Tuesday, September 11, 2012

ARABS SCAM CANADA IN CITIZENSHIP FRAUD

KING JESUS IS COMING FOR US ANY TIME NOW. THE RAPTURE. BE PREPARED TO GO.

DOCTOR DOCTORIAN FROM ANGEL OF GOD
then the angel said, Financial crisis will come to Asia. I will shake the world.

JAMES 5:1-3
1 Go to now, ye rich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon you.
2 Your riches are corrupted, and your garments are motheaten.
3 Your gold and silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together for the last days.

REVELATION 18:10,17,19
10 Standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas, alas that great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour is thy judgment come.
17 For in one hour so great riches is come to nought. And every shipmaster, and all the company in ships, and sailors, and as many as trade by sea, stood afar off,
19 And they cast dust on their heads, and cried, weeping and wailing, saying, Alas, alas that great city, wherein were made rich all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness! for in one hour is she made desolate.

EZEKIEL 7:19
19 They shall cast their silver in the streets, and their gold shall be removed: their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in the day of the wrath of the LORD: they shall not satisfy their souls, neither fill their bowels: because it is the stumblingblock of their iniquity.

REVELATION 13:16-18
16 And he(THE FALSE POPE WHO DEFECTED FROM THE CHRISTIAN FAITH) causeth all,(IN THE WORLD ) both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:(MICROCHIP IMPLANT)
17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark,(MICROCHIP IMPLANT) or the name of the beast,(WORLD DICTATORS NAME INGRAVED ON YOUR SKIN OR TATTOOED ON YOU OR IN THE MICROCHIP IMPLANT) or the number of his name.(THE NUMBERS OF HIS NAME INGRAVED IN THE MICROCHIP IMLPLANT)-(ALL THESE WILL TELL THE WORLD DICTATOR THAT YOUR WITH HIM AND AGAINST KING JESUS-GOD)
18 Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast:(WORLD LEADER) for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred threescore and six.(6-6-6) A NUMBER SYSTEM (6006006)OR(60020202006)(SOME KIND OF NUMBER IMPLANTED IN THE MICROCHIP THAT TELLS THE WORLD DICTATOR AND THE NEW WORLD ORDER THAT YOU GIVE YOUR TOTAL ALLIGIENCE TO HIM AND NOT JESUS)(ITS AN ETERNAL DECISION YOU MAKE)(YOU CHOOSE YOUR OWN DESTINY)(YOU TAKE THE DICTATORS NAME OR NUMBER UNDER YOUR SKIN,YOUR DOOMED TO THE LAKE OF FIRE AND TORMENTS FOREVER,NEVER ENDING MEANT ONLY FOR SATAN AND HIS ANGELS,NOT HUMAN BEINGS).OR YOU REFUSE THE MICROCHIP IMPLANT AND GO ON THE SIDE OF KING JESUS AND RULE FOREVER WITH HIM ON EARTH.YOU CHOOSE,ITS YOUR DECISION.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RYUgVL9PdxM&list=UU4SH8rh0OjYV3zwqnIfqNbA&index=1&feature=plcp
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9PX-vW4VccY&feature=player_embedded#!
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/markets/indexes/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfPX59y4KxE&feature=related

HALF HOUR DOW RESULTS TUE SEPTEMBER 11,2012

09:30 AM +2.43
10:00 AM +72.86
10:30 AM +66.34
11:00 AM +82.67
11:30 AM +94.43
12:00 PM +85.45
12:30 PM +84.41
01:00 PM +80.26
01:30 PM +90.45
02:00 PM +92.45
02:30 PM +93.56
03:00 PM +74.64
03:30 PM +66.07
04:00 PM +69.07 13,323.36

S&P 500 1433.56 +4.48

NASDAQ 3104.53 +0.51

GOLD 1,734.90 +1.90

OIL 96.95 +0.41

TSE 300 12,220.45 +5.02

CDNX 1274.60 +3.89

S&P/TSX/60 69.32 -0.47

MORNING,NEWS,STATS

YEAR TO DATE PERFORMANCE
Dow +21 points at 4 minutes of trading today.
Dow +1 points at low today.
Dow +99 points at high today so far.
GOLD opens at $1,737.90.OIL opens at $97.11 today.

AFTERNOON,NEWS,STATS
Dow +1 points at low today so far.
Dow +99 points at high today so far.

WRAPUP,NEWS,STATS
Dow +1 points at low today.
Dow +99 points at high today.

GOLD ALLTIME HIGH $1,902.60 (NOT AT CLOSE)


FIRES AND EXPLOSIONS

REVELATION 8:7
7 The first angel sounded, and there followed hail and fire mingled with blood, and they were cast upon the earth: and the third part of trees was burnt up, and all green grass was burnt up.

