THE BLOG OF NEVILLE STEPHENS TO WARN PEOPLE THAT JESUS CHRIST IS COMING BACK TO EARTH SOON, AND THAT THE RAPTURE OF THE CHURCH TO HEAVEN IS VERY CLOSE AT HAND.YESHUA IS COMING SOON AND IS NOW SHAKING THE WORLD (HAGGAI 2:6) TO DRAW PEOPLE UNTO HIMSELF. IT IS NOT THE WILL OF GOD FOR ANY PERSON TO PERISH, SO NOW IS THE TIME TO TURN TO JESUS FOR SALVATION!
FOLLOWING ON FROM THE VIDEO BELOW, HERE IS THE FOLLOW-UP DISCUSSION WITH BOB ULRICH AND BILL SALUS, THE EXPERT BIBLE PROPHECY TEACHER, ON THE GARY STEARMAN TELEVISION PROGRAMME IN AMERICA.
IN THIS 16 MINUTE SESSION, BILL SALUS TEACHES ON EGYPT IN BIBLE PROPHECY AND HOW THEY ARE NOW IN "THE CROSSHAIRS". WITH THE RISE OF THE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD THROUGH PRESIDENT MORSI, THIS IS A COUNTRY TO WATCH IN THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE, BUT AS ALWAYS, ISRAEL WILL PREVAIL THROUGH OUR MIGHTY GOD AND SAVIOUR.
JUST CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW FOR ANOTHER GREAT WATCH:
EXCELLENT SHORT 13 MINUTE VIDEO CLIP FROM THE GARY STEARMAN "PROPHECY IN THE NEWS" TELEVISION PROGRAMME WHEN PROPHECY EXPERT BILL SALUS EXPLAINS WHY PSALM 83 IS SO IMPORTANT TODAY, AND HOW IT IS THE NEXT ITEM ON THE AGENDA OF BIBLICAL PREDICTIVE EVENTS!
North Korea has announced it's about to carry out a third nuclear test and more long-range rocket launches, which it says are designed to target the United States.
"We are not disguising the fact that the various satellites and long-range rockets that we will fire and the high-level nuclear test we will carry out are aimed at the United States," North Korea's National Defense Commission says.
Pyongyang now threatens to wage a “fully-fledged confrontation'' against the US for what they call continued hostility.
The declaration follows the UN Security Council's condemnation of North Korea on Tuesday and expanded sanctions against the regime for launching a rocket in December. North Korea has always claimed the launch was a peaceful satellite mission, but the US and others say it was actually a test of long-range missile technology.
In the face of what it considers to be a US threat, North Korea “will take steps for physical counteraction to bolster the military capabilities for self-defense, including the nuclear deterrence, both qualitatively and quantitatively,'' the country's Foreign Ministry warned in a statement.
Japan states North Korea does not yet have the technology to create compact nuclear warheads, but its missiles are already advanced enough to reach the US West Coast. The latest report published by Japanese observers, states the North Korean missile program has attained a new high and poses a grave threat.
The North was banned from developing missile and nuclear technology under sanctions dating from its 2006 and 2009 nuclear tests. First tests used plutonium, were detonated underground and had limited success. This time around, the international concern is that Pyongyang may use highly-enriched uranium and get better results.
North Korea does not give a time-frame of when they intend to undertake the threatened nuclear test.
The US has already called on the North to not carry out its third test.
"We hope they don't do it. We call on them not to do it," Glyn Davies, the top US envoy for North Korean diplomacy, said in the South Korean capital, Seoul.
There is no clear indication of an imminent nuclear test, observers say. However, satellite photos recently taken at North Korea's underground nuclear test site in the far northeast showed continued activity that suggested a state of readiness even in winter.
North Korea has enough weapons-grade plutonium for about four to eight bombs, according to nuclear scientist Siegfried Hecker, who visited North Korea's nuclear complex in 2010. In 2009, Pyongyang also declared that it would begin enriching uranium, which would give North Korea a second way to make atomic weapons.
The latest UN Security Council resolution demands North Korea abandon its nuclear weapons program in a "complete, verifiable and irreversible manner," as well as Pyongyang cease rocket launches. The North insists its rocket launches are purely peaceful.
The December 12 ‘satellite’ rocket launch has been celebrated as a great triumph in North Korea. The scientists involved have been treated like heroes ever since. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un mentioned the launch in his New Year's Day speech laying out the country's main policies and goals for the year. Banners hailing the event were posted on buildings across the capital.
The US, however, is not buying into the ‘satellite’ story, considering such launches covert tests of ballistic missile technology since satellite launches and long-range missile launches have similar firing mechanisms. As if to confirm that suspicion, North Korea showed off what appeared to be an intercontinental ballistic missile at a military parade last April.
Millions of American adults, particularly Protestants and evangelicals, feel religious freedoms have grown worse in the last decade in the United States, and foresee further restrictions in the years to come .... Click here for full story
What does America stand for? That question is a lot more complicated than you might think. Our Founding Fathers established a Republic that was based on a set of shared values that were embodied in the text of the U.S. Constitution .... Click here for full story
Christian Worldview and Issues 'Ben-Hur' Remake to Focus More on Story of Christ"Ben-Hur," one of the most popular biblical movies ever produced, is going to be remade by MGM studios, with sources saying the focus of the storyline will feature more heavily on Jesus Christ .... Click here for full story
Later this year, Comet ISON will pass through the asteroid belt, enter the Inner Solar System and sidestep Mars on its way past Earth, putting on what scientists expect will be a spectacular heavenly show that is not to be missed .... Click here for full story
The Israeli elections, President Obama’s inauguration speech and the violence in Syria all feature prominently in Arab news Tuesday. “Israelis head to the polls today and a ‘settler government’ is forthcoming,” reads the headline of London-based daily Al-Hayat. Featuring a photo of a soldier under a large Likud election banner, the newspaper predicts “an absolute majority” for the “right-religious bloc,” adding that Netanyahu will most likely include Yair Lapid’s Yesh Atid party in his coalition.
