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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/25/2018 10:34:47 AM

Syrian Crisis Shows US Empire Losing Hegemony as Western Mainstream Media Losing Grip Over Narrative

Hassan Diab child chemical attack Douma Syria
© South Front
Hassan Diab appears in the video of the victims of the 'chemical attack' in Douma. Later the boy explained to Russian media how the event was staged.
Two of the most remarkable facts concerning the April 14th attack on Syria by the US, UK and France are:
  1. Materially, the attacks were completely ineffective, as explained by Joe Quinn's article About Those 'Nice, New, Smart' Missiles And The 'Chemical Weapons' Sites in Syria. The Syrians understood this, which is why they were celebrating rather than mourning when the sun came up.
  2. They were carried out hours before the OPCW mission reached Syria and right after the Russian Ministry of Defense beganshowing testimonies of local doctors denying there was a chemical attack in Douma. This suggests F.UK.US. were in a hurry to make a show of force before the facts could be properly analyzed while distracting attention away from the evidence.
Rather than demonstrating strength, these facts speak of weakness, impotence and a desire to compensate with theatrics.The US knows it cannot go too far in its pursuit of regime change in Syria because it risks paying a heavy price at the hands of Russia. Even if it could take out all Russian forces in Syria, it is not willing to lose any ships, aircraft or personnel and thus lose its status as the supreme global military force. Furthermore, there is always the risk of escalation, which is madness when it comes to nuclear powers. The Americans are acutely aware that they are playing with fire, which explains how careful they were to stay away from Russian targets. The attack was carefully measured to appear stronger than last year's, yet not strong enough to provoke Russia into action. This could also explain, in part, why the Trump administration is seeking to replace US troops in Syria with an Arab force, as it is much safer (and cheaper) to fight with proxy forces.

In the aftermath of the strikes on Syria, and as more information is coming out about the chemical attack that never was, it is becoming increasingly clear that Western mainstream media outlets are also losing their dominant positions and their grip on the narrative.

The Truth is Coming Out

On Friday 13th April, Russian Major General Igor Konashenkov addressed the media and revealed that two doctors who appeared in the video of the alleged chemical attack said that the people there were being treated for smoke and dust suffocation and presented no symptoms of chemical exposure. Someone rushed into the room shouting and spreading panic about chemicals and filmed while civilians doused each other with water. Since then, we have seen:
  • A video with the above and further testimonies of medical staff who were present during the event
  • An article written by Robert Fisk, veteran Middle East correspondent for The Independent, which quotes local testimonies confirming the same story
  • A video report from One America's Pearson Sharp, again providing testimonies denying any chemical attack in Douma at the time
  • A video testimony by a child who appeared on the video of the alleged victims of the attack, declaring that he was among a number of people who were urged to go to the hospital where he was doused with water for no apparent reason
As far as evidence goes, this is as good as it gets. But apart from Fisk's article on The Independent and Tucker Carlson openly questioning on Fox News whether the chemical attack even took place, these testimonies have not appeared in Western media. However, there does appear to be a change in the attitude of Western mainstream outlets.

Douma
© AFP/Sameer Al-Doumy
Douma, on the eastern outskirts of Damascus
Signs of Desperation

You know that media outlets resent alternative narratives when they feel the need to address and smear those voices directly, rather than pretend they don't exist, as they normally do. Take this BBC article:
Syria war: The online activists pushing conspiracy theories
19/04/2018

As the investigation continues into another alleged chemical attack in Syria, one group of influential online activists is busy spreading their version of events.

Inspectors from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) are attempting to access the previously rebel-held town of Douma, where medical organisations and rescue workers say President Bashar al-Assad's forces dropped bombs filled with toxic chemicals in an attack on 7 April, killing more than 40 people.
The "medical organisations and rescue workers", which the BBC fails to mention by name, are none other than the Syrian American Medical Society and the White Helmets. The former is a USAID-funded lobbying group led by Muslim Brotherhood sympathizers, which aims for regime-change in Syria and which operates exclusively in territories held by the 'opposition', including Al-Qaeda. Likewise, the latter is a group founded in Turkey by James Le Mesurier, a British private security specialist, and which has been repeatedly shown to work as the propaganda arm of terrorists such as Al Qaeda and ISIS.

