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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/10/2017 5:56:39 PM
The horror elephants face in India — in one heartbreaking photo



A mob in India throws flaming balls of tar and firecrackers at two petrified elephants. (Biplab Hazra/Sanctuary Wildlife Photography Awards)

The back legs of the baby elephant are consumed by fire as it chases after its startled mother, screaming.

In the chilling photo, a flaming ball of tar — the source of the fire, along with a few hurled firecrackers — is frozen in the air as a crowd sprints away from the petrified pachyderms.

Many things in the photo are unclear: the fate of the calf and its mother, the reason the men are attacking them on a road cut through a forest, whether the practice has a formal name or is just a random bit of sadism.

But in an instant, the image — titled “Hell Is Here” and snapped by Biplab Hazra — has shined a light on some of the darkest moments of the conflict between humans and elephants in India, whose lives increasingly overlap in what will soon be the world’s most populous nation.

In his entry to Sanctuary Wildlife’s Photography awards, Hazra describes what happened when the mob met the large animals:

[The] calf screams in confusion and fear as the fire licks at her feet. Flaming tar balls and crackers fly through the air to a soundtrack of human laughter and shouts. In the Bankura district of West Bengal this sort of humiliation of pachyderms is routine, as it is in the other elephant-range states of Assam, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Tamil Nadu and more.

Hazra’s photo won the top prize at the Sanctuary awards, which drew 5,000 entries from across Asia.Eight photographers were awarded prizes.

Several of the winning photos highlight the compassion or cruelty or just downright oddity of human-animal interactions: villagers trying to save a trapped leopard from a well, a monkey peering out from a car’s wheel well, a dead shark in a plastic crate on a crowded dock.

But the photo of the elephants hit a nerve with people across the world:

People even jeered at Hazra for snapping a photo of the elephant torture instead of doing something to help.

More than 60 percent of the world’s Asian elephants live in India as its human population balloons, spreading into migration routes and feeding grounds the animals have used for centuries. EleAid, a conservation organization, estimated that there may have once been more than a million elephants in India, before a human population explosion in the 20th century drastically reduced their numbers. Still, there are sustainable populations that are thriving alongside humans.

But it’s far from a peaceful coexistence.

Last year, according to the Hindustan Times, as many as 29 people were killed by elephants in the Bankura District. The number was so high that the government began sending out text alerts whenever a high concentration of elephants was present.

Apart from killing people, the Times reported, the elephants that stray into West Bengal state routinely destroy property and damage crops.

In February 2016, a wild elephant rampaged through a town in east India, according to the Wall Street Journal, smashing cars and homes before being tranquilized and returned to the forest.

The elephant had wandered from the Baikunthapur forest, crossing roads and a small river before entering the town in search of food.

Hazra faulted the Indian government for not doing enough about human-pachyderm conflicts.

“The ignorance and bloodlust of mobs that attack herds for fun, is compounded by the plight of those that actually suffer damage to land, life and property by wandering elephants and the utter indifference of the central and state government to recognize the crisis that is at hand,” Hazra wrote.

The nation was lauded for making India a stronghold for Asian elephants, Hazra said, but actions like the ones he photographed render that accomplishment moot.

“This achievement rings hollow as vital elephant habitats and routes continue to be ravaged, and human-elephant conflict escalates to a fatal degree,” he wrote.

“For these smart, gentle, social animals who have roamed the sub-continent for centuries, hell is now and here.”

(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?
11/10/2017 6:19:30 PM
Eagle

The horrific results of the US-NATO "model intervention" of Libya

Libya is rarely mentioned in the mainstream Western media, which is not surprising because the place is a catastrophic shambles as a result of the US-NATO Operation Unified Protector in 2011 during which the military alliance carried out 9,658 airstrikes and several hundred cruise missile attacks in seven months of war against the Libyan government. They didn't lose a single aircraft and Human Rights Watch states that "NATO airstrikes killed at least 72 civilians, one-third of them children under age 18."

On October 30 this year there were yet more civilian deaths from airstrikes, and Al Jazeera reported that "at least 17 people have been killed and more than 30 wounded in an air attack in Libya's eastern city of Derna." Nobody admitted responsibility for the attacks and there are several countries with the means, motive and opportunity to blitz the place again, with, for example, the United States having carried out a series of "precision" drone strikes on September 22 which killed some savages of Islamic State, which has established bases in the country following the US-NATO war.

It is unlikely, however, that the October attack that killed Libyan civilians was carried out by the US or any other foreign country, and there is little doubt they were killed by aircraft belonging to General Khalifa Haftar, dual Libyan-US citizen, former CIA "asset" living in Virginia State for five years, and now chief of the Libyan National Army which is one of the brigand bands that have flourished in the years since the US-NATO war destroyed the country.

