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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/11/2016 6:17:47 PM
TERROR IN TURKEY

At least 38 killed including 30 police officers by two bombs in ‘inhuman terror attack’ at Besiktas football stadium in Istanbul

The two blasts targeted riot police hours after the end of a match between two top teams at the Vodafone Arena

A TWIN bomb attack outside a football stadium in Istanbul has killed 38 people – including 30 police officers.

Kurdish militants have claimed responsibility for the “inhuman” terror attack which wounded 160 others hours after the end of a match between two top teams at the Vodafone Arena on Saturday night.

Police arrive at the site of an explosion in central Istanbul
REUTERS
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Police arrive at the site of the stadium explosion in central Istanbul, Turkey
Explosion in Istanbul
EPA
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A blooded body is retrieved off the roof of the stadium
Firefighters carry a body off the roof
AP:ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Firefighters carry a body off the roof
The attack is believed to have targeted riot police after the match
REUTERS
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The attack is believed to have targeted riot police after the match

The two bombs, a car packed with 300kg of explosives and a suicide bomb, struck at about 10.30pm in the Beşiktaş neighbourhood in the Turkish city.

At least 13 people have been arrested over the twin bombing which was carried out by militant group TAK, also known as the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons.

TAK, an offshoot of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), was also behind a deadly car bomb that claimed 11 lives in southeastern city Diyarbakır last month.

Turkey’s deputy prime minister, Numan Kurtulmuş, said Saturday’s attack was “clearly planned”.

Officials confirmed 30 police officers, seven civilians and an unidentified person were killed.

One of the victims has been named as 21-year-old medical student, Berkay Akbaş, who was visiting Istanbul with friends.

Turkish media claim shocking CCTV shows Istanbul bomb detonation
CCTV footage is believed to have captured the moment the car bomb went off outside the arena
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CCTV footage is believed to have captured the moment the car bomb went off outside the arena
The footage shows a bus driving outside the arena, near Taksim square, before the explosion
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The footage shows a bus driving outside the arena, near Taksim square, before the explosion
Traffic comes to a standstill before a flash of light shows the moment the suspected car bomb goes off
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Traffic comes to a standstill before a flash of light shows the moment the suspected car bomb goes off
Funeral services for some of the officers killed in the attack started just after midday on Sunday at Istanbul's police headquarters
REUTERS
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Funeral services for some of the officers killed in the attack started just after midday on Sunday at Istanbul's police headquarters
Grief was etched on the faces of those who attended the funeral service
EPA
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Grief was etched on the faces of those who attended the funeral service

CCTV footage is believed to have captured the moment the car bomb went off outside the arena - home of Champions League side Besiktas FC.

The footage shows a bus driving outside the arena, near Taksim square in the Turkish city, before the explosion.

Traffic comes to a standstill before a flash of light shows the moment the suspected car bomb goes off.

Debris can then be seen raining down from the sky.

Armed police sealed off the streets outside the arena after the explosions which were aimed at causing "maximum casualties".

Turkey's Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu announced that 30 police officers, seven civilians and an unidentified person were killed
REX FEATURES
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Turkey's Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu announced that 30 police officers, seven civilians and an unidentified person were killed
Explosion in Istanbul
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The horrific scene of the first explosion
Turkish policemen at the site of an explosion in central Istanbul
REUTERS
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Turkish policemen lie injured after the carnage

Horror photos showed the full devastation of the blasts which seemed aimed at local riot police.

Bodies were seen scattered on the streets near the stadium and one body was even retrieved off the roof of the arena.

Turkey declared a one-day morning after the twin blasts ripped through the heart of Istanbul.

Prime Minister Binali Yildirim also ordered flags to fly at half mast.

Funeral services for some of the officers killed in the attack started just after midday on Sunday at Istanbul's police headquarters.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the Prime Minister were present to watch the police carry the coffins of the slain officers draped in the Turkish flag.

Speaking at the funeral, Interior Minister Soylu said: "Sooner or later, we will have our vengeance.

