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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/7/2015 5:42:17 PM

WND EXCLUSIVE

COMING DISASTER TO 'MAKE KATRINA LOOK LIKE DISNEY WORLD'


'We are going to take all the weapons'

Published: 19 hours ago


Katrina’s damage

Ten years ago, those who lived through the nightmare of Hurricane Katrina learned how fragile civilization really is. Calm suburbia one day, and gang-controlled no man’s land the next.

But now some are warning another disaster is inevitable – and Americans are not prepared.

Manny Edwards, an emergency preparedness and security consultant and the host of “Survival Tips” on WND TV, says it is “for sure” the country will see something like Katrina again.

“And the next time it happens,” he warns, “it will make Katrina look like Disney World.”

Following Hurricane Katrina 10 years ago, civil order in the city of New Orleans broke down, with widespread looting and property destruction. Heavily armed street gangs actually invaded the city and terrorized residents before order was restored, drawing comparisons to Iraq. One military analyst on Fox even alleged New Orleans police officers were complicit in the looting.

WND reported several years back when the National Rifle Association released a series of videos revealing how, following Katrina, authorities simply seized thousands of weapons – legally obtained and owned – after New Orleans Police Superintendent P. Edwin Compass III announced, “Only law enforcement are allowed to have weapons.”

At that time, just to make sure the message was loud and clear, the city’s Deputy Police Chief Warren Riley told ABC News: “No one will be able to be armed. We are going to take all the weapons.”

Then they did exactly that.

What do YOU think? What’s your greatest concern about the next major disaster? Sound off now in today’s WND Poll!

Edwards says big government and welfare dependence have undermined America’s social capital, creating a society uniquely vulnerable to disruptions and natural disasters.

“The reality is that our society is fundamentally uncivilized, and events like Katrina bring it to our immediate attention,” he told WND. “Government welfare programs, Social Security, and ‘emergency management’ agencies like FEMA actually have a destructive effect on civilization. If you can just get a check from the government, why would you need to invest in your relationship with your neighbor? If you believe (mistakenly) that FEMA will relieve you after a hurricane, why waste time building up interdependence with your neighbor?”

Local, state, and federal government agencies were widely criticized for incompetence and their inability to protect residents in the wake of the disaster. One of the most indelible images of the Katrina response were authorities going door to door and confiscating firearms.

Such incidents, says Edwards, shows how the overweening nature of contemporary government has actually made it far more difficult for citizens to take on the responsibility of citizenship and self-government.

“There’s much you can do to help yourself and your neighbor in a crisis, but there’s very little, maybe nothing, you can do to repair the damage done by decades of depraved government,” he said. “The people have been fettered. They are not allowed to judge, because the state has a monopoly of judicial administration. They have little incentive to build up their community, because their rights and goods are dispensed from far away in Washington. Even if they want to get away from corrupt government, they aren’t allowed to; the state exploits them like cattle and will not let them out of the fences.”

Carl Gallups, a pastor, talk show host and former law enforcement officer, has lived and ministered through several hurricanes as a resident of the Northwest Florida Gulf Coast. He has recently written “Be Thou Prepared,” a guide of both spiritual and practical readiness for Christians who want to be prepared for disaster, persecution or whatever else is to come. He says the book was partially based on his direct experience.

“The area I live in took a direct hit from Hurricane Ivan in September 2004,” Gallups recalled. “The next day the region looked like a war zone, with roadways impassible, parts of the bridge destroyed, homes demolished, and grocery stores, gas stations and government offices closed. There was no power, very little communication and few emergency services available. Many people were simply left all alone. Life went from the relative ease of normal everyday American existence to a basic survival mode in one day. That’s how quickly disaster can strike.”

Gallups also experienced Katrina, “even as we were still cleaning up from Ivan.”

In both cases, the church where Gallups has served as pastor for almost 29 years was used as an emergency shelter, a community communication point, and a staging area for doling out food, water and basic survival supplies. Gallups credits his church’s careful preparations for his congregation’s ability to help those “in desperate need.”

“We initiated and assisted in the complete rebuilding of three African-American churches in the tiny town of Pearlington, Mississippi, about a two-hour drive from our church. Then we moved on to Chalmette, Louisiana – just outside of New Orleans – to help rebuild a church and community there. All of this was done while we were still cleaning up and restoring our own community and storm-shattered lives.”

Gallups found a spiritual lesson in the midst of catastrophe.

