Tuesday, March 29, 2005

No Wonder the TTC always runs late!

They get fired if they are early? Dude! I remember when I used to take the Broadview streetcar every day and the driver would pull into the station, take the newspaper and go and take a crap, or something, while all the other streetcars waited behind him so they could leave. It made me think of that story of the Russian communist shoe factories where the workers put the heals of the boots on the toe end because they couldn't be fired and didn't care about doing a good job. Now I get it, it's not that they don't care, (really I don't know if they do) it's that they don't want to take the chance of being early God forbid!
I remember when I was in Germany, the bus schedule was calculated down to the minute - it would actually say 7:57 or 9:52 and if you got to the bus stop at that time and didn't see the bus arriving, that meant that it was already gone. Oh those crazy Germans!

Mar. 29, 2005.
Progress made in TTC talks
Parties address `arbitrary' firing
Legal strike date only days away
KEVIN MCGRAN
TRANSPORTATION REPORTER
TTC workers vowed not to strike yesterday as long as negotiations continued to be "productive" as Friday's legal strike date inches closer.
"We're talking, so that's a positive thing," said Bob Kinnear, president of Local 113 of the Amalgamated Transit Union. "The last couple of weeks haven't been all that productive, but we did have some substantial movement today, this afternoon, on both sides."
The 8,000 workers of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 113 will be in a strike position following midnight Thursday, meaning the city could suffer through massive gridlock if buses, streetcars and subways stop operating.
Kinnear said commuters should be worried about a strike, but added: "Our organization is going to do everything we possibly can to ensure that we're not forced into a position of (striking). In saying that there's always that potential. We would continue talking as long as things are being productive. That could change tomorrow."
The TTC did not elaborate on the talks. Earlier this month, the workers voted 99 per cent against a five-year offer that included a 2 per cent wage hike in each of the next three years and benefit improvements.
Kinnear said that there was movement yesterday on the importance of non-monetary items.
He said the union wants the TTC to beef up its pension contributions to make up for concessions granted in 1996, and wants to put an end to the "arbitrary" dismissal of drivers who arrive at their destinations ahead of schedule more than three times in one year.
"If you're early by four minutes three times within a year, you're fired," said Kinnear. "It's completely unreasonable.
"They don't factor in construction, weather. We operate on the same schedule in January as we do in May. That's a real concern."
A TTC bus driver earns anywhere from $18 to $24 an hour. The union also represents administrative clerks, who start at about $16 an hour, and maintenance staff such as mechanics, machinists and technicians, who at the high end earn about $28-$30 an hour.
"We have not had any discussion up to this point regarding wages," said Kinnear.
"We recognize they're in a cash crunch right now. But our members made substantial concessions in '96 because the same argument was being brought to us. Here we are nine years later and the same argument is being made to us."
The last negotiations, in 2002, went to the wire. The workers went without a contract for a week before settling on a 9 per cent raise over three years. TTC workers went on strike for two days in 1999.

Monday, March 28, 2005

Crowded House drummer found hanged in park

Mar. 28, 2005.
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) — Paul Hester, the drummer from popular 1980s Australian rock band Crowded House, hanged himself in a park in southern Australia, an emergency services spokeswoman said today.
Hester, 46, had failed to return home after taking his two dogs for a walk on Friday night. The drummer's body was later found in a park near his home in the southern city of Melbourne.
Ambulance officers arrived on the scene shortly after midday Saturday and tried to resuscitate him, but "he was dead when they arrived," Metropolitan Ambulance Service spokeswoman Liraje Memishi said.
Memishi said he had "attempted suicide" and then suffered strangulation. She declined to confirm where Hester's body was found. Reports have said he was discovered hanging from a tree.
Hester played in several small bands before joining the New Zealand group Split Enz in 1983. He and Split Enz singer Neil Finn formed Crowded House in 1985 with bass player Nick Seymour.
Crowded House was one of Australia's most successful bands in the late 1980s and early 1990s, with international hits such as Don't Dream it's Over and Weather with You.
Peter Green, a long-time friend of Hester, reportedly contacted Finn and Seymour after learning of the drummer's death.
Green said Hester had experienced "some dark moments," but dismissed media reports that he was struggling with depression or illness at the time of his death.
"Paul never said anything about that and I never, ever, heard he was suffering from any illness," he told the Daily Telegraph newspaper for its Monday edition. "Then, after today, I wonder if anybody really knew anything."
Seymour also expressed surprise at the news, telling the paper he seen Hester in Ireland two weeks ago.
"It was all good," Seymour told the paper from Dublin. "The last words Paul told me were: `I love you, mate. See you in town (Melbourne) in a month."'
Finn, currently touring in London, said he was deeply saddened at the loss of his friend.
"I am devastated," he told the paper. "I have lost one of my best mates."
Hester quit Crowded House in 1994, citing the pressures of touring and declining motivation for the group.
He is survived by his girlfriend Mardi Sommerfield and their two daughters aged eight and 10.

