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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/2/2015 12:25:43 AM
By October 30, 2015

Why do We Allow Private Banks & Families to Control the World’s Money?

Phillip J. Watt, Contributor
Waking Times

The masses can no longer escape the knowledge that they’re being taken for a walk down a dark alley. The way money is created in our global society benefits the so-called elite at the expense of the 99.9%. It doesn’t have to be this way though, all we have to do is stand up and demand that it change.

Money is no longer backed by anything concrete. It used to be, when it was attached to the gold standard, but for the last several decades if you and I were to get a loan from a bank we’re not actually being loaned anything that they physically have. Instead, they punch numbers into a computer, which creates new money that is placed directly into our bank accounts.

That’s right – they create new cash out of nothing. They don’t get it from their vault, or borrow it from another source, they just create it on their computer. This begs the question: why do we allow private stakeholders, such as the banking families that control the world’s financial and political spheres, to profit from money that was created out of thin air? Can’t we just generate new funds for the benefit of the people and direct the profits back into the community?

Of course we can. If so, we could genuinely attempt to finally overcome poverty, homelessness and other socioeconomic disadvantage. In fact, there are some places on earth that have already taken the lead in transforming the way money is created and distributed in their society.

First of course is Iceland, who not only jailed 26 bankers for their fraudulent behavior that contributed to their economic meltdown during the GFC, but they are also initiating massive reforms to their banking sector. Additionally, they are going to give every citizen a share of the profit from the sale of one of their biggest banks.

It’s only the beginning, but well done Iceland, you’re killing it (the monetary-madness, that is).

Another example is North Dakota, who operates under a public-banking model. They have designed their state-owned bank in a way that was essentially immune to the 2008 GFC. It has also outperformed the private banking industry in terms of profitability. Many matrix-media explanations focus on excess deposits or the oil boom for its success, however that is simply not true. As explained in a Global Research article:

“To what, then, are the remarkable achievements of this lone public bank attributable? The answer is something the privately-owned major media have tried to sweep under the rug: the public banking model is simply more profitable and efficient than the private model.Profits, rather than being siphoned into offshore tax havens, are recycled back into the bank, the state and the community”.

When some people hear that a system like banking can be re-designed to actually benefit society,they automatically hear ‘socialism,’ and it offends them. The reality is, the celebration of the capitalist structure and the contempt towards socialism and communism achieves nothing. Just have a look at where capitalism has gotten us, regardless if it was taken over by crony capitalism and socialism for the rich.

The simple fact remains that going backwards is not an option, and right now humanity is being controlled by a monetary system that is, to put it bluntly, a joke. We need new approaches and innovative designs to move forward to build real peace and prosperity on planet earth, so as a collective we should make it a fundamental priority to seriously look at the available short and longterm solutions that we could potentially implement, to once and for all put an end to being ruled by the banking oligarchy.

For examples of how to truly move forward read, This is How to Create True Freedom for Humanity.

If you want to contribute to the cause, sign and share the petition, here. And finally, watch this 5min video:



About the Author

Phillip J. Watt lives in Australia. He best identifies as a ‘self-help guide’. His written work deals with topics from ideology to society, as well as self-development. Follow him on Facebook or visit his website.

"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?
11/2/2015 9:36:41 AM

Syria rebels using caged captives as 'human shields': monitor

AFP

A rebel fighter with Jaish al-Islam at a training session in Eastern Ghouta on January 11, 2015 (AFP Photo/Abd Doumany)

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Beirut (AFP) - A major Syrian rebel group is using dozens of captives in metal cages as "human shields" in the largest opposition stronghold on the outskirts of Damascus, a monitor said Sunday.

Jaish al-Islam, regarded as the most powerful rebel group near the capital, has put regime soldiers and Alawite civilians it was holding in metal cages, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told AFP.

The group then placed these cages in public squares in the Eastern Ghouta region in an attempt to "prevent regime bombardment", Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

"Jaish al-Islam is using these captives and kidnapped people -- including whole families -- as human shields," he said.

Government forces regularly bombard the Eastern Ghouta area, from where rebel groups fire rockets into the capital.

On Friday, at least 70 people were killed and 550 wounded in regime bombardment of Douma, a large town in the area.

A video published by opposition news outlet Shaam Network showed cages of men and women, about five people in each, being transported on the backs of three lorries through war-ravaged streets as young children rode by on bicycles.

Speaking to camera, both men and women asked government forces to stop shelling Eastern Ghouta.