The BBC singles out Twitter user Sarah Abdallah and independent journalist Vanessa Beeley as two examples of influential 'conspiracy theorists' on Syria. The article includes two pictures of Abdallah taken from her Twitter account. The first includes the following suggestive caption:
Sarah Abdallah is one of the most influential Twitter users commenting on conversations about the conflict in Syria,although little is known about the person behind the account
And the second:

Sarah Abdallah
© Sarah Abdallah / Twitter
In several pictures posted by Sarah Abdallah, items in the background - such as the house in this picture - are common to North America, rather than Lebanon
Ironically, the BBC is making use of 'conspiratorial' suggestions to discredit Abdallah, by pointing out that we don't really know who she is, and that she might not even be in Lebanon. Note that she describes herself as an "independent Lebanese geopolitical commentator" - not that she is necessarily living in Lebanon. The BBC takes issue with this too, as there are no published articles of hers to be found online, even though "commentator" can easily apply to a Twitter user.

Vanessa Beeley Twitter
© Vanessa Beeley / Twitter
Taking aim at Vanessa Beeley, the BBC objects that she writes for 21st Century Wire (although interestingly the BBC does not bother to mention it by name), which has been called by Media Bias/Fact Check a "conspiracy and conjecture site" that has "an extreme right bias." Furthermore, the state-owned BBC complains that Beeley appears in "state-owned Russian channel RT." Never mind that Vanessa Beeley has performed much more valuable journalistic work on Syria by reporting from the ground and actually talking to the Syrian people - something that the BBC rarely, if ever, does. Strangely enough, Media Bias/Fact Check declares that the BBC has a "very high" factual reporting level, while 21st Century Wire is "mixed". Such assessments speak more of Media Bias/Fact Check's bias than that of 21st Century Wire.

Ultimately, the BBC's case against Abdallah and Beeley is merely an ad hominem attack. Rather than examining the validity of their arguments or the evidence presented, the BBC finds it easier to disqualify them for being what they claim to be: a Twitter commentator and an independent journalist.

The London Times too has recently sought to engage in the smear campaign against independent journalists by accusing British academic members of the Working Group on Syria, Propaganda and Media (SPM) of "spreading pro-Assad disinformation and conspiracy theories promoted by Russia." These "apologists for Assad", according to the Times, have been propagating the "slur" that the White Helmets fabricated the video of the chemical attacks. The Times also points out that these academics have tweeted Vanessa Beeley's material - as if this in itself was a problem - while neglecting to examine Beeley's work.

Isn't it funny how there are all these "Assad apologists" all of a sudden, just as the empire decides to escalate its war on Syria? Kinda sorta exactly like how opponents of the Iraq invasion were branded apologists for Saddam instead of truth tellers? https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/apologists-for-assad-working-in-british-universities-2f72hw29m


Dr Idrees Ahmad has criticized an article written by professor Tim Hayward, one of the so-called "Assad apologists". The debate between Ahmad and Hayward and SPM is related in another article on The Times - with a clear bias in favour of Ahmad. It is interesting that Ahmad is quoted as saying:
"Where this gets serious is that not only are this grouppushing the [same line as the Russians] but they are also trying to intimidate academics," he said. "It's fine to have your own opinion but evidence for their views is weakly sourced and often disinformation. If you devalue facts and the basics of an investigation, you create a morass of uncertainty. We can all disagree about the war in Syria, but to deny an event like a chemical attack even occurred is to fall into an Orwellian world."
As an academic, Dr Ahmad should understand that the truth is not determined by who pushes a line of argument, yet it is clearly a turn-off for him that the Russians hold certain opinions. Ahmad proceeds to ask for well-sourced evidence, entirely missing the point that the parties which claim that a chemical attack took place in Douma have presented no such evidence, as US Secretary of Defense James Mattis admitted himself a little more than a day before the bombing of Syria. Does he not realize that is a prime example of Orwellian thinking? Is Mattis an "Assad apologist" too?

