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Archive for the ‘TAKE ACTION’ Category

Some Products Labeled as ‘Natural’ May Cause Cancer

April 26th, 2008

chemicals

An new study reveals that some personal care and cleaning products cannot be trusted. It is a pity that this has happened just as people are becoming empowered to make the organic, natural choice with regard to the products they choose.

A study commissioned by the Organic Consumers Association analyzed many of the most popular “natural” and “organic” personal care products for the presence of a carcinogenic substance called contaminant 1,4-Dioxane. The research was conducted by………

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Why Philip Morris Supports FDA Regulation of Tobacco

April 1st, 2008

tobacco

(NaturalNews) A proposed law that would give the FDA the authority to regulate tobacco products have garnered a wide degree of support — including from Philip Morris, the world’s largest tobacco company.  more…..

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City Mandates Installation of “Big Brother” Video Monitors in All New Buildings

April 1st, 2008

natural health

(NaturalNews) The city government of Aberdeen, Maryland, has passed a measure requiring all new developments to install centrally monitored police cameras upon request.

Under the new law, which becomes effective immediately, the Police Department, the Department of Planning and Community Development, and the Department of Public Works will evaluate each new commercial, industrial or residential development to decide whether...more

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FCC Refuses to Investigate Phone Companies for Turning Over Customer Records to Government Spooks

April 1st, 2008

customer records

(NaturalNews) The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has rejected a congressional request to investigate telephone companies for allegedly turning over confidential customer information to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and National Security Agency (NSA) without proper court authorization.

National Intelligence Director Michael McConnell wrote a letter to the FCC, warning that……...more

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Explaining Monsanto’s Desire to Ban Current Milk Labeling

April 1st, 2008

(NaturalNews) Over the past century, Monsanto has dabbled in many projects – Agent Orange, Terminator seeds, PCBs, and now “recombined” milk. Monsanto’s latest obsession is milk labels. Specifically, those that are labeled “rBST-free” or “rBGH-free”. They are not concerned with the BST and the BGH on your milk labels. What worries them is the “r” in the label, which stands for “recombined.” Recombined milk is not a natural state of milk and recent evidence suggests that it is probably not as good for us.

Consuming dairy products coming from cows treated with rBGH poses some health risks, including antibiotic resistance (because of antibiotic use to treat cows’ mastitis and other health problems), and a link to a certain range of cancers due to an elevated level of Insulin-like Growth Factor 1.

Monsanto is waging a war of words to attempt to stop the threat against its bottom line. Consumers are becoming skeptical about recombined food and so the company is attempting to suppress or ban the “rBGH-free” label at the state level.

They contend that rBST is a supplement used to help cows produce more milk. Because of the fact that the supplement is injected into the cow and not the milk, they insist that the resulting milk is exactly the same. They state that there is no difference in this milk.

While it is true that all cows have naturally occurring bovine growth hormone, only cows injected with the genetically engineered bovine growth hormone have rBGH. To call this hormone a mere “supplement” is inaccurate as well. Cows that receive this hormone typically last only two lactation cycles before they are slaughtered. Non-rBGH cows normally produce milk for 4-7 years and can live as long as 10 years.

Canada, Australia, and parts of the European Union have banned Monsanto’s recombined milk due to its threats to both humans and cows. To date, the U.S. has yet again allowed Monsanto the freedom to unleash its possibly lethal products on the unsuspecting consumer. And so, it comes down to a battle between the FDA (and its supporters) and those who don’t follow the FDA. Proposed bans on rBGH-free labels are not to protect the consumer, they are to protect Monsanto’s pocketbook.

Public sentiment is turning against rBGH products. More medical authorities are voicing concerns about physical and psychological health issues. In addition, farmers and consumers are demanding a differentiation between recombined milk and milk in its natural form.

Just because there is no commercial test for this drug does not translate into there not being a difference between recombined milk and natural milk. Monsanto’s tactic has been to equate the absence of a verifying lab test with the label being misleading. This doesn’t hold true as there are many products with legitimate labels that haven’t been verified by lab tests – bottled water comes to mind.

Monsanto continues to muddy the waters by insisting that to label the different milks is misleading because “they make consumers believe there is a difference, when in fact there is none.”

Monsanto nearly succeeded in a ban on rBGH-free labels in Pennsylvania in 2007; however the ban failed at the eleventh hour. Several other states are expected to revise or lift their bans on rBGH-free labels due to opposition.

