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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/24/2016 4:57:18 PM

Wealthy buying up luxury doomsday bunkers as world becomes more insane

Sunday, January 24, 2016 by: J. D. Heyes



(NaturalNews) Recently, Tyler Allen, an Orlando, Florida-based sports bar and nightclub owner, handed over $3 million in cash for a luxury condo near Concordia, Kansas; it wasn't the indoor swimming pool, hydroponic vegetable garden or 17-seat movie theater that impressed and attracted him.

The main selling point, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal, was not the 1,820-square-foot apartment at all, in fact. It was the underground, decommissioned missile silo buried 174 feet below -- a silo capable of withstanding even a nuclear attack.

Like so many who are concerned about the direction and future of the country feel obliged to do when the media comes calling, Allen insisted to the WSJ that, hey, he's no crazy conspiracy nut or "tinfoil hat-wearing" type. Rather, he says, he is concerned about growing security threats like a global health pandemic, cataclysmic weather and terrorist attacks.

"There's a Camp David for the president," he told the paper. "If you're at a certain level where you can afford it, you can get that, too."

'Insurance plan'

His "Survival Condo" complex comes complete with full and half-floor units that cost between $1.5 million and $3 million apiece. Each building can accommodate 75 people; buyers include physicians, entrepreneurs and scientists, according to developer Larry Hall. In all, the condo complex is 15 stories -- underground.

Hall, who lives in a suburb of Denver, says he purchased his first missile-silo site in Kansas in 2008 and finished construction in December 2012. A year later, he told the paper, the unit had completely sold out.

Now, he has begun construction of a second security complex -- where Allen bought his unit -- and he is considering even more sites, in Texas and elsewhere.

WSJ further reported:

As former nuclear missile sites built under the supervision of the Army Corps of Engineers, the structures were originally designed to withstand a direct hit by a nuclear bomb. At ground level, they can be sealed up by two armored doors weighing 16,000 pounds each. Mr. Hall added sophisticated water and air-treatment facilities, state-of-the-art computer network technology and several alternate power generation capabilities.

Such hide-aways are becoming more popular, especially among more affluent Americans, and follow a trend that began after the 9/11 attacks. In addition, the Great Recession of 2007-2008 coupled with the Ebola scare and the rise of the Islamic State have all fed into simmering concerns. Some, no doubt, also are worried about the state of civil society in the United States.

'She won't go in there - for now'

Hall's company claims that the condos give residents the chance to live an uninterrupted life of luxury underground. Besides standard perks like a spa, dog park and fitness and medical facilities, the complexes come with enough emergency food to last up to five years. Furthering security, the condos also feature a holding cell for unruly tenants.

Each individual unit comes with 9-foot ceilings, and lighting mimics natural sunlight as much as it can. There are no windows, of course, but there are video screens that portray a resident's choice of scenery -- everything from landscapes to city skylines.

Not everyone wants to make it public that they have purchased one of the uber-bunkers, like Allen has done. WSJ reported that one executive on a tobacco-product firm in Connecticut who requested anonymity said he paid $12 million in cash for four entire floors in the first condo-silo complex, which was enough room for his large family and a number of close friends.

He said he hired a decorator and installed fireplaces in all four full floors, as well as antique furniture and more "windows" than the spaces initially came with.

"I look at is as a life insurance policy," he told WSJ, adding that he'll only use the condo in extreme emergencies. He went on to say that his wife "hates the idea" and won't even set foot in the condo. But he added that was just "for now."

Sources:

http://online.wsj.com

http://www.naturalnews.com

http://www.huffingtonpost.com





"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?
1/24/2016 5:39:14 PM

Detroit collapsing into third world status as water supply becomes too toxic to drink... America's infrastructure imploding


(NaturalNews) Already pressured by a collapsing economy and a financial state of emergency, the people of Flint, Michigan, were also deprived of
clean water in 2014, when the state decided to switch the city's water source to the notoriously mucky Flint River in a bid to save money. In the absence of proper treatment, the water eroded the lead service lines and put all residents in danger. Although the lead-poisoned locals and children are now forced to deal with the consequences of this reckless act for the rest of their lives, the city and state officials responsible have yet to pay any noteworthy price.