Friday, March 25, 2005

Gay Communists

New Peoples Army recognizes same-sex marriage

Published Feb 17, 2005 11:23 PM

On Feb. 4, the New People's Army (NPA) conducted the first same-sex marriage in the Philippines. Two guerrilla fighters who have participated in the armed struggle against the pro-U.S. regime in Manila, Ka Andres and Ka Jose, exchanged their vows before their comrades, friends and local villagers.

The ceremony was full of symbolic imagery of the two comrades' commitment to each other as members of a couple, as well as their commitment to the revolutionary struggle. The two men held each other's hand throughout the wedding, and a bullet in the other as a representation of their commitment to the armed struggle.

During the ceremony, Ka Andres and Ka Jose were draped in a sequined flag of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), which was secured by a long, beaded rope around the couple and their sponsors. The rope and flag, according to the Philippine Daily Inquirer, symbolized that their marriage would be made stronger with the help of both their comrades and the masses.


NPA comrades hold
first same-sex wedding.

A choir of the New People's Army serenaded the couple with revolutionary love songs.

In response to the marriage, representatives of the Philippine government have condemned the NPA for lacking religion. A spokesperson for the Air Force generals told reporters, "This proves that they have no god and their morality is very much in question."

Although proposals in support of same-sex marriage have been introduced several times to the Philippine legislature, none have passed so far.

The Progressive Organization of Gays (ProGay) responded to the NPA marriage with a challenge to the administration of President Gloria Macagapal Arroyo to enact legislation that would formalize equal rights for lesbian and gay Filipinos.

Michael Falguera, secretary general of Pro Gay, said, "Instead of branding homosexual marriages as immoral, the government should be taking steps to follow the example of the NPA by legalizing domestic partnerships and honoring gay families."

Speaking on gays in the NPA, newlywed Ka Andres said, "Gay cadres adhere to the strong party discipline. They enhance the prestige of gays in the movement. This has gained positive results through the years. Comrades (male and female) and even the masses have learned to respect and recognize gays and their contribution to the revolution."

Ka Jose said, "What we have to do now--with the help of the party--is to work on our marriage and to be strong while serving the people."

