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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/8/2016 11:04:03 AM



Friday, May 6, 2016

JOSEPH FARRELL: EU WILL MOVE AWAY FROM NATO AND PARTNER WITH RUSSIA

THE NEFARIUM

For a year, now, I've wondered just how blackmailed and/or bribed the EU must be, for allowing itself to get screwed for SO long by the economic sanctions against Russia, ordered by the US, due to Russia's timid yet righteous response to the US-sponsored coup in Ukraine.

Russia's having dared to respond, at all to despicable US meddling in a country not only on its border but historically enmeshed with it for more than a millennium precipitated US economic sanctions against Russia. The US forced the EU to do the same. The EU had to refrain from exporting agricultural and other products to a major trading partner, causing recessions in the EU economies and imploding their currency. For what gain to the EU, exactly?

It appears that finally, a new order has come down from the US that is so over the line in its malignancy, that it's forcing the hand of the EU and could well lead to a rupture of the status quo. I'm referring to the arch-Fascist, Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership.

The TTIP is an agreement, which essentially cedes national sovereignty (including that of the US) to huge US corporate interests, like those of Monsanto and their GMOs. We're finally beginning to see some pushback to US bullying, led by French President François Hollande, to which Joseph P Farrell, in his regular broadcast to his fans here says, "Vive la France!"

The time has come to ask, is the "US" really the US, anymore? That's the real question and it's been increasingly so since the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

Most people in the US who are aware of the TTIP don't want this horrendous agreement to be passed, either; totally without their say. Like the proverbial boiling frog, Americans have not been able to see what is becoming increasingly obvious to Europeans and is so well-put by Joseph Farrell here:

"America; the American Government is a front for something else...a deep, corporate...Fascist - I've been calling it 'Nazi International', you can call it the 'International Mafia'. Whatever this thing is, the European and Russian powers have looked at it and said, 'That's our enemy.'

"And I suspect that what you're now going to see is a gradual peeling away of Europe from that entity - and I suspect, as well, my friends...that these nations realize that their national culture, their identity, their civilization is at stake and under threat from 'Mr Global'...

"They are now taking the steps to distance themselves from it and...prepare for an inevitable war with that structure.

"...what you see, behind the scenes, is France, Germany, Russia, Italy, and so on, recognizing that they're no longer negotiating with the United States of America. They're negotiating with a government that is now hostage to interests that are not in Europe's best interests.

"This is why...we've seen President Putin, that we've seen President Áder of Hungary taking direct aim at the dogma of the Globalists...the so-called 'obsolescence of the nation-state'.

"That's being challenged now, in the beginnings of a process that France has initiated; something that I don't think is going to go away because...Italy's on board, Spain's on board.

"Eventually, this is going to transform Europe, this is going to transform the NATO Alliance...we're going to see a much more open critique of the Globalist agenda coming from Europe."

Germany's Nazi menace was partially conjured by Anglo-American wherewithal. Nazism took its cues from Anglo Supremacists and the American eugenics movement that arose in the post-Civil War Era. The eugenicists opposed recognizing the human rights of the freed African-Americans and of some other ethnic groups arriving in the huge immigrant influx after that war. These rights were only to be officially enshrined a century later, in the 1965 Civil Rights Act.

American troops and their Allies vanquished Fascism in Europe during World War II. Now, the clash appears to have circled back - and this time, it may be the Europeans who will fight the Fascist overlords of the US and it may be they who save us from ourselves and from this beast cohabiting among us...


(
forbiddenknowledgetv.net)




"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?
5/8/2016 11:15:07 AM

SYRIAN REFUGEES IN GREECE FEEL BETRAYED BY THE WEST

BY ON 5/8/16 AT 10:01 AM

A Syrian refugee hugs her children after arriving on the Greek island of Lesbos from Turkey on October 2, 2015. The author writes that Greece has been processing about 45 asylum requests a day, which at this rate would take 20 years to complete.
DIMITRIS MICHALAKIS/REUTERS

Shahira, 57, from Deir Ezzor, knows that there’s a widespread refugee fatigue: the numbers—over 1 million people fleeing by sea to Europe just in 2015—have overwhelmed Western countries and publics.

