Friday, June 30, 2006

Excommunication is Sought for Stem Cell Researchers - New York Times

Excommunication is Sought for Stem Cell Researchers - New York Times: "ROME, June 30 — Scientists who engage in stem cell research using human embryos should be subject to excommunication from the Roman Catholic Church, according to a senior Vatican official.

Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo, who heads the group that proposes family-related policy for the church, said in an interview with the Catholic weekly Famiglia Cristiana published Thursday that stem cell researchers should be punished in the same way as women who have abortions and doctors who perform them.

'Destroying an embryo is equivalent to abortion,' said the cardinal. 'Excommunication is valid for the women, the doctors and researchers who destroy embryos.'

It was unclear if the pop"

Whole Foods Market : Company : John Mackey's Blog : Detailed Reply to Pollan Letter

Whole Foods Market : Company : John Mackey's Blog : Detailed Reply to Pollan Letter: "Detailed Reply to Pollan Letter

Hi Michael,

Thanks for your recent letter to me. I appreciate the fact that you wrote the letter in an overall positive tone. I want to respond to your letter with an equally positive tone and match your efforts in 'constructive criticism.' I'll take your letter section by section, with my responses below each section. I will then conclude by writing about some of the new initiatives Whole Foods Market will be beginning very soon, which I hope you'll find exciting. I know that I'm very excited about them.

I'll only say a couple of things as an introduction. One of these is that I'm disappointed that you didn't respond at all to my short section on the history of the organic foods movement and how difficult it was for Whole Foods Market to develop sufficient supply and scale to actually get authentic organic foods into the hands (and mouths) of millions of people. You completely ignored that section. Without Whole Foods Market's pioneering work and without the growth of our stores and distribution centers, it is very unlikely that the organic foods movement would be where it is today. You obviously admire the retail food co-op movement (which I supported myself in Austin prior to co-founding Whole Foods Market), but in fact this movement "

ATTRA - National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service: organic farming, sustainable ag, publications, newsletters

ATTRA - National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service: organic farming, sustainable ag, publications, newsletters

Amazon.com: The Way We Eat : Why Our Food Choices Matter: Books: Peter Singer,Jim Mason

Amazon.com: The Way We Eat : Why Our Food Choices Matter: Books: Peter Singer,Jim Mason: "From Publishers Weekly
Ethicist Singer and co-author Mason (Animal Factories) document corporate deception, widespread waste and desensitization to inhumane practices in this consideration of ethical eating. The authors examine three families' grocery-buying habits and the motivations behind those choices. One woman says she's 'absorbed in my life and my family...and I don't think very much about the welfare of the meat I'm eating,' while a wealthier husband and wife mull the virtues of 'triple certified' coffee, buying local and avoiding chocolate harvested by child slave labor, though 'no one seems to be pondering that as they eat.' In investigating food production conditions, the authors' first-hand experiences alternate between horror and comedy, from slaughterhouses to artificial turkey-insemination ('the hardest, fastest, dirtiest, most disgusting, worst-paid work'). This sometimes-graphic exposé is not myopic: profitability and animal welfare are given equal consideration, though the reader finishes the book agreeing with the authors' conclusion that 'America's food industry seeks to keep Americans in the dark about the ethical components of their food choices.' A no-holds-barred treatise on ethical consumption, this is an important read for those concerned with the l"

Cellphone talkers as bad as drunk drivers: study | Reuters.com

Cellphone talkers as bad as drunk drivers: study | Reuters.com: "By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - People who talk on cellphones while driving, even using 'hands-free' devices, are as impaired as drunk drivers, researchers said on Thursday.

'If legislators really want to address driver distraction, then they should consider outlawing cell phone use while driving,' said Frank Drews, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Utah who worked on the study."

The So-Called "Austin Mayor" Blog: Correction and Suggestion

The So-Called "Austin Mayor" Blog: Correction and Suggestion: "The actual quote was, ' [W]ere it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.' --Thomas Jefferson to Edward Carrington, 16 Jan. 1787, Papers 11:48-49."

truckle: Definition, Synonyms and Much More From Answers.com

truckle: Definition, Synonyms and Much More From Answers.com: "truck·le (trŭk'əl) pronunciation
n.

