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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/16/2017 5:37:21 PM

APNewsBreak: About 4,000 more US troops to go to Afghanistan

LOLITA C. BALDOR and ROBERT BURNS

FILE - In this April 17, 2017, file photo, U.S. forces and Afghan security police are seen in Asad Khil near the site of a U.S. bombing in the Achin district of Jalalabad, east of Kabul, Afghanistan. The Pentagon will send almost 4,000 additional American forces to Afghanistan, a Trump administration official said June 15, hoping to break a stalemate in a war that has now passed to a third U.S. commander-in-chief. The deployment will be the largest of American manpower under Donald Trump’s young presidency. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon will send almost 4,000 additional American forces to Afghanistan, a Trump administration official said Thursday, hoping to break a stalemate in a war that has now passed to a third U.S. commander in chief. The deployment will be the largest of American manpower under Donald Trump's young presidency.

The decision by Defense Secretary Jim Mattis could be announced as early as next week, the official said. It follows Trump's move to give Mattis the authority to set troop levels and seeks to address assertions by the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan that he doesn't have enough forces to help Afghanistan's army against a resurgent Taliban insurgency. The rising threat posed by Islamic State extremists, evidenced in a rash of deadly attacks in the capital city of Kabul, has only fueled calls for a stronger U.S. presence, as have several recent American combat deaths.

The bulk of the additional troops will train and advise Afghan forces, according to the administration official, who wasn't authorized to discuss details of the decision publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity. A smaller number would be assigned to counterterror operations against the Taliban and IS, the official said.

Asked for comment, a Pentagon spokesman, Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, said, "No decisions have been made."

Daulat Waziri, a spokesman for Afghanistan's defense ministry, was reluctant to comment on specifics Friday but said the Afghan government supports the U.S. decision to send more troops.

"The United States knows we are in the fight against terrorism, " he said. "We want to finish this war in Afghanistan with the help of the NATO alliance."

There was no immediate report whether NATO allies would also increase their troop commitment to Afghanistan. The U.S. currently has 8,500 troops deployed in Afghanistan.

"We are the frontline in the war against international terrorism," Waziri said.

Although Trump has delegated authority for U.S. troop numbers in Afghanistan, the responsibility for America's wars and the men and women who fight in them rests on his shoulders. Trump has inherited America's longest conflict with no clear endpoint or a defined strategy for American success, though U.S. troop levels are far lower than they were under Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush. In 2009, Obama authorized a surge of 30,000 troops into Afghanistan, bringing the total there to more than 100,000, before drawing down over the rest of his presidency.

Trump has barely spoken about Afghanistan as a candidate or president, concentrating instead on crushing the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq. His predecessors both had hoped to win the war. Bush scored a quick success, helping allied militant groups oust the Taliban shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, before seeing the gains slip away as American focus shifted to the Iraq war. In refocusing attention on Afghanistan, Obama eliminated much of the country's al-Qaida network and authorized the mission that killed Osama bin Laden, but failed to snuff out the Taliban's rebellion.

Mattis' deployment of more troops will be far smaller than Obama's.

While military leaders have consistently said more forces are needed, a decision had been tied up in a lengthy, wider debate about America's long-term military, diplomatic and economic strategy for ending the war. Gen. John Nicholson, the top U.S. commander there, has said the troops are necessary to properly train and advise the Afghan military and perform work handled at greater cost by contractors. Afghan leaders endorse the idea of more U.S. troops, having lost significant ground to the Taliban in recent months.

But despite repeated questions from Congress this week, Mattis wouldn't reveal his thinking on a troop increase. He said that while counterterrorism efforts in Afghanistan are making progress in weakening al-Qaida and IS, "their defeat will come about only by giving our men and women on the ground the support and the authorities they need to win."

Obama set a cap a year ago of 8,400 troops in Afghanistan after slowing the pace of what he hoped would be a U.S. withdrawal.

Nevertheless, there are at least another 2,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan not included in the official count. These include forces that are technically considered temporary even if they've been in the warzone for months.

Trump's decision Tuesday to give Mattis authority to set force levels in Afghanistan mirrored similar powers he handed over earlier this year for U.S. fights in Iraq and Syria. The change was made public hours after Sen. John McCain, the Senate Armed Services Committee's Republican chairman, blasted Mattis for the administration's failure to present an overarching strategy for Afghanistan. McCain said the U.S. is "not winning" in Afghanistan, and Mattis agreed.