Peachland wildfire forces 1,500 from homes as firefighters struggle to contain blaze


James Keller, Canadian Press | Sep 10, 2012 8:17 PM ET | Last Updated: Sep 10, 2012 10:48 PM ET
More from Canadian Press
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck A helicopter drops water on a wildfire in Peachland, B.C., Monday.
Tilman Hainle lost his boyhood home in the vicious wildfire that swept down a mountainside near this lakeside Okanagan community Sunday, but Canada lost a piece of history.
The house where Hainle grew up sat abandoned on a former vineyard Hainle had worked for 40 years, the result of a decision to sell the property to a developer last May.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl DyckOne millimetre of rain and calmer winds overnight brought a small amount of relief to fire crews Monday.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl DyckSix-year-old Peachland wildfire evacuee Azaneth Mejia waits outside an evacuation centre with family friend Carmon Gorzynski in West Kelowna.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl DyckFirefighters take a break for breakfast while battling a wildfire before sunrise Monday.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl DyckA helicopter turns around to pick up more water

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tom OckeltonPeople watch smoke from a fire near Peachland, B.C. as they sit on Gyro beach in Kelowna Sunday.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff BassettThe wildfire burns out of control along highway 97C Sunday.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff Bassett
It was also the property where Canada’s first commercially released icewine was created in 1978. Hainle was a teenager when he and his father collaborated on the first of what would become the signature Canadian product.“It’s a time for mixed emotions,” Hainle said in a sober interview Monday, hours after officials confirmed the house and three other homes were destroyed by the blaze.“It certainly has a lot of significance, not just in terms of our history but it’s a significant piece of Canadian wine history as well.”Hainle, 53, said his parents purchased the property in the early 1970s and became among the first in the area to plant European grapes. The creation of the icewine was a product of a father-son experiment.“We didn’t realize at the time it was so significant,” he said.Hainle has spent decades in the wine business, with the family vineyard expanding to a surrounding property over the years.In 2002, the Hainle Vineyard Estate Winery was sold to another operator, while Hainle downsized to the original family homestead and operated a winery and bed and breakfast as the Working Horse Winery, so-named because of the horses he used to help with the work.
Hainle, who now lives on Vancouver Island and is a global winery consultant, said Monday his family was always aware there were fire hazards around the property because it’s an arid part of the province and the vineyard was up against the woods.“It’s a very fortunate thing that we weren’t operating and had guests on the property or had to worry about getting the horses out in such a hurry like some of the neighbours did.”
The strong winds that sent the fire barrelling toward this lakefront community proved too much for firefighters attempting to keep the blaze away from homes, with gusts of wind acting like flame throwers and destroying four houses.The fire, which started Sunday near Peachland and moved three kilometres in a little more than an hour, continued to send thick clouds of white smoke over the community Monday, with more than 1,500 residents remaining under an evacuation order.“The wind was blowing very hard in that area,” Peachland’s fire chief, Grant Topham, told a news conference Monday.“We had the crews in there and they saved many, many homes. The wind blew the fire into those homes. They tried to save them as best they could; they tried their best. They saved many homes, but unfortunately, there were some they could not, did not save.”
Several outbuildings were also damaged or destroyed. Hundreds more people remain on evacuation alert.
The fire started near a park on the northern edge of Peachland, a community of about 5,200 located 380 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, but it wasn’t clear what caused it. Wind gusts as strong as 50 kilometres an hour fuelled the fire, which quickly grew to two square kilometres.On Monday, 65 firefighters were at work with the help of water tankers, 17 fire trucks and half a dozen water-bombing helicopters. By mid-morning, officials said they considered the fire 50 per cent contained after a night of cooler temperatures and rain slowed the fire’s spread.Topham said crews had made progress, but the fire wasn’t under control yet.“We have areas where there are hot spots, there are trees that are still burning, there are stumps that are still burning,” he said.“We are expected to get up to possible 50-kilometre winds. We may or may not get rain.”Elsie Lemke, director of emergency operations for the District of Peachland, said officials were working to contact the residents whose homes were destroyed, but she wasn’t sure how long that might take.
“Our hearts go out to the property owners who have suffered loss because of this fire,” she said.An emergency reception centre was set up in a community hall in nearby West Kelowna, where volunteers were taking down contact information and offering free hotel stays and other supplies to people who needed it.
Eddie Stadelman, 78, stopped by and secured a two-night stay for himself and his wife, who were told to evacuate Sunday evening.Stadelman said they were about to sit down for “a happy hour,” when gusts of wind prompted him to walk outside to have a look around.“I looked up and there was smoke, and I knew there was going to be trouble,” said Stadelman, a retired Toronto firefighter.Stadelman gathered photos, important documents and keepsakes, certain that the evacuation order was only a matter of time. Soon after, a police officer driving by with a loud speaker proved him correct.“We expected to be evacuated because that wind was blowing and that smoke was rolling,” he said.“In my mind, I have an escape plan. We had everything, so we just picked it up and put it in the car.”Stadelman said he can see his house from the highway that runs just north of town, and he could see it was untouched.Thick smoke lifting up from the mountains to the west of Peachland drifted over town, leaving the taste and smell of burnt wood in the air.
The buzz of helicopters was constant, as a steady stream of water bombers flew to Okanagan Lake before returning to douse the blaze.The sky had been clear earlier in the morning, but eventually clouded over and residents were hopeful for the forecast that predicted rain.On the other hand, the winds remained strong, picking up intensity as the day wore on.In my mind, I have an escape plan. We had everything, so we just picked it up and put it in the car.Ron Polak noted the increasing winds with worry, wondering whether he and his wife would soon be among those forced out of their homes.“From my house, through the trees, you can see a lot of smoke,” said the 50-year-old carpenter.“It was a pretty late night for us.”