It is indeed Orwellian that when the former head of the Royal Navy, Admiral Alan West, echoed the logic of the Russian government on the alleged chemical attack in Syria in a BBC interview...
"I just wonder, you know we've had some bad experiences on intelligence. When I was chief of defense intelligence, I had huge pressure put on me politically to try and say that our bombing campaign in Bosnia was achieving all sorts of things which it wasn't. I was put under huge pressure, so I know the things that can happen with intelligence."
...the interviewer, Anita McVeigh, replied:
"We know that the Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Friday, or accused a western state on Friday, of perhaps fabricating evidence in Douma or somehow being involved with what happened in Douma. Given that we're in an information war with Russia on so many fronts, do you think perhaps it's inadvisable to be stating thisso publicly given your position and your profile? Isn't there a danger that you're muddying the waters?"



Clearly, countering anything that Russia says or does is more important to the BBC than the actual truth of the matter.

A similarly shocking interview was aired by British Sky News. The interviewee, General Jonathan Shaw, former commander of the British forces in Iraq, was following Admiral West's same line of thought, doubting that Assad would foolishly bomb civilians with chemicals when he was winning the war. At which point the Sky News host abruptly terminated the interview:


Finally, The Guardian deserves special mention for valiantly attempting to hold back the surge of testimonies from eyewitnesses and doctors in freshly-liberated Douma by citing Dr Ghanem Tayara, a Birmingham (UK)-based GP and director of the Union of Medical Care and Relief Organisations (UOSSM), who claims that medics who responded to the 'gas attack' were subjected to "extreme intimidation" by Syrian officials going around seizing biological samples. This is damage control at its best: the 'logic' here seems to be that if no proof of a chemical attack is found, then that means the doctors were intimidated by the "regime" and all the evidence seized!

According to their website, the UOSSM provides medical training courses"led by Professor Pitti from France, a previous medical advisor for NATO." It prides itself on having trained the infamous White Helmets and cooperates with SAMS. Birds of a feather, as they also say.

Dr Tayara himself has made no effort to hide his allegiance to the Western Empire. He has claimed in the past that the Russians have bombed hospitals in Syria, a dubious accusation at best, which Russia has deniedby pointing out that some of the allegedly bombed hospitals did not even exist. He is currently reporting from Turkey, but that doesn't stop him from describing Douma as if he could see it from his location: "There has been a very heavy security presence on the ground ever since the attack and they have been targeting doctors and medics in a very straightforward way." Unfortunately, his medical sources and any others who have spoken to The Guardian all wish to remain anonymous, so we can only take Tayara's word for it (or not).

How Not to Lose Gracefully

What these examples of media bias from just the last 36 hours or so have in common is the clumsy desperation that comes when a political 'house of cards' is beginning to fall. While the US and its Western allies are slowly losing the political and economic war, the media - which serves as the foundation for their power - is losing the information war... and they know it.

When Western powers felt cornered by the possibility of the truth about Douma coming out, they lashed out in anger with 103 missiles fired at Syria. Thanks to Russia, these caused minimal damage, but if the masses keep insisting on learning the truth, it's anybody's guess how Western powers will react next time.

As for the media, there is no graceful way for them to fix the mess in which they find themselves except by apologizing and starting to engage in real, honest journalism. The more chaos is created, the more lies will be uncovered and, ultimately, the truth shall set us free.

(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?
4/25/2018 10:51:09 AM
Colosseum

Empire Collapse: Russian Missile Tech Renders America's Trillion Dollar Navy Obsolete

kinzhal hypersonic missile

Kinzhal ('dagger') hypersonic missile being test-fired by the Russian military
For the past 500 years European nations - Portugal, the Netherlands, Spain, Britain, France and, briefly, Germany - were able to plunder much of the planet by projecting their naval power overseas. Since much of the world's population lives along the coasts, and much of it trades over water, armed ships that arrived suddenly out of nowhere were able to put local populations at their mercy.