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Happy Easter

IRA Easter message
The following is the full text of this year's Easter message from the Provisional IRA.
On this, the 89th anniversary of the Easter Rising of 1916, we remember the men and women of every generation who have given their lives in the struggle for Irish freedom. The leadership of Oglaigh na hEireann extends solidarity to the families of our comrades who have fallen during this phase of the struggle. We remember those comrades with honour and pride. We send solidarity to our Volunteers and to our friends and supporters at home and abroad. We think of our imprisoned comrades and their families at this time also. Over ten years ago, the leadership of the IRA declared a complete cessation of military operations. We did so to enhance the development of the Irish peace process. From then until now we have, on a number of occasions, demonstrated our continuing support for this process. At times of significant crisis or political impasse, we have taken initiatives to move the situation forward. Our approach has been premised on the belief that the achievement of a just and lasting peace requires constant forward momentum in the peace process. For the past two years, the peace process has been locked in stalemate and has slipped backwards into deepening crisis. During that period, specifically in October 2003 and in December 2004, we agreed to significant initiatives as part of an agreement to break the logjam. On each occasion, other parties reneged on their commitments. An unprecedented opportunity to transform the situation on the island of Ireland was thrown away by rejectionist unionism, aided and abetted by the two governments. The DUP attempted to turn the initiative of December 2004 into a humiliation of the IRA. The concerted efforts of both governments since then to undermine the integrity of our cause, by seeking to criminalise the republican struggle, is clear evidence that our opponents remain fixated with the objective of defeating republicans rather than developing the peace process. The sustained campaign directed against the republican people over recent months is nothing new. We have seen and heard it all before. Those who opted to follow the Thatcher path will not succeed. Our patriot dead are not criminals. We are not criminals. Republican men and women suffered deprivation and torture to defeat attempts to criminalise our struggle. Ten of our comrades endured the agony of hunger strike and died defeating the criminalisation strategy. We will not betray their courage by tolerating criminality within our own ranks. We will not allow our opponents to further their own petty self-interests by levelling false allegations against Oglaigh na hEireann. The IRA has spelt out its position in relation to the killing of Robert McCartney. It was wrong, it was murder, it was a crime. But it was not carried out by the IRA, nor was it carried out on behalf of the IRA. The IRA moved quickly to deal with those involved. We have tried to assist in whatever way we can. Unfortunately, it would appear that no matter what we do it will never be enough for some. Those in the political and media establishments who have been so quick to jump on the bandwagon have again laid bare their own hypocrisy. This causes justifiable resentment among republicans. But it must not cloud the issue. Oglaigh na hEireann expects the highest standards of conduct from our Volunteers. Struggle requires sacrifice and discipline. It promises hardship and suffering. Our fallen comrades rose to those challenges and met them head on. The discipline and commitment of our Volunteers and the wider republican base have been the backbone of our struggle. In these testing times, that steadfastness and determination are needed more and more. We salute you and urge you to remain strong and united. The crisis in the peace process and the reinvigorated attempts to criminalise us have not diminished in any way our determination to pursue and achieve our republican objectives. Irish unity and independence provides the best context for the people of this island to live together in harmony. The primary responsibility now rests with the two governments. They must demonstrate their commitment to a lasting peace. Pandering to the demands of those who are opposed change is not the way forward.
P O'Neill, Irish Republican Publicity Bureau, Dublin