Grass fire forces southern Alberta residents from homes

Lethbridge officials to give grass fire update at 9 p.m. MT

More than 2,000 people live in Coalhurst, west of Lethbridge.
A separate grass fire near the southern Alberta town of Milk River is also forcing residents to leave their homes for safety in Raymond.
Lethbridge

Parts of Lethbridge under evacuation

Smoke from the fast-moving blaze, which jumped across Highway 3, is affecting west Lethbridge.
The County of Lethbridge declared a state of emergency and residents of Mountain Meadows, Sunset Acres and Township 8-22 are advised to leave the area immediately.An evacuation centre has been set up for them at the Fritz Sick Centre at 420 11th St. south in Lethbridge.The Canadian Red Cross has also set up an evacuee centre at the Lethbridge Enmax building located at 2510 Scenic Dr.The City of Lethbridge ordered a mandatory evacuation of homes in northwest Lethbridge, including the Westside Trailer Court and Bridgeview Campground.Residents east of 30th Street and north of Walsh Drive are being asked to head to the homes of friends or family in safe areas or the Enmax evacuation centre.

Heavy smoke

Smoke can be seen in Lethbridge after a grass fire broke out in the area Monday. Smoke can be seen in Lethbridge after a grass fire broke out in the area Monday. (Submitted by Jordan Davidson)Officials said smoke in the area was severely reducing visibility and creating hazardous road conditions.Lethbridge police are closing some roads to prevent motorists from driving toward the fire, west of Highway 509.People are being told to avoid the area and to seek medical attention if they experience breathing difficulties.Lethbridge crews are still battling the fire. Students at schools on the west side of Lethbridge north of Whoop-Up Drive have been sent home early.
Buses have been arranged, but parents are also being asked to pick up students.It's in the same area where a big fire forced at least 125 people from their homes and destroyed two houses on the reserve last year.

 STORMS HURRICANES-TORNADOES

LUKE 21:25-26
25 And there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity;(MASS CONFUSION) the sea and the waves roaring;(FIERCE WINDS)
26 Men’s hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on the earth: for the powers of heaven shall be shaken.

THE FIRST JUDGEMENT OF THE EARTH STARTED WITH WATER-IT ONLY MAKES SENSE THE LAST GENERATION WILL BE HAVING FLOODING
GENESIS 7:6-12
6 And Noah was six hundred years old when the flood of waters was upon the earth.
7 And Noah went in, and his sons, and his wife, and his sons’ wives with him, into the ark, because of the waters of the flood.
8 Of clean beasts, and of beasts that are not clean, and of fowls, and of every thing that creepeth upon the earth,
9 There went in two and two unto Noah into the ark, the male and the female, as God had commanded Noah.
10 And it came to pass after seven days, that the waters of the flood were upon the earth.
11 In the six hundredth year of Noah’s life, in the second month, the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.
12 And the rain was upon the earth forty days and forty nights.
GOD PROMISED BY A RAINBOW-THE EARTH WOULD NEVER BE DESTROYED TOTALLY WITH A FLOOD AGAIN.BUT FLOODIING IS A SIGN OF JUDGEMENT.

Heavy rains flood parts of central Nova Scotia

Cape Breton to get upwards of 125 mm overnight CBC News Posted: Sep 10, 2012 2:35 PM AT Last Updated: Sep 10, 2012 11:17 PM AT

Nova Scotia was pummelled with rain Monday, with upwards of 75 millimetres falling in the central part of the province washing out roads, stranding residents and causing dozens of families to leave their homes.
While the rain was letting up Monday evening in the Truro area, it's just beginning in Cape Breton, according to Peter Coade, CBC's meteorologist.Upwards of 125 millimetres is expected in Cape Breton overnight.
While water levels were receding in central Nova Scotia later Monday evening, officials are watching high tide closely, which began around 9 p.m. AT.In the Indian Brook First Nation, near Shubenacadie, 135 people are stranded as Monday's heavy rain washed out the two access roads to their community.
Forecasters with the Canadian Hurricane Centre said Monday's rainstorm was not due to tropical storm Leslie — the current storm is blocking Leslie's progression.Leslie is expected to head for Newfoundland Tuesday morning.Chris Fogarty said the weather would likely get worse overnight as the two systems converge, with Cape Breton getting the highest winds and heaviest rain.Donna Munro, who lives in North River near Truro, was paddled to safety by a neighbour in a canoe as the area around her home flooded with about 1.5 metres of water.Munro said she and her son stepped onto the doorstep and the doorstep started separating from the front of the house.Her son got to safety and she was rescued a short time later by a neighbour with a canoe."The force of the water, when the tide came in, is what I think really elevated everything on top of all the rain we had too. It just all added to it like a snowball effect," she said.
"It was the force and the viciousness of it, I think, that just sped it along that much quicker."
Seniors are rescued from their Park Street residence in Truro, N.S. (Steve Lawrence/CBC)
Roads and bridges will be inspected by engineers from the Department of Transportation and Infrastructure Renewal as quickly as possible, he said.Motorists should continue to use caution and watch for closed roads and water on roads, according to the provincial release.

