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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/4/2016 3:19:10 PM

Pro-ISIS Group Threatens LAX, JFK, Heathrow



Mark Ralston / AFP / Getty
by MICHELLE MOONS3 Jul 2016

Terrorist threats against several airports — Los Angeles International Airport, London’s Heathrow and New York’s JFK — were posted to what has been identified as a pro-Islamic State Twitter account ahead of what is supposed to be a record-breaking fourth of July weekend for travel out of LAX.

Counterterrorism organization SITE Intelligence Group raised the alert about the threat against planes “flying from (London’s) Heathrow (Airport) to the US” over the 4th of July weekend, according to the Los Angeles Times. The message added: “there will be a device placed in either Heathrow, LAX or JFK Airports.”

Authorities cast the threat as not credible, but nonetheless insisted they take threats seriously. Similar threats are said to come in frequently around busy travel holidays and when other attacks have occurred, the Times reported.

Security had already been boosted at LAX for the holiday weekend, following an Islamic terror attack on the Istanbul airport in Turkey. The security boost reportedly involves LAX police, federal agencies, the Los Angeles Police Department and the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department.

LAX travelers speaking with local KTLA news expressed ease and had no worries about their safety. The Times reported that a record 1.2 million people are expected to make their way through LAX over the holiday weekend.

Travelers may notice the increased law enforcement presence, as well as tactical vehicles around the airport like those seen Friday, according to the report. The FBI was cited as saying on Thursday that there are no known credible threats to the U.S. over the weekend.

In addition, Reuters reported that British Transport minister Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon urged caution, encouraging vigilance to terrorist threats among the British public. That report noted that “[t]he absence of known threats does not ensure safety” before citing Orlando’s Islamic terror attack.

Follow Michelle Moons on Twitter @MichelleDiana


(breitbart.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?
7/4/2016 5:03:39 PM

California Drought Causing Trees to Die by the 'Millions,' Scientist Says

    ·
Jul 3, 2016, 4:53 PM ET


WATCH Fast Moving Wildfires Burn Northeast of Los Angeles

The devastation the California drought has caused to conifer trees in the Sierra Nevadas over the last couple of years "is far greater than previously observed," NASA scientists said in announcement of the publication of new map of the region.

David Schimel, a senior research scientist who worked on the study, told ABC News that the map represented NASA's "first close look" at the extent of the damage caused by drought on Sierra trees.

Schimel referred to the findings as "millions of trees dying at once."

The map was created with measurements from NASA’s Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer instrument, which was developed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. The image was created by scientists at the U.S. Forest Service's Pacific Southwest Region Remote Sensing Lab, in McClellan, California, by performing a time series analysis of AVIRIS images taken from NASA's ER-2 aircraft.

NASA said that the map will be used to help the USFS assess and respond to the impacts of increased tree mortality caused by the drought.

PHOTO: NASA AVIRIS data were used to classify the health of trees in Californias Sierra National Forest. Green conifers are shown as green, conifers that were dead in summer 2015 are red, and conifers that were potentially dead in fall 2015 are yellow.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/USDA Forest Service
NASA AVIRIS data were used to classify the health of trees in California's Sierra National Forest. Green conifers are shown as green, conifers that were dead in summer 2015 are red, and conifers that were potentially dead in fall 2015 are yellow.more +

Wildfires have plagued California throughout the summer of 2016.

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokesman Daniel Berlant told The Associated Press that the Red Cross has set up an evacuation center in Auburn, near Sacramento and 140 miles northeast of San Francisco, in reaction to the most recent wave of fires affecting the region.

Schimel said the death of the trees was caused by a number of factors, related to climate change.

"These are trees that have been stressed by heat and a lack of water for a number years," he said. "Some of them died of a lack of water and others died from insects and plants. Trees would normally be resistant to such threats but the drought weakens them."

He also said that the map points to what could represent a permanent change in the landscape of the region.

"The drought has some momentum, there could be a wave of mortality that continues for the next several years," he said. "The biggest concern here is that the trees that are dying are decades old or even centuries old, and this mortality rate means that the Sierras will be changed during our lifetimes and our kids' lifetimes."


(abcNEWS)

"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?
7/4/2016 5:31:30 PM
Friday's rain breaks 118-year-old record in Tucson

  • Arizona Daily Star
  • Updated


Ron Mevdescek Arizona Daily Star
The Stone Avenue underpass at 6th Street is closed due to flooding

(UPDATED 1 p.m.) Friday's rain in Tucson broke the daily rainfall total set more than 100 years ago.

