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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/20/2016 11:04:04 AM


Delegates yell ‘Lock her up’ as RNC prosecutes Clinton
Liz Goodwin
Senior National Affairs Reporter
July 19, 2016

CLEVELAND, Ohio—Republican delegates officially nominated Donald Trump as their party standard-bearer Tuesday night. But the night’s speeches, grouped under the economic theme “Make America Work Again,” were focused squarely on Hillary Clinton.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie led the assault, presenting a mock trial of Clinton during his address in one of the most spirited moments of the night. Christie turned the delegates into the jury and asked them to judge her “guilty” or “not guilty” on various charges of his devising, including supporting the overthrow of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi. Each time, the delegates shouted “guilty!”

Though Christie said he was presenting the case against her “performance and her character,” the delegates began yelling for Clinton to be literally thrown in jail. They drowned out Christie by chanting, “Lock her up!” Christie nodded as the delegates yelled.

This wasn’t the only time Clinton has been accused of crimes at the RNC. On Monday night, the mother of a State Department official who was killed in the Benghazi terror attack said she held Clinton “personally responsible” for her son’s death, as many delegates wiped tears away from their eyes.

The FBI and Justice Department recently announced they did not find any criminal wrongdoing in Clinton’s use of private email servers while secretary of state, and alengthy House Republican investigation into how the State Department handled the Benghazi terror attack turned up no clear evidence of professional misconduct. But speakers and delegates insist Clinton is guilty of something. “She needs her comeuppance,” said Wisconsin delegate Barb Finger, who believes Clinton mishandled the aftermath of the Benghazi attack. “I don’t know if you could indict her criminally, but it’s something she should be punished for.”

RELATED: Trump’s children give ringing endorsement of their dad

Other speakers railed on Clinton as untrustworthy—hitting on a theme that dogged the former secretary of state during the Democratic primary.

“Not since Baghdad Bob has there been a public figure with such a tortured relationship with the truth,” said Sen. Mitch McConnell, who barely mentioned Trump in his speech.

Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin introduced himself to the crowd as the man who got under Clinton’s skin in the House hearings on Benghazi. “If we can’t trust her to tell the truth, how can we possibly trust her to lead America?” Johnson asked.

Delegates yell “guilty” as they participate during New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s speech on the second day of the Republican National Convention on July 19, 2016 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images)

National Rifle Association official Chris Cox argued that voting for Clinton would mean voting for the end of the Second Amendment. (The Clinton campaign called Cox’s claim “false,” saying she wants “common sense gun safety measures consistent with the Second Amendment.”)

Perhaps the most extreme Clinton slam of the night came from former presidential candidate Ben Carson, who warned that the nation should be “one nation under God” not “one nation under Lucifer.” He implied that Clinton felt an allegiance to the devil because she wrote her senior thesis on community organizer Saul Alinsky. “Are we willing to elect someone as president who has as their role model someone who acknowledges Lucifer?” Carson asked.

One of the few speakers who did not raise the specter of a Clinton presidency was Trump himself, who addressed the crowd in a video from Trump Tower in New York. (He’s taking the unusual step of addressing the convention every night, instead of just the final night.) “’This is a movement, but we have to go all the way,” he said on the convention jumbotron.
_____

(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?
7/20/2016 11:29:23 AM
A new jihadist threat may be on the horizon in Syria


A fighter from the Islamist Syrian rebel group Jabhat al-Nusra poses at a checkpoint in Aleppo in 2013. (Molhem Barakat/Reuters)

Opinion writer

As the U.S.-led coalition has begun to gain ground against the Islamic State in Syria, officials have begun focusing attention on another jihadist group they fear may pose a more dangerous long-run threat there, the al-Qaeda affiliate known as Jabhat al-Nusra.

