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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/17/2016 10:50:05 AM
Fish

Six years after BP Gulf of Mexico spill, remaining oil more toxic than ever to fish


Three month old mahi mahi
Six years after the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig spilled nearly three million barrels of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico, scientists have found that ultraviolet light is transforming the remaining oil into a more toxic substance that hinders the development of heart, eye, and brain function in fish. The research, led by scientists at the University of California, Riverside and the University of Miami, exposed embryos and larvae of mahi-mahi from the Gulf of Mexico to what they called weathered (exposed to years of sunlight) and un-weathered oil (taken from the drilling site) from the Deepwater Horizon spill in 2010. Compared to fish exposed to un-weathered oil, the fish exposed to the weathered oil experienced impaired eye and neurological function, reduced heart rates, and a buildup of excess fluid in the heart.

"To this day, we remain uncertain of the magnitude of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill effects, particularly in sensitive life stages of fish," said Daniel Schlenk, a professor of aquatic ecotoxicology, who led the study, published in Environmental Science and Technology. "We are also uncertain of whether biota exposed to the oil can recover, or have recovered, from this event. And we are still uncertain about how compounds present in oil or any other combustion byproduct or fossil fuel cause toxicity."
(sott.net.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?
7/17/2016 11:23:05 AM

Death By Guns Contrasted Against Death By Vaccines

"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?
7/17/2016 5:12:45 PM

One of the world's foremost terrorism experts says there's 'angst in the C-Suite'

July 16, 2016



Fred Burton is busy these days — and that’s not such a good thing. As one of the world’s foremost experts on security and terrorism, Burton wakes up just like the rest of us seeing horrible events around the globe on an almost regular basis now. Only unlike the rest of us, for him these events —from Nice, Dallas, Brussels, to Orlando — are a call to action.

Burton, you see, is chief security officer at the global intelligence firm Stratfor. Before that, Burton was deputy chief of counterterrorism at the Diplomatic Security Service, where he was in charge of preventing and investigating attacks against diplomats and embassies and consulates. So Burton knows terror all to well.

(Full disclosure: I went to high school with Burton in Montgomery County, Maryland, where he later worked as a police officer.)

Burton notes that the number of terror attacks has been increasing, and that the FBI can’t stop every one. “We’re living through troubled times, but our nation has been through this before,” he says.

Speaking to me of the attacks in Nice, Burton says: “These attacks can’t be stopped without human intelligence and I expect to see more due to the success.”

Burton, who is the author of a number of books including “Under Fire: The Untold Story of the Attack in Benghazi,” which he wrote with Samuel Katz, sees irony in the fact that several countries, including the Bahamas, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, have recently issued travel warnings to their citizens about visiting the United States. “Right, what’s wrong with that picture,” he asks? “The US is usually the one issuing the travel alert.”

Burton doesn’t paint a completely dark picture: “I think that in reality law enforcement in big cities like in New York, do a wonderful job,” he says. “[But] indiscriminate attacks and soft target attacks, is the frightening aspect like we saw at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. It’s a new normal.”

Businesses are concerned, he says: “There’s a lot of angst, there’s a lot of concern in the C-suite over terrorism and risk assessment — even at corporate offices.” Burton says that he leaves “the why” of terrorism “to the politicians and the academics.” And that, “we try to unpack ‘the how’ of terror attacks, because if you understand how, you can take steps to mitigate risk and do something about it.”

So for now, Burton remains very busy. We would all probably be in a better place if he were a little less so.

(Yahoo Finance)


"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?
7/17/2016 5:31:44 PM

Syrian troops 'cut off rebel-held parts of Aleppo'

Government forces reach the only main road into the rebel-held Aleppo, raising fears of a humanitarian disaster.