"Your women are our women. If you want to kill my mother, you will kill them too," a dark-eyed teenage boy said outside one of the trucks.

Abdel Rahman said most of the civilians were kidnapped by Jaish al-Islam two years ago outside Adra al-Ummaliyah, a regime-held neighbourhood in Eastern Ghouta.

A Jaish al-Islam spokesman was not reachable for comment.

Both regime forces and rebel groups have been criticised by rights groups for indiscriminate attacks on civilians in Syria's war, which has killed more than 250,000 people since it began in March 2011.

"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?
11/2/2015 9:57:58 AM

Is Kissinger Right About Assad and ISIS?


BY


Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger testifies at the Senate Armed Services Committee on global challenges and U.S. national security strategy on Capitol Hill in Washington January 29. Kissinger weighed in on Russia’s military intervention in Syria recently, saying the destruction of ISIS is more urgent than the overthrow of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. GARY CAMERON/REUTERS


Two of the top foreign policy minds gracing the American scene—Henry Kissinger and Richard Haass—have weighed in thoughtfully on Russia’s military intervention in Syria: what it means, where it may go, what (if anything) useful might be made of it. One need not agree with all of their respective observations and prescriptions to appreciate fully the intellectual heft they bring to the debate.

Kissinger’s October 16 piece in The Wall Street Journal attracted some criticism because of one sentence in particular, “The destruction of ISIS is more urgent than the overthrow of Bashar Assad, who has already lost over half of the area he once controlled. Making sure that this territory does not become a permanent terrorist haven must have precedence.”

Shorn of context the statement surely rankles those who have suffered from Assad regime war crimes and crimes against humanity for over four years. Indeed, stripped of context the passage offers false confirmation to those who fear that in the end Washington intends to throw in with Damascus in the battle against ISIS—the political-diplomatic end-state sought by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Yet context matters, and Mr. Kissinger threw no bouquets to Syria’s barrel bomber-in-chief.

Indeed, there is nothing in Kissinger’s sense of priority that contradicts the thesis offered in these pages: that the United States should make a major diplomatic effort to bind regional ground combat forces to a military campaign that would (in conjunction with coalition air forces) sweep ISIS from Syria, permit the establishment of a recognizable Syrian government, and enable—in the mother of all protected areas—the creation of a genuine, all-Syrian national stabilization force.

Kissinger posits that ISIS-held territory should be “reconquered either by moderate Sunni forces or outside powers....” The former could take years to accomplish, and time is the enemy. The latter is clearly the only feasible way forward. Sadly, the prevailing sentiment in the Obama administration seems to fluctuate between “It’s too hard to do” and “The regional powers won’t want to do it.” It all starts and stops with long-distance, navel-gazing analysis.

Kissinger makes the apt point that, “The U.S. proclaims the determination to remove Assad but has been unwilling to generate effective leverage—political or military—to achieve that aim.” His prescription is a “federal structure” for Syria that could “be built between the Alawite and Sunni portions.” With such a structure “a context will exist for the role of Mr. Assad, which reduces the risks of genocide or chaos leading to terrorist triumph.”

Without ruling out any scenario that can halt the violence and provide genuine protection to defenseless Syrians, Mr. Kissinger’s prescription is still problematical. It assumes that a continuing political role for Bashar al-Assad is all that stands between genocide, chaos, and a terrorist (ISIS) victory.

Yet what if Mr. Assad should fall off his bicycle and suffer a fatal heart attack? What if he, his extended family and his closest enablers were to board a plane and head for a well-earned exile in Minsk? Would any of this open the door to an unopposed and successful march on Damascus by ISIS?

It would not. The conflation of regime—the Assad-Makhluf clan and its inner circle—with government (including the Syrian Arab Army and Air Force) is understandable, but misleading. The assumption that the disappearance of the former would cause the collapse of the latter is ubiquitous, but entirely unfounded. Indeed, the departure of the regime would open the door to the kinds of internal Syrian discussions about security arrangements, transition and a united front against ISIS that are currently interrupted and preempted with midnight door knocks by regime enforcers.

Richard Haass (“Testing Putin in Syria” in Project Syndicate , October 15, 2015) advances the same regime-government conflation thesis: “As bad as the Assad government is, and as much as it has to answer for, this outcome [Putin coming to the aid of the regime] is arguably preferable in the short run to the regime’s collapse. The painful truth in Syria today is that a government implosion would most likely lead to genocide, millions more displaced people, and the establishment of the Islamic State’s so-called caliphate in Damascus.”

