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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/29/2012 11:28:08 AM
Hello Mike,

I agree with you by a hundred percent; I am afraid it is really difficult to find a reason to all this unless we consider the growing public awareness of what is particularly wrong and heinous in our world as a good, valid one.

There are other points to consider that we may find even more difficult to admit, like karmic laws that need to be fulfilled; but this involves the belief in previous lives and also the possibility that we really made contracts accepting to play negative roles before descending on this material world.

I know all this is most difficult to admit, but then, is there any religious or philosophical belief (other than Hinduism, often said to be pessimistic) that can explain evil? I am afraid only in the realm of metaphysics can we find a few answers, but they will never be accepted by all.

I hope this may help a little to - if at all - begin to understand that
there is a reason to all that we are seeing now.

Blessings too,

Miguel

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Hi Miguel,

It gets more difficult by the day to understand just how our world can be getting better when young children are gunned down and innocent young girls are gang raped and ignored. What is even more puzzling is that these rapes are taken place in public places with plenty of witnesses who could easily overpower the cowards who are committing these rapes. The witnesses are then unable to identify the thugs who committed the rape. It doesn't take one person to change things around for the netter, it takes everyone. Those brave teachers in Connecticut gave their lives to protect those children. Imagine how many other children would have lost their lives if their teacher had not shielded them? I know that the channelers are saying that some bad things will happen in order to make room for the good things and once we ascend to the fourth demension our illusionary lives will be behind us. I'm sorry but children being gunned down, homeless people being torched, and innocent women being raped and then being ignored by those that are there to protect them is not an illusion. These are facts, and the sad part of it all is that these facts are becoming increasingly common. I rally am beginning to wonder who the black hats really are, because I am not seeing very many good vibrations from those that are suppose to be on our side. I still contend that if there are any of the so called people from the Galactic forces living among us, it is time for them to come in and introduce themselves. Also, if there is any more cleansing to be done, do so without harming any more innocent people. I love you all, however I don't love seeing innocent people suffering over and over so that justice can prevail in the end.

GOD BLESS YOU

~Mike~

http://www.countryvalues65.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?
12/29/2012 1:42:28 PM

Fearful of ban, frenzied buyers swarm gun stores


Associated Press/Alex Brandon, File - FILE - In this Thursday, July 26, 2012 file photo, an AR-15 style rifle is displayed at the Firing-Line indoor range and gun shop in Aurora, Colo. Demand for firearms, ammunition and bulletproof gear has jumped since the Dec. 14 school shooting in Newtown, Conn., that killed 20 children and six adults. Politicians, including President Barack Obama, have called for tighter gun control since then. That has sent Americans into a panic, buying as many guns and as much ammunition as they can get their hands on before any type of ban is set. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — The phones at Red's Trading Post wouldn't stop ringing. Would-be customers from as far away as New York wanted to know if the Twin Falls, Idaho gun shop had firearms in stock. Others clamored to find out if their orders had been shipped.

Overwhelmed, gun store manager Ryan Horsley had to do what no employee would ever think of doing just days before Christmas: He disconnected the phone lines for three whole days.

"We had to shut everything off," says Horsley, whose family has owned Red's Trading Post, the state's oldest gun shop, since 1936. "We were swamped in the store and online."

The phones at gun shops across the country are ringing off the hook. Demand for firearms, ammunition and bulletproof gear has surged since the Dec. 14 massacre in Newtown, Conn., that took the lives of 20 schoolchildren and six teachers and administrators. The shooting sparked calls for tighter gun control measures, especially for military-style assault weapons like the ones used in Newtown and in the Aurora, Colo., movie theater shooting earlier this year. The prospect of a possible weapons ban has sent gun enthusiasts into a panic and sparked a frenzy of buying at stores and gun dealers nationwide.

Assault rifles are sold out across the country. Rounds of .223 bullets, like those used in the AR-15 type Bushmaster rifle used in Newtown, are scarce. Stores are struggling to restock their shelves. Gun and ammunition makers are telling retailers they will have to wait months to get more.

Store owners who have been in the business for years say they have never seen demand like this before.

When asked how much sales have increased in the past few weeks, Horsley just laughed.

"We haven't even had a chance to look at it," he says. Horsley spends his days calling manufacturers around the country trying to buy more items for the store. Mainly, they tell him he has to wait.

