Wednesday

Police Release Video Of Man Brutally Raping Woman Then Taunting Her With HIV Claim

The assailant, whose image was captured on a grainy surveillance video, is Black and in his mid-20s with a slim frame that stands about 5’9″ tall. He was dressed in a white T-shirt and sported dark pants and dark shoes.


The violent attack took place on August 29th, after the victim dropped off a friend at a bus stop shortly after midnight. As the young woman is walking along the desolate street, the attacker is seen jumping her from behind, punching, then forcing her in to an alley where she is raped repeatedly for hours, while reportedly yelling, “Ha, Ha, I just infected you with HIV.”



The young victim was so seriously beaten about the head and face that she is almost unrecognizable, according to investigators. Detectives say that she was also choked to the point of losing consciousness.

Hours later, the young woman awakened and managed to barely stumble down a street where she was spotted by a neighbor who immediately summoned police. She was taken to a hospital for treatment and given an HIV test as well. The results have not been released.

Meanwhile, Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter’s office is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the suspect.

(RELATED)

Boyfriend Kills Mother Of 2 After She Admits To Having HIV

 

In a shocking confession, Dallas, Texas-based Larry Dunn told local authorities that he killed girlfriend Cicely Bolden , when she admitted to having HIV after they had sex.

According to 36-year-old Dunn, he had only been dating Bolden briefly, when she confessed to having HIV. Still, Bolden allegedly told Dunn not to worry because it was “not that bad.”

In reaction, Dunn reportedly went in to the kitchen and returned with a knife, stabbing the Mother of two twice in the neck. And yet even worse was to come: Bolden’s two young children would be the ones to find her on her bedroom floor — naked from the waist down — with two gashes in her neck after school.

Deu 28:54 [So that] the man [that is] tender among you, and very delicate, his eye shall be evil toward his brother, and toward the wife of his bosom, and toward the remnant of his children which he shall leave:

Deu 28:56 The tender and delicate woman among you, which would not adventure to set the sole of her foot upon the ground for delicateness and tenderness, her eye shall be evil toward the husband of her bosom, and toward her son, and toward her daughter,

Deu 28:60 Moreover he will bring upon thee all the diseases of Egypt, which thou wast afraid of; and they shall cleave unto thee.

Deu 28:61 Also every sickness, and every plague, which [is] not written in the book of this law, them will the LORD bring upon thee, until thou be destroyed.


 

Egypt: Muslim storm U.S. embassy in rage over film insulting Muhammad



More restrictions on free speech to come, as supine Western leaders rush to mollify the enraged Muslims by censoring themselves and others. "Egyptians angry at film scale U.S. embassy walls," by Tamim Elyan for Reuters, September 11:
CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian protesters scaled the walls of the U.S. embassy on Tuesday, tore down the American flag and burned it during a protest over what they said was a film being produced in the United States that insulted Prophet Mohammad.

In place of the U.S. flag, the protesters tried to raise a black flag with the words "There is no God but God, and Mohammad is his messenger", a Reuters witness said.


The black flag of jihad.
Once the U.S. flag was hauled down, some protesters tore it up and showed off pieces to television cameras. Others burned the remains outside the fortress-like embassy building in central Cairo. But some protesters objected to the flag burning.

Many Muslims consider any depiction of the Prophet to be offensive.

"This movie must be banned immediately and an apology should be made," said 19-year-old Ismail Mahmoud, a member of the so-called "ultras" soccer supporters who played a big role in the uprising that brought down Hosni Mubarak last year.

He called on President Mohamed Mursi, Egypt's first civilian president and an Islamist, to take action, without giving details of the film that angered him or other protesters.

About 20 people stood on top of the embassy wall, while about 2,000 protesters gathered outside. The demonstrators were mainly supporters of Islamist groups or "ultras" youths.

Rafik Farouk, 38, an Egyptian Christian, also took part. "I am here because I am Egyptian and reject anything that insults Islam or anything that sparks division in Egypt," he said....

