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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/9/2017 11:48:39 PM

11 Ominous Signs That We Are Racing Towards War With Iran

"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?
2/10/2017 10:39:16 AM

10 de febrero / 11 de febrero de 2017 — Penumbral Lunar Eclipse

February’s Full Moon, the Snow Moon, on February 10/11 will grow a little darker from 22:34:14 UTC until 02:53:25 UTC when Earth casts a shadow, the penumbra, on the Moon.

This penumbral lunar eclipse is visible in most populated areas on Earth, including most of North and South America, Europe, Africa, and most of Asia.

Next eclipse: Annular solar eclipse on February 26, 2017


What This Lunar Eclipse Looks Like

The animation shows approximately what the eclipse looks like from the night side of the Earth.


It is often difficult to tell the difference between a penumbral eclipse and a regular Full Moon.

However, this eclipse is easier to spot than an average penumbral eclipse because the Moon travels through the darkest areas of Earth’s penumbra, only just missing the umbra, the darkest part of the shadow. However, this eclipse is less spectacular than a total lunar eclipse, also known as a Blood Moon.

Where to See the Eclipse

Regions seeing, at least, some parts of the eclipse: Europe, Much of Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Ocean, Arctic, Antarctica.

Is this eclipse visible in Lima?

Note that since it is a penumbral eclipse, it can be hard to see, as the Moon will only be a bit fainter.

Eclipse is visible.

Eclipse not visible at all.

Note: Areas with lighter shadings left (West) of the center will experience the eclipse after moonrise/sunset. Areas with lighter shadings right (East) of the center will experience the eclipse until moonset/sunrise. Actual eclipse visibility depends on weather conditions and line of sight to the Moon.

When the Eclipse Happens Worldwide

Lunar eclipses look approximately the same all over the world and happen at the same time.

The times displayed are accurate to around 2-3 seconds.

EventUTC TimeTime in Lima*Visible in Lima
Penumbral Eclipse begins10 de feb, 22:34:1410 de feb, 17:34:14No, below the horizon
Maximum Eclipse11 de feb, 0:43:4910 de feb, 19:43:49Yes
Penumbral Eclipse ends11 de feb, 2:53:2510 de feb, 21:53:25Yes


* The Moon is below the horizon in Lima some of the time, so that part of the eclipse is not visible.

The magnitude of the eclipse is -0.035.

The penumbral magnitude of the eclipse is 0.988

The total duration of the eclipse is 4 hours, 19 minutes.


(timeanddate.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?
2/10/2017 11:16:34 AM

Yemen Withdraws Permission For
US Ground Operations







This news is a black eye for the new administration.

By: Jason Ditz / AntiWar

The Trump Administration’s claims that a January 29 ground raid in Yemen was a “success” appear to be on increasingly flimsy ground, with the
Yemeni government announcing it has revoked permission for all future US ground operations on their soil.

Though US officials downplayed the move, saying it doesn’t apply to drone strikes, it is still a nasty black eye for the administration, as the US has long managed to keep the Yemeni government unquestioningly supportive, irrespective of a string of fairly plain blunders.

The January 29 raid was particularly bad, with officials saying everything that could’ve gone wrong did, and that the raid was carried out without sufficient intelligence. Though the Pentagon says 14 “combatants” were killed, so were dozens of civilians, including a substantial number of children, and the raid destroyed most of a village.

The large number of slain children, including eight-year-old American Nora Awlaki, fueled a lot of anger at the US, and virtually obliged the Yemeni government to put the kibosh on future such raids. Officials later suggested intelligence acquired might have justified the raid, though so far this amounted to a single, decade-old video that was already publicly available.




This article (
Yemen Withdraws Permission For US Ground Operations) by Jason Ditz is free and open source. You have permission to republish this article under a Creative Commons license with attribution to the author and AntiWar.com.


(trueactivist.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?
2/10/2017 2:06:07 PM

PUTIN TO TRUMP: LIFT SANCTIONS OR UKRAINE GETS IT



On January 29, the fighting in Avdiivka, a town in eastern Ukraine within Ukrainian government-controlled territory, seriously escalated.

The fighting began close to the demarcation line and six kilometers north of Donetsk (see map), and continued until at least February 3.