“All of this serves to remind us just how delicate life really is, no matter the comfort level at which we might currently be living,” he advised. “Christians have a biblical imperative to be prepared against ‘the day of evil,’ no matter how it might arrive. Certainly faith in God on a day-by-day basis is our first calling. But that faith in God also means we obey his word to always be prepared.

“The main reason we are to be prepared is so that we can minister the love of Jesus to the world around us – even in desperate times. And the pages of the New Testament, beginning in Acts, demonstrate that this was the lesson that even the earliest church had to learn.”

On that note, Edwards offers some practical guidance for those who want to be prepared for the next natural disaster.

“The first priority is to have a safe retreat, or bugout location,” he instructed. “This could be the family farm in another state, a cousin’s house, or a hunting cabin in the mountains. Just make sure it’s far enough away to avoid the damage you expect from a direct hit. You should have a primary route and at least one alternate route that avoids major highways. Ideally, you would be able to reach your destination on one full tank of gas.

“Then, identify your ‘triggers’ for departure. If you’re in a high population density area, you have to be out early, before the roads get jammed. That means you have to have your vehicle stocked at all times, or at least have everything in a closet by the door ready to load, so you can leave within one hour of your decision to go. Keep an eye on the weather forecasts, and get out early.

“Once your escape plan is in place, the second priority is to shore up your preparedness in your area. A hurricane that strikes some distance away and does little damage in your area can still wreak havoc on supply lines and electrical power delivery. I recommend two weeks of food and water for everyone in the house, plus half. So for a family of four, plan for six. It is very important to coordinate with your neighbors – they are potentially your greatest resource in emergencies. You can offer mutual protection from starvation, the elements, and roving gangs, sealing off your neighborhood if necessary, but it requires cooperation… the kind of thing civilized society is built on.”

Unfortunately, Edwards believes far fewer people are capable of that kind of cooperation today than there were in the past. And he suggests the inability of people to care for themselves is ultimately the result of a lack of faith.

“The power to govern should reside within society, but it doesn’t,” he said. “It is held by people who are exempt from the rules by which they govern, and they never suffer the consequences of their bad decisions, so there’s no incentive for them to avoid making them.

“However, in a sense, it is not just a failure of government, but a failure of the people, who for no good reason that I can fathom have trusted this elite group of people with the power to exploit them and control their destiny. I firmly believe that the very existence of the state is the result of a lack of the people to trust in God.”

Edwards is also the author of “The Truth About Liberty,” and he encourages those who want to book him for a security consulting to email him atmannyedwards@gmail.com. Security, he warns, requires a specific plan.

“The principles of preparation are quite broadly applicable, but the details of preparation are unique for every family,” he said. “I highly recommend that everyone consult an emergency preparedness expert, and encourage their friends and neighbors to do the same – for everyone’s benefit.”

Gallups also pleads with people not to ignore the issue of preparedness. Having seen the consequences of neglect, Gallups says he could not keep his hard-won lessons to himself.

Said the pastor: “This is why I wrote the book ‘Be Thou Prepared.’ It comes with my 40 years of combined law enforcement and ministerial life. I have ministered in, and worked through, the tough and disastrous emergency times of people’s lives for decades. I have learned a lot during those years and wanted to share the benefit of the biblical and practical wisdom and knowledge that the Lord has given to me.

“The book, I hope, is a treasure trove of biblical perspective, mental and emotional preparation, as well as offering tons of logistical information on how an individual Christian or church family can prepare for the potentially tough times ahead without feeling like they have stepped over the lines of common sense and a biblical faith-walk with the Lord.”

The images from the NRA are not to be forgotten. See them:

Part 1:


Part 2:


Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2015/09/coming-disaster-to-make-katrina-look-like-disney-world/#sQsSGLzQoEQLoxbG.99

"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?
9/8/2015 10:49:34 AM
Weaker future hurricanes?

Study: Are we shifting to fewer, weaker Atlantic hurricanes?

Associated Press

Paul Garrett, 56, and his neighbor's dog, Rusty, whom he rescued during Hurricane Katrina, walk the streets of the 9th ward on their way home. "Everybody left," said Garrett, a former longshoreman. "I stayed." Garrett said he stayed to help the neighborhood's elderly and sick. "Everybody can't leave," he said. "I'm lookin' [sic] out for people who can't help themselves. Especially the older people. See, I'm just a 'junior citizen.' They're 'senior citizens'," he continued. "You got a lot of people in this city who don't care for each other. I feel like we should pull together now instead of apart. It's gotten worse. It's not right," he said. (Dina Rudick/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)


WASHINGTON (AP) — A new but controversial study asks if an end is coming to the busy Atlantic hurricane seasons of recent decades.

