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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/19/2016 4:08:41 PM

Two Western Wildfires Triple in Size; Evacuations In at Least 3 States

Published:
Jun 18 2016 09:15 AM EDT
By Ada Carr
weather.com





Evacuations Ordered in 3 West States

Meteorologist Ari Sarsalari has the latest on multiple wildfires raging in the Southwest. Combined the fires in New Mexico have burned more than 50,000 acres.


Major wildfires burning across the West have consumed tens of thousands of acres and forced evacuations in at least three states. In New Mexico, one particular wildfire exploded in size on Thursday.

Dry conditions are hampering firefighting efforts in a region that's expected to see dangerous and potentially deadly heat over the weekend and into early next week.

"Humidity values less than 15 percent and dew points as low as the single digits will be present and persistent across a large portion of the Southwest through at least Sunday," said weather.com meteorologist Jonathan Belles.

The most extreme heat in the coming days will be in the Desert Southwest where highs could climb to near 120 degrees, including in Phoenix, where it hasn't been that hot in more than 20 years.

Dog Head Fire - New Mexico

A state of emergency has been declared as the Dog Head Fire more than tripled to around 17,000 acres by Saturday morning, forcing evacuations in the Manzano Mountains southeast of Albuquerque. The sudden growth was attributed to dry conditions, hot temperatures and afternoon winds.

Residents of the town of Chilili along state road 337 begin to evacuate due to the Dog Head wildfire near the Manzano mountains, Wednesday, June 15, 2016, in Chilili, N.M.(Roberto E. Rosales/The Albuquerque Journal via AP)

It has been dry in the region for more than two weeks, said weather.com meteorologist Linda Lam. The last measurable rainfall occurred in Albuquerque on June 1, when 0.12 inches was measured.

The blaze has destroyed 24 single residences and 21 other minor structures as of Saturday, Inciweb reports. Friday officials issued an air quality alert for the area near the fire through mid-day and smoke-sensitive individuals and people with respiratory issues have been urged to take precautions.

Residents in Chilili, Mercid, Escobosa Ponderosa Pines and Yrisarri were forced to leave their homes, and officials cut electricity in evacuated areas as a precaution, the Associated Press reported.

"The only thing I'm worried about is the wind,” area resident Manuel Urban told KOAT.com, “because if it picks up, then there's nothing that is going to stop that fire.”

More than 600 firefighters are battling the blaze, InciWeb also reports. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

North Fire - New Mexico

Fire crews worked to secure a section of line of the North Fire in New Mexico's San Mateo Mountains. (TC Smith/USFS)

The largest of these fires has burned more than 30,000 acres in the San Mateo Mountains of southwestern New Mexico over the course of nearly a month.

The lightning-caused North Fire started May 21 in the Cibola National Forest and is only 30 percent contained. According to a release from the U.S. Forest Service's Magdalena Ranger District on Wednesday, smoke will be the biggest danger for communities and residents in the vicinity of Magdalena and surrounding areas.

"There will be little movement of air to get the smoke up and out of the area," the release said. "Smoke will not move very far or mix well into the atmosphere. It will settle into drainages and low-lying areas, with high likelihood for evening inversions. Smoke may be heavy at times during all hours and lifting of smoke during the day slower than has been seen over the past days."

Cedar Fire - Arizona

A wildfire near Show Low, Arizona, that started Wednesday has nearly reached 10,000 acres and prompted some evacuations in the area.

"It’s huge, I've never seen a fire up here like this," Pinetop resident Ryan Davis told ABC15. “In Pinetop, it's clear, then we drove underneath it and it got all dark and then you could smell it – it smelled like a campfire."

The Cedar Fire - officials changed the name from the Cedar Creek Fire on Thursday, KPHO reports - is burning brush and timber in rugged terrain about nine miles from Show Low. Thousands of area residents remain under pre-evacuation advisories. Navajo County spokesman Adam Wolfe said only about a dozen people have been evacuated.

“Fire is still on the outskirts of town. But the smoke is really bad. Wind is really getting bad," Ryan White, who works in Show Low, told USA Today on Wednesday night. "The wind seems to be pushing it right toward Show Low, Pinetop areas. I could smell the fire around noon; went to look outside the shop and could see the smoke building.”

County officials told residents in Show Low, Pinetop-Lakeside and three other communities to prepare for possible evacuations, but Wolfe says Show Low's west side is the area that likely would be affected initially if evacuations are necessary.

"When it started and the wind was really bad, it was raining ash. Like, it was falling out of the sky," Pinetop resident Janice Elmore, who hadn't been ordered to evacuate yet, told ABC15. “It's pretty scary, but we love it up here so we want to stay as long as we can."

The cause of the fire is still unknown.