Jabhat al-Nusra has played a clever waiting game over the past four years, embedding itself with more moderate opposition factions and championing Sunni resistance to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. The group has mostly avoided foreign terrorist operations and has largely escaped targeting by U.S. forces. Meanwhile, it has developed close links with rebel organizations such as Ahrar al-Sham that are backed by Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

But the global jihadist ambitions of Osama bin Laden remain part of Jabhat al-Nusra’s DNA. U.S. officials report increasing evidence that the group is plotting external operations against Europe and the United States. Its operatives are said to have tried recently to infiltrate Syrian refugee communities in Europe.

A stark warning of the danger ahead comes from the Institute for the Study of War, which closely follows events in Syria. In a forthcoming forecast, the institute argues that by January 2017, “Jabhat al-Nusra will have created an Islamic emirate in northwestern Syria in all but name” and will merge with the supposedly more moderate Ahrar al-Sham.

“The merger, even if incomplete, will accomplish a major Jabhat al-Nusra objective to unify the northern Syria opposition under its own leadership. . . . It will lay the groundwork for Jabhat al-Nusra to absorb or defeat remaining independent elements of the opposition.”

The agonizing question for the Obama administration is how to combat Jabhat al-Nusra as it moves to fill the vacuum left by an Islamic State that is losing territory and popularity. As with most other aspects of the Syrian war, the administration finds nothing but bad choices. The current version of this policy nightmare is whether to ally with Russia in suppressing the Jabhat al-Nusra threat.

Secretary of State John F. Kerry appears to be attempting a tricky three-cushion shot: Kerry’s plan would include joint U.S.-Russian operations against the group, as well as the Islamic State. Kerry also hopes to reduce Assad’s attacks on moderate rebel forces so that they (rather than Jabhat al-Nusra) can gain ground in a post-Islamic State Syria.

Like many of Kerry’s gambits, this is a high-risk maneuver. Even his supporters fear that it’s born more out of desperation than a carefully articulated strategy.

According to one source familiar with Kerry’s plan, it would begin with an attempt to reduce violence, as happened after the initial Russian-American “cessation of hostilities” plan was announced in February. If violence ebbed, and the Assad regime allowed humanitarian assistance to reach besieged areas in Aleppo and elsewhere, then the United States would begin sharing targeting information with Russia.

One sweetener in this still-untested deal is that the Assad regime would agree to a “significant reduction” in its air operations over rebel-held areas. If this curb on Assad’s barrel-bombing tactics succeeded, it could begin a real path toward de-escalation. But even administration officials who have helped frame the Russia-America package are skeptical that the details will fall into place.

Bassam Barabandi, a senior adviser to the opposition coalition, says that most Syrians recognize that Jabhat al-Nusra is a terrorist group and will support gradual U.S. efforts to combat it. But he cautions that Syrians fear the U.S.-Russia pact will only strengthen Assad and “kill the revolution” against Assad’s regime.

Kerry’s diplomacy suffers from a weak U.S. bargaining position. Russia and Syria think they’re winning, as they tighten their siege of Aleppo and other rebel strongholds. There’s little incentive for them to make the serious concessions that might bring buy-in from the opposition. The United States, by contrast, has failed in a three-year, CIA-led effort to build a moderate opposition force that could draw rebels away from Jabhat al-Nusra and its Sunni allies.

The U.S. military has had more success fighting the Islamic State in eastern Syria with a largely Kurdish force known as the YPG. But this Kurdish-centric strategy antagonizes both Turkey and the official Sunni-led opposition.

Five years on, the Syrian civil war remains a problem from hell. Allying with Russia against Jabhat al-Nusra risks deepening the terrorist group’s support within Syria and further alienating Sunnis; but continuing with the current strategy is almost certain to fail.

The right approach now, as when this mess started, is for the United States to aggressively, passionately, visibly provide humanitarian aid, governance and security assistance in areas that are liberated from Assad and the jihadists. “Realism” can be a trap in Syria; doing the right thing is also good policy.

Read more from David Ignatius’s archive, follow him on Twitteror subscribe to his updates on Facebook.

