"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour

Saturday, January 31, 2026

After a Thousand Years a Woman is selected as Archbishop of Canterbury

 

Sarah Mullally becomes first woman to lead

Church of England

   
Sarah Mullally (C) departs St. Paul's Cathedral in London after becoming the 106th and first female Archbishop of Canterbury on Wednesday. Photo by Neil Hall/EPA
Sarah Mullally (C) departs St. Paul's Cathedral in London after becoming the 106th and first female Archbishop of Canterbury on Wednesday. Photo by Neil Hall/EPA

Jan. 28 (UPI) -- Sarah Mullally was confirmed as the first female and 106th archbishop of Canterbury during a formal ceremony at St. Paul's Cathedral in London on Wednesday.

Mullally, 63, previously was Britain's top nursing officer and had been the Bishop of London since 2018. She said she has received significant support for her appointment as Archbishop.

"There's a sense of the weight of office that I feel, but I've also been very conscious of the huge support that I've had from people either writing [to me] or passing me in the streets," Mullally told the BBC.

She said raising awareness of misogyny will be among her goals in her new role.

"It is fair to say that I have, both in my secular role as well as in the church, experienced misogyny at times," Mullally said.

"I'm conscious that being in this role, it's important for me to speak it because there are some that don't necessarily have the status or power of this role and feel more hesitant to do it," she added.

"I commit myself to making an environment where all people can flourish and which is safer for all," Mullally said.

Sounds like a woke mentality. Perhaps even an agenda to change the thousand year old church to make it more welcoming for gay and lesbian leaders.

St Paul wrote that women should not be in a position of authority in the church over men. He cited Eve's disastrous decision in the Garden and her influence over Adam in sharing that decision as reason for men to be responsible for women in spiritual matters. This doctrine has worked in the church for a millenium, but suddenly is not good enough. Watch for trouble between the African church and Canterbury. There will be much spiritual antagonism there,

Mullally's ascent to the Church of England's leading role ends the scandalous term of former Archbishop Justin Welby, who resigned in 2024 due to concerns that he did not do enough to stop a known abuser of boys and young men, who was associated with the church.

Welby was the first archbishop to resign from the Church of England due to a scandal in 1,000 years.

Mullally's rise to archbishop was not universally welcomed within the church.

Some African church elders were unhappy with her confirmation, and others have questioned her ability to protect church members.

Church of Nigeria Archbishop Henry Ndukuba said Mullally's new role as an archbishop runs counter to the "conviction of the majority of Anglicans who are unable to embrace female headship of the episcopate."

Echoing that sentiment, Rwanda Anglican Church Archbishop Laurent Mbanda issued a statement in which he said the "majority of the Anglican Communion still believes that the Bible requires a male-only episcopacy."

Mullally acknowledged such concerns and said she understands that some will find it problematic for a woman to lead the Church of England.

"What I hope to do is to be able to provide a space where I can offer hospitality to people, where I can listen to what their concerns are and, in a sense, find some way in which we can at least have a partnership together in that way," she said.

Mullally acknowledged other concerns that include her support for same-sex marriage and her ability to safeguard church members following the scandal that forced Welby to resign.

The Church of England also recently dismissed a complaint that accused Mullally of protecting an alleged abuser while she was the bishop of London by sharing emails detailing abuse allegations against that person.

Former London Diocese safeguarding adviser Michell Burns has accused the diocese of placing a greater importance on protecting its reputation than addressing the potential abuse of victims.


Latin America Rising > US unfreezes some Venezuelan assets; Ecuador raises tariff on Colombian oil by 900%

 

US unblocks Venezuelan assets

– interim president


Washington is reportedly sitting on $30 billion worth of the South American nation’s property
US unblocks Venezuelan assets – interim president











The US has unfrozen some of Venezuela’s impounded assets, acting President Delcy Rodriguez has announced. Rodriguez said the money will be spent on hospital equipment and power infrastructure.

Speaking on national television on Tuesday, Rodriguez said she had spoken to US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio with “respect and courtesy,” and that the unblocked funds would be used to purchase hospital equipment from the US “and other countries.”

“We are unblocking Venezuelan resources that belong to the Venezuelan people… and this will allow us to invest significant resources in equipment for hospitals,” she said. Rodriguez added that Venezuela will also purchase “equipment for the electricity sector and equipment for the gas industry” with the funds.

Rodriguez did not say what amount of assets would be released. President Nicolas Maduro claimed in 2022 that around $30 billion worth of Venezuelan assets were frozen abroad. These include oil impounded by the US and around $2 billion worth of gold frozen in the UK.

Maduro was abducted by US forces earlier this month and charged with narcoterrorism, cocaine trafficking, and firearms offenses. Rodriguez has denounced the kidnapping of Maduro, but has attempted to placate Washington – namely by allowing US companies to run the South American nation’s oil industry.