As another man-made disaster quietly turns into past, the nearby rundown areas of Detroit are faced with a similar threat. Alongside miserable poverty, bad pipes and neglected water treatment systems are dragging Detroit into third-world status.

Was Flint only the beginning?

After almost two years of drinking toxic water, the people of Flint were finally acknowledged in October 2015. In the meantime, the high levels of lead found in drinking water translated into brain damage, learning disabilities and pregnancy issues for the residents. Children have been permanently hindered in their natural development. But it took until January 2016 for the government to mobilize the National Guard and begin distributing bottled water and filters in Flint.

What lesson do we have to learn from this? Wouldn't the residents of Flint be much healthier today had they listened to their own instincts and stopped drinking tap water when it started smelling funny? Most importantly, has the government done anything to help prevent this from happening elsewhere in America?

People in Detroit living in third-world conditions

Not only are the residents of Detroit on the brink of facing the same disastrous water situation, but it seems that most of them can't afford running water to begin with. According to Detroit census records, 60% of households with children under 18 live in poverty. Of the 200,000 water customers in Detroit, 108,000 are 60 days past due on bills, and their water has consequently been shut off, leading many to collect rainwater for daily use.

The horrible truth doesn't stop here. Darrel Earley is the emergency manager who oversaw the switch of Flint's water source. The same Darrel Earley is now in charge of Detroit's public schools.

Recently shared photos taken by teachers from Detroit are shocking, to say the least, but speak a thousand words for the current status of the city. Five days a week, children and teachers are faced with black mold, toilet water leaking through the ceiling, mushrooms growing out of the walls and extreme cold.

Elsewhere, in America...

Flint and Detroit are not singular cases in America, where the entire infrastructure is headed for collapse. From 2013 to 2014, city officials in Sacramento, California, were literally experimenting with a cheaper water treatment option on the unknowing residents. The result? For almost a year, Sacramentans were exposed to toxic chemicals that raise the risk of cancer, miscarriages and birth defects.

Not long ago, much of central Texas found itself on the brink of a similar disaster, when local officials uncovered the fact that their drinking water tested over federal legal limits of radioactive radium, so much so that the local scrapyard turned down the steel water pipes because they were too radioactive. It seems that the water was so contaminated, that it would result in one additional cancer patient for every 400 people.

Whether in Texas, California or Michigan, it seems that the people are the last to know about the health hazards they are exposed to. In light of all these events and possibly many to follow, we strongly recommend that every citizen should be prepared to filter, purify and store their own water.

Sources include:

CNN.com

SHTFPlan.com

Med.UMICH.edu

DetroitNews.com

USUncut.com

ReadyNutrition.com

KHOU.com

"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?
1/24/2016 11:36:48 PM

Magnitude-7.1 quake jolts Alaska; 4 homes lost

Associated Press

A 6.8 magnitude earthquake has struck southern Alaska, US seismologists say (AFP Photo/Ted Aljibe)


ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A magnitude-7.1 earthquake knocked items off shelves and walls in Alaska early Sunday morning, jolting the nerves of residents in this earthquake-prone region. But there were no reports of injuries.

Alaska's state seismologist, Michael West, called it the strongest earthquake in the state's south-central region in decades. Alaska often has larger or more powerful earthquakes, such as a 7.9 last year in the remote Aleutian Islands.

"However, last night's earthquake is significant because it was close enough to Alaska's population centers," West said, adding that aftershocks could continue for weeks.

The earthquake was widely felt by Anchorage residents. But the Anchorage and Valdez police departments said they hadn't received any reports of injury or significant damage.

