Download The Last Chronicles of Planet Earth January 25 2021 Edition by Frank DiMora
Below is video showing you all the proof that the stones are being set in place to soon build the Third Jewish Temple just as Jesus warned us. I have added my video below for you on all the proof I have gotten showing that soon this Third Temple is going to start construction plus, a host of other events showing us the last days birth pains have already arrived.
My videos can now also be found at the following link: https://www.roxytube.com/@frank
When you go to my newest channel please subscribe to my channel. Soon I will not be posing on YouTube. Thank you.
As I promised in my video below you will see the links to the food prices skyrocketing.
May 13, 2020: Grocery Prices Are The Highest They’ve Been In Decades | TODAY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjwglJ-QrLo
June 10, 2020: Food prices continue to increase with no clampdowns in sight
June 11, 2020: Food prices are rising fast—Here are the winners and losers to watch
Jul 28, 2020: China Food Crisis? Rising Domestic Prices and Large Import Purchases Send a Signal
August 5, 2020: Families Struggle As Grocery Prices Rise Amid Pandemic | NBC Nightly News
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cpl3lM_CQZ0
August 6, 2020: Why Are Food Prices Skyrocketing During the Pandemic? | NBCLA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtqFVULImZU
August 11, 2020: Ethiopia’s inflation soaring to 22.3 percent, food prices unbearable for millions
September 9, 2020: Global food prices have been rising during the coronavirus pandemic, hitting food security
September 22, 2020: Soaring food prices
January 7, 2021: Global Food Prices at Six-Year High Are Set to Keep On Climbing
January 11, 2021: Food Price Inflation Accelerates For Seventh Consecutive Month
https://truepundit.com/food-price-inflation-accelerates-for-seventh-consecutive-month/
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Israel threatens to attack Iran if US eases sanctions, rejoins 2015 nuke deal
Israeli officials warned they will attack Iran if President Joe Biden eases U.S. sanctions on Iran and rejoins the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), also known as the Iran nuclear deal. Two weeks ago, Tzachi Hanegbi, a cabinet member and top advisor to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, threatened that Israel will take action, as it did against Iraq in the 1980s and against Syria in 2007, to prevent Iran from advancing its nuclear program. Habegbi said, “If the United States government rejoins the nuclear deal — and that seems to be the stated policy as of now — the practical result will be that Israel will again be alone against Iran. . . This of course we will not allow. We’ve already twice done what needed to be done, in 1981 against the Iraqi nuclear program and in 2007 against the Syrian nuclear program,” as The Times of Israel reported. Hanegbi’s comments referred to strikes by Israel on Iraq and Syria’s nuclear reactors. On Monday, an Israeli source told Breaking Defense that Israel could go so far as to set a Biden administration decision to ease sanctions on Iran as a redline before Israel launches a strike. “Israel needs to know — and fast — whether Washington plans to stop Iran’s race to the bomb or take some action to do this,” the source told Breaking Defense.
Jan. 26, 2021
Biden Backs Two-State Solution, Will Reinstate Palestinian Mission, Aid
President Joe Biden plans to reopen the Palestinian diplomatic mission in Washington shuttered by the Trump administration as well as reinstate aid to the Palestinians, acting U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Richard Mills told the Security Council on Tuesday. Biden’s Middle East policy “will be to support a mutually agreed, two-state solution, in which Israel lives in peace and security, alongside a viable Palestinian state,” Mills said. He added the measures are “not a substitute for Israeli-Palestinian peace” and called on the two sides to avoid unilateral actions that could hamper the prospects for a two-state solution – including, on Israel’s part, settlement construction and declaring Israeli sovereignty over parts of the West Bank and on the part of the Palestinians, payments to convicted terrorists and their families. The Trump administration cut aid to the Palestinians over its boycott of the U.S. as well as its so-called pay-for-slay scheme.
Jan. 26, 2021
Jordan demands Israel end Al-Aqsa ‘provocations’
Jordan urged Israel on Monday to stop blocking restoration work at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque compound, Islam’s third holiest site. Jordanian foreign ministry spokesman Daifallah Alfayez said he had sent a “protest note” demanding Israel “refrain from such violations and provocations, and respect the mandate of Jordan in administering Muslim holy sites.” Jordan, which said Israel’s police had interrupted restoration work on the Dome of the Rock,” stressed that the Waqf, the Islamic endowments authority, was “the sole authority responsible for the supervision and maintenance of Al-Aqsa.” On Sunday, the Waqf accused Israeli police of blocking “all reconstruction projects in the compound,” including stopping building supplies and “the entry of basic materials necessary for maintenance.” The Waqf said maintenance teams were “unable to maintain or repair the most basic facilities of the mosque and its employees are exposed to prosecution, threats of arrest and expulsion.” On Saturday, the Waqf said police stopped work by “photocopying the identity cards of workers and technicians, preventing them from working and threatening them with arrest if work continues.” There was no immediate response from Israel.