Franklin Armory, a firearm maker in Morgan Hill, Calif., is telling dealers that it will take six months to fulfill their orders. The company plans to hire more workers and buy more machines to catch up, says Franklin Armory's President Jay Jacobson.

The shortage is leaving many would-be gun owners empty handed.

William Kotis went to a gun show in Winston-Salem, N.C., last weekend hoping to buy a rifle for target shooting. Almost everything was sold out.

"Assault rifles were selling like crazy," says Kotis, who is president and CEO of Kotis Holdings, a real estate development company based in Greensboro. "People are stockpiling."

He left without buying anything.

Luke Orlando's parents were able to get him the 12-gauge shotgun he wanted for Christmas to bird hunt, but his uncle wasn't as lucky.

"At Christmas dinner, my uncle expressed outrage that after waiting six months to use his Christmas bonus to purchase an AR-15, they are sold out and back ordered over a year," says Orlando, 18, a student at the University of Texas.

No organization publicly releases gun sales data. The only way to measure demand is by the number of background checks that are conducted when someone wants to buy a firearm. Those numbers are released by the Federal Reserve Bureau every month. Data for December is not out yet. But the Federal Bureau of Investigation says that it did 16.8 million firearm background checks as of the end of November, up more than 2 percent from a year ago.

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation, which handles background checks for the state, can't keep up with the number of requests it is getting. The bureau has pulled staff from other units and increased its hours, says spokesperson Susan Medina.

Many firearm dealers and manufacturers say that Obama's comments since the Newtown school shooting are driving demand.

James Zimmerman of SelwayArmory.com, a website that sells guns, ammunition and knives, says that sales really took off on Dec. 19 after President Barack Obama held a White House press conference announcing that Vice President Joe Biden would lead a team tasked with coming up with "concrete proposals" to curb gun violence.

That day, one customer ordered 32,000 rounds of ammunition from SelwayArmory.com, worth close to $18,000. The order had to be shipped from the company's Lolo, Mont., office to Kentucky on a freight truck.

"I've done more sales in the week after the 19th than I have the whole year," says Zimmerman, who launched SelwayArmory.com in 2009.

At Lady Liberty Gunsmithing LLC in Atlantic City, N.J., a customer called last week asking if a pistol he wanted was available. When he was told there was only one left, he drove more than two hours from Newark, N.J., to buy it that same day.

"People want guns now even more than ever," says Guy Petinga II, whose father opened the store above his home in 1996.

Others saw demand immediately after the shooting.

Bullet Blocker, which makes bulletproof vests, briefcases and insert panels, saw sales of its children's backpacks suddenly jump.

"That's how I found out about the tragedy. I saw the sales rise and then turned on CNN," says Elmar Uy, vice president of business operations at the Billerica, Mass., company.

Bullet Blocker has sold about 50 to 100 bulletproof backpacks a day since the shooting, up from about 10 to 15 in a regular week. The children's backpacks, which are designed to be used as shields, cost over $200 each.

"I've never seen numbers like this before," says Uy.

___

Follow Joseph Pisani at http://twitter.com/josephpisani


"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?
12/29/2012 1:43:46 PM

Same-sex couples marry in Maine for first time


Reuters/Reuters - Same-sex couple Steven Bridges (L) and Michael Snell exchange rings after filling out a marriage license at the City Hall in Portland, Maine December 29, 2012. REUTERS/Joel Page

PORTLAND, Maine (Reuters) - The first gay and lesbian couples to wed under Maine's new same-sex marriage law exchanged vows early on Saturday in a series of spare but joyous civil ceremonies held shortly after midnight in the only state to welcome such nuptials solely by popular vote.

"We finally feel equal and happy to be living in Maine," an exuberant Steven Bridges, 42, said shortly after he and his newly wedded husband, Michael Snell, 53, became the first couple at City Hall in Maine's largest town to tie the knot.

After the pair had filled out the necessary paperwork, the city records clerk, Christine Horne, performed the brief, no-frills ceremony, pronouncing the two men married as they exchanged rings and kissed. Snell's two adult daughters, both from a previous heterosexual marriage, looked on smiling.

Other couples waiting in the hallway outside the clerk's office cheered the pair as they emerged, and a much larger crowd of about 250 supporters huddled in front of the building let out a jubilant roar as Bridges, a retail manager, and Snell, a massage therapist, stepped out into the cold night air.

A group in the crowd sang the Beatles song "All You Need Is Love," accompanied by several musicians playing brass horns, and many carried signs with such slogans as "America's new day begins in Maine" and "Love one another."

