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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/18/2015 11:12:50 AM

A very rare supermoon eclipse of the sun is happening this week that won't take place again until 2034

Business Insider

A very rare supermoon eclipse of the sun is happening this week that won't take place again until 2034 (davidfntau on Flickr)


This Friday, March 20, marks this year's first and only total eclipse of the sun, when the moon passes directly between Earth and the sun.

Not only that, this is an extremely rare type of solar eclipse because it takes place on the first day of spring and when the moon is at its closest distance to Earth, known as a supermoon.

(The supermoon, however, is a new moon, and will therefore be invisible to Earth.)

This is the first time since the turn of the century that a total solar eclipse has fallen on the same day as the start of spring, known as the vernal equinox. We won't see an event like this again until the year 2034. And after that, the only other two such events will be in 2053 and 2072.

Although no one in the US will get a chance to see the total solar eclipse, many parts of Northern Africa and all of Europe will get a glimpse.

The most stunning part of the eclipse, when the moon is directly in front of the sun, will take place at approximately 9:46 pm UT (5:46 pm ET).

Check out the map below to see where in the world the eclipse will be visible:

View gallery

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solar eclipse 2015
(Time and Date)

If you're not in the right spot to see it in person, you can watch it online. The Slooh Community Observatory will host a live, two-and-a-half-hour broadcast of the event starting at 4:30 pm ET. The livestream is provided below:

What's happening

Vernal is Latin for "spring" and equinox is Latin for "equal night." Every March, Earth is angled exactly perpendicular to the sun's rays, shown in the diagram below, which means that we get about the same number of hours of daylight as we get of night. And on this year's vernal equinox, the moon will pass directly between the sun and Earth.

View gallery

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march equinox illustration
(Time and Date)

Each time a solar eclipse occurs, only a small part of the world gets to see it. As the moon passes between our planet and the sun, it casts a shadow onto Earth's surface, but this shadow is relatively small and only covers a small part of the globe each time. Therefore, only a limited amount of prime observing spots exist for each solar eclipse.

This time around it's Europe's turn.

View gallery

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total solar eclipse
(James Jordan)This is not quite a total solar eclipse, but it's pretty close. If you're in one of the prime observing spots, then you can check to see when the eclipse will happen in your city at timeanddate.com.

Remember that no one should look directly at the sun during a partial eclipse without proper equipment, as it can damage the eyes.

The next time the US will get a chance to see a total solar eclipse will be on August 21, 2017. And that's a date to mark your calendars for because it will be the first total solar eclipse visible from the entire US since 1979!

There is only one other eclipse of the sun taking place this year on September 13, but it will only be visible by a small number of observers in South Africa and Antarctica.

If you get any shots of the partial solar eclipse, send them with a description, your name, and location to our science team at science@businessinsider.com and we might feature them on our site.

NOW WATCH: Watch This Amazing Time-Lapse Video Of Auroras Over The South Pole


"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?
3/18/2015 4:05:32 PM

Rare 'severe' geomagnetic storm is hitting Earth right now


A strong flare erupted into space from an active region that was roughly facing towards Earth on Mar. 11, 2015.
IMAGE: NASA SOLAR DYNAMICS OBSERVATORY



BY ANDREW FREEDMAN
________________
23 HOURS AGO

A rare G4, "severe" geomagnetic storm, is underway. It has the potential to disrupt radio transmission signals, cause problems with the electrical grid and have a range of other possibly costly impacts.

The event, which is just one notch below the highest category of solar storm, began at about 10 a.m. ET on Tuesday, according to the NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center. The geomagnetic storm is the result of a pair of coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, that left the Sun on March 15 and are now interacting with Earth's atmosphere and geomagnetic field.

In a press briefing on Tuesday, NOAA scientists said the two CMEs may have unexpectedly combined as they sped toward Earth, which could explain why the geomagnetic storm has been so strong.