Jan. 26, 2021
Dozens injured in anti-lockdown protests in Lebanon’s Tripoli
At least 45 people have been injured in overnight clashes in northern Lebanon between security forces and demonstrators angered by a coronavirus lockdown that has worsened their economic woes, the Lebanese Red Cross says. At least nine of the injured were treated in hospital following rolling scuffles in the city of Tripoli, the Red Cross said on Wednesday. In the second protest in as many days, protesters pelted government offices with stones and blocked a main square. The army was deployed to contain the rioters, who torched a vehicle parked in the area, according to Lebanon’s National News Agency. At least 30 people were injured in similar clashes in Tripoli on Monday night as frustration with tight coronavirus restrictions boiled over. Many of its residents have been left without an income since Lebanon imposed a full lockdown earlier this month in a bid to stem a surge in COVID-19 cases and prevent its hospitals being overwhelmed. Last week, authorities extended the lockdown by two weeks, angering day labourers and other vulnerable groups. A round-the-clock curfew is in force nationwide and grocery shopping is restricted to home deliveries, which are often unavailable in poorer areas.
Jan. 27, 2021
Blast shakes Riyadh three days after projectile intercepted
Inbound Warhead Explodes Above Saudi Capital After Weekend Drone Intercept
A loud explosion shook Riyadh on Tuesday three days after the kingdom intercepted a projectile fired over the Saudi capital. The blast rattled windows across the Saudi capital at about 1pm (10:00 GMT), witnesses said. Some residents reported hearing two blasts on social media. Saudi Arabia-owned Al Arabiya TV cited local reports of a blast and videos circulating on social media of a missile being intercepted over Riyadh. No immediate reaction came from Saudi Arabia, which has come under repeated missile or drone attacks from Houthi rebels in neighboring Yemen since 2015.
***Please also see:
Blast heard in Riyadh as Saudi Arabia intercepts ‘hostile target’
Mysterious Group Claims Responsibility For Recent Attack On Saudi Capital
Jan. 26, 2021
Report: Syrian troops take positions on Lebanese side of Mount Hermon
Syrian Arab Army troops were reportedly spotted on the Lebanese side of Mount Hermon from northern Israel on Monday night, according to Syrian state media. Recently, reports have surfaced of both Israeli and Syrian airstrikes in areas close to the border. The IDF has repeatedly stated that it will not permit any foreign forces, whether regular soldiers or Iranian-backed proxies, to deploy anywhere near Israel’s borders and will strike their positions. Israeli fighter jets reportedly carried out one of the most widespread attacks in approximately three years earlier in January, striking 18 sites including arms depots and military positions in eastern Syria. The cluster of mountains that is Mount Hermon, or Jabal al-Shaykh, of which Israel controls less than 10%, is the apex of the Golan Heights and splits between Israel and Lebanon at its summit. The very top of the mountain is controlled by UN forces. The IDF is preparing for a massive war drill, slated for this upcoming summer. The drill is expected to last a month and will simulate a full-scale war, including with Gaza, and extending to the northern threat, which will be the main focus.
Jan. 27, 2021
Moscow, Tehran call for ‘rescue’ of Iran nuclear deal
New US Red Sea deployment contests speading Iranian threat
Moscow and Tehran called for the rescue of the Iran nuclear deal Tuesday, as their top diplomats held their first talks since Joe Biden’s election raised hopes of Washington returning to the agreement. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said ahead of the talks in Moscow that “one of the most pressing topics is the task of rescuing the Joint Comprehensive Action Plan (JCPOA).” Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif thanked Moscow for its efforts to repair the JCPOA after the US exit in 2018 and for Russia’s “constructive and principled” position on the deal. Zarif urged unity between Moscow and Tehran “in order to save the JCPOA from the risks and fears that arose after the United States left this plan.” The talks in Moscow come days after Zarif urged the United States to make the “fundamental choice” to lift sanctions and reverse the “failed policies” of the previous administration, which took a hard line on Tehran. He cautioned that any efforts from Washington to extract additional concessions would ultimately end in failure.
Jan. 26, 2021
Police fire water cannon as Tunisians march on parliament
Tunisian riot police on Tuesday turned water cannon on protesters outside the heavily barricaded parliament as they tried to quell the largest rally yet since demonstrations began this month over inequality and police abuses. Hundreds of protesters marched from the Ettadhamen district of the capital where young people have clashed nightly with police for more than a week, and were joined by hundreds more near the parliament. Police blocked the march with barricades to prevent protesters approaching the parliament building where legislators were holding a tense debate on a controversial government reshuffle. In parliament, Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi proposed a new cabinet, a move President Kais Saied had on Monday rejected as unconstitutional. Mechichi told the assembly that by naming 11 new ministers to the interior, justice, health and other key portfolios, he aimed to create a “more effective” reform team. The session comes a day after protesters clashed with police in the town of Sbeitla, in Tunisia’s marginalised centre, after a young man hit by a tear gas canister during clashes last week died in hospital. Politicians criticised a heavy police deployment around the parliament building after calls for a rally there.
