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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/1/2018 6:01:00 PM

Pentagon: China, Russia Soon Capable of Destroying U.S. Satellites

J-2 intelligence report warns of new dangers to low earth orbit satellites















Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin / Getty Images

BY:
January 30, 2018 5:00 am

China and Russia are developing anti-satellite missiles and other weapons and will soon be capable of damaging or destroying all U.S. satellites in low-earth orbit, according to the Pentagon's Joint Staff.

The Joint Staff intelligence directorate, known as J-2, issued the warning in a recent report on the growing threat of anti-satellite (ASAT) weapons from those states, according to officials familiar with the assessment.

The report concludes that "China and Russia will be capable of severely disrupting or destroying U.S. satellites in low-earth orbit" in the next several years, said the officials.

The capability to attack low-earth orbit satellites could be in place by 2020, the officials said.

A Joint Staff spokesman declined to comment, citing a policy of not discussing internal reports.

The J-2 report echoes a similar but less specific warning from Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats in May.

"We assess that Russia and China perceive a need to offset any U.S. military advantage derived from military, civil, or commercial space systems and are increasingly considering attacks against satellite systems as part of their future warfare doctrine," Coats said. "Both will continue to pursue a full range of anti-satellite weapons as a means to reduce U.S. military effectiveness."

Coats added that both nations are pursuing information operations seeking international agreements that would limit U.S. defenses in space against such weapons.

Russia's space weapons include a "diverse suite of capabilities to affect satellites in all orbital regimes," Coats testified to Congress, including an airborne laser for use against U.S. satellites.

"Ten years after China intercepted one of its own satellites in low-earth orbit, its ground-launched ASAT missiles might be nearing operational service within the PLA," Coats said.

Both China and Russia also are developing debris-removing satellites that Coats said could be used to damage satellites.

Space expert Michael J. Listner said the threat posed by anti-satellite weapons is not new. Both the United States and Soviet Union developed systems to degrade space systems during the Cold War.

"The United States ASAT program, Program 437, took the form of the ASM-135 missile, or the ‘flying tomato can' and was intended by the Reagan administration to be a deterrent to the Soviet co-orbital system," said Listner, founder of Space Law & Policy Solutions, a consulting firm.

"When Congress defunded development of the ASM-135 there was no follow-on program to provide the desired deterrent effect," Listner said.

"That Russia did not completely scrap its program and China is pursuing its own, leaves the United States with the conundrum of how to deter the threat aside from the hope of resilience."

Resilience is a term used by the Pentagon for protecting, hardening, or replacing satellites in a future conflict.

Low-earth orbit satellites operate between 100 miles and 1,242 miles above the earth and are used for reconnaissance and earth and ocean observation. Those low-orbiting satellites provide key military data used in preparing battlefields around the world for deploying forces in a conflict or crisis.

Also, weather monitoring and communications satellites, including Iridium, Globalstar, and Orbcomm, circle in low-earth orbit.

A number of critical intelligence and military communications satellites also operate in highly elliptical orbits that during orbit travel in an extremely low perigee close to earth where they will soon be vulnerable to Chinese or Russian attack.

All these low-earth orbit satellites are now highly vulnerable to Chinese or Russian anti-satellite weapons and capabilities.

Those capabilities range from several types of ground-launched space missiles, to lasers and electronic jammers, to small maneuvering satellites that can maneuver, grab, and crush orbiting satellites.

According to a report by the National Institute for Public Policy, as of 2016 there were 780 satellites in low earth orbit operated by 43 nations. At total of 37 highly elliptical orbit satellites will soon be vulnerable to Chinese or Russian ASATs.

"U.S. space systems are among the most fragile and vulnerable assets operated by the U.S. military," the report by former Pentagon missile expert Steve Lambakis states.

"This vulnerable communications and data collection, processing, and distribution infrastructure is worth billions of dollars and is vital to nearly every activity of the United States and, increasingly, the armed forces of U.S. allies," he stated.

China has deployed two road-mobile ASAT missile systems and is developing two more advanced ground-launched anti-satellite missile systems.

