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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/9/2013 9:36:16 PM

Guru's view on Indian rape raises anger, but shared by many


India gang rape case


NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Comments by an Indian spiritual leader that a gang-rape victim shared blame for her assault disgusted many in a country shaken by the crime, but his view represents a deep streak of chauvinism shared by a broad swathe of a society in transition.

The 23-year-old physiotherapy student and a male companion were left bleeding on a highway after she was raped and beaten on a moving bus in New Delhi on December 16. She died two weeks later in a Singapore hospital from internal injuries.

"Guilt is not one-sided," the guru, Asaram Bapu, told followers this week, adding that if the student had pleaded with her six attackers in God's name, and told them she was of the "weaker sex", they would have relented.

Such views have caused outrage among India's growing urban middle class.

Protesters burned effigies of the yoga guru near his headquarters in western India, media reported, and Twitter exploded with posts calling him "medieval" and a "misogynist".

But he is not alone.

Similar opinions are being expressed by leaders in the mainstream of society, not just on the fringes.

Some politicians have called on schoolgirls not to wear skirts and told women to dress soberly and not venture out at night.

Before last month's gang rape caused shockwaves, it was common for police to point the finger of blame in sex crime cases at women's clothing, or the fact that they worked alongside men.

Such views are not unique to India but they point to growing discomfort among some conservatives about a perceived erosion of traditional values in fast-changing cities where Western ways are gaining popularity.

President Pranab Mukherjee's son described women who protested against violence in New Delhi's streets in the days after the rape as "dented and painted". He said the protests had "very little connection with ground reality".

New Delhi and other cities have seen a considerable crumbling of caste and gender barriers over the past decade, creating more opportunities for social mobility and a more open culture with women playing a larger role.

But just a few miles from the capital, village councils with the power to set local laws made headlines last year by banning women from using mobile phones and wearing jeans.

A global poll of experts last year by TrustLaw, a legal news service run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, showed India to be the worst place among G20 countries to be a woman.

Activists say most sex crimes in India go unreported, and official data show that almost all go unpunished. Reported rape cases rose nearly 17 percent between 2007 and 2011.

BHARAT VS INDIA

In many ways, the rape victim represented the new India.

Her family moved to New Delhi from rural Uttar Pradesh state when she was small. Her parents encouraged her to study and she worked in a call centre for a U.S. company to fund her education.

"How will they progress without freedom? They should study well and progress in life," the victim's father told Reuters when asked in a telephone interview if he regretted giving his children the opportunity to work and study.

The case ignited fierce protests against the government and police for their perceived failure to protect women from violence.

The leader of a Hindu nationalist organization that wields influence over the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party said that gang rape and sex crimes need to be punished harshly but they were a problem in urban India, not in Bharat.

Bharat is the Sanskrit name for the Indian subcontinent, often used as shorthand for the Hindu heartland. The name India is seen by some as a relic of British rule representing Western influence.

"This is happening in India and it's increasing and very dangerous. But such things don't happen in Bharat," Mohan Bhagwat, leader of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, said on Friday.

"Where there's no India, but only Bharat, you should go and check, this doesn't happen," he told supporters.

His opinions clash with the facts. The National Commission for Women has documented a pattern of gang rape and sexual humiliation of lower caste women in rural India.

Bhaskara Rao, who heads a New Delhi-based policy think tank, said Bhagwat's comments reflected a society in transition.

"The people who are there in the police, judiciary, politics, they are old minds trying to deal with new problems," Rao said.

Women politicians such as West Bengal state Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee have also invited controversy with their comments about rape. Last year, Banerjee said rape cases were on the rise because men and women were interacting more frequently.

And in 2011, Delhi state Chief Minister Sheila Dik**** told a television channel that the city was still too conservative for women to travel on the street late at night.

"All by herself till 3 a.m. at night in a city where people believe ... you know ... you should not be so adventurous," she said after a television journalist, Soumya Viswanathan, was shot dead as she drove home from work in the early hours.

(Additional reporting by Annie Banerji and Shashank Chouhan; Editing by Robert Birsel)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/9/2013 9:40:20 PM

Prosecutor: Lawyer who took girl to Ontario for child pornography is predator

CONCORD, N.H. - The U.S. attorney for New Hampshire says a lawyer charged with exploiting a 14-year-old girl to produce child pornography is a predator.

John Kacavas said in opening statements at the woman's trial Wednesday she took the girl to Ontario in May 2012 to videotape her engaging in sexually explicit conduct.

He said she was the girl's "pot pusher, her pornography producer and her predator."