A New Screen Test for Imax: It's the Bible vs. the Volcano

What the heck is "faith-based science?"
The Merriam-Webster online dictionary defines science as - 1 : the state of knowing : knowledge as distinguished from ignorance or misunderstanding.
Science as in the oposite of scary hillbilly redneck inbred bible belt christian-right American whackos! What the heck is "faith-based science?" It's like jumbo shrimp or, science is never based on faith or it's not science.
Once upon a time, I thought I could try my hand at being a creationist just to piss people off, but that even pisses me off!
Saturday, March 19, 2005
By CORNELIA DEAN
Published: March 19, 2005
The fight over evolution has reached the big, big screen.
Several Imax theaters, including some in science museums, are refusing to show movies that mention the subject - or the Big Bang or the geology of the earth - fearing protests from people who object to films that contradict biblical descriptions of the origin of Earth and its creatures.
The number of theaters rejecting such films is small, people in the industry say - perhaps a dozen or fewer, most in the South. But because only a few dozen Imax theaters routinely show science documentaries, the decisions of a few can have a big impact on a film's bottom line - or a producer's decision to make a documentary in the first place.
People who follow trends at commercial and institutional Imax theaters say that in recent years, religious controversy has adversely affected the distribution of a number of films, including "Cosmic Voyage," which depicts the universe in dimensions running from the scale of subatomic particles to clusters of galaxies; "Galápagos," about the islands where Darwin theorized about evolution; and "Volcanoes of the Deep Sea," an underwater epic about the bizarre creatures that flourish in the hot, sulfurous emanations from vents in the ocean floor.
"Volcanoes," released in 2003 and sponsored in part by the National Science Foundation and Rutgers University, has been turned down at about a dozen science centers, mostly in the South, said Dr. Richard Lutz, the Rutgers oceanographer who was chief scientist for the film. He said theater officials rejected the film because of its brief references to evolution, in particular to the possibility that life on Earth originated at the undersea vents.
Carol Murray, director of marketing for the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History, said the museum decided not to offer the movie after showing it to a sample audience, a practice often followed by managers of Imax theaters. Ms. Murray said 137 people participated in the survey, and while some thought it was well done, "some people said it was blasphemous."
In their written comments, she explained, they made statements like "I really hate it when the theory of evolution is presented as fact," or "I don't agree with their presentation of human existence."
On other criteria, like narration and music, the film did not score as well as other films, Ms. Murray said, and over all, it did not receive high marks, so she recommended that the museum pass.
"If it's not going to draw a crowd and it is going to create controversy," she said, "from a marketing standpoint I cannot make a recommendation" to show it.
In interviews, officials at other Imax theaters said they had similarly decided against the film for fear of offending some audiences.
"We have definitely a lot more creation public than evolution public," said Lisa Buzzelli, who directs the Charleston Imax Theater in South Carolina, a commercial theater next to the Charleston Aquarium. Her theater had not ruled out ever showing "Volcanoes," Ms. Buzzelli said, "but being in the Bible Belt, the movie does have a lot to do with evolution, and we weigh that carefully."
Pietro Serapiglia, who handles distribution for the producer Stephen Low of Montreal, whose company made the film, said officials at other theaters told him they could not book the movie "for religious reasons," because it had "evolutionary overtones" or "would not go well with the Christian community" or because "the evolution stuff is a problem."
Hyman Field, who as a science foundation official had a role in the financing of "Volcanoes," said he understood that theaters must be responsive to their audiences. But Dr. Field he said he was "furious" that a science museum would decide not to show a scientifically accurate documentary like "Volcanoes" because it mentioned evolution.
"It's very alarming," he said, "all of this pressure being put on a lot of the public institutions by the fundamentalists."
People who follow the issue say it is more likely to arise at science centers and other public institutions than at commercial theaters. The filmmaker James Cameron, who was a producer on "Volcanoes," said the commercial film he made on the same topic, "Aliens of the Deep," had not encountered opposition, except during post-production, when "it was requested from some theaters that we change a line of dialogue" relating to sun worship by ancient Egyptians. The line remained, he said.
Mr. Cameron said he was "surprised and somewhat offended" that people were sensitive to the references to evolution in "Volcanoes."
"It seems to be a new phenomenon," he said, "obviously symptomatic of our shift away from empiricism in science to faith-based science."
Some in the industry say they fear that documentary filmmakers will steer clear of science topics likely to offend religious fundamentalists.
Large-format science documentaries "are generally not big moneymakers," said Joe DeAmicis, vice president for marketing at the California Science Center in Los Angeles and formerly the director of its Imax theater. "It's going to be hard for our filmmakers to continue to make unfettered documentaries when they know going in that 10 percent of the market" will reject them.
Others who follow the issue say many institutions are not able to resist such pressure.
"They have to be extremely careful as to how they present anything relating to evolution," said Bayley Silleck, who wrote and directed "Cosmic Voyage." Mr. Silleck said he confronted religious objections to that film and predicted he would face them again with a project he is working on now, about dinosaurs.
Of course, a number of factors affect a theater manager's decision about a movie. Mr. Silleck said an Imax documentary about oil fires in Kuwait "never reached its distribution potential" because it had shots of the first Persian Gulf war. "The theaters decided their patrons would be upset at seeing the bodies," he said.
"We all have to make films for an audience that is a family audience," he went on, "when you are talking about Imax, because they are in science centers and museums."
He added, however, "there are a number of us who are concerned that there is a kind of tacit overcaution, overprotectedness of the audience on the part of theater operators."
In any event, censoring films like "Volcanoes" is not an option, said Dr. Field, who said Mr. Low, the film's producer, got in touch with him when the evolution issue arose to ask whether the film should be altered.
"I said absolutely not," recalled Dr. Field, who retired from the National Science Foundation last year.
Mr. Low said that arguments over religion and science disturbed him because of his own religious faith. In his view, he said, science is "a celebration of what nature or God has done. So for me, there's no conflict."
Dr. Lutz, the Rutgers oceanographer, recalled a showing of "Volcanoes" he and Mr. Low attended at the New England Aquarium. When the movie ended, a little girl stood in the audience to challenge Mr. Low on the film's suggestion that Earth might have formed billions of years ago in the explosion of a star. "I thought God created the Earth," she said.
He replied, "Maybe that's how God did it."

I didn't know I couldn't wreck the place!