A few years back, Bishop Gene Robinson made news by being the first openly gay clergy in the Episcopalian tradition. As I recall the church had a big split about it.
After that, the ELCA Lutherans voted by a narrow margin to allow gay and lesbian pastors.
And today we read that the Catholics are ordaining a transgender woman....which is a woman who dresses and lives like a man.
How tolerant we all are!!
The priest is transgender. And he's starting up a parish that's modeled after the Roman Catholic Church. "I never really felt like I identified as female," said Shannon Kearns, describing his childhood. Shannon was born female but transitioned to male in his late '20s. His transgender journey has brought him peace. "I feel more at home in my body that I have ever before." And now, the culmination of another remarkable journey. Shannon will be ordained as the first transgender priest in the North American Old Catholic Church, one of the largest Old Catholic bodies in the United States. It's an off-shoot of the Roman Catholic Church, with parishes in 23 states. (Nationwide, there are believed to be between 50 and 100 transgender clergy in the Christian tradition.) "If you really value Catholic tradition and ritual and liturgy, and you value equality and social justice, there's a place for you," Shannon explained, describing the North American Old Catholic Church. Here; http://kstp.com/news/stories/s2901973.shtml So if you value ritual, liturgy, equality and social justice then there's a place for you....says the transgender priest. Interesting that she/he NEVER said anything about the value of a PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP WITH JESUS CHRIST! "The Lord says: 'These people come near to me with their mouth and honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me. Their worship of me is based on merely human rules they have been taught." Isaiah 29:13
Sounds an awful lot like all sorts of folks in America who go to church at Christmas and Easter, say the Apostles Creed, maybe put a $1 in the plate, say a few Hail Mary's...and then they are good to go!
One client (who happened to be Catholic) told me once, "Yeah, I'm not sure I'm buying all this God stuff...but I figure if it happens to be true then I better get some fire insurance by showing up at mass a few times per year."
Sad. Our society has unlimited access to Bibles, churches, Christian books, Bible study groups, Christian radio.....and yet we seem to be dying for lack of knowledge...and millions don't know Christ.
• Islamists injured 7 Egyptian troops in Sinai Al Qaeda or Salifist Bedouin extremists attacked an Egyptian patrol Friday in the Sinai Ouja region near the gas pipeline to Israel and Jordan, and injured one officer and six recruits. They were taken to hospital in El Arish.
US military option for Syria nixed before Hagel’s coming DEBKAfile Special Report 11 Jan. At a joint news conference Friday, Jan. 11, retiring Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs, Gen. Martin Dempsey, cleaned the Pentagon’s Syrian desk ready for incoming Secretary Chuck Hagel. Boiled down to essentials, their triple message was that Bashar Assad could not be stopped from using chemical weapons if he chose to do so, that securing the CW sites after Assad’s fall was the job of the “international community,” and that no US ground troops would be sent to Syria. AS DEBKAfile reported in thee third week of November, the White House has resolved to dump the Assad headache into the laps of Syria’s immediate neighbors, Turkey, Jordan and Israel, and cast the rebels adrift.
January 12, 2013 Briefs:
• Israel troops shoot two Palestinian infiltrators dead An military border patrol killed a Palestinian attempting to steal through the security fence near Hebron Saturday. Friday, a large group of Palestinians tried to break through the Gaza border fence near Jebalya. The Israeli force first fired warning shots to stop their advance and then aimed at lower limbs when they kept coming. One Palestinian was killed, a second injured. • Israeli police evict 150 Palestinians from E1 Area A large police force early Sunday evicted some 150 Palestinians who established a “settlement” Friday in the E1 Area between Jerusalem and the town of Maaleh Adummim. They were removed from the area and bussed to the West Bank. Their tents remain in place until it is determined whether they are standing on state or privately-owned land. Saturday night, on orders from Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, the state prosecution petitioned the High Court to annul an earlier temporary injunction against removing the outpost. E1 was meanwhile declared a closed military zone. • Hamas: 885 Palestinians killed in Syrian uprising According to Hamas figures published in Lebanon’s Daily Star Saturday, 885 Palestinians have been killed since the uprising broke out against Bashar Assad nearly two years ago. A further 20,500 Palestinian refugees from Syria are trapped in Lebanon, including least 3,500 who fled last month from the fierce outbreak of violence in the Yarmouk refugee camp outside Damascus.
France on national terror alert after African operations DEBKAfile Special Report
12 Jan. French President Francois Hollande placed the country on high domestic alert Saturday, Jan. 12, in case of retaliatory attacks by al Qaeda for French operations against two of its African wings: a failed mission to rescue a French hostage from the Somali Shabaab, and air and commando aid for the Mali army’s drive to stop advancing Islamists. The Islamists threatened to execute at least eight French hostages one by one, unless French forces pulled out of Somalia and Mali at once. Hollande said France had intervened in Mali because the wider Sahel region of West Africa was becoming an Afghanistan-like base for Islamist terrorists and threatened to establish a terrorist stage threatening all of Africa within range of Europe and France.
January 13, 2013 Briefs:
• Chief of staff sacks former C-in-C aide Wiener Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz has sacked Brig. Erez Wiener, bureau chief of ex-army C-in-C Gaby Ashkenazi over the State Comptroller’s disclosure of his leading role two years ago with disgraced ex-officer Boaz Harpaz in digging out information to malign the defense minister and block Yoav Galant, his appointee’s appointment as chief of staff. • Egyptian court orders new trial for Hosni Mubarak The court Sunday accepted the former Egyptian ruler’s appeal against his conviction and life sentence for failing to stop the killing of protesters during the 2011 uprising that overthrew him. Mubarak was moved to a Cairo military hospital last month. • Netanyahu: Iran is my number one task after my reelection Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu dismissed allegations by ex-PM Ehud Olmert that he wasted billions of dollars preparing for “illusory security escapades” that did not take place. Obama forced out of office in 2009 over a corruption scandal.