The National Weather Service said .82 of an inch of rain was recorded at the Tucson airport. That broke the rainfall total for the date, which was .71 set in 1898.

Some areas of Tucson saw more than 2 inches of rain today. The deluge flood streets, stranded motorists and temporarily shut down street car operations.

The Sun Link street car has resumed service, according to a tweet.

Here are some rain totals from Pima County Regional Flood Control District (six hour totals at noon):

2.17 inches — Alamo Wash and Glenn Street.

1.46 inches — Sabino Canyon Road and the Tanque Verde Wash

1.26 inches — Tanque Verde Road and the Tanque Verde Wash

1.54 inches — Valencia Road at the Pima Air and Space Museum.

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A storm moving to the northeast has swamped parts of the metro area in the last several hours.

The NWS has issued a flash flood warning for the Tucson metro area.


Tucson Fire crews have been called to several swift water rescues to assist stranded motorists. No injuries have been reported.

Authorities were reporting numerous stranded motorists along Country Club Road. Several intersections, including at Grant Road, were being shut down because of rushing water and stalled vehicles. By 1 p.m., the water on many flooded streets was receding.

Authorities are asking motorists not drive through flooded washes.

Twitter posts show flooded streets at Sixth Avenue/Sixth Street, Stone Avenue and Drachman Street; Grant Road and First Avenue.

The Marana Police Department said the underpass at Orange Grove and Interstate 10 is closed because of standing water. Several vehicles had to be towed from the deep water.

(tucson.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?
7/5/2016 1:06:59 AM

CLIMATE CHANGE IS SENDING AFRICA'S AGRICULTURE CRISIS INTO A TAILSPIN

East Africa is already the hungriest place on Earth, and climate change threatens to compound its problems by raising temperatures and disrupting the seasonal rains.

BY ON 7/4/16 AT 11:00 AM


A man carries animal feed in the Sitti Zone of Ethiopia on April 8, 2016, near the border with Somalia. The region is afflicted by a severe drought.

This story was originally published by Mother Jones and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Last December, the climate summit in Paris offered journalists an unprecedented opportunity to reframe the global warming story. Climate reporting used to rest on the tacit understanding that the problem is overwhelming and intractable. That no longer rings true. While we have a better understanding than ever of the potential calamity in store, we finally have a clear vision of a path forward—and momentum for actually getting there.

To that end, Paris was a turning point for me personally, too: It was the end of the beginning of my career as an environmental journalist. This week I'm leaving Mother Jones after five years covering climate and other green stories. Paris underscored that it's past time for me to look beyond the borders of the United States. That's why, this fall, I'm going to undertake a Fulbright-National Geographic Digital Storytelling Fellowship. For at least nine months, I'll move between Kenya, Uganda and Nigeria to document how climate change is affecting food security.

Agriculture in Africa is one of the most important yet underreported stories about climate change today. It's a fascinating intersection of science, politics, technology, culture, and all the other things that make climate such a rich vein of reporting. At that intersection, the scale of the challenge posed by global warming is matched only by the scale of opportunity to innovate and adapt. There are countless stories waiting to be told, featuring a brilliant and diverse cast of scientists, entrepreneurs, politicians, farmers, families, and more.

East Africa is already the hungriest place on Earth: One in every three people live without sufficient access to nutritious food, according to the United Nations. Crop yields in the region are the lowest on the planet. African farms have one-tenth the productivity of Western farms on average, and sub-Saharan Africa is the only placeon the planet where per capita food production is actually falling.

Now, climate change threatens to compound those problems by raising temperatures and disrupting the seasonal rains on which many farmers depend. Anindex produced by the University of Notre Dame ranks 180 of the world's countries based on their vulnerability to climate change impacts (No. 1, New Zealand, is the least vulnerable; the United State is ranked No. 11). The best-ranked mainland African country is South Africa, down at No. 84; Nigeria, Kenya, and Uganda rank at No. 147, No. 154, and No. 160, respectively. In other words, these are among the places that will be hit hardest by climate change. More often than not, the agricultural sector will experience some of the worst impacts. Emerging research indicates that climate change could drive down yields of staples such as rice, wheat, and maize 20 percent by 2050. Worsening and widespread drought could shorten the growing season in some places by up to 40 percent.