The armadas could plunder, impose tribute, punish the disobedient, and then use that plunder and tribute to build more ships, enlarging the scope of their naval empires. This allowed a small region with few natural resources and few native advantages beyond extreme orneriness and a wealth of communicable diseases to dominate the globe for half a millennium.

The ultimate inheritor of this naval imperial project is the United States, which, with the new addition of air power, and with its large aircraft carrier fleet and huge network of military bases throughout the planet, is supposedly able to impose Pax Americana on the entire world. Or, rather, was able to do so - during the brief period between the collapse of the USSR and the emergence of Russia and China as new global powers and their development of new anti-ship and antiaircraft technologies. But now this imperial project is at an end.

Prior to the Soviet collapse, the US military generally did not dare to directly threaten those countries to which the USSR had extended its protection. Nevertheless, by using its naval power to dominate the sea lanes that carried crude oil, and by insisting that oil be traded in US dollars, it was able to live beyond its means by issuing dollar-denominated debt instruments and forcing countries around the world to invest in them. It imported whatever it wanted using borrowed money while exporting inflation, expropriating the savings of people across the world. In the process, the US has accumulated absolutely stunning levels of national debt - beyond anything seen before in either absolute or relative terms. When this debt bomb finally explodes, it will spread economic devastation far beyond US borders. And it will explode, once the petrodollar wealth pump, imposed on the world through American naval and air superiority, stops working.

New missile technology has made a naval empire cheap to defeat. Previously, to fight a naval battle, one had to have ships that outmatched those of the enemy in their speed and artillery power. The Spanish Armada was sunk by the British armada. More recently, this meant that only those countries whose industrial might matched that of the United States could ever dream of opposing it militarily. But this has now changed: Russia's new missiles can be launched from thousands of kilometers away, are unstoppable, and it takes just one to sink a destroyer and just two to sink an aircraft carrier. The American armada can now be sunk without having an armada of one's own. The relative sizes of American and Russian economies or defense budgets are irrelevant: the Russians can build more hypersonic missiles much more quickly and cheaply than the Americans would be able to build more aircraft carriers.

Equally significant is the development of new Russian air defense capabilities: the S-300 and S-400 systems, which can essentially seal off a country's airspace. Wherever these systems are deployed, such as in Syria, US forces are now forced to stay out of their range. With its naval and air superiority rapidly evaporating, all that the US can fall back on militarily is the use of large expeditionary forces - an option that is politically unpalatable and has proven to be ineffective in Iraq and Afghanistan. There is also the nuclear option, and while its nuclear arsenal is not likely to be neutralized any time soon, nuclear weapons are only useful as deterrents. Their special value is in preventing wars from escalating beyond a certain point, but that point lies beyond the elimination of their global naval and air dominance. Nuclear weapons are much worse than useless in augmenting one's aggressive behavior against a nuclear-armed opponent; invariably, it would be a suicidal move. What the US now faces is essentially a financial problem of unrepayable debt and a failing wealth pump, and it should be a stunningly obvious point that setting off nuclear explosions anywhere in the world would not fix the problems of an empire that is going broke.

Events that signal vast, epochal changes in the world often appear minor when viewed in isolation. Julius Caesar's crossing of the Rubicon was just one river crossing; Soviet and American troops meeting and fraternizing at the Elbe was, relatively speaking, a minor event - nowhere near the scale of the siege of Leningrad, the battle of Stalingrad or the fall of Berlin. Yet they signaled a tectonic shift in the historical landscape. And perhaps we have just witnessed something similar with the recent pathetically tiny Battle of East Gouta in Syria, where the US used a make-believe chemical weapons incident as a pretense to launch an equally make-believe attack on some airfields and buildings in Syria. The US foreign policy establishment wanted to show that it still matters and has a role to play, but what really happened was that US naval and air power were demonstrated to be almost entirely beside the point.