Venezuela’s oil industry was nationalized in 1976, with American contractors slapped with further restrictions by Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chavez, in 2007. Trump has repeatedly claimed that these moves amounted to Venezuela “stealing” oil infrastructure built by US firms.

Trump has warned that if Rodriguez “doesn’t do what’s right, she is going to pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro.” The US president spoke with Rodriguez by phone last week, and announced plans to invite her to the White House.

What's right? Probably spending the majority of unfrozen assets in the USA. 

Rodriguez insisted on Sunday that she had enough of “Washington's orders,” and that Venezuelans alone would “resolve our differences and our internal conflicts.” Asked on Tuesday about Rodriguez’ comments, Trump replied: “I haven't heard that at all. We have a very good relationship.”



Ecuador hikes Colombian crude transport tariff by 900%

Colombia's Minister of Trade, Industry and Tourism Diana Morales said at a press conference that her government is reviewing which additional Ecuadorian products will be subject to the new tariffs. Photo by Carlos Ortega/EPA
Colombia's Minister of Trade, Industry and Tourism Diana Morales said at a press conference that her government is reviewing which additional Ecuadorian products will be subject to the new tariffs. Photo by Carlos Ortega/EPA

Jan. 28 (UPI) -- Ecuador confirmed a retaliatory 900% increase in the tariff it charges to transport Colombian crude oil through its petroleum infrastructure, raising the cost to $30 per barrel from $3 -- a move that has deepened bilateral tensions in the energy and trade spheres.

The measure was confirmed Monday by Ecuador's Minister of Environment and Energy Ines Manzano, who said the new rate applies to Colombian crude that moves through the Transecuadorian Oil Pipeline System, known by its Spanish acronym SOTE, which is owned by Ecuador. She said the increase took effect Friday.

"The tariff rose from $3 to $30 in reciprocity for Colombia's decision to suspend the sale of electricity," Manzano said in an interview with local radio station Sucesos.

The dispute between the two countries began after President Daniel Noboa's government announced it would impose a 30% tariff on Colombian products. Ecuador justified the move by arguing that Colombia has not done enough to combat drug trafficking along the shared border and framed it as a trade protection measure.

Bogota responded with retaliatory steps, including the suspension of electricity supplies to Ecuador, which relies on imports to cover part of its power demand.

The SOTE is one of Ecuador's two main oil pipelines and is operated by state-owned Petroecuador. The system transports crude from southern Colombia to the Ecuadorian port of Esmeraldas, on the Pacific Coast, for export to international markets, according to Colombia's La Republica newspaper.

"Ecuador is providing a service of high strategic value to Ecopetrol," Manzano said.

"This is an area where illicit activities occur and where numerous attacks have been recorded, so transporting the crude through our territory has allowed it to reach international markets," she added.

According to figures cited by Ecuadorian outlet Primicias, about 10,300 barrels per day of Colombian oil were transported through the SOTE in November, including from Ecopetrol and private companies.

Ecuador also operates the Heavy Crude Oil Pipeline, known as OCP, which transports oil for private companies. Because it operates under separate commercial contracts, its tariff was not modified.

Colombia relies on Ecuadorian infrastructure, which provides one of the fastest and safest routes to export oil from fields in the country's south. Using Ecuador's pipelines reduces transit times, overland transport costs and risks associated with longer domestic routes.

For more than a decade, Ecuador has been a key logistics partner for Colombia's oil industry, providing direct access to international markets through the Pacific.

In response to Ecuador's decision to raise the tariff on crude oil transportation, the Colombian government decided Tuesday to impose a 30% tariff on a range of products from Ecuador that were not included in the first round of measures, according to Caracol Radio.

Minister of Trade, Industry and Tourism Diana Morales said at a press conference that the government is reviewing which additional Ecuadorian products will be subject to the new tariffs.

Morales added that Colombia, "as a state," has been compelled to "create conditions of balance in the trade relationship with Ecuador."

"Today, we are considering another decree that will include other types of products from Ecuador, also with the imposition of 30% tariffs, so that we can seek that trade balance," she said.

According to the report, the Colombian government is seeking a solution to the dispute through dialogue and was promoting a meeting between Colombian President Gustavo Petro and Ecuador's Noboa at the CAF forum Wednesday in Panama.

Read More

Friday, January 30, 2026

UK's Collapsing Economy > Is Westminster avoiding the obvious? The media certainly seems to be

 

Thousands of Brits live rough on the streets of London and the West Midlands. Meanwhile, more than 100 thousand illegal immigrants live in 4-star hotels, or other government-funded accommodation, in comparative luxury. 

Energy costs are exceptional thanks to USA LNG, and Starmer is determined to give 5% of GDP to unnecessary military buildups that will mostly benefit the USA. Have you ever heard so much stupidity in your life?