More rain coming, forecasters warn

The Canadian Red Cross has set up two reception centres for area residents who have been displaced by the storm: at the Bible Hill Village Fire Hall at 69 Pictou Rd. and the Immanuel Baptist Church at 295 Young St.However, the reception centres are not serving as shelters at the moment, according to Mona O'Brien, district community supervisor for the Canadian Red Cross in Truro.The flooding in central Nova Scotia Monday posed some concern in the Salmon River area, according to the Emergency Management Office.
Water levels are on the decline in some areas, but the area isn't in the clear yet."The water has subsided quite a bit in the North River and the Salmon River," according to Bob Taylor, mayor of the municipality of Colchester."Having said that, there's still a lot of water from the uplands, also we don't know how much the tide is going to affect us."People are being asked to stay away from flooding areas because of the high tide.

Wild weather brings flooding to Southern Calif.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Monsoonal moisture and warm temperatures were expected to bring more thunderstorms to the desert and mountain areas of Southern California on Monday after a round of wild weather that caused flash flooding and left several thousand homes without power.Thunderstorms dumped rain and caused flash flooding on Sunday in northern Los Angeles County, while lightning strikes sparked a small fire in the San Bernardino National Forest.Strong winds produced a blinding dust storm in the Borrego Springs area and knocked down power lines that forced the closure of a portion of Interstate 10 near Palm Springs for a couple of hours.The wind gusts also downed trees in inland San Diego County and cause a power outage to about 4,000 homes in San Bernardino County.A Temecula woman was killed Sunday after she lost control of her pickup truck on a freeway in heavy rain.The National Weather Service issued a flash flood warning Monday for most Southern California mountain and desert areas. Heavy downpours were expected in some areas because storm will be slow-moving due to weaker winds.

Newfoundland braces for Tropical Storm Leslie


ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland (AP) — Canadians along the East Coast loaded up on emergency supplies and secured patio furniture before the arrival of Tropical Storm Leslie, which is expected to make landfall Tuesday in Newfoundland, the Canadian Hurricane Centre said Monday.The center said Leslie could make landfall as a hurricane or a strong tropical storm.Forecaster Bob Robichaud said wind gusts could reach up to 49 miles per hour (80 kilometers per hour) in the Cape Breton area and up to 62 mph (100 kph) over the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland.Robichaud said Leslie is gaining strength as it moves over warm waters, but its massive size may prevent it from reaching hurricane status."If it was a smaller storm, there would most definitely be strengthening and we'd almost certainly have a hurricane at landfall," he said. "But given the size of the storm, it takes a lot more to spin it up."Fire and Emergency Services worked to ensure culverts were cleared and shored up resources to ensure crews are ready to deal with the storm.Department spokeswoman Cheryl Gullage said citizens have been asked to ensure water pumps are in working order, drains are free of debris and window and door wells are clean. The department also asked Newfoundlanders to remove dead branches from trees and secure patio furniture, barbeque equipment and yard tools.Patricia Devine, of Clarenville in southeastern Newfoundland, nervously hunkered down just two years after Hurricane Igor caused more than CA$25,000 (US$25,600) in flood damage to her home.
"All over this town trees were down, an awful lot of people got flooded basements. Oh, it was awful," she said. "In fact, I'm very nervous. I'm saying a lot of prayers."She was among many residents who spent the day buying food, water and gasoline, checking sump pumps, preparing generators and making sure they had flashlights, batteries and emergency contact numbers at hand.Marine Atlantic said it is cancelling ferries between Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.Red Cross spokesman Dan Bedell said supplies and additional people have been taken to the Burin Peninsula, on the south coast of the island, which is where Hurricane Igor pounded Newfoundland as a Category 1 hurricane almost two years ago. Igor dumped 200 millimeters (8 inches) of rain and caused CA$200 million (US$204 million) in damages. The hurricane was also blamed for the death of one man."Our teams have gone through a similar experience for Igor and the current forecast for this storm is tracking in approximately the same area, but it has very wide effects this time so we're seeing flooding from one end of the province to the other. If that continues, we'll likely have to evacuate that area tomorrow," Bedell said.Newfoundland's Municipal Affairs Minister Kevin O'Brien said 95 percent of municipalities and regions in the province now have emergency preparedness plans because of Igor.
Nasty weather hit Atlantic Canada before Leslie's arrival.The hurricane center said a trough of low pressure had already dumped 100 millimeters (4 inches) of rain on parts of western and central Nova Scotia by Monday morning, with more yet to come as Leslie approaches.Evacuation orders were issued for Truro, Nova Scotia, where sheets of heavy rain swamped two rivers, leading to flooding and evacuations in Colchester County.Weather warnings were in place for Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.Bob Taylor, mayor of the Municipality of the County of Colchester, said dikes in both rivers gave way, flooding some roads in and out of Truro and the village of Bible Hill.Taylor said some people were asked to leave their homes voluntarily, but only a few did so.He said a high school near Salmon River was evacuated before lunchtime as a precaution.The Mounties in Nova Scotia warned drivers to slow down after receiving reports of flooding on some roads.Leslie was located about 366 miles (590 kilometers) northeast of Bermuda by mid-Monday morning.Leslie's outer bands buffeted Bermuda on Sunday with gusty winds and rain but caused little damage.Far out in the Atlantic, Hurricane Michael was forecast to weaken to a tropical storm by Tuesday.___Associated Press writers Elizabeth Roberts in Hamilton, Bermuda, and Charmaine Noronha in Toronto contributed to this report.