Of course, all of this is terrible news to the US military and foreign policy establishments, as well as to the many US Congressmen in whose districts military contractors operate or military bases are situated. Obviously, this is also bad news for the defense contractors, for personnel at the military bases, and for many others as well. It is also simply awful news economically, since defense spending is about the only effective means of economic stimulus of which the US government is politically capable. Obama's "shovel-ready jobs," if you recall, did nothing to forestall the dramatic slide in the labor participation rate, which is a euphemism for the inverse of the real unemployment rate. There is also the wonderful plan to throw lots of money at Elon Musk's SpaceX (while continuing to buy vitally important rocket engines from the Russians - who are currently discussing blocking their export to the US in retaliation for more US sanctions). In short, take away the defense stimulus, and the US economy will make a loud popping sound followed by a gradually diminishing hissing noise.

Needless to say, all those involved will do their best to deny or hide for as long as possible the fact that
the US foreign policy and defense establishments have now been neutralized. My prediction is that America's naval and air empire will not fail because it will be defeated militarily, nor will it be dismantled once the news sinks in that it is useless; instead, it will be forced to curtail its operations due to lack of funds. There may still be a few loud bangs before it gives up, but mostly what we will hear is a whole lot of whimpering. That's how the USSR went; that's how the USA will go too.


(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?
4/25/2018 3:50:22 PM


FISH TALE

As coral reefs disappear, some tropical fish might just keep swimming


The
future looks grim for coral reefs. Warmer oceans, overfishing, pollution, and gradually acidifying waters have destroyed more than a third of the world’s shallow tropical coral reefs. Just this week, a new report said that Australia’s Great Barrier Reef — the crown jewel of the world’s oceans — lost half of its corals in just the past three years. More than 90 percent of the world’s near-surface coral habitat could be gone in the next 30 years.

This is a big deal. Coral reefs support about a quarter of all marine biodiversity in just 1 percent of the ocean’s space. And so tropical reef fish, among the most vulnerable organisms when it comes to climate change, are increasingly under threat.

But amid all the bad news, it’s vitally important to have a reality check: Some reefs and reef fish — the familiar angelfish, eels, snappers, and parrotfishes — will survive. We are just now learning some basics of how Earth’s vast biodiversity responds to warming, and there’s a growing realization that deeper, cooler waters are one possible future for coral reefs and the fish that inhabit them.

A recent study in the journal Scientific Reports builds upon other studies showing that some coral reef fish may be more resilient than we thought to climate change, boosting chances that reef ecosystems might withstand the current onslaught. The evidence suggests that tropical fish species can adapt to warmer waters just by moving a few feet down to cooler waters. For some fish, profound changes don’t necessarily lead to extinction.

Carole Baldwin, a marine biologist at the Smithsonian Institution and lead author of the new study, thinks that deeper waters are the future for coral reefs, and she makes a case for hope amidst uncertainty.

“We know that fishes in general, like a lot of marine organisms, can survive a lot deeper,” says Baldwin. “We figured that there was a lot of habitat that is suitable for reef organisms between 500 and 1,000 feet, and sure enough, that is exactly what we found.”

Baldwin and her colleagues have discovered and named a new zone of the ocean between about 400 and 1,000 feet down where species may be beginning to flee and morph into entirely new ecosystems. Baldwin had to use a submarine to conduct her research off the coast of Curaçao in the Caribbean.

The new oceanic realm that Baldwin and her colleagues have identified — the “rariphotic zone” — is named for its lack of sunlight (rari = low, photic = light).

As a curator of the Smithsonian’s fish collection, the largest of its kind in the world, Baldwin knows a thing or two about tropical fish. And it’s possible that this “new” zone has actually been around for a long time, providing refuge for surface fish during times of environmental turmoil. Baldwin says there’s evidence that gobies — a type of small, bottom-dwelling fish — migrated from shallow reefs to deep reefs in response to warmer waters about 10 million to 14 million years ago. She wants to expand her work in the rariphotic zone to study other groups of fishes and the corals themselves, in an attempt to learn more about larger-scale responses to ocean warming.

