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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/10/2013 10:52:35 PM

Leaked Report: Egypt’s Army Complicit in ‘Arab Spring’ Torture and Killings

Egyptian protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square in February 2011 during demonstrations against the then president, Hosni Mubarak. Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian

Egyptian protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in February 2011 during demonstrations against the then president, Hosni Mubarak. Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian

Stephen: And another truth comes to light. While we may have all thought it, a leaked document shows that former Eqyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s army took part in killings and crimes including torture and forced disappearances during the 2011 ‘Arab Spring revolution.

Egypt’s Army Took Part in Torture and Killings During Revolution, Report Shows

By Evan Hill and Muhammad Mansour in Cairo, The Guardian – April 10, 2013

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/apr/10/egypt-army-torture-killings-revolution

Egypt’s armed forces participated in forced disappearances, torture and killings across the country – including in the Egyptian Museum – during the 2011 uprising, even as military leaders publicly declared their neutrality, according to a leaked presidential fact-finding report on revolution-era crimes.

The report, submitted to the president, Mohamed Morsi, by his own hand-picked committee in January, has yet to be made public, but a chapter obtained by the Guardian implicates the military in a catalogue of crimes against civilians, beginning with their first deployment to the streets. The chapter recommends that the government investigate the highest ranks of the armed forces to determine who was responsible.

More than 1,000 people, including many prisoners, are said to have gone missing during the 18 days of the revolt. Scores turned up in Egypt’s morgues, shot or bearing signs of torture. Many have simply disappeared, leaving behind desperate families who hope, at best, that their loved ones are serving prison sentences that the government does not acknowledge.

The findings of the high-level investigation, implicating Egypt’s powerful and secretive military, will put pressure on Morsi, who assumed power from the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces after his election last June and has declined to prosecute any officers, despite allegations that some participated in abuse. They could also figure in the retrial of the toppled president Hosni Mubarak and his former interior minister Habib el-Adly, who are set to return to court on Saturday to face charges – perhaps supported by new evidence from the fact-finding committee – that they were responsible for killing protesters during the revolt.

“This chapter sheds light on new and extremely disturbing incidents that implicate the military in serious human rights violations,” said Hossam Bahgat, the director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights. “In particular, it uncovers new details on one of the most secret aspects of the 18 days of revolt that ended with the ouster of Mubarak: the role played by the armed forces in supporting Mubarak against protesters from the date they were deployed on 28 January 2011, until the first military statement was issued in support of the protesters on 10 February.”

Among the incidents explored in the chapter, which focuses on the fate of those who went missing or were forcibly disappeared, investigators found that members of the armed forces detained an unknown but likely large number of civilians at a checkpoint along a highway south of Cairo who have never been seen again; detained and tortured protesters in the Egyptian Museum before moving them to military prisons, killing at least one person; and delivered to government coroners in the capital at least 11 unidentified bodies, believed to be former prisoners, who were buried in indigent graves four months later.

“The committee found that a number of citizens died during their detention by the armed forces and that they were buried in indigent graves, as they were considered unidentified,” the report states, adding that authorities did not investigate, despite evidence of injuries and severe torture.

“The committee recommends investigating the leaders of the armed forces about the issuance of orders and instructions to subordinates who committed acts of torture and enforced disappearance,” it states.

Radia Atta, whose husband disappeared after being held at a military roadblock south of Cairo. Photograph: David Degner

Radia Atta, whose husband disappeared after being held at a military roadblock south of Cairo. Photograph: David Degner

One woman who gave testimony to the committee, Radia Atta, told the Guardian that her husband, Ayman Issa, disappeared after being held at a military roadblock on a major desert highway south of Cairo, near the pyramids of Dahshour. He was on his way to work on 30 January 2011, after leaving their home in Ashment, a rural village in the governorate of Beni Suef. Issa was probably arrested some time between 7.30am and 8am, Atta said, during a curfew set by the military.

