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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/23/2013 5:17:45 PM
Well, he clearly deserved that!

Politically Active Carrie Underwood Won’t ‘Stick to Singing’

By | Our CountryMon, Apr 22, 2013 11:49 AM EDT

Carrie Underwood (Photo: Ethan Miller)Nobody is going to tell Carrie Underwood to "shut up and sing." The superstar and American Idol is firing back at her state representative for a remark he made in response to her comments on a controversial bill sitting on the governor's desk this month.

Underwood, a longtime animal activist, spoke out with disapproval regarding the "Ag Gag bill" last week--a measure that would require anyone recording images of animal abuse to submit unedited footage or photos to law enforcement within 48 hours.

Leading animal-rights groups adamantly oppose this bill, saying the short deadline will compromise investigations into farming cruelty cases; as well as have potentially dangerous impact on labor issues, food safety, and First Amendment rights.

Underwood agrees: "Shame on TN lawmakers for passing the Ag Gag bill. If Gov. Bill Haslam signs this, he needs to expect me at his front door. Who's with me?" the singer tweeted to her nearly 1.5 million followers last Thursday.

In response, State Representative Andy Holt, who supports the bill, told local news: "I would say that Carrie Underwood will stick to singing, I'll stick to lawmaking."

To this, Underwood tweeted incredulously, "I should stick to singing? Wow...sorry, I'm just a tax paying citizen concerned for the safety of my family."

The "Ag Gag" bill has already passed the state House and Senate and is currently in Haslam's hands. The bill most recently was withdrawn from consideration in the nation's top agricultural state, California, due to serious opposition.

Related:

American Idol updates


"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?
4/23/2013 5:20:08 PM

More rain expected for already swollen rivers


CLARKSVILLE, Mo. (AP) — Communities along the Mississippi River and other Midwestern waterways eyed and in some cases fortified makeshift levees holding back floodwaters that meteorologists said could worsen or be prolonged by looming storms.

Overnight rain from Oklahoma to Michigan led the National Weather Service to heighten the forecast crest of some stretches of rivers while blunting the retreat of other waterways.

Mark Fuchs, a National Weather Service hydrologist, said the latest dousing could be especially troublesome for communities along the Illinois River, which is headed for record crests.

"Along the Illinois, any increase is going to be cause for alarm, adding to their uncertainty and, in some cases, misery," he said late Monday afternoon.

Last week's downpours brought on sudden flooding throughout the Midwest, and high water is blamed for at least three deaths. Authorities in LaSalle, Ill., spent Monday searching for a woman whose van was spotted days earlier near a bridge, and a 12-year-old boy was in critical condition after being pulled from a river near Leadwood, Mo., about 65 miles south of St. Louis.

Shipping resumed Tuesday along a 15-mile stretch of the Mississippi near St. Louis after the Coast Guard said 11 barges that sank last weekend in the rain-swollen waterway were not a hazard to navigation.

Investigators were trying to determine what caused 114 barges to break loose in St. Louis County. Coast Guard Lt. Colin Fogarty said drifting debris such as trees can collect under docked barges, and that this may have weighed on the fleet and the lines that secured them to shore.

Fogarty said efforts to salvage the sunken barges would begin soon.

The prospect of additional rain was not welcome in Clarksville, Mo., about 70 miles north of St. Louis.

Days ago bused-in prison inmates worked shoulder to shoulder with the National Guard and local volunteers to build a makeshift floodwall of sand and gravel. But on Monday the barrier showed signs of strain. Crews scrambled to patch trouble spots and build a second sandbag wall to catch any water weaseling through.

In Grafton, Ill., some 40 miles northeast of St. Louis, Mayor Tom Thompson said the small community was holding its own; by early Monday afternoon the Mississippi was 10 feet above flood stage. Waters lapped against some downtown buildings, forcing shops such as Hawg Pit BBQ to clear out and detours to be established around town. One key intersection was under 8 inches of water.

"If it gets another foot (higher), it's going to become another issue," Thompson said. Townsfolk "are kinda watching and holding their breath. ... Some things are going to really be close to the wire."

Elsewhere, smaller rivers caused big problems. In Grand Rapids, Mich., the Grand River hit a record 21.85 feet, driving hundreds of people from their homes and flooding parts of downtown.