Sherpa Fire - California

A wind-driven fire that has consumed almost 6,000 acres in the Los Padres National Forest prompted mandatory evacuations in Southern Santa Barbara County as it swept toward the Pacific Ocean. The fire started shortly after 3 p.m. Wednesday afternoon near the Sherpa Ranch, and late Wednesday evening, KTLA.com quoted Santa Barbara County Fire Captain Dave Zaniboni as saying the fire had "blown up."

Friday U.S. 101, the state's main coastal highway, had to be shut down for the second time since the fire first erupted, the Associated Press reports. The roadway was closed for hours.

"I was actually on scene last night and saw some of the fire tornadoes, and I tell you what, it's no joke," Highway Patrol Lt. Steve Larson told AP. "It was off the hook."

Friday morning, a firefighting DC-10 jumbo jet led an air attack on the inferno, dropping vast swaths of retardant to stop the fire's movement across hard to reach terrain. A fleet of planes and helicopters have been brought in to assist the army of firefighters on the ground.

"Our defensive strategy will continue to emphasize protection of life and property while we look for a place to turn the corner and push this back up into the mountains and get full containment," federal incident commander Robert Laeng told AP.

"This has been a significant and challenging fire," Santa Barbara County Fire Chief Eric Peterson told KSBY. "It's burning in an area notorious for life and property loss, structure loss and fuels that have not burned for over 70 years."

The fire was burning "very close" to the ExxonMobile facility in Las Flores Canyon, KEYT.com said.

"The refinery has fire around it, and companies in place protecting it," Zaniboni told the AP, adding that it has a cleared buffer zone.

Evacuation centers have been set up at the Wake Center in Goleta, California, and Santa Ynez Union High School in Santa Ynez, California, Inciweb reported. A large animal evacuation center has been set up at the Earl Warren Showgrounds in Goleta.

This fire was just 5 percent contained as of Friday afternoon.



In this photo provided by the Santa Barbara County Fire Department, a firefighter knocks down flames as they approach a ranch near the Las Flores Canyon area west of Goleta, Calif., in the early morning hours of Thursday, June 16, 2016. The wildfire burning in rugged coastal canyons west of Santa Barbara is growing as it feeds on vegetation that hasn't burned in 70 years. (Mike Eliason/Santa Barbara County Fire Department via AP)


(weather.com)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/19/2016 4:30:38 PM
Sat Jun 18, 2016 8:53pm BST

Belgium charges three men with terrorism offences after overnight raids

BRUSSELS |


A Belgian police officer stands guard outside a meeting of the government's security council in Brussels, Belgium, June 18, 2016.
REUTERS/FRANCOIS LENOIR

Belgian prosecutors charged three men with terrorism offences on Saturday following overnight raids that took place amid heightened security in Belgium and France due to the Euro 2016 soccer tournament.

Three months after Islamist bombers killed 32 people in Brussels, police searched dozens of houses across the country and arrested 12 people the night before Belgium's Euro 2016 game against Ireland.

Nine of them were released after questioning but three Belgian nationals identified as 27-year-old Samir C., 40-year-old Moustapha B., and 29-year-old Jawad B., were charged with "having attempted to commit a terrorist murder and for participation in the activities of a terrorist group", the federal prosecutor's office said in a statement.

Some media reports said the suspects had planned attacks against fans watching the Euro 2016 games in Brussels, and had possibly been targeting Saturday afternoon's Belgium vs Ireland match.

Earlier on Saturday, Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel chaired a meeting of the government's security council, which includes the ministers of defence, foreign affairs, home affairs and justice, after the raids and said soccer-related events would go on as planned with extra security measures.

"We want to continue living normally," Michel told a news conference. "The situation is under control."

"We are extremely vigilant, we are monitoring the situation hour by hour and we will continue with determination the fight against extremism, radicalisation and terrorism," he added.

No weapons or explosives were found during the overnight searches, which also involved 152 garage lockups.

SOCCER MATCHES TARGETED?

Flemish public broadcaster VTM said the people arrested overnight were suspected of planning an attack in Brussels this weekend during one of Belgium's soccer matches.

Areas where fans watch matches in Brussels were potential targets, as well as other crowded areas such as shopping centres and stations, Belgian media reported.

The Belgian crisis centre in charge of coordinating security responses decided not to raise the security level to the maximum that would indicate an imminent threat of attack, Michel said.

Public broadcaster RTBF said Belgium's crisis centre on Friday had placed several government ministers, including Michel, under heightened protection.

Michel said extra security measures had been taken for some people but did not name them.

With the Euro 2016 soccer tournament underway in neighbouring France, Europe is on high security alert. March's deadly attacks by Islamist suicide bombers in Brussels followed attacks in Paris last November in which 130 people died.

Investigators have found links between the Brussels and Paris attackers, some of whom were based in Belgium.

