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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/19/2016 6:36:07 PM
Found a couple of news articles, after reading your forum post.

"Revealed: George Soros’ War on Israel"

Oh Lord, it is good for world leaders to be mindful of what they support ... more specific they should beware of "alternative motives" aka deceit





Quote:

Soros Got Hacked. Can You Guess What We Found?

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/19/2016 6:38:31 PM
A father punched his infant daughter to death because she was making baby talk, police say

Cory Morris was home with the baby over the weekend, he told investigators.

His girlfriend had gone to work and Morris was watching television.

Then, the 4-month-old child, a girl named Emersyn, started to make some noises. Morris described it as baby talk in his interview with authorities, according to a criminal complaint.

The Minneapolis father said he took Emersyn out of her swing, carried her into her room and placed her on a changing table.

But Emersyn kept making noises, Morris later told authorities.

So to quiet her down, Morris began to punch the baby.

Emersyn was later pronounced dead.

And now Morris, 21, has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of his baby daughter.

“None of us can comprehend what this is all about,” Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman said at a news conference Tuesday. “And I’m a proud father of five and a grandfather of two. There’s nothing more important in my life than my children and my grandchildren. What is this? Why? Frankly, right now, we don’t know.”


Cory Morris is charged with murdering his four-month-old daughter, allegedly because she was making baby talk. At a press conference August 16, Hennepin County, Minn., Attorney Mike Freeman said "we’re just sad." (Hennepin County Attorney)


Freeman said there were “suggestions” of mental health issues, which would be evaluated.

“But right now, we have charged him with second-degree intentional murder,” Freeman told reporters. “And we’re just sad.”

Authorities responded to a Minneapolis home after a man called 911 and said he had killed his baby, according to the probable-cause statement. Emersyn was unconscious when police arrived. She was covered in blood.

Morris was taken into custody and said he had repeatedly hit the baby.

“His clothing, hands and arms were covered in dried blood and officers observed swelling to his right hand,” the complaint notes.

Emersyn was rushed to a hospital but died from blunt force trauma.

Morris’s girlfriend told investigators that he watched the child about three to four times a week, while she is at work. She “stated Defendant can go from happy to mad easily” and had thrown things in the past, according to the documents.

His mother, Ginny Morris, told the Star Tribune that her son had recently seen a therapist but wasn’t previously violent. She said that in the past, the family had trouble getting Morris help.

“We never thought he would hurt the baby. We would never allow him to be with the baby if that was the case,” Ginny Morris told the newspaper. “We were worried he was going to hurt himself, not the baby.”

The Star Tribune reports:

Family members say that although they’d long been trying to get Morris psychological help, he never showed violent tendencies, and it was typical for him to watch the baby on his own. After police arrived and spoke with Morris, Freeman said, the father expressed no remorse. He would later tell law enforcement that he was schizophrenic and heard voices.

Freeman said a full psychological evaluation on Morris will be completed but that his depiction of his state of mind has since changed.

“There’s all sorts of different stories from him,” he said.

A message left with Morris’s attorney was not immediately returned.

Freeman said at the news conference that Morris called his girlfriend and his mother after the fatal incident and indicated that he had done something wrong, but he didn’t tell them that the baby might be dead.

“She’s shocked,” Freeman said, when asked about Emersyn’s mother.


(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?
8/20/2016 10:32:56 AM



Watch this adorable preview for the end of the world


It’s a little early for the wave of October horror movies, but a new video from MinuteEarth is way more terrifying than the usual slasher flicks anyway. Ignore the cheery delivery, the friendly stick figures, and the upbeat music — they all are just there to dress up my personal paranoia: erosion.

I’m actually kind of serious about this. Erosion is insidiously boring, which keeps us from seeing how dangerous it really is. On the list of the most boring things, erosion comes just after hold music and just before other people’s dreams. But the fact is that without the few inches of topsoil we use to grow our food, the world would fall into apocalyptic chaos, and that topsoil is eroding. Fortunately, as MinuteEarth explains, there are things we can do about this problem (I don’t think Soylent, the sponsor of the video, is a particularly realistic solution).

If we don’t act to preserve the farmland we have, we’ll end up cutting down more forests to grow food, releasing tons of earth to erosion. It’s enough to make one soil himself.


(GRIST)


"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?
8/20/2016 10:59:35 AM
White supremacist stabs interracial couple after seeing them kiss at bar, police say



Daniel Rowe stabbed a black man and a white woman after seeing them kiss in a bar in Olympia, Wash. (Q13 Fox)

Daniel Rowe was apparently enraged at the sight of a black man and a white woman kissing on the streets of Olympia, Wash., Tuesday night. But police say he hid his violent intent behind a stony face until he was close enough to strike.

The attack happened about 8:30 p.m. in the state’s capital city on Fourth Avenue, a classic downtown street busy with people going to a local movie theater or visiting bars and restaurants.

Rowe had recently been released from Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla, about 300 miles away. Police say he may have been among the ranks of the state’s homeless, who flock to Olympia for help on their way to Portland or Seattle.