When Atta arrived at the checkpoint that afternoon, after receiving a call from a neighbour who saw Issa being arrested, she said she saw a staggering number of detained civilians lying on the ground with their hands and feet bound. Officers at the checkpoint sent Atta to a police station in Giza, the capital’s western district, that had been commandeered by the military.

There, Atta saw soldiers frisking and beating detainees as they arrived from the checkpoint. One soldier handed Atta her husband’s passport and said he had been charged with “rioting” against the army and referred to military prosecutors.

When Atta obtained permission from the prosecutors to visit her husband in Hykestep, a large military base with a prison on Cairo’s eastern outskirts, he could not be found. Her complaints to the defence ministry, interior ministry, and civilian and military prosecutors have failed to turn up any trace of her husband.

The military declined to comment on the report, saying it could take up to three weeks to respond. A source at the president’s office said Morsi had not seen the findings, which were being investigated by the prosecutor general. “As soon as results appear, they will be made public,” the source said. “The findings you mentioned are speculative, and not authentic. We haven’t received the findings from the committee, and the investigations are still ongoing.”

Protesters and opposition politicians have long called for the military to be held accountable for scores of alleged incidents of torture and killings during the uprising and 16 months of military rule that followed. The military has prosecuted at least four people, including three low-level conscripts, for incidents that occurred later in 2011, but no member of the armed forces is known to have faced charges for abuse or killings during the revolution. Human rights lawyers say Egypt’s new constitution, which was passed with Morsi’s urging in December and gives the military sole authority to investigate its own members, made prosecuting soldiers impossible.

The constitution is “a bar forever”, said Heba Morayef, the Egypt director for Human Rights Watch.

“We’ve been arguing from the start that there will never be military accountability within the military judiciary. It’s just never going to happen in Egypt,” she said.

The 16-member fact-finding committee, appointed by Morsi last July, investigated 19 violent incidents and submitted a roughly 800-page report to Morsi and the prosecutor general, Talaat Abdallah, but neither has released or publicly responded to the report’s findings and recommendations.

Dahshour, Egypt, the village near where Ayman Issa was stopped before he went missing. Photograph: David Degner

Dahshour, Egypt, the village near where Ayman Issa was stopped before he went missing. Photograph: David Degner

Despite calls from some human rights lawyers, including the committee member Ahmed Ragheb, to form a special authority that could have prosecuted crimes committed by both civil and military authorities, no new charges have been filed. An office under Abdallah for the “revolution protection prosecution”, approved by Morsi in November, says it is investigating new cases, but it will not be able to charge military officers.

“The committee reached important findings, but unfortunately Morsi didn’t do his role in declaring the report to the public opinion and did not take serious steps with the security apparatus that was involved in crimes against demonstrators,” Ragheb said.

Egypt has not created a national database to track those who disappeared and has not established a ministry to assist their families, as Libya did after its revolution. The National Council for Care of the Revolution Martyrs’ Families and Wounded, established in December 2011, claims to have paid out millions of pounds in compensation but does not track missing people.

Disappearances are particularly difficult to investigate, human rights activists say. Egyptian authorities may intentionally fail to keep records, and ordinary missing-person cases can be impossible to distinguish from forced disappearances at the hands of security forces.

Mohsen Bahnasy, a human rights lawyer and member of the fact-finding committee, said the military and interior ministry had refused to provide the names of soldiers or officers working at checkpoints, police stations and ad-hoc detention centres where civilians disappeared. The failure to turn over the names “is in itself an indication of a criminal cover-up”, Bahgat said.

Bahnasy said he intends to sue the armed forces and the government to compel them to reveal the officers’ names and a definitive list of who they arrested.