A small wheel or roller; a caster.
intr.v., -led, -ling, -les.

To be servile or submissive. See synonyms at fawn1.

[Middle English trocle, pulley, from Anglo-Norman, from Latin trochlea, system of pulleys. See trochlea.]
truckler truck'ler n. "

The GOP's Clorox bombshell | Salon News

The lunatics who are running this country...

The GOP's Clorox bombshell | Salon News: "But several Republicans appeared unbowed. Weldon said he had been informed by a 'former intelligence officer' that the Bush administration had not searched all suspected sites in Iraq. The Philadelphia Inquirer recently reported that Weldon had planned a 'secret mission' over Memorial Day to investigate four suspected sites where he believed there were weapons of mass destruction. On his next trip to Iraq, Weldon said he would 'question our military leadership on reports that some suspected sites have yet to be inspected.'"

Thursday, June 29, 2006

OUR STAFF

OUR STAFF

THE FLY FISHERMAN

Recreational Shrimping and Scalloping

Recreational Shrimping and Scalloping: "Recreational Shrimping and Scalloping

by Charlie Courtney

When July and August roll around, the hot midday sun makes fishing miserable in Big Bend waters. However Big Bend anglers have two cooler alternatives that still let them harvest the sea's bounty, scalloping and shrimping."

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

On Special at Your Local Supermarket: Moral Choices - New York Times

On Special at Your Local Supermarket: Moral Choices - New York Times: "And Dr. Nestle maintains that, if anything, too much food is available in the United States — 3,900 calories per day per person, she writes, about twice as much as an average adult needs. Poor families are spending a far smaller proportion of their income on food today than they did a generation ago, she says.

&*&*&*&
Rather than insisting that producers make sure that produce, eggs, meat and shellfish are safe, Dr. Nestle says, food regulators advise consumers to wash their produce, avoid eating anything with raw or even soft-cooked eggs, cook meat until it is well done and buy fish from 'reliable suppliers,' as if such suppliers were easy to identify.

Both books also point to one of capitalism's most intractable and widespread problems — costs that are important but do not show up in the balance sheet.

Organic food is more expensive than conventionally grown products, the authors concede, but that is because conventional growers do have to not pay for the damage done by pesticides in the soil, fertilizer runoff in the water or greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. If you add these 'externalities' to the cost of a piglet and its feed, shelter and slaughter, conventionally produced bacon is no longer so cheap."

On Special at Your Local Supermarket: Moral Choices - New York Times

On Special at Your Local Supermarket: Moral Choices - New York Times: "And Dr. Nestle maintains that, if anything, too much food is available in the United States — 3,900 calories per day per person, she writes, about twice as much as an average adult needs. Poor families are spending a far smaller proportion of their income on food today than they did a generation ago, she says.

&*&*&*&
Rather than insisting that producers make sure that produce, eggs, meat and shellfish are safe, Dr. Nestle says, food regulators advise consumers to wash their produce, avoid eating anything with raw or even soft-cooked eggs, cook meat until it is well done and buy fish from 'reliable suppliers,' as if such suppliers were easy to identify.

Both books also point to one of capitalism's most intractable and widespread problems — costs that are important but do not show up in the balance sheet.

Organic food is more expensive than conventionally grown products, the authors concede, but that is because conventional growers do have to not pay for the damage done by pesticides in the soil, fertilizer runoff in the water or greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. If you add these 'externalities' to the cost of a piglet and its feed, shelter and slaughter, conventionally produced bacon is no longer so cheap."

Pick Your Poison - The Archive - The New York Times

Pick Your Poison - The Archive - The New York Times:

Pick Your Poison

By AMY STEWART (NYT) 834 words
Published: May 14, 2006

Eureka, Calif. - WHEN I send a bouquet to my mother on the second Sunday in May, I'm motivated by this familiar scene from childhood: Mom walking in the door at the end of the day, paperwork spilling out of her briefcase, her feet aching to get out of high-heeled shoes and her mind already turning to what she could cook for dinner. She worked a series of difficult jobs that she didn't particularly like to help keep food on the table. For that, she gets flowers.