She also knows painfully well that—despite the strong efforts of many—Europe’s system is failing Syrians like her.

Spend just a day in the Greece she’s experienced and it is palpable that the current policies are disconnected from the realities on the ground. “Tell me,” the matriarch asked me in April. “Are our voices being heard?”

Shahira and her nine family members arrived wet and cold on Lesbos Island on March 19, 2016. It was supposed to be the start of the end, the matriarch told me a month later.

First there was the danger of life under Bashar al-Assad, followed by the protests and hopes—and then the regional violence that engulfed the fight and turned Deir Ezzor into a battlefield.

Next came the siege, the hunger, the bombing and fighting, the escape to Raqqa, the ISIS terror, the escape to Turkey, the exploitation and the gamble on death or Europe across the Mediterranean.

And now this shock: Greek authorities processed Shahira and her family on March 21 two days after they arrived and a day after the implementation of the controversial EU-Turkey deal intended to cut the maritime flow of refugees by criminalizing their passage. They are stuck without the right stamp in legal limbo at the Kara Tepe center on Lesbos.

Shahira knows it is comparatively better than the nearby closed Moria detention center where new arrivals are now detained—or shipped back to Turkey. "It's Guantanamo," she likened it, having initially been processed there.

Still, the family's options are dire: there's a son already in Germany, but once they go through the paperwork it will likely take years for cash-strapped Greece to process their asylum request for relocation.

In the meantime, the borders they once hoped to escape through remain closed as reports out of Moria remain dire, Athens fills with homeless refugees, a humanitarian crisis boils in the north at Idomeni and rumors and mistrust swirl over the new military camps being built for the 50,000, and growing, people burdening an already struggling Greece.

"It's the market of luck," Shahira, dressed in a bright white hijab and donated clothes, told me.

Beside her sat her daughter, who's back still burns from bomb wounds they can't afford to treat. "What should I do? We are in Europe?"

In legal limbo

Syrians like Shahira represent the realities of Europe today: They are trapped in Greece and unable to safely and legally leave because of the EU-Turkey deal.

Refugees often do not want their pictures taken—"I don't want my family seeing me like this on Facebook," Affaf, 27, from Raqaa said—they are conscious that people are quick to pass around their images while politicians reduce their lives and rights to political talking points and empty promises.

Like with Syria’s war, news reports and politics often depict each twist of the refugee trail as a big mess indistinguishable from the next. But constant policy and legal changes have made it difficult for aid agencies to plan their care and left refugees endangered and caught in information voids.

05_07_lesbos_01
A Syrian refugee holds onto his children as he struggles to walk off a dinghy on the Greek island of Lesbos, after crossing a part of the Aegean Sea from Turkey on September 24, 2015.REUTERS

Last summer, shifting coast guard rescue points by authorities and registering refugees all over the Greek islands made it difficult for NGOs to provide consistent care, explained Jane Waite of the International Rescue Committee.Then borders started to periodically close and restrict by nationality. Soon new fronts opened as the European Union balked at creating a comprehensive approach.

On March 9, Macedonia completely shut its border with Greece, cutting off access to the Balkan route to Germany and western Europe. On March 20 came the EU-Turkey deal, turning Moria into a detention center for refugees and sanctioning the return of asylum seekers to Turkey.

Tens of thousands of people, who planned to be only days in Greece, found themselves stuck for an indeterminate time. The Idomeni camp increased to around 12,000 people, while resources dwindled and people could only keep faith the border would re-open.

“In this case, it’s basically impossible to plan anything for the future,” said Emmanuel Massert of Doctors Without Borders, which has had to rent land from Idomeni’s owner just to place necessities like portable washrooms in the informal camp.

Then, as NGOs scrambled to shift from transit to stationary care, UNHCR and others pulled their services from Moria to protest the illegal detention of asylum seekers. In the background, Greek military and local authorities started to convert old farms and barracks into formal camps—primarily still closed to aid workers and journalists—to provide for part two of Europe's refugee crisis.

For Greece, it is also an implausible expectation. Greece has been processing about 45 asylum requests a day, which at this rate would take 20 years to complete, Waite said.

