|
EARTH
CHANGES
-IRIS Seismic
Monitor
-EMSC
Earthquake Center
-St. Helens
-WA State Emergency Management Division
-Space Weather
-Near-Earth Object
Program
-Current Solar
Wind Conditions
-Current
Solar Images
--------------------------- prophecy/
end-times research
-K-House.org
--------------------------- News
Sites
- Steve Quayle
- Watch.org
- India Daily -
harpazo Ready -
Drudge
Report - Red
NOVA - Jane's Defense
Weekly - Raider's
News
-Hal Lindsey Oracle
---------------------------
Internet
Radio Sites
- 66/40 Chuck
Missler Bible Study - The
Well Network - Turning
Point - Coast
to Coast AM
-Zola Levitt Ministries
- Prophecy
Watch - Spirit
105.3 Christian Music |
Reported from harpazo
Ready:
-
1st
Amendment 'doesn't create church-state wall of separation' (December
21, 2005)
- A U.S. appeals court today upheld the decision of a lower court in
allowing the inclusion of the Ten Commandments in a courthouse
display, hammering the American Civil Liberties Union and declaring,
"The First Amendment does not demand a wall of separation
between church and state." Attorneys from the American Center
for Law and Justice successfully argued the case on behalf of Mercer
County, Ky., and a display of historical documents placed in the
county courthouse. The panel voted 3-0 to reject the ACLU's
contention the display violated the Establishment Clause of the
Constitution. The county display the ACLU sued over included the Ten
Commandments, the Mayflower Compact, the Declaration of
Independence, the Magna Carta, the Star Spangled Banner, the
national motto, the preamble to the Kentucky Constitution, the Bill
of Rights to the U. S. Constitution and a picture of Lady Justice.
Writing for the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals, Judge Richard
Suhrheinrich said the ACLU's "repeated reference 'to the
separation of church and state' ... has grown tiresome. The First
Amendment does not demand a wall of separation between church and
state." Suhrheinrich wrote: "The ACLU, an organization
whose mission is 'to ensure that ... the government [is kept] out of
the religion business,' does not embody the reasonable person."
The court said a reasonable observer of Mercer County's display
appreciates "the role religion has played in our governmental
institutions, and finds it historically appropriate and
traditionally acceptable for a state to include religious
influences, even in the form of sacred texts, in honoring American
traditions." more...
NOW
QUAKE HITS LOUISIANA... (December 21, 2005)
- Magnitude 3.0 - Tuesday, December 20, 2005 at 00:52:20 (UTC) =
Coordinated Universal Time Monday, December 19, 2005 at 6:52:20 PM
-
Syria
agrees to hide Iran nukes (December 20,
2005)
- Syria has signed a pledge to store Iranian nuclear weapons and
missiles. The London-based Jane's Defence Weekly reported that Iran
and Syria signed a strategic accord meant to protect either country
from international pressure regarding their weapons programs. The
magazine, citing diplomatic sources, said Syria agreed to store
Iranian materials and weapons should Teheran come under United
Nations sanctions. Iran also pledged to grant haven to any Syrian
intelligence officer indicted by the UN or Lebanon. Five Syrian
officers have been questioned by the UN regarding the Hariri
assassination, Middle East Newsline reported.
"The sensitive chapter in the accord includes Syria's
commitment to allow Iran to safely store weapons, sensitive
equipment or even hazardous materials on Syrian soil should Iran
need such help in a time of crisis," Jane's said. The accord
also obligated Syria to continue to supply the Iranian-sponsored
Hizbullah with weapons, ammunition and communications. Iran has been
the leading weapons supplier to Hizbullah, with about 15,000
missiles and rockets along the Israeli-Lebanese border. The accord,
negotiations of which began in 2004, was signed on Nov. 14 and meant
to prepare for economic sanctions imposed on either Iran or Syria.
Under the accord, Jane's said, Iran would relay financial aid to
Syria in an effort to ease Western sanctions in wake of the UN
determination that Damascus was responsible for the assassination of
former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Iran also pledged to
supply a range of military aid to Syria. Jane's cited technology for
weapons of mass destruction as well as conventional arms, ammunition
and training of Syrian military. Teheran would seek to upgrade
Syrian ballistic missiles and chemical weapons systems. Under the
accord, Iran would also be prepared to operate "advanced weapon
systems in Syria during a military confrontation." Jane's said.