"With this range of direct-ascent ASAT capabilities, China may be capable of using hit-to-kill technologies to target and destroy surveillance satellites in low earth orbit, GPS satellites in medium earth orbit, and early warning satellites in geosynchronous orbit," Lambakis said. "Use of a single nuclear warhead in an ASAT role has the potential to decimate low altitude satellites."

Beijing also has tested satellites that can maneuver close to satellites in space, a capability that can be used to attack them.

Cyber attacks against satellite control stations also are being developed, along with radio-frequency weapons and directed energy beam weapons.

Russia's anti-satellite forces have been rapidly built up in recent years, with estimated investments of $5 billion annually, after a lapse in the program after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

Moscow's space weaponry includes development of a new ground-launch ASAT missile called the Nudol that was tested for the third time in December 2016. Other weapons include lasers and jammers that can blind or disrupt satellite electronics. Russia also has cyber weapons capable of disrupting satellite control systems on the ground.

Russia's newer surface-to-air missiles, including the S-300, S-400, and S-500 also are capable of hitting targets in low earth orbit, with the S-500 slated for deployment this year.

For maneuvering killer satellites, Russia in 2014 launched four satellites, including one that was observed maneuvering. The Pentagon suspects that satellite will be used for anti-satellite warfare. Two other of the remaining satellites were detected maneuvering after months of remaining in stationary orbit.

The Russian anti-satellite program also is expected to include an interceptor missile launched from a MiG-31 jet, similar to the now-defunct U.S. ASM-135.

Moscow also has developed high-altitude electro-magnetic pulse weapons that could be used disrupt the electronics of all satellites not hardened against EMP attack.

The Pentagon's Defense Science Board also warned of the strategic vulnerability of U.S. satellites in a report last March.

The board report said military satellite communications used for global operations, in particular, "will be contested by a myriad of effects ranging from reversible to destructive."

"The estimated and projected electronic threats against satellite communication (satcom) have rapidly escalated in the last few years and will continue to increase in the foreseeable future," the report, made public in March, said.

"Advances and proliferation in advanced electronic warfare (EW), kinetic, space, and cyber capabilities threaten our ability to maintain information superiority," the report said, noting "under severe stress situations, jamming can render all commercial satcom and most defense Satcom inoperable."

"This reality should be considered a crisis to be dealt with immediately," the board warned.


(freebeacon.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?
2/1/2018 6:34:33 PM
Lab-bred mosquitoes to fly near Miami to help combat Zika



The discovery might explain why a disease that was considered mostly harmless became so dangerous so quickly. Video provided by Newsy Newslook













In this Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016, photo, Aedes aegypti mosquitoes sit in a petri dish at the Fiocruz institute in Recife, Pernambuco state, Brazil.(Photo: Felipe Dana, AP)



MIAMI (AP) — Thousands of bacteria-infected mosquitoes will be flying near Miami to test a new way to suppress insect populations that carry Zika and other viruses.

According to a statement from the Kentucky-based company MosquitoMate, the first mosquitoes will be released in the city of South Miami. The test is in collaboration with the Miami-Dade County Mosquito Control and Habitat Management Division.

MosquitoMate infects male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes with the naturally occurring Wolbachia bacteria. Any offspring produced when the lab-bred mosquitoes mate with wild female mosquitoes won't survive to adulthood.


More: These lab-grown mosquitoes kill off other mosquitoes. And now they're legal in the US

More:
Why Zika virus infections are way down in U.S. this summer

More:
Injecting Zika virus into adult brains? Researchers say it could shrink cancer

Male mosquitoes don't bite, and Wolbachia isn't harmful to humans.

A similar trial began near Key West last spring. Hurricane Irma's landfall in the Florida Keys interrupted the final weeks of monitoring for that trial. The results are still pending.


(
naplesnews.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?
2/1/2018 7:03:25 PM

US life expectancy drops for second year in a row



Get outside to improve your health 01:03

(CNN)Life expectancy in the United States has dropped again following last year's decline, which marked the first downturn in more than two decades.

