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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/17/2016 9:33:12 AM

Car bomb kills 13 Turkish commandos, army says

DOMINQUE SOGUEL
Associated Press
A public bus is burning at the scene of a car bomb attack in central Anatolian city of Kayseri, Turkey, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2016. A public bus was heavily damaged and dear and injured were reported. Turkish authorities have banned distribution of images relating to the Istanbul explosions within Turkey. (IHA via AP)

ISTANBUL (AP) — Thirteen Turkish troops were killed and 48 others wounded in a car bomb attack in the central Anatolian province of Kayseri on Saturday morning, the Turkish military reported.

In a statement, the Turkish armed forces said the car bomb went off at 8:45 a.m. and targeted on-leave military personnel from the Kayseri Commando Brigade.

The wounded were rushed to hospitals in the region. The army said civilians may have also been casualties of the "treacherous attack."

State-run Anadolu Agency said the car bomb went off at an entrance gate of Erciyes University, hitting a public transportation bus that included on-leave soldiers among its passengers.

Speaking about the Kayseri explosion, Vice Prime Minister Veysi Kaynak said in remarks broadcast on NTV that "treacherous factions" had taken aim at commandos from the Kayseri Airforce Brigade, who had been "training exclusively for the safety of our people."

Turkey's prime ministry office imposed a temporary blackout on coverage of the explosion and urged media to refrain from publishing anything that may cause "fear in the public, panic and disorder and which may serve the aims of terrorist organizations."

Turkey is facing renewed conflict with Kurdish rebels in the southeast and has suffered a string of suicide and car bombing attacks this year.

The blast comes a week after a car bomb struck riot police posted outside a soccer stadium in Istanbul following a match. That attack killed 44 people, mostly police officers, and wounded scores others. Kurdish militants claimed the Istanbul attack.

Turkey is a member of NATO and partner in the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State group, which has been blamed for multiple attacks in Turkey.

___

Ayse Wieting, Bulut Emiroglu and Neyran Elden in Istanbul also contributed reporting.


(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?
12/17/2016 9:58:59 AM

VIDEO 1000 Muslims block London streets chanting Allahu Akbar to demand Islamic caliphate

MORE than 1000 Muslims took to the streets of London last night chanting Allahu Akbar and demanding an Islamic caliphate.


The street outside the empty embassy in Belgrave Square, London, was closed off as it filled with protestors and Islamic leaders chanting loudly and calling for America to be punished over Aleppo.

The demonstration became an alternative to an official rally calling for an end to the bloodshed in Syria outside Downing Street.

During the speeches which lasted almost an hour the crowd chanted Allahu Akbar 'God is the greatest' and cheered for those calling for a global caliphate.

Muslim protest in London
YOUTUBE

More than 1,000 Muslims took to the streets of London in protest

A poet invited to talk shouted: "We need a Caliph who will clean up these streets. Who will smack up armies and who will back beef [fighting].

"Backhand your missiles back to your land, that’s the plan.

"World domination at hand. We can expand and take out these fools."

The crowd largely segregated into men and women with many of the women wearing Islamic clothing.

According to website Breitbart one protester appeared to be waving a Taliban flag, while others were handed placards made by Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain, which calls for the reestablishment of a caliphate.

It is unclear who organised the demonstration.

Breitbart also reported that Haitham al-Hadad, a Saudi-trained Salafist Muslim, congratulated the crowd on amassing so quickly and in such large numbers saying: “This gathering today – in a matter of a few hours, hundreds of brothers and sisters coming together – is a sign of positivity and revival, and a sign of victory for Allah.”

Most speakers kept to the message over foreign action in Syria.

An Islamic protest in London
YouTube

The protest blocked lanes of traffic when it got underway in the capital

Asim Qureshi, director of the Muslim rights group CAGE, who once called Jihadi John 'beautiful', laid the blame for the situation in Aleppo at America’s door, saying: “Never forget who is the problem here.