"The new strategic accord is based on the existing military
MoUs, with the addition of the sensitive chapter dealing with
cooperation in times of international sanctions or military
conflict," Jane's reported.
Netanyahu
sweeps to victory in Israel's Likud contest (December
20,
2005)
- Former premier and arch hawk Benjamin Netanyahu swept to victory
in the contest to succeed Prime Minister Ariel Sharon as leader of
Israel's beleaguered right-wing Likud party. His closest challenger,
Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom, conceded defeat in a speech to
activists at his campaign headquarters in Tel Aviv, pledging to help
take the party to victory at the country's general election on March
28. Although official results were still to be declared, an exit
poll had given Netanyahu 47 percent of the votes against 32 percent
for Shalom. Ultra-nationalist candidate Moshe Feiglin won 15 percent
while Agriculture Minister Israel Katz trailed in fourth place with
six percent, the poll for public television showed. Candidates
needed to secure more than 40 percent of the vote to avoid the
contest going into a second round. "I congratulate Netanyahu on
his victory and I stand ready to serve the party," Shalom told
supporters after phoning the victor. Party officials put the turnout
at around 40 percent of the 130,000 members who were entitled to
cast ballots. The vote was held a day after Sharon, who dramatically
resigned from Likud a month ago, was admitted to hospital suffering
from a mild stroke, although doctors expect the 77-year-old to be
released and resume his duties on Tuesday. more...
Official
Egyptian Paper Denies Holocaust (December
20,
2005)
- An official Egyptian government newspaper defended Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's denial of the Holocaust, asserting,
in a column, there was no massacres of the Jews during World War II,
and the gas chambers were intended for disinfecting clothing. Nazi
leader Adolf Hitler, wrote columnist Hisham Abd Al-Rauf in the
newspaper Al-Masaa, was not against Jews and had allowed Jews to
immigrate to the Holy Land during his first years in power. The
column, titled "Israel's Lies," was translated into
English by the Washington, D.C.-based Middle East Media Institute,
or MEMRI. "The world is truly discriminative and oppressing.
Israel spreads whatever lies it wants, and the so-called 'cultural'
world congratulates it and views these lies as absolute indisputable
facts," Al-Rauf wrote. Ahmadinejad has called the Holocaust a
"myth," and stepped up his rhetoric over the weekend,
calling on the world's Muslims to be on guard against the Jewish
state. "The Zionist regime is today a threat to the whole
Middle East region and therefore Muslims should increase their
vigilance against this regime," he said. more...
Sharon
to divide Jerusalem? (December
19,
2005)
- Just days after a principle adviser to Ariel Sharon told the media
the Israeli prime minister will divide Jerusalem if he wins in
upcoming elections, a senior minister and close Sharon ally today
refused to answer whether she would support relinquishing parts of
the holy city to the Palestinians. The statements follow the lauding
by several senior dovish Israeli lawmakers and Palestinian leaders
of Kadima, Sharon's newly formed political party, as Israel's
"best chance" at creating a Palestinian state in Gaza,
Judea and Samaria and the eastern sections of Jerusalem. "My
parents' friends demand that I promise to say there won't be a
Palestinian state and that I promise to fight and prevent its
establishment, but I'm not saying it," said Justice Minister
Tzipi Livni at a community gathering earlier today. Livni then
refused to respond to a question posed to her by a reporter for
Israel's Haaretz daily about whether she would support splitting
Jerusalem to create a Palestinian state. Livni was one of the first
politicians to join Sharon's Kadima party after the Israeli leader
announced he is leaving the ruling Likud Party he helped found to
start his own "centrist" party, prompting new elections
that will be held in March. Since Sharon's move, multiple Kadima
members have stated the new party is looking to change Israel's
borders. more...
