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Patricia Bartch

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/25/2016 5:35:20 PM
i can't even imagine laying off 60,000 people ... from just ONE plant!!!

I will never buy an APPLE product. just my opinion.
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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/25/2016 5:44:27 PM

Yes Pat, hard to believe... yet true.

Thanks for showing up.

Miguel


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

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Patricia Bartch

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/25/2016 5:51:49 PM
i read parts of that article to my husband. when all those people are displaced from the place of employment, companies around the "office" suffer.

restaurants, cleaners, department stores ..... EVERYTHING around that Apple workplace will suffer. those companies who are introducing ROBOTS by the thousands are killing our world.
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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/25/2016 11:13:43 PM

The war on Isis: Iraqi government forces launch offensive to recapture Fallujah from Daesh
By David Sim
May 23, 2016 12:04 BST

Iraqi pro-government forces take up position on the outskirts of the city of Fallujah, as part of a major assault to retake the city from Islamic StateAhmad al-Rubaye/AFP

Iraqi government forces have clashed with Islamic State (Isis) militants near Fallujah as they launched a military offensive to recapture the city from the extremists. Backed by US-led coalition airstrikes and paramilitary troops, government forces bombed central areas of the city and carried out a ground offensive around the town of Garma, east of Fallujah, which is considered the main supply line for the militants.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced the launching of the offensive on his Twitter feed. "Zero hour for the liberation of Fallujah has arrived. The moment of great victory has drawn near and Daesh has no choice but to flee," he tweeted.

Fallujah, 50km from Baghdad, was the first city to fall to the jihadists in January 2014. Six months later, the group declared a caliphate spanning large parts of Iraq and neighbouring Syria. Iraqi forces have surrounded the city since last year but focused most combat operations on IS-held territories further west and north. Theauthorities have pledged to retake Mosul this year in keeping with a US plan to dislodge Isis (Daesh) from their de facto capitals in Iraq and Syria. However, the Fallujah operation could push back that timeline.

Iraqi and US officials have called on the estimated 100,000 civilians still living in Fallujah to flee and said they would open safe corridors to areas south of the city, but bombs planted by IS along the roads are complicating evacuation. About 300,000 people lived in the Euphrates River city before the war.

The United Nations and Human Rights Watch said last month that residents of Fallujah were facing acute shortages of food and medicine amid a siege by government forces. Aid has not reached the city since the Iraqi military recaptured nearby Ramadi.

The latest offensive comes a week after Iraqi forces pushed IS out of the western town of Rutba, around 380km west of Baghdad, on the edge of Anbar province. In April, Iraqi forces cleared territory along Anbar's Euphrates river valley after the provincial capital Ramadi was declared fully liberated.

Known as the "city of minarets and mother of mosques", Fallujah is a focus for Sunni Muslim faith and identity in Iraq. In the early days of the Sunni-led insurgency that followed the 2003 US-led invasion which toppled Saddam Hussein, Fallujah emerged as the main stronghold for different militant groups opposed to American forces. The main group was al-Qaeda in Iraq, which later spawned the IS extremist group. Fallujah was the site of two bloody battles against US forces in 2004.


(ibtimes.co.uk)

"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?
5/26/2016 12:01:25 AM

State Department sets new single-day record for Syrian refugee approvals


Syrian refugees arrive aboard a dinghy after crossing from Turkey to the island of Lesbos, Greece, on Sept. 10, 2015. (Associated Press) Photo by: Petros Giannakouris

- The Washington Times - Tuesday, May 24, 2016

The State Department admitted 80 Syrian refugees on Tuesday and 225 on Monday, setting a new single-day record as President Obama surges to try to meet his target of 10,000 approvals this year — sparking renewed fears among security experts who say corners are being cut to meet a political goal.

Officials insisted they’re moving faster because they’re getting better at screening, and say they’re still running all the traps on applicants.

But the new spike in numbers is stunning, with more people accepted on Monday alone than were approved in the entire months of January or February.

“The Obama administration is on full throttle to admit as many people as possible before the time clock runs out on them,” said Jessica Vaughan, policy studies director at the Center for Immigration Studies. “This is the classic scenario when political expediency trumps prudence, and someone slips through who shouldn’t have, and tragedy ensues.”

Powerless to stop the civil war in Syria, Mr. Obama has instead offered the U.S. as a safe haven for those fleeing the conflict, promising to accept 10,000 refugees between Oct. 1 and Sept. 30. As of Tuesday evening, he’d approved 2,540 — an average of about 10 applications a day.

To meet the 10,000 goal, that pace will have to spike to nearly 60 approvals a day.

Officials at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency charged with vetting the applications, and at the State Department, which gives final approval, insisted they can meet Mr. Obama’s goal without sacrificing security.

From February to April, the administration deployed extra staff to Jordan, where some 12,000 applicants referred by the U.N. were interviewed. Interviews of Syrians were also being held in Lebanon and Iraq, and both USCIS and the State Department said everything is going according to plan, with enough interviews completed that they can bring in 7,000 more refugees by the end of September.

“Increases in processing capacity have improved our capacity to meet the 10,000 target for Syrian refugee admissions for this fiscal year. As such, we expect Syrian refugee arrivals to the U.S. to increase steadily throughout the fiscal year,” a State Department officialsaid.

The department says refugees undergo the most checks of anyone applying to enter the U.S., and Syrians are getting as much scrutiny as possible.

But pressure to speed up the process is growing. Last week Senate Democrats, led by Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, fired off a letter saying other countries are approving refugees at a quicker pace, and demanding the administration catch up.

“Refugees are victims, not perpetrators, of terrorism,” the Democrats wrote in their letter.

That’s not always the case, however, as two men who arrived as part of the refugee program were charged with terrorism-related offenses in January.

One of those, Aws Mohammed Younis Al-Jayab, an Iraqi-born man, was living in Syria when he was admitted as a refugee in 2012. The State Department counts him against its Iraqi refugee program, not against the Syrian refugee program.

The Obama administration has repeatedly cited the Iraqi program as evidence that it can safely admit refugees from Syria. But security experts say the U.S., by dint of the long war in Iraq, has access to government databases, and a presence on the ground, to assist in checking out would-be refugees’ stories.

No such access exists in Syria, where the U.S. considers the current regime an enemy and much of the country is occupied by the very terrorist forces from Islamic State that the U.S. is fighting.

Critics say the Obama administration has been too heavily focused on Muslim refugees, while hundreds of thousands of Christians are left behind. The latest statistics show only a dozen Christian refugees from Syria have been accepted so far — a rate of less than half of one percent.

The overwhelming majority — more than 97 percent — are Suni Muslims.

Congressional Republicans have called for a slower approach to admitting refugees, but have been powerless to stop Mr. Obama. Democrats filibustered a proposal to require the chiefs of Homeland Security, intelligence and the FBI to sign off on every refugee’s application.

The House will take another step Wednesday, as the Judiciary Committee votes on legislation requiring USCIS to check the social media profiles of all applicants seeking visas from suspect countries.

States have also tried to block Mr. Obama, renouncing agreements to work with the administration to resettle refugees within their borders. Texas even sued to try to bar resettlement, but a federal court rejected the lawsuit, saying the state didn’t have standing.

(The Washington Times)

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

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