According to official reports, 13 Ukrainian soldiers were killed and 93 were wounded since the fighting intensified. Three civilians were killed and one wounded, and a British journalist was wounded and later operated on in the Dnipro hospital.

Heavy shelling from the separatist-controlled territories also affected nearby residential areas. The town was cut off from electricity, heat and water supplies, and repairs could not begin immediately due to continued hostilities, despite the brutally cold temperatures.


Ukrainian artillery is moved nearer to the front lines on February 1, near Keramik, Ukraine. Volodymyr Yermolenko and Tetyana Ogarkova write that a phone call between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin on January 28 failed to result in the lifting of sanctions imposed for Putin's invasion of Crimea and eastern Ukraine. The escalation that occurred in eastern Ukraine the very next day could be a warning signal to Trump that security in eastern Ukraine is in Putin’s hands, and he can make things worse if sanctions are not lifted.BRENDAN HOFFMAN/GETTY

Now Avdiivka is slowly recovering. Water, heat and electricity were finally restored on February 6. The Ukrainian government-controlled side’s response to the shooting targeted Donetsk and its suburbs; the city also suffered from cuts in water and electricity supplies, which were restored on February 6.

Hostilities also escalated near the towns of Mariupol, Mariinka, Opytne, Pisky, Popasna and others. The OSCE Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine reports of a drastic, unprecedented increase in the number of ceasefire violations within the Avdiivka-Yasynuvata-Donetsk airport triangle since January 29.

We examined the key factors, both global and local, that might help explain the current escalation.

Related: With Trump distracted, Putin pounds Ukraine

GLOBAL ASPECTS

Russia's war game

The war in eastern Ukraine was originally provoked by pro-Russian and Russian military groups in the spring of 2014 in reaction to Ukraine's Euromaidan protests. Since then, Russia has maintained considerable involvement in the Donbas.

Although Russian President Vladimir Putin's press secretary Dmitry Peskov denies Russian participation and says that the Donbas fighting is an "internal Ukrainian conflict," overwhelming evidence indicates Russia has a military and political presence in the Donbas. Even such a cautious institution as the International Criminal Court mentions the "existence of an international armed conflict" in eastern Ukraine.

Today, the Kremlin increasingly uses tensions in the Donbas to influence Ukraine's internal politics by increasing a sense of war fatigue, polarizing public opinion and weakening the current pro-Western government.

Minsk deals questioned

The current escalation comes at a time when the Minsk agreements are at their weakest point since 2014. In Ukraine, the Minsk agreements are unpopular among the public, but the government’s official policy is to fully observe them while demanding that the security component be implemented before the political one.

For Russians, deadlocks in the Minsk process move Moscow further away from the lifting of sanctions. Moscow might therefore want a better deal. Russia and its proxies escalated hostilities in both 2014 and 2015 prior to negotiation of the Minsk agreements in order to get a deal on Russia’s terms—in a "coercion to peace" approach—and the same thing may be occurring now.

Trump-Putin talk

A phone call between U.S. President Donald Trump and Putin on January 28 failed to result in the lifting of sanctions. The escalation that occurred in eastern Ukraine the very next day could be a warning signal to Trump that security in eastern Ukraine is in Putin’s hands, and he can make things worse if sanctions are not lifted.

LOCAL ASPECTS

Artillery war

Although the Minsk agreements required that heavy weapons be withdrawn to 30 kilometers from the contact line, this has never been fully met. The current Avdiivka episode, however, is a serious escalation; heavy weaponry has not been used to this degree for months.

One tragic aspect of this escalation is that the war is taking place in densely populated areas, and in many cases the military units are located in cities, including residential regions. Shelling to Avdiivka, for example, has been done from residential neighborhoods in Donetsk; the counter-attack, therefore, is targeting Donetsk’s residential areas. Additionally, the Avdiivka attack targeted municipal infrastructure (water, electricity and heat) in the middle of winter.

Hybrid ceasefire

Despite the Minsk agreements, a complete ceasefire never took place in the Donbas; the "hybrid war" also produced a "hybrid ceasefire." Local clashes have been reported practically every week. Avdiivka is not the first case of a large-scale violation with many deaths; in late December, there was an escalation onSvitlodarska duha. And these days, the war is back at many other points along the front.