Bahnasy and others say they cannot reliably estimate how many people disappeared during the revolt. Nermeen Yousry, who in 2012 helped found an independent advocacy campaign for the disappeared called We Will Find Them, said Egypt’s military-appointed cabinet reported in March 2011 that 1,200 missing-person cases had been filed during the revolution. The fact-finding committee, after collecting witness statements, testimonies from relatives of the disappeared, and data turned over by Cairo prosecutors and the Forensic Medical Authority, could only confirm 68 disappearances. Bahnasy said he believes there are hundreds more.

“This is a very small number, of course. The real numbers are much higher,” said Hassan el-Azhari, a lawyer with the Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression, who has also filed a case to force the government to turn over the names of those arrested.

The military, interior ministry and General Intelligence Service – Egypt’s top spy agency – did not provide the committee with any information about civilians who may have been detained without identification, and Bahnasy said many families of the disappeared did not come forward.

But evidence compiled by the committee points to a wave of arrests, torture and deaths.

In addition to at least four civilians, though probably many more, who disappeared after being detained at the roadblock near the Dahshour pyramids, the committee also compiled evidence that the military detained protesters in and around Tahrir Square and transferred them to military prisons during the revolt. Investigators found that armed military intelligence officers with cameras booked rooms in a major hotel adjacent to the square on 25 January, the first day of protests, and observed and recorded subsequent events, Bahnasy said.

“Military intelligence had evidence of what happened and hid them from the committee and the judiciary,” he said.

The committee found evidence that at least one protester who disappeared from Tahrir Square during the revolt and was later found dead – a young lawyer from the governorate of Monofeya, around 45 miles (75km) north of Cairo – was detained and tortured by the military.

Osama Abdel Hamid travelled to Cairo with colleagues from his local lawyers syndicate on 1 February 2011 to participate in the protests, his father told the committee. Karim el-Gharbali, a friend who joined Abdel Hamid in the square, told investigators that the lawyer was fluent in English and helped foreign journalists translate painted banners and shouted slogans.

Some time after the 2 February assault on the square by Mubarak loyalists that came to be known as the Camel Battle, Abdel Hamid was abducted by men in civilian clothes and detained in the basement of the nearby Egyptian Museum, Gharbali said.

Another witness, Hani el-Azab, told the committee that he and Abdel Hamid were taken in armoured military vehicles to the museum at around 6am on 3 February and were tortured and photographed with weapons and money. Before dawn on 4 February, Azab said, he and Abdel Hamid were transferred to a military prison operated by a unit he identified as Military Intelligence Group 75, where they were tortured and forced to confess to crimes. Finally, Azab said, the two were moved and held for three days in Hykestep, where Abdel Hamid died from the torture and beatings.

Abdel Hamid’s father, Abdel Moneim Allam, found his son’s body 12 days later, after receiving a tip from a lawyer who said it was being stored in Cairo’s Zeinhom morgue. It was “misshapen” by torture, bore signs of beatings, and had a fractured skull, he told the committee.

Bahnasy and Azhari said that the hundreds of people who they believe disappeared during the uprising were probably killed. In addition to protesters who vanished and civilians who were arrested from the streets, thousands of prisoners remain lost, and the two lawyers believe many of them are dead.

Little is known about the violent events that wracked Egypt’s prisons in the days following 28 January, when the police fled their posts. According to the interior ministry, about 24,000 prisoners escaped, and 21,000 have since been re-arrested. Taqadum el-Khatib, a political activist who worked with the fact-finding committee, has said that several prisons came under co-ordinated attacks by unidentified men and that guards used teargas and live ammunition in failed attempts to repel the assaults and subdue rioting prisoners.

Other reports alleged that security forces may have intentionally allowed prisoners to escape from certain prisons, while guards at other facilities opened fire and killed dozens of inmates who rioted when they heard that prisons were being opened. Witnesses claimed that during the chaos, some prisoners were left abandoned and locked inside, while others who escaped were later arrested by security forces and disappeared.

