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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/6/2014 12:47:23 AM

Ferguson protesters met with racial slurs during march to Missouri capital


Protesters marching from Ferguson to the Missouri capital of Jefferson City encountered counterprotesters, some of whom shouted racial obscenities, at a time when people across the country are holding demonstrations.

By , Staff writer



Members of the NAACP Journey for Justice week-long march from Ferguson to Jefferson City, Mo., make their way through Linn, Mo., on their way to the Capitol, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2014.

Kile Brewer/The Jefferson City News-Tribune/A

"Journey for Justice" protesters descended on the capital of Missouri Friday after marching 130 miles from the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson.

The week-long march was organized by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in response to the grand jury decision not to indict a white police officer for the shooting death of Michael Brown, a black 18-year-old, in Ferguson.

Passing through the rural town of Rosebud on Wednesday, protesters encountered counterprotesters, some of whom yelled racial slurs at the other protesters. One man wore what appeared to be a Ku Klux Klan hood while standing next to a car with a Confederate flag mounted on it.

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"It was lined on both sides of the street with a lot of racial slurs and name-calling and ugliness," said Mary Ratliff, president of the Missouri chapter of the NAACP, according to the Columbia Daily Tribune.

In a video on The Huffington Post, NAACP president and CEO Cornell William Brooks expressed his gratitude for the support he has seen throughout the days of the march but added that he was disappointed by those who resorted to shouting obscenities at peaceful protesters.

"What we've seen is an extraordinary array of citizens of Missouri who've brought us coffee, hot chocolate, sandwiches, refreshments all along the way without being asked, people who have come and shed tears, prayed for us," he said. "And we've seen a few people who've used the N-word, who've asserted their First Amendment rights with obscenities."

Though he said he supports the right of individuals to express how they feel, he urged people not to give into their fears.

"We support their right to protest. But we're simply posing this question: Why be afraid? You need not be afraid of an organization that's committed to nonviolence, that's committed to bettering this country," Mr. Brooks said. "Over the last 105 years, that's what we've done. And so the people in these communities, the few people who've called us the N-word or shouted obscenities at us, all we say to them is don't be afraid. Step up, step forward, and better your country. And one of the best ways to do that ... is to stand with law enforcement that believes that law enforcement can yet be better."

Clyde Zelch, former mayor of the city of Rosebud, said that while he recognizes the possible need to improve law enforcement, he supports the police, echoing the sentiment of protesters who held signs voicing support for former officer Darren Wilson, who shot Mr. Brown.

"I support the police," he said in The Huffington Post video. "We may have a system that needs to be improved on. But it's a system our Founding Fathers gave us, and what the NAACP acts like is that we're supposed to throw out everything that's worked for 200 years, and the only version that they want is one in which they win every time. It should not be us against them. This is just simply criminals committing crimes and having to pay a price for that."

Friday's protest in Jefferson City comes at a time of heated racial tensions between police and the black communities they patrol. A week after the grand jury announced no indictment in the Ferguson shooting, a grand jury in New York announced no indictment in the death of Eric Garner, a black man, at the hands of a white police officer in July.

On Thursday, the US Justice Department announced that an investigation into the Cleveland Police Department had found "a pattern or practice of unreasonable and unnecessary use of force." The investigation's findings included discussion of officers escalating encounters with citizens as opposed to defusing the situation and officers "using guns in a careless and dangerous manner."

And on Thursday night, a black man was shot dead by a white Phoenix police officer. The officer reportedly mistook a pill bottle for a gun on Rumain Brisbon. That shooting sparked about 150 protesters to march in the Arizona capital.

Throughout the past two weeks, demonstrators have gathered in cities around the country to express grief for lives lost at the hands of police officers and to protest what they see as a pattern of injustice in handling such cases.

At a protest Thursday night in downtown Boston, Carolyn Little held a candle as she stood quietly off to the side of a large crowd.

"This is a human problem, and my heart is broken and sick that this even has to take place," she said, referring to the scene around her.

Monitor staff writer David Unger and The Associated Press 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?
12/6/2014 1:19:38 AM
This reasoning is outrageous!

Police: Chokehold victim complicit in own death

Associated Press


WPVI – Philadelphia
Police cases stir national protests, debate


NEW YORK (AP) — Eric Garner was overweight and in poor health. He was a nuisance to shop owners who complained about him selling untaxed cigarettes on the street. When police came to arrest him, he resisted. And if he could repeatedly say, "I can't breathe," it means he could breathe.