Similar scenes were repeated as five more couples exchanged vows during the next two hours, and more weddings were expected before the office was scheduled to close again at 3 a.m. About 15 couples simply obtained their marriage licenses, with plans to wed later.

"We've been together for 30 years, and never thought that this country would allow marriages between gay couples," said Roberta Batt, 71, an antiques dealer and retired physician with silver hair and round eyeglasses, as she and her longtime partner, Mary, waited their turn to wed.

"We're just very thankful to the people of Maine, and I hope the rest of the country goes the way this state has," she added.

TURNING THE TIDE

Maine, Maryland and Washington state became the first three U.S. states to extend marriage rights to same-sex couples by popular vote with passage of ballot initiatives on November 6.

But Maine was the only one of the three where voters did so entirely on their own, without state legislators precipitating a referendum by acting first.

Nine of the 50 U.S. states plus the District of Columbia now have statutes legalizing gay marriage. Washington's law took effect on December 9, and Maryland's law does so on January 1, 2013. Another 31 states have passed constitutional amendments restricting marriage to heterosexual couples.

City clerks' offices around Maine scheduled extra weekend office hours, some opening late Friday night as in Portland to accommodate same-sex couples rushing to wed as the new law went into force at 12:01 a.m. local time.

More lavish same-sex weddings were being booked for the spring at the On the Marsh Bistro in Kennebunk, said owner Denise Rubin.

"We support it wholeheartedly," she said. "We look forward to being part of a whole new wave of wonderful thinking."

The tide of public opinion has been shifting in favor of allowing same-sex marriage. In May, President Barack Obama became the first U.S. president to declare his support for allowing gay couples to marry.

A Pew Research Center survey from October found 49 percent of Americans favored allowing gay marriage, with 40 percent opposed. The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review two challenges to federal and state laws that define marriage as a union between a man and a woman.

The nation's highest court said this month it will review a case against a federal law that denies married same-sex couples the federal benefits that heterosexual couples receive. It also will look at a challenge to California's ban on gay marriage, known as Proposition 8, which voters narrowly approved in 2008.

Maine's voter-approved initiative this year marked a turnaround from 2009, when legislators passed a statute recognizing gay marriage only to see it overturned that same year in a statewide referendum.

(Reporting by Daniel Lovering; Writing by Steve Gorman; Additional reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst; Editing by Todd Eastham and Robin Pomeroy)


"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?
12/29/2012 1:46:23 PM

Only political process can save Syria from "hell": envoy

Reuters/Reuters - U.N.-Arab League peace mediator Lakhdar Brahimi (L) of Algeria and Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attend a joint news conference in Moscow December 29, 2012. The international mediator seeking to end the 21-month-old conflict in Syria met Russia's foreign minister in Moscow on Saturday after talks in Damascus but expectations of progress toward a negotiated solution were low. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin

MOSCOW (Reuters) - The international mediator seeking peace inSyria warned of "hell" if no deal is struck to end 21 months of bloodshed, but his talks in Russia capping a week of intense diplomacy brought no sign of a breakthrough.

U.N.-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov both said there was still a chance for a negotiated solution to the conflict, which has killed more than 44,000 people and set world powers against one another.

But Lavrov firmly repeated Russia's stance that President Bashar al-Assad's exit cannot be a precondition for a political solution, saying that such demands were "wrong" and that the opposition's refusal to talk to the government was a "dead end".

"If the only alternative is really hell or a political process. then all of us must work ceaselessly for a political process," Brahimi said. "It is difficult, it is very complicated but there is no other choice."

Lavrov issued a similar exhortation in a joint appearance at an ornate mansion where he meets foreign dignitaries, saying: "The chance for a political settlement remains and it is our obligation to make maximal use of that chance."

But Lavrov, whose country has vetoed three U.N. Security Council resolutions meant to put pressure on Assad, gave no indication it would back down from that stance.

"When the opposition says only Assad's exit will allow it to begin a dialogue about the future of its own country, we think this is wrong, we think this is rather counterproductive," he said. "The costs of this precondition are more and more lives of Syrian citizens."

Russia has tried to distance itself from Assad for months and seems to have stepped up its calls for a peaceful resolution as the rebels have gained ground against government forces in the conflict, which has began with peaceful protests in March 2011 but which has descended into a civil war.