In February 2011, Amnesty International found that inmates who were released from Fayoum prison on 28 January and detained on 30 January at the Dahshour checkpoint were later found dead. Officers told two men whose brothers were among the detained that they could inquire at the interior ministry about where their relatives would be taken. Instead, the men found their brothers’ corpses, bearing signs of torture, nine days later in a Cairo morgue alongside 68 other bodies identified as Fayoum prison inmates.

According to data provided to the fact-finding committee by the prosecutor general’s office, the Forensic Medical Authority officially recovered 19 unclaimed bodies during the revolution, 11 of whom had been delivered to coroners by military prosecutors, and 10 of whom were identified as inmates from Fayoum prison. All were turned over between 2 and 8 February.

Other disappearances detailed in the committee’s report remain harder to explain.

Sabah Abdel Fattah, the mother of 26-year-old Mohamed Seddik, told the Guardian that her son, a member of the opposition Dignity party, disappeared after leaving home to protest on 28 January. On 11 February, the day Mubarak resigned, Seddik texted his cousins, saying: “Talk to me.” When Abdel Fattah reached him on his mobile phone, Seddik was surrounded by voices and car horns, as if in a crowded vehicle.

“Yes mum, I’m mo …” he said, before the line cut. Abdel Fattah believes he was either saying his name, Mohamed, or “mahbous”, the Arabic word for arrested.

When Abdel Fattah reached Seddik’s phone later that night, a man answered and swore at her. No one answered for another three months, when finally another man picked up and said he had bought the line. A month later, a third man answered and explained that his brother, a soldier in the army, had found the sim card near el-Gabal el-Ahmar, or Red Mountain, a well-known riot police camp in Cairo. When Abdel Fattah visited the Red Mountain area, residents told her that prisoners had been held in the camp during the revolution but had been released.

Azhari says that a number of families who continued to call their disappeared relatives’ phones were answered by neighbourhood residents who said they found the sim cards in piles of rubbish outside Red Mountain.

Abdel Fattah said she thought the military had secretly detained civilians during the revolution, some of whom had been sentenced. She claims to have been told by family friends in the intelligence services that her son was given a three-year sentence and is probably in a military prison. Morayef and other human rights advocates say such a scenario is highly unlikely, since the thousands of civilians known to have been brought before military trials since 2011 are transferred to civilian prisons after their case is decided and usually can contact their families.

Abdel Fattah believes her son will return to the family’s apartment, down an unpaved back alley in Cairo’s Zeitoun district, where his framed portrait sits on top of a bookshelf, when he completes his sentence. Human rights lawyers say most will never return.

Yousry, of We Will Find Them, said the security forces had tried to disappear those who died in their custody “to make it harder for the families to ever find their kids, so they don’t convict themselves”.

“Actually me, myself, I used to chant: ‘The army and the people are one hand,’ but now, yes, maybe we will realise that the army was never on our side,” Yousry said. “I guess they were trying to break down the revolution. They wanted to contain it and make people scared, terrify people from going to the square.”


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/10/2013 10:54:23 PM

Disgraced UK Bank Boss Hands Back His Knighthood

The soon-to-be Mr James Crosby

The soon-to-be Mr James Crosby

Stephen: A knighthood (or a damehood, its female equivalent) harks back to the more class-structured British military and aristocracy of old, yet remains one of the highest ‘honours’ an individual in the United Kingdom can be ‘awarded’. Traditionally, knighthoods were bestowed by the Queen for military service, although today, being dubbed a Sir or Dame usually recognises that a person has made a significant contribution to national life. Barely a handful people have ever had their knighthood rescinded. Here, however, is a disgraced businessman – and a banker at that – personally giving his right to be called Sir. Now that’s a turnaround.

Ex-HBOS Chief Sir James Crosby Gives Up Knighthood and Part of Pension

By Alistair Osborne, Business Editor, The Telegraph, UK – April 9, 2013

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/9982384/Ex-HBOS-chief-Sir-James-Crosby-gives-up-knighthood-and-part-of-pension.html

Sir James Crosby, the former HBOS chief executive, is dramatically giving up his knighthood and almost a third of his £580,000-a-year pension after being severely criticised by a report into the downfall of the bank.

