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Daily Archives: August 5th, 2009

http://www.sportsnetwork.com/merge/tsnform.aspx?c=sportsnetwork&page=…

San Jose confirms Arena League’s demise

San Jose, CA (Sports Network) – The San Jose SaberCats confirmed in a
release that the Arena Football League has suspended football
operations indefinitely.

The league was originally suspended just for the 2009 season and
intended on returning in 2010, but the AFL has now suspended
operations indefinitely.

“It is very unfortunate that the tremendously loyal and enthusiastic
SaberCats fans will not be able to see their team on the field as a
member of the AFL in 2010,” said team vice president Hank Stern. “We
deeply regret this turn of events and wish to thank our fans for their
passionate support, and we apologize that they are being disappointed
due to this decision by the league.”

The release says that “there remained an impasse in getting the
required 75 percent of the franchises to commit to the 2010 season.”

The SaberCats won the ArenaBowl three times since joining the league
in 1995 and were the runner-up in the final ArenaBowl in 2008, won by
the Philadelphia Soul.

Last December, the league suspended operations for the 2009 season,
saying it was working on developing a long-term plan to improve its
economic model.

The league, which was founded in 1987, has faced trouble as longtime
commissioner David Baker resigned in July 2008.

Check out the blatant shilling.

—————————–

Gadgets that make you look like a jerk
Seven fairly common gizmos you might just look cooler without

Linux

Linux is great. It’s a free, open-source operating system (OS) based on work done by Linus Torvalds in the early ’90s. Again, it’s free, powerful and easy to …

Oh wait, it’s a pain to use. Let’s get this straight: Linux is very good, and leads the charge in an ongoing revolution in free software. However, a lot of Linux users out there give the whole thing a poor name. They forget that most people don’t know as much as they do about computers. Some people garden, write poetry, fall in love or … er, bloviate about gadgetry.

Please don’t confuse your fanaticism with superiority and, for the love of Jobs, stop telling us we’re sheep under the sway of Microsoft. No one likes Comcast either, but until it’s convenient to string our own fiber optic cable we’re sticking with it. (Msnbc.com is a Microsoft-NBC Universal joint venture.)

Cool if: You’re not heaping disdain on the rest of us, or maybe if you’re in charge of a server farm.

Not cool if: You feel your mastery of computers excuses your inability to control a neck-beard.

Windows 7 upgrade rip-off for UK customers

,—-[ Quote ]
| Microsoft imposes 100% price hike
`—-

http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/news/index.cfm?newsid=120256

They give the illusion Vista 7 is worth something and then bundle it with PCs
to make it look like a bargain. At the same time, those bullies use
racketeering tactics to tax Linux:

C’mon Steve…

,—-[ Quote ]
| Well, along comes Linux, and they say, “we have no price,” which of course,
| we know for IP and other reasons, of course they have a price. But they
| say “we have no price.”
|
| Notice how Steve diverts the attention of the public from the real issue
| here: money.
| What Steve here tries to underline – as he has done in oh-so-many-occasions -
| is the fact that everything has a price. If his company sells, then by
| comparison, what is free must also have a price. You see, for Steve is
| crucial that the consumers get brainwashed with this idea. Otherwise they
| could all just wake up one day and say “hey – what have we been paying for
| all this time? Why can Linux be free?”
| So this is the story of the happy little “intelectual property” fairy.
| Steve used to call Linux users “communists”. Linux used to be a “cancer”. Do
| you know what communists do? They monopolize people.
| Sounds familiar?
`—-

http://www.mylro.org/blogs/mylro/?p=527

Microsoft is the next SCO.

Recent:

Windows 7: 83% Of Businesses Won’t Deploy Next Year

,—-[ Quote ]
| The survey, of more than 1,100 IT professionals, is one of the first
| extensive looks at Windows 7′s early sales prospects. It found that a
| whopping 83% of enterprises plan to skip the OS in its first year. While the
| business market typically tends toward caution when it comes to new products,
| the figure is nonetheless surprising given that almost no large companies
| migrated to Vista and as a result most have been using XP much longer than
| planned.
|
| [...]
|
| The open source Linux OS also could benefit from slow uptake of Windows 7 in
| the enterprise market, as could Google’s Android OS — which some computer
| makers are reportedly testing as a netbook platform. Fifty percent of those
| surveyed by Dimensional Research said they’ve considered switching to a
| non-Windows OS to avoid Vista or Windows 7
`—-