Analysis: Canada may have cut ties with Iran to avoid retaliation

DUBAI/OTTAWA, Sept 10 - Canada's surprise decision to sever relations with Iran may well have been triggered by Ottawa's fear of retaliation for stepping up its denunciations of Tehran and a parallel move to list Iran as a state sponsor of terrorism.The break in relations, announced on Friday, has led to speculation that it was a prelude to Israeli or U.S. military action against Iran's nuclear facilities. Canada has categorically denied having any information about planned attacks."Canada wants to be able to continue to speak up on the Iranian regime's behavior, and we didn't want our guys in there as hostage," said Andrew MacDougall, chief spokesman for Prime Minister Stephen Harper, explaining the decision to close the Tehran embassy and order Iranian diplomats out of Canada.The Canadian announcement offered a long list of reasons for cutting ties: Iran's nuclear program, hostility toward Israel, Tehran's military assistance to Syria, and what Ottawa said was Iran's support for terrorist groups.But none of those reasons had surfaced overnight, leaving people asking, why now?Indeed, the decision appeared to catch Canada's Western allies off-guard.
"It was news to us," one Western diplomat based in Tehran told Reuters by telephone hours after the announcement. "There seemed to be nothing specific that made them pull the plug."Still, the announcement came on the same day that Canada designated Iran as a state sponsor of terrorism. A new Canadian law required the government to come up with a list of state terrorism sponsors by September 13, and many feared such a declaration could have sparked reprisals in Tehran if Canadian diplomats had stayed.
Canadian officials were mindful of the storming of the British Embassy in Tehran last November after a tightening of banking sanctions. The incident led London to close the embassy."With the British gone, who will be on the frontline of Iran's animosity?" reflected the Western diplomat. "There's France and Canada, and it's got a lot of people thinking."A Canadian official who asked not to be identified said the timing of the announcement hinged partly on getting the last Canadian diplomat out of Iran."We had gotten to the point where all our diplomats had left safely ... and we were able to announce it," he said.Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was quick to welcome Canada's tough stance, but the announcement has come in for criticism by some in Canada.John Mundy, whom Tehran expelled as Canadian ambassador in 2007 and who has since retired, says Ottawa's reasons are not convincing and called on the government to say if it had received specific threats."When the going gets rough you really need your diplomats," he wrote in Monday's Globe and Mail newspaper. "Canada's tradition is to be one of the last countries to leave in a crisis, not the first."MacDougall, the prime minister's spokesman, dismissed the remarks as ill-informed: "This is a former ambassador who, quite frankly, isn't aware of the specifics or anything of this."He added: "The prime minister's not willing to have civil servants who don't get paid to go to war for their country to be pawns in any dispute. The prime minister and minister of foreign affairs didn't feel that they could guarantee the safety of our diplomat personnel there, and so got them out."On Saturday Iranian officials lashed out at Canada, describing the embassy closure as a hostile and anti-Iranian act that was taken under Israeli and British influence.Already on a downward slump, the value of the Iranian currency, the rial, has fallen by more than 10 percent since Friday.While there has been muted reaction among people in Iran, many Iranians in Canada sense ominous news to come."Many Iranians here interpret it as a green light to Israel for military action. They aren't happy with it," said blogger Mahmoud Azimaee, based in Toronto, home to around half of Canada's Iranian community of an estimated 120,000 people."What has to be avoided are bombers and Israeli missiles flying over Iran, because that will be a 10-year setback for any democratic movement. Cutting ties with the regime does not help that," said Arash Abadpour, a 33-year-old IT engineer.Canada is also home to some of the most vocal critics of the Iranian government over its human rights abuses and they strongly support the Harper government's actions.They have highlighted the cases of Saeed Malekpour and Hamid Ghassemi-Shall, both Iranians with Canadian citizenship, who have been sentenced to death and languish in prison in Iran.Also behind bars is Hossein Derakhshan, an Iranian Canadian blogger, who was sentenced to 19 years in prison on charges of cooperating with hostile countries and spreading propaganda.
Activists have long alleged that the Iranian embassy in Ottawa has carried out secretive activities to monitor dissenting voices and intimidate them into keeping quiet."Many Iranians here are apprehensive to speak publicly against human rights violations because they fear the regime is keeping tabs on them," Toronto-based activist Maryam Nayeb Yazdi told Reuters by email.(Additional reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Frank McGurty)

U.S., Israel still at odds over Iran "red line"