Rank-and-file New York City police officers and their supporters have been making such arguments even before a grand jury decided against charges in Garner's death, saying the possibility that he contributed to his own demise has been drowned out in the furor over race and law enforcement.

Officers say the outcry has left them feeling betrayed and demonized by everyone from the president and the mayor to throngs of protesters who scream at them on the street.

"Police officers feel like they are being thrown under the bus," said Patrick Lynch, president of the police union.

The grand jury this week cleared a white patrolman, Daniel Pantaleo, who was caught on video applying what appeared to be an illegal chokehold on the black man. Mayor Bill de Blasio said the case underscores the NYPD's need to improve relations with minorities.

But Lynch said: "What we did not hear is this: You cannot go out and break the law. What we did not hear is that you cannot resist arrest. That's a crime."

At the noisy demonstrations that have broken out over the past few days, protesters have confronted police who had nothing to do with the case. Signs read: "NYPD: Blood on your hands," ''Racism kills" and "Hey officers, choke me or shoot me." Some demonstrators shouted, "NYPD pigs!" More than 280 people have been arrested, and more demonstrations were planned Friday.

In private and on Internet chat rooms, officers say they feel demoralized, misunderstood and "all alone."

Some are advising each other that the best way to preserve their careers is to stop making arrests like that of Garner's, in defiance of the NYPD's campaign of cracking down on minor "quality of life" offenses as a way to discourage serious crime.

"Everyone is just demonizing the police," said Maki Haberfeld, a professor of police studies at John Jay College of criminal justice. "But police follow orders and laws. Nobody talks about the responsibility of the politicians to explain to the community why quality-of-life enforcement is necessary."

The fatal encounter occurred in July after Pantaleo and other police officers responded to complaints about Garner, a heavyset 43-year-old father of six.

The video showed Garner telling officers to leave him alone and refusing to be handcuffed. Pantaleo, an eight-year veteran, appeared to wrap his arm around Garner's neck and take him down to the ground with the help of other officers.

Garner could be heard saying, "I can't breathe," several times before he went motionless.

The medical examiner later found that a chokehold resulted in Garner's death, but also that asthma, obesity and cardiovascular disease were contributing factors.

While many have decried the death of another black man at the hands of a white officer, no evidence has come to light to suggest that Pantaleo's actions were racially motivated. His supervising sergeant at the scene was black, and so were some of the officers involved in the confrontation.

As the video sparked accusations of excessive force, the police unions mounted a counter-narrative: that Garner would still be alive if he had obeyed orders, that his poor health was the main cause of his death and that Pantaleo had used an authorized takedown move — more like a headlock than a chokehold — to subdue him.

While the grand jury proceedings were secret, Pantaleo's lawyer has said that the officer testified that he never tried to choke Garner and did not believe the man was in mortal danger.

Pantaleo's defenders have included Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., who argued that the grand jury outcome would have been the same if Garner had been white, and that police were right to ignore his pleas that he couldn't breathe.

"The fact that he was able to say it meant he could breathe," said King, the son of a police officer.

"And if you've ever seen anyone locked up, anyone resisting arrest, they're always saying, 'You're breaking my arm, you're killing me, you're breaking my neck.' So if the cops had eased up or let him go at that stage, the whole struggle would have started in again."





"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?
12/6/2014 10:23:25 AM

Oil just plunged to Great-Recession levels

Published: Dec 5, 2014 5:27 p.m. ET


U.S. oil benchmark at level last seen more than 5 years ago

The U.S. oil benchmark on Friday settled at levels last seen in mid-2009.


NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Talk about an oil slick. Few seem to know how much further crude prices can fall, lately. The most recent slide is to levels last seen in mid-2009.

The U.S. crude benchmark CLF5, -1.77% slumped to a five-year low on Friday, as shown in the included chart. It settled at $65.84 a barrel — its lowest level since July 2009, back when the U.S. economy was far from recovering from the Great Recession.

WTI has tumbled 33% in the year to date, and it’s off 55% from its record high of $145.29 hit in July 2008, according to the markets data group at Dow Jones.

Oil prices have been hammered lately by factors such as OPEC deciding not to reduce production, a strengthening dollar and Saudi Arabia cutting January prices for U.S. and Asian buyers. Read more: Oil hit by rallying greenback, Saudi price cut

The European oil benchmark on Friday also settled at its lowest level in more than five years, with Brent crude for January delivery LCOF5, -1.01% ending at $69.07 a barrel. That was the lowest settlement for a front-month contract since October 2009, and Brent is down 38% in the year to date.