I don't mean to side with "The Man" on this one, but having worked in a museum I see this B.S. all the time. We got this whole, "I didn't know I couldn't climb on the ancient artifacts and have a picnic and then graffiti on them." I've been to the Parthenon, there are about a zillion signs stuck everywhere about not taking, touching, or disturbing anything and they are in English, unless you were blind there's no way you could not see them. I don't think they overreacted, people tell me stories all the time about the appalling things they've done at archaeological sites. If they want to keep this stuff open to the public they are going to have to crack down and if that means making an example of someone, then that's just how it's going to be. I'd rather be allowed to go and see these places under heavy supervision than not be allowed in at all because others wrecked them.
'I wasn't warned,' says B.C. teen arrested in Greece
Last Updated Thu, 24 Mar 2005
CBC News
VANCOUVER - A Vancouver Island teen arrested in Greece says she was never told not to touch artifacts at an ancient site in Greece.
Madelaine Gierc spent two days in an Athens jail this week, charged with trying to steal an antiquity.
FROM MARCH 22, 2005: Greek court allows Canadian teen to come home
The 14-year-old student from Duncan, B.C., claims she was just picking up a rock on a path near the Parthenon to have her picture taken, when she was arrested, charged and jailed.
Gierc says she was never told about the rules at the ancient site.
"I didn't see any of the signs and we were never told 'Don't touch,' and I had no idea we couldn't pick up things on the ground and have closer looks," said Gierc.
But a spokesperson for the tour company, EF Travel, says there are many written notices at the Parthenon. Brent Ronning says his company also uses licensed tour guides who warn against touching artifacts.
"She really has to take responsibility for her own actions, but we do think that the Greek authorities overreacted," said Ronning.
Gierc was first charged with theft of an antiquity, a charge that carries a maximum 10-year sentence. That charge has been reduced to illegally possessing an antiquity and will likely result in a fine.
She will not have to return to Greece for the hearing.

What's closed for Easter weekend

Several people have asked me about this...
Mar. 24, 2005.
You better stock up on groceries and beer and liquor today because many businesses will be closed for Good Friday and Easter Sunday. Even the Eaton Centre will be dark on those two days. Most stores reopen on Saturday, and some lucky employees, including Catholic school teachers and students, will get an extended holiday on Monday.
Here's a look at what's open and closed this weekend.
Good Friday closings
Schools
Eaton Centre
Malls
Government offices
Banks
Libraries
No mail delivery
No garbage collection (Click here for City of Toronto schedules)
TTC and GO on holiday schedule
Saturday
Back to business for stores
Sunday
Most stores, including Eaton Centre, to close again
Monday closings
Banks
Government offices
Beer and LCBO stores
No mail
Some schools to remain closed

I Love Henry Morgentaler

If I had a university, I'd give him an honourary degree.
Mar. 24, 2005.
The University of Western Ontario will give an honorary degree to Dr. Henry Morgentaler.
Morgentaler honoured by university
Abortion pioneer not worthy of degree, critics say Western refuses to back down on touchy decision
PAT CURRIE
SPECIAL TO THE STAR
LONDON, Ont. —A decision to award Dr. Henry Morgentaler with an honorary degree has caused an uproar for the University of Western Ontario.
A member of Parliament, the university's three religious colleges and a professor are protesting the honour that will be bestowed upon Canada's pioneer abortionist doctor.
Yesterday, Joanne McGarry, a Western graduate and executive director of the Catholic Civil Rights League, said her organization is asking disgruntled alumni to register their displeasure by stopping their donations to the university.
"This man's sole contribution to Canada has been the taking of life in unprecedented numbers," said McGarry.
But the university isn't budging.
"The decision has been made. We expect people will continue to talk about it but we are honouring that decision," said Ted Garrard, a Western vice president.
London MP Pat O'Brien, also an alumnus, is urging the university to find another recipient for the degree.
"I told them there has to be a long list of deserving medical people, so why did they have to single out this guy?" said O'Brien, who is also a vocal opponent of same-sex marriage.
"This was a bad decision," he said, adding that it "may well result in a drop in donations from alumni.
"Either they are very naive or they have deliberately made a very controversial decision that could have a negative impact for years," O'Brien said.
Each year, a committee of about 18 members, representing faculty, staff, students and alumni, select 13 honorary degree recipients.
"Hundreds of names are considered every year. Each choice is decided by majority vote," said Garrard, a committee member.
"Dr. Morgentaler was chosen on his merits as an advocate of women's rights and for standing his ground on an important societal issue."
The committee proceedings are confidential.
Garrard said no other nomination has created such a ruckus. Since the announcement was publicized over the weekend, the university has already received about 100 messages on this decision alone, said Garrard, adding that "most of them (are) supportive."
But sociology professor and separate school board chairperson Paul Whitehead has said he will boycott the June 10 academic procession immediately preceding the Morgentaler award.
"Instead, I plan to march in peaceful vigil against what I consider to be an appalling decision by my employer of 35 years," he wrote in a letter.
Morgentaler wasn't available for comment.