The earthquake struck at about 1:30 a.m. Alaska time and was centered 53 miles west of Anchor Point in the Kenai Peninsula, which is about 160 miles southwest of Anchorage, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Vincent Nusunginya, 34, of Kenai said he was at his girlfriend's house when the quake hit.

"It started out as a shaking and it seemed very much like a normal earthquake. But then it started to feel like a normal swaying, like a very smooth side-to-side swaying," said Nusunginya, director of audience at the Peninsula Clarion newspaper. "It was unsettling. Some things got knocked over, but there was no damage."

Four single family homes in Kenai were lost to explosions or fire in the wake of the earthquake.

Two of the homes were destroyed in explosions and the other two were fully engulfed before firefighters determined it was safe enough from gas for them to enter the homes, Kenai battalion chief Tony Prior said. He said firefighters focused on keeping the flames from those homes from spreading to nearby houses.

"No injuries. Thank God," he said. "The second one was a major explosion. We're fortunate that no one was hurt."

About 30 homes were evacuated, and some people took shelter at the Kenai National Guard Armory.

Workers with the gas utility were examining the remaining homes Sunday afternoon with the goal of getting displaced residents back in their homes later in the day.

The USGS initially reported the quake as a magnitude-7.1, but downgraded shortly afterward to magnitude-6.8 before raising it back to 7.1.

"Some earthquakes have challenges associated with them, they are unusual or hard to monitor," West said. "This is neither of them. Southern Alaska is well instrumented, and this earthquake is of the style and type that we would expect in this area."

The biggest aftershock Sunday was 4.7, and West said a magnitude-5 or magnitude-6 aftershock is possible.

There were reports of scattered power outages from the Matanuska Electric Association and Chugach Electric in the Anchorage area. The Homer Electric Association reported on its website that about 4,800 customers were without power early Sunday in the Kenai Peninsula.

The Alaska Department of Transportation reported on its Facebook page that there was road damage near the community of Kasilof, on the Kenai Peninsula.

Alaska Gov. Bill Walker said in a statement Sunday that he was relieved there wasn't more damage. He urged all Alaskans to have a response plan for when a major natural disaster takes place.

The hashtag #akquake trended early Sunday on Twitter as people shared their experiences and posted photos of items that had fallen off walls and shelves.

Andrea Conter, 50, of Anchorage, said she was surprised by the quake's strength.

"This was a wild one," the former Southern California resident said. "I looked at the closed-circuit cameras at work and it lasted over 50 seconds and that is considerable for an earthquake."

"When I bought my house in Anchorage I had a geological map that shows what are the sturdiest parts of town and there were a few where I said, 'If there's an earthquake, that house is toast,'" Conter said. "That's how I chose my house. Literally. Drove my real estate agent nuts. But, I didn't have one thing fall in my house. It was kind of clutch."

Andrew Sayers, 26, of Kasilof was watching television when the quake struck.

"The house started to shake violently. The TV we were watching fell over, stuff fell off the walls," he said. "Dishes were crashing, and we sprinted toward the doorway."

Later, he was driving to his mother's home when he came across a stretch of road that was damaged in the quake.

"We launched over this crack in the road. It's a miracle we didn't bust our tires on it," he said.

After reaching his mother's house, Sayers checked on his grandparents, who live about a mile away.

"No damage, except their Christmas tree fell over," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Rashah McChesney in Juneau and Michelle A. Monroe and Tarek Hamada in Phoenix contributed to this report.

"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?
1/25/2016 10:14:25 AM

Asia shivers, slips and slides in record low temperatures

AFP

Seoul recorded its coldest day in 15 years on Sunday, when the temperature fell to minus 18 degrees Celsius, its coldest weather since 2001 (AFP Photo/Ed Jones)


Hong Kong (AFP) - Snow, sleet and icy winds across Asia caused deaths, flight cancellations and chaos over the weekend as areas used to basking in balmier climates struggled with record-low temperatures.