"This blood will not be left on the ground, no matter what the price, what the cost."

Mr Erdogan said the blasts were timed to cause maximum loss of life.

"A terrorist attack has been carried out against our security forces and our citizens," he said.

Dozens killed and hundreds injured in two explosions outside Besiktas stadium in Istanbul, Turkey
istanbull-3
TWITTER
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Minutes after the explosion went off outside the stadium
Explosion in central Istanbul, Turkey - 10 Dec 2016
REX FEATURES
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Riot police lay wounded after the explosion

"We have witnessed once more here in Istanbul the ugly face of terror which tramples down any form of value and morals."

There has been no claim of responsibility for the blasts.

Police evacuated the area around the Besiktas football arena following the explosions.

The second explosion at nearby Macka Park was reportedly carried out by a suicide bomber.

There were also reports of gunfire at the sports venue.

A suspicious package was later detonated by the security services near the site of the two earlier blasts.

The scene is also about a half a mile from the busy Taksim Square, a magnet for tourists.

The Turkish FA expressed its "tremendous sorrow" at the injuries and condemned the "inhuman brutal terrorist attack".

No group has yet claimed responsibility for the latest atrocity.


(THE SUN)



"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?
12/12/2016 10:51:28 AM

SYRIAN CIVIL WAR: ASSAD CLOSE TO ALEPPO VICTORY


BY


Syria's military and Russian warplanes bombarded rebel-held districts of Aleppo on Saturday as Damascus's allies said victory was near, but insurgents fought back and army advances halted after rapid gains during the week. The United States said it was meeting a Russian team in Geneva to find a way to save lives, but an agreement looked elusive as the two countries, which back opposing sides, have repeatedly failed to strike a deal to allow evacuations and help aid deliveries.

Russia, whose military intervention helped turn the war in President Bashar al-Assad's favour, said the Syrian government now controls 93 percent of second city Aleppo, a figure Reuters could not independently verify.

Its recapture would deal a major blow to rebels who have fought to unseat Assad in the nearly six-year war. The insurgents are holed out in a handful of areas mostly south of the historic Old City, having lost nearly three-quarters of territory they controlled for years in the space of around two weeks. Lebanese Shi'ite group Hezbollah, a key military ally of Damascus alongside Russia and Iran, said late on Friday that a "promised victory" in Aleppo was imminent and would change the course of the war. The advances mean the government appears closer to victory than at any point since 2011 protests against Assad evolved into armed rebellion. The war has killed more than 300,000 people and made more than 11 million homeless.

A win for Assad in Aleppo looks close, but fighting still raged on Saturday. Russian warplanes and Syrian artillery bombarded rebel-held districts, and rebels responded with shelling of government-controlled areas as gunfire rang out, a Reuters correspondent in Aleppo said. Russia and Syria said on Friday they had reduced military operations to allow civilians to leave.

But rebels say their counter attacks are what have halted government advances. "There's no advance by the regime. They (rebels) have stopped them several times," Zakaria Malahifji, a Turkey-based official in the Fastaqim rebel group told Reuters. Government forces launched an attack in the Izaa area near the Old City early on Saturday which insurgents repelled, destroying an army tank, he said.

Vast Destruction

Aleppo residentsPeople who have left the eastern districts of Aleppo carry their belongings as they walk in a government held area of the city, Syria, in this handout picture provided by SANA on December 8.SANA/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

