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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/27/2015 9:37:40 AM

Five killed after tornadoes touch down near Dallas, as storms pummel Southeast


Deadly tornadoes rip through the South

Five people were reported dead near Garland, Texas, Saturday evening after at least four tornadoes spawned by severe storms touched down in the Dallas area,according to Fox-4.

Four of the people were reportedly killed in a weather-related incident" that may have been a traffic accident, the Dallas Morning News reported.

The Rowlett Police Department confirmed late Saturday that the fifth death on the same highway. It was unclear whether the fifth person died as a result of the same incident.

Severe tornado-producing storms caused heavy damage as they moved through north Texas, the latest in a series of deadly weather patterns that have affected the nation's heartland this week.

The National Weather Service reported at least four tornadoes touched down near Dallas — at least one of which caused major damage in the northeast suburb of Rowlett on Saturday evening, the News reported.

A number of homes were destroyed and others damaged in Ellis County, the area's emergency management director, Stephanie Parker, told Fox-4.

The Dallas area was also placed under a flash flood warning as a result of the severe storms.

Southwest Airlines told the paper that at least 12 flights headed to Love Field were diverted to other airports, and departing flights were experiencing delays. High water was also reported throughout the city.

The storms have also heavily damaged some homes in the area, including in the southern suburb of Waxahachie, where the storms began, the paper reported.

Extremely warm temperatures and an unstable weather pattern brought Christmas Day tornadoes and flooding to Alabama, damaging homes and leaving hundreds without electricity.

The funnel was spotted by witnesses outside Birmingham around 5 p.m Friday. An hour later the National Weather Service confirmed that first responders were on the scene along Jefferson Avenue, a working class neighborhood 10 miles from downtown Birmingham.

Several houses on the block had been destroyed and partially blown into the street,Al.com reported Saturday.

Mayor William Bell told Fox6 News one person had been hospitalized.

Luckily, Bell said there have been no reports of missing people, the station reported.

The city reached out to the Red Cross to assist residents whose homes were damaged.

Utility workers turned off electricity and gas in the area to permit house-to-house searches and rescue efforts.

Pastor Melvin Howard of the Mount Olive Full Gospel Church rushed to Jefferson Avenue when he heard the storm hit.

He told Al.com his church’s building had collapsed but no one was inside at the time.

“We’re just there to salvage what we can salvage,” Howard told the website. “Mikes and p.a. systems of that magnitude that we know someone would go in and take.”

The Christmas Day rain pelted two Alabama counties, Marion and Winston, with more than 8 inches of rain. Birmingham saw 4.4 inches of rain fall Friday, Al.com reported.

As of Saturday, 2,800 Alabama Power customers were without power, including 1,900 in the Birmingham area, Al.com reported.

Saturday evening, the National Weather Service reported a tornado touched down briefly near Dallas, Texas. But, the Associated Press said it reportedly lifted off the ground before causing any damage.

In Birmingham, Ruthie Green went door-to-door in a coat and a bicycle helmet to check on neighbors after the storm and swept debris from her front porch as more emergency responders arrived in the neighborhood.

"I been listening to the news all day so I was kind of preparing," Green told the Associated Press. When the tornado warning came up on her iPad, Green said she ran to a closet.

"Then I heard the big roaring, it didn't last more than three minutes," Green said. "I just laid down and just kept praying."

Green said she was unsure of whether any neighbors had been injured or killed down the block where several homes were destroyed.

"We probably won't know anything until daylight comes," she said. "I'm hoping that everybody got out all right."

Elsewhere in the region, dozens of people faced Christmas having lost their homes and possessions. Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley on Friday issued a state of emergency for parts of the state experiencing flash flooding. Officials in southeast Alabama are particularly concerned, as Pea River is approaching record-levels near the town of Elba, which has a history of severe flooding.

Storms have already ravaged the Southeast this week. At least 18 people have died as the outbreak of severe weather trenched through Mississippi, Tennessee and Arkansas. The victims included a 7-year-old by in Mississippi who perished while riding in a car that was swept up and tossed by storm winds

Some people who survived the storms were thankful just to see another Christmas. Tony Goodwin ducked into a storm shelter with seven others as a storm pounded Tennessee and other states in the southeastern U.S. He emerged to find his house in Linden had been knocked off its foundation and hurled down a hill by high winds.