On Monday a French policeman and his police officer partner were stabbed to death outside their home in Paris in an attack claimed by Islamic State. In a video posted on social networks, the attacker, Larossi Abballa, linked it to the soccer tournament, saying: "The Euros will be a graveyard."

Two suspected associates of Abballa were placed under investigation on Saturday for membership of a terrorist organisation.

Separately, a judiciary source told Reuters on Friday a 22-year-old man suspected of planning attacks on tourists had been jailed on terrorism charges after being arrested at the start of the week.

On Wednesday Belgian police received an anti-terror alert warning that a group of Islamic State fighters had recently left Syria en route for Europe planning attacks in Belgium and France, security officials said.

(Additional reporting by Barbara Lewis, Matthias Blamont in Paris; Editing by Jon Boyle and Helen Popper)

(reuters)

"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?
6/19/2016 4:57:32 PM

IS mounts fierce defence of besieged Syrian bastion

June 18, 2016

The Syrian conflict has killed more than 280,000 people and displaced millions since it began in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government demonstrations (AFP Photo/Thaer Mohammed)

Beirut (AFP) - Islamic State group jihadists have launched a wave of suicide and car bombings to defend a besieged stronghold in northern Syria against US-backed fighters, a monitor said on Saturday.

A Kurdish-Arab alliance last week encircled the city of Manbij and severed a key supply route used by IS from the Turkish border to the jihadists' de facto Syrian capital, Raqa.

But since then the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), supported by US air strikes, have been slowed by almost daily suicide bombings by IS, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

On Friday, IS carried out two suicide attacks and five car bombings in the southwestern suburbs of Manbij, according to the British-based monitor, which relies on a network of sources on the ground.

The number of casualties from the attacks was unknown, but hundreds have been killed since the offensive to retake the city from IS began on May 31.

According to the Observatory, a total of 352 IS fighters and 37 SDF combatants have died, as well as an estimated 78 civilians.

The operation has also been complicated by the presence of tens of thousands of civilians trapped in the city, although more than 1,000 have managed to escape with the help of the SDF.

"On Friday, six members of the same family were killed when they were targeted by jihadists while fleeing," Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

SDF commanders have accused IS of using civilians as human shields.

Southeast of Manbij, regime forces backed by Russian air strikes have also faced IS counterattacks after advancing towards another jihadist bastion, Tabqa.

The town lies around 50 kilometres (31 miles) west of Raqa city, and recapturing it would cut a key supply route. The army is now reported to be 15 kilometres away from Tabqa's military airport.

Syria's five-year conflict has evolved into a multi-sided civil war involving a range of combatants including Western- and Gulf-backed rebels, jihadists, Kurds and pro-regime forces supported by Russia and Iran.

The northern province of Aleppo in particular has been carved up by a complex set of front lines and key supply routes, and has seen some of the worst fighting.

Opposition-held areas of Aleppo city were hit by fresh barrel bomb attacks on Saturday, while rebel fire killed seven civilians in a Kurdish-majority neighbourhood, the Observatory said.

South of the city, rebel groups backed by Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front were locked in battles with government forces and allied militia.

Since Tuesday, 186 fighters have been killed in those clashes -- 100 rebels and jihadists along with 86 members of pro-regime forces, including 25 from Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah, the Observatory said.

"It's the highest toll for Hezbollah fighters in a single battle," said Abdel Rahman.

The Syrian conflict has killed more than 280,000 people and displaced millions since it began in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government demonstrations.

(Yahoo News)

"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?
6/19/2016 5:20:43 PM

U.S. advocates see LGBT rights at a watershed after Orlando shooting

June 18, 2016


Chris Sydow shows off her tattoo at Stigma Tattoo Bar to raise funds for the families of the victims who were killed at the Pulse gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, June 18, 2016. REUTERS/Jim Young


By Julia Harte and Jonathan Allen

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - In the days following the slayings of 49 people at a gay nightclub, members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community pulled together in prayer vigils and benefit drag shows and basked in a broad showing of support many said they had never experienced.

For Victor Guanchez, that support was personified in President Barack Obama, who met Thursday with survivors at a sports arena in downtown Orlando. Guanchez, 24, was working at Pulse early Sunday when the shooter came in. He was hit in a leg but survived by diving under the bar he tended.

With his right foot in a walking cast, Guanchez attempted to stand as the president approached. Obama told him it wasn’t necessary, that Guanchez was strong and would recover well.

Guanchez said he was encouraged by the visit and the wave of well wishes he had received from around the world. He said he hoped the response would be a turning point for the way Americans view LGBT people.

“Everybody has their own mind. But with the [shooting], we are just one mind. And that will change everything, I think,” said Guanchez, speaking Friday from a hospital bed, a blanket draped over his legs.