Leave aside how these words would be creatively and unfortunately read by millions of Syrians, “The genocidal effects of Assad’s barrel bombings and starvation sieges on largely Sunni Syrians are regrettable, but better they should continue lest they be visited upon people currently enjoying the regime’s protection.”

Surely this is not Richard Haass’s intent. Yet the question is whether the excision of a clique trying to save itself through wholesale, civilian-centric criminality is the same thing as “government implosion.” The view here is that it is not. The view here is that the removal of the regime can enable the government and its security forces to do the kind of outreach that is currently forbidden.

It is not error that inspires the false caliph—Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi—to pray for the political health of Bashar al-Assad and his family. Theirs is mainly a live-and-let-live relationship. Recent military pressures on the Assad regime came not at all from ISIS, but from rebels now under assault by Russia.

Indeed, Haass fully gets the Assad-ISIS connection. “Many fear that Russia’s latest activism will not only prolong Syria’s brutal civil war, but also strengthen the Islamic State. This could well turn out to be the case, as hatred of the Assad regime is a major recruiting tool. And, thus far at least, the Islamic State seems to be a low priority for the Russian military, which appears to be attacking mainly other anti-Assad groups.”

Haass goes on to say, “Russia seems to be playing the same cynical game as Assad: framing the war as a binary choice between the Islamic State and a regime that, however flawed, still deserves the world’s support.”

Mr. Haass hopes that Putin’s goal “would be to ease Assad out of power and establish a successor government that, at a minimum, enjoyed the support of his Alawite base and, ideally, some Sunnis.” Haass and Kissinger would seem to share the view (as articulated by the latter) that, “Russia’s purposes do not require the indefinite continuation of Mr. Assad’s rule.” Rather, “It is a classic, balance-of-power maneuver to divert the Sunni Muslim terrorist threat from Russia’s southern border region.”

Time—and the status of Bashar al-Assad—will tell if Russian objectives center on meeting terrorist threats, preserving a naval refueling station, rescuing a friendly state, and the like. The view here is that Vladimir Putin and his Iranian collaborators wish—for differing but compatible reasons—to preserve Mr. Assad in power indefinitely in as large a chunk of Syria as he and they can manage.

For Putin, Assad’s ongoing presence is a rebuke to Washington. He will want to force President Obama into an anti-ISIS alliance with Assad: this is why his forces engage everyone except ISIS. For Iran’s Supreme Leader, a “federal” system or a mini-state leaving its employee ensconced in western Syria perpetuates Tehran’s ability to support Hezbollah’s continued imprisonment of Lebanon and maintain its rocket and missile threat to Israel.

Henry Kissinger and Richard Haass have greatly enriched the discussion of Syria’s future and Russia’s role in it. There is much in their respective analyses that is cogent, useful and totally on point. Their conflation of regime and government is unfortunate but understandable, as the Obama administration cites it as one of its many excuses to refrain from protecting Syrian civilians from the genocidal effects of regime civilian mass casualty operations.

The thesis that Assad gone means Baghdadi in is false. But in terms of current American policy, it is an argument that definitely has its uses.

Frederic C. Hof is a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council's Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East.

(Newsweek)

"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?
11/2/2015 10:14:11 AM

Russia plane 'broke up in air', bodies flown home from Egypt

AFP

Egyptian soldiers stand guard next to the luggage and belongings of passengers of the A321 Russian airliner at the site of the crash in Wadi al-Zolomat, a mountainous area in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula on November 1, 2015 (AFP Photo/Khaled Desouki)


WADI Al-ZOLOMAT (Egypt) (AFP) - A Russian airliner that crashed in Egypt broke up "in the air", an investigator said, as the bodies of many of the 224 people killed on board were flown home.

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi urged patience to determine the cause of Saturday's crash, after the Islamic State jihadist group (IS) claimed it brought down the A-321 in Egypt's restive Sinai Peninsula.

"The disintegration happened in the air and the fragments are strewn over a large area," said Viktor Sorochenko, a senior official with Russia's Interstate Aviation Committee, quoted by the Russian news agency RIA-Novosti from Cairo.

Sorochenko, who is heading an international panel of experts, said it was "too early to draw conclusions" about what caused the flight from the Red Sea holiday resort of Sharm el-Sheikh to Saint Petersburg to crash.

Late on Sunday, a Russian plane carrying 162 bodies of those killed left Cairo for Saint Petersburg. Russian officials said it was expected to land at around 0200 GMT.

