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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/20/2015 11:11:06 AM

Yemen rebel fire kills civilians as Aden battle rages

AFP

Yemeni fighters loyal to exiled President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi display a Saudi national flag next to the Saudi consulate in Aden after they retook it from Shiite Huthi rebels on July 16, 2015 (AFP Photo/Saleh Al-Obeidi)


Aden (AFP) - At least 57 civilians were killed on Sunday when Shiite rebels bombarded Yemen's second city Aden, where Saudi-backed pro-government forces have made gains against the insurgents, a health official said.

The bloodshed came two days after Prime Minister Khaled Bahah declared the city to be "liberated", although Iran-backed rebels continued to resist in some districts.

Local health chief Al-Khader Laswar told AFP that the death toll had risen to 57 from 43, and that 12 children and six women were among the dead.

More than 215 people, also including women and children, were wounded when the Dar Saad neighbourhood in the north of the port city was targeted, Laswar said.

Backed by air support from Saudi-led warplanes and troops freshly trained in the kingdom, forces loyal to exiled President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi have managed to wrest back control of most of Aden.

Two ministers from the government exiled in Saudi Arabia returned to Aden this weekend, and on Sunday they toured the southern city devastated by four months of ferocious fighting.

On Sunday, fighters from the pro-Hadi Popular Resistance advanced towards the rebel-held district of Al-Tawahi, a military source said.

- Air strikes hit rebels -

Aden's presidential residence is in the district, where Hadi took refuge after escaping house arrest under the rebels in Sanaa in February, before then being forced to flee for Saudi Arabia.

Warplanes from a Saudi-led Arab coalition have pressed an air campaign launched in March in support of Hadi and against the Huthis and renegade troops loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

Since late Saturday, around 15 air strikes targeted rebel positions in Al-Tawahi and on the northern outskirts of the city where the rebels had brought in reinforcements, military sources and witnesses said.

There was also fighting in the Crater district where some rebels remain holed up, according to pro-Hadi fighters.

Nine rebels were killed in a raid on Khormaksar neighbourhood, witnesses said.

The interior and transportation ministers headed a delegation from the exiled government that landed in Aden on Friday night.

On Sunday they also took part in a meeting that looked into reopening the airport and the port to allow the flow of much-needed aid, as well as the restoration of electricity and water services, state media said.

Loyalist forces took the airport shortly after an assault dubbed "Operation Golden Arrow" began on Tuesday.

- 'There is no life!' -

Some displaced residents have returned to assess the damage to their houses and neighbourhoods.

"There is no life! No hospitals, no electricity, nor water. If it was not for the two wells of the neighbourhood, people would have died of thirst," said Crater resident Moatez al-Mayssuri.

A rebel spokesman dismissed the government's claims on Saturday that it now controlled Aden as "psychological warfare and an attempt to improve the crushed morale" of loyalist fighters.

On Sunday, the spokesman for the Huthis' Ansarullah movement Mohammed Abdulsalam said the rebels had "regained the lead and repelled several attacks by the mercenaries".

The rebels, meanwhile, also targeted Saudi positions across Yemen's northern border in Najran and Jizan, according to the rebel-controlled Saba news agency which cited a military source.

Elsewhere, firefighters managed to extinguish a huge blaze at a gas depot southwest of Taez in central Yemen after it was shelled by rebels, according to the government-run news agency.

The United Nations has declared Yemen a level-3 humanitarian emergency, the highest on its scale.

After weeks of shuttle diplomacy between the two sides, the UN announced a humanitarian truce last weekend to allow the delivery of desperately needed relief supplies, but the ceasefire failed to take hold.

More than 21.1 million people -- over 80 percent of Yemen's population -- need aid, with 13 million facing food shortages.

Upwards of 3,200 people have been killed in the fighting -- many of them civilians, the UN 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?
7/20/2015 11:18:17 AM

8,000 HIV patients at risk in Eastern Ukraine: UN envoy

AFP

Ukrainian soldiers roll through the village of Bobrovyshche in the small Ukrainian town of Mukacheve on July 13, 2015 (AFP Photo/Alexander Zobin)


Vancouver (AFP) - Some 8,000 people with HIV in war-torn eastern Ukraine face a critical shortage of medicine and their supply will run out in mid-August unless a blockade is lifted, a UN AIDS envoy has warned.