The Atlantic looks like it is entering in to a new quieter cycle of storm activity, like in the 1970s and 1980s, two prominent hurricane researchers wrote Monday in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Scientists at Colorado State University, including the professor who pioneered hurricane seasonal prognostication, say they are seeing a localized cooling and salinity level drop in the North Atlantic near Greenland. Those conditions, they theorize, change local weather and ocean patterns and form an on-again, off-again cycle in hurricane activity that they trace back to the late 1800s.

Warmer saltier produces periods of more and stronger storms followed by cooler less salty water triggering a similar period of fewer and weaker hurricanes, the scientists say. The periods last about 25 years, sometimes more, sometimes less. The busy cycle that just ended was one of the shorter ones, perhaps because it was so strong that it ran out of energy, said study lead author Phil Klotzbach.

Klotzbach said since about 2012 there's been more localized cooling in the key area and less salt, suggesting a new, quieter period. But Klotzbach said it is too soon to be certain that one has begun.

"We're just asking the question," he said.

But he said he thinks the answer is yes. He says the busy cycle started around 1995 and probably ended in 2012; in 2005 alone, Katrina, Rita and Wilma killed more than 1,500 people and caused billions of dollars of damage. The quiet cycle before that went from about 1970 to 1994 and before that it was busy from 1926 until 1969, he said.

Klotzbach doesn't take into account where a storm hits, but how strong storms are and how long they last regardless of whether they make landfall. So even though no major hurricane hit the United States in 2010, its overall activity was more than 60 percent higher than normal. And just because it's a quiet season doesn't mean a city can't be devastated, Klotzbach said. Hurricane Andrew hit South Florida in an otherwise quiet 1992 season as a top-of-the-scale storm.

Other scientists either reject the study outright or call it premature.

"I think they're pretty much wrong about this," said MIT meteorology professor Kerry Emanuel, who also specializes in hurricane research. "That paper is not backed by a lot of evidence."

Emanuel doesn't believe in the cycle cited by the researchers or the connection to ocean temperature and salinity. He thinks the quiet period of hurricanes of the 1970s and 1980s is connected to sulfur pollution and the busy period that followed is a result of the cleaning of the air. And Jim Kossin of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said cooler water temperatures earlier this year might be due to Atlantic dust, and August temperatures there have risen.

Another NOAA scientist, Gabriel Vecchi, said while there seems to be signs of a change in the circulation of the Atlantic, it's far too early to say that the shift has happened.

"So what happens in the next few years is going to be very exciting to watch as it may help settle or at least refine some intense scientific debates," Vecchi said in an email.

___

Online:

Nature Geoscience: http://www.nature.com/ngeo

___

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears



Study: Fewer, weaker Atlantic hurricanes ahead?


A controversial study posits a quieter cycle of storm activity in the next two decades given localized cooling.
Salinity level drop


"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?
9/8/2015 11:11:42 AM

Britain to take 20,000 Syrian refugees over five years

AFP

A boy walks past tents in a Syrian Kurdish refugee camp in the town of Suruc in Turkey's southern Sanliurfa province on October 11, 2014 (AFP Photo/Aris Messinis)


London (AFP) - Britain will take 20,000 Syrian refugees from camps near the war-torn country's borders over the next five years, Prime Minister David Cameron said Monday, under pressure to address the crisis.

"We are proposing the UK should resettle up to 20,000 refugees over the life of this parliament," Cameron said in a speech in the House of Commons.

"In doing so we will continue to show the world that this is a country of extraordinary compassion always standing up for our values and helping those in need."

Britain will continue to take refugees from the camps and from elsewhere in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, he said.

"This provides refugees with a more direct and safe route to the UK, rather than risking the hazardous journey to Europe," Cameron said.

Vulnerable refugees such as orphans will be given priority, according to the prime minister, who has come under mounting pressure after the image of a dead Syrian toddler washed up on a Turkish beach sparked a groundswell of public sympathy.

The refugees will be funded for the first year of their stay, with the money coming from Britain's foreign aid budget.

More than 40 local authorities in Britain have said they are willing to offer sanctuary to Syrian refugees following a request from Labour leadership contender Yvette Cooper.

"The whole country has been deeply moved by the heart-breaking images we have seen over the past few days," the Prime Minister added.

But he cautioned that Britain must "use our head and our heart" to address "the causes of the problem as well as the consequences" and pledged to "help to stabilise countries where the refugees are coming from".