A man walks near a carcass of a dead cow in Farado Kebele, one of the drought stricken Somali regions in Ethiopia, January 26.
TIKSA NEGERI/REUTERS

This isn't just a matter of putting food on the table. Agricultural productivity also lies at the root of broader economic development, since farming is Africa's No. 1 form of employment. So, even when hunger isn't an issue, per se, lost agricultural productivity can stymie rural communities' efforts to get the money they need for roads, schools, clinics, and other necessities. "We only produce enough to eat," lamented Amelia Tonito, a farmer I met recently in Mozambique. "We'd like to produce enough to eat and to sell." More food means more money in more pockets; the process of alleviating poverty starts on farms.

"We only produce enough to eat," lamented Amelia Tonito, a farmer I met recently in Mozambique. "We'd like to produce enough to eat and to sell."

The story goes beyond money. Hunger, increased water scarcity, and mass migrations sparked by natural-resource depletion can amplify the risk of conflict. Al-Shabaab in Kenya and Boko Haram in Nigeria have both drawn strength from drought-related hunger.

This is also a story about new applications for technology at the dawn of Africa's digital age. It's a story about gender—most African farmers are women—and the struggle to empower marginalized sectors of society. It's about globalization and the growth of corporate power, as large-scale land investors from Wall Street to Dubai to Shanghai see a potential windfall in turning East and West Africa into a global breadbasket. Such interventions could boost rural economies—or disenfranchise small-scale farmers and further degrade the landscape.

Of course, all the data points I've just mentioned are only that: cold, lifeless data. They work as an entry point for those of us who are thousands of miles away from Africa. But they don't tell a story, and they won't lead to action. They won't help Amelia Tonito improve her income. My hope is my coverage of this story will help provide the depth of understanding that is a prerequisite for holding public and corporate officials accountable, so that the aspirations of the Paris Agreement can start to come to fruition.

I've loved my time at Mother Jones and I'm truly at a loss to express my gratitude to my editors for the experiences they have afforded me. I've seen the devastating impacts of global warming, from the vanishing Louisiana coastline to thesmoldering wreckage of Breezy Point, Queens, after Hurricane Sandy. And I've seen the cost of our fossil fuel addiction, from the dystopian fracking fields of North Dakota to Germany's yawning open-pit coal mines. But I've also seen the fortitude of the young Arizonans who spent weeks sweating in the woods to protect their community from wildfires. And I've seen the compassion of a caretaker who, in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy, stayed with her elderly patient on the top floor of a Lower East Side high-rise with no electricity or running water.

Encounters like these are what draw me to climate change as a beat. The story is just getting started.

(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?
7/5/2016 1:28:04 AM

VIRTUAL REALITY PORN FESTIVAL CANCELLED DUE TO OVERCROWDING

The first adult VR festival in Japan is forced to cancel due to riot risk.

BY ON 7/4/16 AT 11:42 AM


An attendee experiences Samsung Gear VR at The Samsung Experience at VidCon 2016, Los Angeles, June 23. VR porn is expected to be a $1 billion industry by 2025. CHARLEY GALLAY/GETTY IMAGES

A virtual reality pornography festival in Japan was forced to close prematurely due to overcrowding, according to local reports.

The Adult VR Festa event, held in the Tokyo district of Akihabara last month, was highlighting new virtual reality technologies relating to the adult entertainment industry. However, the venue proved too small to host the crowd that arrived.

Japanese blogger Eizo Wu wrote on blogging platform Hatenablog that organizers and police were unable to adequately control the crowd, leading to the event being closed down.

“There were so many that it was almost impossible to keep the situation under control,” the blogger reported. “While waiting for my friends, I couldn’t help but think that if they couldn’t control the mass of people, a riot or something similar could happen.”

vr porn virtual reality japan
A picture taken from the event in Japan by a virtual reality blogger.HATENA BLOG

Interest in virtual reality porn has increased significantly in recent years, with statistics from Google Trends revealing a 9,900 percent rise in Google searches for ‘VR porn’ since 2014.

This trend has been driven by the release of the HTC Vive and Oculus Rift headsets, as well as popular sites like Pornhub offering VR content for its users.

“Virtual reality is the next phase in the constantly metamorphosing world of adult entertainment, and will provide users with a mesmeric experience unlike anything they’ve seen before,” Corey Price, vice president of Pornhub, said when the firm launched the VR category to its site in March.

Analysts expect the adult VR industry to be worth $1 billion in the U.S. by 2025, with some suggesting it will be one of the major “killer apps” for the nascent technology, alongside games and movies.

(Newsweek)

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

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