Investigators have recovered the "black box" flight recorders of the Airbus, which crashed on Saturday killing all those on board, and the Egyptian government said its contents were being analysed.

The head of an Irish mission that will join the Egypt-led probe into the disaster said the results from the recorders should be ready in a few days.

The crash site in the Wadi al-Zolomat area of North Sinai was littered with blackened aircraft parts Sunday as the smell of burnt metal lingered, an AFP correspondent said.

Soldiers guarded dozens of bags and suitcases belonging to passengers from flight KGL 9268 --- a tiny red jacket among the recovered items underlining the horror of the tragedy that killed 17 children.

Officers involved in the search efforts said rescue crews had recovered 168 bodies so far, including one of a girl found eight kilometres (five miles) from the main wreckage.

- International investigation -

Flags flew at half mast in Russia on Sunday and entertainment programmes on television were cancelled on a national day of mourning for the victims, most of them Russians ranging in age from 10 months to 77 years.

Cairo said there were 214 Russian and three Ukranian passengers on board, and seven crew members.

Thousands of Russians gathered in Saint Petersburg's Palace Square to observe a minute's silence and release doves and balloons to the darkening sky.

"It was impossible for me not to come," said Nika Kletskikh, 27, who lost a friend in the crash. "It's so awful to think that she's no longer there."

Both Cairo and Moscow have downplayed the claim from Egypt's IS branch that it brought down the aircraft flown by the airline Kogalymavia, operating under the name Metrojet.

International experts are now investigating other possible causes, and a Russian team including Sokolov and the emergencies minister, Vladimir Puchkov, have visited the scene in a remote part of the Sinai.

Two air accident investigators from France -- Airbus's home country -- and six experts from the aerospace giant are also taking part in the probe.

Jurgen Whyte, chief inspector with reland's Air Accident Investigation Unit (AAIU) who is leading the team, said readings from the black boxes due in the next few days would direct the investigation.

"Nothing can be said until we have access to the recorders, and luckily they have been recovered," he told AFP.

- Plane passed safety review -

On Sunday, the AAIU said it had given the A-321 a clean bill of health earlier this year after its annual review, which was carried out in Ireland as that is where the aircraft was registered.

Russia has a dismal air safety record, and while larger carriers have begun upgrading ageing fleets, the crash is likely to raise concerns about smaller airlines such as Kogalymavia.

On Sunday, Russia's transportation watchdog ordered Kogalymavia to perform a full check on its A-321s, although the airline denied this was a de facto grounding of its other six aircraft of the same model.

Experts have dismissed claims from an IS affiliate insurgency group in the Sinai claimed it brought down the aircraft in revenge for Russian air strikes against the jihadist group in Syria.

They argue the militants have neither the technology nor the expertise to take out a plane flying at 30,000 feet (9,000 metres), although Germany's Lufthansa, Emirates and Air France have all halted flights over Sinai until the reasons for the crash were known.

Experts say human or technical error more likely caused the crash -- although they concede a surface-to-air missile could have struck the aircraft if it had been descending for some reason.

An Egyptian air traffic control official said the pilot told him in their last exchange that he had radio trouble, but Civil Aviation Minister Mohamed Hossam Kamal said communications had been "normal".

"There was nothing abnormal... and the pilot didn't ask to change the plane's route," he said.

The last major air crash in Egypt was in 2004, when a Flash Airlines Boeing 737 plunged into the Red Sea after taking off from Sharm el-Sheikh, killing all 148 people on board.

"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?
11/2/2015 10:39:53 AM

Explosion rocks nuclear power plant in Belgium

Published time: 1 Nov, 2015 09:56


Nuclear power plant of Doel © wikipedia.org

An explosion occurred overnight at a nuclear power plant in Doel, northern Belgium, local media reported, adding that the blast caused a fire. The exact damage from the incident remains unknown.

The blast happened around 11pm local time on Saturday. The fire started in Reactor 1 of the plant, but was soon extinguished by personnel.

The explosion didn’t cause any threat to nature, Els De Clercq, spokeswoman from Belgian energy corporation Electrabel that runs the plant, told Het Laatste Nieuws. There was no fuel present at the time of the incident as the reactor had been shut due to its expired operational license.


Doel Nuclear Power Station, one of the two nuclear power plants in the country, is located near the town of Doel in east Flanders. The plant employs about 800 people.

According to the Nature journal and Columbia University in New York, the plant is in the most densely populated area of all nuclear power stations in the EU. About 9 million people live within a radius of 75km of the station.

(RT)

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

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