Coronal mass ejections, which are essentially magnetic clouds ejected at high velocity from the sun, can affect the electricity grid, radio transmissions and GPS signals, among other things, when they interact with the planet's magnetic field. According to NOAA, there had not been any reported abnormalities in the U.S. power grid as of noon eastern time on Tuesday.

However, there have been numerous reports of "vivid" sightings of the Northern Lights across the northern tier of the U.S., including Washington State and Minnesota. The G4 solar storm is expected to lead to a widespread viewing of the Aurora Borealis, or Northern Lights, on Tuesday night from Alaska across Canada and much of Eurasia.

It's possible that the Northern Lights will be visible as far south as Tennessee, New Mexico and Oklahoma on Tuesday night, NOAA experts said, depending on the evolution of the event's intensity.


Northern Lights forecast for March 17, 2015.
IMAGE: NOAA

The Space Weather Prediction Center issued a G1, or minor, geomagnetic storm watch for Wednesday in response to the two recent CMEs, with the first effects to be felt on Tuesday. Scientists think the two CMEs unexpectedly combined into “one sort of larger shock front traveling and intersecting Earth’s orbit,” according to Robert Rutledge of the Space Weather Prediction Center.

The CMEs in this case were not oriented head-on in relation to Earth, causing forecasters to think the planet would just receive "just a glancing blow," rather than a severe geomagnetic storm, Rutledge says.


Severe solar storms such as this one have the potential to cause "possible widespread voltage control problems" in the electrical grid. It could also disrupt tracking of spacecraft, and impede the efficacy of high-frequency radio signals, such as those used by flights that travel across the Arctic between North America and Asia. These storms can also degrade the accuracy of satellite navigation.

According to the Space Weather Prediction Center, these storms tend to occur about 100 times per every 11-year solar cycle, or about 60 days per each 11-year cycle. According to the Space Weather Prediction Center, the ongoing event is one of just two G4 events in the current solar cycle.

Dalton Highway
The Northern Lights seen from the Dalton Highway in Alaska on March 17, 2015.






IMAGE: MARKETA MURRAY/SPACEWEATHER.COM

This event is nowhere near the strength that would be required to create a nightmare scenario that space weather specialists have been warning about for years. In that scenario, a powerful geomagnetic storm, a G5 on the five-point scale, shuts down the electrical grid, wreaks havoc on radio communications, GPS devices and aerial navigation systems, costing billions in damage.

Real world implications of G4 severe conditions? Possible widespread voltage control problems with power grid. Using anything electronic?



OK, space weather is rapidly moving up the list to 'big deal' category. Now at the G4 severe level (Kp index of 8).


Such a storm last occurred in 1859, and is known as The Carrington Event. In that event, a CME was so powerful that it raced from the Sun to the Earth — a 90-million-mile journey — in just 18 hours.

Research published in 2014 showed that the Earth narrowly missed a similar event in 2012, but the burst of solar energy was directed far enough away from Earth's magnetic field that disaster was averted.

The ongoing event may last a total of 24 to 36 hours, NOAA scientists told reporters on Tuesday. The last G5 event occurred in 2005, and the last G4 event before this one was in the fall of 2013, according to NOAA.

While this event is somewhat rare in the context of the current solar cycle, when looking at longer timescales it does not appear nearly as unusual, Rutledge says.

"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?
3/18/2015 5:59:47 PM

Indictment of a U.S. President for Mass Murder

Posted by Johnny Punish on March 17, 2015

Bugliosi Presents a Case Against George W. Bush for Mass Murder


While U.S. Main Stream Media continues to fail and provide “We The People” anything of value to confirm and buttress our democracy, today Free Speech TV frankly kicked their ass taking huge giant leap forward for democracy and justice airing America’s # 1 prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi’s documentary “The Prosecution of An American President“.

Famed and esteemed U.S. Veteran, Charles Manson prosecutor, and New York Times bestselling author Vincent Bugliosi makes the most powerful, explosive and thought-provoking argument of his storied career.