Monday, March 21, 2005

Canadian teen charged for pocketing rock at Greek site

Mar. 21, 2005. 10:05 AM
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — A Canadian teenager was arrested after allegedly removing a piece of marble from the grounds of the 2,500-year-old Parthenon on the Acropolis Hill, authorities said today.
The 17-year-old girl — who was not further identified — was arrested Sunday after a security guard saw her removing the stone and called the police.
She is due to appear before a public prosecutor later Monday.
The grounds of the Acropolis are closely monitored to deter unscrupulous souvenir hunters.
Under Greece's strict protection laws, it is illegal to own, buy, sell or excavate antiquities without a special permit. Items found accidentally must be handed over to authorities
Police gave no details concerning the size of the rock or the exact location from where it was removed.

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Happy St.Patrick's Day

Courtesy of Josh:
Opinion
St. Patrick's Day revelry shames Irish people, saint
Politics Without the Party
Matthew Getz
March 02, 2005
Recently, www.thefacebook.com has reminded IUP that racism is alive and strong. Any Irishman could have told you that. Every year, we Irish are forced to endure the most racist of all American institutions -- St. Patrick's Day.
Don't get me wrong, it's always flattering to see the millions of wannabes desperate to pretend that for one day they, too, can be Irish. There's something enchanting in the essence of the Irish, and in my patron saint, Patrick.
Why, then, do I say that St. Patrick's Day is America's most racist institution? Simply put, it's the stereotypes that rob us of our holy day -- and our dignity.
When he arrived in Ireland in 430 as a missionary, St. Patrick confronted an island full of magic, superstition, druids, gods, monsters and barbaric violence. For 30 years, he criss-crossed Ireland, preaching to all. His life was threatened countless times, but he never responded with violence of his own, and never encouraged or allowed his followers to use violence.
The result is astounding. In only three decades, he affected the genuine conversion of an overwhelming majority of the Irish race. Patrick never converted by force. His humility, faith and selfless love were enough to show Christ's love to a people desperately in need of it.
It is said today that there are no truer Catholics in all the world than the Irish. Well, Catholic or not, their unwavering faith in Christ has been the center of the uniquely Irish sense of perseverance and hope in the face of an 800-year English genocide. Without the faith and salvation brought to them by Patrick, the Irish would have been exterminated or culturally assimilated centuries ago by the English.
We remember this man who brought us deliverance every year on the day of his death -- March 17. It is a holy day for the Irish, and for all Christians who celebrate piety and faith. Yet it is treated by millions of Americans as an excuse to indulge in cruel and patronizing racial stereotypes and racist behaviors.
To see millions of non-Irish wearing tacky green plastic shamrocks, or glitzy green glasses and hats, or silly "kiss me, I'm Irish" buttons is insulting. What's worse is to watch as millions treat this holy day as an excuse to drink themselves stupid, then engage in shameful, destructive or violent behaviors. Stereotyping the Irish as violent alcoholics is racist, and using such a stereotype to excuse such behavior is worse.
Not one person reading this can possibly deny that St. Patrick's Day is treated this way. We've all seen it; we've all heard it. I'm just standing up and calling it what it is -- racism.
I, as I said, am Irish. I'm proud of my heritage and the holy man who delivered my race out of darkness and into the light. Thus, March 17 will find me praying, attending mass and gathering with family and friends. That is how we celebrate St. Patrick's Day, not by sitting in a pub or brawling in the street.
Please, IUP, let's make this year different. Let's work against racism in all its forms, most notably in the form we seem to love. Don't have parties that Thursday, and don't insult my patron saint by seeing how much green beer you can drink or buying pathetic green trinkets.
Show respect, love and dignity -- not just for the Irish and our patron saint, but also for yourselves. Getting drunk, gaudy and disgraceful only shames you and perpetuates racism. St. Patrick showed us a better way; let us celebrate him by living it.

