Friday, January 3, 2020

Trump on Handling of U.S. Embassy Attack: ‘This Will Not Be a Benghazi’ (Video)


“The Marines came in. We had some great warriors come in. They did a fantastic job. This will not be a Benghazi. Benghazi never should have happened. This will never, ever be a Benghazi … They will pay a very big price for any damages incurred.”

Boom…
Here’s video:
Cross-posted with Mental Recession
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Baltimore, Chicago outpace Pacific Northwest for homicides again


Three cities post more murders in 2019 than the entire Northwest did in 2018.
Year-end crime data reveals that more people were murdered in Baltimore that were killed in the entire Pacific Northwest states of Washington and Oregon combined in 2018, which leads one to question why gun prohibitionists on both sides of the Columbia River think the region needs more restrictions on law-abiding gun owners.

According to CNN, Chicago ended the year with 490 murders as of Tuesday morning. The good news—relatively speaking—is that this number is down for the third straight year in a row. In 2018, the Windy City racked up a body count of 564.
Turning to Baltimore, a city where Maryland’s restrictive gun control laws have done nothing to quell the violence, last year saw “at least 348 homicides,” according to the Baltimore Sun. Baltimore has become one of the nation’s most dangerous cities, where honest citizens have a difficult time getting a carry permit, while dishonest criminals don’t even bother.
By contrast, in 2018, Washington State reported 232 total homicides including 138 committed with firearms, according to the FBI Uniform Crime Report. The same year saw Oregon report 81 slayings, of which 48 were linked to guns.
Dropping down a notch on the murder chart, Detroit reported 272 homicides in 2019. That is still more than Washington and way more than Oregon in 2018, and if murder patterns in those states continue, Detroit will still outrace them in 2020.
Still, the Seattle-based, and billionaire-backed, Alliance for Gun Responsibility is pushing for additional restrictions on honest gun owners, and Gov. Jay Inslee and Attorney General Bob Ferguson have called for a ban on future sales of so-called “assault rifles” in the state.
Down in Oregon, gun owners are facing at least three measures as 2020 unfolds, according to the Oregon Firearms Federation. Anti-gunners concentrated in the Multnomah Valley from Portland to Salem will be busy this year and so will gun owners motivated by OFF.
Yet Washington and Oregon are relatively safe places, compared to major cities in the east and Great Lakes regions.
And let’s not forget “the other Washington,” the nation’s capital, where last year saw 166 homicides, according to WTOP. That’s up 4 percent over 2018 and 50 more than recorded in 2017.
There is something going on in Washington State, however. The number of homicides is creeping upward, which it should not be if one had believed campaign rhetoric surrounding two gun control initiatives adopted in recent years. In 2014, the Alliance bankrolled I-594, a “universal background check” measure ostensibly aimed at reducing “gun violence.” In 2018, voters passed I-1639, another gun control measure aimed at regulating sale and possession of so-called “assault rifles” to young adults.
As Evergreen State gun owners head into the 2020 legislative session starting Jan. 13, it might be fair to question whether gun control has made the state more dangerous than it was before the gun control crowd weaponized the wealth of Seattle-area elitists.

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Christians in India Spend Christmas in Jail, Accused of Illegally Practicing Medicine

Morning Star News India Correspondent Morning Star News | Thursday, January 2, 2020
Christians in India Spend Christmas in Jail, Accused of Illegally Practicing Medicine