At this juncture, Monsanto seems to have accepted the consumer’s rejection of genetically modified bovine growth hormones. At this point they are experimenting with some funding of grass-roots farming coalitions. The American Farmers for Advancement and Conservation of Technology (AFACT) is one such recipient of Monsanto’s generosity. The farmers from organizations such as these have been known to harass their state legislators, force scientists who may be skeptical of advisory panels, and general intimidation.

As more consumers become aware of the issues involved and make their choices for rBGH-free products, it becomes more and more apparent that Monsanto’s goal is censorship to protect their own interests, not the public’s. One need only take a cursory look at Monsanto’s past pattern with products like Agent Orange, PCBs, and Terminator seeds. The bottom line is that more information is never a bad thing and anything or anyone who tries to restrict the flow of information is likely anti-consumer.

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Soil and the City: DIY Urban Compostin

March 10th, 2008

 by Jessica Ridenour

By Nicole Gluckstern

I have a confession: My roommates and I have worms.

Fortunately, they’re not the contagious kind… they’re the composting kind. You see, unlike most of our apartment-dwelling friends, we have a backyard to put them in. Plus, we live in San Francisco, which offers residents free citywide bio-waste collection.

Still, even here in the eco-enlightened Bay Area, many of our friends’ landlords don’t participate in the program (which baffles us, considering, um… it’s free). And not many other cities in the U.S. offer an equivalent to their green-minded residents.

But, intrepid eco-urbanite, never fear: It’s still possible to put your green waste to green use in the city you know and love. Here’s how to get started:

1. Find a collection vessel. One- to five-gallon plastic buckets with lids (used by restaurants, bakeries, housepainters, and contractors) are ideal. Ask around, scour the Dumpsters for a freebie or buy one at the hardware store.

2. Sort your scraps. Not all food can be composted on a small scale, so unless you have access to an industrial-grade compost heap (like the one provided through our pretty city by the Bay), you’ll have to separate your scraps ‘yerself. Bones, meat, dairy products and fats should not be thrown into your compost bin (eggshells are fine). Vegetable scraps should be chopped up for maximum breakdown effectiveness.

3. Scout out a dumping ground*. If your city offers a bio-waste pickup that your apartment doesn’t participate in, find out what night the pickup is and tip your bucket into any curbside bin. Alternatively, scout the neighborhood for a community or demonstration garden project with a compost pile (or befriend a neighbor with a green thumb), and negotiate dumping rights with them.

31/2 * Start a guerilla compost pile. If step 3 fails, you can go commando and start your own compost in a vacant lot or urban wildland. A galvanized aluminum or heavy-duty plastic trash can is a great, rodent-resistant container. Punch small holes all around the sides so oxygen can get into the heap, and fill half-full with dry leaves, sawdust, newspaper or dried lawn trimmings. Food scraps can then added on a regular basis; mix with a shovel or gardening fork, or by rolling the can around on its side. Compost should be kept moist but not soggy, and more dry material added regularly. If all goes to plan, you should have usable compost in a month or two that you can then use… for guerilla gardening projects, of course!

4. Reach out. Community composting is a great way to get to know your neighbors, and with safety in numbers you can work together to establish more permanent composting options in your area.

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Video Shows Employees Torturing Cows on Way to Slaughterhouse

February 29th, 2008

employees

An article posted by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) on their Web site on Jan. 30, 2008 revealed the disturbing results of a six-week undercover investigation into Hallmark Meat Packing Co., of Chino, located in southern California. Video evidence showed employees of the plant, which supplies beef to the National Lunch Program, kicking, electrocuting, and downright torturing sick or injured animals, forcing them to walk on their own ability into the slaughterhouse and into our food chain.

A link to the video can be found here:

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How to Recycle Everything

February 25th, 2008

 

 

recycle intro

There’s more to recycling than melting down plastic soda bottles to make new plastic soda bottles. These days you can recycle everything from toothbrushes to your wedding dress, turn medicine bottles into life jackets and old running shoes into new playground surfacing-how’s that for reincarnation? Discover how and where to recycle everything you never thought you could…………….CLICK

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Factory Farms and Beef Slaughterhouse Cruelty (video)

February 25th, 2008

Selling Sickness (1/5)

February 25th, 2008