Fighting has killed hundreds of people in recent weeks, monitors say, and devastated large areas of Aleppo. Parts of the UNESCO World Heritage Old City recaptured by the government were completely destroyed by fighting, a Reuters correspondent said. Old markets and bathhouses had been flattened. "I found my home destroyed," said one returning resident, who gave only his family name, Sheikho. "I didn't even recognise where it was because of the destruction," he said. Mohammed Shaaban, standing outside a destroyed church, was also astounded by the destruction. "A year and a half ago when I last visited there was not this level of damage. I'm shocked and saddened. They destroyed civilisation and humanity," he said, referring to rebels.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said several people were killed in rebel shelling on Saturday. Hundreds have been killed in recent weeks, mostly in government bombardments, it says. Thousands of people have left rebel districts. Some fled to government-held areas but others went to areas under rebel control fearing arrest and reprisals by government forces.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry urged Russia to show "a little grace" when American and Russian officials meet in Geneva later on Saturday to try to reach a deal enabling civilians and fighters to leave the besieged city of Aleppo. "Fighters ... don't trust that if they agreed to leave to try to save Aleppo that it will save Aleppo and they will be unharmed," Kerry told reporters in Paris after a meeting of countries opposed to Assad. "The choice for many of them ... is to die in Aleppo, die in (neighbouring) Idlib, but die," he added.

Germany said Syrian opposition backers were seeking a political solution, but there was no agreement in Paris on reaching a truce.

Islamic State Assault Stretches Army

10_22_aleppo_01A rebel fighter rests inside a damaged room in Marea city, northern Aleppo province, Syria October 21. KHALIL ASHAWI/REUTERS

Russia's defence ministry said more than 20,000 civilians left eastern Aleppo on Saturday and over 1,200 rebels laid down their arms. The British-based Observatory said hundreds of civilians had left but no fighters surrendered. Rebel officials have sworn they will never leave. The army said it reduced operations to allow residents to leave, and that this would enable the military to carry out "wider manoeuvres" against insurgents in due course.

Russia's defence ministry said that after civilians left, government forces would continue to "liberate" eastern Aleppo.

Even once Aleppo is retaken, the multi-sided Syrian war will continue. The Syrian army said it sent reinforcements to Palmyra more than 200 kms (130 miles) away to stave off a fierce attack by Islamic State militants, who advanced to the city's outskirts. A rebel commander in the Aleppo-based Jaish al-Mujahideen group said the IS offensive had forced the government to divert troops from Aleppo - a possible explanation for the slowed advance there and heavy aerial and artillery bombardment.

The United States, which is leading a separate fight against Islamic State in northern and eastern Syria, said it will send 200 additional military personnel including special forces to create pressure on the group's Raqqa hub. The fight against Islamic State, waged separately by the group's many enemies in Syria - Moscow and Damascus; the U.S. coalition; and some of the same Turkish-backed rebels that are fighting Assad in Aleppo - is just one sign that Syria's complex conflict will not end with a defeat for insurgents in Aleppo.

Kerry warned the war would create more jihadist militants and grind on. "If Aleppo were to fall ... the war does not end, but in fact could create more jihadis and more people to seek revenge and prosecute their interests," he said.

(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?
12/12/2016 11:00:26 AM
We’re at the controls on planet Earth, but we’re not in control

Gazing over the countless transformations in Earth’s multibillion-year history, I am struck by the unique strangeness of the present moment. We suddenly find ourselves sort of running a planet — a role we never anticipated or sought — without knowing how it should be done. We’re at the controls, but we’re not in control.

Climate change is the most obvious example, but it is one of a large number of ways in which we are modifying the planet. The scientific community is now converging on the idea that we haveentered a new phase, or epoch, of Earth history — one in which the net activity of humans has become a powerful agent of geological change, equal to the other great forces of nature that build mountains and shape continents and species. The proposed name for this new epoch is the "Anthropocene" or the age of humanity. Many species have changed the planet, like the cyanobacteria that long ago pumped oxygen — terribly poisonous for most life at the time — into the atmosphere. But there has never before been a geological force aware of its own influence. We are witnessing something unprecedented and still completely unpredictable: the advent of self-aware geological change.

As an astrobiologist, I study the evolutionary relationships between life and the planets that may host it. The planetary perspective allows us to step away from the noise of the immediate present, to see ourselves from a distance. When we do so, what we see is an entirely new evolutionary stage in the development of life. We also see the planet entering a phase where cognitive processes are becoming a major agent of global change. Earth’s biosphere gave birth to humans and our thoughts, which are now reshaping its planetary cycles. A planet with brains? Fancy that. Not only brains, but limbs with which to build and manipulate tools. We are just beginning to come to grips with this strange new development. Like an infant staring at its hands, we are becoming aware of our powers but have not yet gained control over them.