Being subjected to aerial attack is a not a new experience for Libya, because it is the first country ever to have been bombed from an aircraft.

This hideous precedent took place in November 1911 when, only eight years after the Wright Brothers took to the air, Lieutenant Giulio Gavotti of Italy wrote enthusiastically to his father back home that "I am ready. The oasis is about one kilometre away. I can see the Arab tents very well. I take the bomb with my right hand, pull off the security tag and throw the bomb out, avoiding the wing. I can see it falling through the sky for couple of seconds and then it disappears. And after a little while, I can see a small dark cloud in the middle of the encampment. I have hit the target! I then send two other bombs with less success. I still have one left which I decide to launch later on an oasis close to Tripoli. I come back really pleased with the result. I go straight to report to General Caneva. Everybody is satisfied."

Of course they were satisfied. And you can imagine his descendants - the gallant air warriors of modern times - returning from their bombing and rocketing of some unseen but undoubtedly deserving target and sending an SMS or a Tweet to their nearest and dearest that "I hit the target... I came back really pleased with the result," just like Lieutenant Gavotti.

And perhaps there were Gavottis in modern cockpits, because the Italian Air Force was heavily involved in the US-NATO blitz on Libya from March to October 2011. On the sidelines, however, Italy's erratic President, Silvio Berlusconi, an earlier version of Trump, with the same vulgar tastes and salacious habits but more knowledge of the world, expressed doubt about the war. He said he was "against this measure. I had my hands tied by the vote of the parliament of my country... I am against this intervention which will end in a way that no-one knows."

This was one of Berlusconi's very few wise statements and was most unfortunately prophetic, although in the year after the blitz two distinguished intellectuals, Ivo Daalder, who was the US Permanent Representative on the NATO Council during the US-NATO war, and Admiral James G ("Zorba") Stavridis, who was at that time US Supreme Allied Commander Europe (the military commander of NATO), wrote in the journal Foreign Affairs that "NATO's operation in Libya has rightly been hailed as a model intervention. The alliance responded rapidly to a deteriorating situation that threatened hundreds of thousands of civilians rebelling against an oppressive regime. It succeeded in protecting those civilians and, ultimately, in providing the time and space necessary for local forces to overthrow Muammar al-Gaddafi."

The word 'moron' comes to mind.

Which brings us to the British foreign minister, Boris Johnson, who went to Libya in August to meet General Haftar and achieved nothing, although he did admit that the US-NATO military alliance had been "way over-optimistic" concerning the future of the country following its seven months of bombing and rocketing in support of rebels, including General Haftar who had been flown to Libya from the US in March 2011 by the CIA, just as the US-NATO strikes began.

The 2017 World Report by Human Rights Watch recorded that in Libya, "Forces aligned with all governments and dozens of militias continued to clash, exacerbating a humanitarian crisis with close to half-a-million internally displaced people. The civilian population struggled to gain access to basic services such as healthcare, fuel, and electricity. Militias and armed forces affiliated with the two governments engaged in arbitrary detentions, torture, unlawful killings, indiscriminate attacks, abductions, and forcible disappearances."

But Boris Johnson told a British parliamentary group on October 3, 2017 that he regards Libya as "an incredible country. Bone white sands, beautiful sea... Incredible place... There's a group of UK business people, actually, some wonderful guys who want to invest in Sirte on the coast, near where Gaddafi was captured and executed as some of you may have seen." He concluded his bizarre fantasy by gushing that "They have got a brilliant vision to turn Sirte into the next Dubai. The only thing they have got to do is clear the dead bodies away." And then he laughed.

Three weeks after Mr Johnson's hilarious observation about Libyan corpses there were even more dead bodies littering the country, when General Haftar's aircraft blitzed Derna. Johnson had declared that the general had a "role to play in the political process," but it seems that Haftar has followed the example of his mentors and believes that bombing his political opponents is more effective than trying to negotiate with them. The war crimes committed by his Libyan National Army (LNA) have been atrocious and Amnesty International verified two videos in the first of which "an LNA fighter is seen shooting three captured fighters with what appears to be a Kalashnikov-type assault rifle as they kneeled on the ground facing a wall, with their hands tied behind their backs." In the second video "a group of LNA fighters taunt, humiliate and drag a captured fighter along the ground before shooting him dead."

As acknowledged by US-NATO, the destruction of Libya in 2011 was intended to overthrow the then president Muammar Gaddafi, who, they claimed, was about to kill lots of people. He had, in fact, incurred much disapproval by considering nationalizationof his nation's oil resources, almost all of which were (and continue to be) owned by foreign companies, and an independent British Parliamentary inquiry determined that "Qaddafi was not planning to massacre civilians. This myth was exaggerated by rebels and Western governments, which based their intervention on little intelligence." Which sounds familiar.