Speaking to AFP ahead of the International AIDS Society (IAS) conference, which opened Sunday, Michel Kazatchkine called on key nations to intervene as soon as possible.

"I am calling on the United States, Germany, France, Ukraine and Russia to do something," said Kazatchkine, the UN Secretary General's special envoy for AIDS in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

He said 8,000 patients are "caught in the political crossfire between the Ukrainian government and Russian-supported fighters" because they need both antiretroviral treatments and opioids, which are now blocked at border check points.

The looming crisis is centered in the mostly Russian-speaking Lugansk and Donetsk regions.

The area once housed 25 percent of Ukraine's HIV-positive population, but thousands have ready fled, said Kazatchkine.

The 8,000 who remain are mainly injection drug users whose addictions are being treated with opioid substitution therapy (OST), and who are also taking antiretroviral drugs to keep their HIV infections under control.

He said the treatments are already paid for and the aid group Doctors Without Borders has pledged to deliver and oversee treatment.

But Ukraine will not allow the drugs to be shipped and argues the opioids require armed convoys, said Kazatchkine.

Russia bans the use of opioids to help wean addicts off drug addiction.


"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?
7/20/2015 2:23:35 PM

Amid epic drought, California farmers turn to water witches

Rejected by scientists, dowsing is an ancient tradition that’s dying hard in the Central Valley’s parched fields

Yahoo News

Vern Tassey, a water witch, with his divining tools in an orange grove in Lindsay, Calif. (Photo: Holly Bailey/Yahoo News)


LINDSAY, Calif. — Vern Tassey doesn’t advertise. He’s never even had a business card. But here in California’s Central Valley, word has gotten around that he’s a man with “the gift,” and Tassey, a plainspoken, 76-year-old grandfather, has never been busier.

Farmers call him day and night — some from as far away as the outskirts of San Francisco and even across the state line in Nevada. They ask, sometimes even beg, him to come to their land. “Name your price,” one told him. But Tassey has so far declined. What he does has never been about money, he says, and he prefers to work closer to home.

And that’s where he was on a recent Wednesday morning, quietly marching along the edge of a bushy orange grove here in the heart of California’s citrus belt, where he’s lived nearly his entire life. Dressed in faded Wranglers, dusty work boots and an old cap, Tassey held in his hands a slender metal rod, which he clutched close to his chest and positioned outward like a sword as he slowly walked along the trees. Suddenly, the rod began to bounce up and down, as if it were possessed, and he quickly paused and scratched a spot in the dirt with his foot before continuing on.

A few feet away stood the Wollenmans — Guy, his brother Jody and their cousin Tommy — third-generation citrus farmers whose family maintains some of the oldest orange groves in the region. Like so many Central Valley farmers, their legacy is in danger — put at risk by California’s worst drought in decades. The lack of rain and snow runoff from the nearby Sierra Nevada has caused many of their wells to go dry. To save their hundreds of acres of trees, they’ll need to find new, deeper sources of water — and that’s where Tassey comes in.

View galleryNew citrus plantings near Lindsay, Calif., a town hard hit by the drought (Holly Bailey/Yahoo News)

New citrus plantings near Lindsay, Calif., a town hard hit by the drought (Holly Bailey/Yahoo News)

Tassey is what is known as a “water witch,” or a dowser — someone who uses little more than intuition and a rod or a stick to locate underground sources of water. It’s an ancient art that dates back at least to the 1500s — though some dowsers have argued the origins are even earlier, pointing to what they say is Biblical evidence of Moses using a rod to summon water. In California, farmers have been “witching the land” for decades — though the practitioners of this obscure ritual have never been as high profile or as in demand as during the last year.

With nearly 50 percent of the state in “exceptional drought” — the highest intensity on the scale — and no immediate relief in sight, Californians are increasingly turning to spiritual methods and even magic in their desperation to bring an end to the dry spell. At greatest risk is the state’s central farming valley, a region that provides fully half the nation’s fruit and vegetables. Already, hundreds of thousands of acres have been fallowed, and farmers say if they can’t find water to sustain their remaining crops, the drought could destroy their livelihoods, cause mass unemployment and damage the land in ways that could take decades to recover.