Weather-related deaths were reported in Japan and Taiwan, with hundreds of flights cancelled across the region, tens of thousands of holidaymakers stranded in South Korea, and freezing conditions in sub-tropical Hong Kong causing mayhem on its tallest peak.

While the cold snap is by no means on the scale of the weather now affecting the snow-bound eastern United States, such temperatures are a novelty for many residents of the region.

In Bangkok, a city that rarely sees the thermometer dip below 20-25 degrees Celsius (68-77 Fahrenheit), temperatures dropped to around 16 degrees late Sunday.

It left Bangkokians, whose normal attire generally includes flip-flops and shorts, digging through their closets for jackets and jumpers.

In Japan five people died and more than 100 were injured Sunday, with record-breaking heavy snowfall and low temperatures in the country's western and central regions and rare snow in subtropical areas, officials and local media said.

The small subtropical island of Amami observed snow for the first time since 1901, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

In China, 24 weather stations around the country recorded all-time low temperatures between Friday and Sunday.

At Eergu'Na in Inner Mongolia, the temperature on Saturday hit a record low of -46.8 degrees Celsius.

The southern city of Guangzhou saw rare sleet, the first in 60 years, in its downtown area, the provincial meteorological station announced on Sunday.

In Hong Kong, primary schools and kindergartens were closed Monday after temperatures plunged to a 60-year low.

A 100-kilometre ultra-marathon race was abandoned as competitors crossing the city's tallest peak, Tai Mo Shan, slipped on icy slopes buffeted by freezing winds.

The peak became the scene of "carnage", as one race official described it, as hundreds of curious "frost-chasing" citizens became stranded, with dozens stricken with hypothermia and hapless firemen called in to rescue them filmed slipping and sliding on the icy roads.

Close to 90,000 people were stranded on the South Korean resort island of Jeju on Monday after the biggest snowfall in three decades shut the airport for the third straight day.

Taipei registered a low of 4 degrees Celsius over the weekend, the coldest in 44 years, with the Taiwan media reporting 90 deaths due to the cold weather, and rare snowfall drawing enthusiastic crowds to Yangmingshan National Park.

In Vietnam, temperatures in Hanoi dropped to six degrees Celsius at night over the weekend, which state-run media said was the coldest weather the country has experienced for some two decades.

"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?
1/25/2016 10:44:27 AM

SNOWMAGEDDON 2016

MARTIAL LAW DECLARED IN NEW YORK CITY


Massive snow dump prompts extraordinary action by government


Published: 12 hours ago


It’s the nagging fear many have about our government: what would happen if martial law was declared? New York City just found out, at least temporarily.

Eleven states as well as Washington D.C. declared states of emergency in the wake of the massive record-breaking snowstorm which blanketed the East. But New York City went a step further. Governor Andrew Cuomo declared martial law in New York City by ordering all people to stay inside under police enforcement. He issued an absolute travel ban for anything that is not an emergency vehicle.

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The New York Police Department put out a blunt announcement on Saturday: “After 2:30 p.m. and you’re on the road, we will arrest you.”

As if that wasn’t direct enough, the NYPD reiterated, “”Stay off the road. We don’t want to have to arrest you.”


The NYPD emphasized the need for safety, sending out additional tweets:

“For your safety & ours, roads are closed in NYC except for emergency vehicles.”

“We are asking people to make good common sense decisions. Use your head.”

“Last year no one got arrested. People made the right decisions. We are looking for that again today.”

Reactions ranged from outraged to amused.

“Threatens arrest citizens for being on the streets 1 day due to snow. Illegals are free to roam the other 364.”

“Haha. Arrest away then fella’s.”

“Calm down chief!”

“Shouldn’t you help them get to their destinations safely instead of arresting them?”

“What if this person is trying to get home?”

“I get that the roads need to be clear for 911, but isn’t that a bit extreme?”

“You are gonna have to arrest me, and I’ll take it to court. This is appalling. I want to leave NYC!”

“You all drive prius’s How in the world are you going to arrest me & my 4×4 with them?”

