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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/21/2015 10:43:16 AM

CBS News defends decision to show sarin gas attack on '60 Minutes'

'We wanted the world to see what this was in all of its ugliness,' Scott Pelley says


Dylan Stableford
Yahoo News

Pelley introduces Sunday's graphic segment. (CBS News)

CBS News is defending its decision to air a video showing a 2013 sarin gas attack in Syria, for which no one has yet been held accountable, on Sunday's "60 Minutes."

"If you have young children watching right now, usually that's a good thing," correspondent Scott Pelley said at the top of the segment. "But this story is not for them."

The report included gruesome eyewitness footage of the attack that killed an estimated 1,429 people, including more than 400 children, in the suburbs of Damascus.

"These kinds of things happen in this world because people don't see them," Pelley said in an online interview explaining the decision to air the footage, "and don't know why of all the weapons in the world sarin is banned by almost every country on Earth. We wanted to just stop and show it to the world so people can understand the hideousness of this weapon."

In August 2013, videos surfaced online showing what appeared to be mass civilian casualties. Later, U.S. officials said lab results showed traces of the nerve agent in hair and blood samples collected from the scene.

"It was just such a horror, just unbelievable, inconceivable that this kind of a weapon would be used," Pelley said. "And then to use it on civilians — women, children, the elderly, neighborhoods — that's not the kind of thing you want to report on for a couple of days and walk away and never remember it again. You want to never forget."

CBS is hardly the first news organization to balance graphic footage with newsworthiness.

In February, Fox News allowed visitors to its website the opportunity to view footage released by the Islamic State militant group of a Jordanian pilot being burned alive.

“After careful consideration, we decided that giving readers of FoxNews.com the option to see for themselves the barbarity of ISIS outweighed legitimate concerns about the graphic nature of the video,” Fox News executive vice president John Moody said in a statement to Variety. “Online users can choose to view or not view this disturbing content.”

Television viewers were given a similar choice.

“The images are brutal. They are graphic. They are upsetting. You may want to turn away. You may want to have the children leave the room — right now,” Fox News' Bret Baier said on a Feb. 3 broadcast. “But the reason we’re showing you this is to bring you the reality of Islamic terrorism. And to label it as such. We feel you need to see it.”

Pelley said there was no hesitation at CBS over whether to show the footage.

"We wanted the world to see what this was in all of its ugliness," he said. "You can read about [the attack] all day, but if you don't see it, I don't believe the impact truly hits you."

Technology, Pelley added, has clearly changed the way humanitarian crimes are covered.

"What would've happened during the Holocaust if all the Jews had cellphones? Certainly the world would've found out much sooner what was happening," he said. "I think we have entered a new era of human rights that are in some way safeguarded and guaranteed by the fact that everybody has a video camera and a way to publish that video."

Warning: The video of Pelley's explanation, shown below, includes graphic footage of sarin gas victims. Viewer discretion is advised.



"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?
4/21/2015 10:44:51 AM

Walmart denies claims it targeted wage protestors with store closings

Yahoo Finance

Walmart workers from Pico Rivera, Calif. protest their store closing on April 14, 2015. Source: Our Walmart


Less than a week after Walmart (WMT) said it would close a handful of locations and lay off more than 2,000 employees, the retailer is now fending off accusations from disgruntled workers who say they were being unfairly punished for protesting the company’s employee practices.

Citing prolonged plumbing issues at five stores in California, Texas, Oklahoma and Florida, Walmart told employees it had no choice but to close. Repairs could take up to six months or longer,according to Walmart.

“We understand this decision has been difficult on our associates and our customers and we aim to reopen these stores as soon as these issues are resolved and improvements are made,” Walmart said in a statement provided to Yahoo Finance.

But members of Our Walmart, an activist group that pushes for better wages and benefits for workers, aren’t buying the excuse. In an injunction filed Sunday by The National Labor Relations Board — the group backing Our Walmart — they claim Walmart's real motive was to shut down one store specifically: its Pico Rivera, Calif., location. The store was the site of the first worker protest against the company’s employee practices in 2012, which helped incite the minimum wage debate that’s taken hold across the country. The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, which brought the charge along with the NLRB, wants to force Walmart to rehire all 2,200 workers affected.

