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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/7/2011 10:44:52 AM

Big quake follows increase in Oklahoma rumblings

By JUSTIN JUOZAPAVICIUS - Associated Press

Rise in Okla. rumblings puzzles scientists

The biggest earthquake in the state's history is part of a dramatic spike in seismic activity. 'It's a real mystery'

SPARKS, Okla. (AP) — Clouds of dust belched from the corners of almost every room in Joe Reneau's house as the biggest earthquake in Oklahoma history rocked the two-story building.

A roar that sounded like a jumbo jet filled the air, and Reneau's red-brick chimney collapsed and fell into the roof above the living room. By the time the shaking stopped, a pantry worth of food had been strewn across the kitchen and shards of glass and pottery covered the floor.

"It was like WHAM!" said Reneau, 75, gesturing with swipes of his arms. "I thought in my mind the house would stand, but then again, maybe not."

The magnitude 5.6 earthquake and its aftershocks still had residents rattled Sunday.

Two minor injuries were reported from Saturday's quakes by theOklahoma Department of Emergency Management, which said neither person was hospitalized. And, aside from a buckled highway and the collapse of a tower on the St. Gregory's University administration building in Shawnee, no major damage was reported.

But the weekend earthquakes were among the strongest yet in a state that has seen a dramatic, unexplained increase in seismic activity.

Oklahoma typically had about 50 earthquakes a year until 2009. Then the number spiked, and 1,047 quakes shook the state last year, prompting researchers to install seismographs in the area. Still, most of the earthquakes have been small.

Saturday night's big one jolted Oklahoma State University's stadium shortly after the No. 3 Cowboys defeated No. 17 Kansas State. Fans were still leaving the game.

"That shook up the place, had a lot of people nervous," Oklahoma State wide receiver Justin Blackmon said.

The temblor sent Jesse Richards' wife running outside because she thought their home was going to collapse. The earthquake centered near their home in Sparks, 44 miles northeast of Oklahoma City, could be felt throughout the state and in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, northern Texas and some parts of Illinois and Wisconsin.

Richards estimated it lasted for as much as a minute. One of his wife's cookie jars fell on the floor and shattered, and pictures hanging in their living room were knocked askew.

"We've been here 18 years, and it's getting to be a regular occurrence," said Richards, 50. But, he added, "I hope I never get used to them."

Geologists now believe a magnitude 4.7 earthquake Saturday morning was a foreshock to the bigger one that followed that night. They recorded at least 10 aftershocks by midmorning Sunday and expected more. Two of the aftershocks, at 4 a.m. and 9 a.m., were big, magnitude 4.0.

"We will definitely continue to see aftershocks, as we've already seen aftershocks from this one," said Paul Earle, a seismologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo. "We will see aftershocks in the days and weeks to come, possibly even months."

Brad Collins, the spokesman for St. Gregory's University in Shawnee, said one of the four towers on its "castle-looking" administration building collapsed in the big earthquake and the other three towers were damaged. He estimated the towers were about 25 feet tall.

"We definitely felt it," Collins said. "I was at home, getting ready for bed and it felt like the house was going to collapse. I tried to get back to my kids' room and it was tough to keep my balance, I could hardly walk."

Scientists are puzzled by the recent seismic activity. It appeared the latest quake occurred on the Wilzetta fault, but researchers may never know for sure. Earthquakes that hit east of the Rocky Mountains are harder to pinpoint because the fault systems are not as well studied as major faults like the San Andreas in California.

Arkansas also has seen a big increase in earthquake activity, which residents have blamed oninjection wells. Natural gas companies engaged in hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, use fluid to break apart shale and rock to release natural gas. Injection wells then dispose of the fluid by injecting it back into the ground.

There are 181 injection wells in the Oklahoma county where most of the weekend earthquakes happened, said Matt Skinner, spokesman for the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, which oversees oil and gas production in the state and intrastate transportation pipelines.

But natural gas companies claim there is no proof of a connection between injection wells and earthquakes, and a study released earlier this year by an Oklahoma Geological Survey seismologist seems to back that up. It found most of the state's seismic activity didn't appear to be tied to the wells, although more investigation was needed.

"It's a real mystery," seismologist Austin Holland of the Oklahoma Geological Survey said of the recent shaking.

"At this point, there's no reason to think that the earthquakes would be caused by anything other than natural" shifts in the Earth's crust, Holland said.

Earle said he couldn't comment on the relationship between fracking, injection wells and earthquakes.

Most Oklahoma residents still see earthquakes as anomalies in a state more often damaged by tornadoes. Roger Baker, 52, laughed at the idea of buying earthquake insurance, although the weekend quakes left a 6-foot-long crack several inches deep his yard in Sparks.