“When they say ‘look, America is the one who is going to come and help you in this’, then we have to remind them. Go back to the beginning of the war on terror when we were investigating cases of individuals being put on rendition flights to Syria where they had the soles of their feet beaten by the Syrian regime the moment they arrived in prison.

“And who sent them there? The Americans, the CIA.”

The protest blocked lanes of traffic when it got underway at around 9pm on Tuesday night.

Islamic demo
YouTube

The street outside the empty embassy was closed off for the demo

The US has been involved in airstrikes in Syria and been involved with providing equipment for rebel groups fighting ISIS.

Motorists were forced to find alternative routes as the protest got underway at about 9pm, with a prayer session outside the Syrian embassy. The embassy was vacated in May 2012 when the Syrian ambassador to the UK was expelled by the British Government.

The crowd, mostly drawn from mosques across London, was largely self-segregated with many of the women wearing Islamic clothing.

It soon grew to block off the entire road, with many in the crowd waving what looked to be the Taliban flag, while others were handed placards made by Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain, which calls for the reestablishment of a caliphate. It is not clear who organised the demonstration.

But Haitham al-Hadad, a Saudi-trained Salafist Muslim, congratulated last night’s crowd on drawing together to rapidly and in such large numbers. “This gathering today – in a matter of a few hours, hundreds of brothers and sisters coming together – is a sign of positivity and revival, and a sign of victory for Allah,” he said.

(express.co.uk)

"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?
12/17/2016 10:31:13 AM

Dylann Roof guilty on 33 counts of federal hate crimes for Charleston church shooting

Dylann Roof on Dec. 15 was found guilty on all 33 counts he had been charged with in the Mother Emanuel church massacre last year in Charleston, S.C. (Gillian Brockell, Bastien Inzaurralde/The Washington Post)

Dylann Storm Roof, a ninth-grade dropout who learned to hate black people on the Internet, was convicted Thursday of 33 counts of federal hate crimes for slaughtering nine black parishioners at a church Bible study meeting here last year.

A federal jury took less than two hours to reach its decision, following a seven-day trial in which Roof, 22, a self-described white supremacist, chose to remain silent and motionless amid a barrage of testimony and evidence so thorough and devastating that his mother, watching from the third row, suffered a heart attack on the first day.

“He executed them because he believes they are nothing but animals,” prosecutor Nathan Williams said in his closing argument, addressing a somber jury that had seen crime-scene photos of all the dead, including Susie Jackson, 87, the oldest victim, into whom Roof had emptied an entire 11-round magazine from his Glock .45-caliber pistol.

As Williams spoke, a photograph of the Rev. Clementa Pinckney was shown on the screen. The pastor, who had offered Roof a seat next to him at Bible study, was wearing a crisp white shirt and new suit now stained by blood from the five bullet wounds in his neck, back and arm. Roof’s grandmother, sitting in the courtroom while the image was displayed, wiped a tear from her eye.

Judge Richard M. Gergel dismissed the jury for the holidays and told them to return on Jan. 3, when they will hear prosecution and defense arguments about whether Roof should be executed or sentenced to life in prison without parole. Roof also faces a separate state murder trial in January, which also carries a potential death penalty.

Many friends and relatives of the dead attended the trial, in the historic heart of the city where the Civil War began, and many sat with their eyes closed tight as they listened to the verdict.

“There’s no win in this. We still have grieving families, a grieving community. There’s some closure, but there’s no win in this thing,” said Kevin Singleton, 43, whose mother, Myra Thompson, was killed. “We just want to move forward and put this behind us and try to get on with our lives. Nothing good came out of any of this.”

But some allowed themselves a moment of gratitude.

The Rev. Sharon Risher, whose mother, Ethel Lance, was among the dead, said she was “overjoyed that this part is done.”