The woman, arrested in November, has pleaded not guilty.

Her lawyer, James Moir (MOY'-er) told jurors they will find the case shocking, but the issue is whether the government proves each element of the crimes beyond a reasonable doubt.

The woman has not been named to avoid identifying the girl, who is a relative.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/9/2013 9:45:22 PM

Obama determined to act against gun violence: Biden


Associated Press/Charles Dharapak - FILE - President Barack Obama stands with Vice President Joe Biden as he makes a statement in this Dec. 19, 2012 file photo taken in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, about policies he will pursue following the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Ct. Facing an end-of-the-month deadline, the Obama administration is calling gun owner groups, victims' organizations and representatives from the video-game industry to the White House Biden will meet Wednesday Jan. 9, 2013 with gun violence victims' groups and gun safety organizations, a White House official said. On Thursday, he will hold talks with gun ownership groups, as well as advocates for sportsmen. for discussions on potential policy proposals for curbing gun violence. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama is "determined to take action" against gun violence and is considering executive orders aimed preventing attacks like last month's massacre at a Connecticut elementary school, Vice President Joe Biden said on Wednesday.

Biden opened a White House meeting with gun violence victims and gun-control advocates as part of his effort to craft a package of recommendations that Obama has requested by the end of January.

The administration is considering a combination of executive actions and legislation and is determined to act quickly, Biden said.

"We are not going to get caught up in the notion that unless we do everything we're going to do nothing," the vice president told reporters before the meeting. "There is a pretty wide consensus on three or four or five things in the gun safety area that could and should be done."

In a reversal, Wal-Mart Stores Inc said it would send a representative to Washington to meet with Biden on Thursday, after initially saying it would not send anyone. Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, is the largest U.S. gun seller.

"We underestimated the expectation to attend the meeting on Thursday in person, so we are sending an appropriate representative to participate," spokesman David Tovar said.

After the Newtown shooting, Obama asked Biden to come up with ideas to curb gun violence. The president is expected to present many of them in his State of the Union address, traditionally delivered in late January.

Obama has said he wants new gun control measures passed during the first year of his second term, but gun control is a divisive issue in the United States, where the right to bear arms is enshrined in the U.S. Constitution.

Biden is due to meet with the powerful U.S. gun lobby, the National Rifle Association, on Thursday.

"We're reaching out to all parties on whatever side of this debate you fall," he said. "But the president is going to act. There are executive orders, executive action that can be taken."

No decision has been made yet on what those actions would be, he added. Legislative measures are also under consideration, Biden said.

Biden's task force is examining legislation that would ban assault rifles, but is also looking at the role of violent movies and videogames in mass shootings and whether there is adequate access to mental health services.

(Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Doina Chiacu)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/9/2013 9:47:45 PM

Judges look favorably on Obama gun reporting rule

Reuters/Reuters - Phoenix Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives (ATF) special agents Tom Mangan (L) and Peter Forcelli examine a confiscated AK-47 short pistol at the bureau's headquarters in Phoenix, Arizona January 14, 2008. REUTERS/Jeff Topping

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A federal appeals court signaled on Wednesday it was prepared to uphold a regulation designed to detect the sale of semi-automatic rifles to Mexican drug cartels, one of the few gun control measures put forward so far by the Obama administration.

Gun retailers and manufacturers, including a trade group based in Newtown, Connecticut, scene of the December 14 school massacre, say the rule is burdensome and violates federal law.

It requires stores in the four U.S. states bordering Mexico to send a notice to federal law enforcement whenever someone buys two or more of rifles during any five-day period.

The measure applies only to high-caliber, semi-automatic rifles that can use a detachable magazine.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), which regulates gun sales, adopted the rule in 2011 amid rising cartel violence and at the urging of gun control groups for President Barack Obama to act.

Thousands of firearms are thought to cross the border illegally into Mexico each year, and semi-automatic rifles with detachable magazines are a favorite of drug traffickers, the ATF said in a report last year.

Mexican authorities recovered more than 68,000 U.S.-sourced guns from 2007 to 2011, the ATF said.

The rule applies to retailers in Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas who, perhaps without realizing it, could be sources for those firearms.

Gun stores "have to create a new system to keep track of that," Richard Gardiner, a lawyer for retailers Foothills Firearms LLC and J&G Sales Ltd, told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Federal law does not allow law enforcement to require that system, he said, calling it burdensome because store workers do not always know which of the guns they sell are covered.

COURT DOUBTS BURDEN

The court's three judges, though, repeatedly doubted whether the rule creates much additional work.