In The Prosecution of an American President, Bugliosi presents a meticulously researched legal case that proves George W. Bush took our nation to war in Iraq under false pretenses and is therefore, under the law, guilty of murder for the deaths of 4,500 young American soldiers who fought and died there.

Bush’s unlawful war also cost the United States more than a trillion dollars; alienated many of our allies; caused the deaths of more than 100,000 innocent Iraqi men, women, and children; and pushed a previously tranquil nation into unending civil war, atrocities and chaos. (some estimates say the deaths are closer to over 1,000,000)

As a prosecutor dedicated to seeking justice, Bugliosi delivers a non-partisan argument based on hard facts and pure objectivity. This searing indictment also outlines a legally credible pathway to holding our highest government officials accountable for their actions, thereby creating a framework for future occupants of the Oval Office. Ultimately, Bugliosi calls for the United States to return to the great nation it once was.


prosecution of American PresidentThe Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder by Bugliosi, Vincent (2008) Hardcover

Best-selling author Vincent Bugliosi has written the most important and thought-provoking book of his prolific career. In a meticulously researched and clearly presented legal case that puts George W. Bush on trial for murder after he leaves his presidency, Bugliosi delivers a searing indictment of the president and his administration.

With what he believes is overwhelming evidence that President Bush took the nation to war in Iraq under false pretenses – a war that has caused great loss of life, cost this nation close to $1 trillion, and alienated most of our allies in the Western world – Bugliosi argues that it is George W. Bush who must be held accountable for what Bugliosi considers to be monumental crimes.

In this groundbreaking book, Bugliosi, in his inimitable style, presents a powerful case against the man in the oval office.


Free Speech TV is proud to announce that they will be airing Prosecution of an American President on the following, upcoming dates.

This is MUST SEE TV and should be required viewing for every school in the nation and the world.

So make sure to tune in two nights in a row to see the film in its entirety. For additional dates and times, check out the Free Speech TV schedule.

  1. Tuesday March 17th – PART ONE ONLY at 8:30pm ET
  2. Wednesday March 18th – PART TWO ONLY at 8:30pm ET
  3. Thursday March 19th – PART ONE ONLY at 8:30pm ET
  4. Friday Match 20th – PART TWO ONLY at 8:30pm ET

Free Speech TV Web Site >>>


Learn how to place music on itunes at ReverbNation.com

Johnny Punish

Founder and Director at Middle East Union Congress
Johnny Punish is a global citizen, visionary, musician, artist, entertainer, businessman, investor, life coach, and syndicated columnist. He is also the founder and President of the Middle East Union Congress; a non-profit global think tank dedicated to building a new Middle East for the 21st century.

Educated at University of Nevada Las Vegas and California State University Fullerton, his articles appear in Veterans Today, Money News Now and hisJohnny Punish Blog. His art music is promoted worldwide and played on net radio at Last.fm, IHeartRadio.com and more.

Resources: Store - Music - Videos - Amazon - YouTube - Twitter -Facebook - LinkedIn - SoundCloud- Spotify - Itunes

Read Full Bio at JohnnyPunish.com >>>

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"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?
3/19/2015 1:01:27 AM

#BlackLivesMatter: Is Our Health Care System Fundamentally Racist?


(Photo: Getty Images)

Exhibit A:

A young white woman visits a medical clinic with acute pain in her lower abdomen. She’s preliminarily diagnosed with appendicitis.

A young black women visits the same clinic with identical symptoms. She’s given a diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease, which usually is the result of an untreated sexually transmitted disease.

Exhibit B:

Among women diagnosed with breast cancer, African-American women are the most likely to die from the disease.

Exhibit C:

In New York City, the rate of premature death is 50 percent higher among black men than among white men.

The Verdict:

The #BlackLivesMatter movement — which began in 2013 as a hashtag when George Zimmerman was acquitted in theshooting death of Trayvon Martin, and gained momentum after the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner in 2014 — needs to extend to the American health care system.