January 14, 2013 Briefs:
• Maj. Gen. Gady Eisenkott takes office as Dep. Chief of Staff He assumed the post Monday in a ceremony conducted by Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, after the state attorney ruled that Israel’s security situation demanded that the office be filled without delay - even during an election campaign. • Netanyahu: The next government must either cut spending or raise taxes In view of the mounting deficit, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu told a TV interviewer Monday night that the post-election government which he hopes to head will have to decide whether to cut spending or raise taxes. Israelis go to the polls Jan. 22. • Syrian rebels forced out of Taftanaz air base Syrian rebel leaders admitted Jan. 14, that Syrian forces had forced them to retreat from the big Taftanaz air base in the north. DEBKAfile: They never seized the entire base only a small part of it. • Islamists counter French airstrikes, capture Diabaly in central Mali Al Qaeda-led insurgents Monday struck the town of Diabaly in government controlled central Mali in retaliation for French airstrikes Sunday. The rebels fought with reinforcements from Mauritania. French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said French bombardments had blocked the Islamist advance to the east of Mali, but the situation in the west “remains difficult.” • Iran plans “big-budget” film to “correct Golden Globe-winning Argo Tehran shot back at Ben Afleck’s thriller about the CIA’s rescue of 6 American diplomats from Islamist Iran by announcing plans to make its own epic film to “correct numerous historical distortions” in Hollywood's version of the takeover of the 1979 US embassy takeover by revolutionary students. Argo is banned in Iran but it bootleg copies have a wide circulation.
No Egypt-Israel hot line after Egypt hosts al Qods chiefDEBKAfile Exclusive Report
• Hollande: 750 French troops in Mali to increase French President Francois Hollande said Tuesday that a total of 750 troops are taking part in the offensive against Islamist rebels in Mali and their number would increase. During a visit to the French Middle East military base, Peace Camp in Abu Dhabi, Hollande said French overnight strikes “achieved their goal.” French sources commented that the rebels’ conquest Monday of the western town of Diabali "was not a setback.” US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta confirmed that the US was backing French forces in Mali. • New secret tunnel from Gaza runs 600m into Israel A tunnel, of the type used by Gazan Palestinian terrorists to infiltrate Israel or pack with explosives for remote detonation, was discovered by a routine IDF patrol Monday. It ran 600 meters into Israeli territory from a point in southern Gaza.
Iran to send monkeys into space DEBKAfile Special Report 15 Jan. Iran will parade its ballistic rocket achievements by sending monkeys into space next month. This was announced by Hamid Fazeli, head of the country’s space agency Tuesday, Jan. 15. DEBKAfile: Since firing the first Iranian-made satellite, the 27-kilogram Omid, in February 2009, Tehran has developed a rocket with a payload capacity of 330 kilograms, capable of placing nuclear warheads anywhere on the face of the earth. The Iranians habitually mask advances in their nuclear and missile programs as pure scientific research. Obama ready for first Iranian nuclear test DEBKAfile Special Report 15 Jan. After US intelligence admitted it cannot detect or stop a Syrian chemical attack, US experts now estimate that Iran will not be able to produce enough weapon-grade uranium for one or bombs before mid-2014 “without detection by the West.” DEBKAfile: Barack Obama is preparing the world for the “surprise” of an Iranian nuclear test. The new, delayed dateline, moreover, is based on a false supposition. Already today, Iran has acquired or produced enough enriched uranium to build five nuclear bombs. Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu told an Israeli TV interviewer Monday night, Jan. 14 that his government had spent billions of shekels to outfit Israel’s Defense Forces with offensive and defensive options hitherto lacking. He stressed Israel is obliged to be extremely strong – whether to stand up to the Iranian nuclear threat and the extremist Islamist wave lashing the Arab world – or to make peace. The new nuances in Netanyahu’s reference to the Iranian nuclear threat suggest that he too is aware of the new winds blowing in Washington. In his latest statement, he departed from his standard assertion that his government would not permit Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon and said instead: “The government which I head has invested billions to prepare the country for the Iranian threat.” January 16, 2013 Briefs: • Washington ignores “compelling” evidence of Syrian chemical warfare A leaked State Department report by US diplomats in Turkey, which made a “compelling case” that Bashar Assad’s forces had used poison gas, was dismissed by National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor, who said there was no such evidence. • Netanyahu: No return to 1967 borders Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said he stands by his refusal to return to the pre-1967 war borders and will make certain to keep Jerusalem united, against international pressure. This was his associates’ comment on the an article by Jeffrey Goldberg quoting Barack Obama as saying Netanyahu does not know what Israel’s best interests are and is driving Israel into grave isolation. Israelis go to the polls for a new parliament and government in six days. • France must triple troops in Mali after no agreement on African force France pledged to triple the size of its 750-strong force fighting an Al Qaeda-rebel force threatening to overrun Mali, after West African army chiefs failed to agree on the deployment of the 3,300 troops promised by the region at a meeting in Bamako Tuesday. The regional force was to have taken over from France. DEBKAfile: This number is a drop in the sand for contending with well-trained, highly mobile al Qaeda and rebel forces equipped with high quality weaponry in broad desert regions. France in Mali fights the unfinished Libyan War DEBKA Video 16 Jan. Neither France nor the US has learned from the Afghanistan War that aerial warfare won’t defeat al Qaeda – certainly not when they are highly-trained in special forces’ tactics and backed by mobile, well-armed local militias with advanced anti-aircraft weapons. Those militias are Touareg tribesmen, trained and armed by the US in Libya as a spearhead against al Qaeda in Africa, who instead defected to the enemy. January 17, 2013 Briefs:
• The Algerian operation at the gas field hostage site is ongoing Thursday night there were with no definite figures on the number of 41 hostages held by al Qaeda for two days who survived and how many were freed. Many were used as human shields by their kidnappers, the al Qaeda (AQIM) Islamists who took them hostage Wednesday. Washington reported a US drone joined the Algerian air operation at the embattled Algerian gas field, where the Islamists had threatened to blow up the BP-operated gas facility with their Norwegian, British, Japanese, American, French and other foreign hostages unless France ended its military operation in N. Mali. • Somali Al-Shabaab says French captive killed, fears for 41 hostages The Al Qaeda-linked Somali al-Shabaab rebels claimed Thursday they had executed Denis Allex, the French secret agent held since 2009, after a French mission to rescue him failed Saturday. Al Qaeda’s African wings have threatened to execute all 10 French hostages they are holding unless France ends its Mali offensive. Paris has repeatedly claimed that Denis Allex died in the failed French rescue mission, in which two French soldiers were killed. As DEBKAfile reported earlier, the French intervention in Mali has united al Qaeda’s African factions.
