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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/14/2016 4:45:44 PM

Race Relations Are at Lowest Point in Obama Presidency, Poll Finds



More than two-fifths of black people say the police in their communities make them feel more anxious than safe. By wide margins, whites and Hispanics say the police make them feel safer.Credit
Joshua Lott for The New York Times

Sixty-nine percent of Americans say race relations are generally bad, one of the highest levels of discord since the 1992 riots in Los Angeles during the Rodney King case, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.

The poll, conducted from Friday, the day after the killing of five Dallas police officers, until Tuesday, found that six in 10 Americans say race relations were growing worse, up from 38 percent a year ago.

Racial discontent is at its highest point in the Obama presidency and at the same level as after the riots touched off by the 1992 acquittal of Los Angeles police officers charged in Mr. King’s beating.

Relations between black Americans and the police have become so brittle that more than half of black people say they were not surprised by the attack that killed five police officers and wounded nine others in Dallas last week. Nearly half of white Americans say that they, too, were unsurprised by the episode, the survey found.

Despite President Obama’s insistence at a memorial service for the fallen officers that the races in the United States are “not as divided as we seem,” the poll found that black and white Americans hold starkly different views on race, particularly regarding the treatment of African-Americans by the police.

Asked whether the police in most communities are more likely to use deadly force against a black person than a white person, three-quarters of African-Americans answered yes, and only about half as many white people agree. Fifty-six percent of whites said that the race of the suspect made no difference in the use of force; only 18 percent of black Americans said so.

When asked to rate the job their local police department was doing, four in five whites said excellent or good; a majority of blacks answered fair or poor. More than two-fifths of black people say the police in their communities make them feel more anxious than safe. By wide margins, whites and Hispanics say the police make them feel safer.

“I have been in situations where the police have made situations worse rather than better,” Ayesha Numan, 22, a black woman living in Kansas City, Mo., said in a follow-up interview. “That’s not to say that I write them off as all bad. I just have to be cautious of how they’re acting around me.”

Mr. Obama on Tuesday spoke at a memorial service in Dallas honoring the officers killed when Micah Johnson, a 25-year-old black Army veteran, opened fire at a protest last Thursday. Last week was among the most wrenching since the Black Lives Matter movement began three years ago: On back-to-back days, videos were released showing the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile at the hands of the police, and the Dallas attack followed a day later.

Black and white opinion is sharply divided on the aims and the approach of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Seventy percent of African-Americans are sympathetic to the movement, compared with only 37 percent of whites. Among all Americans, 41 percent agree with the movement, 25 percent disagree and 29 percent do not have an opinion either way.

Support for Black Lives Matter correlates directly to age, with 50 percent of all adults younger than 30 saying they agree with the movement, compared with 20 percent who disagree with it. Among those 45 and older, 36 percent agree and 29 percent disagree.

“The Black Lives Matter movement has given a younger generation a voice in civil rights,” Marc Morial, the president of the National Urban League, said. “The police are a flash point. The broader situation is always the underlying issues: the criminal justice system being broken, the higher unemployment among African-Americans, the slower recovery from the recession, the assault on voting rights and voter suppression.”

The nationwide Times/CBS News Poll was conducted July 8 to 12 on cellphones and landlines with 1,600 adults, including 171 black respondents and 1,207 whites. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus three percentage points for all adults, three points for whites and nine points for blacks.

Eighty-four percent of Americans have heard or read at least some news about the last week’s racially tinged violence — the shootings in Dallas and deaths of Mr. Castile and Mr. Sterling.

Some feel skeptical of what they have seen and heard of police shootings. “A lot of the times you see video, and most of it’s after the altercation. You really don’t see what happens before that,” said Roger Boulanger, 46, who is white and lives in Mendon, Mass. He said that race relations were generally bad, but he did not perceive them as being worse recently.

“I don’t want to say it’s 100 percent that every time someone gets shot, it’s just the police being racist,” he said. “I don’t think that.”


A version of this article appears in print on July 14, 2016, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Race Relations Deemed Bleak by Most in U.S.