“The hopeful thing is that if species start moving deeper now or in the future in response to warming surface waters or deteriorating reefs, that there are these other zones that they can go to.”

Rich Pyle, a fish scientist with the Hawaii Biological Survey, agrees that deep water corals hold immense promise for conservation efforts.

“The more we look, the more obvious it is that there are no natural ecology-wide boundaries” that prevent shallow fish from descending to greater depths, he says.

But it’s not as if surface fish can just pack up and move to deeper waters overnight, either. Pyle says that there are certain species, such as some rays, that live at both shallow and deep waters, and those are the ones that stand the best chance of survival.

“If we screw up the shallow reefs,” Pyle says, “we can take some comfort knowing that the deeper reefs still have populations of these organisms.”

Pyle is a pioneer of deep-water coral exploration. But the new zone that Baldwin and her colleagues have identified goes even further into the depths.

“These deeper coral reefs below about 30 meters have been barely looked at for the past several decades,” Pyle says. One reason is that’s about as deep as scuba diving gear allows you to easily go.

As a result, no historical data exist for species in this zone of tropical reefs. There isn’t even much data about temperature at these depths, though it is significantly cooler and more stable than surface waters.

To be sure, Pyle says there’s reason to believe that deep reefs may even be in greater danger than their shallower cousins.

For example, it’s possible that stronger hurricanes have started raining thicker plumes of sediment down on deep reefs, burying fragile corals. Increased surface level pollution may also block light, stopping photosythesis. Deep reefs are also more accustomed to steady water temperatures, so they could be more vulnerable to severe marine heat waves of the future.

All of this argues for doubling down on deep-reef research in preparation for the ravages of climate change in the coming decades.

“We just need to spend more time out there in the sub to see what’s happening,” says Baldwin. She thinks it’s a good idea to begin designating deeper reefs as marine protected areas, too.

Reefs will survive, at least in some form. It’s just a question of what they will look like. Genetic engineering of corals, farming corals, transplanting corals, or trusting corals to adapt in surprising ways are all strategies currently underway.

And it looks like coral fish have a shot at surviving, too. If they migrated to the depths in the past, maybe they could do it again.


(GRIST)

"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?
4/25/2018 4:25:42 PM

RUSSIA TO MOVE AIR DEFENSES TO SYRIA 'SOON,' WARNS ISRAEL AGAINST ATTACK

“If Israel decides to carry out rocket strikes on the deployment locations of the S-300, the consequences will be catastrophic for all sides.”

BY
APRIL 23, 2018 13:42

Syria claims U.S. launched missile strike on air base; Pentagon denies it, April 9, 2018 (Reuters)

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has denied reports that Moscow will supply Syria with S-300 antiaircraft defense systems “soon” after a senior Russian official warned Israel that it would “suffer catastrophic consequences” if it attacks the systems.

TASS News Agency quoted Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov as saying on Monday Moscow had not yet decided whether it would deliver the advanced systems to Syria, but it would not be a secret if it took such a decision.


“We know what President Vladimir Putin said,” he said. “He has discussed such matters with an official of our Defense Ministry from the standpoint of preventing a situation where Syria might turn out insufficiently prepared for aggressive attacks, like the one that occurred on April 14. It remains to be seen what decisions will be made by the Russian leadership and Syrian officials.”

According to Lavrov, Moscow has warned the US and Europe of carrying out additional strikes in Syria, but “certainly, one should be prepared to see more provocations.”

According to a report in Russia’s Kommersant newspaper, the system will be supplied to the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad for no cost and will likely be brought into the country via transport aircraft or Russian Navy ships to be deployed to cover Damascus and the regime’s airfields.