Goodwin's neighbors weren't so fortunate. Two people in one home were killed.

"It makes you thankful to be alive with your family," he said.

Peak tornado season in the South is in the spring, but such storms can happen at any time. Exactly a year ago, tornadoes hit Mississippi, killing five people and injuring dozens.

Barbara Perkins was told Thursday by an insurance agent that her storm-damaged home in Falkner, Mississippi, was a complete loss. But Perkins — who survived the storm hunkered down inside a closet with her husband — said she was happy just to be alive. Two neighbors had died in the storm that swept across the southeastern U.S. earlier this week.

"You kind of stop and realize what Christmas is all about," Perkins said.

"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?
12/27/2015 9:52:45 AM

California wildfire burns 1,200 acres northwest of Los Angeles, closes highway

Reuters


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A burnt bed frame stands in a makeshift encampment in the aftermath of a wildfire in the Solimar Beach area of Ventura County, California December 26, 2015. REUTERS/Patrick T. Fallon

By Patrick T. Fallon

VENTURA, Calif. (Reuters) - A wildfire northwest of Los Angeles burned about 1,200 acres of land, forced the closure of parts of a major highway and led to evacuations on Saturday, fire officials said.

More than 600 firefighters battled the blaze in the Solimar Beach area of Ventura County, and parts of U.S. Highway 101 were closed for part of the day, county fire department officials told a news conference.

No injuries have been reported, fire officials said. No structures have been damaged by the fire, but nearby Union Pacific rail lines were closed for a period and the fire is a threat to oil, gas and power lines.

The northbound side of the highway, a major roadway in the region, reopened around 2 p.m. local time (5 p.m. ET) according to state transportation officials, and the southbound side was moving 30 minutes later according to a Reuters witness.

At 1:30 p.m. local time, an Amtrak train heading north and filled with passengers passed near Solimar Beach, according to the same Reuters witness.

"Even if we do open up the roadways, it's still not a contained fire," Ventura County Fire Department Chief Norm Plott told reporters earlier in the day. "It's a very dynamic fire. We're not quite out of the woods yet."

The fire is less than 10-percent contained and it will take at least three days to get it under control, fire officials said. The cause of the fire was still under investigation.

Helicopters and fixed-wing tankers were helping to battle the blaze with water drops.

Fire officials had earlier reported that parts of the Pacific Coast highway also were closed, but a fire department spokeswoman said only a portion that overlaps the 101 was closed. Ventura is about 65 miles (105 km) northwest of Los Angeles.

The fire started at around 11 p.m. local time on Friday near Ventura, and strong winds as high as 50 miles per hour and dry vegetation caused it to grow rapidly, fire officials said.

At around 2 a.m. local time on Saturday in a video posted on Facebook, Ventura County Fire Department Captain Steve Kaufman said the fire was near the beach, "bumping up against the roadway. We're getting a bunch of embers in Solimar east."

The Solimar Beach community, with 50 to 60 homes, and a nearby campground were under a mandatory evacuation order, while a voluntary one had been issued for the nearby Faria Beach community, where there are 30 to 40 homes, fire officials said.

(Writing and additional reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Pravin Char, Hugh Lawson, Dan Grebler and Bill Rigby)

"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?
12/27/2015 10:04:47 AM

Dengue fever outbreak in Hawaii has global impact
Experts warn that we should be prepared for more dengue in the US and around the world. ‘Hawaii is a piece of a much bigger phenomenon that’s happening globally,’ says Dr. Peter Hotez at Baylor College of Medicine

Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, pictured, are among the species that transmit dengue. Photograph: Christophe Simon/AFP/Getty Images

It’s peak tourism season in Hawaii, and the state’s Department of Health has issued a warning for visitors and residents: dengue fever is spreading on the Big Island. More than 150 people on Hawaii Island have been infected with the mosquito-borne virus.