This annual floral tradition -- one that I participate in along with roughly half of all Mother's Day shoppers, bringing in about $1.98 billion to American flower shops -- was fairly uncomplicated until I started wondering about the women who might harvest those flowers. The question of where and how our flowers are grown raises all sorts of thorny issues for consumers. But today I've sent my mother a bouquet that doesn't come at the expense of someone else's mother, working under much worse conditions and for much less pay.

Of the roughly four billion stems we buy each year, 78 percent are imported, mostly from Latin America. One impetus for moving cut flower production to countries like Colombia and allowing the flowers to be shipped to the United States tariff-free was a misguided hope that such projects would provide an alternative to coca production.

While the drug war rages on, serious labor and environmental problems associated with floriculture have now moved south of the border. Imported flowers can't show any signs of bugs and fungus when they arrive at Miami International Airport for inspection. In their eagerness to make sure that their flowers pass muster, many growers in Latin America douse their crops in agricultural chemicals that are banned or severely restricted here at home.

On a flower farm in Ecuador, I saw workers dunk bunches of roses, blossom-first, into a barrel of fungicide just before shipment. The stench was so overpowering that I had to resist the urge to run outside for air. Chemicals dripped off the flowers, they sloshed on the floor and it seemed impossible that the workers -- almost all women -- could get through the day without getting covered in them, too.

In addition to the health hazards that such chemicals pose, the runoff of pesticides and fertilizers into streams and aquifers threatens already fragile water resources. This has prompted agencies like Canada's International Development Research Center to invest in long-term projects to study the extent to which these chemicals persist in the environment. All this for a flower? When I watched Ecuadorean workers move through a field of baby's breath -- a filler that is nothing but an afterthought in most arrangements -- dressed in full protective gear to shield themselves from chemicals, I realized that something had gone horribly wrong with the Mother's Day bouquet. I couldn't stomach the idea of buying those flowers for my mom. But until recently, there weren't many alternatives.

One is the new VeriFlora label, which establishes sustainable agriculture and labor standards for flowers grown anywhere in the world for sale in the United States. Two farms in California and two in Latin America have been certified so far, representing about 250 million stems per year that enlightened consumers can send their mothers. Some of those flowers are organic, and others are grown using the least toxic methods available with a commitment to move to organic practices eventually. All growers are monitored for compliance with local labor laws.

So where are these eco-label flowers? Good question. I've asked dozens of florists why they don't offer organic or certified flowers, and every one of them told me that their customers haven't asked for them. Some didn't want to call the rest of their flowers into question by offering socially responsible bouquets as well. But organic and conventional products are sold side by side in grocery stores; there's no reason flowers should be different.

It's a vicious cycle. Growers won't participate in the program unless they see a market for certified flowers. Retailers won't stock them unless their customers demand them.

And although shoppers might prefer ''green'' bouquets if they saw them, they can hardly be blamed for not asking for them.

Try this experiment: Call your florist and say that you'd like a dozen pesticide-free roses delivered to your mother. Explain that you also want an assurance that the woman who picked them wasn't forced to work unpaid overtime or take her children to work to help her meet her quotas.

Silence? Yeah, that's the response my florist gave, too. But my mother didn't raise a shrinking violet. I said that I would find certified flowers somewhere, and eventually I did. Mom, your roses are coming from an Internet florist that sells only organic bouquets. I don't know what the woman who picked them will do with her day off, but at least I know that she gets a day off. I wish a happy Mother's Day to both of you.

Monday, June 26, 2006

OCALA ORGANICS

OCALA ORGANICS

Orlando Organics: Home Delivery of Organic Produce & Dairy For Central Florida

Orlando Organics: Home Delivery of Organic Produce & Dairy For Central Florida

Sunday, June 25, 2006

The Road From K Street to Yusufiya - New York Times

The Road From K Street to Yusufiya - New York Times: "Nearly 40 cents of every dollar in federal discretionary spending now goes to private companies."