JERUSALEM/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel and the United States were in talks on setting a "clear red line" for Iran's nuclear program, but the two allies remained at odds on Monday over whether to spell out a clear threshold for military action against Tehran.The Israeli leader, who has been pressing President Barack Obama for a tougher line against Iran, again signaled that a sharper U.S. ultimatum for Tehran could deter it from developing nuclear weapons and mitigate the need for a military response.Netanyahu's recent calls for world powers to set clear markers that would show they were determined to stop Tehran's nuclear drive has suggested a growing impatience with the United States, Israel's main ally.Washington, which has resisted the idea of laying down red lines for Iran in the past, has urged the Israeli leader to give diplomacy and sanctions imposed on the Islamic Republic more time to work to rein in Iran's nuclear work peacefully. But Obama has not ruled out military action if all else fails.
Recent heightened Israeli rhetoric has stoked speculation that Israel might attack Iran before the U.S. elections in November, believing that Obama would give it military help and not risk alienating pro-Israeli voters.In his latest call for an unambiguous message on boundaries that Tehran must not cross, Netanyahu said in interview with Canada's CBC television aired late on Sunday: "We're discussing it right now with the United States." But he has yet to define publicly what he wants.Senior U.S. officials offered no sign that the United States and Israel were any closer to narrowing their differences.Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made comments that were interpreted by Israeli media as rejecting Netanyahu's call for a red line and drew admonishment from a senior Israeli official.In an interview with Bloomberg Radio, Clinton was asked about Netanyahu's demand that a red line be set and also whether she thought a time limit should be put on negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program.Clinton responded only to the second part of the question, saying, "We're not setting deadlines." Israeli media seized on those comments as a rejection of Netanyahu's red-line demand.The Israeli official said: "These statements will not stop Iran's centrifuges from spinning."
Obama, who has had a strained relationship with Netanyahu, is facing accusation from Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney that he is lax in his support for Israel and not hard enough on Iran.
WHITE HOUSE AVOIDS 'SPECIFICITY'
White House spokesman Jay Carney dodged questions on whether Obama was ready to offer new red-line assurances to Israel."The line is the president is committed to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, and he will use every tool in the arsenal of American power to achieve that goal," he told reporters, reiterating Obama's position.Asked whether that meant the United States would act only if Iran began building a bomb, Carney said: "It is not fruitful as part of this process to engage in that kind of specificity."
Netanyahu has faced opposition at home to any go-it-alone attack. Opinion polls show a majority of Israelis do not want their military to strike Iran without U.S. support."I don't think that they (Iran) see a clear red line, and I think the sooner we establish one, the greater the chances that there won't be a need for other types of action," Netanyahu told CBC, apparently referring to military steps."If Iran saw that, there's a chance, I won't say it's guaranteed, but there's a chance they might pause before they cross that line."
Israel and the West believe Iran is working toward nuclear weapon development capability. Israel, widely thought to be the Middle East's only atomic power, says a nuclear-armed Iran would be a threat to its existence. The Islamic Republic says its nuclear work is for peaceful energy purposes only.The Jewish state says little time remains before Iran achieves a "zone of immunity" in which Israeli bombs would be unable to penetrate deeply buried uranium enrichment facilities.The United States has more potent weapons that would allow more time for the sanctions push to work.Israeli newspaper Haaretz said on Monday that Netanyahu had told German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle that if Iran enriched uranium above 20 percent, that would provide a red line, proving Tehran had chosen to exceed the level of refinement suitable for civilian energy and "break out" with an atom bomb.Enrichment to 90 percent fissile purity is the typical threshold for weapons-grade nuclear fuel. Haaretz said Netanyahu stressed that from the moment Iran decided to make a nuclear bomb, it would need only six weeks to enrich to 90 percent.Many independent analysts say, however, that Iran would need additional time - from several months to a year or more - to fashion weapons-grade material into a nuclear warhead and fit it onto a missile capable of delivering the payload.
Netanyahu is scheduled to travel to the New York and address the U.N. General assembly about Iran later this month.A meeting with Obama, who is deep in his re-election campaign and due to speak to the forum two days before Netanyahu arrives, has not been finalized, the Israeli official said.(Editing by Jeffrey Heller, Michael Roddy and Mohammad Zargham)

THE RIFTS CANADA CAN NOT IGNORE
http://www.leaderpost.com/opinion/rifts+Canadians+cannot+ignore/7215940/story.html

Role or Position Of Palestine House in Toronto

The Palestine House Educational and Cultural Centre (Palestine House) is a charity that serves as the educational, cultural and social center for Canada’s Palestinian community, especially in the Greater Toronto Area.