Extreme poverty rate shoots up in UK – study


Nearly seven million people are living in severe hardship, the highest level on record, according the Joseph Rowntree Foundation
Extreme poverty rate shoots up in UK – study











Poverty in the UK has worsened, with record numbers living in severe hardship and unable to afford basic necessities, according to an analysis by a leading charity.

More than one in five people in the UK – about 14.2 million – were living in poverty in 2023/24, the final year of the last Conservative government and the latest year for which official figures are available, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) said in a report on Tuesday. Of these, about half, or 6.8 million people, were experiencing “very deep” hardship, the highest number in 30 years.

Children, renters, disabled people, and those in insecure work were among the groups most affected. Nearly 4.5 million children lived in poverty in 2023/24, 600,000 more than during the pandemic and marking the third consecutive year of increases. Rates were highest in larger families, where 44% of children were affected. People renting privately faced greater risks than homeowners, while disabled people and informal carers were also disproportionately affected, the report noted.

The most severe cases are even more acute. About 3.8 million people, including around one million children, experienced destitution, being unable to afford basics such as heating, clothing, and food.

“Poverty in the UK is still not just widespread, it is deeper and more damaging than at any point in the last 30 years,” said JRF’s chief analyst Peter Matejic. “When nearly half of the people in poverty are living far below the poverty line, that is a warning sign that the welfare system is failing to protect people from harm.”

Poverty rates varied across the UK, with London and the West Midlands among the hardest-hit areas, according to the report.

Rising living costs and stagnant wages have contributed to the increase in severe poverty, the charity stated. Inflation for essentials such as food, energy, and rent has surged in recent years, while earnings for low-income households have barely increased, leaving many struggling to cover basic needs.

The poorest UK households have only become poorer under Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government, despite promises to boost living standards, according to the latest data from independent research consultancy Retail Economics.

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Is Europe beginning to wake up to the fact that their biggest enemy is not Russia but America and it's NATO proxy? NO!!!

 

EU scrambles to secure new energy suppliers to curb reliance on US


The bloc’s growing dependency on American LNG has sparked concerns amid fraying ties over Greenland
EU scrambles to secure new energy suppliers to curb reliance on US











The EU is seeking new gas suppliers as growing reliance on US-sourced liquefied natural gas (LNG) and deteriorating relations with Washington have raised concerns over energy security.

The bloc has faced a surge in energy prices since reducing Russian oil and gas imports following the 2022 escalation of the Ukraine conflict. The shift away from comparatively inexpensive Russian pipeline gas has increased reliance on US energy, while legislation passed this week requires member states to halt all Russian deliveries by late 2027, leaving the EU exposed to supply risks.

Russia's NordStream pipeline still has one line functional and able to supply Germany with a boost to the crumbling economy at short notice. Do the Germans have the guts to trigger it? Not a snowball's chance in Hell.

Energy Commissioner Dan Jorgensen told reporters on Wednesday that “geopolitical turmoil” regarding Greenland has been a “wake-up call” for the region, which now relies on the US for more than half of its LNG supplies.

“There is a growing concern, which I share, that we risk replacing one dependency with another,” Jorgensen, Denmark’s representative in the European Commission, said. “We need to diversify it as much as possible,” he added, noting that he will travel to Canada, Qatar, and North African countries in the coming months to discuss supplies.

The autonomous Danish territory of Greenland has been at the center of a transatlantic rift since US President Donald Trump announced plans to annex it, citing its mineral wealth and strategic location, while initially refusing to rule out the use of force and threatening tariffs on opponents of the plan.

Trump has increasingly used energy as leverage in trade talks with the EU. Under a deal announced last July, the bloc agreed to buy $750 billion worth of US energy by 2028 to avert higher tariffs, a pledge critics call coercive.

Before the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, the EU imported 45% of its gas from Russia – the bloc’s largest foreign supplier since the end of the Cold War. Western sanctions and sabotage of key infrastructure have slashed Russian gas deliveries; however, purchases of Russian LNG by the bloc remain significant.

Reacting to the EU’s recent decision to ban all Russian gas imports, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said this could turn member states into Washington’s “miserable slaves.”

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Ozzone 12-03 > Is your sanctified life sanctified?

 



Corruption is Everywhere > UK Immigration officers making a bundle on two schemes; China executes 11 criminals for online scamming in Myanmar; Germany police raid Deutsche Bank in money laundering probe

 

UK immigration officers charged with robbing migrants

The five suspects are accused of misconduct in public office and stealing cash from illegals who had crossed the English Channel on boats
UK immigration officers charged with robbing migrants











Five British immigration officers have appeared in court on charges of stealing cash from illegal migrants who arrived in the UK across the English Channel on small boats, Reuters reported on Thursday.

The officers were charged at Westminster Magistrates’ Court with conspiracy to steal, misconduct in public office, and money laundering for alleged offenses between August 2021 and November 2022.