It’s a challenging moment for human civilization. The great restless cleverness of our species has gotten us into a tough spot. Our collective actions threaten the well-being of many of our fellow humans, not to mention vast numbers of our more distant biological relatives. Our very survival may be threatened. Paradoxically this comes at a time, and even largely as a result, of unparalleled advancement in our scientific and technological prowess. But if we’re so great at figuring things out and inventing solutions to problems, how come we’re in this mess? Part of the reason we are, so far, stumbling through this transition is that we have not yet seen it clearly for what it is. Our fundamental Anthropocene dilemma is that we have achieved global impact but have no mechanisms for global self-control. To the extent that we are like some kind of global organism, we are still a pretty clumsy one, crashing around with little situational awareness, operating on a scale larger than our perceptions or motor skills.

We have, unconsciously, been making a new planet. Our challenge now is to awaken to this role and grow into it, becoming conscious shapers of our world. There are some ways in which our evolutionary history and our unique plasticity as a species may equip us for the job.

Some of the most amazing things are very easy to take for granted. How cool is it that you are reading this? By thwacking away at these dirty little plastic keys in some coded pattern, I’m sending you a detailed message over expanses of space and time. Our fingers were not evolved for this. They were made for grasping and throwing, touching, making tools, making dinner, making love. And yet the human nervous system is so flexible, seemingly made to be rewired as needed. Time and time again our species has escaped existential threats by reinventing ourselves, finding new skills not coded in our genes to survive new challenges not previously encountered.

Before we were modern humans we were hominids who werenearly wiped out by climate change but survived by constructing new material and social technologies and finding new ways to live. Who would have imagined, when we were all hunter-gatherers, that we could live in towns and cities? Doing so caused massive public health problems, many of which were eventually solved by the invention of sewage systems. We were taken by surprise by our inadvertent destruction of the protective ozone layer, but quickly invented technical and political solutions that are now fixing what could have been a deadly mistake. We’vebounced back a few times from the edge of extinction, and ultimately thrived due to our abilities to communicate, work collectively, adapt creatively to changing environments, and solve problems through technological and social innovation.

Now we need to do so again.

If human civilization is to persist and thrive we will need a completely different view of our planet, and of ourselves, in which we acknowledge both our deep dependence and our increasing influence. We need visions of a future in which we have applied our infinite creativity to the task of living on a finite world, where we have embraced our role, become comfortable and proficient as planet-shapers, and learned to use our technological skills to enhance the survival prospects not just of humanity but of all life on Earth. My name for this vision is Terra Sapiens, or “Wise Earth.”

One hundred million years from now, what will our time have been? A brief climate spasm that Earth shrugged off and largely forgot, leaving a thin layer infused with bizarre plastic objects? Or the beginning of a lasting new phase when the biosphere finally woke up and adjusted its grip on the planet?

Our obligation now is to move beyond lamenting the job we’ve done as reluctant, clumsy, incompetent planet-shapers. We have to face the fact that we’ve become a planetary force, and figure out how to be a better one. A planetary view of the human journey suggests that we are not stuck, just disoriented, not evil, just confused, struggling to find our way in a world increasingly of our own making. We’ve been building an expanding, rapidly changing civilization on a finite world with no long-term plan. Our challenge is to acknowledge the predicament we’re in, and not to succumb to toxic fatalism. Our most valuable resources — creativity, communication, invention and reinvention — are in fact unlimited.

If we make it through the next few centuries it will be because we’ve honed our survival skills and adapted them to work on a planetary scale. Once we achieve that, we’ll have done much more than ensure our own persistence against shortsighted self-induced challenges. We will have unleashed the power of reason and foresight in permanent defense of Earth’s biosphere.

Awareness of ourselves as agents of geological change, once propagated and integrated, could provide us with the capacity to avoid doom and to take our future into our own hands.