(The New York Times)


"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?
7/14/2016 5:34:51 PM

JULY 13, 2016 5:07 PM
Health experts: Zika threat is serious – and getting bigger


Three senior U.S. government experts testify before a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee to urge Congress to pass a $1.1 billion Zika prevention bill stalled by partisan politics. The bill stalled after a House GOP version added provisions to block funding to Planned Parenthood for birth control.
C-SPAN

BY JAMES ROSEN

"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?
7/14/2016 6:10:20 PM

PUTIN ATTACKS UKRAINE AS NATO BOLSTERS DEFENSE

'Russia wants to punish Ukraine for moving toward NATO, and they want to make clear to NATO that they can take Ukraine any time they want.'

BY ON 7/14/16 AT 5:30 AM


This article first appeared on the Daily Signal.

Over the weekend, as NATO leaders in Warsaw, Poland, were discussing ways to counter Russian aggression, the conflict in eastern Ukraine concurrently spiked to its worst level in months.

“I don’t think it’s a coincidence,” Stephen Blank, senior fellow for Russia at theAmerican Foreign Policy Council, told the Daily Signal. “It makes sense that it would be related to the Warsaw summit.”

According to Kiev, three Ukrainian soldiers died and 16 were wounded on Saturday. And on Sunday, one Ukrainian soldier died and 10 were wounded.

During Sunday’s fighting, Ukrainian military officials said combined Russian-separatist forces shelled various Ukrainian positions in the Donetsk region with 152 mm, 120 mm and 80 mm mortars as well as 122 mm self-propelled artillery.

Near the village of Troitskoye in Ukraine’s embattled southeastern Donbas region, the Ukrainian military claimed to have rebuffed an attack by a 23-man reconnaissance force on Sunday.

Of the three separatist soldiers captured in the attack, one later died from wounds sustained in battle, according to military reports. The Ukrainian military identified the deceased soldier as Natan Leonidovuch Tsakirov, a Russian citizen from Omsk, according to his passport.

In all, Ukrainian officials tallied 94 combined Russian-separatist attacks on Sunday and 51 on Saturday.

Crime and Punishment

While fighting spiked in the Donbas, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko was meeting with NATO leaders in Warsaw to discuss the security situation in Ukraine.

In a joint press conference with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on Saturday evening, Poroshenko praised NATO’s approval of a comprehensive assistance package to bolster Ukraine’s military capabilities—including interoperability with NATO forces—and to accomplish key reforms.

While Stoltenberg said full NATO membership for Ukraine was “not currently on the table,” Poroshenko called Ukraine’s relationship with NATO a “de facto alliance.”

“It is our common responsibility to change Russia’s aggressive behavior,” Poroshenko said. “We are grateful that NATO stands by Ukraine.”

Russia supports the two breakaway territories in eastern Ukraine with weapons, ammunition, and training. And various news reports have shown Russian troops are fighting inside Ukrainian territory in support of separatist forces.

At the Warsaw summit, NATO leaders frequently and directly called out Russia for its actions in Ukraine, which continue to violate Ukraine’s shaky cease-fire, known as Minsk II.

“We condemn Russia’s deliberate destabilization of eastern Ukraine where cease-fire violations occur on a daily basis—often with equipment banned under the Minsk agreements and with casualties every day,” Stoltenberg said.

“Our 28 nations are united in our view that there can be no business as usual with Russia until it fully implements its Minsk obligations,” U.S. President Barack Obama said during a press event in Warsaw on Saturday.

“The language of statements on Ukraine and Russia is a mind exercise that has no impact on the actual Minsk process,” Russian Permanent Representative to NATO Alexander Grushko said Monday during an interview with the Rossiya-24 television channel, according to the Russian news site Tass.

Blank said Ukraine’s deepening ties with NATO and the high-profile dressing down of Russian policy by NATO leaders over the weekend in Warsaw likely prompted Moscow to retaliate with attacks in eastern Ukraine.


Russian servicemen rehearse for a parade marking the victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two, in Sevastopol, Crimea, on May 3. Nolan Peterson reports one Ukraine expert saying, ‘Russia wants to punish Ukraine for moving toward NATO, and they want to make clear to NATO that they can take Ukraine any time they want.’PAVEL REBROV/REUTERS

“Russia wants to punish Ukraine for moving toward NATO, and they want to make clear to NATO that they can take Ukraine any time they want,” Blank said. “Russia’s policy is to try to force Ukraine to fall apart.”

