~This Thing Ends In Jerusalem~ (Eschatology Watch)

NewsBusters has this story that will turn the head of all those end-time junkies out there:

On Wednesday’s NBC Nightly News, chief foreign correspondent Richard Engel informed viewers that he is “worried” that a major war between some of the Arab countries and Israel could be in the not too distant future because of the “ferociously anti-Israel” sentiment of the “Arab street” that is likely to gain power in countries like Egypt. He ended up concluding: “But I think, over time, this thing ends in Jerusalem.”

After host Brian Williams and Engel had discussed the likely prosecution of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, and the disappointment of Libyan rebels at the level of assistance to their cause supplied by NATO, Williams posed the question: “You’re back here in New York for a few days. The question I’ve seen most people ask you: Where does this all end?”

Engel sounded more pessimistic than he did during the protests in Egypt from January and February. Engel:

This whole movement in the Middle East, and I’m worried about it because while people in the region deserve more rights and they want more rights and they’re embracing more of the will of the Arab street, well, the will of the Arab street is also ferociously anti-Israel, against Israel.

He added:

And there’s many people who believe that if you empower the Arab street and the Arab street wants to see a war or wants to see more justice for the Palestinians, that, down the road three to five years, this could lead to a major war with Israel. It could also force a negotiated settlement. But I think, over time, this thing ends in Jerusalem.

…(read more)…

 

While cities across the country are cutting services,raising taxes and contemplating bankruptcy,something extraordinary is happening in a suburban community of Sandy Springs (Georgia)

From video description:

While cities across the country are cutting services, raising taxes and contemplating bankruptcy, something extraordinary is happening in a suburban community just north of Atlanta, Georgia.

Since incorporating in 2005, Sandy Springs has improved its services, invested tens of millions of dollars in infrastructure and kept taxes flat. And get this: Sandy Springs has no long-term liabilities.

This is the story of Sandy Springs, Georgia—the city that outsourced everything.