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Pico Rivera workers protest their store closing last week. Source: Our Walmart

Pico Rivera workers protest their store closing last week. Source: Our Walmart

With the Pico Rivera store’s closing, more than 500 employees were laid off, including Venanzia Luna, a 36-year-old deli manager who has worked at the location for eight years.

“This has nothing to do with plumbing,” Luna told Yahoo Finance. “They wanted to get rid of us one way or the other.”

Luna was among the first workers to walk out of the store in protest 2012 and was an active participant in future protests. Their latest effort, in which dozens of protesters blocked off an intersection in front of the store last fall, resulted in her arrest as well as others. Their actions have been mimicked across the country, inspiring part-time wage earners from fast food companies like McDonald’s and Burger King to follow suit.

A Walmart spokesperson denied these claims in a statement provided to Yahoo Finance:

“We don't believe there is any basis for an injunction. As we have said all along, these stores were closed temporarily so we could fix the ongoing plumbing issues and it would be unfortunate if this outside group attempts to slow this process down for our associates and customers. Each of these five locations had more than 100 plumbing problems reported over the last two years, the most out of our more than 5,000 stores in the U.S.”

After enduring three years of nationwide protests, media scrutiny and criticism from politicians and business groups, Walmart announced it would give 40% of its workforce — half a million employees – raises by June 2015. With the changes, the company's average full-time worker would earn $13 an hour, up from $12.85. Part-time workers will be bumped from $9.48 an hour to $10.

Luna, who earns $14.40 as a manager, says she was expecting to be bumped up to $15 by June. As required by law, Walmart will be offering two months’ pay to employees who were laid off and human resource staffers will work to transfer employees to other store locations. But Luna has no plans to sign the forms that would guarantee her severance pay — by signing, she would forfeit the right to sue the company or hold any future protests on site.

“I will not sign it,” she says, but “I’m the breadwinner in my family. I have to figure out how I’ll be able to take care of my parents. I will have to start all over again.”

Last summer, a Canadian court ruled that Walmart violated labor laws by shutting down a store in Quebec, where workers had attempted to unionize in 2005.

The National Labor Relations board has been behind a number of court actions against Walmart. In January, the group filed a complaint against the retail giant for allegedly disciplining employees who had been actively protesting against them, citing unfair labor practices.

In its injunction filed Sunday, the NLRB says out of the five stores closed, Pico Rivera did not have any known plumbing issues.

Walmart has claimed that there is a "plumbing issue" which caused it to suddenly close the store without warning. City officials in Pico Rivera say that nothing has been brought to their attention and no permits at all have been sought for any work. Walmart has targeted this store because the Associates have been among the most active Associates around the country to improve working conditions

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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?
4/21/2015 11:00:49 AM

US starts training Ukrainians to fight pro-Russia forces

AFP

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US, Ukraine Kick Off Joint Military Exercises

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Yavoriv (Ukraine) (AFP) - US paratroopers on Monday began training Ukrainian government forces who will fight pro-Russian separatists in the east, angering Moscow as the deadly conflict rumbles on in the ex-Soviet country.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko welcomed troops from the US 173rd Airborne Brigade in a rain-soaked ceremony at a military base in Yavoriv, western Ukraine, to launch Operation Fearless Guardian.

"We are the eyewitnesses and direct participants in forming the new Ukrainian military, which like the phoenix is rising again after years of decline," Poroshenko told the assembled troops.

"This is not only a war for the independence of Ukraine, but also a war for freedom and democracy in Europe and the whole world."

Officials said some 300 US troops will train 900 members of Ukraine's National Guard, which is deployed in the east where heavy artillery fire is rumbling on despite a February ceasefire.

More than 6,000 people have been killed in the conflict in the past year and more than a million civilians have been displaced, according to the United Nations.

US Army Major Michael Weisman told AFP the mission would provide training in individual and medical skills and defence manoeuvres with the kind of weapons already used by the Ukrainian forces such as AK-47 assault rifles.

As the US brigade arrived in Ukraine last week from its base in Italy, Russia warned the move could "destabilize" Ukraine and said it was a step towards the United States arming.