Prosecutors told the court the defendants worked on Britain’s south coast “dealing with recent arrivals on small boats.” It stated that many of these people arrived “with relatively large sums of money in cash on their person,” and that the officers “worked together to take that money for themselves and share it.”

A sixth defendant faces a single charge of money laundering. All six were granted bail, with their next hearing scheduled at Southwark Crown Court next month. None were asked to enter pleas.

The case comes amid rising tensions over immigration across the UK as illegal boat crossings have become a focal point for many voters and have led to a rise of anti-immigration sentiment. The controversy has further been escalated by increasing criminal activity linked to illegals.

Fake Sponsorships

Earlier this week, The Times reported on a black market in fake skilled-worker visa sponsorships. An investigation found agents charging up to £20,000 ($27,500) to fabricate payroll records for non-existent jobs, allowing migrants to stay in the UK while forcing them into unofficial cash-in-hand work.

The issues have eroded trust in the British government, with polls showing Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s approval rating plummeting while support for Nigel Farage’s opposition right-wing Reform party has risen.

The government has responded by announcing a planned overhaul of its immigration policy in an effort to reduce the number of arriving illegals. In November, the British Home Office also proposed confiscating high-value assets, including vehicles and “bags full of gold rings,” from asylum seekers to help cover the cost of benefits.

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China executes 11 over Myanmar scam centers

   
China on Thursday executed 11 members of a Chinese crime family in connection to scam centers being run in Myanmar. File Photo by Mark R. Cristino/EPA-EFE
China on Thursday executed 11 members of a Chinese crime family in connection to scam centers being run in Myanmar. File Photo by Mark R. Cristino/EPA-EFE

Jan. 29 (UPI) -- China on Thursday executed 11 members of the Ming-family crime syndicate in connection with the running of online scam centers in civil war-torn Myanmar, according to state-run media.

The 11 gang members were executed by the Wenzhou Intermediate People's Court of Zhejiang province, Xinhua reported. The method of execution was not mentioned, though death sentences are carried out either by firing squad or lethal injection.

The Ming-family crime syndicate is one of several criminal organizations that have taken advantage of the ongoing civil war in Myanmar to generate billions from running online scam centers using human trafficking, forced labor and torture in the Asian nation.

Those executed Thursday were sentenced to death in September for intentional homicide, intentional injury, illegal detention, fraud and operating gambling establishments.

The court found that they had been operating several Myanmar scam centers engaged in telecom fraud, illegal gambling and other crimes.

Two of the members appealed their conviction in September, but the verdict was upheld in November.

China's Supreme People's Court reviewed the case and confirmed the criminal syndicate had established the compounds in northern Myanmar's Kokang region, where they recruited financiers and provided armed protection for the scheme, generating more than $1.4 billion in illicit funds, according to state-run media.

The group was also found to have conspired with other organizations running scam centers to deliberately kill, injure or illegally detain workers, resulting in the deaths of 14 Chinese citizens, the high court found.

China is believed to have conducted more executions than any other country, though its use of the death penalty, according to the United Nations Human Rights Office, "remains shrouded in secrecy, making it difficult to obtain accurate numbers."

Amnesty International has said that China is believed to execute thousands a year.




German police raid Deutsche Bank in money laundering investigation

   
German police raided Deutsche Bank locations in Frankfurt and Berlin on Wednesday over an investigation into money laundering. File Photo by Wallace Woon/EPA-EFE
German police raided Deutsche Bank locations in Frankfurt and Berlin on Wednesday over an investigation into money laundering. File Photo by Wallace Woon/EPA-EFE

Jan. 28 (UPI) -- German police raided Deutsche Bank locations in Frankfurt and Berlin on Wednesday over an investigation into money laundering.

Deutsche Bank said in a statement that it is cooperating with law enforcement on the investigation.

"We confirm Frankfurt prosecutors are currently conducting an investigation at Deutsche Bank's business premises," the statement said. "We are cooperating fully with [the] prosecutor's office. We cannot comment further on this matter."

The prosecutors say the probe is related to executives and employees of Deutsche Bank who are suspected of being involved in money laundering. Prosecutors also say Deutsche Bank has maintained relationships with foreign companies that were suspected to be part of a money laundering scheme.

Suspects in the investigation have not been named.

News of the investigation preceded shares in Deutsche Bank falling by about 2.7%.

Deutsche Bank is set to release its fourth quarter 2025 and year-end earnings report on Thursday.

The investigation marks the third time in the last eight years that law enforcement has probed Deutsche Bank. It did so in 2022, also in a money laundering investigation, and in 2018 in an investigation of two employees for tax evasion.

Deutsche Bank has been penalized in the past for delays in its anti-money laundering reports. Banks are required by law to promptly file reports of suspicious activity.