Saturday, March 19, 2016

World switches off lights for Earth Hour



Jessica Guynn, USA TODAY

3 hours ago


In 178 countries and territories around the world Saturday, millions of people are switching off their lights for Earth Hour, an annual event to highlight the global threat from climate change.

Some 350 world landmarks including the Empire State Building and the Eiffel Tower will go dark for 60 minutes starting at 8:30 pm. local time Saturday.



Christophe Archambault, AFP/Getty Images


The Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn) lit (top) and with lights out (bottom) during the Earth Hour in Bangkok.

This year's theme celebrates "Places We Love" — the mountains, rivers, beaches, reefs, forests and national parks that organizers say are in peril from climate change.

Earth Hour is hoping to harness momentum for climate change after world leaders reached a landmark accord in December to lower planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions.

The lights-out event began in Sydney as an initiative of conservation group World Wildlife Fund in 2007. It caught on around the globe the following year.

This year, Facebook users are being asked to change their profile pictures and donate their social feeds to show support for Earth Hour.


Source




Sabbath rest poem




Published on Mar 19, 2016


FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law.

Due to the importance of the subject matter, this video is a re-upload of the same video that was posted in 2012.

Many in the Christian world profess their faith in Christ but when it comes obeying Christ and abide by His law, they refuse to and reject His law including Christ’s 7th day Sabbath commandment written black on white in Exodus 20:8-11.

The Sabbath commandment says, Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work: But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates: For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: therefore the LORD blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it.

Exodus 31:13; Ezekiel 20:12, 20; Isaiah 58:13; Isaiah 66:23, Mark 2:27-28 and Hebrews 4:4-9 point to the importance of upholding the 7th day Sabbath commandment of the Word. Christ’s apostles and first century church kept the 7th day Sabbath, following Christ's resurrection and ascension to heaven, in Acts13:14, Acts 13:27; Acts 13:42-44; Acts 15:21; Acts 16:13; Acts 17:2 & Acts 18:4.

Accordingly, the Sabbath commandment remains for the saints of the Most High.

Revelation 14:12 says, Here's the patience of the saints, here are they that keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus. This includes the Sabbath commandment.

For more information and videos on Christian beliefs and prophecy, please visit www.theseventhdayremnantchurch.org; www.remnantofgod.org; www.john1429.org along with SDRMinistries.org and NicholasPoGM's YouTube channels.

Pope Francis is on Instagram: The Pontiff launches next step of his digital 'journey'


His first image was captioned with 'pray for me'



Pope Francis addresses a crowd in St Peter’s Square, Rome, after mass on Tuesday Getty Images


Anyone looking for some spiritual guidance can now turn to Instagram after Pope Francis began the first step of his “new journey” by launching his account.

The Pontiff continued his digital journey on Saturday by sharing a picture of himself kneeling down and praying with the caption ‘pray for me’ written in nine languages.

In a tweet announcing his arrival, Francis explained that his account is part of “a new journey, on Instagram, to walk with you along the path of mercy and the tenderness of God”.

Francis had amassed over 100,000 followers within 45 minutes of sharing the picture.

Instagram founder Kevin Systrom was on hand to watch the first photo (which sadly was not a selfie) and shared his own image of meeting him.

“Watching Pope Francis post his first photo to Instagram today was an incredible moment," he wrote. "@franciscus, welcome to the Instagram community! Your messages of humility, compassion and mercy will leave a lasting mark.”

Francis has established himself as a more progressive leader of the Catholic Church and has been praised for his efforts to bridge the distance between the Pope and those who follow him.

Pope Francis's 10 tips for a happier life


Source


Friday, March 18, 2016

She is silently growing into power


God's word has given warning of the impending danger; let this be unheeded, and the Protestant world will learn what the purposes of Rome really are, only when it is too late to escape the snare. She is silently growing into power. Her doctrines are exerting their influence in legislative halls, in the churches, and in the hearts of men. She is piling up her lofty and massive structures in the secret recesses of which her former persecutions will be repeated. Stealthily and unsuspectedly she is strengthening her forces to further her own ends when the time shall come for her to strike. All that she desires is vantage ground, and this is already being given her. We shall soon see and shall feel what the purpose of the Roman element is. Whoever shall believe and obey the word of God will thereby incur reproach and persecution.

Great Controversy, p.581.

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Even in the Adventist Church


We have far more to fear from within than from without. The hindrances to strength and success are far greater from the church itself than from the world. Unbelievers have a right to expect that those who profess to be keeping the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus, will do more than any other class to promote and honor, by their consistent lives, by their godly example and their active influence, the cause which they represent. But how often have the professed advocates of the truth proved the greatest obstacle to its advancement! The unbelief indulged, the doubts expressed, the darkness cherished, encourage the presence of evil angels, and open the way for the accomplishment of Satan's devices.—Selected Messages 1, p.122 (1887).

Last Day Events, p.156



Happy Sabbath


Pope Francis Asks Nations to ‘Open Their Hearts and Their Doors’ to Migrants




TIZIANA FABI/AFP/Getty

by THOMAS D. WILLIAMS, PH.D.17 Mar 2016

In his general audience Wednesday, Pope Francis launched an appeal to the nations of the world to open their hearts and their doors to migrants who are standing “at the border,” in an apparent reference to the many migrants camped at key border positions trying to enter Europe.