Human Rights are the State religion of Europe, the unpleasant new country in which we are now trapped. These supposed rights have expelled and replaced Christianity. They have shrunk the human conscience and vastly increased the power of the State. That is why it was no use anyone going to the Strasbourg Court to win back Christianity’s lost status as the dominant faith of Britain. The Church has been humiliated. Britain no longer exists. True, you can now wear a cross while working for British Airways. But you have that freedom because you are now just another protected minority, which has no more rights or standing than other faiths, such as Atheism, Islam, Buddhism, Sikhism or Hinduism.
British Airways employee Nadia Eweida celebrates after the European Court of Human Rights ruled that she had suffered discrimination at work because of her faith
In fact, the Christian religion is worse off than all the others because it has to be constantly reminded that it is not the national religion any more. This means regular slaps and humiliations of the kind handed out by occupying powers to troublesome peoples not yet used to being subjugated. The most devastating of these was delivered two years ago by Lord Justice Laws, who personally humbled Lord Carey, a former Archbishop of Canterbury, before jeering at religious opinions as ‘irrational’. He intoned: ‘The precepts of any one religion – any belief system – cannot, by force of their religious origins, sound any louder in the general law than the precepts of any other.’
I don’t like this judgment, but it is a deadly accurate statement of the position. This country’s official faith, as people are slowly discovering, is a code of ideas called ‘Equality and Diversity’, based on several European Directives but put into law in Britain mainly through the Equality Act 2010. The continued existence of a few rather wet bishops in the House of Lords, and various other baubles and trinkets in odd corners of the constitution, means nothing against the Equality and Diversity bulldozer, enacted by Harriet Harman with the willing help of her Tory counterpart, Theresa May. Its demands are written into the contracts of public employees, and supported by the politically correct public-sector unions. Private firms that do business with the State are roped in. So are (as we have learned in recent years) the owners of small hotels and cafes, adoption agencies, housing associations and councils that have prayers before they meet. It controls thought and speech in a new post-modern way. Today’s liberal bigots don’t crudely threaten to throw people in prison for saying things they disapprove of. That might result in protests even from the increasingly spineless people of this country. Instead, they menace our livelihoods. Speak out and you lose your job, with little hope of ever getting another. This is, of course, tyrannical and brutal. But because it is not the Gestapo, the Stasi or the Gulag, we don’t recognise it for what it is. And because it is done in the name of ‘Rights’ – which sound reassuring and friendly – we do not realise that it is, in fact, a deep and shameful wrong. And so it grows worse each day.
(This week marks Jim's 300th “Israel Watch” for RaptureReady. He is grateful to the RR family, beginning with Todd and Terry, for the opportunity to talk about the relevance of modern Israel.)
Israel is not Legitimate
Just as Barack Obama came out in favor of same-sex marriage last year, calculating that the time was now right culturally, so too do Israel haters now feel emboldened to put their hands tightly on the lever of the hangman’s scaffolding.
An article this week from Jerome Slater from the Christian Science Monitor was quite instructive.
Many of us pro Israel activists have asked for a long time, “Why didn’t Israel get credit for pulling out of Gaza? After all, now it can’t be said they are ‘occupying’ the Strip anymore.”
Slater has answered that for us: It doesn’t matter.
By Slater’s reasoning—which is leftist worldview—Israel is still occupying the Gaza Strip, since the IDF maintains a perimeter presence. This of course is because Hamas (and, presumably, the larger Palestinian population, since they elected the terror group) likes to murder Jews. Yet, again, notice the chilling irony:
Israel no longer occupies Gaza, except that it does.
This passes for reality in 2013.
The lead paragraph of Slater’s analysis/diatribe goes like this:
“Israel's ceasefire with Hamas is holding, but unless Israel completely lifts its blockade and includes Hamas in two-state negotiations, renewed rocket attacks from Gaza are likely. Should that happen, Israel would not be justified in arguing self-defense.”
Since 1967, the Soviet-inspired Palestinian/PLO propaganda has been nothing short of brilliant. Let your supernatural hatred seethe under the surface, offer coffee to gullible Westerners, lament the “occupation,” and never have to hijack a plane again. The combination of the international community’s gullibility, and its own inherent anti-semitism has paved the yellow brick road for the PLO, which has never abandoned its goal of liquidating the Jewish state.
Slater’s reasoning, which, as I’ve been writing about non-stop is also the view of the Religious Left in America, goes like this:
“Israel, however, is not defending its homeland against unprovoked attack. Rather it is ‘defending’ a nonexistent right to continue its occupation (direct or indirect) and repression of the Palestinians – and that is what provokes Palestinian attacks from Gaza.”
This is quite important, my friends. He is saying that he believes the Palestinian narrative, that the occupation breeds violence, not the other way around. This is the other worldview in the Arab-Israeli conflict. Leaders around the world, including American pastors and ministry leaders, believe Palestinian frustration, joblessness, lack of a sovereign homeland, etc., is caused by the presence of Jews in the former Roman/Muslim/Turkish province of Palestine.
Slater says that after Operation Cast Lead in 2008, several human rights groups defined Israel’s response to Palestinian terrorism as “war crimes.”
I hope you are beginning to see that in the view of the international community, Israel cannot raise a legitimate defense for any reason, in any area. Do you get it? Much like the argument over gun control now raging in America, the left is simply marching relentlessly toward its goals. Obama means to try and disarm regular Americans, period. No discussion, no dialogue on Capitol Hill or in a coffee shop in Peoria will stop that advance.