The report said while Moscow believes such a move would stabilize the situation in the war-torn country,“experts believe that the reaction of the Israeli military to such a move will be predictably negative and do not exclude attacks on their locations.”

“If Israel decides to carry out rocket strikes on the deployment locations of the S-300, the consequences will be catastrophic for all sides,” Russian defense officials told the paper.

Last October, Moscow deployed the mobile S-300 and S-400 anti-aircraft batteries to Syria but they remain staffed by Russian troops.

Lt.-Gen. Aitech Bizhev, the Russian Air Force’s former deputy chief commander for the CIS joint air-defense system, said it would take about three months for the Russians to train Syrian troops to operate the S-300 and would likely see Russian military advisers stationed where the batteries are deployed to coordinate with the Syrians.

Last week, Russian Main Operational Directorate chief Col.-Gen. Sergei Rudskoy said that “in the past year and a half Russia has fully restored Syria’s air-defense system and continues to further upgrade it.”

Moscow had “refused” to supply the surface-to-air missile system to Syria a few years ago after “taking into account the pressing request of some of our Western partners.”

But following US-led air strikes on Syrian regime chemical weapons infrastructure, Russia considered the possibility to “return to examine this issue not only in regard to Syria, but to other countries as well,” he stated.

Syrian air defenses are largely Soviet-era systems, with SA-2s, SA-5s, and SA-6s as well as the more sophisticated tactical surface-to-air missiles such as the SA-17s and SA-22 systems. Moscow has also supplied the short-range Pantsir S-1 to the Assad regime which has shot down drones and missiles over Syria.

The advanced S-300 would be a major upgrade to the Syrian air defenses and would pose a threat to Israeli jets on missions as the long-range missile defense system can track objects such as aircraft and ballistic missiles over a range of 300 km.

A full battalion includes six launcher vehicles with each vehicle carrying four missile containers for a total of 24 missiles as well as command-and-control and long-range radar detection vehicles.

The system’s engagement radar, which can guide up to 12 missiles simultaneously, helps guide the missiles towards the target. With two missiles per target, each launcher vehicle can engage with up to six targets at once.

(The Jerusalem Post)

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

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/25/2018 4:55:50 PM



Detroit is about to cut off water for thousands of people

This story was originally published by Mother Jones and is reproduced here as part of theClimate Desk collaboration.

In the next few weeks, Detroit is set to start shutting off water to thousands of residents with unpaid bills. Since the shutoffs began four years ago, tens of thousands of Detroiters have had their water cut off, drawing sharp criticism from local anti-poverty activists as well as the United Nations.

Households are slated for shutoff once their water bill is 60 days or $150 past due. While more than 17,000 households are at risk, Gary Brown, director of the Detroit Water and Sewage Department, told the Detroit Free Press that roughly 2,000 will actually be shut off as more residents enroll in repayment and assistance plans. The city’s Water Residential Assistance Program (WRAP), for instance, offers up to $1,000 a year to help customers catch up on their accounts.

According to Brown, the average home slated for shutoff this year is $663 past due, and most water connections are restored within 48 hours of being turned off. City records obtained by Bridge Magazine show that the number of yearly shutoffs went from 33,000 in 2014 to 17,500 last year. Overall, there have been more than 101,000 shutoffs in the past four years.

In late March, Mayor Mike Duggan’s office touted the $7 million that has been spent in the last two years to help Detroiters facing shutoffs. Just the week before, the city council approved a $7.8 million contract to Homrich Wrecking for conducting water shutoffs.

Advocates who work with the poor black and brown Detroiters who are most vulnerable to losing their water say the city’s financial assistance programs are inadequate. They are little more than “a marketing plan being framed as a compassionate solution,” says Monica Lewis Patrick, president and CEO of We the People of Detroit, a grassroots group fighting the water shutoffs. Many Detroiters who enroll in payment plans are at risk of falling back into cycles of nonpayment, says Mark Fancher, staff attorney for the Racial Justice Project of the ACLU of Michigan. “Not because they’re lazy or just choosing to be poor,” but because “there are a whole lot of reasons why people are poor and there are lots of poor people in Detroit.”