Part of the problem is that under the EU's austerity plans the government cannot hire more people to meet asylum needs. Unemployment is already rampant in Greece and most Syrians never intended to stay; now they are slowly beginning paperwork anyway. That is when they can reach UNHCR at all.

Greek authorities have set up a system where people have initial interviews by Skype—but the line is always busy and Internet access expensive and often intermittent. The European Union pledged to send more staff to Moria, but has barely done so yet. It also agreed to resettle 160,000 refugees from Italy and Greece, the latter which has barely begun.

Like a jail

Last week, riots and a fire broke out at Moria, reportedly after police hit an unaccompanied child. Conditions inside are dire. The week before the trouble, I met a man from Syria there, who thought he would be in Germany by April, not in what he likened to jail.

We spoke as he charged his phone on an extension cord connected from a food truck through the tall fence enclosing Moria detention center. Turkey's Turkcell reaches strongest here.

He cannot leave and journalists cannot enter the camp under the EU-Turkey deal. Inside, he tells me, fights are ongoing, the food is spoiled, infections are rampant, sleeping quarters overcrowded and lines for anything essential hours long. People with medical and psychological needs remain locked up with little recourse .

Reports circulate of violations of European laws, like children not receiving adequate milk. By the fence, a 17-year-old Syrian woman fanned herself with a piece of cardboard and explained that the facilities do not keep her safe: she isn't comfortable walking around without a male companion, while sleeping is often interrupted by fears for her safety.

Hours north in snake-prone Idomeni, the situation is similarly shocking. "You come from another planet," Abdel Rahman, 39, also from Deir Ezzor, told me while seated in his family's “house”—a carefully organized section of a larger tent, which houses around 200 people, demarcated by low walls of bunk beds and blankets.

Abdel Rahman, his three children, wife and parents all share this small space. "The last thing we wanted was to leave Syria," he said, his broad frame still stiff. Next to him, his oldest, Sara, 9-years-old, listened in as she leafed through notes from her occasional English class. We would rather die in Syria than live like this, he told me.

Abdel Rahman once rejoiced at escaping war-torn Syrian, but his status as a survivor is now a different kind of burden. "The hardest thing in life is not to have a goal," he said of learning the border had closed.

What eats at him is the way the darkest moments are used against the Syrians. They should be the number one priority, he argued. It had become a competition now with the thousands of Afghans and other nationalities, like Moroccans, Iranians, Algerians and Eritreans, which, along with the Syrians and Iraqis, have made up the bulk of the exodus.

The sentiment that Europe and the West have betrayed Syrians echoes throughout the camps. It is not just that Abdel Rahman seeks the basic essentials that Europe touts—a safe space with schools, a house and a future—but that his own fate has also long been intertwined with the repercussions of the West's championed wars, markets, rulers and rights.

After two months in Idomeni, and just borders ways from brothers in Germany and Sweden, the shock still burns:

"Where is Europe? Making treaties with ISIS and Assad? This isn't Europe…Where is Europe? Europe is finished."

Abdel Rahman keeps trying to Skype the United Nations, as instructed, but now he thinks, "It's a lie just like the other things the UN has said."

The longer he stays in Idomeni, the more he distrusts the new system. He does not want to go to the new military camps: a neighbor already went and promptly came back, telling everyone in the tent how there were bugs but no doctors and not enough food for the children.

That morning in Idomeni, Greek military jets buzzed over the camp, terrifying those who have only known planes like that to drop bombs. The Greek people, Abdel Rahman concluded, have been kind, but what he craves is information. "What can we do?"

Miriam Berger is a journalist and researcher.

(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?
5/8/2016 1:26:44 PM

ANTI-IMMIGRANT PROTESTERS CALL FOR MERKEL TO STEP DOWN

BY ON 5/7/16 AT 9:38 PM

Right-wing protestors demonstrate against refugees, Islam and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin, Germany, on Saturday. The sign reads "Volksschaedling" (Enemy of the People), a word used by Nazis.
HANNIBAL HANSCHKE/REUTERS

Almost 2,000 far-right protesters marched through Berlin on Saturday to demand that Chancellor Angela Merkel step down for allowing more than a million migrants from the Middle East into Germany since last year.