- Alleged Russian arms deliveries -

Washington has sent $75 million (70 million euros) worth of non-lethal military aid to Kiev, but has so far held off from supplying arms.

And the United States plans to give another $17.7 million in humanitarian assistance for those in need, such as shelter, health and sanitation support, food vouchers and potable water, the White House said.

Britain has also deployed personnel to Ukraine to train government forces, in a mission that ministers said would involve up to 75 trainers at a time. Canada announced last week it would also send 200 trainers in the summer.

US troops have trained with Ukrainian forces in the past, but this is the first time Washington has trained members of Ukraine's recently reformed National Guard.

"It is the first time that joint exercises of such scale and content have been carried out in Ukraine," Poroshenko said.

"I am sure the exercises we are launching here today will be effective in reinforcing and stabilising the situation."

Kiev and the West say there is mounting evidence that Russia is arming separatists who control parts of eastern Ukraine and is sending troops to fight alongside them. Russia has repeatedly denied this.

In a telephone call, Poroshenko and US Vice President Joe Biden "called on Russia to abide by the terms of the Minsk agreements and to stop the transfer of heavy weapons into Ukraine and massing of troops along the international border," the White House said.

Ukrainian army spokesman Andriy Lysenko said shelling in the east eased on Sunday, but intelligence services had detected scores of vehicles bringing arms into eastern Ukraine from Russia over recent days.

Moscow accuses the United States of backing an uprising that preceded the ousting of Ukraine's former pro-Russia president Viktor Yanukovych in February last year. Moscow subsequently annexed the Crimean peninsula.

France and Germany brokered a ceasefire agreement in February, but European OSCE observers in eastern Ukraine say exchanges of artillery fire have continued over recent weeks.

However, OSCE Secretary General Lamberto Zannier said monitors had brokered a truce in one flashpoint village, Shyrokyne, near the strategic government-held city of Mariupol.

"There is a good chance for peace at this moment and we need to invest as much as we can in this," Zannier told AFP during a visit to Lithuania.

"But there is always a risk of relapse in the conflict."

Poroshenko said there had been negotiations on setting up a 24-hour observation post for the OSCE in Shyrokyne, in comments quoted by the Interfax-Ukraine news agency.

"We hope that it will be achieved in the coming days through joint efforts with our partners," he added.





"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?
4/21/2015 11:11:42 AM

Sapling planted in Michael Brown's memory destroyed

Associated Press

A baseball cap and a portrait of Michael Brown is shown alongside his casket inside Friendly Temple Missionary Baptist Church before the start of funeral services in St. Louis, Missouri, August 25, 2014. Family, politicians and activists gathered for the funeral on Monday following weeks of unrest with at times violent protests spawning headlines around the world focusing attention on racial issues in the United States. REUTERS/Robert Cohen/Pool


FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, say they will replace two recently planted saplings this week, including one planted in memory of 18-year-old Michael Brown.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/1yKcJeM ) reports that both trees were found damaged Sunday. They were planted in January in Wabash Park and had been donated by the Black Caucus of the American Library Association.

One of the trees was dedicated to Brown, who was fatally shot by Ferguson officer Darren Wilson in August, setting off months of protests. The second sapling was dedicated by a Ferguson resident to a dead pet.

Less than 24 hours after being planted, memorial tree for Mike Brown cut in half, stone memorial stolen http://www.kmov.com/story/28842731/memorial-tree-for-michael-brown-cut-in-half-stone-memorial-missing#.VTTwjpLkUbR.twitter


City officials say both trees were chopped off at the trunk. Concrete plaques placed at the bases of both trees were taken.

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Information from: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, http://www.stltoday.com

Related video:

Ferguson, Missouri works to rebuild


"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?
4/21/2015 3:29:59 PM

Questions, answers about federal anti-radicalization effort

Associated Press

In this March, 27, 2015 photo,Youssef Edghouch listens during a discussion on American Muslims and civic engagement from the local to the national level, at the Islamic Center of San Gabriel Valley in Rowland Heights, Calif. The Obama administration has launched a pilot program in several cities charged with tackling global terrorism on a local scale by preventing radicalization from taking root. If the efforts are successful, they would be rolled out nationwide. (AP Photo/Christine Cotter)


The Obama administration is piloting programs in Boston, Los Angeles and Minneapolis focused on tackling global terrorism on a local scale. But some community members and activists worry the efforts will amount to wide-scale government surveillance of Muslim communities. Some questions and answers about the initiative:

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WHAT IS THIS PROGRAM, IN A NUTSHELL?