“You have made NYC go full Fascist!”

“Russia now has more freedom than NYC!!!!!!”

“*** martial law over a snowstorm. I pity us when there’s an actual emergency.”

A spokesperson for the New York Police Department said the ban just means no vehicles on the roads. Walking, running, and bicycles are permitted. “They can pedal all they want,” said the spokesman

The police did request people not to walk in the streets so people could do their job.


The travel ban was lifted approximately 7 a.m. on Sunday.


NYPD reported 25 summonses were issued during the travel ban, and one arrest for driving while intoxicated.

The massive cleanup continues as New York City and many other locations dig out from under the record-breaking snowfall, with some areas including Virginia and West Virginia reporting 40 inches of the white stuff.

What do YOU think? Sound off on New York City’s imposition of martial law in today’s WND poll.

The monster snowstorm claimed at least 19 lives across the East. While there were widespread totals of 24 to 36 inches, a few localized locations topped that. A National Weather Service spotter reported 42 inches of snow near Glengary, West Virginia.

Due to heavy bands of snow across portions of the mid-Atlantic, snow fell at rates of 1 to 3 inches per hour. Snow crews were unable to keep ahead of the storm, which led to some vehicles being trapped on the roads for more than 24 hours.

Be prepared for the next big storm! Get the best survival kit ever from the WND Superstore.

The weary work of cleaning up after the storm will take days or weeks. “While we are prepared more than we’ve ever been for a snowstorm, a storm of this magnitude requires patience,” said Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake. “Don’t panic if you haven’t seen a snowplow on your street. We have a big city and there’s a lot of snow to move.”

Collapsed roofs were reported in many states. In Poolesville, Maryland, a barn roof crashed down on 12 horses. Although firefighters struggled to get equipment to the barn because of the snow, crews were able to rescue all the animals.

(Photo: Montgomery County Fire)


U.S. Capitol Police said a 44-year-old police officer died of a heart attack while shoveling snow at his home.

“The death of Officer Alston is truly a tragic loss for the Alston family and the United States Capitol Police, which in fact is one in the same,” said Chief of Police Kim Dine. “Officer Alston was someone who loved his job, and his loss leaves a huge void in the hearts of all of the men and women at the USCP.”

School closures are widespread throughout the region, and many airports remain closed or will have limited flights as runways are cleared.

Snow removal is a “major operation” and officials are urging residents to stay off the roads whenever possible. With many sidewalks impassible, people are often forced to walk in the street, complicating cleanup efforts.

“The longer you stay home, the quicker we get this done,” District of Columbia Police Chief Cathy Lanier said.

What made this storm so excessively snowy?



According to the website Mashable.com:

The storm resulted from a rare and potent mix of ingredients that came together at just the right moment to create a powerful storm. What’s more is that the storm was located in the perfect spot to produce an East Coast blizzard of the sort that might come along once in 20 years, or even longer for some.

First and foremost, there was an upper level low pressure area that dug a deep dip, or trough, in the jet stream across the southeast. The circulation around this low and the jet stream winds associated with it produced an area of strong lift in the atmosphere out ahead of it.

This helped trigger a surface low pressure area, which strengthened rapidly on Friday night and Saturday morning as it moved up the coast to a position east of the Delaware shoreline by midday Saturday. The upper low aligned itself on top of the low at the surface, creating a vertically stacked, whirling vortex off the East Coast that sat and spun like a top throughout the day on Saturday.

The moisture feed from this storm was incredibly long – based on satellite imagery, the storm was tapping moisture from as far south as the Bahamas, and as far east as the Gulf Stream waters of the Atlantic Ocean.

The storm greedily gulped down this moisture via an unusually strong airflow known as a low level jet stream, which gave the storm a powerful east-to-west feed, which acted like a straw that the storm could suck on to ingest relatively mild, moist air.


Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2016/01/martial-law-declared-in-new-york-city/#ZQybVO0hQpXy1gIO.99



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

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