Regime fighters descended on the Castello Road, severed the last route out of the east and fully cut it [Abdalrhman Ismail/Reuters/File]

Pro-Syrian government forces and their allies have closed the only road leading into the rebel-held side of Aleppo, opposition activists and a monitor said.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told the Reuters news agency that government forces and members of Lebanon's Hezbollah group had reached the strategically-vital Castello Road on Sunday, closing it and raising fears of a humanitarian disaster.

Government forces descended on the road and fully cut it off, Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the observatory said. The troops had reached a point where they could fire on the road earlier this month, effectively cutting it off, but many people still risked the dangerous journey.

The Castello Road had been used by rebels but also by shopkeepers to bring in produce for and by people visiting relatives in Aleppo.

"The army has reached the road and even arrested a group of civilians who were walking there," a rebel fighter from the Aleppo Revolutionaries group told the AFP news agency. "They are now setting up sandbag barriers."

On Saturday, at least 28 civilians - including children - were killed in a bombardment of the rebel-held eastern districts, according to the observatory, which relies on a wide network of sources on the ground for information.

600,000 Syrian besieged

The UN has warned that nearly 300,000 people rely on the Castello Road for travel, food and medicine,
with local market stalls sparsely stocked.

Residents also described searching in vain for fuel, whether for vehicles or home use.

Nearly 600,000 Syrians live in besieged areas, most surrounded by government forces, although rebels are also besieging civilians.

Aleppo was once Syria's commercial powerhouse but has been ravaged by fighting since mid-2012, with several temporary truces failing to bring an end to the violence there.

More than 280,000 people have been killed and millions have been forced to flee their homes since Syria's war erupted in 2011.


(aljazeera.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?
7/17/2016 6:20:46 PM

Refugees in Greece: 'We are living in a prison here'

Patrick Strickland16 July 2016


A bankrupt hotel in Greece is now home to hundreds of refugees [Nick Paleologos/SOOC/Al Jazeera]

Thermopylae, Greece - Akram al-Majidi lifted his left arm to show the skin disfigured by severe burns after a car bomb exploded outside his shop in Baghdad in 2008.

The flesh, once on the outside of his forearm, was pushed to the other side, leaving just a thin layer of scorched skin on top of his radial bone.

Akram, 34, says his life was simple in Iraq. He owned a bakery, preparing special cakes for weddings, birthdays and other occasions.

"I'm left-handed. I wrote, ate, made cakes - all with my left hand," Akram tells Al Jazeera in his family's tiny room in a bankrupt and deserted hotel converted into a refugee camp for hundreds of people in Thermopylae, central Greece.

After receiving death threats earlier this year from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant group (ISIL, also known as ISIS), the Majidis decided to pack their bags and flee to Europe. Four months ago, they arrived in the Aigli Hotel, an abandoned hot springs resort.

Though they have applied for a relocation programme to get asylum somewhere in Western Europe, the process has moved slowly and they haven't heard back from the United Nations in months.

Surrounded by vast mountains, the location remains a popular retreat for Greeks and tourists alike. A German couple swim in the stream on the edge of the hotel grounds. A pair of Syrian children swim nearby, laughing and leaping into the water from the top of a small cliff.

Yet back in the hotel, many residents complain of poor living conditions, overcrowding, inadequate food and little access to healthcare.

The forceful smell of sulphur permeates the rooms of the old hotel, which sits about 15 kilometres from the nearest town. The location is difficult for asylum seekers, most of whom are penniless after months in the camp and cannot afford the bus fare or a taxi to town.

Trapped in Greece

Akram lives with his wife and four children in the one hotel room.

He says that in Iraq, local armed groups that later became loyal to ISIL targeted him personally in the attack.

He lifts up photos of his old home in the Iraqi capital. Graffiti scrawled in spray paint across the white wall reads: "The Islamic State [ISIL] remains" and "blood wanted".

Another photo shows his cake stand on fire as a result of the bombing, with huge plumes of smoke billowing above and nearby cars also set ablaze.