However, Lavrov noted that Assad has said publicly and privately that he would not go, adding that Russia "does not have the ability to change this".

Brahimi is trying to build on a plan agreed in Geneva in June by the United States, Russia and other powers that called for a transitional government but left Assad's role unclear.

"The core of that political process ... is and must be the Geneva agreement," said Brahimi, who took over as the U.N.-Arab League envoy after Kofi Annan quit in frustration at divisions among world powers, chiefly the United States and Russia, and the failure of the Geneva accord to bring a resolution closer.

"There may be one or two little adjustments to make here and there, but it is a reasonable basis for a political process that will help the Syrian people," he said, without elaborating.

Brahimi, who met Assad and others on a five-day trip to Syria this week, is to meet senior U.S. and Russian diplomats together in the coming weeks, after two such meetings this month that produced no signs of a breakthrough.

In Damascus on Thursday, Brahimi called for a transitional government to rule until elections in Syria and said only substantial change would meet demands of ordinary Syrians, but did not specify who could be part of such a body.

A spokesman for the opposition National Coalition said on Friday the coalition "will not negotiate with the Assad regime", and its leader rebuffed Russia's first invitation for talks, demanding that Lavrov apologise for Russia's support for Assad and that Russia issue a clear call for him to step down.

(Writing by Steve Gutterman; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Article: Russia: still chance for negotiated solution to Syria conflict

Article: Russia: Syrian opposition's stance on Assad "a dead end"

Article: Egypt's Mursi says Assad "regime" has no future in Syria


"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?
12/29/2012 1:50:26 PM
Sorry, You're Too Old to Get the Best Cancer Treatments














A new look into cancer treatment in the UK has raised the alarm that people over 65 may be being denied the best cancer treatments because of their age, despite many being robust enough to withstand the treatments.

The research poll, carried out as a joint effort between Macmillan Cancer Support, Age UK and the Department of Health, evaluated five pilot projects that aim to improve on the UK’s lagging cancer survival rates.

The poll found that 45% of oncologists, cancer clinical nurse specialists and GPs reported having witnessed cancer patients being refused treatment by other staff on the grounds they were “too old.” The research also said that 67% of those surveyed heard health professionals speak to older cancer patients in what was termed a “condescending or dismissive way.”

Previous research has demonstrated that older patients were less likely to be put forward for aggressive cancer treatments like surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy under the mistaken notion that, because of their age, they would not survive the treatments or, in some cases, that those expensive therapies would be better allocated to younger patients.

In order to dissuade them from making such blanket judgments Macmillan Cancer Support, Age UK and the Department of Health, set out a broad number of recommendations, including the need for comprehensive assessments that will investigate elderly patients’ existing medical conditions, physical and mental well-being and anticipated post-operative care.

Said Ciarán Devane, chief executive at Macmillan Cancer Support, in a statement:

Unless staff are given the time and training to carry out a proper assessment of a patient’s overall physical and mental wellbeing, some patients will be unfairly written-off as “too old” for treatment.

The right practical support, whether it’s transport or help with caring responsibilities must also be put in place so older people needing treatment can actually take it up.

Unless the barriers to timely treatment are tackled now, many older people could die unnecessarily from cancer and services will become unaffordable.

This sentiment was echoed by Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt who said, “It is shocking and wrong to deny people treatment just because of their age, which is why we have made it illegal. However, we agree that more still needs to be done to improve treatment for cancer patients over 70 – which is why we worked with Macmillan on this report to understand how to address this. [...] To achieve this, we are investing more than £750 million over four years to improve cancer services and outcomes.”

This of course comes amid increasing concerns over changes to NHS services that, critics have warned, risk privatizing the NHS to the detriment of patient care. There have also been stark warnings from financial experts in recent weeks that the UK government’s health cuts are unsustainable and could impact patient care.

Earlier this month, the National Audit Office (NAO) warned that out of the £5.8bn NHS savings made by the government over the last year, £520m were one-off cuts. These, therefore, could not be repeated in future years and attempting to make the same level of cuts could, they warned, risk damaging patient care. The NAO also called on the government to take a stronger role in ensuring patient care wasn’t being rationed.

Whether the government will take this advice, and how this will square with Hunt’s commitment to improving cancer care for the over-65s, remains to be seen.

Related Reading:

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Image Credit: Borya.



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/sorry-youre-too-old-to-get-the-best-cancer-treatments.html#ixzz2GRrUoY00

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

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