During the last year, more than 1.1 million migrants entered the European Union and the unabated flow has prompted countries along the main migration corridor through the Balkans to seal their borders, leaving tens of thousands encamped in Greece.

The Pope compared today’s migrants to the people of Israel who were deported into Babylon in the 7thcentury BC, as recounted in the Biblical book of the prophet Jeremiah.

“How many of our brothers and sisters are living in this time a real and dramatic situation of exile,” Francissaid, “far from their homeland, still in their eyes the reflection of their homes reduced to rubble, their hearts full of fear and often, unfortunately, sorrow at the loss of loved ones!”

“And when they try to go somewhere else, they find the door closed to them,” Francis continued, “There they are, at the border, because so many doors and so many hearts are closed. Today’s migrants suffer from the cold, without food and with no way to enter. They do not feel welcome.”

“How it pleases me to hear of nations and rulers who open their hearts and open their doors!” he said.

Earlier this month, Pope Francis called Europe’s migrant crisis a veritable “Arab invasion,” and framed the inundation of primarily Muslim migrants in the context of invasions that Europe has suffered in the past, immediately adding: “How many invasions has Europe suffered in its history!”

In his audience Wednesday, the Pope related the situations of contemporary migrants to the Israelites’ deportation to “a foreign land,” which tried their faith in God’s goodness.

Francis said that the Babylonian exile was a “devastating experience for Israel.” Faith had faltered because in a strange land, without a temple and without worship, “it was difficult to continue to believe in the goodness of the Lord.”

“In these cases, one may ask, where is God? How is it that so much suffering can befall men, women and innocent children?” he asked.

The prophet Jeremiah was called upon to assure these people that “God is not absent even today in these dramatic situations,” Francis said. “God is near, and makes great works of salvation for those who trust in him.”

The Pope said that that Israel’s experience of exile, and above all returning home, presaged the mission of the Lord Jesus as redeemer.

“The real and radical return from exile and the comforting light after the darkness of the crisis of faith, is realized at Easter,” Francis said, “in the experience full and definitive love of God, the merciful love that gives joy, peace and eternal life.”

Listen to the interview about this article on Breitbart News Daily on SiriusXM this morning:

https://soundcloud.com/breitbart/breitbart-news-daily-dr-thomas-d-williams-march-16-2016


Source




European Union Reaches Deal With Turkey to Return Asylum Seekers





Video Turkey's prime minister and the president of the European Union on Friday praised the agreement to return new asylum seekers who arrive in Greece from Turkey.


By JAMES KANTER
MARCH 18, 2016


BRUSSELS — The European Union and Turkey reached a deal on Friday to return new asylum seekers who arrive in Greece from Turkey, as soon as Sunday, a long-awaited and significant step in the bloc’s effort to deal with the migrant crisis that has left tens of thousands of people in squalid conditions.

The leaders of the 28 nations in the bloc and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu of Turkey approved the accord after two days of talks and over strenuous objections from humanitarian groups, who said the deal violated international law on the treatment of refugees.

The accord with Turkey represents a moment of painful compromise for Europe. Turkey has taken an authoritarian turn under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and Europe was forced to accept some Turkish demands to gain its cooperation in stopping the large numbers of people using the Aegean Sea to reach Greece.


Source

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Shutting down free speech in college and politics



Daily Inter Lake (Kalispell, Mont.)

March 16, 2016 at 6:47 am





When I was trudging through my high school years, one thing that kept me going was the vision of “higher” education — the belief that once I got to college, I would be surrounded by intellectuals engaged in lively debate and the exchange of ideas. Think of Plato’s “Symposium” except on a grander scale.

Then I got to Tulane University –the Harvard of the South, as they like to call themselves.

Imagine my surprise when I found out that college in 1973 was high school with more sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll. People didn’t read Plato; they read Rolling Stone.

Sure, every once in a while I would get into an actual exchange of ideas that didn’t involve religious or political dogma, but more often than not my counterparts would stop the conversation at some point with a quizzical look upon their face, hold up their hands in frustration, and query me — “You don’t really believe that, do you?”

In other words, the free exchange of ideas on college campuses has always had a somewhat restrictive view of the word “free” — at least since the 1960s. You were free to condemn disgraced President Nixon, for instance, but not free to defend him. You were free to denounce the Vietnam War, but not free to justify it. You were free to praise affirmative action, but not free to question it.

Fast forward 40-plus years and freedom on college campuses has grown even more suffocatingly claustrophobic. Freedom today means the freedom to hear only what you want to hear and to say only what other people want you to say. In other words, freedom is another word for political correctness. The alignment of those two concepts is a perfect example of what George Orwell called “doublethink” — the ability to hold two completely opposite concepts in the brain at the same time without the ability to recognize that they are mutually exclusive.