Check out: OPEC might get the last laugh on oil

MarketWatch has covered how the good times at the gas pump will continue to roll, as well as how cheaper oil is like a tax cut for the economy. But other analysts argue the economic benefits of these so-called tax cuts also could be a big myth.


"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?
12/6/2014 10:25:26 AM

California drought, high temperatures create worst conditions in 1,200 years: study

Reuters


A tire rests on the dry bed of Lake Mendocino, a key Mendocino County reservoir, in Ukiah, California Feb. 25, 2014.


SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - A combination of record high temperatures and sparse rainfall during California's three-year drought have produced the worst conditions in 1,200 years, according to a study accepted for publication by the American Geophysical Union (AGU).

The state has gone through numerous periods of dry weather, with as little or less rainfall as the past few years, but scientists looking at the cumulative effects of temperature, low precipitation and other factors said that it all adds up to the worst conditions in more than a millennium.

"The current California drought is exceptionally severe in the context of at least the last millennium and is driven by reduced though not unprecedented precipitation and record high temperatures," the report's authors said in the study released late Thursday.

The study by the University of Minnesota and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution said that warm, dry conditions have shrunk the supply of surface water from reservoirs, streams and the Sierra Nevada snowpack in the state, even as demand from people and farms has gone up, resulting in unprecedented scarcity.

Despite its conclusion that several factors add up to the worst conditions in 1,200 years, the report's authors point out that six years during that period were possibly drier than 2014, and that three-year-droughts are not unusual in the state.

Even so, the report said, the latest drought stands out because of its "cumulative severity."

The report has been peer-reviewed but not yet edited for publication, so some of the wording in it may change, a spokesman said.

It comes as California is experiencing a wet start to December that could result in 12-inches (30 cm) of rain and yards (meters) of snow over the next two weeks, according to the forecasting service Accuweather.

In October, the AGU published a study by NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City saying that the 1934 U.S. drought, which caused the upheaval known as the Dust Bowl, was the worst in 1,000 years.

(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Sandra Maler)


"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?
12/6/2014 10:41:41 AM

Missouri march seeks justice for black teen killed by police

Reuters


Cornell William Brooks, the President and CEO of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), raises his hands while marching through Ferguson, Missouri November 29, 2014. REUTERS/Adrees Latif

By Carey Gillam

(Reuters) - Activists protesting police treatment of black Americans concluded a 120-mile (190-km) march from Ferguson, Missouri, to the Missouri governor's mansion on Friday, ending a "journey for justice" tied to the police killing of an unarmed black teenager.

More than 100 protesters shouted "hands up, don't shoot" and other slogans as they rallied in the rotunda of the state Capitol in Jefferson City.

The demonstrators walked through cold rain as they concluded a march that began Nov. 29 and was organized by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).

The civil rights group organized the march after a grand jury decided not to indict Darren Wilson, the white police officer who shot and killed Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18 year old in Ferguson in August.

NAACP leaders met with Missouri Governor Jay Nixon and Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster on Friday.

"While we did not agree on every point, I believe common ground exists to bring progress in areas such as body cameras for police officers, reform of municipal courts, and increasing minority participation in urban law enforcement agencies," Koster said in a statement.

In an atmosphere at times reminiscent of the civil rights marches of the 1960s, the protesters said they encountered counter-demonstrators and hecklers along the way.

"For many, the fight has never ended," said NAACP staff member Jamiah Adams, who participated in the march.

In the small town of Rosebud, Adams said a group that included Ku Klux Klan members met the marchers with racist signs, epithets as well as fried chicken and watermelon, foods typically associated with racist stereotypes of black people. Someone broke a window of a bus accompanying the marchers in an incident that remains unexplained, she said.

The NAACP is calling for a number of changes, including the ouster of the Ferguson police chief, the demilitarization of local police authorities and an end to racial profiling by police.

Brown's death, and a grand jury's decision in November not to indict Wilson, have prompted expanding protests over what activists say is deeply engrained hostile treatment of black Americans by police, and an unequal justice system that refuses to hold police accountable.

Protests spread to many major U.S. cities this week after another grand jury decided not to indict a white police officer who put a 43-year-old black man suspected of illegally selling cigarettes in a chokehold in New York, which resulted in his death.

(Reporting by Carey Gillam in Kansas City, Missouri; Editing by Doina Chiacu, Christian Plumb and Sandra Maler)


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

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