Before the war in 2011 the World Health Organization recorded that "the country is providing comprehensive health care including promotive, preventive, curative and rehabilitative services to all citizens free of charge through primary health care units, health centers and district hospitals" and the CIA World Factbook noted that Libya had a literacy rate of 94.2% which was higher than in Malaysia, Mexico and Saudi Arabia. According to the UN, life expectancy was 75 years, as against 66 in India, 71 in Egypt and 59 in South Africa. The country had a very strange leader but it was thriving.

The consequences of the war on Libya are that its infrastructure collapsed, with the effect, for example, of requiring the citizens of Tripoli to "drill through pavements in a desperate bid to find water." Refugees from other African countries flood in to try to make their way to Europe, adding to the already calamitous humanitarian crisis. Countless thousands have perished and Islamic State has thrived, while civil war continues to be waged by groups of savages who receive varying degrees of support from western countries.

There is no solution to the catastrophe other than declaration of the country as a UN protectorate, which is impracticable. The lesson learned, however, is that the US-NATO military alliance must never again be permitted to carry out another "model intervention."

Comment: If the US-led destruction of Libya in 2011 wasn't bad enough, the 'Empire of Chaos' and allied parties seem determined to keep the decimated Libya in a perpetual state of disarray:
(sott.net)


"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?
11/11/2017 12:01:25 AM

After IS collapse, Syria government faces US-backed Kurds

SARAH EL DEEB

BEIRUT (AP) — With the fall of the Islamic State group's last significant stronghold in Syria, Iranian and Russian-backed Syrian troops now turn to face off with their main rival, the U.S.-backed forces holding large oil fields and strategic territory in the country's north and east.

The complicated map puts U.S. and Iranian forces at close proximity, just across the Euphrates River from each other, amid multiple hotspots that could turn violent, particularly in the absence of a clear American policy.

There are already signs.

Iran threatened last week that Syrian troops will advance toward Raqqa, the former IS capital, which fell to the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces in October, raising the potential for a clash there. The Kurdish-led SDF also controls some of Syria's largest oil fields, in the oil-rich eastern Deir el-Zour province, an essential resource that the Syrian government also says it will take back.

The question now is whether the United States is willing to confront the troops of Syrian President Bashar Assad and Iranian-backed militiamen. The Kurds are seeking a clear American commitment to help them defend their gains. American officials have said little of their plans and objectives in Syria beyond general statements about continuing to deny IS safe havens and continuing to train and equip allies.

Washington seems to be hoping to negotiate a deal for Syria that would protect the Kurds' ambitions for autonomy while limiting Iran's ambitions for a presence in Syria. Four U.S. officials said Presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin could announce a Russian-U.S. deal on how they hope to Syria's war after IS's defeat if they meet Friday at a conference in Vietnam. However, prospect of such a meeting uncertain, it was not clear if such a deal had been reached.

But Assad underlined that his government plans to regain all of Syria and will now fight against plans to "partition" Syria, a reference to Kurdish aspirations for a recognized autonomous zone in the north.

Government victories "have foiled all partition plans and the goals of terrorism and the countries sponsoring it," Assad said during a meeting this week with Ali Akbar Velayati, the adviser of Iran's supreme leader.

With its collapse in Boukamal on Thursday, the Islamic State group has no major territory left in Syria or Iraq. Its militants are believed to have pulled back into the desert, east and west of the Euphrates River. The group has a small presence near the capital, Damascus. Late Thursday, the extremist group carried out a counteroffensive in Boukamal, regaining control of more than 40 percent of the border town.

The Euphrates now stands as the dividing line between Syrian government troops and the SDF in much of Deir el-Zour province.

Government forces and their allies, including Iranian troops and fighters from the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, control the western bank. They hold the provincial capital and several small oil fields.

The Kurdish-led force, along with American troops advising them, is on the eastern bank. They hold two of Syria's largest oil fields, nearly a dozen smaller ones, one of the largest gas fields and large parts of the border with Iraq. They say they are determined to keep the government from crossing the river.

The coalition had said for weeks that the SDF was pushing toward Boukamal. With Assad's forces taking the town, the coalition said in a statement to the AP on Friday that the SDF is now moving on Baghuz, a village also on the border near Boukamal but on the eastern bank of the Euphrates.

Iran's Velayati said the U.S. presence aims to divide Syria. "They have not and will not succeed in Iraq and they will also not succeed in Syria," he said during a visit to Lebanon last weekend. "We will soon see the Syrian government and popular forces in Syria east of the Euphrates and they will liberate the city of Raqqa."

The U.S. coalition declined to comment on Velayati's remarks, saying "it would not be appropriate to comment on speculation or rumor by any third party."

Washington has been wary of Iran's increasing influence in the area and its attempts to establish a land corridor from Iran across Iraq and Syria to Lebanon.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis acknowledged this week that allies have pressed for a clearer U.S. policy in Syria. The priority was to get the U.N.-sponsored peace talks back on track, he said, offering few details.