The finality of the decision isn't entirely clear. While Trump has handed over the troop level decision-making, there is nothing preventing him from taking it back.

Mattis has repeatedly stressed that increasing the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan would take place within a broader, long-term strategy for stabilizing Afghanistan. In congressional testimony this week, he said the strategy will take into account regional influences, such as Pakistan's role as a Taliban sanctuary. Regional powers Iran, India and China, which all have political stakes in the fate of Afghanistan, also must be considered.

While the new troops could raise fears of mission creep, Mattis told lawmakers this week he didn't envision returning to the force levels of 2010-11, when Obama thought he could pressure the Taliban into peace talks. Despite heavy losses, the Taliban fought on.

"Reconciliation" remains the goal, Mattis told a House Appropriations panel Thursday, along with reducing Afghan government corruption.

"We're not looking at a purely military strategy," he said. "All wars come to an end. Our job is to end it as quickly as possible without losing the very mission that we've recognized, through several administrations, that was worth putting those young Americans on the line for."

There have been almost 2,400 U.S. military deaths in Afghanistan since 2001. Three U.S. soldiers were killed and another was wounded in eastern Afghanistan this weekend in an attack claimed by the Taliban.


(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?
6/16/2017 5:57:42 PM

RuPaul: America’s first lady of drag covers EW's LGBTQ issue

POSTED ON


Check out the complete oral history of RuPaul—and revisit 25 years’ worth of game-changing LGBTQ movies, TV, and music—in
the new issue of Entertainment Weekly, on stands Friday, or buy it here now. Don’t forget to subscribe for more exclusive interviews and photos, only in EW.

Drag has been around since the days of Dionysus, but no ancient Greek ever sashayed nearly as statuesquely as RuPaul Charles. The world’s most famous and influential drag performer took a long (and still) marginalized art form and used it to create an empire — and in doing so, built a shimmering 30-year-long career as twisted as pop culture itself to become one of the most important LGBTQ icons of our time.

That’s why the inimitable RuPaul is the perfect cover star to grace Entertainment Weekly’s annual LGBTQ special issue, which this year features a reunion with the stars of The L Word, a gay pop preview (including a sneak peek at the Will & Grace revival), and our list of the 25 greatest LGBTQ entertainment moments from the past 25 years.

RELATED: RuPaul’s 13 Best Pop Culture Moments

As for the story of RuPaul, it would certainly be enough to hear from Ru himself about all of his grand achievements (like signing on as the first face of MAC’s Viva Glam cosmetics line in 1994, or becoming national TV’s first openly gay host with his VH1 talk show in 1996). Instead, we’ve assembled a supporting roster of crucial voices who witnessed his ascent into stardom (like sidekick Michelle Visage, drag legend Lady Bunny, and the producing minds and winners of RuPaul’s Drag Race) to join in on our completely brief oral history of author, model, recording artist, activist, and Emmy-winning host, RuPaul.

TONY KELLY FOR EW

They all have their stories to share alongside Ru, who was hustling up a reputation as a dancer in ‘80s Atlanta when he first met the two young musicians who would become his first managers and longtime business partners:

  • Fenton Bailey (cofounder, World of Wonder): When we met him in the ‘80s, he was wheat-pasting posters of himself that said, ‘RuPaul is Everything.’ I often think of that moment because it was so symbolic in so many ways because it was Ru, putting up a poster of himself that contained the fundamental message of Ru from the beginning: You have to hustle. You have to find and connect with your audience. When we met Ru, he wasn’t sitting around waiting to be discovered.
  • Randy Barbato (cofounder, World of Wonder): He was fully realized. He was working a total gender-f–k punk rock look, this incredible creature that you could not ignore. It was undeniable that we were in the presence of this huge star.

There’s the RuPaul whom the world met as a recording artist with his 1993 dance-pop single, “Supermodel (You Better Work)” and as the country’s first mainstream drag model:

  • Lady Bunny (drag legend): Ru’s contribution to drag is unique in that Ru presented himself as pretty, and the only way that the mainstream had embraced drag was to have [men] in Some Like It Hot doing drag because they were hiding. Tootsie, where Dustin Hoffman does drag because he’s unable to find work. Mrs. Doubtfire.There was always a reason a man had to do drag. Ru didn’t need a reason. The reason was, ‘I’m gorgeous. I’m a supermodel.’ That was a huge benchmark for him to say, ‘I want to do drag because I look great—don’t you agree?’ And for the world to say, ‘Yes.’