CHRISTIANS IN INDIA SPEND CHRISTMAS IN JAIL, ACCUSED OF ILLEGALLY PRACTICING MEDICINE


NEW DELHI, January 2, 2020 (Morning Star News) – Christians arrested in central India after Hindu nationalist tribal villagers disrupted their worship service, spent Christmas in jail before they were released on bail after 11 days – accused of illegally practicing medicine.
 Pastor Mukam Kiraad, 35, along with two members of his church, 40-year-old Lalsingh Tomar and 38-year-old Nanliya Rawat, were shocked to learn that they were charged under a Madhya Pradesh state law prohibiting unregistered medical practice, punishable by up to three years in prison.
Their attorney, Rahul Parihar, said he also was stunned.
“Their next hearing is Jan. 8,” Parihar told Morning Star News. “They will have to come for each hearing, which might fall once every 15 days, and the case may prolong for many years.”
The three Christians were initially arrested after more than a dozen tribal villagers radicalized by Hindu nationalists in Vadi village, near Alirajpur, intruded into their house-church worship service on Dec. 10 wearing blankets that concealed guns and locally-made sharp weapons, Pastor Kiraad said.
The intruders seized their cell phones, preventing them from calling the police. They also took four Bibles, literature and a bottle of oil that belonged to the Christian resident of the home, Pastor Kiraad said.
“About 10 assailants were hiding outside at various locations, to attack us in case any of us managed to escape,” he said.
The intruders grabbed the landlord of the rented house, who regularly attends the services, by his hair, the pastor said. They threatened the landlord for renting it to a Christian and allowing worship there, Pastor Kiraad said.
They also seized the pastor’s water bottle, which they may have tainted with some substance before they presented it to police as evidence of some crime, he said.
“They took my bottle, which later was presented in the courtroom as evidence with some test report,” Pastor Kiraad said. “I do not know what the report said or what they added to my drinking water later.”
“Everybody shared their faith testimony as the police personnel blamed me for forcefully converting villagers,” Pastor Kiraad said. “However, one policeman showed his appreciation towards me for doing such a good work and wondered why the villagers were putting such allegations on me.”
The police let the nine go, only to call the pastor, Tomar and Rawat back on Dec. 16. The tribal Hindu nationalists had exerted pressure on police to arrest the three men and publicized wild accusations against them in local news outlets, said pastor Dilip Rawat of the Filadelfia Fellowship Church.
The charge of unregistered medical practice was apparently based on the Christians engaging in prayer for healing.
Police had summoned the three Christians saying they only wanted to close a matter concerning the complaint against them, Pastor Kiraad said.
“I was asked that each one should carry a photograph, submit it at the police station and the complaint would be closed,” he said.
“We were taken before the judge, where I was asked what I do, to which I said I was a pastor and was conducting regular church service,” Pator Kiraad told Morning Star News. “No bail plea was presented. The judge ordered us to be sent to jail.”
Baffled, the pastor watched as his Bible, water bottle and a poster of the Ten Commandments confiscated from the house church were presented before the court, he said.
Pastor Kiraad said he had no idea what was happening until they were locked in the Alirajpur jail.
Of the more than 25 Hindu nationalists who pressured police to file a First Information Report (FIR) on the Christians, only Suresh Mondalai, village headman Thawar Singh and three other tribal villagers are named as complainants, he said.
“We had a nice time sharing the word of God with fellow prisoners,” Pastor Kiraad told Morning Star News. “Some of them had never heard the name of Jesus Christ, nor the gospel.”
After a lower court dismissed their bail application, on Dec. 26 the three Christians managed to obtain bail from the Sessions Court with a bond of 30,000 rupees (US$420) each, Pastor Kiraad said.
A married father of four children ages 7 to 13, Pastor Kiraad leads three Filadelfia Fellowship Church congregations, though the Vadi fellowship has now ceased, he said. He also attends the Filadelfia Fellowship Church in Alirajpur, pastored by his mentor, pastor Vikelson Sewla.
Pastor Sewla called the case against the Christians a well-planned conspiracy.
“They did this to cause trouble to the arrested and their families,” he told Morning Star News. “They had no money for their bail bond, they are poor people. We helped them by raising money from the church.”
Villagers have succeeded in instilling fear among the Christians and harassing them, he said.
“The court case has just begun, and on the other hand the worship service has completely stopped, and the house church has been shut down,” Pastor Sewla said.
Nearly 30 miles away in Paara village, Jhabua District, pastor Rahul Bariya and his family returned from a prayer service of thanksgiving on Dec. 2 to find a mob of about 100 Hindu extremists waiting for him.
Accusing the 38-year-old pastor of converting people, the mob hurled insults as they dragged him to the Paara police station, where he was detained for more than 24 hours, he said.
The mob also threatened his landlord if he failed to evict the family from their rented house, he said.
“The landlord forced my wife and children out of the house at 11 in the night while I was in police custody and did not allow them to pick up the household stuff,” Pastor Bariya told Morning Star News. “Without bedding and warm clothes, they were forced to wander in the middle of the night looking for some shelter.”
The family took refuge with another family for three days while he searched for another house to rent, he said.
For four years the pastor had led worship services every Wednesday at his rented house.
The pastor, his wife and three children remain steadfast in their faith, especially as they recall how his wife nearly died from a serious illness before he found out about a church that prayed for her.
“I took her there. We sat there for three and a half hours, and my wife got completely healed,” Pastor Bariya said. “We as a family have decided to live and die for Christ. We will worship Him and serve Him alone.”
Jailed for Christmas Program 
In Mathwad village, 31 miles from Alirajpur, police on Friday (Dec. 27) detained Pastor Ramesh Vaskale, along with two church members, on charges of fraudulent conversion, sources said.
The Christians were taking part in a Christmas program when area Hindus began to complain and informed the media, a local source said. They also called members of two Hindu extremist groups – the Hindu Yuva Janjati Sangathan and the Dharam Raksha Samiti – who came and accused the Christians of converting villagers. Conversion is legal in India, but Madhya Pradesh’s anti-conversion law prohibits conversion by force, fraud, allurement or inducement, terms used to make baseless accusations [against] religious minorities.