(The Washington Post)

"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?
7/20/2016 1:39:54 PM

9 Killed, 55 Shot in Chicago — 33 in One Day, Marking Worst Day of Shootings in a Year


by WARNER TODD HUSTON18 Jul 2016
Chicago, IL

With 55 shootings and five deaths, the weekend in Chicago was particularly bloody, so much so that Sunday marked itself as having the most shootings in a single day in over a year.

Friday rang in with nine shootings and one death at around 3 PM. One of the shooting incidents included no less than three victims in the same incident.

Saturday brought two more gangland shooting deaths and one police-involved shooting. But the day also saw 21 shootings total, of which one incident included four victims and three other incidents, which included two victims each.

But it was Sunday that brought out the worst gunfire, with a whopping 33 shootings and five more deaths.

The high number of shootings was topped only by last year’s 34 shootings which occurred on July 5, 2015.

Along with the massive number of shootings in that one day, four of the incidents had two victims each.

Police also responded Sunday to a house party in the Austin neighborhood that devolved into a shooting gallery where two men ending up wounded.

The massive bloodletting came on the heels of a bloody week which saw 78 shot and ten killed between Monday and Friday afternoon.

First Deputy Superintendent John Escalante commented on one of the deaths, saying that in a particular way the justice system failed the victim.

Raygene Jackson, 38, was murdered on Sunday, but according to Escalante, he should have still been safely in jail and not walking the streets.

“I don’t mean to victimize this victim any further, this man lost his life,” Escalante said. “But our frustration is, in 1995 he was sentenced to 46 years in the Illinois Department of Corrections for a murder. In 1995. He was paroled last year. How and why he’s on the street, I don’t know. But if he was still serving his sentence, he wouldn’t be a murder victim right now.”

The bloody weekend raises the odious totals to 2,218 citizens shot this year thus far, with 330 shot and killed.

Follow Warner Todd Huston on Twitter @warnerthuston or email the author at igcolonel@hotmail.com.

(Breibart)

"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?
7/20/2016 2:02:32 PM

Starving Seabirds Washing Up Dead On Washington Beaches

JUL 18, 2016


A rhinoceros auklet found dead at Dungeness Spit National Wildlife Refuge.
COASST/CLIFF BROWN / KUOW

Seabirds have been washing up dead on beaches in Washington and British Columbia this summer. Something is taking a toll on a funny-sounding, peculiar-looking seabird.

Julia Parrish studies seabirds at the University of Washington. She says volunteer beach-watchers on the Olympic Peninsula and across the water in Victoria have seen dozens of auklets wash up dead.

A few of the bodies have been sent off to a federal forensics lab.

“These birds are severely emaciated. So they starved to death,” Parrish said.

But scientists don’t know yet why the birds starved. They’re working to answer that question.

Over the past two years, other species of seabirds were found dead by the hundreds of thousands on the west coast. So this summer’s dieoff is much smaller by comparison. So far.

“If we ignore it, and only pay attention when it’s really dire, then it’s often too late to do anything about it,” Parrish said.

Last year and the year before, warmer waters left seabirds with fewer of their favorite fish to eat. Parrish says it was like going to the grocery store and only finding rice cakes.

The Pacific has cooled off a bit since then, but it’s still warmer than normal, and the ocean forecast is for more of the same through next year.

Copyright 2016 KUOW

(nwpr.org)

"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?
7/20/2016 2:30:23 PM

No exit: Safety failures turned Baghdad bombing into inferno


Posted: Wednesday, July 20, 2016 1:06 am



In this Monday, July 4, 2016 photo, people gather to pray at the scene of a massive truck bomb attack during a funeral in Baghdad, Iraq. The July 3 suicide attack at Baghdad's Karradah district is the city's deadliest bombing since the Iraq war began 13 years ago, a grim distinction made all the more tragic by details of the immediate aftermath of the bombing given to the Associated Press by a half dozen survivors and witnesses. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

Women, quietly sobbing or crying uncontrollably, place candles or flowers where they believe their loved ones fell. Some silently read from copies of the Quran. Men pound their chests with their hands in a customary Shiite gesture of mourning.


(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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