The U.S. embassy had put out a statement earlier on Tuesday condemning "misguided individuals" who hurt the religious feelings of Muslims or followers of other religions.

"We firmly reject the actions by those who abuse the universal right of free speech to hurt the religious beliefs of others," the U.S. embassy said in its statement....

(RELATED)

Libya ambassador Chris Stevens killed: U.S. warships headed to Libyan coast as Obama says 'justice will be done'


U.S. launches wave of unmanned drones to patrol the skies over eastern Libya to search for terror camps, while an elite team of Marines is also being deployed to the region to safeguard Americans.

The ruthless attack that killed four American diplomats in Libya appears to be a carefully planned terror strike rather than an uprising of a mob angry over a film that lampooned the Prophet Muhammed.

President Obama vowed Wednesday to bring those responsible to justice — and moved swiftly to hunt down the killers.

“Make no mistake,” Obama said. “Justice will be done.”



Two American warships were headed to the Libyan coast in a precautionary move. The U.S. launched a wave of unmanned drones to patrol the skies over eastern Libya to search for terror camps, while an elite team of Marines is also being deployed to the region to safeguard Americans.

“The United States condemns in the strongest terms this outrageous and shocking attack,” Obama said from the Rose Garden, joined by Secretary of State Clinton.

“Since our founding, the U.S. is a nation that respects all faiths,” the President added. “There is no justification of this type of senseless violence. None.”

Ambassador Chris Stevens, who spent years working to help stabilize Libya, and three colleagues died when the U.S. Consulate came under siege by a band of heavily armed militants.

A wave of anti-American unrest swept through the Middle East on the 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, but officials believe the bloodshed in Benghazi, Libya, was far more sinister.

Uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia were sparked by the inflammatory anti-Muslim video, and there was further unrest Thursday outside the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, where protesters had scaled the walls Tuesday. Riot police fired warning shots and tear gas to keep hundreds of demonstrators away.

U.S. officials initially thought the protesters in Libya had the same motive, according to reports.

But investigators now suspect the film protest was being used as a cover by terror groups who, unlike their unarmed counterparts in other countries, were toting rocket launchers and other heavy artillery.

The attacks may have been carried out by a shadowy terror group that has been responsible for a recent surge of violence in Libya, according to CNN.

The group, believed to be an Al Qaeda spinoff, is dubbed the “Imprisoned Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman Brigades” after the blind sheik serving a life sentence in the U.S. for carrying out the 1993 World Trade Center attack.

Isa 14:9 Hell from beneath is moved for thee to meet [thee] at thy coming:

Job 18:11 Terrors shall make him afraid on every side, and shall drive him to his feet.

Job 18:12 His strength shall be hungerbitten, and destruction [shall be] ready at his side


Lynching photo placed in front of Indiana church to urge people to vote


'We need to be reminded,’ Pastor Joy Thornton. ‘My past is your past. Your future is my future.’


An Indiana pastor is urging people to vote — and he’s put up a massive poster outside his church depicting a lynching and slaves shackled in chains to get people to the polls in November.

The large poster is situated on a busy road outside the Greater St. Mark Missionary Baptist Church in Indianapolis.

On one side, the poster depicts slaves in chains with a message that reads “lest we forget.” The other side of the poster is the historical image of the lynching of two black men in Marion, Ind., in 1930. That image is outfitted with a message that asks “Is this a reason to vote?”

“We need to be reminded,” Pastor Joy Thornton told WISH—TV of his reasoning behind the provocative images.

“My past is your past. Your future is my future,” he said.

Neighbors feel the images aren’t entirely appropriate.

“It’s not a good example for them to have it like that,” said Mary Bishop, who runs a business near the church. “He meant well but went about it the wrong way.”

Thornton feels the images do reflect the importance of exercising the right vote.


“It’s to let people know there's been a price paid for the privilege of voting. Often times people get complacent and don’t realize that people made a sacrifice, matter of fact, the ultimate sacrifice for such a privilege.”

The Indianapolis Urban League told WISH it agreed with the pastor’s efforts to encourage people to cast ballots in November, but did not support the imagery on the poster.