Thus, college campuses today have become indoctrinators of ideology instead of incubators of ideas. Instead of welcoming debate between those with different ideas, professors and administrators have become protectors of left-wing orthodoxy against any challenge that might invite people to think for themselves. The examples are too numerous to recite, but you are all encouraged to do a Google news search for “free speech on campus” to find numerous examples of the opposite.

You probably heard of Melissa Click, the University of Missouri professor, who was caught on camera calling for “some muscle” to remove reporters from a protest site in 2015. That’s no surprise, but what was shocking is that the university later fired her instead of lauding her as a hero. I guess incitement to violence still goes too far.

At lots of college campuses though, it is considered perfectly acceptable to muscle out dissenting viewpoints and to silence speech. A recent example took place at Rutgers University last month when feminists and Black Lives Matter protesters took objection to a speech by that most scary of speakers — a gay Roman Catholic conservative.

Milo Yiannopoulos must have represented a threat to the “safe space” of the college-age adolescents who expect everyone to toe the line of political correctness. Yiannopoulos is a real-life version of Kris Kristofferson’s “The Pilgrim”: “He’s a walkin’ contradiction, partly truth and partly fiction.”

Yiannopoulos was invited to the New Jersey campus by Young Americans for Liberty to speak on “How the Progressive Left Is Destroying Education.” And right on schedule, the progressive left provided a perfect example of it by disrupting the event by smearing blood on their faces and shouting down Yiannopoulos, who was on the first stop of his “Dangerous Faggot Tour.” Dangerous indeed!

Not coincidentally, when Donald Trump scheduled a rally on the University of Chicago campus Friday, it was canceled after hundreds of protesters infiltrated the pavilion and raised security concerns because of the potential for violence.

The protesters were jubilant and took to the streets, chanting “We stopped Trump!” No, you didn’t. You stopped free speech, and you stopped the free exchange of ideas, which is another way of saying you stopped people from learning, including yourself.

No surprise there. Our society doesn’t value education any more; it values the appearance of education. It values degrees and not discernment.

Too bad these protesters, many of whom are probably college students or college graduates, did not spend more time reading the great books. Then they might have stumbled upon this quote from Plato’s “Republic”:

“Our youth should be trained from the first in a stricter system, for if amusements become lawless, and the youths themselves become lawless, they can never grow up into well-conducted and virtuous citizens.”

If that is the sign of a noble republic, maybe it’s too late to make America great again. We shall see.

___

(c)2016 the Daily Inter Lake (Kalispell, Mont.)


Source


How Sunday stopped being special for the American worker



Wonkblog

Following the rest of the retail industry, Walmart gets rid of Sunday premium pay altogether.


By Lydia DePillis March 17 at 10:20 AM 



Sometimes it's harder to come to work than other times. (Gilbert R. Boucher II/Daily Herald via AP)

This month, workers who have been with Walmart for at least five years received a one-time bump in their paychecks. A couple hundred extra dollars is usually welcome, but this time, it actually symbolizes a loss: No longer will those workers receive premium pay for their Sunday shifts, as the idea of compensating people for toiling on what some consider a day of rest fades from American business.

Walmart discontinued Sunday premium pay, which had been $1 extra per hour, for new hires back in 2011. Those who had continued to receive it will receive a lump sum equal to half the amount of Sunday pay they received last year, according to a company release in January outlining a handful of adjustmentsthat Walmart explained were a way of "simplifying its pay structure" — and reducing the overall cost of increasing base wages to $10 an hour across the board.

That hasn't worked worked out so well for more experienced employees like eight-year Walmart veteran Nancy Reynolds, a 69-year-old cashier in Merritt Island, Fla., who works Thursday through Monday. Her base pay was already slightly above $10 an hour, so she didn't get much of a raise, and the loss of a few extra Sunday dollars a week will hurt. "The younger people, the ones who haven’t been there that long, they got it, and I'm glad for them," Reynolds says. "But they did it at the expense of me and everybody who’s been there a long time."

In cutting Sunday pay, Walmart is actually behind most of the retail industry, which made that change as legal requirements to pay more on Sundays were stricken from state laws across the country. So-called "blue laws" once prohibited Sunday commerce altogether in 34 states in the 1960s. They were often weakened through compromise, with higher pay mandated in exchange for shopping being legalized. Even with no mandate, premium pay was often what the labor market demanded.

"To get people to work, when they’d never worked before, they started to pay Sunday pay," says Craig Rowley, a retail compensation consultant with Korn Ferry, who has done work for Walmart.

That changed over time as women entered the workforce, pushing more shopping from weekdays to the weekend. The labor market also loosened up, meaning workers couldn't pick and choose which days they wanted to work; Sunday shifts are now expected rather than optional. And meanwhile, the importance of Sunday as a universal day of rest started to recede from the American psyche.

"When I was growing up, Sundays were kind of family day, church day," Rowley says. "As we’ve gotten to be a more secular society, staying at home on Sunday is not necessarily expected. 'We’re all going to be here all day Sunday' is not as strong a cultural norm."

Rhode Island and Massachusetts are now two of the last states to require retailers to pay time and a half on Sundays, and the retail industry ispushing hard to get the requirement rolled back in Massachusetts. "Sundays in retail have become unaffordable in our state," wrote William Rennie, vice president of the Retailers Association of Massachusetts, in a Boston Globe op-ed.