There’s the RuPaul who changed the world of talk shows with his VH1 talk show The RuPaul Show, a short-lived series that booked everyone from Cher and Diana Ross to Bea Arthur and the Backstreet Boys:

  • RuPaul: VH1 asked me to present an award at the 1995 VH1 Fashion Awards, and they sent me the script, which was written by some writer who was trying to speak queen-speak, and it was rotten. Every time I would get a script for something like that back then, it would be in what the writer would think a drag queen would speak like, and it was always *****y. I do sassy — I don’t do *****y. So I rewrote what I was supposed to say, and I came out in these Bob Mackie wings, and I could see in the audience there was David Bowie and there was Tina Turner, and there was Madonna — not looking at me — and the crowd was just going wild and laughing and it was so positive and funny. That’s when they called and said, ‘Let’s do a TV show.’
  • Michelle Visage (co-host): It was a brilliant f—ing show and way before its time. I mean, we had a TV show with a drag queen and his best girl friend being clowns, taking the piss out of life and out of pop culture. I knew when I was in it that it was different, but it didn’t feel different as in weird. It felt different as in groundbreaking.

And there’s the RuPaul who was once — and, even as the Emmy-winning host of RuPaul’s Drag Race, still is — just an ambitious kid, determined to figure out how to make waves and leave his positive mark in the world:

  • RuPaul: Everything came to a screeching halt when I turned 28. I moved out to LA because nothing was happening for me. I was sleeping on my baby sister’s couch, not a penny to my name. I thought, ‘Could it be that this is not meant for me?’ It was this horrible existence. And one day, my friend Larry Tee called me and said, ‘Ru, what the f–k are you doing? You are a star. Get your ass back to New York and get your s–t together.’ And I did. I got a plane ticket and decided I was going to shave these legs, I’m going to shave my chest, I’m going to put some f—ing titties in – rolled-up socks, not implants – and I’m going to go back to New York and give those *****es exactly what they want from me.

ew.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?
6/17/2017 12:29:05 AM
Serbia's president formally nominates country's first openly gay prime minister

Ana Brnabic attends a parliament session in Belgrade CREDIT: DARKO VOJINOVIC/AP

By 16 JUNE 2017 • 2:16AM

Serbia's president on Thursday nominated the highly conservative country' first openly gay prime minister, a move likely to infuriate both the Christian Orthodox church and ultranationalists.

President Aleksandar Vucic
announced that Ana Brnabic, 41, was nominated as the prime minister-designate, which could also make her the first female head of government in the country's history. Her cabinet needs formal approval by parliament next week.

It was "a difficult decision reached in the interest of Serbia and its citizens," said Vucic, a former extremist-turned-reformist who has promised to boost gay rights as part of efforts to move closer to European Union membership.


"If elected in parliament, I will run the government with dedication and responsibility and I will do my job honestly and with love," Brnabic told state Tanjug news agency.

Brnabic's nomination is considered part of Vucic's apparent turn toward the West despite strong pressure from Russia to maintain its influence in the region. The British-educated Brnabic, a marketing expert, had worked for U.S. companies before she assumed her Serbian government job.

"I believe she has professional skills and personal qualities," Vucic said. "I'm convinced she will work hard."

Brnabic is currently Serbia's minister of public administration and local government. She is not a member of Vucic's ruling populist Serbian Progressive Party but is considered loyal to him.

Her appointment to the government last year — she was hand-picked by Vucic who was then prime minister — was hailed by rights groups as historic for the Balkan country whose gay community regularly faces discrimination, harassment and violence.

Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic speaks during a press conference where he announced Ana Brnabic as the country's next prime minister. CREDIT: DARKO VOJINOVIC/AP

"Hopefully this will blow over in three or four days, and then I won't be known as the gay minister," she told the Associated Press at the time.

Pro-Russian nationalists blasted the choice Thursday. The conservative opposition Dveri group, close to the Serbian Orthodox Church, said Brnabic was obviously appointed under Western pressure.

"Is it possible that the ruling majority has no other candidate for the prime minister-designate but the one imposed by the West, which dictates all the moves by this government?" the party asked.

Vucic's coalition partners were also infuriated.

"Ana Brnabic is not my prime minister," nationalist official Dragan Markovic-Palma told the private Beta news agency. Earlier he said he would not approve anyone for the post who does not have at least two children.

Vucic, who was prime minister before his election as president in April, was expected to appoint a loyalist to maintain control of the government as he moved into the largely ceremonial presidential position.