At the moment the verdict was read, she said, the family members “looked at each other with smiles, like, ‘Hallelujah, God is still in the miracle-working business.’ ”

Roof’s guilt in the killings was essentially uncontested; prosecutors showed the jury Roof’s interview with FBI agents in which he calmly confessed to the killings and complained that he was “worn out” after pumping more than 60 bullets into his victims.

Prosectors introduced and played Dylann Roof’s two-hour video confession during the third day of Roof’s federal death penalty trial. (U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina)

Under federal law, he was charged with hate crimes resulting in death, obstruction of religion and firearms violations. He was also charged with attempting to commit those same offenses against two adults and a child who survived.

His attorney, David Bruck, a death penalty specialist, told the jury he expected them to find Roof guilty, but he repeatedly tried to inject the notion that Roof was mentally or emotionally unstable. He was consistently cut off by Gergel, who said that was relevant only in the penalty phase of the trial.

Roof has said he will represent himself during that phase, and Bruck was apparently trying to help his client in advance of that by giving the jury some justification to spare his life.

“Consider the mad energy, the rationale, the senselessness,” Bruck said as the prosecution mounted objection after objection. “The fact that one is a racist does not tell you what else is going on. And what else is going on is what you should be thinking about.”

The federal death penalty is rarely imposed; the last time was more than a decade ago. Roof had offered to plead guilty and accept life in prison, but the U.S. Justice Department determined that the circumstances were so egregious that they warranted seeking Roof’s execution.

The crime stood as a new and hideous chapter in the long history of racial killings in America. Prosecutors read lines from a journal found in Roof’s car and the manifesto he posted online, and they told jurors that Roof wanted to incite a race war.

Prosecutors presented evidence that Roof chose the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, a historic monument known as Mother Emanuel, because of its spiritual and symbolic importance to the black community.

Roof told FBI interrogators that he “had to” kill blacks because they rape white women; computer records showed that he had researched “black on white” crime and spent time on white supremacist sites.

He said he chose Mother Emanuel because it was the South’s oldest black church and he “knew that would be a place to get a small amount of black people in one area.”

During the trial, prosecutors documented Roof’s meticulous planning in the seven months leading up to the killings. Data collected from his GPS showed that he had made at least six trips to Charleston, visiting historic plantations and studying the church. He videotaped himself on several occasions taking target practice with his Glock in the back yard of his home.

Photos showing Roof posing with the Confederate battle flag prompted South Carolina officials to remove the flag from the state capitol in Columbia.

“A person’s actions tell us what they are thinking and what is in their heart,” Williams said, citing the “vastness” of his “cold, calculated hatred,” and his “tremendous cowardice” in shooting nine people who had closed their eyes to pray.

“There is no bravery in this defendant. There is no bravery in his actions. But there is bravery in this case,” Williams told the jury before recounting the courage shown by the victims and the two adult survivors who testified.

As the prosecutor presented his closing, each victim’s body was shown on the floor of the church’s basement, along with smiling portraits of the victims in life.

“What does ‘malice’ mean?” Williams asked the jury. “It means everything you’ve seen in this case.”

Huddled together under blankets in the chilly courtroom, the families of the victims began weeping. Some kept their heads bowed, rocking back and forth, while other held their heads high, refusing to look away. One relative groaned and rushed from the courtroom as an image of Tywanza Sanders, 26, the youngest victim, was shown, his arm outstretched toward Susie Jackson as they lay dead on the church floor.

Singleton said he had initially planned to stay away from court on the day photos of his mother’s body were shown. But in the end, he said, he felt he needed to be there.

“To see your mom face down on the ground, it’s a life-changing experience,” he said. “A part of me regrets seeing it, but I’m glad I did because I needed to have that closure. It’s like a dream. This doesn’t seem real, so I needed something real. I wanted to have that connection with my mom.”

Sullivan reported from Washington.


(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?
12/17/2016 11:12:42 AM

WHY ARE WE SO NUMB TO THE ATROCITIES BEING COMMITTED IN ALEPPO?