With nearly 50 percent of the state in “exceptional drought,” Californians are increasingly turning to spiritual methods and even magic in their desperation to bring an end to the dry spell.

Across the Central Valley, churches are admonishing their parishioners to pray for rain. Native American tribal leaders have been called in to say blessings on the land in hopes that water will come. But perhaps nothing is more unorthodox or popular than the water witches — even though the practice has been scorned by scientists and government officials who say there’s no evidence that water divining, as it is also known, actually works. They’ve dismissed the dowsers’ occasional success as the equivalent of a fortunate roll of the dice — nothing but pure, simple luck. But as the drought is expected to only get worse in coming months, it’s a gamble that many California farmers seem increasingly willing to take.

With many farms limited or even cut off from government-allocated irrigation water this year, growers like the Wollenmans have been forced to rely on their groundwater wells — most of which were built more than 50 years ago and are less than 200 feet deep. In a normal year of regular rainfall, that would usually suffice, but with so many straws in the cup, wells across the Central Valley are quickly going dry. Farmers are being forced to drill deeper to tap into the aquifer below — an expensive proposition that can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more. It’s a desperate attempt to survive what many describe as a slow-moving natural disaster on par with the Dust Bowl.

A dust devil rises up in a citrus grove along Highway 65 in Tulare County, Calif (Holly Bailey/Yahoo News)

State officials recommend that farmers who are planning to dig should hire a hydrogeologist to survey their land to find a spot for a productive well. But the first call many farmers make is to a water witch — who charges a fraction of the price and, some insist, is often just as accurate.

On this Wednesday, Tassey was charging the Wollenmans just $100 — his usual fee — to look for water in one of their orange groves. They’d been working with him for years — and before that, they’d used another witch to help them find water, just as their parents had when they first came here in the 1940s as one of the first citrus growers in Lindsay.

“We’ve always used someone,” Guy Wollenman said as he watched Tassey work. “Most farmers do. They don’t drill a hole without someone like Vern to help them find the best spots.”

“It’s an energy of some sort. … Like how some people can run a Ouija board. You either have it or you don’t.”
— Marc Mondavi

The severity of the latest drought has raised the ante even higher. With landowners across the valley desperate to tap into water, it costs thousands of dollars just to get on a waitlist for drilling that is often several months long. Desperate farmers have little margin for error. If they drill a hole and find nothing, it’s money that’s gone, and they are back on the waitlist again. They are betting on witches to help them find the magic mark.

A few feet away, Tassey continued to pace back and forth along the line of orange trees, and as he worked, a strange hush settled over the scene. Soon, the only sound was Tassey’s footsteps crunching dead leaves on the sandy ground as a nearby dog began to bark. The farmers quietly followed at a distance, careful not to disrupt Tassey’s concentration.

“It will start bouncing,” Jody Wollenman explained in a low voice, pointing to the metal rod in Tassey’s hands. “When he hits the aquifer, it will start moving. It tells you the width of the aquifer by the strength of the bounce.”

An Oklahoma native who moved to the Central Valley with his family in the aftermath of the Dust Bowl when he was just 7, Tassey discovered he had the “gift” during California’s last devastating drought in the late 1970s. A colleague at a drilling company often witched the land before they dug wells, and intrigued, Tassey asked if he could give it a try. The rest, he said, is history.

It’s never bothered Tassey that people call him a witch — though lately it’s gotten him into a little trouble with folks at church. A few weeks earlier, a local television station out of Fresno came down to interview him after hearing of his skill. He’d never been on television before. “The reporter asked me if I dabbled in witchcraft. Do I worship the devil?” he laughed. A few days later at church, Tassey, a Baptist, got pulled aside by one of the church elders just to make sure.

A tree stump from a removed citrus tree sits in front of a healthy orange grove in Lindsay, Calif. (Holly Bailey/Yahoo …

As Tassey paced down the line of trees, the farmers followed quietly. After a moment, Tommy Wollenman, who is also a general manager at LoBue Citrus, a grower and distributor in town, tried to lighten the mood. “Ommmm,” he jokingly began to chant. A few feet away, the metal rod in Tassey’s hands suddenly began to move feverishly up and down. Wollenman paused. “That’s amazing,” he said.