Isa 30:1 Woe to the rebellious children, saith the LORD, that take counsel, but not of me; and that cover with a covering, but not of my spirit, that they may add sin to sin:


Isa 30:2 That walk to go down into Egypt, and have not asked at my mouth; to strengthen themselves in the strength of Pharaoh, and to trust in the shadow of Egypt!

Isa 30:3 Therefore shall the strength of Pharaoh be your shame, and the trust in the shadow of Egypt [your] confusion.

Isa 30:5 They were all ashamed of a people [that] could not profit them, nor be an help nor profit, but a shame, and also a reproach.

Isa 30:7 For the Egyptians shall help in vain, and to no purpose:

White Man Shoots Black Man In Face, Allegedly Cooks Dinner Afterwards




Walton Henry Butler(pictured), a 59-year-old White man from Port St. Joe, Fla., has been charged with the attempted murder of a Black man after shooting him in the face during an altercation,WJHG-TV reports. Butler has also been charged with a hate crime in connection to the shooting.
The incident took place on Monday night at the Pine Ridge Apartments in Port St. Joe. Cops say that Bulter used racial slurs towards children in the complex and the victim, 32-year-oldEverett Gant, knocked on his door to talk to him about it. Butler reportedly opened the door and shot Gant in the face with a 22. caliber shotgun. After the shooting, he allegedly closed the door, called 911 and finished cooking dinner.
According to WMBB-TV, Butler made a 911 call claiming the shooting was in self-defense:
This man came in and threatened to kill me and I just shot him. I need ya’ll to come and pick him up…. He’s moving out there, he’s on my back patio.”
Fortunately, Gant survived the shooting and is listed in “guarded condition.”
Here are more details from WJHG-TV:
When Sheriff Nugent arrived Butler told him he did not understand the problem and acted as if he was being inconvenienced. “He was brought to the investigation unit where he was interviewed and basically admitted to shooting the victim and said he shot a, used a racial slur, and said that is what he shot and acted like it was not like a big deal or anything to him,” said Gulf County Sheriff Joe Nugent.
The Broward Palm Beach New Times uploaded a probable-cause affidavit that describes the phraseology of the racial slur Butler allegedly used during Sheriff Nugent’s investigation into the shooting. Not only did Butler seem “inconvenienced” by Nugent, as written in the affidavit, he “did not understand the problem. He had only shot a n*gger.”

Oba 1:10- For [thy] violence against thy brother Jacob shame shall cover thee, and thou shalt be cut off for ever.

Eze 35:6- Therefore, [as] I live, saith the Lord GOD, I will prepare thee unto blood, and blood shall pursue thee: sith thou hast not hated blood, even blood shall pursue thee.

Chicago Activist, Farrakhan Look To Hold Peace Summit For Gangs





In a city racked by the paroxysms of violence, an activist in Chicago is turning to the Nation of Islam to help create a peace summit between warring gang factions.
Tio Hardiman, director of CeaseFire Illinois, toldNewsOne that he is in early talks with representatives forNation of Islam Leader Louis Farrakhan to hold a summit at Mosque Maryam, Farrakhan’s national headquarters in the city’s South Shore community, before Labor Day.
The goal is to help stanch the gang violence that has caused the city’s homicide rate to soar 38 percent in the first six months of the year. So far, the city has seen 308 homicides through the end of July, compared to 243 in 2011, according to CBS Chicago. Eighty percent of those deaths have been attributed to gangs and Black-on-Black crime, said Hardiman, whose group was recently awarded a $1-million contract to help mediate conflicts in crime-plagued communities.
“African American youth are crying out for help in the form of violence,” Hardiman told NewsOne. “They don’t know how to settle disputes. The average coward can shoot an unarmed person. Cowards who catch someone off guard are doing most of the killing. They just shoot someone in the head and keep going. They don’t care who gets caught in the crossfire. We have to change that mind-set.”
Farrakhan’s office did not return phone calls by press time, but Mosque Marymam, with its airtight security, is the ideal place to hold the summit when bringing together active gang members, Hardiman said.
“When you bring these warring factions together, you want to make sure there is no margin of error,” Hardiman said. “No one is trying to get anyone to join the Nation of Islam. We just want to educate them to stop the killing. There is no better place to do this than Mosque Maryam.”
Farrakhan has been on a mission to tackle the violence himself. On July 6, he famously proclaimed onWVON 1690 AM in Chicago during an interview with Cliff Kelly that “I’m going to lead the Nation in to the streets” across the nation:
When the Nation of Islam was strong, we were in the streets and when we were in the streets, the violence—we had it—but it was not like it is today, so Brother Farrakhan is going to lead the Fruit of Islam in to the streets. We are going to help our people. We have to take our teaching and our example to our people.
It is a tremendous tragedy and a scourge on our community that after we have suffered so much from so many, for so long, that we would become the worst enemies of self. This is grievous. We are filled with self-hatred and I have to say to us as parents, we took our eyes off the prize, he added.
on July 16 and July 23 in the Auburn-Gresham, Englewood, and South Shore neighborhoods — all communities that have experienced spasms of violence. Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, the city’s first Jewish mayor, has welcomed Farrakhan’s support despite his history of making anti-Semitic remarks.