Experts say there’s no need to change your travel plans, but warn that we should be prepared for more dengue in the US and around the world. “Hawaii is a piece of a much bigger phenomenon that’s happening globally,” says Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

Before 1970, severe dengue epidemics only happened in nine countries. Today, dengue is endemic in at least 125 tropical and subtropical nations in Asia, the Pacific, the Americas, Africa and the Caribbean. Local transmission is starting to happen for the first time in Croatia, France and the Madeira Islands of Portugal. While it was once believed that dengue infected 100 million people annually, the most recent analysis suggests it’s more like 390 million. India, with as many as33m new infections every year, bears the biggest global burden.

Can dengue be contained?

In the US, there’s no vaccine or antiviral treatment approved for dengue fever. The government of Mexico recently authorized the first dengue vaccine, but it will likely be several years before an approval happens in the US. In the meantime, covering up with long sleeves and pants when possible and using a DEET-based bug spray is the best line of defense for people living in or traveling to dengue-infested regions.

“Just using mosquito repellent is really enough to decrease your potential for getting exposed to almost zero,” says Dawn Wesson, an associate professor of tropical medicine at Tulane University School of Public Health in New Orleans.

Like malaria, dengue is transmitted by the bite of an infected mosquito. While malaria is caused by a parasite, four closely related viruses cause dengue. If you get infected, chances are you won’t have any symptoms – only one out of four people do. But you can still pass the virus on if an Aedes species of mosquito bites you.

If you do get sick, it will feel a lot like the flu. Once known as “break bone fever”, dengue causes a high temperature, along with at least one of the following: muscle, joint or bone pain; rash; headaches; eye pain; nausea and vomiting; unusual bleeding, like nose bleeds; or bruising.

In some cases, dengue fever progresses into severe dengue, called dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). DHF kills more than 20,000 people every year. Recent research suggests that dengue is much more likely to kill you if you have an underlying health condition, like diabetes. “What we’re seeing now is a confluence of the tropical diseases with noncommunicable diseases,” Hotez says.

The current dengue outbreak on the Big Island is the third to strike Hawaii since 2001. But Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands, Samoa and Guam all have regular dengue outbreaks. In recent years, dengue has also made landfall on the mainland, in south Texas and south Florida.

Hotez predicts that the Gulf Coast will be one of the next big global hot spots for dengue. Two mosquito species, Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus, transmit dengue. Hawaii only has Aedes albopictus, while parts of the Gulf Coast have both. Southern California also has both species, although dengue hasn’t arrived there yet, Wesson says.

It’s not just dengue that we need to plan for. “We’ve seen a global explosion of viruses transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes … called arboviruses,” Hotez says. Experts predict that two other arboviruses – chikungunya and zika – will soon start popping up in same regions where we’re seeing dengue. In 2014, Florida saw thefirst local transmission of chikungunya. Wesson says she believes the advanced health system in the US should help prevent massive outbreaks, but poorer nations won’t be so fortunate.

Regular human travel and forced migrations, global trade, poverty, rapid urban growth, climate change and the evolution of the pathogen itself all play a role in the spread of the Aedes mosquito and the dengue virus. Until an effective and widely available vaccine comes around, it will be hard to stop arboviruses from continuing to spread throughout the tropics and subtropics.

This content is brought to you by SC Johnson


(the guardian)

"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?
12/27/2015 10:41:13 AM

ABU BAKR AL-BAGHDADI TELLS ISRAEL TO PREPARE TO MEET ISIS TROOPS FACE TO FACE


"The Jews thought we forgot Palestine and that they had distracted us from it," Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi says in the recording. "Not at all, Jews. We did not forget Palestine for a moment. With the help of Allah, we will not forget it. We are getting closer every day."


THE LEADER OF THE SELF-DECLARED ISLAMIC STATE ISSUED A DEFIANT MESSAGE TO THE WEST, WARNING “CRUSADERS” NOT TO DARE FIGHT ON HIS TURF

“Let them all be confounded and turned back that hate Zion.” Psalm 129:5 (KJV)

In a rare public statement – his first in seven months – Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi said Western countries had “learned from” previous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. “Crusaders and Jews don’t dare to come on the ground because they were defeated in Iraq and Afghanistan,” he said in a 23-minute long audio message released through an Isil-run internet account.

The message – dubbed an “alternative Christmas broadcast” on social media – appeared to be an effort to rally Isil followers against the growing number of enemies arrayed against them.

