Tag Archives: Point Loma

Forget Me Not Landscape Design | Forget-Me-NotLandscapeDesign.com

By brownherlinda

Forget Me Not Landscape Design is one of California’s leading landscaping design firms who offer their services across the state of California in Carlsbad, Rancho Bernardo, Point Loma, Scripps Ranch, Encinitas, Del Mar, Carmel Valley and other locations.

Forget Me Not Landscape Design
Forget Me Not Landscape Design
Forget Me Not Landscape Design
Forget-Me-NotLandscapeDesign.com
Forget Me Not Landscape Design

From: http://www.doityourself.com/forum/environmentally-friendly-landscaping-gardening/493750-forget-me-not-landscape-design-forget-me-notlandscapedesign-com.html

Waco’s Assault On Religious Toleration

By Breaking News

Waco SC Wacos Assault on Religious Toleration

Twenty years ago, on Feb. 28, 1993, a firefight near Waco, Texas, began a weeks-long confrontation between members of the Branch Davidian sect and agents of the federal government. The conflict culminated at the sect’s compound known as Mount Carmel on April 19, with the deaths, as a fire spread through the buildings, of 80 sect members, including 20 children.

Looking over the span of American history, we must be struck by what a radical departure the conflict marked in religious terms. Rather than ask what could have led believers to follow such a bizarre movement, we should see the Davidians as part of a well-established tradition of religious movements in America. It is the ferocity of the official response that still demands explanation.

From the earliest days of British settlement, religious secession has been a fundamental theme of America’s history. Throughout that history, evangelical and apocalyptic ideas have been commonplace, boosted by repeated revivals and spiritual awakenings. Sometimes, religious fervor has spawned new denominations, and often it has driven believers to seek out new territories.

For the most part, these sects were tolerated. In upstate New York, the Oneida community survived for 30 years in the mid-19th century, despite the commune’s unconventional sexual arrangements and the sexual exploitation of teenage girls. In the 20th century, Michigan’s House of David kept going for 50 years despite repeated underage-sex and other scandals. The Theosophical settlement at Point Loma, near San Diego, also lasted for nearly 50 years, as it educated generations of children in esoteric and occult traditions (happily, the group avoided sexual imbroglios). Florida had a colony of flat-earther Koreshans—no relation to David—which persisted from the 1890s through the 1960s.

Read more at The Wall Street Journal. By Philip Jenkins.

Photo credit: cmiked (Creative Commons)

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Searchers struggle to pick up trail of former Los Angeles cop wanted in killing spree

All that was left were footprints leading away from Christopher Dorner‘s burned-out pickup truck, and an enormous, snow-covered mountain where he could be hiding among the skiers, hundreds of cabins and dense woods.

More than 100 officers, including SWAT teams, were driven in glass-enclosed snow machines and armored personnel carriers to hunt for the former Los Angeles police officer suspected of going on a deadly rampage to get back at those he blamed for ending his police career.

With bloodhounds in tow, officers went door to door as snow fell, aware to the reality they could be walking into a trap set by the well-trained former Navy reservist who knows their tactics and strategies as well as they do.

“The bad guy is out there, he has a certain time on you, and a distance. How do you close that?” asked T. Gregory Hall, a retired tactical supervisor for a special emergency response team for the Pennsylvania State Police.

“The bottom line is, when he decides that he is going to make a stand, the operators are in great jeopardy,” Hall said.

As authorities weathered heavy snow and freezing temperatures in the mountains, thousands of heavily armed police remained on the lookout throughout California, Nevada, Arizona and northern Mexico.

Police said officers still were guarding more than 40 people mentioned as targets in a rant they said Dorner posted on Facebook. He vowed to use “every bit of small arms training, demolition, ordinance and survival training I’ve been given” to bring “warfare” to the LAPD and its families.

At noon, police and U.S. Marshals accompanied by computer forensics specialists served a search warrant on his mother’s house in the Orange County city of La Palma. Dorner’s mother and sister were there at the time, and a police spokesman said they were cooperating.

The manhunt had Southern California residents on edge. Unconfirmed sightings were reported near Barstow, about 60 miles north of the mountain search, at Point Loma base near San Diego and in downtown Los Angeles.

Some law enforcement officials speculated that he appeared to be everywhere and nowhere, and that he was trying to spread out their resources.

For the time being, their focus was on the mountains 80 miles east of Los Angeles — a snowy wilderness, filled with deep canyons, thick forests and jagged peaks, that creates peril as much for Dorner as the officers hunting him. Bad weather grounded helicopters with heat-sensing technology.

After the discovery of his truck Thursday afternoon, SWAT teams in camouflage started scouring the mountains.

As officers worked through the night, a storm blew in, possibly covering the trail of tracks that had led them away from his truck but offering the possibility of new trails to follow.

“The snow is great for tracking folks as well as looking at each individual cabin to see if there’s any signs of forced entry,” said San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon.

The small army has the advantage of strength in numbers and access to resources, such as special weapons, to bring him in.

“We’re prepared to use our expertise …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News