BY


“The famous trucks are here now and we are waiting for it to begin. Take care of my golden boy and don’t spoil him too much with your love. Have a great life, we must board the trucks now. Into eternity. Yours, Wilma.” This is the text of aletter, recently acquired by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum from the son of the letter’s author. Written only hours before Wilma Grunwald was sent to her death in the gas chambers on July 11, 1944, it took nearly 72 years for the world to discover her final goodbye message.

Today in Aleppo thousands upon thousands of civilians caught on the wrong side of the front lines and in the crosshairs of barrel bombs and rifles are sending their own death notes to the world. For days, Twitter, Facebook, WhatsApp and other social media platforms have been choked by those desperate final calls for mercy as death approaches.

There was always an assumption that if the world had more readily understood what was happening to Wilma Grunwald and the millions like her, that more would have been done to mount a response to save Jewish lives. So great was our collective shame that in the aftermath of that failure, the world vowed “never again” and began constructing an international architecture to animate that sentiment.

U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power emotionally questioned Russian, Syrian and Iranian representatives to the United Nations this week about their response to the bombardment and systematic targeting of civilians inside Aleppo, asking “Have you no shame?” The lamentable response is resolutely “no,” but mustn’t that same question be put to all of us as well?

How have we fallen so far from the building of museums and memorials to the Holocaust and victims of other genocides and mass atrocities that we can so callously ignore that history being rewritten in the blood of a new generation of victims before our eyes? What has changed?

For one, that foundational assumption of genocide prevention that knowing more empowers us, and necessitates us, to do more, is proving patently false in the digital age. The competition for our attention in an always-on, reality-TV media environment has in many ways numbed us to the gravity of the crimes that are unfolding in Syria today.


Syrian residents, fleeing violence in the restive Bustan al-Qasr neighborhood, arrive in Aleppo's Fardos neighborhood on December 13, after regime troops retook the area from rebel fighters.STRINGER/AFP/GETTY

The personal goodbyes from those trapped inside Aleppo’s kill zone are scrolled over in a flick and compete with far more “likable” and “retweetable” posts from more digitally savvy content providers.

Second, the complexity of the actors and the crimes they are committing in Syria don’t lend themselves to facile slogans or 140-character missives. We can identify the innocent civilians, but the perpetrators are so often less clearly identified and their motives even more opaque. As a result, many Americans who might otherwise be doing more to demand an American-led response emerge perplexed and unable to see the U.S. security interest in this slaughter or its attendant consequences.

Further complicating this tragic narrative is the specter of fake news compounded with the government spin machines that are helping to divert the story away from the immense human cost of this conflict. Russia has framed its nearly 18-month involvement in Syria as part of a coalition effort to roll back the terrorist threat, including that from the Islamic State militant group (ISIS). But groups like the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported before the current siege of Aleppo that Russian bombing has killed nearly three times the number of Syrian civilians and opposition members than ISIS fighters.

And Syria’s own ambassador to the United Nations, in fending off Samantha Powers’ shaming, brandished his own “evidence” of an alleged Syrian soldier tenderly offering “help and support” to an elderly grandmother being evacuated from Aleppo this week, only for it to emerge hours later that the cropped photo was that of an Iraqi soldier taken six months ago in Fallujah, Iraq.

In the battle for the truth about Syria, the only real losers, as they always are, are the civilians, expressed poignantly on Twitter this week by Abdul Alhamdo, a schoolteacher in Aleppo, who posted on Wednesday: “The last message. Thanks for everything. We shared many moments…the Assad militias are maybe 300 meters away, no place to go. It’s the last of days.”

It hasn’t taken us 70 years to discover Abdul’s final message. But it may take us that long to understand why we didn’t do more to stop it.


(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?
12/17/2016 11:47:22 AM

BAN KI-MOON: THE WORLD HAS BETRAYED SOUTH SUDAN

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

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