Breaking his silence after Friday’s damning account from the (UK) Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards, Sir James said he was “deeply sorry for what happened at HBOS and the ensuing consequences for former colleagues, shareholders, taxpayers and society in general”.

Sir James has also quit as the senior non-executive director of Compass, ending days of speculation over his position at the FTSE100 catering company.

He acknowledged that the report, which painted him as the “architect of the strategy that set the course for disaster” had “made for very chastening reading”.

The commission, chaired by Tory MP Andrew Tyrie, found a “colossal failure of senior management” and called for Sir James and two other former HBOS directors – his successor Andy Hornby and chairman Lord Stevenson – to be banned for life from the financial services industry.

Sir James, who stepped down from HBOS in 2006, said: “Shortly after I left HBOS, I received the enormous honour of a knighthood in recognition of my own – and many other people’s – contribution to the creation of a company which was then widely regarded as a great success.

“In view of what has happened subsequently to HBOS, I believe that it is right that I should now ask the appropriate authorities to take the necessary steps for its removal.”

In volunteering to give up his honour, Sir James was seeking to avoid a re-run of the hounding of former Royal Bank of Scotland boss Fred Goodwin, who was stripped of his knighthood after a public outcry.

HBOS was rescued by Lloyds Banking Group at the height of the financial crisis in 2008 but still required a £30bn taxpayer bail-out. Sir James was lambasted by the commission for putting in place a “culture of perilously high–risk lending”, where shoddy risk controls produced an “accident waiting to happen”.

Sir James said he would also give up 30pc of his “substantial pension entitlement”, though the cut will still leave him with an index-linked £406,000 this year that will rise with inflation.

That is more than the £342,500 a year Mr Goodwin was left with in 2009 when he volunteered to cut his own pension by £200,000 annually. He had originally retired on £703,000 a year but that was reduced to £555,000 after he took out a £2.8m lump sum.

Of his own pension cut, Sir James said: “I will be discussing how this reduction is implemented, and whether the amount waived should go to support good causes, or benefit shareholders, with the pension scheme’s employer and trustees.”

He added that “with great personal sadness”, he had also decided to stand down as a trustee of charity Cancer Research UK.

“Throughout my business career I have always tried to act with integrity and to the best of my abilities,” Sir James said. “I have had the enormous privilege of working with people and organisations about whom I cared deeply. I would like to express my sincere regret for events and my appreciation for the personal support I have been shown.”

As chief executive of the Halifax bank, Sir James oversaw 2001′s merger with Bank of Scotland to create HBOS and ran the group until 2006.

A friend of Sir James said: “He did not want to end up like Fred Goodwin hounded for the rest of his life. He wanted to be able to look people in the eye and say he did the right thing. Part of him wanted to fight but he did not think it was tenable. He has a business career, he does not want to stop.”

Labour MP John Mann, who sits on the Treasury Select Committee, welcomed Sir James’s actions, saying: “This sets the benchmark for others and it is a highly appropriate. At last we have a banker who is prepared to say he got it wrong and wishes to make amends.” He added on Twitter that the step Sir James had taken “meets exactly my demands”.

However, John Cridland, director-general of the CBI employers lobby group, said: “I think it’s a very personal decision and I can imagine for James Crosby quite a painful one. But because it’s personal I don’t think you can draw too many lessons.

“I wouldn’t go as far to say it’s unique because you could conceive of situations where other corporate failures raise questions over honours. But I think it would be unfair if this were seen to be normative behaviour in that you were expected to do this.”

One senior banking figure said: “I think this is a damage limitation. I don’t see it as a redemption.”

Lord Stevenson did not return calls requesting comment, though he received his honour before chairing HBOS and draws no pension from the company.