As the farmers walked closer, Tassey scratched a mark in the ground and grabbed another tool — this one a metal rod crafted into a Y shape, almost like a wishbone. He backed up along the path and walked forward again, retracing his steps. He was, he explained, using this tool to “fine-tune” his discovery. With this, he’d be able to more accurately guess the route of the aquifer below and suggest where drillers should dig to capture the best volume. In his hands, his guiding rod seemed to bounce again, and Tassey stopped, marking another spot.

Moving in, Tommy Wollenman reached down and quickly planted a tiny metal stake with an orange flag in the spot. “Oh!” he cried, a teasing smile on his face. “I think there’s water coming up already!”

No one knows how many water witches there are. They don’t exactly advertise in the phone book or the newspaper. There is an organization — the American Society of Dowsers, which has hundreds of members scattered across local chapters throughout the country. But many water witches like Tassey seem to work on their own. The U.S. Geological Survey, which issued a brochure discrediting the practice of dowsers, estimates there may be thousands roaming the nation’s agricultural lands in search of water — though the agency admits even it isn’t sure.

Water witches have been a fixture in California agriculture for about as long as people here can remember. Everyone knows of someone who’s used one or a person who had “the gift” — or at least thought they did. Even John Steinbeck immortalized the role of the dowser in his seminal novel “East of Eden,” set in California’s Salinas Valley.ew gallery


In this photo taken Feb. 13, 2014, proprietor Marc Mondavi demonstrates dowsing with divining rods to locate water …

In the book, Adam Trask hires Samuel Hamilton to find water on land he hopes to transform into his own personal Eden. When Trask asks Hamilton how his divining stick works, the fictional witch confesses that he’s not really sure and suggests it’s perhaps his own instinct, not an instrument, driving the magic. “Maybe I know where the water is, feel it in my skin,” Hamilton explains.

Ask a witch in real life how the magic works or why they were blessed with “the gift,” and most confess they don’t know. In Napa Valley, Marc Mondavi, a vintner whose family is part of the state’s wine aristocracy, discovered his ability decades ago when a high school girlfriend’s father who was a dowser took him out into the vineyard to see if he had any skills. Mondavi was only 17. “He used these willow forks, and he handed them to me and said, ‘Go,’” he recalled. “And sure enough, they bent down.”

At the time, Mondavi didn’t know if he really believed he had the skill. But years later, while in college, he summoned his ability again when his family planned to drill a new well on their property. They had called on the expertise of the most popular dowser in wine country, a vineyard manager named Frank Wood, who at the time was witching almost all the land around Napa. When Mondavi mentioned to him that he believed he had the gift, Wood became his mentor and taught him everything he knew.

Scientists roll their eyes at the phenomenon. Graham Fogg, a hydrologist at the University of California, Davis, called it “folklore.”

“It’s an energy of some sort. ... Like how some people can run a Ouija board. You either have it or you don’t. You can’t learn how to get it, but if you do have it, you have to learn how to use it,” he said. “It took me years to get my confidence. ... At first, you are a bit leery of telling someone they are going to have to go dig a $50,000 hole. What if nothing is there? But over time, I learned to trust.”

Now at 61, Mondavi is the go-to water witch for Napa — servicing some of the top wine producers in the country. Among his clients is Bronco Wine Company, the nation’s fourth-largest winemaker, which makes Charles Shaw’s “Two Buck Chuck” and dozens of other brands. He knows what geologists say about witches like him, and he relishes the idea of proving them wrong. “They think we’re ridiculous, that it’s all luck,” he said. “I get it. There’s no science that explains any of it.”

A roll of recovered sprinkler lines sits adjacent to bulldozed orange grove in Lindsay, Calif. (Holly Bailey/Yahoo …

Pausing, Mondavi can’t help but smile. “I’m good,” he says, a sly grin on his face. “I’m not afraid to blow my own horn. I’m good at this.”

Scientists roll their eyes at the phenomenon. Graham Fogg, a hydrologist at the University of California, Davis, called it “folklore” and said there is no scientific proof that dowsers have any special skill at finding water. The reason dowsers often appear successful, he argued, is because “groundwater is ubiquitous.” Anybody with a basic knowledge of an aquifer is likely to be able to tap into something.