"We're trying to get this into the diplomatic mode so we can get things sorted out ... and make certain (that) minorities — whoever they are — are not just subject to more of what we've seen" under Assad, he said, apparently referring to ensuring some sort of accommodation to Kurdish ambitions.

The talks, scheduled for Nov. 28, have already been challenged by Russia, which seeks a bigger role. Moscow called for intra-Syrian talks to chart a political process and invited the dominant Kurdish party that forms the backbone of the SDF, the first such international invitation. A date for the Russia talks has not been set.

Yezid Sayigh, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut, predicted the Syrian government will use military pressure to reach a negotiated solution with the Kurds amid lack of evidence that the U.S. has any "commitment to engineering political change in Syria or indeed has a Syria policy at all." In an article last week in the Al-Hayat newspaper, Sayigh said Russia is the likely arbiter between Kurds and the government.

Ilham Ahmed, a senior politician with the political arm of the SDF, said indirect talks with the government have taken place but there are no signs of a change in their position.

"A clear position from the coalition can prevent confrontation," she said.

Meanwhile, the Kurdish-led SDF faces the complications of trying to run Arab-dominated areas. With US-backing, the force sought to allay any Arab residents' fears of Kurdish domination by forming joint local councils and electing Arab and Kurdish officials.

But this week, the SDF-held town of Manbij saw protests by Arab residents against compulsory military conscription imposed by the SDF. Hundreds were briefly detained, according to Mohammed Khaled, with activist-operated Aleppo 24.

Ahmed described the protests as "fabricated" by the government and Turkey, which sees Kurdish aspirations as a threat.

___

Associated Press writers Josh Lederman and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.


(Yahoo)



"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?
11/11/2017 12:39:11 AM
Alarm Clock

SOTT Earth Changes Summary - October 2017 : Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

This October saw the continuing trend of deadly and record-breaking wildfires, massive rainfall, freak hailstorms and flooding and sudden powerful down-bursts wreak havoc across the planet.

Early October snow also surprised people from the US to China, while many others spotted meteor/fireballs streak across the sky, with one of the space rocks possibly starting a wildfire! The chaos came pretty close to home for one or two people who had seriously close encounters with lightning!

Check it out below, and thanks for watching and don't forget to like and subscribe so you don't miss the ongoing planetary drama!

Watch it on Sott.net's Vimeo channel

Music used: 'Escape from the Temple' by Per Kiilstofte. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
To understand what's going on, check out our book explaining how all these events are part of a natural climate shift, and why it's taking place now: Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection.

Check out previous installments in this series - now translated into multiple languages - and more videos from SOTT Media here,here, or here.

You can help us chronicle the signs by sending your video suggestions to sott@sott.net

Comment:
Check out the other releases of 2017:


(sott.net)


"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?
11/11/2017 9:42:06 AM
Cult

Italian priest blasted after blaming girl who was raped after night out drinking

© CC0 / Pixabay
An Italian priest has prompted outrage by posting a message on Facebook telling a girl who had been raped it was her fault for getting drunk and hanging around with migrants. The priest's private message was leaked and soon went viral.

A priest in the Italian city of Bologna has been forced to apologize after telling an under-age girl who was raped that she deserved it.

Lorenzo Guidotti posted a long rant on Facebook in which he blamed the girl for hanging around with migrants and getting drunk.

"Sweetie, I'm sorry, but... you get revoltingly drunk... and then who do you go off with? A North African?" the priest wrote in the Facebook post. "I'm sorry but if you swim in the piranha tank you cannot complain if you lose a limb," he wrote.

The girl was raped and robbed by a North African man after getting intoxicated.

"Do you understand that, along with the alcohol, you've gulped down the ideological tirade about 'welcoming everyone'?" Fr. Guidotti told the girl.

"Darling, at this point, waking up semi-naked is the least that could happen to you," he added.

Rant Only Visible to Priest's Facebook Friends

The priest's rant was leaked to Radio Citta del Capo by someone who saw it on Father Guidotti's Facebook page, which was set to private.

At one point he railed at the Italian government's policy of welcoming migrants.

Twitter: "I find disgusting the words of don Lorenzo Guidotti about the young girl raped in Bologna."


Apology

Confronted about the Facebook post, Fr. Guidotti said he did not intend to attack the girl personally, but was "trying to make kids and their parents think."

But he later issued an unreserved apology to the victim and her family.

"With my intervention, I missed the terms, the ways, the corrections. I apologize to her and her parents if my imprudent words may have added pain," Fr. Guidotti said.

It is not clear if Fr. Guidotti faces disciplinary action by the Roman Catholic Church. The Bologna Archdiocese said his opinion "in no way reflects that of the Church, which condemns every sort of violence."


(sott.net)


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

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