Sunday premium pay hasn't disappeared as quickly from other sectors, such as manufacturing and transportation, which have held on to a more traditional five or six-day work schedule. Most federal employees are still entitled to time and a half on Sundays. But more and more of their neighbors in the private sector won't be so lucky.


Lydia DePillis is a reporter focusing on labor, business, and housing. She previously worked at The New Republic and Washington City Paper. She's from Seattle.



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U.S. Air Force general removed for 'unprofessional relationship'




Reuters By Andrea Shalal 8 hours ago


By Andrea Shalal


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Air Force on Thursday said it had removed its assistant vice chief of staff, Lieutenant General John Hesterman, after an investigation showed he had engaged in an unprofessional relationship with a married female Air Force officer about five years ago.

Hesterman, who previously commanded the U.S. Air Force component of U.S. Central Command, gave up his duties Thursday and submitted a retirement request, the Air Force said in a statement. It said it was still reviewing whether to downgrade Hesterman's rank for engaging in an unprofessional relationship with a lower-ranking officer, and for engaging in conduct unbecoming an officer and gentleman.


"These e-mail exchanges were found to have constituted an unprofessional relationship. The investigation did not uncover any additional misconduct," the Air Force said.

The Air Force said a third allegation was not substantiated; that section of the report was completely redacted.

The anonymous complaint that triggered the probe alleged that Hesterman also interfered in the military assignments of the female officer's former husband, according to a heavily redacted copy of the investigation report.

The Air Force said it could not comment on any disciplinary action regarding the female lieutenant colonel, a reserve officer serving in a full-time position, since that process was not complete. Neither her name nor the name of her former husband were disclosed.

The Air Force said an investigation launched in October showed that misconduct occurred between May 2010 and May 2011 when Hesterman was a major general and exchanged "sexually suggestive" emails with the female officer.

"The language is sexually suggestive in parts and indicates a relationship that has gone well beyond a professional, mentorship situation," the investigation report said.

It raised particular concern about a passage in one email in which Hesterman "intimated that he improperly influenced" the female officer's boss to say laudatory things about her and expected "full credit" for doing so.

Both officers were married to other people at the time.

Both denied engaging in sexual intercourse, although the female officer told one of the witnesses interviewed during the investigation that there had been "inappropriate touching."

The investigation report includes materials presented during the woman's divorce proceedings, including some emails that the female officer said were fabricated because she had not seen them until the divorce proceedings.

In a February 2016 statement, she said it appeared that someone had used her former email account to correspond with Hesterman. The name of the person was redacted in the investigative report provided by the Air Force.



(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Leslie Adler)


Source


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Thursday, March 17, 2016

Vatican Secret Societies and the New World Order (Full Documentary)



 

kytekutter

Published on Mar 17, 2016

Learn more about the history of the Vatican led new world order as it pertains to history, modern times and what's going on in the news today. From knights templars, jesuits, freemasonry right down to the illuminati people speak of today. Also deals with the protestant reformation and the response from the Catholic church sometimes called the counter-reformation

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Activists Gear Up for Nomination Fight



9:48 AM. ET  March 16, 2016
Eric Lipton  |  WASHINGTON


Even before a name has been released, groups on the left and right are fine-tuning their plans for the opening acts in the fight over the nomination. Among those efforts will be events in 100 locations around the country on Monday, part of what liberal groups like MoveOn.org are calling a “Day of Action,” to try to persuade the Senate to approve the nomination.

With Congress in recess for much of the rest of this month, a lot of the focus of the activity will be in the home states of senators, with liberals organizing rallies outsidef their district offices or at public events where they appear. Conservatives also plan to do the same with Democratic members of the Senate who come from more conservative states.

Social media will be a major tool for both sides, with Twitter and Facebook campaigns already prepared and work getting underway on television and radio spots.

Source

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Battle lines set as Merrick Garland meets with Democrats



MARCH 17, 2016 4:43 PM




BY KATHLEEN HENNESSEY AND ALAN FRAM
Associated Press


WASHINGTON

It was Day One for the traditional courtesy calls to senators, but there's not much about Merrick Garland's Supreme Court nomination that has adhered to tradition — or courtesy.

A day after his selection set the battle lines in a major fight over the court, President Barack Obama's choice to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia met only with Democratic leaders on Thursday — steering clear of the Republican leader who has vowed the Senate will ignore Garland's nomination and wait for the next president to fill the seat.

For Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the Capitol visit was a stunt "orchestrated" by the White House, his spokesman said. But for Democrats, it was just the opening salvo in a public campaign to make Garland, a mild-mannered jurist with sterling credentials, the best-known victim of Republican obstruction and a household name in every election battleground state.

Garland met with Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.

Said Leahy: "I talked to him about where the hurdles are, and I talked to him about what I thought would happen if we actually follow the oath that we've all taken to uphold the Constitution."

Outside, Garland braved a throng of reporters and cameras but said nothing.