“Groundwater occurs virtually everywhere at some depth beneath the surface of the earth, so regardless of where you drill, you will virtually always hit the water table at some depth,” Fogg said.

The vibrating or movement of the diving rods or sticks, scientists argue, is nothing more than show.

“We’ve always used someone. Most farmers do. They don’t drill a hole without someone like Vern to help them find the best spots.”Lorem
— Guy Wollenman

In spite of the skepticism, some high-profile figures seem unwilling to miss a chance at finding water. Last year, at the suggestion of a cousin, California Gov. Jerry Brown had a pair of water witches go over land he owns in Williams, Calif., about an hour north of Sacramento, where he plans to build a home and settle when he retires. A spokesman for the governor confirmed Brown had used dowsers, but he declined to say if they found water.

Down in the Central Valley, Tassey says he would like to retire. Three times, he’s tried, but the farmers won’t let him. He’s too good at witching the wells, apparently. Farmers talk him up to each other, and even drillers have started to recommend him. He estimates he’s witched at least 100 wells so far this year — the busiest year he can recall in the four decades since he learned he had the gift.

Tassey can’t explain what makes him special, why he apparently has this ability that others do not. He had hoped that one of his four kids might have the gift, but none did. Only him. Some have speculated it has something to do with the magnetic core of the earth. He doesn’t know. He just has something, a gift that God has given him to use, and he’ll likely use it until the day he dies.

“The farmers here have been good to me all these years, to all of us here,” Tassey says. “Now it’s my turn.”

View galleryMarc Mondavi, a water witch, uses divining rods to locate an underground source of water at his property in Angwin, Calif. (Holly Bailey/Yahoo News)

Marc Mondavi, a water witch, uses divining rods to locate an underground source of water at his property in Angwin, …

"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?
7/20/2015 4:13:22 PM

Greece reopens banks, starts repaying some debts

Reuters




People make transactions at a counter inside a Piraeus Bank branch at the city of Iraklio in the island of Crete, Greece July 20, 2015. REUTERS/Stefanos Rapanis

By Lefteris Papadimas and Lefteris Karagiannopoulos

ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece reopened its banks and ordered billions of euros owed to international creditors to be repaid on Monday in the first signs of a return to normal after last week's deal to agree a tough new package of bailout reforms.

Customers queued up as bank branches opened for the first time in three weeks on Monday after they were closed to save the system from collapsing under a flood of withdrawals.

Increases in value added tax agreed under the bailout terms also took effect, with VAT on processed food and public transport jumping to 23 percent from 13 percent. The stock market remained closed until further notice. The bank closures were the most visible sign of the crisis that took Greece to the brink of leaving the euro earlier this month, potentially undermining the foundations of the single European currency.

Their reopening followed Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' reluctant acceptance of a tough package of bailout demands from European partners, but a revolt in the ruling Syriza party now threatens the stability of his government and officials say new elections may be held as early as September or October.

"It is positive that the banks are open, though the effect is psychological for people more than anything else," said 65-year-old pensioner Nikos Koulopoulos. "Because to be honest nothing much changes given the capital controls are still in place," he said.

Limits on withdrawals will remain, however -- at 420 euros ($455)per week instead of 60 euros per day previously -- and payments and wire transfers abroad will still not be possible, a situation German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Sunday was "not a normal life" and warranted swift negotiations on a new bailout, expected to be worth up to 86 billion euros.

"Capital controls and restrictions on withdrawals will remain in place but we are entering a new stage which we all hope will be one of normality," said Louka Katseli, head of the Greek bank association.

Greeks will be able to deposit cheques but not cash, pay bills as well as have access to safety deposit boxes and withdraw money without an ATM card.

Bankers said there may be minor disruptions after the extended interruption to services but said they expected services to resume largely as normal.

"I don't expect major problems, our network and the network of our competitors are ready to serve our clients," said a senior official at Piraeus Bank, one of the big four lenders. "There might be lines because many people will want to withdraw money from their deposit boxes," the official said.

Athens initiated payment 4.2 billion euros in principal and interest to the European Central Bank due on Monday after European authorities agreed last week to provide emergency funding assistance,

It is also paid 2.05 billion euros to the International Monetary Fund in arrears since June 30, when Greece became the first advanced economy to default on a loan to the IMF, along with 500 million euros owed to the Bank of Greece.