Russian munitions

Pro-Russian and Russian forces are using weapons supplied through the Ukraine-Russia border. The border is not controlled by Ukraine; moreover, Russia "allows" the OSCE to monitor only two checkpoints, in violation of the Minsk deals.

The separatists' ability to continue the conflict using heavy weaponry and sophisticated technology can only be explained through the continuous supply of armaments from Russia.

Ukrainian maneuvers

Christopher Miller, a correspondent for RFE/RL, writes in his coverage that “since mid-December, Ukraine's armed forces have edged farther into parts of the grey zone... shrinking the space between them and the separatist fighters."

The Ukrainian side, however, responds that its troops were not violating the Minsk agreements, as they were not crossing the demarcation line and were moving inside government-controlled territory.

Moreover, maneuvers from both sides and the eventual clashes with light weaponry were taking place practically continuously since the Minsk deals. What makes the Avdiivka situation different is that pro-Russian separatists responded with heavy artillery and Grad shelling, with rockets targeting not only military but also civilian targets.

The strategic Donetsk-Horlivka road

Another important factor is transport. Avdiivka is a strategic town that may be theweakest point in the DNR forces’ defense. Some military experts say that control over the Donetsk-Horlivka road, which goes through Avdiivka’s suburbs, is essential in the current circumstances—in particular, for improving Ukraine's defense capacity.

The new positions taken by the Ukrainian army are located in government-controlled territory under the Minsk agreements, but are considered a strategic challenge by Russian-backed separatists. This explains why the separatists tried to attack Ukrainian positions and eventually used heavy artillery to push the Ukrainian army back.

Akhmetov's role

Rinat Akhmetov, one of Ukraine's most powerful oligarchs who has been called the "master" of the Donbas, still has business interests on both sides of the demarcation line.

Akhmetov has coal mines in the separatist-controlled territories, and steel and electricity power plants in the Ukrainian government-controlled areas. He owns the Avdiivka coke factory, which is a key asset for Ukrainian steel production. At the same time, the administration of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic still includes people linked to Akhmetov like Dmitry Trapeznikov, Alexei Granovsky and Maksim Leshchenko.

These factors all point to the sad reality that the settlement of the conflict in eastern Ukraine is still a very distant goal. There are numerous factors that provoke new escalations, both international and local.Akhmetov might play a role in brokering deals across the frontline, but could also be a target for those who consider him an obstacle.

Despite Russia’s repeated denials of involvement in the conflict, Moscow started the war in the spring of 2014, it has sustained it ever since and it still holds the keys to end it.

Volodymyr Yermolenko is an expert at Internews Ukraine and UkraineWorld group, a networking initiative focused on Ukraine that counteracts disinformation. Tetyana Ogarkova is head of international outreach at the Ukraine Crisis Media Centre. The authors thank Alya Shandra, Oleksandr Sushko, Yevhen Bystrytskyi, Dmytro Shulga, Daria Gaiday, Roman Vybranovskyi and other UkraineWorld group members for their help and consultations.

(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?
2/10/2017 2:36:28 PM

For years, immigration authorities gave this Arizona mother a pass. Now she has been deported.

Seven protesters were arrested outside a Phoenix immigration center after blocking a van that carried an undocumented migrant from Mexico, Guadalupe García de Rayos, who was taken into custody and issued an order of deportation at her regular check-in. (Photo: Arizona Republic via AP/Reuters)

About eight years ago, there was a knock on Guadalupe García de Rayos’s door. Authorities had come to arrest the undocumented mother of two U.S.-born children, a Mexican native who had lived north of the border since she was 14.

The Phoenix mother was detained for months and eventually ordered to be sent back to Mexico. But for the subsequent years, after she appealed her voluntary deportation, García de Rayos was allowed to remain in the United States, as long as she checked in once a year, and then every six months.

Each year, she did so, and each year, immigration officials let her stay.

This year, as García de Rayos feared, was different. When she went to check in as usual at the central Phoenix offices of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), she was taken into custody as protests erupted outside.

García de Rayos was perhaps among the first undocumented immigrants to be arrested during a scheduled meeting with immigration officials since President Trump’s inauguration, civil rights lawyers told the New York Times. And now, she is gone.