Before the Capitol Hill visit, more than a dozen Senate Democrats stood in front of the Supreme Court, using the telegenic backdrop to underscore their calls for Republicans to give Garland a hearing. Democrats cited polling showing public support for Senate consideration of the nomination, and eagerly linked the court fight to Donald Trump — the volatile front-runner for the GOP nomination and a source of embarrassment for the Republican establishment.

"If Republicans stand in the way and refuse to do their job, it will only be because they want Donald Trump to pick the next nominee," said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

The success of the Democrats' plans hinge in part on rallying their grass roots to the cause — a task complicated by Obama's nomination of a moderate with little public record on many issues valued by the progressive wing of the party. Obama on Thursday tried to win over key interest groups and activists, holding a conference call to explain "that this is a high priority of his, and that he hopes that this would be a priority that people all across the country would share," spokesman Josh Earnest said.

Liberal and labor groups planned events next week, when the Senate is out of session and senators are back home, pressuring Republicans on their home turf. The events include teachers holding rallies in Cleveland, Cincinnati and Lima, Ohio, aimed at Sen. Rob Portman; union members mobilizing in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia and targeting Sen. Patrick Toomey, and activists attending town hall and other Iowa re-election events staged by Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley.

Republicans prepared their defense.

One Nation — run by Steven Law, a former McConnell chief of staff and the head the GOP-aligned American Crossroads super PAC — was beginning 10 days of television advertising on Friday in Des Moines, Iowa, aimed at supporting Grassley, a key opponent of confirming an Obama nominee.

The ad says an Obama appointment to the court could "radically transform" laws governing land ownership, gun rights and religious freedom and says, "Tell Senator Grassley, keep fighting for the right of Iowans to decide the Supreme Court's future."

Republicans were mindful of the risks of closing their doors to this nominee, while past Supreme Court candidates had paid visits shortly after their nomination with little controversy.

McConnell tried to pre-empt the spectacle by talking with Garland by phone Wednesday. He wished him well, his office said. Grassley, who also talked to Garland, agreed to meet with him — just not immediately.

A few GOP senators suggested they were ready.

"I meet with anybody, and that would include him," said Jeff Flake of Arizona.

Flake said if a Democrat were elected president in November, he would want the Senate to consider Garland's nomination during a postelection, lame duck session because "between him and somebody that a President Clinton might nominate, I think the choice is clear."

Flake's comment showed how Obama and the leading Democratic presidential contender, Hillary Clinton, have had a good cop-bad cop effect on some Republicans, who consider Clinton likely to make a more liberal selection should she enter the White House.

Still, Garland's confirmation remains an uphill climb. One reason for the intense combat over Scalia's replacement is that Garland would tilt the court's 4-4 balance in the liberal direction.


Source:
http://www.newsobserver.com/news/politicsgovernment/article66598677.html#storylink=cpy

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Anonymous Declares Total War on Donald Trump *NEW 2016*


       






 
 

On Foreign Policy, Trump's Campaign Hasn't Released Names Of Advisers (Richard Haass of CFR interviewed)

@ 1:00 Min., Richard Haass of the CFR (Council on Foreign Relations) is interviewed by NPR's Mary Louise Kelly.
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


 


Updated March 17, 20168:05 AM ET Published March 17, 20165:21 AM ET
 





Little is known about the foreign policy plans of Donald Trump. Mary Louise Kelly talks to Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, who has met with the Republican front-runner.

Source

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Protesters Clash In Front Of Brazil’s Presidential Palace



Thursday, March 17, 2016



People demonstrate against Brazilian former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in Sao Paulo, Brazil on March 17 2016. A federal judge in Brazil suspended President Dilma Rousseff’s appointment of her predecessor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as her new chief of staff, amid allegations she gave him the post to protect him from corruption charges. (Nelson Almeida/AFP/Getty Images)

Former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, better known as “Lula,” was supposed to be named chief of staff today in current president Dilma Rousseff’s administration, but a judge has blocked the move. Here & Now’s Meghna Chakrabarti gets the latest news from NPR’s Lourdes Garcia-Navarro in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.


Source
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US general says we could be screwed in a war against China or Russia



By Associated Press

March 16, 2016 | 2:57pm

Modal Trigger 

US Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley Photo: Getty Images


WASHINGTON — The Army’s top general says military forces on the ground face a high level of risk if the United States gets into a large-scale conflict against a power such as Russia or China.

Testifying Wednesday on Capitol Hill, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley says years of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, constrained budgets and troop cuts have had a cumulative effect on the service.

Milley says the Army is ready to fight the Islamic State group and other terrorist organizations.

But what Milley describes as a “great power war” against one or two of four countries – China, Russia, Iran and North Korea – would pose greater challenges.

Milley says the Army’s readiness is not at a level that is appropriate for what the American people expect to defend them.


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US Military Readiness Questioned Amid Korea Tensions


Last Updated: March 17, 2016

Brian Padden



FILE - United States Forces Korea 2nd Infantry Division soldiers take part in an air assault training session at Camp Casey in Dongducheon, South Korea, July 24, 2015.



SEOUL —
U.S. military leaders voiced concern Wednesday about their ability to fight a conventional war against the armed forces of countries like China, Russia, Iran and North Korea.