Brown told the Free Press that the tricky part of conducting shutoffs is “separating the truly needy from those who are just not paying.” That line of thinking, says Fancher, presumes that those who aren’t paying are “deadbeats that have the money, but have chosen not to pay. This is completely contrary to the reality of most people who are dealing with these shutoffs.”

In a city that’s 80 percent black, more than 35 percent of residents live in poverty, the highest rate among the nation’s 20 largest cities. Unemployment hovers around 9 percent and the median income is around $28,000. Yet water rates have climbed as much as 400 percent in the last 20 years.

Large-scale water shutoffs began in 2014, just as the city was crawling out from the wreckage of the country’s largest-ever municipal bankruptcy, pegged at $18 billion. The shutoffs have been advertised as an unavoidable, if painful, treatment for restoring the city’s fiscal health. In 2014, the office of then-Emergency Manager Kevin Orr referred to the shutoffs as “a necessary part of Detroit’s restructuring.” Patrick isn’t buying it: “You can’t convince me that while you’re smiling at me and shutting my water off that this is good for me and you represent my interests. As my grandmother would say, ‘You can’t piss on me and tell me it’s raining.’”

In 2014, two United Nations special rapporteurs declared the shutoff policy a “violation of the most basic human rights.” “I heard testimonies from poor African American residents of Detroit who were forced to make impossible choices — to pay the water bill or to pay their rent,” Catarina de Albuquerque, the special rapporteur on the human right to water and sanitation, said after visiting the city. Among the findings she recounted:

Ms. de Albuquerque cited the case of a woman whose water had been cut and whose teenage daughters had to wash themselves with a bottle of water during menstruation. In other instances, she continued, she heard mothers who feared losing their children because their water was shut off; heads of household who feared losing access to water without any prior notice; others who feared receiving unaffordable and arbitrary water bills.

Activists and researchers have pointed out that the Detroit Water and Sewage Department’s financial woes can’t be blamed entirely on the city, since it stretches far beyond the city itself, serving 40 percent of Michigan’s population. The progressive think tank Demos has described the decision to include the department’s $6 billion debt in the city’s bankruptcy filing as an accounting trick used to negotiate more favorable terms with lenders.

We the People of Detroit and other grassroots groups have been organizing to not only stop the shutoffs, but make water more affordable. Cities like Philadelphia are experimenting with tying residents’ water bills to their incomes to ensure that families don’t become trapped in a cycle of missed payments. We the People recommends that no family living at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty line ($25,100 for a family of four) pays more than roughly 3 percent of their income for water, the rate considered affordable under UN guidelines. (The Environmental Protection Agency pegs affordability at 4.5 percent of median household income.) In 2017, Michigan State University researchers found that the median household spends about $1,620 on water bills annually, roughly 6.5 percent of a poverty-line income. More alarmingly, they found that by 2022, water rates would climb to unaffordable levels for 35 percent of households nationally.

Under an income-based plan, Fancher says, many Detroiters would not be paying market rate for water, but they would be paying something, leaving the city in better financial shape than it is under the status quo: “You replace a whole lot of people who are paying nothing with a whole lot of people who are paying something. In the long run, the utility is far better off than it would be.”

However, the city has refused to alter water rates, insisting that its hands are tied by a state constitutional amendment that requires new taxes to be approved by voters. An affordability fee, Fancher argues, would not legally be a tax. The constitutional argument, he says, has been “a convenient excuse for not doing something that makes a whole lot of sense.”

Some water rights activists see the city’s intransigence as more evidence of a quiet campaign to push poor people of color out of the city. In a recent study, We the People found that many home foreclosures concentrated in Detroit’s black communities were driven in part by overdue water bills. “It’s about using water to displace residents in order bring in a younger, whiter population to dilute black political power in Detroit,” Patrick says. They are “weaponizing water as a tool of gentrification.”


(GRIST)

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

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