Jan. 26, 2021
U.S. Suffers Sharpest Rise in Poverty Rate in More Than 50 Years
The end of 2020 brought the sharpest rise in the U.S. poverty rate since the 1960s, according to a study released Monday. Economists Bruce Meyer, from the University of Chicago, and James Sullivan of the University of Notre Dame found that the poverty rate increased by 2.4 percentage points during the latter half of 2020 as the U.S. continued to suffer the economic impacts from Covid-19. That percentage-point rise is nearly double the largest annual increase in poverty since the 1960s. This means an additional 8 million people nationwide are now considered poor. Moreover, the poverty rate for Black Americans is estimated to have jumped by 5.4 percentage points, or by 2.4 million individuals. The scholars’ findings put the rate at 11.8% in December. While poverty is down from readings of more than 15% a decade earlier, the new estimates suggest that the annual Census Bureau tally due in September will be higher than the last official, pre-pandemic level of 10.5% in 2019.
Jan. 26, 2021
Why your face could be set to replace your bank card
Sara Stewart strolls into a small Mexican restaurant in Los Angeles and orders a torta, a type of sandwich. To pay she simply looks at her reflection in a small LCD screen attached to the cashier’s counter. Then to add her preferred amount of tip she flashes a quick peace sign at the monitor. The entire process takes less than five seconds, and is entirely contactless. Moreover, Ms Stewart doesn’t need to carry her mobile phone or bank card with her, or show any form of identification, or even enter a pin number. Welcome to the futuristic world of facial recognition payment. It might sound like something from a science fiction movie, but this kind of transaction is already happening millions of times a day across China’s major cities. With the technology now being introduced in the US, and other countries such as Denmark and Nigeria, are we all going to be using it within a few years’ time? And, are there data security and privacy issues that we should worry about? “Our phones already read our faces, and our faces are already all over the internet, so I don’t think it really makes much of a difference [to someone’s security]. It’s faster, more convenient, and safer… and you don’t have to worry about leaving your phone or cards at home.” The firm’s chief executive John Miller says: “Our view is that using your face to pay is no different [than using your phone]. “It’s just another way to identify yourself. The [digital] picture [taken at point of sale] is destroyed immediately, and the data isn’t shared with anyone.” In fact, he argues that it’s less intrusive than paying by your mobile phone, because a phone can track your location at all times via GPS. He adds that the photos stored by PopID are mathematical maps of unique facial vectors, not actual photographs. Currently PopID requires the user to temporarily lower his or her facemask, but the firm says it is updating its systems so that this will not have to be done in the future.
Jan. 25, 2021
Significant eruption at Merapi volcano, ash to 12.2 km (40 000 feet) a.s.l., Indonesia
A significant eruption took place at the Indonesian Merapi volcano at 06:40 UTC on January 27, 2021. The Aviation Color Code was raised to Red. Due to the meteorological cloud, ash estimate to 12.2 km (40 000 feet) above sea level was based on the IR temperature. Ash cloud is moving NNW, the Darwin VAAC reports. Multiple ground reports warned of a significant eruption, the center added. In addition, volcanic ash below 7.3 km (24 000 feet) a.s.l. is expected to move NE. The volcano produced at least 14 pyroclastic flows today, with a maximum distance of 1.5 km (0.93 miles).
Jan. 27, 2021
Large tornado hits Fultondale, causing significant damage, Alabama
At least one person has been killed and more than 20 injured after a large tornado ripped through Fultondale, Alabama, U.S. at around 22:30 CST on January 25, 2021 (05:30 UTC, January 26), causing significant material damage and downing trees. The tornado was described by the NWS as ‘large and extremely dangerous.’ The search and rescue mission was still in progress early Tuesday morning (LT). “We do have possible fatalities, can not confirm the number yet. We still have search and rescue crews out working,” Assistant Fire Chief Justin McKenzie said at around 03:30 CST, January 26. McKenzie also confirmed earlier Tuesday morning there were ‘many injuries or deaths at this time,’ according to the WBRC. At least 5 people have been hospitalized, with injuries ranging from minor to severe, Fultondale Police Chief said. 17 people were reportedly rushed to the hospital and 11 treated on scene.
Jan. 26, 2021
All earthquakes are instantly posted to the ETRM Facebook page- you do not need to sign up; click the photo below to see the earthquake album