Spots south of St. Louis aren't expected to crest until late this week, and significant flooding is possible in places like Ste. Genevieve, Mo., Cape Girardeau, Mo., and Cairo, Ill. Further downriver, flood warnings have been issued for Kentucky and Tennessee.

___

Salter reported from St. Louis.

"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?
4/23/2013 5:22:55 PM

Syrian rockets hit Lebanon as tensions spike

Associated Press/Aleppo Media Center AMC - This citizen journalism image provided by Aleppo Media Center AMC which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows members of the free Syrian Army hiding behind scrap metal during an attack against Syrian government forces, in the neighborhood of al-Amerieh in Aleppo, Syria, Sunday, April. 21, 2013. The Syrian opposition called on Hezbollah to withdraw its fighters from the country immediately, as activists said regime troops supported by pro-government gunmen linked to the Lebanese Shiite militant group battled rebels Sunday for control of a string of villages near the Lebanon-Syria border. (AP Photo/Aleppo Media Center AMC)

BEIRUT (AP) — Two Syrian rockets struck Lebanon on Tuesday, causing material damage and heightening tensions between Lebanese Shiite and Sunni communities over neighboring Syria's civil war, security officials in Beirut said.

Syrian rockets have hit the predominantly Shiite areas in Lebanon on several occasions in the past two weeks, in one instance killing at least two people.

The shelling came just hours after two leading Lebanese Sunni Muslim clerics rallied followers late Monday for holy war, or jihad, in Syria. The calls appealed on fighters to go to protect Sunnis in villages under attack by Syrian regime troops and pro-government Shiite gunmen.

Lebanon and Syria share a complex web of political and sectarian ties and rivalries that are easily enflamed. Lebanon, a country plagued by decades of strife, has been on edge since the uprising in Syria against President Bashar Assad erupted in March 2011.

Pro and anti-Assad groups in Lebanon have engaged in several deadly clashes. Many Lebanese Shiites back Assad, whose regime is dominated by members his minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. Lebanese Sunnis, on the other hand, back the rebels in Syria who are mostly from that country's Sunni majority.

The officials in Beirut said one of the rockets Tuesday hit a house under construction on the edge of the northeastern town of Hermel near the Lebanon-Syria border. The other fell in a field, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Meanwhile, heavy fighting was ongoing on the Syrian side of the border Tuesday around the strategic town of Qusair where troops and pro-government Shiite gunmen backed by Lebanon's militantHezbollah group have been advancing for days.

A government official in the provincial capital of Homs said troops were making progress, adding that Qusair "will be safe soon." He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the military's progress.

The Qusair region around the Orontes River is strategic because it links the capital Damascus with the Mediterranean coastal enclave that is the heartland of Assad's Alawite sect.

In Lebanon, hard-line Sunni cleric Sheik Ahmad al-Assir, one of the militant group Hezbollah's harshest critics, issued a religious edict, a fatwa, urging Sunni Lebanese men "to defend Qusair."

Another Sunni cleric, Sheikh Salem al-Rafie who is based in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli, issued another fatwa later Monday, calling for a "general mobilization among Sunnis to protect Sunni brothers." He said the people of Qusair had told them they need "money and men."

Al-Assir, based in the southern port city of Sidon, and al-Rafie said Hezbollah has violated the Lebanese government's neutral stance toward Syria's civil war by taking part in the fighting.

Over the past several weeks, Hezbollah, which denies taking part in Syria's conflict, held several funerals in Lebanon for its members — gunmen who it said were killed while "performing their jihadi duties." The group did not say where or how the men were killed, but it is widely known they died fighting in Syria.

Lebanese Sunni fighters have also been killed in Syria while going to fight with the rebels trying to remove Assad from power.

Top Hezbollah official, Nabil Kaouk, said Monday that the group is "performing a national duty" toward Lebanese Shiites living in Syrian border towns and villages.

Syria's conflict started with largely peaceful protests against Assad's regime in March 2011 but eventually turned into a civil war. More than 70,000 people have been killed in the war, according to the United Nations.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/23/2013 10:02:56 PM

Bomb Suspects' Mom Says Sons Only Guilty of Being Muslim

By KIRIT RADIA | Good Morning America5 hours ago

Good Morning America - Bomb Suspects' Mom Says Sons Only Guilty of Being Muslim (ABC News)

The mother of the Boston bombing suspects said today that her sons were only guilty of being Muslims.