Likewise, no presentation of facts, no appeals to serious efforts to get the Palestinians to abandon their goals of mass murder will have any effect.
Naturally, you understand what these scenarios lead to, don’t you?
Confrontation.
The decades-long conflict leads finally to conflict.
Slater insists that Israeli strikes have landed on hospitals, schools, and ambulances. He (deliberately?) leaves out the all-important fact that the IDF goes to extreme lengths to avoid such strikes…but Hamas uses those hospitals, schools, and ambulances as shields.
It is international weakness and cowardice that perpetuates the conflict.
I’ve heard quite a bit of talk lately that commentators (such as yours truly) talk too much about gloom and doom, and write depressing stuff.
I can’t speak for others. What I know is that a presentation of facts allows all of us the opportunity to live in reality, a place from which we can make good decisions.
More than that, I often attempt to pull back a curtain on a glorious future, because even amid all this conflict, we see very clearly that God acts and is acting in history. Most importantly—get this—He will act in history.
Those who love the Jewish people know that the world’s injustice and inversions of the truth are but for a little while. Scripture is soaked with the message that dawn is coming, because God has said quite clearly that He will exact justice for His people.
That’s why a hopelessly skewed perspective, from yet another journalist, is not reality. It is merely pitiful, reflecting the wisdom of the world.
Israel is permanent, if Scripture is to be believed. I’m afraid her current tormenters will not realize that until it’s too late.
The twin crises unfolding either side of the Sahara Desert in Mali and Algeria are closely interlinked - the Islamist groups in Mali have their roots in Algeria, while the kidnappers who have just struck in Algeria say they are acting in revenge for France's intervention against their allies to the south.
While some analysts have said it would have not been possible to plan and carry out such a complex operation in the few days since the French intervention in Mali, the well-connected Islamist groups who operate across the Sahara Desert are likely to have had sleeping cells, allied commandos in Algeria and beyond and local sympathisers ready to join in if any high-profile operation was decided. The hostage crisis on a BP oil base at Tiguentourine in southern Algeria brings the issue of Islamist groups back to Algeria, where they developed in the early 1990s before the army routed them, forcing their relocation in Mali where ex-President Toumani Toure had the weakness to tolerate them. The Malian crisis is, to a large extent, the by-product of a conflict which has been mostly forgotten these days, but which cost the country between 70,000 and 150,000 lives during Algeria's so-called "dirty-war" (1991-2002).
The Independent, Exaro News with thanks to Robert Chewter.
IF THE IMAGES BELOW DO NOT APPEAR, IT IS BECAUSE "BIG BROTHER" HAS CENSORED THEM AGAIN!! HOWEVER, YOU CAN ACCESS ALL OF THE MISSING INFO BY PRESSING THE "READ MORE" LINK AT THE BOTTOM OF THIS ARTICLE (NEV).
105 adults come forward to report sexual abuse in investigation into paedophilia at North Wales care home
Investigation is looking into previously undetected paedophilia in the 1970s and 80s Scores of people have come forward to claim that they were sexually abused as children during the North Wales care home scandal amid a growing number of police inquiries into previously undetected paedophilia in the 1970s and 80s. Operation Pallial into local authority homes in North Wales said that it had received information from 105 adults living in England, Scotland, Wales and the Republic of Ireland since early November. Amid persistent rumours that some abusers held positions of authority, detectives said they would follow the evidence “without fear or favour” and would prioritise offenders still working with children. Detective Superintendent Ian Mulcahey, the senior investigating officer, saidL “All victims of abuse have a right to expect all allegations of abuse, no matter how much time has passed, to be investigated professionally and appropriately. We will do so.” The tally, revealed in an official statement yesterday, casts further doubt on the findings of the public inquiry by the former High Court judge Sir Ronald Waterhouse into Welsh care homes, which in 2000 identified but did not name 28 alleged sexual abusers of teenaged boys. Following the disclosure of the late Jimmy Savile’s paedophilia in October, former care home residents living in and around Wrexham suggested that dozens of abusers had escaped justice, prompting the Prime Minister to set up a new police inquiry, Operation Pallial. Updating the public on its progress, Det Supt Mulcahey, from Merseyside Police, said that since then 105 people had either contacted police directly or agreed to have their details forwarded by the Children’s Commissioner for Wales and the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. He said some of what he described as “new allegations of historic child abuse” had come from victims previously known about, and some from victims who had contacted police for the first time. Stressing that police intended to track down abusers, Det Supt Mulcahey said that if any were still alive “they must be identified, investigated and brought to justice, with those who still have access to children being prioritised.” Twenty-seven staff are working on Operation Pallial, a joint operation by the Serious Organised Crime Agency and North Wales Police – one of three serious inquiries now under way into alleged sexual abuse of children in the 1980s. Since October, the Metropolitan Police has been carrying out Operation Yewtree into the alleged activities of Savile and other showbusiness figures and have made high-profile arrests. For a month five officers from Scotland Yard’s child abuse investigation team have been secretly looking into allegations that senior politicians abused children during 1980s, the Independent revealed last week. Operation Fairbank was set up into the Labour MP Tom Watson claims in the House of Commons in October that the police should re-examine evidence of a “powerful paedophile network linked to Parliament and No 10”. Following Mr Watson’s comments, BBC’s wrongly aired allegations of sexual abuse against a former politician – who was named on social media as Lord McAlpine, a former Conservative Party treasurer. Lord McAlpine, who was innocent, successfully sued the BBC and commentators subsequently suggested that Mr Watson had been responsible for a baseless “witchhunt.” However, all three live police operations into historic paedophilia are growing. The Metropolitan Police disclosed last week that Operation Yewtree is investigating allegations made by a total of 589 victims, most against Savile; Operation Fairbank has interviewed several witnesses in conditions of utmost secrecy, and, now, Operation Pallial has been inundated with allegations. In what is thought to be an unrelated matter, Greater Manchester Police said last month that the late Liberal politician Cyril Smith, abused teenaged boys at a care home in Rochdale in the 1960s before becoming an MP.