The leader, who has rarely been pictured and has not been heard from since he was believed to have been injured in an airstrike by Iraqi forces in October, Russian or US-led airstrikes had failed to weaken the group, which was only “expanding and getting stronger”.

ABU BAKR AL-BAGHDADI: THE MAN WHO DREW THE U.S. BACK TO IRAQ



“Be confident that God will grant victory to those who worship him, and hear the good news that our state is doing well. The more intense the war against it, the purer it becomes and the tougher it gets,” he said.

He also called on Saudi citizens – the second biggest contributor to Isil ranks – to “rise up” against their government as he dimissed the kingdom’s newly formed Muslim coalition against the caliphate.

He also said Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) would soon be in Palestine to establish an Islamic state there. “Jews, soon you shall hear from us in Palestine which will become your grave,” the voice, purporting to be Baghdadi, is heard saying.

“THE JEWS THOUGHT WE FORGOT PALESTINE AND THAT THEY HAD DISTRACTED US FROM IT,” HE SAYS IN THE RECORDING. “NOT AT ALL, JEWS. WE DID NOT FORGET PALESTINE FOR A MOMENT. WITH THE HELP OF ALLAH, WE WILL NOT FORGET IT… THE PIONEERS OF THE JIHADIST FIGHTERS WILL SURROUND YOU ON A DAY THAT YOU THINK IS DISTANT AND WE KNOW IS CLOSE. WE ARE GETTING CLOSER EVERY DAY.”

BAGHDADI HAD REPORTEDLY BEEN SERIOUSLY INJURED IN A IRAQI AIRSTRIKE IN OCTOBER.

The leader is thought to constantly move between ISIL’s strongholds of Raqqa, northeastern Syria, and Mosul, in Iraq, in a bid to avoid airstrikes. In the statement titled “Wait for we as well are waiting with you”, Baghdadi boasted that the group had fought off advances in both Syria and Iraq.

THE MILITANT SUNNI ISLAMIST GROUP CONTROLS SWATHES OF IRAQ AND SYRIA BUT HAS COME UNDER INTENSIFYING MILITARY PRESSURE IN RECENT WEEKS.

On Saturday, Isil suffered a major blow after a US-backed alliance of Syrian Kurds and Arab rebel groups, backed by coalition planes, captured a dam from its fighters, cutting a main supply route of the militants across the Euphrates.

Colonel Talal Selo said the rapid advance overnight by thousands of troops from the Democratic Forces of Syria had brought the dam, 15 miles upstream from the militants’ de facto capital Raqqa, under their control on Saturday afternoon.

Since the US-backed alliance was formed last October, its fighters have opened several major offensives against Islamic State with the ultimate goal of capturing Raqqa. source


"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?
12/27/2015 1:33:34 PM



Death Of Top Syrian Rebel Commander May Derail "Peace" Process, Evacuation Efforts


Tyler Durden's picture

“For sure it will cause a big delay and it may kill the whole process. Whoever committed this crime is pushing for a military solution, not a political process solution.”

That’s a quote from Hadi al-Bahra, a Syrian opposition leader. The comments come a day after an apparent Russian airstrike killed Zahran Alloush. Alloush, the son of Saudi-based cleric Abdallah Alloush, is (or, more appropriately “was”) the leader of Jaysh al Islam, a powerful Syrian opposition group whose forces number some 10,000.

The group controls Ghouta, the site of an infamous sarin gas attack that nearly served as the excuse for a US air campaign against the Assad regime in 2013. Alloush was violently anti-Shiite and anti-Alawite but was seen as “moderate” when compared to ISIS and al-Nusra. Jaysh al Islam has fought against Islamic State in various parts of Syria.

In the wake of the commander’s death, some say UN “efforts” to negotiate a truce will now be all but impossible. As we noted on Friday, Jaysh al Islam was among the rebel groups invited to a summit in Riyadh earlier this month.”Two Army of Islam officials were among those who attended a meeting this month bringing together both the political and armed opposition,”WSJ writes, adding that “they signed a final declaration that envisioned a secular, democratically elected government in the future without Mr. Assad.”