On Friday, within hours of the report’s publication, Sir James resigned from his role as an adviser to private equity firm Bridgepoint Capital.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/11/2013 2:00:02 AM
How Could 1,600 Years of Ice Melt in Just 25 Years?














1,600 years of ice in the Andes has melted in just a quarter of a century. It’s yet more evidence about climate change caused by carbon emissions, a fact that climate skeptics still deny, even asGreenland is becoming a greenhouse, the earth is the hottest it’s been in 11,000 years and theNorth Pole will soon be open for commercial shipping.

Last week, glaciologists from Ohio State University reported in the journal Science that 1,600 years of ice in the Andes mountains in Perus melted in a mere 25 years. The Quelccaya ice capis the world’s largest tropical ice sheet and sits at 18,000 feet above sea level. Glaciologist Lonnie G. Thompson and his colleagues have been studying the ice cap intermittently for decades. About a quarter of a century ago, they discovered long-dead plants near a lake formed from meltwater from the glacier; chemical analysis showed that these plants were lived about 4,700 years ago, meaning that the ice cap had shrunk to its smallest in five millennia.

Further exploration has now turned up plants that had been frozen by glaciers even further back in time, about 6,300 years ago. Had the plants been exposed at “any time in the last 6,000 years … they would have decayed,” as Thompson explains in the New York Times. In just about 25 years, 1,600 years of ice has melted.

Thompson’s research is further evidence that the melting of glaciers is occurring at the fastest rate ever since the last ice age. The impact on local communities in the Andes could soon be felt: while glacial melting is causing a current increase in water supplies and leading to population growth in the region, the fact is that the glaciers are shrinking. Water supplies in cities including Lima and La Paz could eventually decline by as much as 50 percent, Douglas R. Hardy, a University of Massachusetts researcher notes to the New York Times.

It goes without saying that “glaciers will melt faster than ever and loss could be irreversible, warn scientists.” This is actually the title of a recent report from about glaciers elsewhere, including Canada’s Arctic Archipelago. Using computer modeling, European scientists have been studying the rate at which glaciers in Canada’s Arctic Archipelago have been melting. Their computer simulations have, as it turns out, correctly predicted the shrinking of the glaciers, due to snow melting on the tundra and sea ice loss from around them.

After Greenland and Antartica, Canada’s Arctic Archipelago glaciers are the third-largest ice body in the world. In 2000, temperatures in the Arctic Archipelago rose by 1 to 2 degrees Centigrade, the volume of ice significantly shrank and the sea level rose. Should the Canadian ice caps melt completely, the scientists predict a rise of global average sea level of 20 centimeters, or almost 8 inches.

Knowing that the World Bank has predicted that Peru’s mountaintop glaciers are melting, Peruvian activist-inventor Eduardo Gold has proposed to paint the mountaintops white to “simulate the reflective qualities of mountaintop glaciers and help slow the warming effect that ice-free mountaintops may have on the surrounding environment.” It’s a clearly outlandish idea and the Peruvian government has said it plans to channel funds to other climate adaptation projects. Given the repeated reports about climate change’s irreversible effects, one sometimes has to wonder if we may end up trying such desperate measures.

Related Care2 Coverage

Are You Ready For Earth Hour 2013?

The North Pole Could Be Open to Shipping Very, Very Soon

We’re on the Brink of the Worst Drought in 1,000 Years

Photo from Thinkstock

Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/how-could-1600-years-of-ice-melt-in-just-25-years.html#ixzz2Q7DvOvv0

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/11/2013 2:04:51 AM
Would You Be Willing to Endure What Farm Animals Do?















Activism has taken an interesting turn with a movement that was started by Sasha Boojor, 27, from Tel Aviv, which led to three activists branding themselves in public with the number “269″ in an effort to raise awareness about the things that are done to anonymous farm animals every day.