http://www.informationweek.com/news/windows/operatingsystems/showArti…

~~~~~—> http://food.change.org/blog/view/nations_food_policy_pro-pus_pro-e_coli_pro-bribery_pro-gmos

Nation’s Food Policy Pro-Pus, Pro-E. Coli, Pro-Bribery, Pro-GMOs

by Natasha Chart
July 10, 2009

EXCERPT:

Pro-Pus

So Michael Taylor, Monsanto’s former lawyer and a fan of adding extra pus to the nation’s milk supply by way of giving all our dairy cows chronic mastitis from rBST/rBGH, has indeed been hired to the newly created position of Deputy Commissioner of Food with the Food Safety Working Group at the FDA.

In theory, Taylor might not be as bad as all that, he shilled for rBST as a young, impressionable executive and he seems to have grown as a person.

Though adding insult to injury, Pennsylvania’s Dennis Wolff is a finalist for Undersecretary of Food Safety. A willing and enthusiastic participant in Monsanto’s campaign to prevent rBST-free labeling on milk, Wolff tried to sneak a 2008 ban on the labels under the noses of Pennsylvania citizens who were outraged and forced the governor to overturn the policy.

But really, two, TWO people appointed or being considered to head food safety in the Obama administration who opposed the public’s right to know when their milk came from cows being treated with a hormone that gives them chronically inflamed and infected udders!?

(BTW, people would have heard about the bovine growth hormone controversy more widely as of the year 2000, perhaps, if Monsanto hadn’t instigated the firing of two journalists who tried to expose rBST/rBGH for the carcinogenic, bovine mastitis-causing health disaster that it is. Though also, and this is funny, ha-ha, as part of the resolution of the ensuing litigation, a judge ruled that it wasn’t illegal for a news station to lie. F*ers!)

So, I think we can safely say that there are those in our national food safety leadership who don’t consider pus a worrying contaminant in the milk supply. Even if they don’t hire Wolff, that this didn’t immediately disqualify him, that they’d consider adding to the shame of hiring Taylor, is a mark of some serious concern.

Pro-E. coli

As reported, again at ObamaFoodorama, this is another of goals of the Obama administration’s food policy:

*Reducing the Threat of E. coli O157:H7: The bacterial strain called E. coli O157:H7 causes diarrhea, abdominal pain, and fever in approximately 70,000 Americans each year. In an estimated one in 15 patients, complications arise potentially resulting in intense pain, high blood pressure, kidney failure, and even death. In recent years, this bacterium has caused outbreaks associated with meat and spinach. …

It goes on like that, very lofty sounding goals framed in descriptions of problems that those interested in food policy are generally familiar with. Here’s what they propose to address the E. coli problem: more inspections of slaughter facilities. Here’s what would work: stop feeding cows grain and give them hay, or at the very least, feed them hay the few days before slaughter.

Cows’ stomachs are supposed to have a near neutral pH of 6.5-7.2, whereas the healthy human gut has an acidic pH that hovers around 2-3. (More about the pH scale.)

The bacteria found in the guts of health cows eating a normal cow diet of high fiber, low starch grass and hay is generally no match for the acidic environment of a human stomach. Our stomach secretions aren’t only there to digest our food, but to be the first line of our immune defense.

It’s because we have feedlots full of cows suffering permanent acidosis and standing in each other’s poop their whole lives that we continue having outbreaks of a bacterial strain that shouldn’t stand a chance against our stomach acid.

Does the federal government currently have a plan to reduce the concentration of animals into cruel and revolting factory feedlot farms? No. That would injure Cargill’s right to profit,* and it’s just not profitable to And in further fact, they’re going to continue subsidizing their waste management costs through the existing provisions of the Farm Bill.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The person who may be responsible for more food-related illness and death than anyone in history has just been made the US food safety czar. This is no joke.

Here’s the back story.

When FDA scientists were asked to weigh in on what was to become the most radical and potentially dangerous change in our food supply — the introduction of genetically modified (GM) foods — secret documents now reveal that the experts were very concerned. Memo after memo described toxins, new diseases, nutritional deficiencies, and hard-to-detect allergens. They were adamant that the technology carried “serious health hazards,” and required careful, long-term research, including human studies, before any genetically modified organisms (GMOs) could be safely released into the food supply.

But the biotech industry had rigged the game so that neither science nor scientists would stand in their way. They had placed their own man in charge of FDA policy and he wasn’t going to be swayed by feeble arguments related to food safety. No, he was going to do what corporations had done for decades to get past these types of pesky concerns. He was going to lie.

Dangerous Food Safety Lies

When the FDA was constructing their GMO policy in 1991-2, their scientists were clear that gene-sliced foods were significantly different and could lead to “different risks” than conventional foods. But official policy declared the opposite, claiming that the FDA knew nothing of significant differences, and declared GMOs substantially equivalent.

This fiction became the rationale for allowing GM foods on the market without any required safety studies whatsoever! The determination of whether GM foods were safe to eat was placed entirely in the hands of the companies that made them — companies like Monsanto, which told us that the PCBs, DDT, and Agent Orange were safe.