What Happened

In January 2012, Immigration and Multiculturalism Minister Jason Kenney announced that funding for Palestine House would not be renewed after March 31. Kenney cited concerns that Palestine House was an extremist institution and a supporter of terrorists and terrorism.
 THESE FRAUDS ARE ARABS FROM PALESTINE HOUSE AND CULTURAL CENTER IN MISSISAGA AND ELSEWARE IN MONTREAL ANOTHER 400 USE A HOUSE TO CLAIME CITIZENSHIP.AT LEAST 3,000 ARABS WHO LIVE IN MUSLIM COUNTRIES CLAIME CANADIAN CITIZENSHIP IN CANADA BY SAYING THEY LIVE AT PALESTINE HOUSE IN MISSISAGA AND A HOUSE IN MONTREAL.THEY PROBABLY GET WELFARE CHECKS SENT TO THEM.SO THESE ARAB MUSLIM FRAUDS ARE SCAMMING CANADA OF MONEY TO BUY ROCKETS FOR WERE THEY LIVE IN MUSLIM COUNTRIES AND MAKE THE ROCKETS AND SHOOT THEM AT ISRAEL WITH THE WELFARE MONEY THEY DEFRAUD CANADA OF.WHAT A SICK SCAM THESE ARAB/MUSLIMS ARE DOING.THEY PROBABLY DO THIS IN EVERY WESTERN COUNTRY TO SCAM THEM OF CASH DISQUISED AS CITIZENSHIP.
http://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/rcmp-to-raid-montreal-address-as-part-of-crackdown-on-immigration-cheats-1.949485

Government aims to strip Canadian citizenship from 3,100 it says cheated system


OTTAWA - The federal government plans to revoke Canadian citizenship from 3,100 people it says cheated on the process.It's also looking at thousands of others who may have obtained or maintain permanent residence fraudulently.Immigration Minister Jason Kenney says cheats will be stripped of citizenship and residence status.He says it's part of a three-year crackdown on immigration fraud.So far, he says, federal agencies have removed or denied admittance to more than 600 former permanent residents linked to the fraud investigations.They have denied about 500 citizenship applications where the applicants did not meet residence requirements and almost 1,800 applicants linked to cheating have simply abandoned their citizenship applications.

News Release — Canadian citizenship not for sale: Minister Kenney provides update on residence fraud investigations


Ottawa, September 10, 2012 — The Government of Canada’s investigation into residence fraud continues to grow, with nearly 11,000 individuals potentially implicated in lying to apply for citizenship or maintain permanent resident status.“We are applying the full strength of Canadian law to those who have obtained citizenship fraudulently,” said Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism Minister Jason Kenney. “Canadian citizenship is not for sale. We are taking action to strip citizenship and permanent residence status from people who don’t play by the rules and who lie or cheat to become a Canadian citizen.”Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) has begun the process to revoke the citizenship of up to 3,100 citizens who obtained it fraudulently. Minister Kenney first announced the investigations last year. CIC is working closely with the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and Canadian offices abroad to tackle this fraud.“Today’s announcement is the end-result of the hard work done by the RCMP and CBSA, and they should be congratulated for their dedicated effort in bringing these charges forward,” said Canada’s Public Safety Minister Vic Toews. “These efforts reinforce our government’s commitment to protecting the integrity of our immigration system.”The Department has also been working on cases of those who are not yet citizens. Nearly 5,000 people with permanent resident status who are known to be implicated in residence fraud have been flagged for additional scrutiny should they attempt to enter Canada or obtain citizenship. The majority of these individuals are believed to be outside the country.Permanent residents must reside in Canada for three years out of four years prior to applying for Canadian citizenship. To retain their status as permanent residents, they must be physically present in Canada for two out of five years with few exceptions.In typical cases, permanent residents will use the services of an unscrupulous immigration representative to fraudulently establish evidence of residence in Canada while living abroad most, if not all, of the time. This is perpetrated so that individuals can fraudulently maintain their permanent residence status and later apply for citizenship. RCMP and CBSA criminal investigations have found that a family of five may pay upwards of $25,000 over four or more years to create the illusion of Canadian residence.Finally, CIC has flagged the files of another 2,500 individuals where, for various reasons, there are concerns. These individuals will be watched closely should they make future applications. This makes a total of nearly 11,000 individuals tied to citizenship and residence fraud investigations.To date, CIC and its partners have removed or denied admittance to over 600 former permanent residents linked to the investigations, and have denied about 500 citizenship applications where the applicants do not meet the residence requirements. Almost 1,800 applicants linked to the investigations have abandoned their citizenship applications as word about these investigations spreads.“We will not stand by and allow people to lie and cheat their way into becoming citizens,” added Minister Kenney. “I encourage anyone who has information regarding citizenship fraud to call our tip line to report it. There is no time limit for investigating this type of fraud.”Over the past six years, Canada has had the highest sustained level of immigration in Canadian history. The Government of Canada is committed to creating an immigration system that brings the world's best and brightest to Canada while protecting our immigration system against those who would abuse our generosity.Cases involving false representation, fraud or knowingly concealing material circumstances in the citizenship process—for example, pretending to be present in Canada to meet the residence requirements for obtaining citizenship—should be referred to the citizenship fraud tip line at CIC’s Call Centre at 1-888-242-2100 (in Canada only, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. local time, Monday through Friday). Tips may also be reported by email at Citizenship-fraud-tips@cic.gc.ca. Those overseas can also contact the nearest Canadian visa office.All other types of immigration fraud can be reported to the CBSA’s Border Watch Tip Line at 1-888-502-9060. Tips accepted by the Border Watch Tip Line include, but are not limited to, suspicious cross-border activity, marriages of convenience, misrepresentation in any temporary or permanent immigration application, or the whereabouts of any person wanted on an immigration warrant.