At its core, officials say, the program called Countering Violent Extremism is about developing local programs aimed at preventing youths and other vulnerable people from joining extremist groups. The effort draws some parallels to gang and gun violence prevention efforts already in place in cities nationwide.

The program is part of President Barack Obama's overall plan to address rising extremism worldwide. It involves U.S. attorneys' offices, the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, other major law enforcement agencies and, critically, local faith-based and community groups.

Other countries, notably in Europe, have instituted similar programs with varying degrees of success. Britain's program is called Prevent and describes itself as aiming "to stop people becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism."

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HOW WERE THE PILOT CITIES CHOSEN?

The Department of Justice says the three cities were chosen primarily because local law enforcement officials there have spent years building relationships with Muslim and other minority communities. That, the department says, makes them a logical starting point to test new strategies, which, if successful, would be tried out in other cities.

The three cities have also had recent experiences with homegrown terrorism. Boston was the site of the 2013 marathon bombings, which were perpetrated by two Cambridge-raised brothers seeking to retaliate for U.S. attacks in Muslim countries.

Minnesota, home to the largest Somali population in the U.S., has seen nearly two dozen young Somali men recruited to fight for al-Shabab, an al-Qaida-linked group, since 2007, and a handful more have gone to fight in Syria.

In the Los Angeles area, four men were sentenced to prison this year for their role in a conspiracy to travel to Afghanistan to kill U.S. troops and support terrorists.

On Sunday, six people were arrested in Minneapolis and San Diego as part of an investigation into youths who have traveled or tried to travel to Syria to fight with militants.

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WHO'S PAYING FOR IT?

There is no official funding for the pilot programs, but local agencies and community groups have already committed time and manpower to try and get it off the ground.

Obama, in the federal budget he proposed in February, has called for a $15 million allocation, to be split among the cities to bolster their efforts. Local organizers say that money is critical to making many of their plans a reality. The request, along with the president's overall spending plan, is currently before Congress.

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HOW DOES IT WORK?

The pilot cities have each come up with a rough plan for how they intend to approach the issue. These plans were unveiled at a White House summit in February after months of local development.

BOSTON: A few initiatives are geared specifically to violent extremism, such as inviting experts to talk about the various types of extremist organizations or encouraging groups to develop social media messages that can combat extremist propaganda. Other programs would look to address violent extremism in the context of other challenges immigrant and minority communities face, including cultural assimilation, domestic violence, gangs, drugs and poverty.

LOS ANGELES: Programs emphasize building strong communities and involving people in the civic process. Several community-based examples government officials highlighted and hope to replicate include the American Muslim Civic Leadership Institute at the University of Southern California, which aims to identify emerging leaders and coach them; Bayan Claremont, an Islamic graduate school established in 2011, which offers a master's degree that aims to improve the ability of religious leaders to deal with racism and violence; and New Ground, an interfaith partnership created to lessen tension between Muslims and Jews.

MINNEAPOLIS: Efforts focus on the area's large Somali population. Members of that community worked with the U.S. attorney's office to develop a program that addresses the root causes of radicalization through programs such as employment help, college scholarships and social media campaigns.

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HOW IS SUCCESS MEASURED?

That remains to be seen. Organizers concede it's generally hard to measure prevention. Plus, many of the efforts are works in progress. Still, organizers promise to come up with performance metrics that will help measure success and justify any future the program has.

___

WHAT TO CALL IT?

The program's official name is Countering Violent Extremism — a blunt, aggressive moniker that even its leaders tacitly acknowledge could work against it.

In all three cities, officials have tried to avoid using the term CVE — tossed around frequently in bureaucratic documents, town halls and interviews with reporters — with specific program participants.

Related video:

Obama urges unity in fight against terrorism





Some people worry that the efforts will amount to wide-scale government surveillance of Muslim communities.

Q&A on the program


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

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