Carlos García, director of the group Puente Arizona, said Thursday that García de Rayos was no longer in the United States.

“She has been deported,” he told a crowd. “And this has been one of the first victims of President Trump.”

ICE confirmed the deportation, saying in a statement that García de Rayos was “removed” to Mexico on Thursday morning, shortly before 10 a.m. local time.

Having anticipated her possible detention, Puente Arizona had on Wednesday organized a rally outside the offices, and crowds swelled to about 200 people at the peak of the gathering, the Arizona Republic reported. Protesters, including de Rayos’s two children, shouted, “No papers, no fear” and “Let her go, set her free,” as others banged on drums and raised posters and flags.

For several hours, demonstrators blocked an ICE van with García de Rayos inside; one man even tied himself to one of the van’s front wheels. It was unclear whether the van was taking García de Rayos and other deportees to Mexico or to detention. Seven protesters were arrested, but the majority of the demonstration was peaceful, Phoenix police said.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer on Thursday directed questions on the matter to ICE.

“I’m going to refer you back to ICE on that. That’s an ICE matter,” Spicer said during Thursday’s briefing. “The issue is developing in Arizona right now, and I would refer you back to ICE.”

In a statement posted to Twitter on Thursday, Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton (D) wrote: “What happened last night to Guadalupe García de Rayos is a travesty.”

“She has been peacefully living and working in the Valley for more than two decades, and by all accounts was building a life and contributing to our community,” it said. “She has now been torn apart from her family. ”

García de Rayos’s arrest and deportation is likely to mark a shift in priorities under Trump. Previously, the Obama administration prioritized the deportation of people who were violent offenders or had ties to criminal gangs. Trump’s executive orderon Jan. 25 expanded priorities to include any undocumented immigrants who had been convicted of a criminal offense.

In an earlier statement, ICE officials said García de Rayos was detained based on a removal order issued by the Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigration Review, which became final in May 2013, and was spurred by a prior felony conviction dating from March 2009 for criminal impersonation.

The conviction stems from one of former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s worksite raids targeting the Golfland Entertainment Centers, which operated several water and mini-golf parks. Sheriff’s deputies seized hundreds of employment records and later arrested García de Rayos at her house, the Arizona Republic reported. She pleaded guilty to a charge of criminal impersonation, a Class 6 felony, the lowest level.

After being arrested and turned over to ICE, García de Rayos spent six months at the Eloy Detention Center. She has been fighting recently to have her felony conviction thrown out on grounds that Arpaio’s worksite raids were unconstitutional. Puente Arizona filed a lawsuit in 2015 to end Arpaio’s raids, an often-touted law-enforcement tactic that has led to the arrests of hundreds of immigrant workers since 2008.

“It has 100 percent to do with the executive order,” Ray Ybarra-Maldonado, a Phoenix immigration lawyer who is representing García de Rayos, told the Arizona Republic.

Protesters in Phoenix on Feb. 9 pled for the return of Guadalupe Garcia de Rayos, an undocumented mother of two who was detained and deported to Mexico this month. Her family and lawyer say she's an early target of President Trump's executive order on deportations. (Video: Reuters / Photo: Arizona Republic via AP)

Ybarra-Maldonado immediately filed documents asking ICE to stay her deportation, on the basis that she has lived in the United States since she was 14, has two children who are U.S. citizens and is fighting to have her felony conviction overturned, he told reporters.

That effort was unsuccessful.

Protesters said they initially stopped the vehicles from leaving, but that they later left the grounds by another exit, the Associated Press reported.

García, the Puente Arizona director, told the Republic that ICE’s decision to take García de Rayos into custody would likely spur other undocumented immigrants who were released on supervision to stop checking in. Now, he said, they might be more likely to go into hiding.

“Most definitely, if what’s going to happen when people come to check in they are going to get detained and deported, I would assume most people will not turn themselves in,” he said.

When asked what she would tell Trump if she had the chance, García de Rayos’s 14-year-old daughter told reporters: “I’d ask him why he would want to take her from me. She hasn’t done anything wrong and I’m not scared of him.”

Asked how long she planned to fight the U.S. government, her daughter had a simple answer, the Arizona Republic reported: “Until I get my mom back.”

This story has been updated.


(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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