Congolese guerillas cooked, ate victims: UN'

Mar. 16, 2005. 09:52 PM
Those responsible for atrocities will be brought to justice,' Dutch general promises
FROM ASSOCIATED PRESSKINSHASA, Congo — Militiamen grilled bodies on a spit and boiled two girls alive as their mother watched, UN peacekeepers charged, adding cannibalism to a list of atrocities allegedly carried out by one of the tribal groups fighting in northeastern Congo.
"Those responsible for atrocities will be brought to justice," Gen. Patrick Cammaert, the Dutch Navy commander of UN forces in Congo, said today in presenting a report on abuses allegedly committed by the Patriotic Resistant Front of Ituri.
Cammaert said UN forces also are working to cut off weapons supplies to the group, which apparently entered the country from neighbouring Uganda.
Front militiamen were suspected of killing nine UN troops in a Feb. 25 ambush. On March 1, militiamen fired on Pakistani troops and the peacekeepers fought back, killing up to 60 fighters, UN officials said at the time.
Congo became a battleground for six countries during a 1998-2002 war that killed some 50,000 people directly and another three million through strife-induced hunger and disease. But sporadic fighting continues between militiamen, rebels and government troops in the lawless northeast.
The fighting is killing thousands every month and has made it the worst humanitarian crisis in the world, UN humanitarian chief Jan Egeland said in Geneva, Switzerland, on Wednesday.
Wednesday's UN report, summarizing testimony from witnesses gathered over a year, said hundreds of people have been kidnapped by militias in the region and some have been killed by torture and decapitation. Those not killed are held in labour camps and forced to work as fishermen, porters, domestic workers and sex slaves.
"Several witnesses reported cases of mutilation followed by death or decapitation," the report said.
Wednesday's charges of cannibalism were the first detailed account to emerge since the war, when occasional charges surfaced.
The UN report was accompanied by a separate account from Zainabo Alfani in which she described to UN investigators being forced to watch rebels kill and eat two of her children in June 2003.
The report said: "In one corner, there was already cooked flesh from bodies and two bodies being grilled on a barbecue and at the same time they prepared her two little girls, putting them alive in two big pots filled with boiling water and oil."
Her youngest child was saved, apparently because at six months old it didn't have much flesh.
The woman was gang-raped by the rebels and mutilated.
Alfani survived to tell her horror story but she died in the hospital Sunday, nearly two years after the attack, of AIDS contracted during her torture, the UN report said.
The mother gave her account in February but the UN waited to publish them until after her death for fear she would become a target for reprisal.
The new International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, said this week its first cases will deal with war crimes committed in eastern Congo.

Suicidal Chinese man lands on elderly woman

Mar. 17, 2005. 07:49 AM
SHANGHAI, China (AP) — A man who jumped off a fourth-storey balcony in an apparent suicide landed on a 72-year-old woman, killing himself and leaving her in hospital with broken bones and other injuries, a news report said today.
The man jumped from a balcony on the side of a supermarket in Shanghai at midday Wednesday, landing on Gao Yuzhen, who suffered a ruptured liver and a broken leg and ribs, the newspaper Shanghai Daily reported.
"The man died on the spot but he fell onto an old woman before reaching the ground," it quoted a witness, Lu Zhinian, saying.
The man carried no identification and police were still trying to find out his name, the report said.
Gao was taken to hospital and had surgery, the newspaper said.

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Why do women pay more?

Apply this law to contractors, auto-mechanics and car sales people and then we'll have something!