Rowe, 32, walked up to the couple and, without warning, yelled a racial slur and lunged with his knife, police say. The blade grazed the woman and went into the man’s hip, according to a news release from Olympia police.

“The suspect is unknown to the victims and the attack appears to have been unprovoked,” police said in the statement.

No one involved had life-threatening injuries, but police said Rowe’s behavior grew stranger as officers tried to wrestle him into the back of a patrol car.

“He tells them, ‘Yeah, I stabbed them. I’m a white supremacist,'” Lower said. “He begins talking about Donald Trump rallies and attacking people at the Black Lives Matter protest.”

According to court documents obtained by the Olympian, Rowe, who was unconscious when police encountered him, had tattoos that read “skinhead,” “white power” and “hooligan.” One tattoo showed the Confederate flag.

Rowe was arrested and booked into the Thurston County Jail on two charges of first-degree assault and possible malicious harassment, which in Washington state is a designation used for hate crimes. The investigation continues.

“This has all the hallmarks of a hate crime,” Deputy Prosecutor Joseph Wheeler said at Rowe’s court hearing Wednesday, according to the Olympian. “This black-and-white couple was simply expressing their love for one another.”

According to the newspaper, Rowe had been imprisoned for a 2008 conviction for second-degree robbery.

Rowe told police he had come to Olympia in response to anti-police graffiti that had been written over the weekend. Police were still investigating who wrote the graffiti, the spokesman said.

A year ago, protesters organized several demonstrations after a police officer shot and wounded two black men accused of stealing beer. The Seattle Times described the protest:

It all began Saturday night when 150 protesters, some wearing masks, marched through downtown to counter-protest a planned gathering of white supremacists, an Olympia Police Department spokeswoman said Sunday.

Some vehicle windows were broken and car tires were slashed. A man was stabbed in the arm about 9:30 p.m. Saturday, although that incident was thought to be unrelated to the protest, police spokeswoman Laura Wohl said.

In 2014, the FBI reported 5,479 hate crimes across the United States, a 14.6 percent decrease from 2013.

Lower stressed that Rowe is not connected to any of the city’s protest groups.

In fact, investigators aren’t sure whether he is connected to anyone in the area, Lower said. And officers were scratching their heads at Rowe’s comments about fighting Black Lives Matter during a Donald Trump rally. Neither had events planned in Washington this week.

(The Washington Post)

Cleve Wootson is a general assignment reporter for The Washington Post.
Follow @CleveWootson





"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?
8/20/2016 11:18:20 AM
They survived Hurricane Katrina and rebuilt in Baton Rouge. Now they’ve lost everything again.


BATON ROUGE — When Hurricane Katrina leveled New Orleans, thousands of people left behind their ruined homes and took refuge here. They found new jobs and rebuilt their homes. Slowly, things started to feel normal again.

But then a nameless storm brought unprecedented flooding to Baton Rouge and a wide swath of southern Louisiana over the last week. Countless Katrina survivors have been left, for a second time, with nothing.

“Everything was going good,” said Trinice Rose, a nurse who escaped her home near Baton Rouge on foot as the floodwater rose — 11 years to the month after her home in New Orleans’s Ninth Ward was drowned under more than nine feet of water. “Now, again, we’re back where we started.”

Two displacements, two traumas. A loss that has left many feeling tired, battered and hopeless. And even as many face unclear futures and questions about where they will live, experts say they are also concerned about the mental health consequences for Katrina survivors now weathering this new loss.

The historic flooding that is battering Louisiana has left at least 13 dead, state officials said. Another 30,000 people have been rescued and 40,000 homes have been damaged.

“We are certainly not out of the woods,” Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) said at a news conference Thursday afternoon. “As I’ve been saying for six days now, this is an ongoing event.”

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, who toured the affected region Thursday, stressed that federal authorities are fully invested in helping the region.

“The federal government is here, we have been here, we will be here as long as it takes to help this community recover,” Johnson said at the same news conference.

His comments came as many in the flooded area and across the country have questioned why this devastation — which the American Red Cross called the country’s worst natural disaster since Hurricane Sandy in 2012 — has not received more attention from national media outlets, politicians and government officials.

In particular, a major newspaper in the area and many voices on social media have questioned why President Obama, who declared the flooding a major disaster on Sunday, has not visited the region. Obama is vacationing in Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., and the White House said he has been receiving regular updates since this weekend.

Johnson was asked about the lack of a visit from Obama, and he defended it by stressing that the president is “closely monitoring the situation” and had dispatched both him and, earlier this week, W. Craig Fugate, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

“The president can’t be everywhere,” Johnson said. He added: “When you’re the chief executive of the entire U.S. government, you can’t be everywhere, including places you would like to be.”

In an editorial published Wednesday night, the Advocate newspaper in Baton Rouge sharply called on Obama to end his vacation early visit the shaken region.

“We’ve seen this story before in Louisiana, and we don’t deserve a sequel,” the editorial stated. “In 2005, a fly-over by a vacationing President George W. Bush became a symbol of official neglect for the victims of Hurricane Katrina. The current president was among those making political hay out of Bush’s aloofness. … It’s past time for the president to pay a personal visit, showing his solidarity with suffering Americans.”