"I don't remember the record containing any evidence of confusion," said Judge Harry Edwards.

ATF has a special phone number for retailers to call if they have questions, such as whether the rule covers a particular rifle, but few people have called, government lawyer Michael Raab told the court.

"Any dealer worth his salt" should know whether most guns he sells fit the criteria, Raab said, echoing the wording of a lower court judge.

Gardiner responded that evidence of the rule's burden is unnecessary because it is a government overreach.

The court is expected to decide within the next few months.

Gun rights advocates have also argued that the ATF measure could lead to a federal database of guns, which they fear would infringe on their rights. Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives have tried to cut off money to enforce the regulation.

The National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade group for gunmakers and a plaintiff in the lawsuit, is based in Newtown, where gunman Adam Lanza killed his mother, 20 children and six school employees before shooting himself in one of the worst U.S. school shootings.

Lower court judges in Texas and Washington have upheld the ATF rule, which is an example of steps Obama can take outside the proposed gun control laws he is expected to send to Congress this month.

The case is National Shooting Sports Foundation Inc, et al, v. B. Todd Jones, U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, No. 12-5009.

(Editing by Xavier Briand)


"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?
1/10/2013 12:15:09 AM

Colorado suspect James Holmes took creepy self-portraits hours before the theater shootings


Sketch of James Holmes being led into court this week. (AP Photo/Bill Robles, Pool)

[Updated at 2:30 p.m. ET/12:30 p.m. MT]

CENTENNIAL, Colo.— Photos recovered from James Holmes’ iPhone show the alleged gunman posing with weapons and making creepy faces in the weeks and hours before the shooting massacre at an Aurora movie theater.

The images were not released to the public, but were shown in court Wednesday during Holmes' preliminary hearing.

It was the state's final move before declaring that it had presented overwhelming evidence that Holmes meticulously planned and executed the attack without remorse.

"Because he wanted to kill all of them, and he knew what he was doing," prosecutor Karen Pearson said in arguing that the case should go to trial.

One of the more disturbing self-portraits was snapped on July 12. It shows his infamous orange-dyed hair flaring out from beneath a black skull cap. His eye color is darkened by black contact lenses, and he is grinning with his tongue sticking out.

Three other self-portraits were snapped approximately six hours before the movie theater shooting. In those photos he is also wearing black contact lenses and making various faces. In one of them, he's holding up one of two semi-automatic pistols he had recently purchased.

"He has a large, toothy smile," Aurora police Sgt. Matthew Fyle said from the witnesses stand.

In two others from July 19, he is posing with parts of homemade bombs he allegedly built. A final photo from July 19 shows an arsenal of guns and black tactical clothing sprawled across a red sheet on his bed.

A self-portrait taken on July 5 shows Holmes with orange-dyed hair and dressed in black combat gear with an assault-like rifle being carried from his shoulder.

Other photos recovered from Holmes' iPhone lead police to believe he began casing the Century 16 theater a month before the shootings.

Four photos taken on June 29, July 5 and July 11 show various interior and exterior images of the movie theater, including doorways, hallways and sidewalks.

Holmes’ lead public defender, Daniel King, did not present evidence or call witnesses during this phase of the case.

“I have no argument to probable cause,” King said. “This is not a trial.”

King said anything he would present would speak to Holmes’ mental illness, and this was not the time to do so.

Judge William Sylvester did not make a ruling at the end of Wednesday's preliminary hearing. He recessed the court until 9 a.m. MT on Friday when he will announce if the evidence presented is enough to move forward with a trial. An arraignment may be held the same day. If so, Holmes' defense attorneys could plead not guilty to preserve Holmes' right to a jury trial.

[Updated at 9:30 a.m. ET/7:30 a.m. MT]

CENTENNIAL, Colo.—Aurora police Sgt. Matthew Fyles, who has supervised the Aurora movie theater massacre investigation, is scheduled to take the stand when the preliminary hearing resumes at 9 a.m. MT.

Prosecutors said late Tuesday that Fyles will be the last witness for the state. It is unknown if shooting suspect James Holmes' defense team will call its own witnesses.

The purpose of the hearing is for District Judge William Sylvester to determine if there is evidence to try Holmes on 166 counts of first-degree murder and attempted murder. Colorado allows dual filing of charges (essentially premeditated and without remorse). Twelve people were killed and 58 wounded in the shooting. An additional 13 suffered nongunshot injuries as a result of the rampage.

Holmes, a former neuroscience doctoral student at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Denver, has been held without bond and in isolation since being arrested without resistance behind the theater minutes after the massacre.


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

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