Elm Guest House Operation Fairbank Rumours
max farquar In November of last year, surrounded in secrecy, the Metropolitan Police began Operation Fairbank. It was set up after Tom Watson MP made allegations, in the House of Commons, of a “powerful paedophile ring” with links to a previous prime minister’s “senior adviser”. The widely held belief has been that Labour MP Tom Watson was referring to a member of Margaret Thatchers’s Conservative government. Apparently, the Operation Fairbank investigation is just a “scoping exercise” aimed at a “preliminary assessment of the evidence rather than a formal inquiry”. Presumably that means if they find anything too incriminating then they can just ‘kill’ the investigation … or maybe I’m just getting a tad too cynical these days. Anyway, one of the areas of inquiry that the “scoping exercise” is … well … err … ‘re-scoping’ is a child sex abuse case from the late 70s and early 80s which centred around the Elm Guest House at 27 Rocks Lane, South West London. The Elm Guest House was run by Carole Kasir between 1979-1982 where she provided an ‘unthreatening meeting place for homosexual men, free from the stigma of a sexual orientation’. An opportunity for gay men to “be themselves”. Following the sudden death of 47-year-old Kasir in 1990 from an insulin overdose, apparently, two social worker friends of hers gave some worrying evidence to the inquest. Mary Moss and Christopher Fay made allegations of the sexual abuse of children at the Elm Guest House. Carried out by rich and powerful men. A party at the Elm Guest House was raided by police in 1982, following which 12 boys gave evidence that they had been abused by men. German born Carole Kasir was convicted for running a disorderly house. However, the allegations of sexual abuse against children by the rich and powerful, rumoured to include politicians, police, judges, clergy and famous names from the celebrity world of entertainment … were not pursued. Hmmm … maybe it was just another “scoping exercise”. In the last few weeks, what is claimed to be, some of the alleged Elm Guest House evidence collected by social worker Mary Moss has begun to appear on the internet. In particular, a series of reversed photographs which show someone holding hand written notes and photocopied images. More than 130 of these pictures have now been flipped and appear to reveal details of some of the rich and powerful men that were alleged to have frequented the Elm Guest House between 1979 and 1982. To be honest, the photography is not of the highest quality and some of the handwriting is very difficult to read and in some cases it’s illegible. One such image is the list of names that are alleged to have visited the Elm Guest House. I have no way of knowing whether this list originates from Mary Moss, if it’s in her own handwriting or even if any of the people listed have ever visited a house in Rocks Lane. However, I can’t see how merely pointing out how certain individuals are on a list of people, who once stayed at a famous or infamous London guest house, can be construed as interfering with any “scoping excersise”. After all, if it eventually becomes a ‘formal inquiry’ and anybody is charged with anything criminal, as a subsequence … then they will be named anyway. Many of the men mentioned on the list are, of course, dead. Just like Jimmy Savile. So, cue the ‘I didn’t do anything at the time but 20/30/40/50 years later I quite fancy some compensatiom’ band wagon jumpers … if it transpires that any of them are postumously pursued for a punishment that they can no longer serve.
Just so as there’s no confusion … I understand that Leon Brittan, Cliff Richard and Peter Bottomley, for instance, are still alive and kicking. I’d hate for anyone to think otherwise. Speaking ill of the dead is one thing but speaking dead of the living is quite another. BTW, there seems to be quite a few mentions of the Monday Club there. I haven’t got a clue what that’s all about. Does that mean they were members of the Monday Club? Is that something to do with a regular stay at the Elm Guest House? Or is it something conducted outside of the ’unthreatening meeting place for homosexual men’? Perhaps someone could enlighten me.
TURKEY: Police break up plot to assassinate pastor
18th January, 2013
Police in Turkey say they thwarted an assassination plot against Emre Karaali (pictured) on Tuesday 15 January when they arrested 14 suspects, two of whom had been part of his congregation for more than a year.
Emre Karaali (33), pastor of Izmit Protestant Church, was the target of the alleged plot. He is a native Turk and a former Muslim. Emre said that two of the arrested suspects were regular members, feigning interest in Christianity. Some of the other suspects also had visited the church. Eleven of the suspects are men and three are women. "These people had infiltrated our church and collected information about me, my family and the church and were preparing an attack against us," said Emre. "Two of them attended our church for over a year and they were like family."
Accounts of the arrests in Turkish media reported that the suspects were planning to murder Emre during a series of evangelistic outreach meetings. "They caught them at the last minute," said Hakan Tastan, an Istanbul Christian who was visiting Izmit on Wednesday 16 January. "If they had waited one week, we would have lost them," he said, referring to the pastor, his family and church members.
The 14 suspects had collected personal information, copies of personal documents, created maps of the church and the pastor's home, and had photographs of those who had come to Izmit to preach. The police recorded the telephone conversations of the 14 suspects, and found two guns in one of the homes they raided.
Press reports said that the Izmit anti-terror police decided to close in when they learned that the network of suspects had brought in someone from Diyarbakir, in eastern Turkey, to carry out the murder. The police are not talking about the arrests, as their investigation is ongoing.
Police investigations
Emre Karaali said that he learned about the arrests when reading the morning newspaper on Wednesday 16 January. Later that day, the police called him in for questioning and a briefing that lasted more than five hours. He said that the police showed him photographs of some of the twelve suspects who, unlike the remaining two suspects, had not been regularly attending the church. He said he recognized some of the twelve as occasional visitors.
Emre described his treatment at the hands of the police as "exceptional". He said he has been working with the police since January 2012, when he informed them of a death threat he had received: "I received a threat by phone and that's when the police started to investigate." Emre said that he declined the police protection he was offered, but his wife and two young children moved into an apartment building with better security. Another threat was made during the summer: "They said, ‘You talk too much. We're hearing your voice everywhere and we're going to break your head.' They didn't say they'll kill me exactly, but that if I didn't shut up it would be bad." The police have not revealed whether any of the 14 arrested suspects is connected to the telephone threats.
