EU to ban selling eggs by the dozen

UK - British shoppers are to be banned from buying eggs by the dozen under new regulations approved by the European Parliament. For the first time, eggs and - other products such as oranges and bread rolls will be sold by weight instead of by the number contained in a packet.

The last post: McChrystal's bleak outlook

USA - Sacked US General Stanley McChrystal issued a devastatingly critical assessment of the war against a "resilient and growing insurgency" just days before being forced out.

No talks on Falklands, David Cameron tells Argentina

UK - David Cameron is set to restate "robustly" Britain's sovereignty over the Falkland Islands in unscheduled talks with the Argentine president at the G20 gathering of world leaders. British sources said the Prime Minister would starkly turn down a fresh request from Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner for talks on the issue as tensions rose once again between the two nations.

Queen to make historic UN addressComment

UK - The Queen is preparing to deliver one of the most important speeches of her 58-year reign in New York early next month. She is expected to appeal for world unity and world peace when she addresses the 192-member General Assembly of the United Nations for the first time in more than half a century at the end of her summer tour of Canada.

Violent inner-city crime and a question of race

UK - The official figures, which examine the ethnicity of those accused of violent offences in London, suggest the majority of men held responsible by police for gun crimes, robberies and street crimes are black. Black men are also disproportionately the victims of violent crime in the capital.

Obama calls for bank tax as next step in reform

CANADA - President Barack Obama, fresh from a win on a sweeping overhaul of Wall Street regulations, on Saturday urged Congress to take up his proposal for a $90 billion, 10-year tax on banks as the next step in reform.

Vandals mar summit protests in Toronto

TORONTO, CANADA - Black-clad demonstrators broke off from a peaceful protest and torched a police cruiser in the financial district and smashed windows in a shopping district after veering off from the planned protest route.

Foetus 'cannot feel pain before 24 weeks'

UK - The human foetus cannot feel pain before 24 weeks, according to an official review of scientific evidence, contradicting one argument that anti-abortion campaigners have used for reducing the termination limit.

The Coming US Real Estate Crash

USA - This week headlines across the United States screamed that new home sales in the US had declined to the lowest level since the US government began keeping track in 1963. But in the news stories covering this data in the mainstream media, they were always very careful to give their readers lots of reasons why things are going to "get back to normal" very soon.

Toronto a 'fortress' ahead of G8, G20

CANADA - Thousands of Canadian police threw a tight security net over eastern Ontario province Thursday as world leaders began arriving for key summits focused on economic recovery and development. In one of the North American country's largest ever security operations, some 20,000 police have been deployed in the city of Toronto and the exclusive lakeside community of Huntsville, some 225 kilometers (140 miles) to the north.

White House welcomes Shariah finance specialist

USA - The Obama administration has announced its appointment of 13 White House fellows - and the first person featured on its short list is a Muslim attorney who specializes in Shariah-compliant transactions.

Nation of broken families

UK - Nearly one child in three is living without their father or mother. In a bleak picture of disintegrating family life, researchers found that there are 3.8 million such children, the great majority of them in single-parent families. More than half rarely see their missing parent. They make up 30 per cent of the country's children and their numbers are up by nearly a fifth over the past decade, according to a study by the Office for National Statistics published yesterday.

Greece puts its islands up for sale to save economy

GREECE - Desperate attempt to repay debts also driven by inability to find funds to develop infrastructure on islands. There's little that shouts "seriously rich" as much as a little island in the sun to call your own. For Sir Richard Branson it is Neckar in the Caribbean, the billionaire Barclay brothers prefer Brecqhou in the Channel Islands, while Aristotle Onassis married Jackie Kennedy on Skorpios, his Greek hideway.

Belgian Catholic offices raided

BELGIUM - Belgian authorities have raided the headquarters of the Belgian Catholic Church during an investigation into child sex abuse claims. A spokesman for the Brussels prosecutors' office confirmed that the palace of the Archbishop of Mechelen-Brussels had been sealed off.

US Financial Conditions Just Collapsed Back To Crisis Levels

USA - Deutsche Bank has a new and improved index of US financial conditions, and this index just slumped back towards the lows of our recent crisis. Financial conditions appear to have worsened substantially in recent quarters based on our update of the broad index of US financial variables presented earlier this year at the US Monetary Policy Forum.

“Just what is an APOSTLE?”
Just what is an Apostle?

Today we find the Church of God in a “wilderness of religious confusion!”

The confusion is not merely around the Church – within the religions of the world outside – but WITHIN the very heart of The True Church itself!

Read online or contact email to request a copy

Listen to Me, You who know righteousness, You people in whose heart is My Law: …I have put My words in your mouth, I have covered you with the shadow of My hand, That I may plant the heavens, Lay the foundations of the earth, and say to Zion, “you are My people” (Isaiah 51:7,16)