Zubeidat Tsarnaeva left her house accompanied by her brother-in-law and tried to evade the crowd of television cameras that followed her. She ignored questions from reporters, but when ABC News asked her "What did your son do?" Tsarnaeva turned and shouted "My son just was Muslim. My son was Muslim, that's it."

Then she and the relative got into a taxi and sped away, ending her first appearance in public since Friday's bloody standoff with police that left her older son Tamerlan Tsarnaev dead and ended when his younger brother Dzhokhar was captured alive.

Moments before the mother emerged from the house, a spokeswoman for the family told reporters the suspects' parents did not want to talk to reporters because they are grieving. She said the mother could only look at a photo of her son, which has been circulating on the internet and claims to be his naked dead body, and cry.

"She is in a difficult condition and she can't talk," the spokeswoman, local human rights activist Heda Seratova, said. "She doesn't understand what she says."

A lawyer for Seratova's organization also addressed reporters and said the suspects' parents are still in shock. Despite claims by both parents that their sons were framed and killed by the United Statesgovernment, the lawyer expressed support for the investigation into last week's Boston Marathon bombings and the subsequent standoff on Friday.

The parents plan to travel to the United States to collect Tamerlan's body, the lawyer said.

"The father wants to go to the United States to find justice," he said.

In a phone interview with ABC News on Monday, Tsarnaeva said she had encouraged Tamerlan to embrace Islam about five years ago. Tamerlan traveled to this restive region in southern Russia, home to an Islamic insurgency, last year for about six months. Investigators are exploring whether he became radicalized during that trip or met any militants here. Family members insist Tamerlan's views of Islam were formed in the United States.

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"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?
4/23/2013 10:06:20 PM

‘An Absolute Shock’: Boston Bombing Suspect’s Widow Releases Statement Through Her Attorney


Katherinne Russell, the 24-year-old widow of Boston bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaeva, released a short statement through her lawyer, Amato DeLuca, on Tuesday morning. It was the first time she has spoken out since the terror attack unfolded last Monday (although her mother did previously release a brief written comment following Tsarnaeva's death).

Including informational tidbits that have been reported in media of late, the release explained that Russell, referred to as "Katie" in the text, grew up in Rhode Island. That said, the release claims that she has been living in Cambridge, Massachusetts, since getting married in 2010, WPRI-TV reports.

There has been mixed reporting about where, exactly, she lived leading up to the attacks, with one of her parents' neighbors seemingly telling the Daily Mail that she had been residing with her parents for quite some time (and that her husband had not been seen in at least a year).

An Absolute Shock: Boston Bombing Suspects Widow Releases Statement Through Her AttorneyHow Doctor's Daughter Became The Muslim Convert Widow Of Boston Bomber

Katherine Russell (Photo Credit: MailOnline.com)

According to DeLuca, the young woman "has been working long hours, caring for people in their homes who are unable to care for themselves." Additionally, the attorney claims that she is assisting authorities in their investigation of her deceased husband.

Here's the statement in full:

Our firm is representing Katherine Russell and she has asked us to make a short statement. As you know from news reports, Katie married her husband in June of 2010. Since then, she has been living in Cambridge, raising her child and working long hours, caring for people in their homes who are unable to care for themselves. Katie grew up in Rhode Island and has always remained close to her parents and sisters here, as well as her extended family. She is fortunate to have the support of her loving family now, as they struggle to come to terms with these events and the deep sorrow we all feel following the events of last week. Meanwhile, she is doing everything she can to assist with the investigation.

The injuries and loss of life - to people who came to celebrate a race and a holiday - has caused profound distress and sorrow to Katie and her family. The reports of involvement by her husband and brother-in-law came as an absolute shock to them all. As a mother, a sister, a daughter, a wife, Katie deeply mourns the pain and loss to innocent victims - students, law enforcement, families and our community. In the aftermath of this tragedy, she, her daughter and her family are trying to come to terms with these events.

The aforementioned text was read aloud this morning outside of the DeLuca and Weizenbaum law offices, WLNE-TV reports.

Featured image Credit: MailOnline.com

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

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