Izmit Church
Izmit, about 160 kilometres east of Istanbul, is in an industrial region of about 1 million people, known for the devastating earthquake of 1999 that claimed thousands of lives. Izmit Protestant Church, which has been in existence for 13 years, is a congregation of 20 native Turks, all of whom are former Muslims. Emre and his wife have served the church for four years, in an environment he describes as difficult: "Every region of Turkey has its challenges. What is difficult about our city is that the people here are closed and there are many radical groups making it a hard place for the church. The anger towards us continues."
A Christian visiting the Izmit church this week described a group of children yelling insults at people leaving an evening meeting. Earlier in the week, a passerby threw rocks and hurled expletives at the church. "There is hate and this hate feeling continues from people here," Emre said. "We've been trying to make known what Christianity is about. There are those who come to us who are warm and well-intentioned, but ones who hate us also come, unfortunately."
Emre's predecessor Wolfgang Hade, a German, also received death threats during his time as pastor in Izmit, and was under police protection for a year after the 2007 murders of three Christians in the eastern city of Malatya. The accused ringleader of the Malatya murders had said that he was planning to kill Wolfgang Hade next.
The Istanbul Protestant Church Foundation, of which the Izmit church is a member, denounced the alleged assassination plot in a press statement on 17 January: "These types of assassination attempts are a black stain that some want to spread on Turkey making it a spectacle to the world. We stand against those who attack different faiths in our country. Instead we prefer the upholding of the virtues of love and brotherhood, which is the core of tolerance."
Emre Karaali said that he intends to continue to pastor his small flock. "Two years ago I almost lost my life because of my health, but the Lord brought me back to life and he has done this for me again," he said. "He protects us, so we believe this means the Lord has work for us to do. We haven't lost our confidence. On the contrary, we feel the Lord is with us because he didn't allow this [assassination] to happen, and we will continue to do what the Lord asks. We will continue. We will continue."
(World Watch Monitor)
The elections will almost certainly yield a leadership that firmly rejects Palestinian statehood and adamantly champions settlement expansion — not so much because the electorate is swinging heavily to the right, but because the right has already swung heavily to the far right
Four years ago: Then prime minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu meets with President Shimon Peres to discuss forming a governing coalition, March 20, 2009 (photo credit: Avi Ohayon/GPO/Flash 90)
Sixty-five years after those who spoke for the local Arabs rejected a Jewish state, this will likely be an Israel that has voted to reject a Palestinian state — prompted by a combination of the Palestinians’ intransigence, doubletalk, hostility and terrorism, and of Israeli Jews’ security fears, historic connection and sense of religious obligation.
Curiously, however, this dramatic imminent shift in the national orientation stems less from a surge by the Israeli electorate from left to right — if the polls are accurate, there isn’t going to be all that much of that. Rather, it is the right itself that has already shifted. The right has become the far-right. The Likud is both bleeding support to the adamantly pro-settlement Jewish Home, and itself chose a far more stridently pro-settlement slate for these elections: On the Israeli right in 2013, Benjamin Netanyahu, rhetorically at least, is a discordant relative moderate.
The Israeli right may not grow by much numerically on January 22. Likud, Yisrael Beytenu, Jewish Home and National Union held 49 seats between them in the last parliament, and many polls suggest that those same parties — some allied, some defunct, some resurgent — will this time draw a similar number of seats or perhaps just a few more. But this is a different Israeli right, almost certainly helming and setting the tone for our different Israel.
This is an Israeli right whose soaring political force is Naftali Bennett, an ex-IDF commando, former head of the Council of Settlements and previous top aide to Netanyahu, who brushes aside the notion of a Palestinian state anywhere in the biblical Land of Israel. It’s just not going to happen, he declares, with a confidence born of his party’s dizzying rise, from three seats in the last parliament to what the polls indicate will be well over a dozen this time. Unfamiliar to many Israelis — perhaps even to many of its voters — Bennett’s Jewish Home favors annexing the 60% of the West Bank where Israel retains full security and civil control and offering citizenship to the 50,000 Palestinians who live there, and is perhaps best exemplified by the fact that it will in all probability provide Israel with two representatives in the Knesset from among the tiny, hardest-core Hebron settler community.
Naftali Bennett casts his vote in his successful campaign to lead the Jewish Home party, in November (photo credit: Yehoshua Yosef/Flash90)
In the new Israel of 2013, furthermore, kippa-wearing Bennett is the monopolistic political face of religious Zionism. The ideologically diverse National Religious Party has been entirely superseded by this new incarnation. And there is emphatically no place in our new Knesset for the dovish religious Zionist politics emblemized by the likes of ex-minister and Meimad MK Rabbi Michael Melchior. In our dawning new era, Orthodox Zionism is now all but synonymous with pro-settlement activism and advocacy, championing and concretizing the IDF’s 1967 liberation of the Jewish people’s historic Judean and Samarian territory.
As shown by the unresolved dispute over Bennett’s declared preference to go to jail rather than obey an IDF order to evacuate settlements — his unretracted conviction that above such an order flutters the “black flag” of illegality — this newly politically empowered Orthodox Zionist swathe of our electorate could not be relied upon to dismantle settlements if so required… and in the likely new Israel will almost certainly not be asked to do so.
Deputy Prime Minister Dan Meridor (left) speaks with MK Benny Begin at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem. (photo credit: Lior Mizrahi/Flash90)
The Israeli prime minister will not have changed. But Netanyahu will be leading a very different party of government. This is a Likud without the dovish prickling of Dan Meridor and Michael Eitan, a Likud whose 100,000 or so party members chose to send into political oblivion even Benny Begin, the scion of the man who first brought them to power in 1977, not because of a rejected political orientation, a la Meridor, but because of Begin’s determined fealty to the rule of law.
Netanyahu’s government will further lack the braking influence of outgoing Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who did insist on evacuating illegal settlement outposts. Barak is gone, and the Labor Party that he abandoned in 2011, so that he could cling onto his beloved ministry just a little while longer, has gone too — in that it has had nothing of relevance to say during this campaign on the core issues of Palestinian statehood, West Bank settlement, the physical contours of this country, our national values, and our place in the international mosaic.