"It's just a part of life," he said.

Prague resident Mark Treat, 52, was at the Dollar General store Sunday, buying paper towels in bulk, garbage bins and a broom and mop to begin cleaning up his home. He said the quake hit hard enough to knock dishes, lamps and a TV to the ground and overturn a chest of drawers.

"It busted up a lot of stuff," Treat said. "I can't believe is only was a 5.6."

___

Associated Press writer Ken Miller in Oklahoma City and AP science writer Alicia Chang in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

"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?
11/7/2011 11:01:30 AM
Here is a curious document depicting mine blasts (see http://publicmining.org/mine-blast/). My question was: Are earthquakes also caused by mining blasts, among other man-made causes like gas injection and fracking for example? The answer was affirmative, as you can see at Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthquake) and other sites. You may do your own research beginning with this site and then maybe going to "Earthquake Map Locations Locator Map and Directory" at http://find.mapmuse.com/interest/earthquakes.

--------------

This section is dedicated to videos about the mine blasts and explosions and showcases a collection of clips ranging from historical footage to the latest video news releases issued by mining companies.


"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?
11/7/2011 5:41:15 PM
Quote:
Hmm amazing the years quoted were all Obama years with a stacked congress in his favor. Not the purveyor or harbinger of change you can believe in is it?

Quote:
Rob from the Poor, Give to the Rich









Politicians and critics who wonder why the Occupy movement hasn’t disappeared with cooler weather should read a study just released by Citizens for Tax Justice. “Corporate Taxpayers & Corporate Tax Dodgers, 2008-2010” makes uncomfortable but important reading.

The study looks at 280 of America’s largest companies, all of them on the Fortune 500 list. These are high-profit corporations so it would be reasonable to expect them to be fair contributors to the system that allows them to operate. After all, they benefit from roads, schools, hospitals, parks and other amenities and services tax dollars provide.

As it turns out, between 2008 and 2010, 78 of them avoided paying any taxes at all. That is only one way these corporations raided the futures of millions of their fellow Americans. Robert McIntyre, Director at Citizens for Tax Justice and lead author on the report, says, “These 280 corporations received a total of nearly $223 billion in tax subsidies. This is wasted money that could have gone to protect Medicare, create jobs and cut the deficit.”

Some of the highlights, or low points, of the report:

  • 38 corporations had negative tax rates all three years. Pepco Holdings topped the list, at -57.6%, with General Electric second at -45.3%.
  • In 2009 49 companies paid zero or less federal taxes
  • In 2008, 22 of the 280 companies did not pay one dollar in federal taxes, but they received $3.3 billion in tax rebates. In 2010, those numbers jumped to 37 companies that paid no taxes but received $7.8 billion in rebates.

The list of tax avoiders and subsidy recipients includes a lot of familiar names, such as Boeing, Yahoo, Yum Brands, Marathon Oil, FedEx, Hewlett Packard, American Express, and Time Warner. Corporations point out they are doing nothing illegal paring their taxes to nothing and receiving rebates. They are merely abiding by tax laws. However, as the report points out, “The laws were not enacted in a vacuum; they were adopted in response to relentless corporate lobbying, threats and campaign support.”

Tax reform is desperately needed in a country where the growing gap between rich and poor is leaving the country at risk for social instability and continuing economic chaos. However, “GOP candidates for president are all promoting huge cuts in the corporate tax or, in several cases, even elimination of the corporate income tax entirely.”

The whole report is worth reading, especially as campaign rhetoric heats to the melting point in advance of the 2012 elections. Should elected politicians be held accountable for this untenable situation? Can voters make them change the system? What do you think?

Related Care2 Stories

Top 10 US Corporate Tax Avoiders Named on Senate Floor

Top 25 Hedge Fund Managers Make Almost $1 Billion Each – And Pay Less Taxes Than You Do

Cantor Tells Republicans to Dig in on Tax Increases

Read more: , , , , , ,

Photo from imelenchon via morgueFile.com



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/rob-from-the-poor-give-to-the-rich.html#ixzz1cxivpsPt


Sorry for the delay, Jim.

In all this, one of the things that amazes me the most is how only now are the mainstream media, even in my country, beginning to show (yet little by little and in a timid fashion) the crude facts concerning the great banks that we have been learning about for months if not years now.

Can it be that they are curing while still healthy, as one of our most popular sayings goes? Because sooner than later their infamous role in all this will also be exposed to the public eye and they might be held accountable for that.

And the same with that of nearly all of the developed world politicians (including, I am afraid, Mr Obama) who have long known about this (even if they will not admit to it) and can be regarded if not as the great banks' accomplices, at least their puppets for the simple reason that in addition to this, they, too, for their most part belong to the richest one percent.