VOTE ON WEDNESDAY

Acceptance of the bailout terms and reopening of the banks have marked a new stage for Tsipras after months of difficult talks and he is now eyeing a fresh start and swift talks on the bailout aimed at keeping Greece afloat with up to 86 billion euros of new loans.

However he faces difficulties with hardline factions in his leftwing Syriza party, which came to power in January pledging to reject bailout-driven austerity.

Although the Greek parliament approved the bailout package on Thursday, the 40-year-old prime minister was forced to rely on votes from the opposition after 39 rebels from Syriza refused to back the government by voting against or abstaining.

A second vote will be held on Wednesday on measures including justice and banking reforms and a similar outcome is expected. The voting arithmetic is finely poised, however.

Together with his coalition partners from the right-wing Independent Greeks party Tsipras has 162 seats in the 300-seat parliament. But Thursday's rebellion cut his support to just 123 votes, meaning he is likely to need opposition votes again.

Some officials in the government have suggested that if support from lawmakers from within the coalition dropped below 120 votes, early elections would have to be called while the bailout was still being negotiated.

That is because under Greek law, the lowest number of votes a government can have to win a confidence motion is 120 out of 240, the minimum quorum in parliament for a vote to be valid.

Dropping below 120 would be a heavy symbolic blow but whether it would actually force Tsipras to step down is unclear given that he would have the support of the pro-European opposition parties if a confidence vote were called.

"What worries me is that some people still think that there would be no austerity if we were out of the euro. This argument is absolutely false," State Minister Nikos Pappas, one of Tsipras' closest aides, told the leftist Efimerida Ton Syntakton newspaper.

The bailout terms, which are tougher than those rejected in a referendum earlier in July, include tax hikes, pension cuts, strict curbs on public spending, an overhaul of collective bargaining rules and a transfer of 50 billion euros of state assets into a special privatization fund.

(Additional reporting by Renee Maltezou, Angeliki Koutantou; Writing by Ingrid Melander and James Mackenzie; Editing by Jon Boyle, Anna Willard, Sonya Hepinstall and Giles Elgood)

"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?
7/20/2015 5:29:10 PM

WND EXCLUSIVE

PORNOGRAPHY A PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS, SAY EXPERTS


Event in Capitol sheds light on dangers

Published: 2 days ago



By Paul Bremmer

WASHINGTON – “It is about time we took this culture back from the pornographers.”

Dr. Gail Dines, founder and president of the non-profit organization Culture Reframed, made this exhortation before a standing-room-only crowd of congressional staffers, reporters and concerned citizens in the U.S. Capitol at an event held by the National Center on Sexual Exploitation.

Dines was one of eight public health experts, social scientists and legal experts gathered in the heart of the nation’s capital on Tuesday for a symposium on the wide range of harms caused by pornography.

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation is an organization that opposes sexual exploitation by highlighting the links between pornography, sex trafficking, violence against women, child abuse, addiction and more.

All of the speakers agreed pornography is a public health crisis that must be addressed now. Dines, a leading expert on the harmful effects of porn and hypersexualization of the culture, revealed that 36 percent of the Internet is pornography. She said there are 40 million regular consumers of porn in the U.S. alone, and porn sites get more visitors each month than Netflix, Amazon and Twitter combined.

Dines said the porn industry aims to capture customers while they are young and then get them addicted for life. Given that the average American child is exposed to hardcore pornography by age 11, according to a 2007 study, pornographers seem to be doing a good job of hooking children, she said.

“We have given up our children to the porn industry!” Dines lamented.

Dr. Judith Reisman in “Sexual Sabotage” explains how the so-called “sexual freedoms” pursued by Alfred Kinsey have devastated America’s social and moral fabric. She describes Kinsey’s work as emitting “erototoxic radioactivity” for generations.

She said pornography is nothing more than hating women. She rattled off a list of violent actions all too common in porn videos today – gagging, choking, slapping, sexist name-calling and more. In other words, pornographers have decoupled sexual actions from love.

“What pornographers absolutely fear is intimacy,” Dines told the crowd. “You can’t have porn and intimacy.”