Jewish Home and most in the newly hardline Likud essentially proclaim “To hell with world opinion,” and argue that in this region you survive by standing up for what’s yours and that the soft and the soft-hearted just get trampled. And the Labor Party, the alternative voice? Silent.
Former Labor Party leader Amram Mitzna announces that he is joining the Hatnua party during a joint press conference with party chairwoman Tzipi Livni in Tel Aviv, on December 2 (photo credit: Gideon Markowicz/Flash90)
The party of former chief of staff Yitzhak Rabin, the one-time party of government, has offered no leadership in these elections on shaping our relations with the Palestinians. Discredited by the failure of the Oslo process and by Yasser Arafat’s duplicity, bereft of the assassinated Rabin, confounded by Mahmoud Abbas’s impossible mix of English-language conciliation and Arabic viciousness, it abandoned the security-diplomatic agenda. It mustered no credible ex-generals or security chiefs to galvanize the electorate, contriving to lose even its own ex-general and former leader Amram Mitzna to Tzipi Livni’s doubtless transient Hatnua. Rabin is murdered, Mitzna jumped ship, one-time Shin Bet chief Yaakov Peri preferred to run with Yair Lapid, Rabin protege Amnon Lipkin-Shahak is dead. And even our last IDF chief, Gabi Ashkenazi, Labor’s potential future savior, is already neutered politically by his own crass behavior in the Harpaz affair.
In 1996, four suicide bombings in 10 days by Hamas pushed an Israel emerging from the trauma of the Rabin assassination toward Netanyahu, with his scathing, and vindicated, derision over the prospects of peacemaking with Arafat. Ironically, in the new Israel, Netanyahu is now the closest thing the Likud has to a political dove — championing numerous building projects over the pre-1967 Green Line, vowing never to divide Jerusalem, but also defying the hawks in his party, and hemorrhaging votes to Bennett, by affirming his commitment in principle to Palestinian statehood, and by insistently differentiating himself from his joint list’s No. 2, Avigdor Liberman, who talks incessantly of Abbas as a “political terrorist.”
Time’s Netanyahu cover, dated May 28.
Netanyahu, in the new Israel, will likely find himself “King Bibi” in title only when it comes to the Palestinians. Barely a soul on the Likud list would support him were he to essay even a slightly more flexible policy — if, that is, and it’s quite an if, he felt the urge to do so. His Knesset faction divides only between longtime hardliners and expedient hardliners. The late-November Likud primary winner Gideon Sa’ar noted recently that “two states for two peoples was never part of [the Likud's] election platform.” And Sa’ar was not previously ranked among the particular hawks. Tzipi Hotovely, who always was, is already preparing the ladder for Netanyahu’s two-state climbdown, repeating during the campaign that his 2009 Bar-Ilan University speech setting out his “vision” of Palestinian statehood was merely a tactical maneuver intended by Netanyahu to placate the world.
It will be remarkable, if the polls are more or less accurate, that the Israeli electorate has not swung dramatically to the right. Remarkable because this is an era, and a region, in which profound wariness about the notion of Israeli territorial compromise seems axiomatic. Israel left Gaza and South Lebanon without an agreement, and the extremists immediately took over. Israel relinquished territory to Egypt with an agreement, and the extremists eventually took over. Israel adjusted its border with Jordan, and the extremists are on the rise there too. The relatively moderate Abbas would be ousted by Hamas if the IDF were not deployed in the West Bank, and even the relatively moderate Abbas chose not to accept prime minister Ehud Olmert’s far-reaching, albeit problematically timed, peace offer in 2008. Israel contemplated giving up the Golan Heights, from which it was attacked in the state’s early years, and now heaves a daily sigh of relief that Bashar Assad doesn’t hold that high ground, even as it braces for still greater dangers on that frontier when he is gone. Turkey loathes Israel and is moving out of the Western orbit. Iran is closing in on the bomb.
Wariness is mandated. Bullheadedness, less so. Israel’s relationships in this region are under immense strain, and the security dangers allow for little risk-taking and no complacency. But the Labor party of a bygone age would have argued that Israel’s interest lies in protecting the country today while doing what it can — however Sisyphean the task — in seeking to gradually create a climate more conducive to conciliation and compromise tomorrow. The Labor Party of a bygone age would have sounded an impassioned alarm at the threat to Israel’s Jewish democracy that is explicit in Jewish Home’s vision of a largely Israeli-sovereign West Bank in which almost all of the Palestinians are restricted to limited self-rule in enclaves (Areas A and B) and denied self-determination. It would have determinedly highlighted the consequent risks to Israel’s international legitimacy, and strains on Israel’s vital alliance with the United States. The Labor Party of a bygone age would have bitterly protested the extremism on the far right, which is deeply discomfiting for Israel’s supporters, and makes it so easy for critics to blame Israel even for diplomatic deadlocks for which it is not primarily responsible. It would have urged Israelis not to vote for Jewish Home, and implored Netanyahu not to build a coalition with Bennett.
But today’s socioeconomically focused Labor has offered no compelling formulae for grappling with the regional challenges and the way they have impacted Israeli politics. Yes, Israelis need to put bread on the table. Israelis would also prefer not to spend the foreseeable future hiding beneath the table. Or being told that they no longer have the right to a table at all. Short-sighted self-interest on the center-left prevented the creation of an alliance that might have been capable of offering alternative policies on both socioeconomic and diplomatic/security issues.
And still, the political blocs may remain much the same.
But even if Israelis prove not to have surged across the spectrum less than two weeks from now, even if they didn’t switch from center-left bloc to rightist bloc in massive numbers, the right-wing leadership they are set to re-elect did shift. It’s a right wing with arch-survivor Netanyahu as its constrained figurehead, with uncompromising Liberman marginalized only by his current legal difficulties, and with the triumphant Bennett — whether or not Netanyahu chooses to bring Jewish Home into the coalition — a warning personified against any perceived weakness.