U.S. Army Chief of Staff General Mark Milley told the House Armed Services Committee the military’s anti-terrorism and counterinsurgency focus on the Middle East has taken resources away from planning and preparation to fight a “higher-end” combat force if a conflict erupted in another part of the world.

“If that were to happen, I would have grave concerns about the readiness of our force to deal with that in a timely manner,” Milley said.

But while most of their readiness concerns were directed at potential conflicts with major powers Russia and China, they also come at a time of escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula over the North’s nuclear threat.



FILE - Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Feb. 2, 2016.

U.S. and South Korean forces have increased their readiness defense posture following Pyongyang’s nuclear test in January and long-range rocket launch in February.

Washington has moved more troops and assets into the region and the two allies are currently conducting their largest joint exercises ever, involving 17,000 American troops, 300,000 South Korean troops, and an array of U.S. aircraft and naval vessels.

North Korea

North Korea has called these annual drills rehearsals for invasion and the country’s supreme leader, Kim Jong Un, has threatened to conduct pre-emptive nuclear strikes against South Korean and the U.S. forces.

“Early on in the conflict the North Koreans have an enormous incentive to use missiles and artillery to strike as many U.S. forces in the region, I think first as a war winning measure in order to slow down the rate of which the United States can flood forces into South Korea and up to Pyongyang, but I think also in the hope that the casualties will cause the United States to back off,” said Jeffrey Lewis, the director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in California.

The slogan for the U.S. forces in Korea is “ready to fight tonight” and part of this year’s exercises is preparing to counter the North’s nuclear threat.



FILE - U.S. and South Korean Marines run from a South Korean assault amphibious vehicle during joint military exercises in Pohang, south of Seoul, April 26, 2013.

In addition to combat drills, the allied forces are also simulating surgical pre-emptive strikes against the North Korean leadership and the taking out of key military installations.

North vs. South

North Korea’s military is listed as the 36th most powerful in the world, according to the website Global Firepower which evaluates the military capability of countries.

The North has an advantage over the South in some categories, with 700,000 active forces (and over 4 million in the military reserves), 4,200 tanks and 70 submarines.

But much of its conventional weaponry was built or designed by the Soviet Union in the 1950s.

South Korea is seventh in the Global Firepower world ranking, even though it has significantly fewer armed forces, half the number of tanks, and only 13 submarines.

However, South Korea has some of the best modern American weapons and equipment, including more than 2,000 tanks and hundreds of F-5, F-15 and F-16 fighter jets and fighter-bombers.



FILE - A firing contest of Korean People's Army artillery units, which North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspected, at an undisclosed location in North Korea, Jan. 15, 2015.

Together, the U.S. and South Korean militaries are widely considered to have superior conventional forces in the region that are better equipped, better trained and better fed than those in the impoverished North.

The North’s answer to its conventional military disadvantage has been to develop nuclear weapons.

“North Korea’s concentration on the development of nuclear power and missiles shows that it recognizes that it is far behind South Korea’s conventional military capability,” said analyst Kim Dong-yub, with Kyungnam University's Institute of Far Eastern Studies in Seoul.

There are currently close to 28,500 U.S. troops in South Korea. Since the end of the Korean War in 1953, the U.S. has maintained a military presence in South Korea to enforce the armistice agreement that divided the peninsula along the 38th parallel between the communist North and the capitalist South.

Youmi Kim in Seoul contributed to this report.



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Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Exclusive: Navy Secretly Conducting Electromagnetic Warfare Training on Washington Roads




Monday, 07 March 2016 00:00

By Dahr Jamail, Truthout | Report


(Photo: Olympic Park Road via Shutterstock; Edited; LW / TO)

Without public notification of any kind, the US Navy has secretly been conducting electromagnetic warfare testing and training on public roads in western Washington State for more than five years.

An email thread between the Navy and the US Forest Service between 2010 and 2012, recently obtained via a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request filed by Oregon-based author and activist Carol Van Strum in November 2014, revealed that the Navy has likely been driving mobile electromagnetic warfare emitters and conducting electromagnetic warfare training in the Olympic National Forest and on public roads on Washington's Olympic Peninsula since 2010.

In one of the 2012 emails, Navy contractor Gerald Sodano explained that the Navy "utilized EW [electronic warfare] ranges outside the local vicinity." But he went on to say that the aim of establishing an electromagnetic warfare range on the Olympic Peninsula would be to conduct all training locally on the Olympic Peninsula, rather than further afield. This means that rather than using expansive training areas the Navy already has access to in Yakima in eastern Washington State, the Navy aims to use the Olympic National Forest and areas adjacent to Olympic National Park instead.

"What the Navy is doing we have no idea because they don't tell us."




Jewish Judge Merrick Garland Will Be Obama Choice for Supreme Court








NewsBreaking News



Mar 16, 2016

(Updated 10 h ago)

Image: Getty, Wikimedia Commons (inset)



President Barack Obama on Wednesday will nominate Merrick Garland, a veteran federal appeals court judge viewed as a moderate, to the U.S. Supreme Court, Democratic Senator Charles Schumer told Reuters.