He said he would "seek a solution to the crisis in Syria, push for the formation of a new unity government in Libya and bust the criminal gangs."

Charity Oxfam welcomed Cameron's announcement, calling it an important first step.

"It will give much-needed respite to people fleeing horrors most of us can only imagine," said Mark Goldring, Oxfam's chief executive.

"This is a good step forward, but its far from job done."

Britain has accepted 216 Syrian refugees over the past year and granted asylum to almost 5,000 Syrians since the conflict there broke out in 2011 -- far fewer than countries like France, Germany and Sweden.

Britain opted out of a quota system for asylum seekers within the European Union despite growing calls in the EU for fairer distribution.

More than four million Syrians have fled the war.

Cameron said Britain had been working to "tackle the threat (of IS) at source" with British aircraft carrying out nearly 300 airstrikes over Iraq and conducting airborne surveillance missions over Syria.

"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?
9/8/2015 11:21:13 AM

U.S. rethinks strategy for battling Islamic State in Syria: NYT

Reuters

A member of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent carries a girl as they rush away from a site hit by what activists said were airstrikes by forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad in the Douma neighborhood of Damascus, Syria August 24, 2015. (REUTERS/Bassam Khabieh)


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States is rethinking its strategy for battling the Islamic State in Syria, the New York Times reported on Monday, with the Pentagon looking into moving more fighters into safer zones, providing better intelligence and improving the skills of trained rebels.

The options, which are classified, are circulating among top officials at the Department of Defense, the newspaper reported, citing sources who spoke on condition of anonymity.

They include enlarging the size of the groups of trained rebels sent back into Syria and shifting the location of the deployments to places where there is more local support, the Times reported.

Highlighting the fragility of U.S.-led efforts to train and equip thousands of Syrian opposition members, the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front said in July it had detained some of a first group of less than 60 U.S.-trained rebels weeks after they were deployed.

Last month the U.S.-led coalition began focusing on deploying rebel fighters trained in Turkey to push the insurgent Islamic State away from Syria's borders.

(Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by Paul Simao)

Related video:

US Military Conducts Dozens of Air Strikes Against Islamic State (video)

"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?
9/8/2015 4:19:54 PM

As Iran Deal Is Talked Up in Washington, Israel, Iran Prepare for War


The Iran Deal: Another Obama publicity stunt with deadly consequences.


With an eye on Iran and other complex, heavily defended theaters, Israel is building up the infrastructure and indigenous capabilities needed to begin operating its first F-35 Adir (Awesome) stealth strike fighters by the end of 2017.

…“The stealth and other advanced capabilities provided by this fifth-generation fighter are self-evident,” an IAF officer told Defense News when asked how the F-35 would maintain superiority over advanced anti-air systems, like the Russian S300 slated for delivery to Iran.

…“Your options for attacking the enemy are much more numerous and practical,” said Maj. E., an Adir project manager and one of the initial cadre of pilots tapped to fly the F-35.

“The things that we could do before will entail much less risk, and the things we might not have been able to do before will be rendered doable,” said the officer, whose full name was withheld from publication for security reasons.

“We’re studying proof of concept trade studies on carrying extra fuel,” a Lockheed Martin program official told Defense News. “After you own the air space, you won’t have to worry about stealth. So then you can add external tanks because you won’t be worried about being detected.”

Israeli defense and industry sources said that ultimately they hope to develop F-35 conformal fuel tanks that are stealthy. Nevertheless, they say it is well worth the effort given that it will more than double the range with very low risk of detection.

Only days later, IMRA picked up on this report from the Iranians:

Managing Director of Iranian Electronic Industries Company Hossein Baqeri announced on Sunday that the country’s experts and engineers have designed and manufactured a radar system that can identify approaching flights from the most remote areas and high-altitudes.

As Dr. Aaron Lerner concluded:

The question is not if the F-35′s can address the S-300 system. The real question is how long it might take Iran to implement Chinese and Russian technology to intercept F-35′s. Iran certainly will have the money and the technology is “defensive” in nature and thus not even technically covered by restrictions. The answer to this question delineates the “window” Israel has to act against Iran.

Renders any idea of a “deal” with Iran rather moot, doesn’t it? Almost as if it’s a huge publicity stunt to deflect attention from the reality on the ground in the Middle East.

_______

A member of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards chants slogans after attacking a naval vessel during a military drill in the Strait of Hormuz in southern Iran, February 25, 2015. (photo credit: Hamed Jafarnejad/AFP/Fars News)


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

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