THE MADE UP NAME OF ARAB PEOPLE  IN ISRAEL,SO CALLED PALESTINIANS HAVE 600 MILLIONAIRES IN GAZA.HOW CAN A SURPRESSED PEOPLE HAVE 600 MILLIONAIRES IN A SMALL AREA CALLED GAZA.HOW ELSE BY SCAMMING COUNTRIES LIKE CANADA OF WELFARE CHECKS AND DONATIONS AND AIDE TO MAKE AND BUY ROCKETS TO ELIMINATE ISRAEL FROM THE FACE OF THE EARTH.THE SO CALLED PALESTINIANS ARE NOTHING MORE THEN EGYPTIAN,JORDANIAN AND ALL ARAB/MUSLIMS.

September 11, 2012

NY Times ignores Gaza's millionaires, hypes poverty, blames Israel (natch)

Leo RennertAccording to reports in the Arab press, a thriving smuggling economy in Gaza has produced no fewer than 600 millionaires.  Hundreds of tunnels to Egypt have become bustling export and import conduits -- with the ruling Hamas elite siphoning off millions of dollars from transit taxes.  Beach-side hotels and a modern mall have become a testament to the territory's growing wealth -- especially since Israel lifted its blockade for most goods, except those that could be used by terrorists, with whom Gaza is copiously blessed. Does this mean that the old picture of Gaza as a poverty-stricken hell hole has been completely erased?  Not quite.  There still are poor Palestinians in the territory, forgotten or exploited by their Hamas rulers. But that's not quite how the New York Times depicts Gaza in a lengthy article by Jerusalem bureau chief Jodi Rudoren ('''Forgotten Neighborhood' Underscores the Poverty Of an Isolated Enclave" Sept. 10, page A8). Rudoren starts with a heart-tugging picture of Gazans who live in homes that have no floors and sit, eat and sleep on the sand.  Parents have no money to buy their children school books and proper dress.  During Ramadan, families slaughtered a horse and used it for kebabs because they couldn't afford beef or lamb. Having sketched a picture of utter misery as the template for her story,  Rumoren then switches gears  and concedes that her lead paragraphs may have been a bit too grim.  "There are certainly less-livable slums in Africa, South Asia or in Delhi, or Cairo," she writes.  So why not spotlight those places as examples of dire poverty instead of Gaza? Readers don't have to wait long for the answer.  "Some see it as a sure sign that Israeli restrictions make the place a concrete prison," she hypothesizes. Having  blamed Israel -- what else would you expect? -- she softens the blow a bit by acknowledging that Israel may not be entirely to blame.  Gaza living standards also may be  repressed by "corruption, mismanagement and infighting among Palestinian factions," she adds.  But make no mistake, Israel tops the list of likely suspects for Gaza's poverty. In any case, Rudoren finally admits deep in her article that the ultra-poor picture she depicted at the beginning is "an extreme case."  So why lead with it?  Isn't that bound to leave an erroneous impression with readers who may not plow through her entire dispatch? And further contradicting her lead -- and the headline -- Rudoren confesses that "much of the strip has seen a building boom since Israel eased its blockade two years ago, and the smuggling tunnels are thriving once again." First, she blames Israel, and then she seems to take it back.  But not quite.  "Many in Gaza," she adds, "blame Israel, which captured the territory in 1967 and occupied it until a unilateral withdrawal in 2005, but still controls utilities and regularly strikes people and places it suspects are connected to terrorism."  Which is rich in its euphemistic disguise of Gaza's various terror organizations that readily identify such "suspects" as their own members and claim responsibility for  firing rockets at civilian targets in southern Israel.Rudoren's entire piece suffers from such reluctance to level with readers about Gaza's history down to the present.  There is no real context that Gaza was a much poorer place when it was ruled by Egypt before the Six-Day War in 1967 and that the territory subsequently prospered under Israeli control -- until the second intifada and the Hamas takeover.  There is no acknowledgment that, even as Israel faces constant rocket attacks, Gazans requiring complex medical procedures regularly are allowed into Israel where they receive high-quality hospital care.And why pray tell devote more than half a page to Gaza without squarely noting that it has been and still is the launch site for thousands of rockets that terrorize a million residents in southern Israel?  Why not devote as much space to sympathize with Israelis under Gaza missile attacks?
Instead, Rudoren turns into a Hamas apologist by writing that "attempts at a cease-fire with Israel are constantly thwarted by rogue militant groups."  If this opaque sentence has any meaning at all, it is that Hamas gets a good grade and only Islamic Jihad and other terror groups are the bad guys.  And of course, Israel as well.But for the New York Times,  sanitizing Hamas and slapping Israel go with the paper's anti-Zionist creed.Leo Rennert is a former White House correspondent and Washington bureau chief of McClatchy Newspapers Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2012/09/ny_times_ignores_gazas_millionaires_hypes_poverty_blames_israel_natch.html#ixzz26AN4inr3

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