Excerpted from "Earth in Human Hands: Shaping Our Planet’s Future" by David Grinspoon. Copyright © 2016 by David Grinspoon. Used with permission of Grand Central Publishing. All rights reserved.

(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?
12/12/2016 11:07:36 AM
How ‘food apartheid’ is punishing some Venezuelans



CARACAS, Venezuela — With food riots breaking out and supermarket shelves woefully bare, the government of embattled President Nicolás Maduro launched a new food distribution system in April promising to deliver subsidized groceries to every household in need.

Maduro called the new system “CLAPs” (Local Committees of Supply and Production). The name might be fitting, because those who don’t applaud his government haven’t been getting anything to eat.

Maduro told Venezuelans that the CLAP system would alleviate chronic scarcities and the “economic war” against his government he says is being waged by opposition leaders, business owners and the street-level black market vendors known as “bachaqueros.” The CLAPs would go door to door in Venezuela’s poorest communities selling bags of groceries at huge discounts.

Instead, critics say the system has devolved into a kind of “food apartheid” meant to punish those who oppose Maduro.

“I was told very clearly and straight to my face: We won’t sell you the bag of food, this benefit is reserved only for chavistas,” said Carmen Villegas, who lives in the rough Caracas neighborhood of Catia. She was referring to people who support the government's socialist policies, enacted by former president Hugo Chávez.

Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar, is now trading against the U.S. dollar at a black-market rate of more than 4,200 to 1, up from roughly 2,000 a month ago. So the grocery bags can be a lifeline for families who have seen their savings and their salariesevaporate.

The CLAP bags typically contain basic products such as corn flour, pasta, sugar, coffee, oil or butter that have become Venezuela’s most sought-after items. But Maduro has neighborhood groups loyal to his government in charge of determining who gets the cheap groceries and who doesn’t.

“In my building, there are seven apartments, and I’m the only one who didn’t receive the bag of food,” said Escarlet Rodríguez, 61, a retired teacher. Rodríguez, along with the rest of her family, are known in her neighborhood as opposition supporters, and she said they were denied groceries from her local CLAP until only recently, after she made repeated complaints.

“The goal of the CLAPs is to administer hunger,” opposition leader Jesus Torrealba said Friday on his weekly radio show, blasting the program as a cynical ploy by Maduro to starve his critics.

According to Venezuela’s Food Ministry, the organizations tasked with overseeing the CLAPs are all community-level groups that identify themselves as chavistas, socialists and government loyalists.

Provea, a Caracas-based rights group, said the CLAPs have introduced a form of food discrimination that is exacerbating social unrest. The group said it has recorded hundreds of complaints from Venezuelans who say they are being left hungry because of their opposition to the government.

Because the CLAPs are not controlled by any formal institution and operate with little oversight, they invite abuse and corruption, said Provea researcher and journalist Edgar López. “Anything can happen,” he said.

The government does little to hide the exclusionary nature of the distribution network. In July, Vice President Aristóbulo Istúriz called the CLAPs a “political instrument to defend the revolution.” Other politicians are even more explicit: Government opponents “shouldn't be part of the CLAPs,” said Cojedes state Gov. Erika Farías.

In response to the charges of food apartheid, Freddy Bernal, the Maduro official in charge of the CLAPs, said the groceries “are not for everyone — just for the poorest class.”

But the country’s inflation rate has rendered Venezuela’s longtime class distinctions increasingly meaningless, as families who were once solidly middle class now spend hours each day searching for food.

Even the families who do receive the food complain that the CLAP supplies are irregularly delivered and inadequate to meet their basic needs.

“It’s not enough to feed a whole family,” said Edgar Alvarez, 65, a resident of the 23 de Enero neighborhood in Caracas that is well-known as a chavista bastion. Alvarez said he hasn’t received any groceries in nearly a month. “Two bags of corn flour, a bottle of cooking oil and two cans of tuna aren’t enough to survive on,” he said.

(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?
12/12/2016 11:15:20 AM

Researchers On The Verge Of Creating Artificial Intelligence/Human Hybrids

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

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