That’s the message of three experts in Thursday’s edition of theNew England Journal of Medicine — that it’s essential to recognize racial disparities in access to and quality of health care, the disproportionate number of preventable deaths and illness within the African-American community, and the overall underrepresentation of people of color within the medical establishment.

In her piece “#BlackLivesMatter – A Challenge to the Medical and Public Health Communities,” New York City’s health commissioner Mary Bassett, MD, MPH, says that “[t]here is great injustice in the daily violence experienced by young black men. But the tragedy of lives cut short is not accounted for entirely, or even mostly, by violence. In New York City, the rate of premature death is 50 percent higher among black men than among white men…and this gap reflects dramatic disparities in many health outcomes, including cardiovascular disease, cancer, and HIV. These common medical conditions take lives slowly and quietly — but just as unfairly.”

The trickle-down inequalities of health care in the black community are not just limited to men. “Black women in New York City are still more than 10 times as likely as white women to die in childbirth,” Bassett points out.

According to data from Young Invincibles, a policy group focused on health care reform for young adults, African-Americans ages 18 to 34 have, historically, been disproportionately uninsured — and one of the populations most significantly impacted by the Affordable Care Act (or ACA, known by many colloquially as Obamacare). Since the implementation of ACA, about half a million young African-Americans have gained access to health insurance because they are now able to remain on their parents’ plan through age 26. An additional 1.8 million uninsured young adult African-Americans could be eligible for tax credits for lower premiums and an additional 1.7 million could be eligible for free or low-cost Medicaid coverage if all states were to participate in theACA’s Medicaid expansion program (currently just 27 do).

The lack of health insurance among this demographic contributes to poor health outcomes compared to other groups (and white peers especially): African-Americans are more likely to die from chronic diseases and heart disease; experience negative health effects from poverty such as asthma, obesity, and infectious diseases; and are 12 percent less likely than white adults to receive a flu vaccine. Furthermore, a disproportionate number of these deaths are the result of pregnancy complications in young African-American women and chronic lower respiratory diseases in young African-American men.

Racial disparities in the American healthcare system impact children, too.

A 2009 report published by First Focus, a bi-partisan advocacy group, found that not only are African-American children more likely to suffer from asthma, skin allergies, speech problems, and unmet prescription needs, but that African-American children are at a 12 percent greater risk of being uninsured — and thus left with sub-optimal health care. And yet, many of these children are eligible for, but not enrolled in, Medicaid of the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP).

The report concludes that providing insurance to these children would result in “significant reductions in unmet needs for medical care” and “increased visits for preventive specialty care; improved quality of care…higher immunizations rates…reduced emergency department visits for asthma and reduced hospitalizations.”

Young women face their own unique challenges; a spokesperson for Planned Parenthood notes that black teens ages 15-19 have higher rates of pregnancy, birth, and abortion than non-Hispanic white teens. While at a historic low, the birth rate for African-American teens is more than twice that of non-Hispanic white teens.

In January of this year, Cecile Richards, President, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, addressed the National Press Club to call attention to disparities in women’s healthcare. In her remarks, Richards urged Congressional leadership to address these inequalities by expanding access to publicly funded family planning services; support medically accurate, age-appropriate sex education nationwide; make birth control available and accessible; and support efforts to strengthen and protect Medicaid.

A study out today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) found that while they did not ultimately impact clinical decisions, unconscious race and social class biases were present in most trauma and acute-care clinicians. 215 clinicians were surveyed; almost all were found to have moderate racial biases, and strong social class biases, regardless of the clinician’s respective age, race, and clinical specialty. One particularly startling finding was that respondents were more likely to diagnose a young black woman with pelvic inflammatory disease rather than appendicitis when presented with the same set of symptoms among black and white patients.