On average, Americans can now expect to live 78.6 years, a statistically significant drop of 0.1 year, according to a report on 2016 data published Thursday by the National Center for Health Statistics. Women can now expect to live a full five years longer than men: 81.1 years vs. 76.1 years.
    The last time the agency recorded a multiyear drop was in 1962 and 1963.
    "I still don't think you can call it a trend, because you really need more than two data points to call something a trend," said Bob Anderson, chief of the mortality statistics branch at the National Center for Health Statistics, part of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "But it's certainly concerning to see this two years in a row."
    Anderson said he is particularly concerned about drug overdose deaths, most of which are opioid-related.
    "We have data for almost half of 2017 at this point. It's still quite provisional, but it suggests that we're in for another increase" in drug-related deaths, he said. "If we're not careful, we could end up with declining life expectancy for three years in a row, which we haven't seen since the Spanish flu, 100 years ago."

    The 10 leading causes of death remain unchanged and now account for 74.1% of all deaths in the United States, according to the report. Age-adjusted death rates decreased for seven of the top 10 leading causes of death: heart disease, cancer, chronic lower respiratory disease, stroke, diabetes, influenza and pneumonia, and kidney disease. The rates increased for unintentional injuries, Alzheimer's disease and suicide.

    Unintentional injuries include accidental drug overdoses, which were the official cause of 63,600 deaths last year.
    "It just keeps going up and up and appears to be accelerating," Anderson said.
    "In the past, those increases have been more than completely offset by declines in cardiovascular mortality," such as heart disease and stroke, he said. "What's happened in recent years, since about 2010 or so, is a substantial slowdown in the rate of decline for cardiovascular mortality. It seems to be leveling off to some extent, and as a result, the drug overdose deaths are more prominent in the overall picture of mortality."
    A country's infant mortality rate (the number of births compared with the number of deaths of children under age 1) "is generally regarded as a good indicator of the overall health of a population," according to the report. In the United States, this rate "changed from 589.5 infant deaths per 100,000 live births in 2015 to 587.0 in 2016, but this change was not statistically significant."

    The biggest takeaway from the report is that heart disease and cancer are still far and away the top killers of both men and women in the United States. The good news is that there are three things you can do to drastically reduce your risk of developing both: eat right, exercise and don't smoke.
    It sounds like simple advice, but as anyone who has ever tried knows, it is easier said than done.

    (activistpost.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?
    2/2/2018 9:17:44 AM

    Atlantis FOUND? '8.5-mile pyramid' discovered at bottom of the ocean

    COULD this bizarre object, described as a giant ancient pyramid and found at the bottom of the sea, be a clue to the site of the mythological City of Atlantis?



    The structure, estimated as being between 3.5 and 11 miles across, was spotted on Google Earth in the Pacific Ocean just west of Mexico.

    A video about the discovery uploaded to YouTube has drawn vast speculation about what it could be, including an ancient sunken city, a bizarre UFO, or even an alien base.

    The "discovery" was made by Argentinian Marcelo Igazusta.

    The
    GETTY

    The 'pyramid' was spotted on Google Earth

    He says in a video about the find it is an alien UFO left underwater.

    The video commentary described it has being "an intense light in the Pacific Ocean" of 3.5 miles in length, with a shape similar to a plane.

    Scott C Waring, an alien conspiracy theorist, said: "It is a perfect pyramid that measures over 8.5 miles across one side of its base. Thats a conservative estimate, it could be up to 11 miles across.”

    He suggested it could symbolise an ancient civilisation, or even something alien.

    Conspiracy theorists claim it could be an undersea ancient pyramid or even connected to aliens.
    GOOGLE

    Conspiracy theorists claim it could be an undersea ancient pyramid or even connected to aliens.
    A 8.5 mile pyramid...biggest the world has ever known,

    and it’s right off of Mexico, near the ancient Mayan and Aztec pyramids.

    Scott C waring

    He said: ”Even if this is not a UFO that landed in the ocean that was being used as an alien base, it still is a monumental discovery.

    "A 8.5 mile pyramid...biggest the world has ever known, and it’s right off of Mexico, near the ancient Mayan and Aztec pyramids."

