individuals, businesses and industries after Putin’s annexation of Crimea in March. EU foreign ministers are next set to meet on Nov. 17.

Speaking at a news conference in Berlin, Merkel called on all parties to “return to the Minsk plan and achieve a true cease-fire as quickly as possible.”

There’s “no possibility” of easing or lifting current sanctions, she said. The penalties can be “rolled back” if the Minsk agreement is implemented, according to Kerry.

“Based on these illegitimate elections, we should look again at the list of particular individuals who bear responsibility in eastern Ukraine,” Merkel said. “Beyond that, I think we should simply stick with what we have so far in terms of sanctions. We would certainly like to talk about possibly lifting them, but I don’t see such a situation.”



"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?
11/6/2014 1:33:57 AM

OPEC shaken by Saudi price move

Associated Press

FILE - This is a Wednesday, June 11, 2014 file photo of Saudi Arabia's Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Ali Ibrahim Naimi as he gestures as he speaks to journalists prior to the start of a meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC, at their headquarters in Vienna, Austria. Saudi Arabia showed little concern for fellow OPEC members by unilaterally cutting its oil prices to the U.S. this week, a move that casts doubts on the cartel’s credibility and its ability to find a common plan to stabilize the slumping energy market. Oil prices were near multi-year lows on Wednesday Nov. 5, 2014 after dropping sharply on Saudi Arabia’s move to cut its prices for U.S. customers. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak, File)


VIENNA (AP) — Saudi Arabia showed little concern for fellow OPEC members by unilaterally cutting its oil prices to the U.S. this week, a move that casts doubts on the cartel's credibility and its ability to find a common plan to stabilize the slumping energy market.

And while OPEC struggles to find consensus, oil prices risk remaining low — or falling further — to the benefit of consumers and businesses in the U.S. and worldwide.

OPEC is already riven by differences among its members on what the ideal price level should be. That is exemplified in the rivalry between heavyweights Saudi Arabia, which can withstand lower prices, and Iran, which relies on a stronger market to remain profitable.

The Saudis' unexpected move on Monday to cut prices to the U.S., aimed at protecting their market share there, will exacerbate those conflicts — weighing on the market and hurting most other OPEC members economically.

"At the end of the day, this is still the Saudis' cartel for better or worse, and for smaller members this is definitely worse," says oil analyst Phil Flynn, alluding to the fact that despite OPEC's credo of consensus and unity, the organization is de-facto controlled by its top producer.

The prime motivator for the Saudis is to compete against U.S. shale oil. But John Hall, chairman at Alfa Energy, sees other benefits for the desert kingdom.

Russia, which competes with OPEC, is already hurting from low oil prices and Saudis are tightening the vise — "seizing the opportunity to reduce prices, hit Russia and hit Iran in one go," he says.

When the cartel meets later this month to discuss how to manage the recent market slump, tensions are likely to fly high — and hopes for concerted action are low. Flynn calls the current price slump the "biggest threat (to OPEC's unity) since oil hit the $10 range" 15 years ago.

The price of crude hit three-year lows on Tuesday on news of the Saudi move. On Wednesday, the benchmark New York contract recovered only slightly to trade just above $77 a barrel. The international grade of crude also hit multi-year lows.

These levels are manageable for the Saudi government, as its coffers are well-padded and its oil production costs are relatively cheap.

Not so for many others within the 12-nation oil producing organization with higher extraction costs and national budgets dependent on higher crude revenues.

Even without the Saudi price discounts, Iran's ability to export oil was slashed by international sanctions imposed over its nuclear program. Tehran, which once hoped to displace the Saudis as OPEC's top producer, has seen its oil revenues nearly halved as a result.

If sanctions were to be lifted as part of a nuclear agreement later this year, Iran still would need prices close to $140 a barrel to finance the government budget. Crude export revenues finance more than 50 percent of the government's outlays.

Venezuela will also be hurt. The International Monetary Fund says Venezuela needs to sell oil at around $120 a barrel to avoid the threat of national bankruptcy. Bank of America estimates that for every dollar that oil prices drop, the state loses $770 million in net revenue over a year. That puts revenue $12 billion a year below peak levels even if current prices don't fall further.

Venezuela traditionally supports Iran in calling for high oil prices and OPEC meetings and the Saudi price concessions mean it will push that demand even harder at the Nov. 27 OPEC ministerial gathering.

Nigeria also needs a stronger market to flourish. Bismarck Rewane of the Financial Derivatives Consultancy in Lagos says the government had organized its 2015 budget around an oil price of $78 a barrel based on production of 2.4 million barrels a day — but the country is pumping only about 2 million barrels a day. He warns that even if oil prices do not fall further, the government will have to revise some of its spending plans.

Angola, Ecuador and other OPEC members with limited production may also suffer — but not so Saudi Arabia's wealthy allies Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait.

The upshot of the Saudis' willingness to live with low prices to protect their market share in a world of high supplies is that households and companies worldwide may enjoy a period of lower fuel bills.

Adam Slater, senior economist at Oxford Economics, estimates that the recent fall in oil prices could add around 0.4 percent to GDP in the U.S. in two years, and a little less in Europe. China, which is the second-largest oil consumer and on track to become the largest net importer of oil, could see its economy grow an extra 0.8 percent.

__

Michelle Faul in Lagos, Nigeria, Joshua Goodman in Caracas, Venezuela, and Nasser Karimi in Tehran, Iran, contributed to this report.



"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?
11/6/2014 1:40:45 AM

Canada fighter jets strike IS heavy vehicles in Iraq

AFP


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Canada's first attacks on IS destroy heavy equipment


Ottawa (AFP) - Canada's first airstrikes against Islamic State jihadists in Iraq destroyed heavy engineering equipment used to build up group's defenses and divert water from the Euphrates River, an official said Tuesday.

Lieutenant-General Jonathan Vance told a press conference two CF-18 Hornet fighter jets dropped several 500-pound laser-guided bombs on four targets near a dam near Fallujah.

IS, he said, had been using the equipment to "divert water from the Euphrates river to create flooding and displace the population in Anbar province, and denying water to other populations downstream."

By flooding specific areas, IS forced civilians and Iraqi troops to use "specific roads where they had placed improvised explosive devices or IEDs," he explained.

Furthermore, the militants used the vehicles to "develop and enhance their defensive positions, which would have made future clearing operations for the Iraqi security forces more difficult."

Canada conducted its first airstrikes in the anti-IS fight following two days of reconnaissance after joining the coalition last Thursday.

Vance said Canadian aircraft have flown a total of 27 sorties in Iraq so far.





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

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