Jer 8:11- For they have healed the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly, saying, Peace, peace; when [there is] no peace.

Jer 8:15- We looked for peace, but no good [came; and] for a time of health, and behold trouble!

Deu 28:54- [So that] the man [that is] tender among you, and very delicate, his eye shall be evil toward his brother,

Saturday



NBC has issued an excuse and explanation for their recent ad with a monkey doing gymnastics that was shown right after a Bob Costas tribute to gold medal winner Gabby Douglas. The ad set off a firestorm of controversy, as the timing of the ad was incredibly poor and highly offensive to millions of Americans. The ad featured a “monkey with an Olympic dream” lifting himself up on still rings, with flashing cameras in the background. I don’t need to tell you about the flaws of mixing the imagery of black people and monkeys.

NBC came forth with their explanation for what happened shortly afterward:

Deu 28:37- And thou shalt become an astonishment, a proverb, and a byword, among all nations whither the LORD shall lead thee.

Job 30:9- And now am I their song, yea, I am their byword.

Price of corn surges by 20 per cent amid fears of huge hike in food bills in wake of Midwest drought



As the worst drought in more than half a century continues to afflict the Midwest, the price of corn surged by 20 per cent in July - the biggest two-month rally since the last major drought in 1988.
Two-thirds of the continental United States is now suffering from the most widespread drought since the 1950s.
And the lack or rain in America's breadbasket is intensifying at an unprecedented rate, driving concern food prices could soar if crops in the world's key producer are decimated.
The latest US Drought Monitor reported a nearly threefold increase in areas of extreme drought in the course of a single week in the nine Midwestern states where three-quarters of the country's corn and soybean crops are produced.

The percentage of the nation's corn crop rated very poor or poor rose to 48 per cent in the week ending July 29, while 47 per cent of the soybean crop was in very poor or poor condition, according to the US Department of Agriculture.
That is the worst rating since the drought of 1988, which cut production by 20 per cent and cost the economy tens of billions of dollars.


The U.S. Agriculture Department last week raised its estimates of food price inflation due to soaring grain prices tied to the drought, saying prices could rise as much as 3.5 per cent this year and another 3 to 4 per cent in 2013, led by meat.
And with grazing pastures also parched and feed prices at record highs, many ranchers are sending their animals to slaughter early because it is too costly to keep them until full size.


President Barack Obama's administration has opened up protected US land to help farmers and ranchers and has encouraged crop insurance companies to forgo charging interest for a month.
It has also provided emergency low-interest loans to farmers in the 1,234 counties across 31 states which have been declared disaster areas due to the drought.
Local governments are also trying to help. The state of Missouri has offered millions in grants to help farmers and ranchers drill or deepen wells and expand irrigation systems.
Experts predict there will still be a sizable harvest -- just not anywhere close to the bounty of recent years or the bumper crop predicted before the rain stopped.
And that will likely bring price increases for food and all types of products for years to come.
'We're not just talking about the fact that things are going to be tight here in the United States,' said Sam Funk, senior economist with Doane Advisory Services.
'When you look at such a large portion of the corn and soybean crop that gets exported, you're going to talk about substantially impacting a number of other marketplaces.'
The impact spreads far beyond just cereal or bread - or a single growing season - because so much of the US crop is used as livestock feed and those herds are being culled, Funk said.