EU
leaders agree new budget plan (December
19,
2005)
- European leaders have agreed the next seven-year EU budget after
two days of tense talks ended in the early hours. The UK gives up
10.5bn euros (£7bn) of its rebate, some 20%, while the budget grows
to 862.4bn euros, helping to fund the development of new member
states. In return, France has agreed to a budget review in
2008-2009, which could lead to cuts in farm subsidies. UK Prime
Minister Tony Blair said the deal allowed Europe to move forward,
avoiding a serious crisis. Referring to budget commitments to new,
mainly east European member states, he told reporters: "If we
believe in enlargement, we had to do this deal now." Mr Blair
later told the BBC that had Britain walked away from the compromise
deal it "would have wrecked" London's relations with the
new EU members and the new German government. The 2007-13 budget
figure agreed represents 1.045% percent of EU output, up from 1.03%
in an earlier proposal but still well below the 1.24% sought by the
European Commission.
Globalization
BBC Europe Editor Mark Mardell says the deal allows the EU to end
the year if not exactly on a high then on at least a success, when
yet another crisis was seriously on the cards. The EU was left in
disarray last June when the rejection of the EU constitution in
France and the Netherlands was followed by an acrimonious collapse
of talks on the budget. If there had not been a deal at this summit,
new member states would not have had time to plan how to use the
development aid they become eligible for in 2007, and some of it
would have remained beyond their reach. Tony Blair's grand project
was to give Europe a modern budget, refocusing the spending of the
European Union so it can face up to the challenges of globalisation
rather than subsidising farmers, says Mark Mardell. He has achieved
nothing like that, our correspondent says, not even the certainty
that a review will apply to this budget round. But he has ensured
that the EU will return to the subject. more...
Ariel
Sharon has a stroke (December
19,
2005)
- Ariel Sharon undergoes further tests Monday after his admission
the night before to Hadassah hospital with a stroke. He underwent a
second MRI at noon. Czech PM cancels Israel visit His staff say he
received his usual daily briefing after a quiet night. DEBKAfile’s
political analysts: As the prime minister bids for a third four-year
term at the head of a new party, Kadima, in the March 28 general
election, politicians are focusing for the first time on his age, 78
next February, and state of health. This consideration will impact
Monday’s Likud primary and the integrity of Kadima as a one-man
show. Sharon’s aides are bending over backwards to play down the
stroke as minor, release a minimum of medical data and present the
prime minister as raring to go back to work. At the same time the
hospital is keeping him in under scrutiny and his staff plans to set
up a small provisional bureau at his bedside. Any suggestion of
Sharon’s ill health drastically impacts the Kadima party he
established a month ago, basically a one-man show like the
government, and the general election he called for March 28. more...
Reported from Steve
Quayle:
- America
Plundered by Global Elite (December
21, 2005)
- In 1978, this writer's book Trilaterals Over Washington
revealed the global strategy of the Trilateral Commission and it's
co-founders David Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski. Brzezinski,
in particular, provided the intellectual reasoning and political
strategy for the "New International Economic Order".
Brzezinski was also an astute political operator. He is credited as
the first person to take interest in Jimmy Carter, to mentor him in
globalism starting in 1973 when Carter was chosen to be part of the
Trilateral Commission. Upon Carter's election victory in 1976,
Brzezinski was appointed National Security Advisor. By the end of
1976, Carter had appointed no less than 19 members of the Trilateral
Commission to high-ranking government positions. These 19 members
represented just under 20% of the entire U.S. delegation of the
Trilateral Commission. The stage was now set for their power to
become permanently embedded. Each successive Administration has been
disproportionally dominated by members of the Trilateral Commission:
George H.W. Bush, William Jefferson Clinton, Richard B. Cheney. Each
administration filled top posts from the Trilateral Commission.
Think-tanks connected to the Trilateral Commission cranked out
volumes of studies that droned on and on about the New International
Economic Order, interdependence and the need for political change. more...
- Israel
Increasingly Likely to Attack Iran (December
21, 2005)
- Israel is sending increasingly clear signs that it is gearing up
for a major military confrontation with the soon-to-be nuclear power
of Iran.
Consider that in recent weeks:
- Israeli military intelligence chief Aharon Zeevi Farkash said
Israel will have to admit the failure of diplomatic efforts to
contain Iran’s nuclear weapons program if Iran is not referred
to the U.N. Security Council before the end of March.
- Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz declared that Israel must
get ready for actions “other than diplomatic” to solve the
Iranian problem.
- And citing Iran as an “existential threat,” Likud Party
Chairman candidate Benjamin Netanyahu was even more blunt,
making an attack on Iran an explicit campaign promise.
These signals were amplified by a December 11 report in Britain’s
Sunday Times claiming that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has
already ordered the Israeli military to prepare to attack Iran with
both ground troops and air strikes at the end of March. Israel’s
response to the report was coy, with its Defense Ministry declaring
that there were no intentions to attack Iran “at the moment,”
whatever that may mean. more...
- Iran’s
Fanatical Regime Threatens London as Well as Israel (December
21, 2005)
- Deep-cover Mossad agents in Iran have discovered the regime is
rushing to complete the development of a giant missile. It has a
range of 2,200 miles that would bring London and other European
cities in range and a 1.2 ton nuclear payload that would leave any
city a wasteland. The missile is an updated version of the North
Korean Taepodong-1 rocket. Based on Russian technology and sold to
North Korea in 2003 in a secret arms deal that MI6 uncovered last
month, the rocket’s ballistic technology is among the most
sophisticated in the world.
Nuclear proliferation expert Al Venter said: “This confirms why
Tony Blair issued his blunt warning of possible military action. The
stakes are growing in the confrontation between Iran’s Islamic
regime and the West. Britain and Europe are now in the firing
line”. Last week the Mossad agents discovered that only days
before President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Israel “must be wiped
off the map”, a fleet of giant flying tankers from North Korea
arrived in Iran carrying liquid propellant to drive its 8 Shahab-3
missiles. The fuel came from North Korea’s state-owned
Chongchengong Arms Corporation. Each rocket has a range of 800
miles, capable of hitting Tel Aviv and other Israeli cities. The
Mossad agents have obtained an Iranian target-selection map that
shows the prime target would be Dimona, Israel’s own nuclear
arsenal in the Negev desert. It stores over 200 nuclear weapons. The
target map, along with details of the sites where the long range
Taepodong rocket is being rushed into operation, was passed to MI6.
They will form a briefing paper by John Scarlett for Tony Blair this
week. Until now the Iranian sites have remained secret. But the
threat they pose to Britain and Europe is so serious that Mossad has
revealed the details. more...
- Nuclear
Pakistan Will Back Iran If Attacked by US (December
21, 2005)
- Pakistan's Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri has said that
Pakistan is strictly opposed to any U.S. attack on Iran and will
stand by Tehran if this extreme step is taken by Washington.
"Iranian foreign minister's statement during his recent visit
to Pakistan provides testimony to our policy towards Tehran.
Pakistan aspires to resolve the Iranian nuclear issue according to
the principles of the International Atomic Energy Agency,"
Kasuri said while talking to reporters in his hometown, Kasur.
Kasuri said that neglecting defence would be a suicide in the
present scenario and Pakistan would acquire the latest technology
and defense equipment at all costs to maintain a balance of power in
the region. The deferred purchase of F-16s has started, as this was
put on hold only for coping with the situation arising out of the
October 8 earthquake, he said. The foreign minister said Pakistan
has categorically told the United States that only the latest
version of F-16s would be accepted and has also imposed the
condition of transfer of technology. Pointing out that India had
signed agreements with Russia, the US and other countries to pile up
weapons, Kasuri said this situation forced Pakistan to consider
every option for its survival. more...
- In
Iran, Arming for Armageddon (December
20, 2005)
- Lest you get carried away with today's good news from Iraq,
consider what's happening next door in Iran. The wild pronouncements
of the new Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, have gotten
sporadic press ever since he called for Israel to be wiped off the
map. He subsequently amended himself to say that Israel should
simply be extirpated from the Middle East map and moved to some
German or Austrian province. Perhaps near the site of an old
extermination camp?