Dr. Mary Anne Layden, a psychotherapist and director of education at the Center for Cognitive Therapy at the University of Pennsylvania, sounded a similar message. She said the media feed kids the message that sex is casual – that it’s not intimate and has nothing to do with marriage. Layden also said her own research has revealed increased use of porn is related to higher psychopath scores.

She compared porn to junk food and spoke about “sexual obesity” – the widespread consumption of porn among many adults and young people that slowly erodes their health. One of the dangers of sexual obesity, she said, is that male porn users may eventually reach the point where they are unable to get aroused by real-life women.

“If you become sexually obese on junk food, you’ll miss the feast,” Layden warned.

Cordelia Anderson, founder of the National Coalition to Prevent Child Sexual Abuse and Exploitation, shared a story that spoke to Layden’s point. She once counseled a devout Christian couple that was getting a divorce because the husband, who was addicted to porn, simply couldn’t get sexually aroused by his wife anymore.

Anderson, who has served as an advocate for child sexual abuse victims for many years, said pornographic materials should not be described as “sexually explicit,” but “sexually exploitative” because women and children are exploited in the worst possible ways.

Dr. Sharon Cooper, a developmental and forensic pediatrician, works with children who have been sexually exploited. She told the audience children often don’t tell anyone when they have been abused in a porn film because they feel great guilt and shame. Their abusers often convince them what happened was their fault.

Unlike the other speakers, Ed Smart had a personal brush with the evils of pornography. Smart is vice president of the Elizabeth Smart Foundation, named after his daughter who was abducted in June 2002, at age 14, and rescued nine months later.

Smart shared the story of how a man named Brian David Mitchell, a porn addict, had abducted Elizabeth with a knife to her throat. Throughout the nine-month captivity period, Mitchell forced Elizabeth to perform all kinds of gruesome sexual acts, some of which he filmed for a porn video. Elizabeth later told her father the only thing worse than being abused was for her abuse to be filmed for the whole world to see.

Smart warned the audience porn addiction is the beginning of a slippery slope to abuse and sexual exploitation.

Dr. Melissa Farley, a practicing clinical psychologist, explained the connections between pornography, prostitution and human trafficking.

“Porn is prostitution that’s legalized as long as you get to take [the] picture,” she quipped.

Farley co-authored a 2011 study that found men who paid for prostitutes masturbated to pornography more often than non-sex buyers, and they had more often learned about sex from pornography than non-sex buyers.

Farley said porn, prostitution and trafficking amount to the same thing for victims – gross violation and abuse of their bodies. However, pornographers have de-linked their craft from the shadier professions of prostitution and trafficking to ensure profits remain high. Farley lamented that those in the porn industry count on the public’s tolerance for social injustice.

Dr. Donald Hilton, a neurosurgeon at the University of Texas, voiced a different concern about the public. He said that for too long the public has looked at porn as a First Amendment freedom of speech issue rather than as a health issue. Hilton shared his own research demonstrating that pornography is biologically addictive. He also shared research that has found porn-watching most likely causes the brain to shrink.

Ernie Allen, former president and CEO of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, pointed out children’s brains are not yet fully developed at a time when they’re being bombarded with pornographic images. The Internet, he claimed, has made “soft porn” obsolete, as hardcore pornography is now widely available for free. And that free porn has been a gateway to more hardcore porn for purchase.

Before the Internet, Allen noted, adults could simply hide pornography from children’s eyes by covering up displays in storefront windows or keeping their porn magazines at home well-hidden. But with the advent of computers, tablets, and smart phones, kids can more easily access porn. Efforts to educate parents on the dangers of pornography haven’t done much good, Allen said. And federal obscenity laws are not often enforced anymore.

Allen offered a solution: “default filtering.”

Under such a system, all websites considered inappropriate for children would be automatically blocked on every computer. Users would have to actively opt out if they didn’t want the filters.

Allen said Prime Minister David Cameron already introduced such a plan in the United Kingdom, and Cameron was able to convince all four major British Internet service providers to implement default filtering as of 2014. Incredibly, they all did it on a voluntary basis, and Allen said that offers hope that legislation may not be necessary to solve the pornography epidemic – although he assured the room full of congressional staffers that legislation would be very helpful.


Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2015/07/pornography-a-public-health-crisis-say-experts/#Vs9qlEHPAvv5Q8jT.99



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

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