Due to the early culls, getting the US cattle herds back up to pre-drought levels would take at least two years, he said, warning that pork and poultry production was also at risk.
Out in the fields, many farmers are trying to salvage what they can by chopping the stunted plants into feed for livestock. So few ears of corn are growing, it just isn't worth harvesting.
Worries about the worst drought in more than half a century afflicting the world's largest grain exporter also deepened overseas.
Buyers in China and other hungry nations are concerned that the expected sharp drop in U.S. harvests will cause shortages and price spikes.

On Monday, U.S. livestock groups appealed to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to curb or suspend the mandate, warning against the ruinous impact of soaring feed costs.
Corn and soybean meal make up basic animal feedstuffs.
Grain analysts polled by Reuters pointed to a U.S. corn crop of 11.2 billion bushels, the smallest in six years and down 14 per cent from USDA's latest forecast of 12.97 billion. Initial forecasts were for a crop of more than 14 billion bushels.
Soybeans, which were planted later and until now escaped the drought's pressure, are now also being hurt.
Analysts predict a 2.834 billion bushel harvest, the smallest in four years, and down from USDA's latest estimate of 3.05 billion bushels.
Oilseed processor and ethanol producer Archer Daniels Midland Inc reported a larger than expected 25 per cent drop in quarterly profit yesterday due in part to higher corn prices causing it to lose money making ethanol.
'In a challenging fourth quarter, solid results from our global oilseeds business, particularly in South America, were more than offset by negative U.S. ethanol margins and weaker U.S. merchandising results,' ADM CEO Patricia Woertz said.
Brokerage BB&T Capital Markets last week lowered its earnings forecasts for U.S. pork producer Smithfield Foods Inc and U.S. chicken producer Sanderson Farms Inc, citing corn prices.
But some said that easing off ethanol production - already at a two-year low amid soaring corn prices - was unnecessary.
In Iowa, the largest U.S. corn and soybean producer, Gov. Terry Branstad said he opposed an ethanol waiver.
'Even if you took that kind of action, it probably would have no action on soybean and corn prices,' Branstad said.
Ray Bardole of Rippey, Iowa, a soybean farmer and industry official now touring China,said he has been reassuring the worried Chinese, who are the biggest importers of U.S. soybeans.
'As we have met with folks from the government, as well as the Chinese media and our customers themselves, that is absolutely the very top thing on their mind,' he said.
At the Chicago Board of Trade, corn and soybean markets eased back from new record highs this week as traders took their profits.
December corn futures closed down 1.1 per cent at $8.05 - 1/4 per bushel and November soybeans closed down 0.2 per cent at $16.41 per bushel.
'We are continuing to see a deterioration of the crops,' grains analyst Karl Setzer of MaxYield Cooperative in West Bend, Iowa said, referring to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's crop progress report issued on Monday.
That report said 24 per cent of the domestic corn crop was in good-to-excellent condition as of Sunday, down from 26 per cent the previous week.
That was slightly better than trade expectations for a three-point drop.
The soybean crop was 29 per cent in that category, down from 31 per cent in the previous week.
Those ratings were the worst for those crops since the last major drought in 1988.


Rev 6:6- And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a penny; and [see] thou hurt not the oil and the wine.

Mat 24:7- For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.

2 Esdras 16:21 Behold, victuals shall be so good cheap upon earth, that they shall think themselves to be in good case, and even then shall evils grow upon earth, sword, famine, and great confusion.

2 Esdras 16:22 For many of them that dwell upon earth shall perish of famine; and the other, that escape the hunger, shall the sword destroy.