The number 269 was chosen because it was the number given to a white calf who was born on an Israeli dairy farm and destined for the slaughterhouse. His life mimics millions of other calves who are removed almost immediately from their mothers, marked with tags and brands and shipped off to a feedlot for fattening before finally being sent to a slaughterhouse and killed. Calf 269 isn’t special. He was just noticed and the group hopes that he will give an identity to all of the millions upon millions of individuals like him who are exploited, overlooked and forgotten.

We’re easily touched by stories of individual animals, their personalities and their ability to forgive, love and enjoy life and are equally horrified by graphic images of the stark reality and cruel industry practices that many of these animals are forced to live though. But the ones who are saved whose stories reach the public are only a lucky few who, like calf 269, are ever recognized, while billions of others live and die in the shadows. Their individual personalities, desires, fear, pain and distress seem to go without consideration as consumers continue to contribute to the mass exploitation, intensive confinement, mutilation and slaughter of species used in agriculture on a daily basis.

Credit: 269life

“This anonymous male calf will be forever immortalized on our bodies, and hopefully this message of solidarity will somehow bring a new way of looking at non-human animals. 
No animal should be exploited to satisfy the selfish needs and whimsical desires of humans, and that is why we chose to use the industry’s own method of objectifying living beings as this symbolic means to convey our idea,” the group 269life writes on its website.

Since this movement started, it has gained traction around the world with hundreds of people joining and attending events, many of whom have since tattooed the number on their bodies in solidarity, while a few others have withstood hot branding the way it’s done to calves – each with their own beliefs, stories and reasons for participating. An estimated 800 people in different parts of the world were tattooed on World Vegan Day last November 1, reports Haaretz.

“We aim to bring the pain and horror other animals face each and every day out of the suppressed darkness and into the realm of everyday life,” states the group.

After recently coming under fire, and investigation, for leaving animal heads and dying the water red in fountains in Jaffa and Tel Aviv, Bojoor told Haaretz, “a few meters from every fountain there is a supermarket filled with carcasses of those animals. I think it’s a bit over the top to set up a special police team for food coloring in fountains. It’s not clear why people are shocked by the sight of animal heads but are perfectly calm when they eat other animal organs.”

Warning: this video contains violent images.


Related Stories:

Why Are We Still Being Deceived by Egg Labels?

Veal Calves Too Weak to Stand Will Not be Slaughtered, Announces USDA

Will the Fifth Attempt to Ban Antibiotics on Farms Succeed?


Photo credit: 269life


Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/would-you-be-willing-to-endure-what-farm-animals-do.html#ixzz2Q7FFevhs

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/11/2013 10:19:26 AM

Gunman holed up with four firefighter hostages in Georgia

Yahoo! News/WSBTV - Five firefighters held hostage in Suwanee, Georgia

ATLANTA (Reuters) - A gunman was barricaded in a home in Georgia on Wednesday with fourfirefighters he took as hostages after they responded to what appeared to be a medical emergency call, officials said.

The man initially held a fifth firefighter captive in the home, in Suwanee, about 35 miles northeast of Atlanta, but let that person leave to move a fire truck, police and fire officials said.

Officials were not releasing details about what happened inside the house or a possible motive but said the hostages did not appear to have been harmed.

"We're not getting any word that any of our firefighters have been injured," said Tommy Rutledge, spokesman for the Gwinnett County Fire Department.

The five firefighters, who also are trained as paramedics, had responded to what was believed to be a routine medical call, Rutledge said.

"There was no indication that they would meet with someone who was hostile," he said.

Rutledge said the firefighters had alerted their dispatch center about the incident, but he could not say whether they were still in contact with officials.

Television footage of the scene showed a well-groomed, suburban neighborhood of two-story homes filled with police cars and fire engines. Residents were not being allowed in or out of the neighborhood, which they described in television reports as quiet.

(Reporting by Colleen Jenkins and David Beasley; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Steve Orlofsky)


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