This data speaks strongly to a second piece regarding black lives and healthcare in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine. In it, David Ansell, MD, MPH, and Edwin McDonald, MD, write about the “White Coats for Black Lives” die-ins held at medical schools across the country this past December, “the largest coordinated protests at U.S. medical schools since the Vietnam War era,” a movement that set out to call attention to “the explicit and implicit discrimination and racism in our communities and reflect on the systemic biases embedded in our medical education curricula, clinical learning environments, and administrative decision-making.”

Ansell and McDonald reiterate the findings of the JAMA study, noting that implicit racial biases often impact the kind of care a patient receives. A 2002 Institute of Medicine (IOM) study found that “for almost every disease studied, black Americans received less effective care than white Americans. These disparities persisted despite matching for socioeconomic and insurance status.”

Ansell and McDonald also point out that while “black medical students are more than twice as likely as white students to express a desire to care for underserved communities of color,” the number of African-American men graduating from American medical schools has declined over the past twenty years. Perhaps not coincidentally, “only 2.9 percent of all faculty members at U.S. medical schools are black” and “black faculty members are less likely than their white counterparts to be promoted, to hold senior faculty or administrative positions, and receive research awards from the National Institutes of Health.”

The authors conclude that the racial disparities that exist in our healthcare system cannot be fully addressed until the biases happening in medical education are first addressed.


Experts address racial disparity in health care


New NEJM articles address the dramatic imbalance between black and white individuals.
'Premature death is 50% higher'

"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?
3/19/2015 1:20:58 AM

Police cars torched at anti-austerity protest in Germany

Associated Press

Associated Press Videos
Raw: New European Central Bank HQ Protested


FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — Protesters torched police cars and threw stones at officers during anti-austerity protests ahead of the inauguration ceremony for the European Central Bank's new headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany.

Police detained 350 people but said those intent on violence were a minority among the thousands who gathered Wednesday to peacefully denounce government austerity policies.

Police said 14 officers suffered minor injuries, several from being hit with stones. A further 80 suffered from contact with some kind of irritating gas or liquid during the confrontations but recovered and later returned to duty.

The early morning violence quickly subsided. Some 10,000 people gathered later in the day for a peaceful rally on the Roemerberg, Frankfurt's main square.

The ECB ceremony went ahead, with ECB President Mario Draghi saying the new building was "a symbol of what Europe can achieve together." The ECB is the monetary authority for the 19 countries that have joined to share the euro currency.

The bulk of demonstrators conducted themselves peacefully, marching in groups, drumming and singing ahead. Some blocked bridges across the Main River or streets in an effort to hinder access to the ECB ceremony.

Leading activists distanced themselves from the violence. Ulrich Wilkens, a left-wing deputy in the regional parliament, said at news conference that he was "both depressed and horrified by what I experienced myself and saw in pictures."

The demonstrations were organized by Blockupy, an alliance including trade unions and anti-capitalist groups. Protesters said they were targeting the central bank because of its role in supervising efforts to restrain spending and reduce debt in financially troubled countries such as Greece.

At the ECB ceremony, Tarek Al-Wazir, economy minister for the Hesse region, denounced the violence. He said the protesters "have no answers... but they have some of the right questions," adding that "austerity can indeed be self-defeating."

He and several other German politicians including Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel said the ECB was the wrong target.

Draghi has urged more spending by governments that are in good financial shape such as Germany to help lift the economy and reduce unemployment. That advice has been ignored by the German government, which has stressed the need to balance its budget and pressed others to restrain spending.

The ECB, along with the European Commission and International Monetary Fund, is part of the so-called "troika" that monitors compliance with the conditions of bailout loans for Greece and other financially troubled countries in Europe.

Those conditions include spending cuts and reducing deficits, moves that are aimed at reducing debt but have also been blamed for high unemployment and slow growth.







Anti-austerity demonstrators target the European Central Bank, leading to a heavy police presence and 350 arrests.
'Not yet finished'


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

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