The Syrian government has said it’s willing to meet with opposition leaders in Geneva next month. According to Hezbollah (which functions as Putin’s ground force in Syria), “the strike also killed Abdul-Nasser Shmeir, an officer who defected from the Syrian army and headed another leading Damascus-area rebel group [as well as] Mr. Alloush’s brother Mahmoud and at least 16 other rebel commanders.” Here’s more:


Despite its name,
the Army of Islam is considered one of the more moderate Islamist rebel groups in Syria. Mr. Alloush considered himself a bitter enemy of both Mr. Assad and the head of Islamic State Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi—often calling them both “gang leaders.” His group fought pitched battles to chase Islamic State out of the eastern suburbs of the capital.

But the Syrian regime and its allies Iran and Russia consider the Army of Islam a “terrorist group” that like many other rebel factions should be precluded from any role in a future settlement. Some in the opposition also had misgivings about any prominent role for Mr. Alloush and his group, which has been accused of human rights abuses and extrajudicial killings.


Mr. Alloush’s killing coincided with preparations on Friday by the Syrian regime to facilitate the transfer of up to 4,000 people, including many fighters linked to Islamic State and other extremist groups
as well as their families, from rebel-held areas on the southern outskirts of Damascus as part of U.N.-mediated efforts to expand a local cease-fire.


There are a couple of things worth noting there. First, there wasn't anything "moderate" about "Mr." Alloush. He essentially called for a genocide of Syrian Shiites in 2013. You can watch the video in the piece excerpted above.

The fact that anyone considers him a "moderate" undercores The Kremlin's point that differentiating between terrorists is an exercise in futility and it's also worth noting that there's no coincidence inherent in Riyadh allowing someone who has pushed for the eradiction of Shiites a place at the negotiating table.

Second, the plan to evacuate injured fighters as well as women and children from Damascus will likely now be placed on hold. "Jaish al-Islam was supposed to provide safe passage through areas east of Damascus for the buses heading to Raqa," a source told AFP on Saturday. "About 1,200 people were supposed to leave today (Saturday), but the death of Zahran Alloush means we are back to square one." Here's a bit more color:

The deal came after two months of intense talks between government and district leaders, according to the Britain-based monitor.

Backed by Saudi Arabia, Army of Islam recently took part in a landmark opposition meeting in Riyadh aimed at forming a united front for eventual talks with Assad's regime.

It has remained firmly opposed to both Assad and IS.

Analyst Karim Bitar said Alloush's death is "a severe blow to the Riyadh negotiations process".

"Given Alloush's authoritarian temper and strong rule, it will take time for Jaish al-Islam to recover from this blow and for the alternative leadership to emerge," he said.

Aron Lund, editor of the Carnegie Endowment's Syria in Crisis website, said: "In a way, Zahran Alloush has been the rare successful centraliser in the Syrian rebel movement."

But with him gone, that cohesion could "unravel", Lund added.


And make no mistake, all of this is just fine with Assad, whose army took credit for the strike despite widespread speculation that is was in fact a Russian warplane that carried out the attack. A Saudi-backed coalition of Sunni rebels is just about the last thing the Syrian government (not to mention Tehran) wants to see coalesce in Syria and the death of Alloush will certainly help to create choas among one of the country's most prominent opposition forces.

As for the Western media, the death of an extremist is being pitched as a blow the peach process. Here's The New York Times:

Mr. Alloush and his faction had not been universally accepted in the Syrian opposition — they are widely blamed for the disappearance of four secular opposition activists from the Damascus suburb of Douma. But unlike harder-line armed groups, the Army of Islam has shown a recent interest in taking part in politics, said Ibrahim Hamidi, a Syrian correspondent for Al Hayat, a pan-Arab newspaper.

Mr. Hamidi, who opposes the Syrian government, said that by having successfully targeted Mr. Alloush, Mr. Assad and his Russian allies had demonstrated their desire to pursue a military solution. “This is a rejection of the Riyadh talks,” he said.


No, it's not.

It's a rejection of the idea that someone who has variously called for the systematic extermination of a particular religious sect can somehow be part of a "political" solution to the crisis. Anyone who says otherwise is either living in a fantasy world constructed by the powers that be in Washington and Riyadh, or else has a vested interest in toppling the Assad government and undermining Iranian influence in the Arabian Peninsula.


(ZeroHedge)


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

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