Johnson said he would brief Obama on what he saw in Louisiana, and said that the President cared deeply about the situation there.

Edwards also said he was “not complaining in any way” about the federal response, and said that while he would welcome a visit from Obama, such a trip would have a significant impact. He pointed out that when Vice President Biden came to the region last month for a vigil honoring three slain police officers, this trip prompted road closures and required a large number of police officers.

“Quite frankly, that is something I don’t want to go through right now,” Edwards said. “While the president is welcome to visit, I’d rather he give us another week or two. And then he can visit.”

He added, to laughter in the briefing: “Well, I’ll say that differently. He can visit whenever he wants to.”

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and his running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, said that they plan to visit Baton Rouge.

The flooding in Louisiana has closed government offices, schools, businesses and roadways, with uncertainty in some areas about when things will reopen. More than 86,000 people had registered for FEMA assistance by Thursday afternoon.

Johnson said he has been “remarkably impressed” by the response from people on the ground in Louisiana. On Thursday, Johnson said he spoke with a first responder whose home was severely damaged in the flood and who told him: “Our hearts are broken but our faith is strong.”

This search is a hot, grim task full of putrid smells of decay inside damp homes. Veterans of storm searches speak of having acquired “nose blindness.”

The painstaking effort is being coordinated by the office of H. “Butch” Browning, the state fire marshal. He estimates that teams will search some 30,000 homes and businesses in at least five parishes.

“We are really challenged in situations like this, where you have such widespread damage,” Browning said.

But he said he anticipated finding far fewer bodies than during a similar effort after Hurricane Katrina, a disaster that caused an estimated 1,500 deaths. During Katrina, people were facing not only rising water but also high winds and a tidal surge. “We won’t see that type of death toll at all,” he said.

Still, the specter of Katrina was inescapable as the water rose in Baton Rouge this week.

“I was just thinking, ‘Not again,’ ” said Phonecia Howard, who lives in East Baton Rouge. “This cannot happen again.” Howard’s family fled their New Orleans home at 4 a.m. the day before Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast. They headed to Baton Rouge, to safety.

All of the memories of that storm and its aftermath — ripping out sheet rock, stepping over warped hardwood floors, having to replace all their possessions right down to the last measuring cup — raced through her mind as she waded into her yard this past weekend and stepped into a boat waiting to take her to safety.

“I was praying, just ask God to spare us one more time,” Howard said. Of the 260 houses in Howard’s subdivision, she says, hers is one of only 20 that did not flood.

Rose, the nurse, was working at the Orleans Parish Prison when forecasters said Katrina might make landfall in New Orleans. She had just buried her brother days before, and she was a single mother with a six-year-old son, but she was a nurse, so she sent her son with her parents to Baton Rouge while she worked for another six days.

She was able to get to her son and reunite with her then-boyfriend, Johnathan Rose. They settled in Baton Rouge, sharing a home with six other displaced families until they found their own place. Since then, they began careers in Baton Rouge, got married and had two boys of their own. Just this month, they were given custody of Trinice’s nephew.

On Friday, her 17-year-old son sent her photographs of the water creeping into their yard. She left work early to get her children, driving through rising water to reach them. They walked through waist-high water to get to dry ground.

“I want to get away from water, get away from low-lying areas,” said Jerry Savage, who lost both his home and his lawn-care business in Katrina, then rebuilt both in Baton Rouge only to lose them again. “I want to get out of here.”

Savage hasn’t been able to sleep in the emergency shelter where he’s staying: The storm hit three weeks after he had back surgery, and his pain medication was lost in the flood. “I just want to be comfortable, living in my house,” he said.

People facing this repeated trauma after enduring Katrina could be at risk for post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, experts said. “They are definitely a vulnerable population,” said Erich Conrad, a psychiatrist who serves as medical director for behavioral health at the University Medical Center in New Orleans.

Bill McDermott, a psychologist for the New Orleans Police Department, said that repeated traumas can shatter victims’ presumptions about how the world works, which can be deeply unsettling. They are left with a worldview, he said, “that involves no longer believing the same as I had in justice, in fairness, in that good things happen to good people and bad things happen to bad people. That’s a presumption that is shattered.”

Many Katrina survivors say that they have been heartened by the improved response to this disaster. They appreciate that communication systems didn’t fail completely as they did during Katrina, that there is enough food and water at emergency shelters and that rescuers came when they were called.

“There was no rescue in New Orleans. Here, they had their act together,” said Stephanie Polk, who was working as a teacher in New Orleans when Katrina hit. She, her husband and their extended family rebuilt in Gonzales, La., on what they thought was high ground. On Tuesday afternoon, they were evacuated by boat as the floodwater rose.

“It’s stressful,” Polk said. “You have to realize it’s just stuff.”

Berman reported from Washington. Sarah Netter in Slidell, La., contributed to this report. This story, first published at 9:52 a.m., will be updated throughout the day.


(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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