The nomination of Garland, 63, who currently serves as chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, would set up a potentially ferocious political showdown with Senate Republicans.

Garland, 63, is a long-time appellate judge and former prosecutor who Obama also considered when he filled two previous Supreme Court vacancies. Federal appeals court judge Sri Srinivasan also had been a finalist for the nomination.

Obama said in a statement released by the White House that he will unveil his nominee at 11 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT) in the White House Rose Garden. Schumer is a member of the Senate Democratic leadership.

Obama has been searching for a replacement for long-serving conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, who died on Feb. 13.

Garland, who in the past has earned praise from lawmakers of both parties, was named to his current job by Democratic President Bill Clinton in 1997, winning Senate confirmation in a 76-23 vote. Prior to that, he served in the Justice Department during the Clinton administration.

“I’m confident you’ll share my conviction that this American is not only eminently qualified to be a Supreme Court Justice, but deserves a fair hearing, and an up-or-down vote,” Obama said in the statement ahead of his scheduled announcement in the White House Rose Garden.

Senate Republicans have vowed not to hold confirmation hearings or a vote on any nominee picked by the Democratic president for the lifetime position on the court. Senate confirmation is required for any nominee to join the bench.

Obama said he hoped the Senate would do its job and “move quickly to consider my nominee.”

Without Scalia, the nine-member Supreme Court is evenly split with four liberals and four conservative justices. Obama’s nominee could tilt the court to the left for the first time in decades.


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Merrick Garland is Obama's nominee for the Supreme Court





Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit

Incumbent
Assumed office
February 12, 2013
Preceded by David Sentelle
Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit

Incumbent
Assumed office
March 20, 1997
Appointed by Bill Clinton
Preceded by Abner Mikva
Personal details
Born Merrick Brian Garland
November 13, 1952 (age 63)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Spouse(s) Lynn Rosenman (m. 1987)
Children Rebecca (b. 1991)
Jessica (b. 1993)
Alma mater Harvard University
Religion Judaism[1]

Merrick Brian Garland (born November 13, 1952) is an American federal judge who is the chief judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. He has served on that court since 1997.

A native of the Chicago area, Garland graduated summa cum laude as valedictorian from Harvard College and graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School.


Read more

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P.S.
If approved the Supreme Court would then have 4 Jews and 5 Roman Catholics presiding on the court.

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Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Pope Francis and His Many Women Saints




MARCH 15, 2016 - 5:53 PM




In 2003, six years after Mother Teresa died from a massive heart attack, Pope John Paul II beatified her in front of a crowd of 300,000 in St. Peter’s Square.

Now, more than 13 years later, Teresa — one of Catholicism’s most celebrated nuns — will finallyascend to sainthood when Pope Francis officially canonizes her on Sept. 4, 2016, one day before the anniversary of her death.

Her September canonization will come some 10 months after the pontiff confirmed she performed two miracles that saved the lives of two men from India and Brazil. And she isn’t only the one who will achieve sainthood that day: Francis will offer the same honor to four other people, including Maria Elizabeth Hesselblad, the first Swede to be named a saint in 600 years.

Teresa’s sainthood has not come without its fair share of controversy. Journalist Christopher Hitchens wrote an entire book, The Missionary Position, on why she shouldn’t be named a saint, arguing that Teresa’s commitment to helping the poor was more of an opportunity for her to spread religious beliefs than alleviate poverty, and shortchanged efforts to end suffering.

Beyond Teresa, Pope Francis has canonized or announced plans to canonize more than a dozen other women during the last three years. Here are a few of them:

St. Mariam Baouardy

Born in 1846 in I’billin, in what is now Israel, Mariam Baouardy lost both her parents at the age of two, and was almost married off to a distant relative at age 13. She refused and asked to either rejoin her brother or join the church. A servant working for her uncle caught wind of her dilemma and tried to convince her to convert to Islam and marry him instead, then slit her throat and left her for dead when she turned him down. A mysterious nun nursed her back to health and within a few years, Baouardy joined the church, and later served in India. She died at 33, the same age as Jesus, after complications from a broken arm. But in her short life she is believed to have experienced multiple miracles, including curing her own temporary blindness through prayer, and later recovering almost immediately from a life-threatening fall. She credited her survival to the Virgin Mary.

Marie-Alphonsine Danil Ghattas

A Jerusalem-born Christian, Marie-Alphonsine Danil Ghattas joined the Catholic Church as a nun in the late 1800s, when she was 17. It’s believed she quickly began to experienceapparitions from the Holy Virgin Mary, in which Mary called for Marie-Alphonsine to found theSisters of the Most Holy Rosary, a congregation for Arab girls and women. She only ever told one priest about those conversations with Mary, and it took 53 years for her experiences to become public.

Émilie de Villeneuve

Born in Toulouse, France, in 1811, Émilie de Villeneuve lost her mother and sister as a young girl and decided to join the church in order to “go there without hesitation where the voice of the poor they call us.” She founded the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception and dedicated the rest of her life to missions across Africa, South America, and Asia. The nuns of her still-existing congregation are known as the blue sisters of Castres because their clothing is blue. Multiple miraculous medical cures have been credited to their prayers, which helped clear the way for Villeneuve’s ascension to sainthood last May.