Except that there were no such camps, indeed no Holocaust at all,
says Ahmadinejad. Nothing but "myth," a "legend"
that was "fabricated . . . under the name 'Massacre of the
Jews.' " This brought the usual reaction from European and
American officials, who, with Churchillian rage and power, called
these statements unacceptable. That something serious might accrue
to Iran for this — say, expulsion from the United Nations for
violating its most basic principle by advocating the outright
eradication of a member state — is, of course, out of the
question.
To be sure, Holocaust denial and calls for Israel's destruction are
commonplace in the Middle East. They can be seen every day on
Hezbollah TV, in Syrian media, in Egyptian editorials appearing in
semiofficial newspapers. But none of these aspiring mass murderers
are on the verge of acquiring nuclear weapons that could do in one
afternoon what it took Hitler six years to do: destroy an entire
Jewish civilization and extinguish 6 million souls. more...
- US
Warned Not to Ignore Chinese Military Advances (December
20, 2005)
- The United States must prepare an effective
strategy to face China's rising military power and not freeze at the
Asian giant "like a deer in the proverbial headlights," a
new study warned Wednesday. Beijing's rapid
technological advances mean that the United States "must plan
seriously" for its development of weapons of greater complexity
and power, said the study by the Hudson Institute, a
Washington-based conservative think tank. The report, entitled
"China's New Great Leap Forward: High Technology and Military
Power in the Next Half-Century," warned that the US government
is too preoccupied with its "war on terror" and
democratization of the Middle East and Central Asia. Meanwhile,
Washington is ignoring China's emergence as a top competitor to US
technological leadership. Since the September 11, 2001 Al-Qaeda
attacks, the United States has largely focused on the "cunning,
soul-less but essentially low-tech predator: the terrorist,"
the study said. "Yet those other
realms of warfare that occupied us prior to 9/11 -- information,
naval, and above all aerospace -- still constitute the nucleus of
the new RMA (revolution in military affairs)," it said. "If
we neglect the timely development of weaponry in these arenas, then
China could catch America like a deer in the proverbial headlights
-- precisely where we caught them after the 1991 victory in Desert
Storm." more...
- Horn
of Africa: 3.5 Million at Risk of Starvation (December
20, 2005)
- Two and a half million people have been left at
risk of starvation in Kenya
due to the non-appearance of rains while in the northern neighbour, Somalia,
one million are in need of urgent aid, 350,000 of these in what the
UNO describes as an "acute" crisis. The UNO's World
Food Programme (WFP) gave the alert on Friday, that two and a
half million people are at risk in Kenya due to the lack of rains.
The situation is especially critical in the northeast, but also in
the eastern region of the country, where the rains in the last
quarter of the year are around 30% less than the level required. The
lack of rains has been responsible for the deaths of many head of
cattle, camels and donkeys. According to the Director of the WFP for
Kenya, Tesema Negash, "food security is already
critical" in some areas, while it will not be possible to make
a final assessment until inspections have been carried out in the
field in January. Describing "a rapidly deteriorating
situation", Tesema Negash added that "we need immediate
action to avoid the loss of people's assets and their lives." more...
- Bankruptcy
Law Backfires on Credit Card Issuers (December
20, 2005)
- The industry muscled through tough changes that
were supposed to make more filers repay some of what they owe. But
that isn’t happening. Credit card
issuers and other lenders spent a small fortune to get bankruptcy
reform legislation passed. Now the new law is costing them even
more. An unprecedented spike in filings before reform took effect in
fall 2005 is chewing into lenders' bottom lines, and the subsequent
lull is showing signs of being short-lived. Bankruptcy attorneys say
their caseloads are starting to pick up, and credit counseling
agencies -- which provide now-mandatory sessions for consumers who
want to file -- say they're seeing significantly more people than
they initially predicted. All this is raising questions about
whether lenders will profit as much from the new bill as they hoped.
It wasn't supposed to be this way. The new law contains a “means
test” that was supposed to steer higher-income filers toward
repayment plans. Lenders expected a rush of consumers trying to beat
the bankruptcy deadline, but nothing like the surge that actually
occurred. More than 500,000 bankruptcy cases were filed in the two
weeks before the law took effect, compared with a normal weekly
volume of 30,000 to 35,000. So far this year more than 2 million
cases have been filed, 49% more than the same period last year and
eclipsing all previous records.
|