GMOs were rushed onto our plates in 1996. Over the next nine years, multiple chronic illnesses in the US nearly doubled — from 7% to 13%. Allergy-related emergency room visits doubled between 1997 and 2002 while food allergies, especially among children, skyrocketed. We also witnessed a dramatic rise in asthma, autism, obesity, diabetes, digestive disorders, and certain cancers.

In January of this year, Dr. P. M. Bhargava, one of the world’s top biologists, told me that after reviewing 600 scientific journals, he concluded that the GM foods in the US are largely responsible for the increase in many serious diseases.

In May, the American Academy of Environmental Medicine concluded that animal studies have demonstrated a causal relationship between GM foods and infertility, accelerated aging, dysfunctional insulin regulation, changes in major organs and the gastrointestinal system, and immune problems such as asthma, allergies, and inflammation

In July, a report by eight international experts determined that the flimsy and superficial evaluations of GMOs by both regulators and GM companies “systematically overlook the side effects” and significantly underestimate “the initial signs of diseases like cancer and diseases of the hormonal, immune, nervous and reproductive systems, among others.”

The Fox Guarding the Chickens

If GMOs are indeed responsible for massive sickness and death, then the individual who oversaw the FDA policy that facilitated their introduction holds a uniquely infamous role in human history. That person is Michael Taylor. He had been Monsanto’s attorney before becoming policy chief at the FDA. Soon after, he became Monsanto’s vice president and chief lobbyist.

This month Michael Taylor became the senior advisor to the commissioner of the FDA. He is now America’s food safety czar. What have we done?

The Milk Man Cometh

While Taylor was at the FDA in the early 90′s, he also oversaw the policy regarding Monsanto’s genetically engineered bovine growth hormone (rbGH/rbST) — injected into cows to increase milk supply.

The milk from injected cows has more pus, more antibiotics, more bovine growth hormone, and most importantly, more insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). IGF-1 is a huge risk factor for common cancers and its high levels in this drugged milk is why so many medical organizations and hospitals have taken stands against rbGH. A former Monsanto scientist told me that when three of his Monsanto colleagues evaluated rbGH safety and discovered the elevated IGF-1 levels, even they refused to drink any more milk — unless it was organic and therefore untreated.

Government scientists from Canada evaluated the FDA’s approval of rbGH and concluded that it was a dangerous facade. The drug was banned in Canada, as well as Europe, Japan, Australia and New Zealand. But it was approved in the US while Michael Taylor was in charge. His drugged milk might have caused a significant rise in US cancer rates. Additional published evidence also implicates rbGH in the high rate of fraternal twins in the US.

Taylor also determined that milk from injected cows did not require any special labeling. And as a gift to his future employer Monsanto, he wrote a white paper suggesting that if companies ever had the audacity to label their products as not using rbGH, they should also include a disclaimer stating that according to the FDA, there is no difference between milk from treated and untreated cows.

Taylor’s disclaimer was also a lie. Monsanto’s own studies and FDA scientists officially acknowledged differences in the drugged milk. No matter. Monsanto used Taylor’s white paper as the basis to successfully sue dairies that labeled their products as rbGH-free.

Will Monsanto’s Wolff Also Guard the Chickens?

As consumers learned that rbGH was dangerous, they refused to buy the milk. To keep their customers, a tidal wave of companies has publicly committed to not use the drug and to label their products as such. Monsanto tried unsuccessfully to convince the FDA and FTC to make it illegal for dairies to make rbGH-free claims, so they went to their special friend in Pennsylvania — Dennis Wolff. As state secretary of agriculture, Wolff unilaterally declared that labeling products rbGH-free was illegal, and that all such labels must be removed from shelves statewide. This would, of course, eliminate the label from all national brands, as they couldn’t afford to create separate packaging for just one state.

Fortunately, consumer demand forced Pennsylvania’s Governor Ed Rendell to step in and stop Wolff’s madness. But Rendell allowed Wolff to take a compromised position that now requires rbGH-free claims to also be accompanied by Taylor’s FDA disclaimer on the package.

President Obama is considering Dennis Wolff for the top food safety post at the USDA. Yikes!

Rumor has it that the reason why Pennsylvania’s governor is supporting Wolff’s appointment is to get him out of the state — after he “screwed up so badly” with the rbGH decision. Oh great, governor. Thanks.

Ohio Governor Gets Taylor-itus

Ohio not only followed Pennsylvania’s lead by requiring Taylor’s FDA disclaimer on packaging, they went a step further. They declared that dairies must place that disclaimer on the same panel where rbGH-free claims are made, and even dictated the font size. This would force national brands to re-design their labels and may ultimately dissuade them from making rbGH-free claims at all. The Organic Trade Association and the International Dairy Foods Association filed a lawsuit against Ohio. Although they lost the first court battle, upon appeal, the judge ordered a mediation session that takes place today. Thousands of Ohio citizens have flooded Governor Strickland’s office with urgent requests to withdraw the states anti-consumer labeling requirements.

Perhaps the governor has an ulterior motive for pushing his new rules. If he goes ahead with his labeling plans, he might end up with a top appointment in the Obama administration.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeffrey-smith/youre-appointing-who-plea_b_243810.html

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