A correspondent who followed up on the interview told Morning Star News that villagers who said they were pressured to convert had differing stories.
“Every person who alleged that they were forced to convert had a completely different story, which does raise doubts over the authenticity of the allegations,” said the correspondent, who requested anonymity for security reasons.
He added that the Alirajpur area is unsafe for reporters who try to balance reports with Christians’ viewpoints.
“If I try to interview the Christians, it can be life-threatening for me and very unsafe for my family,” he said. “There is a lot of political pressure on the police, who are forced to take action against the Christians despite knowing the truth.”
At this writing the Christians were still in prison, though church leaders were making efforts to bail them out.
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Photo courtesy: Morning Star News.

Trump Responds Swiftly after Pro-Iranian Protestors Attack U.S. Embassy in Iraq

Amanda Casanova ChristianHeadlines Contributing Writer | Thursday, January 2, 2020
Trump Responds Swiftly after Pro-Iranian Protestors Attack U.S. Embassy in Iraq

TRUMP RESPONDS SWIFTLY AFTER PRO-IRANIAN PROTESTORS ATTACK U.S. EMBASSY IN IRAQ


Marines used tear gas to break up a gathering of pro-Iran protestors who had surrounded the U.S. embassy compound in Iraq.
According to CBN News, U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said an American infantry battalion of about 750 soldiers will deploy to the Middle East after hundreds of Shiite militiamen and protesters tried to storm the Iraq embassy on Tuesday.
The protestors destroyed the reception area and smashed windows in the building before Marines arrived.
"I think it's been handled very well," President Donald Trump said. "The Marines came in. As soon as we saw there was potential for problem, they got in and there was no problem whatsoever."
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) tweeted that he supported Trump’s efforts in Iraq.
"Very proud of President @realDonaldTrump acting decisively in the face of threats to our embassy in Baghdad. He has put the world on notice - there will be no Benghazis on his watch."
In 2012, an Islamic group attacked the American diplomatic compound in Benghazi, killing four Americans, including U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens.
"As you know, this will not be a Benghazi," Trump added, referring to the most recent attack in Iraq. "Benghazi should never have happened. This will never, ever be a Benghazi."
Protestors are rallying against U.S. airstrikes in Iraq and Syria where 25 members of an Iranian-backed militia were killed over the weekend. Those U.S. airstrikes came in response for a militia attack that killed a U.S. contractor last week at an Iraqi army base.
Earlier this week, protestors had been pushed back away from the embassy compound, but they had set up tents. American Apache helicopters continued to drop flares and warn protestors to stay back. Protestors chanted, “death to America” and “death to Israel.”
A State Department spokesperson says there are no plans to evacuate the compound.
Photo courtesy: ©Getty Images/Win McNamee/Staff

Amanda Casanova is a writer living in Dallas, Texas. She has covered news for ChristianHeadlines.com since 2014. She has also contributed to The Houston Chronicle, U.S. News and World Report and IBelieve.com. She blogs at The Migraine Runner.

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