Under the motto "Merkel must go," demonstrators gathered outside Berlin's central train station waving German flags and holding up posters reading "Islamists not welcome" and "Wir sind das Volk" ("We are the People"), a slogan coined by the protesters who ended communist rule in East Germany, adopted last year by the anti-Islam Pegida movement.

05_07_merkel_02
People protest against a right-wing demonstration in Berlin, Germany on Saturday.
HANNIBAL HANSCHKE/REUTERS

The rally drew around 1,800 participants, police said, less than half the number organizers had expected, and the protesters were outnumbered by around 7,500 left-wing counter-demonstrators who also marched through the capital.

A spokesman for the police said there had been scuffles when several left-wing demonstrators tried to break through barriers separating the two groups, and threw bottles at police.

Police used tear gas and made several arrests, the spokesman said, adding that the situation had quickly been brought under control.

While many Germans have welcomed the new arrivals, others say the country cannot cope with integrating them and risks losing its identity.

Support for the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany party has risen sharply, while arson attacks on refugee centers and sometimes violent protests have become increasingly common.

(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?
5/8/2016 1:58:46 PM
Alert raised for Cleveland Volcano in Aleutians after explosion

Alaska Dispatch News | May 6, 2016


Smoke rises from Cleveland Volcano in the Aleutians on Aug. 8, 2011, in this aerial photo provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Alaska Volcano Observatory staff raised the volcano's alert level after detecting an explosion Thursday evening.
NOAA


The Cleveland Volcano in the Aleutian Islands is again under a heightened alert level from the Alaska Volcano Observatory, after researchers there recorded an explosion Thursday evening.

The observatory issued a statement raising the eastern Aleutians volcano’s alert level to watch, and its aviation color code to orange, late Thursday.

Researchers said in the statement they detected an explosion at 6:44 p.m. Thursday using both air pressure and seismic data.

“There are no recent satellite views since the detected explosion. However, previous Cleveland explosions have typically produced ash emissions,” observatory staff wrote.

Nearly a year ago, scientists recorded a restless period at the volcano on Chuginadak Island, including an explosion -- but no detected ash cloud -- in July.

In March, an eruption at Pavlof Volcano on the Alaska Peninsula sent an ash plume to an altitude of 20,000 feet, coating the nearby village of Nelson Lagoon and disrupting flights across Alaska as the material drifted northeast across Interior Alaska into Canada.


"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?
5/8/2016 2:09:15 PM

Marine die-offs accelerate across the globe – and no one seems to know why

ELE Marine Die Off
May 2016MARINE HEALTH – 35 tons of dead fish washed up in a lake in China. A researcher with the Haikou Oceanic and Fishery Bureau, Lu Yongliang, said the fish came from the larger Nandu River, and were swept into the Hongcheng Lake with the tide, where they died from the sudden drop in salinity. The saltwater fish are not meant to thrive in freshwater; more water is forced to enter their bodies from the freshwater lake, causing their blood vessels to rupture, Chinese researchers explained. Despite the experts’ statements, the public has been skeptical and are speculating that the fish have died from pollution.
In August last year, tons of dead fish rose to the surface in Tianjin port, after they were poisoned by cyanide in the water that was 277 times beyond the acceptable level. The cyanide had come from two massive chemical plant explosions, which tainted the water with toxic chemicals. Authorities in Tianjin, however, explained the dead fish as a salinity change. City workers in Hainan have been busy removing the fish from the shores and bagging them for incineration plants and landfill sites. –AOL