(telegraph.co.uk)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/17/2017 1:02:08 AM

Male, female or X? Oregon adds third option to driver's licenses



FILE PHOTO: An employee of the advocacy group Basic Rights Oregon hands out stickers during an Oregon Driver and Motor Vehicle department public hearing on the rights of transgender people as the state considers adding a third gender choice to driver's licenses and identification cards, in Portland, Oregon, May 10, 2017. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester/File Photo

By Terray Sylvester

Oregon on Thursday became the first U.S. state to allow residents to identify as neither male nor female on state driver's licenses, a decision that transgender advocates called a victory for civil rights.

Under a policy unanimously adopted by the Oregon Transportation Commission, residents can choose to have an "X," for non-specified, displayed on their driver's license or identification cards rather than an "M" for male or "F" for female.

The policy change was cheered by supporters as a major step in expanding legal recognition and civil rights for people who do not identify as male or female. This includes individuals with both male and female anatomies, people without a gender identity and those who identify as a different gender than listed on their birth certificate.

The state's Driver and Motor Vehicle Services Division expects to start offering the option in July.

"I very much plan to head to the nearest DMV and ask for that ID to be corrected on July 3rd," said Jamie Shupe, an Army veteran who successfully petitioned for the non-binary gender option. "And then I'll no doubt stand out front of the building, or sit in the car, and cry."

Transgender rights have become a flashpoint across the United States after some states, including North Carolina, have tried to restrict transgender people's use of public bathrooms.

At the end of May, a federal court ruled that a transgender boy must be allowed to use the boys' bathrooms at his high school in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

The decision in Oregon comes a year after a Portland circuit court judge granted a request by Shupe to change gender from female to a third, nongender option.

That 2016 ruling prompted state officials to examine how to allow a third option in the state's computer systems and how such a change would interact with the state's gender laws.

During public hearings on the change, most comments were in favor, according to a summary by DMV officials.
A handful of people questioned the need for the third option and expressed concern that the change would complicate police officers' efforts to identify people.

Having the third option on legal documentation can help reduce discrimination and raise awareness of "the spectrum of gender identity," said Diane Goodwin, spokeswoman for Basic Rights Oregon, an advocacy group that campaigned for the "X" option.

Nearly one-third of transgender people who showed an ID with a name or gender that did not match their perceived gender reported harassment, discrimination or assault, according to a 2015 survey of more than 20,000 people in all states.

A DMV spokesman added the agency has no estimate of how many people might apply for the new IDs.

(Reporting by Terray Sylvester in Hood River, Oregon; Writing by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

(REUTERS)


"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?
6/17/2017 9:28:09 AM

NORTH KOREA DEMANDS WOMEN 'ABDUCTED' BY SOUTH KOREA ARE SENT BACK


BY


North Korea has called for a group of women it says South Korea abducted to be repatriated to the Communist state. Rodong Sinmun, a North Korean newspaper generally seen as the mouthpiece for the North Korean regime, published the demand.

The newspaper claimed that South Korea’s disgraced ex-President Park Geun-hye had “abducted” a group of women and said that the people of South Korea were clamoring for the group to be returned immediately.

The article, published on KCNA watch, an aggregator of official DPRK media, suggested that South Korea is deliberately ignoring the voice of its people by not repatriating the North Korean women: “ They are now deliberately evading the repatriation of those detained women citizens despite the demand of the south Korean public.”

The group it refers to could be a group of North Korean restaurant workers who fled from their overseas jobs.

North Korean media has repeatedly used the ousted South Korean president, now in prison over a government corruption scandal, as an example of the “sinister” nature of South Korean politics, condemning her actions as evidence of its neighbor’s “greed” and underhand actions.

The article continued, saying that no further work should take place between the two countries without the situation being solved, referring to new South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s attempts to open up dialogue between the rivals. “Explicitly speaking, no humanitarian work including the reunion of separated families and relatives in the North and the South can be expected without the settlement of the issue,” the statement said.

As part of his election campaign, Moon promised to move away the status quo regarding South Korea’s relationship with North Korea and attempt to engage with Kim Jong Un’s regime, something that greatly appealed to young people.

In recent weeks, South Korea has made attempts to supply the North with anti-malaria supplies and medication via a charitable group given permission by Moon. However, the North rejected the aid, with reports suggesting the regime was angry South Korea had condoned sanctions.


(Newsweek)


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