New Normal

The war in Ukraine has seen two official cease-fires and a renewed truce that went into effect in September 2015—none of which fully took hold.

Minsk II was signed in February 2015 but collapsed days later when combined Russian-separatist forces launched an offensive on the village of Debaltseve, then Ukrainian-controlled. A previous cease-fire had been signed in September 2014 in the Belarusian capital of Minsk, but it too quickly collapsed.

In September 2015, both sides to the conflict renewed their commitment to the Minsk II agreement’s terms, which included the pullback of heavy weapons from the front lines. Yet, after a brief lull in fighting in winter 2015, casualties have continued to mount in 2016 as fighting resumed, including the use of heavy weapons expressly banned by the Minsk II agreement.

The pace of the more than two-year-old conflict often ebbs and flows, leading some to speculate that a full-fledged Russian-backed offensive may be looming whenever fighting intermittently surges. Yet, this weekend’s uptick in attacks does not necessarily mean the overall situation in eastern Ukraine is edging toward a major escalation.

“I think it’s part of a pattern,” Blank said. “Whenever NATO does something like this Russia needs to prove that they’re not going to take it lying down.”

Nolan Peterson, a former special operations pilot and a combat veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, is the Daily Signal’s foreign correspondent based in Ukraine.


(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?
7/14/2016 6:27:36 PM

It’s Official: Robots Are Now Injuring And Killing Humans

"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?
7/15/2016 12:16:03 AM

In video, man ignores police demands and is fatally shot

July 14, 2016

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Despite demands that he “Show both hands!” and shouts that “You’re going to get shot man!” a 19-year-old in California refused to pull one hand from behind his back and to stop walking toward Fresno police. Officers then shot him four times, killing him.

Dramatic and graphic body-camera video shows the man, identified as Dylan Noble, was struck twice after he already had gone down from the first two bullets.

“Get on the ground now!” officers continually shout at Noble in the video released by police Wednesday. One yells: “Drop whatever you have in your hand!”

It turned out Noble, who was white, was unarmed and had only a small, empty plastic container with an unknown purpose in his hand, police Chief Jerry Dyer said. Officers, who had been looking for a man with a gun when they pulled him over, had no way of knowing that with his refusal to cooperate, Dyer saud,

One officer shot him twice as Noble yelled that he hated his life. He was still moving his arms, and officers were still shouting for him to stop, as he lay on the ground. Another shot from the same officer and a fourth from a second officer finally made him stop.

At a news conference, Dyer acknowledged the video is gruesome, but he said it was important for the public to see. He said he prays it won’t spark violence amid simmering anti-police sentiment in Fresno and elsewhere.

“Tensions are high,” Dyer said. “In some cases we are one spark away from a forest fire. And I pray this video doesn’t serve as that spark … This is not a time to become violent.”

Dyer said he intended to make the video public last Friday, but he held off because of the shooting deaths of police in Dallas the night before. The video was shown last week to Noble’s father and stepfather.

Noble’s death on June 25 came more than a week before police killed two black men in shootings in Louisiana and Minnesota. Those shootings last week sparked protests around the country.

The video shows Noble first draws officers’ attention when he screeched his truck’s tires while they were searching for an armed man.

Noble pulls into a gas station, and officers order him to put both hands out of the window. Noble puts his left hand out the window, concealing his right hand, and officers shout “both your hands!”

Noble gets out of the truck and walks away from officers, at first putting both hands in the air. He turns around and walks toward officers, raising his left hand but putting his right hand behind his back.

He continues to walk toward officers with his right hand concealed and his left hand in the air when the shots began coming.

His mother, who declined to watch the videos, is seeking damages from the city for her son’s death.

Stuart Chandler, the attorney for Noble’s mother, Veronica Nelson, put out a statement saying that he urged the police chief to release the video Wednesday. “We are pleased to discover from the media that Chief Dyer is belatedly providing the body camera footage to the general public,” Chandler said.

Noble’s mother and attorney said in a claim filed with the city that the officers used excessive force, and they called the death inexcusable. The claim does not say how much Nelson seeks from the city.

Dyer, who has asked the FBI do its own investigation into the shooting, said he has yet to conclude if officers used excessive force.





(Yahoo News)
video shows fatal shooting of unarmed man

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

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