In this regard, the closing paragraph in the piece of news above rings most true to me:
Should elected politicians be held accountable for this untenable situation? Can voters make them change the system? What do you think?

Sincerely,

Miguel

"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?
11/7/2011 5:58:37 PM
Sorry I have not posted this so far. A fascinating document that has been shown at Jill's and Bogdan's New Age forums already by Myrna Ferguson, I feel it can nail my previous posts' points still better.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011 The Multi-trillion-dollar Embezzlement and Fraud that Wall Street and Washington are Committing It is rare for me to reprint articles written by others. I usually research my articles and cite several useful articles in the process. The following article, though, deserves to be reprinted in full, with only a few added comments from me. I've taken the liberty of highlighting important passages. US lawmakers are accomplices to financial industry’s immorality
Political ‘donations’ — more appropriately, legalized bribery — are fueling the injustice wrought by financial institutions and their selfish excesses
By Thomas Friedman / NY Times News Service, NEW YORK(reprinted in the Taipei Times, November 2, 2011)

Citigroup is lucky that former Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi was [allegedly] killed when he was. His[alleged] death diverted attention from a lethal article involving Citigroup that deserved more attention because it helps to explain why many average Americans have expressed support for the Occupy Wall Street movement. The news was that Citigroup had to pay a US$285 million fine to settle a case in which, with one hand, Citibank sold a package of toxic mortgage-backed securities to unsuspecting customers — securities that it knew were likely to go bust — and, with the other hand, shorted the same securities — that is, bet millions of US dollars that they would go bust.
It doesn’t get any more immoral than this. As the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) civil complaint noted, in 2007, Citigroup exercised “significant influence” over choosing US$500 million of the US$1 billion worth of assets in the deal and the global bank deliberately chose collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs, built from mortgage loans almost sure to fail. According to the Wall Street Journal, the SEC complaint quoted one unnamed CDO trader outside Citigroup as describing the portfolio as resembling something your dog leaves on your neighbor’s lawn.
“The deal became largely worthless within months of its creation,” the Journal added.“As a result, about 15 hedge funds, investment managers and other firms that invested in the deal lost hundreds of millions of US dollars, while Citigroup made US$160 million in fees and trading profits.”
Citigroup, which is under new and better[better for whom? Don't forget that this article was written by a hack for the corporate-owned media.]management now, settled the case without admitting or denying any wrongdoing. James Stewart, a business columnist for the Times, wrote Citigroup’s flimflam made “Goldman Sachs mortgage traders look like Boy Scouts. In settling its fraud charges for US$550 million last year, Goldman was accused by the SEC of being the middleman in a similar deal, allowing hedge fund manager John Paulson to help choose the mortgages and then bet against them without disclosing this to the other parties. Citigroup dispensed with a Paulson figure altogether, grabbing those lucrative roles for itself.”
(On Thursday, the US District Court judge overseeing the case demanded that the SEC explain how such serious securities fraud could end with the defendant neither admitting nor denying wrongdoing.) [TheAmerican Action Report's Realistic Dictionarysays that the name Goldman Sachs came from the words gold + man + saxophone. It's an instrument, mostly brass, so that banksters can have congressmen dance to their tune.]
This gets to the core of why all the anti-Wall Street groups around the globe are resonating. I was in Tahrir Square in Cairo for the fall of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak and one of the most striking things to me about that demonstration was how apolitical it was.
[In a large part, that's also true of the Tea Parties and the Occupy Movement. Pompous asses in the corporate media never seem to tire of ridiculing the protesters for their lack of expertise in economics, business, political science, and other fields. The protesters do know, however, that they're hurting, where they were kicked, and who kicked them. Pompous asses like Peter Schiff are telling them, in effect, "Since you're not experts as I am, you must not have a problem. Go back to sleep." Hell, the "experts" are the ones who caused the problem! Oh, one more comment on Schiff's pomposity. He seemed to be implying that the Wall Street protesters could be part of the 1% like him, if they only followed the "free market system." The truth is, the Wall Street protesters have no hope or desire to be reincarnated as part of the inbred Schiff, Rothschild, and Warburg families. Take a look at this marriage announcement from 1916here. That should reveal the hypocrisy of the Rothschild who has infiltrated Ron Paul's campaign as an adviser.]
When I talked to Egyptians, it was clear that what animated their protest, first and foremost, was not a quest for democracy — although that was surely a huge factor. It was a quest for “justice.” Many Egyptians were convinced that they lived in a deeply unjust society where the game had been rigged by the Mubarak family and its crony capitalists. Egypt shows what happens when a country adopts free-market capitalism without developing real rule of law and institutions.
However, then, what happened to us?Our financial industry has grown so large and rich it has corrupted our real institutions through political donations. As US Senator Dick Durbin bluntly said in a 2009 radio interview, despite having caused this crisis, these same financial firms “are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they, frankly, own the place.” [No, they share ownership with a criminal syndicate blasphemously calling itself Israel. The Israeli regime, which has no need of foreign aid, is the world's largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid. Add to that the trillions of dollars and thousands of American lives America has lost fighting wars under false pretenses, benefiting no one but the Israeli regime. America's "best friend in the Middle East? Not hardly. To read about Israel's covert war against the United States, click here.]
The US Congress today is a forum for legalized bribery. [That's only the tip of the iceberg. Those crooks are continuously passing bills that siphon money from the Treasury and into their business interests.] One consumer group using information from Opensecrets.org calculates that the financial services industry, including real estate, spent US$2.3 billion on federal campaign contributions from 1990 to last year, which was more than the healthcare, energy, defense, agriculture and transportation industries combined. Why are there 61 members on the US House of Representatives Committee on Financial Services? So many lawmakers want to be in a position to sell votes to Wall Street.
The US can’t afford this any longer. It needs to focus on four reforms that don’t require new bureaucracies to implement:
1) If a bank is too big to fail, it is too big and needs to be broken up. We can’t risk another trillion-US dollar bailout;
2) If US banks’ deposits are federally insured by US taxpayers, it can’t do anyproprietary trading with those deposits — period;
3) Derivatives have to be traded on transparent exchanges where we can see if another AIG is building up enormous risk;
4) Finally, an idea from the blogosphere: US lawmakers should have to dress like NASCAR drivers and wear the logos of all the banks, investment banks, insurance companies and real-estate firms that they’re taking money from. The public needs to know.
Capitalism and free markets are the best engines for generating growth and relieving poverty — provided they are balanced with meaningful transparency, regulation and oversight. The US lost that balance in the last decade. If it doesn’t get it back — and there is now a tidal wave of money resisting that — it will have another crisis. If that happens, the cry for justice could turn ugly. Free advice to thefinancial services industry: Stick to being bulls. Stop being pigs.
[The author of this article is giving Congress too much of a break. Congressmen are not just accomplices; they're perpetrators. Take the 2009 Bankster Bailout Bill, for example. The bailout, which saved no homeowner's home, and for which the banksters lost nothing, was a theft of $700 million. The bill ended up costing $1.2 billion because congressmen festooned the bill with funds earmarked for investments congressmen had made. That amounts to a $500 million embezzlement benefiting no one but the congressmen and their cronies. To see how your congressman voted on this criminal act, click here.]