Whether the groundswell of compassion Guanchez felt translates into change is unclear. The worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history will be closely followed by the first anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark decision that gay marriage is a constitutional right. LGBT advocates, taking stock this week, said the push for equality was far from over.

Job bias based on sexual orientation remains legal in many states. Some businesses are pushing for laws allowing them to reject LGBT customers.

And the most recent Justice Department survey found 57,000 people who said they were victims of sexual orientation-based hate crimes in 2014.

“Most Americans don't realize how many of these crimes there are,” said Jason Marsden, executive director of the Matthew Shepard Foundation, an advocacy group.

Beth Littrell, an attorney with the Lambda Legal advocacy organization, said it was a precarious period.

"The anti-LGBT rhetoric that has erupted since the marriage decision inevitably fuels the kinds of actions and prejudice that lead to tragedies," she said.

People “who have relied on the law to keep minorities in their place no longer have the law to treat them unequally," she said, "and if the law can't discriminate, sometimes people take it into their own hands to enforce discrimination.”

Littrell said Lambda Legal was pushing for state and federal legislation workplace protections.

"We're fighting battles in every state in every legislature this session,” she said.


NEW HOPE

For Raymond Michael Sharpe, the massacre brought back memories of the HIV/AIDS crisis, which was dawning in 1983, the year he came out.

“It was devastating,” said Sharpe, 55. “All the bars got boycotted on and off for years because people thought that they were going to catch HIV from the bartenders.”

On Wednesday night in Orlando, the response to tragedy was very different at Southern Nights, another Orlando gay club where Sharpe works.

Hundreds packed in for a benefit to raise money for Pulse employees. Pulse founder Barbara Poma made an appearance, hugging supporters and lip syncing to “One Love” by David Guetta featuring Estelle, alongside more than 40 drag queens, some of whom had come from as far as Ohio and New York.

Sharpe noted that, for some, the response to the shooting and the ensuing support for the LGBT community in Orlando was hopeful and very personal: Some younger friends had come out on social media for the first time in the aftermath.

At the GLBT Community Center of Central Florida in Orlando, one of the people answering the telephones this week was Thalia Ainsley, 67, a veteran who enlisted because her family believed military service might “cure” her of identifying as a woman. She lost a leg in the Tet Offensive in Vietnam. After spending much of her life as a man deeply withdrawn, she began hormone therapy last year to transition to womanhood.

After the shooting, Ainsley said she fielded scores of calls at the center from LGBT people seeking counseling, a few hostile calls and far more from well wishers.

“It’s like the consciousness of the whole world is being lifted,” she said, “and the LGBT community is being seen as human beings now, instead of just an issue that people argue about.”


(Additional reporting by Ned Parker and Mimi Dwyer; Editing by Lisa Girion and Cynthia Osterman)


(Yahoo News)

"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?
6/19/2016 5:27:27 PM

Central Philippines volcano spouts massive ash column

June 18, 2016

Kanlaon volcano spews ash into the air as seen from an observation post in La Carlota town, Negros Occidental province, central Philippines, on June 18, 2016 (AFP Photo/Philippines Institute of Volcanology and Seismology)


A rumbling volcano in the central Philippines shot a huge column of ash into the sky on Saturday, prompting the official aviation agency to warn aircraft to stay away, authorities said.

Mount Kanlaon, located on the central island of Negros, launched a plume of whitish-grey ash about 1.5 kilometres (almost a mile) into the air, said Kenn John Veracruz of the official Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology.

The civil aviation office issued an advisory, saying "flights operating in the vicinity of the volcano are advised to avoid flying close to the summit as airborne ash from a sudden eruption can be hazardous to aircraft."

The volcano, located about 510 kilometres south of Manila, has been more active than usual since November, prompting the government to ban hikers from its slopes.

Veracruz said that so far the authorities had not detected any lava rising inside the 2.47-kilometre high volcano but they were checking how far the ash was being scattered by the wind and whether it could affect nearby communities.

"It has been raining in recent days so there was likely water that built up inside the volcano and since the crater is hot, it built up the steam pressure," causing the eruption of ash, Veracruz, a member of the institute's volcano monitoring division, told AFP.

He added that it was possible the volcano could experience another ash eruption.

The civil defence office said they had not received any reports of damage or people affected from the ashfall but that authorities remain on alert.

Kanlaon has had several eruptions, usually of ash, in the past century, leading the government to impose a permanent four-kilometre "danger zone" around the volcano where people are barred from living.

In August, 1996, the volcano abruptly erupted, sending a spray of heated rocks that killed three hikers who were near the summit at the time.

The Philippines is located in the seismically active Pacific "Ring of Fire" and has over 20 active volcanoes.

Earlier this month, Mount Bulusan in the rural eastern province of Sorsogon fired a spectacular column of ash and steam into the air.


(Yahoo News)

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

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