Although the Majidi family managed to cross the Mediterranean before the deal between the European Union and Turkey to halt the flow of refugees to Western Europe, they now find themselves bottlenecked in Greece along with another 57,000 refugees and migrants, unable to continue their journeys.

After that deal, countries across the Balkans sealed their borders to refugees and migrants.

In a recent visit to the doctor, Akram was told he needed to continue extensive medical treatment on his forearm.

"But it's been almost two months and I haven't had any treatment," he says.

Enduring the sharp pain of nerve damage and incessant twitching, he is often unable to sleep. "The doctor only gave me painkillers. It's especially bad at night. I can wait [for registration], but I need treatment now."

His wife, Eman, who used to be a teacher in Baghdad, says they left their country in search of human rights.

"Tell me. Where are the human rights?"

Slow registration

Asklipios, a camp administrator who did not provide his last name, says there were 432 registered residents - mostly Syrians - as of late June. The 87-room hotel, he explains, belongs to the local municipality.

There are no permanent doctors, but three nurses work there on a daily basis. "The conditions are good here," he says plainly, adding that most of the residents are families and almost half are children.

Those who arrived in Greece after the EU-Turkey agreement are left with the options of applying for asylum in Greece or voluntary deportation to Turkey.

Much like in camps across the country, however, residents are frustrated by the long wait to register for asylum while living in difficult humanitarian conditions. Many complain about the food, which is provided by the Greek army.

Greek government spokesperson George Kiritsis says the government wants "to expedite" the asylum application process.

"There are many people who are in the islands and mainland Greece waiting for their applications to be processed," he tells Al Jazeera, explaining that the government aims to improve living conditions in the meantime.

Yet the government's lethargic pace has prompted criticism. Last week, the European Asylum Support Office expressed concern about the slow pace of asylum registration.

'We are living in a prison'

Abdulsalem Yousef, who lives in a cramped room with his wife and six children, sustained a head injury from shrapnel in Syria's Homs before fleeing. From Turkey, he set sail in a crowded dinghy and arrived on a Greek island four months ago.

Lifting his hat to show the large bulbous lump on the back of his head, Abdulsalem explains that he suffers from chronic headaches and has been waiting for weeks to receive medical treatment.

"The doctor only saw me for a few minutes and told me to take Ibuprofen every few hours," he tells Al Jazeera.

"We are living in a prison here because no one has money and the city is so far away," he adds. "If you miss the food distribution time, then you have nothing to eat."

A Greek army truck pulls up, stops and reverses towards the food distribution tent. Families come out to receive their rations. Children unsuccessfully plead with soldiers for extra portions.

Taref Zeno, who was an electrician back in Aleppo, held up a small can of powdered milk. "This is supposed to last three days for my whole family. We thought Europe was more humane than this," he tells Al Jazeera.

"Turkey made it very easy for us to flee; but then they made a deal that leaves us stuck here."

'Hiding refugees'

Nasim Lomani, a 35-year-old member of the Athens-based Solidarity Initiative for Political and Economic Refugees, criticises Greece's policy approach as "based on hiding refugees, [so they] cannot be seen in the public".

Explaining that most refugee camps are located outside of the city, he says: "This plan is not only anti-refugee because the conditions are horrible … It's also fake as an idea because it will collapse very soon."

A group of men sit on plastic lawn chairs in the hotel lobby and argue while they watch the news on an old television. Several children recite the English alphabet in unison in a waiting area turned into an impromptu classroom.

Outside, people hang laundry from their balconies under the smouldering summer sun. An old man sits in the stairwell to avoid the sunlight as he reads a book.

Back in his room, Akram tidies up as his wife makes the bunk beds. Solemnly, he says they have no choice but to continue living here for the time being.

"My house is gone. My store is gone. My car is gone. There's nothing left for me in Baghdad. And it's worse than the days of the American occupation," he concludes.

(uk.news.yahoo.com)


Follow Patrick Strickland on Twitter:
@P_Strickland_

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

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