"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?
11/8/2011 12:51:56 AM
Caught on camera: Things are hotting up as Nasa captures huge solar flare and coronal mass ejection on the same day

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Last updated at 8:34 PM on 7th November 2011


An enormous solar flare that erupted from the sun on Thursday has been classed an X1.9 flare - making it one of the largest storms our star can produce.

The solar flare came from a giant sunspot that was sighted earlier this week, itself one of the largest seen in years.

Experts at Nasa knew to expect big things from the sunspot, but the sheer magnitude of the flare left them in awe.



Sun storm: This image, provided by NASA, shows giant sun spot activity on Thursday, from a region on the sun that scientists are variously calling AR11339 and the 'benevolent monster'


The flare was so powerful that it disrupted communications systems on earth around 45 minutes later.


The event began at 8.27pm GMT, and Nasa officials said in a statement that it 'triggered some disruption to radio communications on Earth'.

Nasa added: 'Scientists are continuing to watch this active region as it could well produce additional solar activity as it passes across the front of the sun.'

Later on the same day, a coronal mass ejection (CME) was observed blasting from the sun in the direction of Venus.



Coronal mass ejection: Nasa's Stereo twin orbiters (one spacecraft ahead of the earth's orbit and the other trailing behind) can provide a 360-degree view of the sun. The leading Stereo craft caught this image of the CME


Space.com's Clara Moskowitz said Nasa's Solar Dynamics Observatory and twin Stereo sun-watching spacecraft snapped photos and video of both the flare and the CME during the storm.

A solar flare is a powerful release of energy associated increased magnetic activity on the surface of the sun.

While a flare looks like a bright cloud whipping from the sun, the magnetic activity on the surface creates dark areas called sunspots.

The storm spot, variously called AR11339 or the 'benevolent monster', is about 50,000 miles long - which makes it several times wider than the Earth.

Nasa says we haven't seen the last of major activity from this particular section of the sun. It is just part of a larger increase in activity as the sun ramps up to a peak of activity in its 11-year cycle around 2013.




Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2058667/Sunspot-solar-flare-Things-hotting-footage-shows-huge-flare-coronal-mass-ejection.html#ixzz1d4QboqR9

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

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