Mass die-off: Millions of dead creatures litter Chilean beaches

Fish Kill A

Compared to other countries, Chile is almost all coast, and that geographical fluke means that the country is known for its beautiful beaches. But that reputation may be on the wane thanks to a new sight on Chilean shores: dead animals. Lots of them. Heaps of them, in fact. As Giovanna Fleitas reports for the Agence France-Presse, the South American country’s beaches are covered with piles of dead sea creatures—and scientists are trying to figure out why.
Tales of dead animals washing up on shore are relatively common; after all, the ocean has a weird way of depositing its dead on shore. But Chile’s problem is getting slightly out of hand. As Fleitas writes, recent months have not been kind to the Chilean coast, which has played host to washed-up carcasses of over 300 whales, 8,000 tons of sardines, and nearly 12 percent of the country’s annual salmon catch, to name a few.
At least some of the damage to fish appears to be due to fish farming, which encourages toxic algal blooms. But as with so many strange sea phenomena in the last year, El Niño, which warms the equatorial Pacific, appears to be at least partly to blame. The warm water brought on by the phenomenon put stress on coral reefs near Hawaii and appears to have delayed the arrival of whales to the islands. Meanwhile, off the shores of Chile, the warm water appears to have provided great conditions for toxic algae. The blooming creatures poison fish and other marine life that eat them, and this year the bloom is blamed for losses of nearly a billion dollars among Chilean fishers.
Algae also suck oxygen from the water itself—a change to which Pacific Ocean creatures appear to be particularly vulnerable. In a newly published paper in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, researchers warn that declining oxygen levels worldwide kill animals, but that the diversity of life in the Pacific Ocean is at particular risk. That long-term danger isn’t helped by algae that blooms in response to short-term phenomena like El Niño.
The rising tide of dead animals is raising health concerns, as when thousands of squid washed up on shore earlier this year. At the time, reports Latin Correspondent’s Steven James Grattan, health officials were criticized for not clearing coasts of about 10,000 rotting, dead squid sooner. –Smithsonian

Millions of dead fish wash ashore on Vietnamese coast

Fish Kill

Millions of fish have washed up dead along a 125-kilometre stretch of the Vietnamese coast in one of the communist country’s worst environmental disasters. Soldiers have been deployed to bury tons of fish, clams and the occasional whale that began dying in early April along the north-central coast, including some popular tourist beaches. Vietnamese officials facing growing anger over the disaster have not announced the official cause of the deaths, which have affected the livelihoods of tens of thousands of families. Some officials have suggested it may be toxins or algal blooms known as red tide.
But Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has ordered an investigation into how a Taiwanese-owned steel plant received approval to pipe waste directly into the sea. Formosa Ha Tinh Steel, a unit of Tawain’s Formosa Plastics, is looking to raise its investment in the area from $US10.5 billion ($14.2 billion) to $US28.5 billion. The company’s executive vice-president, Chang Fu-ning, said the steel plant’s treatment system had received all appropriate approvals. “It’s beyond doubt,” he said. Mr Phuc said his government is determined to track down the main culprits with “objectivity, honesty, prudence and urgency.” –SMH

Thousands of fish die in lake in Bolivia still a mystery

Fish K

Thousands of small sardine-like fish have been found dead in Lake Alalay, but no one is completely sure what caused oxygen levels in the lake to drop so dramatically. Thousands of dead fish have washed up onto the shores of a lake in Bolivia.
Just before they died, some of the fish had just hatched from their eggs in Lake Alalay, in the central Bolivian city of Cochabamba.No one yet knows the number of dead fish, but they have stockpiled five cubic meters (177 cubic feet) so far, so it’s possible there is over a ton of dead fish in the lake. –Telegraph

Looking for causes for the mass die-offs

China Fish

Piles of dead whales, salmon and sardines are washing ashore in Chile as the El Niño weather phenomenon warms the normally frigid waters off the coasts of the Southern Cone nation. Chile, with its 2,485 miles of Pacific coastline, is particularly susceptible to El Niño’s whims, and thanks to the warmer waters a “red tide” of algae has decimated much of the country’s marine life.
Chile is the world’s second-largest producer of salmon and the surge of algae has choked an estimated 40,000 tons of the fish in the Los Lagos region. The red tide also has been blamed for some 8,000 tons of sardines washing ashore at the mouth of the Queule River and the thousands of dead clams that washed up on Chiloe Island.
“We think that a common factor in the deaths of creatures in southern Chile, in the salmon farms and in fish off the coast, is the El Niño phenomenon,” the Chilean fisheries institute, IFOP, said in a statement, according to AFP. The current El Niño “has been classed as one of the most intense in the past 65 years,” the IFOP added. –Fox Latino

(the extinction protocol)



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

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