Saturday, June 10, 2006

2006 Hyundai Azera: An Avalon Knockoff Comes Knocking - New York Times

2006 Hyundai Azera: An Avalon Knockoff Comes Knocking - New York Times: "And last week, when J. D. Power released the results of its 2006 Initial Quality Survey, Hyundai was the highest-ranked mass-market automaker on the list, taking third place (behind only the Porsche and Lexus luxury brands) and beating out the highly regarded Toyota and Honda lines."

Friday, June 09, 2006

Can Tough Grades Be Fair Grades? - New York Times

Can Tough Grades Be Fair Grades? - New York Times: "'These students are competing for admission to graduate school, for post-docs, for study abroad,' said Jeffrey J. Henderson, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. 'And to the extent G.P.A. is important, they say, we come out of B.U. and we have a lower grade point and no one can tell why. That is a legitimate concern.'

While neither students nor administrators will acknowledge as much, there is another less defensible explanation for the student criticism and for the university's defensiveness on the grading subject. If a degree from a respected institution is a commodity, as well it might be at a time when annual costs at private universities are in the vicinity of $40,000, then grade inflation is a service being purchased. No elite college, in vigorous competition to enroll the top high school seniors, is going to make its recruiting slogan, 'Home of the Gentleman's C.'

Maybe it is just too naïvely idealistic to wish that Boston University would boast about what it has done in holding the line against grade inflation. A study in the university's College of Arts of Sciences found that from 1972-73 to 2003-4, the percentage of A's and B's went up by a few percentage points (to 79 from 75) and the percentage of C's went down slightly (to 18 from 21"

Sunday, June 04, 2006

Russian Download Site Is Popular and Possibly Illegal - New York Times

Russian Download Site Is Popular and Possibly Illegal - New York Times: "AllofMP3 asserts its legality by citing a license issued by a collecting society, the Russian Multimedia and Internet Society.

In most countries, the collecting societies that receive royalty payments for the sale or use of artistic works need reciprocal agreements with overseas copyright holders, according to agencies that represent right holders.

According to Russia's 1993 copyright law, however, collecting societies are permitted to act on behalf of rights holders who have not authorized them to do so. Collecting societies have thus been set up to gather royalties for foreign copyright holders without their authorization. Infringement cases have also affected foreign-produced software, films and books.

The result is that numerous organizations in Russia receive royalties for the use of foreign artistic works, but never pass on that money to the artists or music companies, according to the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers, the umbrella organization for collecting societies.

'These collecting agencies are thieves and frauds because they accept money while pretending to represent artists,' said Eric Baptiste, director general of the confederation. 'They play off a bizarre aspect of the Russian law that we are lobbying to change.'

Consumers"

Supporting Our Troops Over a Cliff - New York Times

Supporting Our Troops Over a Cliff - New York Times: "Call the P.R. strategy 'attack, clear and hold': the administration attacks the credibility of reporters covering the war and tries to clear troubling Iraq images from American TV screens so that popular support might hold until a miracle happens on the ground. This plan first surfaced when the insurgency exploded in spring 2004: Ted Koppel was pilloried by White House surrogates for reading the names of the fallen on 'Nightline' and Paul Wolfowitz told Congress that 'a lot of the press are afraid to travel very much, so they sit in Baghdad and they publish rumors.'

Upon being told that 34 journalists had been killed in the war up to that point, Mr. Wolfowitz apologized, but the strategy was never rescinded. Mr. Bush routinely chastises the press for reporting on bombings rather than 'success' stories like Tal Afar. His new top domestic policy adviser, Karl Zinsmeister, has called American war correspondents 'whiny and appallingly soft,' and he declared last June that 'our struggle in Iraq as warfare' was over except for 'periodic flare-ups in isolated corners.' That's the news the administration wants: the insurgency is always in its last throes. We'd realize that this prognosis was 'basically accurate,' Dick Cheney has explained, if only the non-Fox press didn't concentrate on car bombs in Baghdad."