    His reasoning that aliens might be involved?

    He said: "Humans could never have built such a construction. Only aliens could accomplish making such a massive structure."

    Case closed?

    "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?
    2/2/2018 9:55:33 AM

    Mysterious orange cave crocodiles that live in complete darkness in Africa are mutating into a new species


      • · Experts discovered the 1.5-metre-long (5 ft) reptiles in 2008 in a cave in Africa
      • · The reptiles live in complete darkness and feed only on bats and crickets
      • · Experts first though they were one of three types of African dwarf crocodile
      • · New research shows the orange reptiles could be an entirely separate species

    A group of mysterious orange cave crocodiles who live in complete darkness in Africa may be mutating into a new species.

    Researchers discovered the 1.5-metre-long (5 ft) reptiles in 2008 in a remote cave in Gabon, western Africa, where they fed only on bats and crickets.

    Experts first though they were a type of African dwarf crocodile, but new research shows they could be an entirely separate species.


    Scientists led by the Institute of Research for Development in Marseille found about 30 specimens in the cave, including 10 orange crocodiles.

    They suspect more crocodiles remain hidden in the depths of the cave's system of rooms, which are filled with water.

    The team said new genetic tests show the isolated group may be branching off from their African dwarf cousins.


    'We could say that we have a mutating species, because [the cave crocodile] already has a different [genetic] haplotype,' lead researcher Dr Richard Oslisly told the Guardian.

    'Its diet is different and it is a species that has adapted to the underground world.'

    Dr Oslilsy found the crocodiles in a cave in the remote region of Abanda in Gabon while looking for prehistoric human remains.


    Scientists found about 30 specimens in the cave, including the one pictured above. Ten of the reptiles they found had strange, orange colouring. They suspect more crocodiles remain hidden in the depths of the cave's system of rooms, which are filled with water



    Intrigued as to how they survived in the darkness, Dr Oslisly invited other scientists to study the cave's inhabitants to learn more about them.

    Younger members of the group can leave the cave through a number of small openings because they are small enough, Dr Oslisly said.

    But once the reptiles grow to a certain size, they become trapped in its rooms and must feed on whatever they can find in the cave to survive.

    The orange crocodiles live in a similar way to their outdoor cousins, but the team suggest that they are genetically different from the three other species of African dwarf crocodiles found in Gabon (pictured)

    The orange crocodiles live in a similar way to their outdoor cousins, but the team suggest that they are genetically different from the three other species of African dwarf crocodiles found in Gabon (pictured)


    'They are somehow in their own prison,' Dr Oslisly said.

    'They eat bats that live in these caves by the tens-of-thousands and also crickets that swarm the walls.'

    The reptiles' unusual colouring is likely the result of living in a mixture of water and bat faeces or 'guano', the researchers said.

    African dwarf crocodiles are nocturnal animals, meaning they see well in the dark, and typically hunt at night.


    A group of mysterious orange cave crocodiles who live in complete darkness in Africa may be mutating into a new species. They were first discovered in a cave in Gabon. Now, researchers found the crocodiles in a cave in Abanda, and they appear to be genetically distinct (shown)


    A group of mysterious orange cave crocodiles who live in complete darkness in Africa may be mutating into a new species. They were first discovered in a cave in Gabon. Now, researchers found the crocodiles in a cave in Abanda, and they appear to be genetically distinct (shown)



    The orange crocodiles live in a similar way to their outdoor cousins, but the team suggest that they are genetically different from the three other species of African dwarf crocodiles found in Gabon.

    A set of genes found in one of the orange reptiles did not match those found in other African dwarf crocodiles.

    The split likely occurred thousands of years ago, raising questions as to how and where the cave's residents breed.

    Crocodiles breed during the wet season and uses vegetation to nest their eggs, so if the orange crocodiles bred in the cave itself, it would be a scientific first.




    Read more:
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-5326421/Orange-cave-crocodiles-mutating-new-species.html#ixzz55wZqb6Xn

    Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook



    (dailymail.co.uk)


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

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