Euphrasia Eluvathingal

Euphrasia Eluvanthingal, who was born Rosa in India, to a relatively wealthy, landowning family, long suffered from chronic weakness and poor health. Then she claimed to have seen a vision of the holy family, and her suffering was greatly alleviated. In 1900, she officially joined a convent in Ollur, India, where she stayed the rest of her life. Known there as the “praying mother,” she is credited with multiple miraculous healings, and her tomb was later made a holy site where thousands of people have gathered to pray to cure their loved ones’ illnesses. She was canonized by Francis in 2014.

Photo Credit: Franco Origlia, Getty Images


 

Worried over refugees, Baltics begin to erect border fences



Source: Reuters -

Tue, 8 Mar 2016 13:02 GMT

Author: Reuters


A migrant who is waiting to cross the Greek-Macedonian sits by the border fence at a makeshift camp, near the village of Idomeni, Greece, March 4, 2016. REUTERS/Marko Djurica


By Andrius Sytas and David Mardiste

VILNIUS/TALLINN, March 8 (Reuters) - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are tightening ID controls and erecting fences on their eastern borders, worried the Baltic region will become a new entry point for refugees as migrant routes through the Balkans becomes harder.

Governments fear they could see thousands of refugees cross from former ruler Russia - the focus of long historical mistrust - and Belarus. Concerns have grown since around 6,000 asylum seekers crossed into Finland and Norway from Russia last year.

Latvia and Estonia have begun to fence off their border with Russia. Security concerns also played a part after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean region and accusations an Estonian security officer was kidnapped on the border region in 2014.

Hundreds of Lithuanian border guards, police and soldiers started an exercise this week over handling a border crisis. The reintroduction of ID checks on part of the border with its northern neighbour Latvia will also be tested at the exercise.

"Until last year, neither Norway nor Finland had any migration problems on the Russian border," commander of the Lithuanian state border guard Renatas Pozela told Reuters. "Then migrant flows on that border jumped up in a single week, as if by the wave of a magic wand."

As controls tighten over the direct route from Greece into continental Europe, the route through Moldova, Ukraine and into the Baltic may become more popular, officials say.

Estonia is installing surveillance devices, such as those already on the Lithuanian border with Belarus, to thwart both smuggling and illegal migration.

"It's unfortunate that we would need that (a border fence)," said Ojars Eriks Kalnins, a member of the Latvian parliament European Affairs Committee. "But given the circumstances in Europe right now, the whole refugee crisis, it may be necessary."

So far the number of refugees has been a trickle.

Finland criticised Russia in January for allowing asylum seekers across their Arctic border, after their numbers at the major Salla border crossing reached 20 per day.

About 5,000 asylum seekers arrived in Norway in 2015 via Russia, out of the total 31,000 asylum seekers that came last year.

But the flow of migrants from Russia to Finland has halted in March, according to Finnish border guard. (Additional reporting by Gederts Gelzis in Riga and Tuomas Forsell in Helsinki; Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Ralph Boulton


A World-Wide Message


The light that God has given His people is not to be shut up within the churches that already know the truth. It is to be shed abroad into the dark places of the earth. Those who walk in the light as Christ is in the light will co-operate with the Saviour by revealing to others what He has revealed to them. It is God's purpose that the truth for this time shall be made known to every kindred and nation and tongue and people. In the world today men and women are absorbed in the search for worldly gain and worldly pleasure. There are thousands upon thousands who give no time or thought to the salvation of the soul. The time has come when the message of Christ's soon coming is to sound throughout the world.

Unmistakable evidences point to the nearness of the end. The warning is to be given in certain tones. The way must be prepared for the coming of the Prince of Peace in the clouds of heaven. There is much to be done in the cities that have not yet heard the truth for this time. We are not to establish institutions to rival in size and splendor the institutions of the world; but in the name of the Lord, with the untiring perseverance and unflagging zeal that Christ brought into His labors, we are to carry forward the work of the Lord.

As a people we greatly need to humble our hearts before God, pleading His forgiveness for our neglect to fulfill the gospel commission. We have made large centers in a few places, leaving unworked many important cities. Let us now take up the work appointed us and proclaim the message that is to arouse men and women to a sense of their danger. If every Seventh-day Adventist had done the work laid upon him, the number of believers would now be much larger than it is. In all the cities of America there would be those who had been led to heed the message to obey the Law of God.

In some places the message regarding the observance of the Sabbath has been set forth with clearness and power, while other places have been left without warning. Will not those who know the truth awake to the responsibilities resting upon them? My brethren, you cannot afford to bury yourselves in worldly enterprises or interests. You cannot afford to neglect the commission given you by the Saviour.

Everything in the universe calls upon those who know the truth to consecrate themselves unreservedly to the proclamation of the truth as it has been made known to them in the third angel's message. That which we see and hear calls us to our duty. The working of satanic agencies calls every Christian to stand in his lot.


Testimonies for the Church, Vol. 9, pp. 24-26.

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