Mar. 15, 2005. 01:00 AM
MPP seeks to outlaw gender-based pricing
Lists dry cleaning, hairstyling as examples
ROBERT BENZIE
QUEEN'S PARK BUREAU
Why do women pay more than men for dry cleaning, hairstyling and clothing, among other things?
Liberal MPP Lorenzo Berardinetti (Scarborough Southwest) said yesterday there is no valid reason for such discrimination, which is why he is pushing legislation outlawing "gender-based pricing."
Berardinetti has introduced a private member's bill making it illegal for women to be charged more for similar products and services than men. It will be debated April 14.
The bill, if passed, will prevent businesses such as dry cleaners, hairdressers, retailers and others from charging different prices based one whether the person is a man or a woman, he said.
Under the proposed legislation, fines of up to $5,000 would be imposed on anyone breaking the Ontario Human Rights Code by having gender-based prices for products and services.
"It's a form of discrimination and it's a form that should have been removed a long time ago," said Berardinetti. "It's odd to think that in 2005, discrimination of this type still exists in Ontario and in Canada, where more than half the population ... is discriminated against in several different areas."
The newly married MPP said he did not realize the extent of the differing prices for men and women until he went shopping for clothes with his wife Michelle Berardinetti.
He noticed that clothes made for men were invariably cheaper than those for women even though they were the same brand. For example, a Giorgio Armani suit for men cost $1,200 while the women's version was $2,000.
"It's the same company ... and hers was probably less material with the jacket and pants. There's no way it cost more to manufacture," said Berardinetti, noting alterations usually cost less for men than women.
A similar consumer protection law has been on the books since Jan. 1, 1996 in California, where companies are barred from charging different prices for services based on customers' gender. The law is aimed at dry cleaning, hair styling and tailoring. But a 1998 study by the California Public Interest Research Groupfound the legislation is routinely violated due to a lack of public awareness.
Berardinetti said he was inspired by the work of Toronto market-research guru Joanne Thomas Yaccato, author of The 80% Minority: Reaching the Real World of Women Consumers.
Thomas Yaccato estimates that Canadian women are overcharged $750 million a year on their hairstyling alone.
"The excuses go from women take longer and they require more product in their hair. My point is charge according to the time it takes," the marketing consultant said.
"It's the same in the word of dry cleaning," she said, recalling a Vancouver hidden-camera experiment where a man and a woman showed the same shirt to a drycleaner and were quoted different prices.
"The man goes in first and asked how much it costs to have his shirt cleaned and he's told $5. He comes out into the parking lot, passes the shirt over to the woman, who walks in five minutes later and is told it's $7.50."

Unlike in the media....

Mar. 15, 2005. 01:00 AM
Lawyer attacks campus `intimidation'
Anti-Israeli dissent taken too far: Dershowitz
Says some academics `a barrier to peace'
OLIVIA WARD
FEATURE WRITER
University classrooms have become unfriendly places for pro-Israel students, says high-profile American lawyer Alan Dershowitz.
"There are intimidations on campus, including here in Canada, and in the United States," Dershowitz said yesterday at the University of Toronto. "Part of the reason is that there are not many faculty members prepared to speak up against them."
Dershowitz — a celebrity lawyer whose clients include murder suspects O.J. Simpson, Claus von Bulow, a civil libertarian accused of advocating torture and a Harvard law professor who has turned to political writing — is no stranger to controversy.
A staunch defender of Israel, he is now travelling in the U.S., Canada and Europe to express concern about "how some extreme anti-Israel academics actually have become a barrier to peace."
Two lectures at the University of Toronto and York University this week are part of that campaign. But, Dershowitz said, he will avoid Montreal's Concordia University until "they reissue invitations to both (former Israeli prime ministers Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak) and give whatever protection they need that allows them to speak there."
At Concordia, a request by Jewish students to host a campus speech by the left-wing Barak was turned down last year because of inadequate security, following 2002 violence surrounding an appearance by Netanyahu, one of Israel's most hawkish politicians. Concordia has now boosted security and issued an invitation to Barak.
"Dissent is an important part of university life," said Dershowitz. "But there are places where things have gone beyond that."
At Columbia University in New York, Dershowitz joined battle three years ago against Joseph Massad, an assistant professor of Arab politics accused by a student of ordering her out of the classroom for refusing to agree that Israel had committed atrocities against the Palestinians, a charge Massad denied.
Dershowitz cites petitions circulating on North American campuses urging universities to end investment in companies doing business with Israel, and to boycott Israeli academics, as evidence of a growing bias against Israel.
"It's easier for Israel to make peace with the Palestinians than with academics at Columbia who don't want peace under any circumstances," Dershowitz quipped.
While campaigning for recognition of Israel's positive achievements — including the revival of its peace movement, and medical advances that save millions of lives — he admitted that there was also much to criticize.
"I've been a critic of Israel since 1967, and I don't believe that criticism of Israel should be called anti-Semitism. Criticism is the essence of any democracy, and there is no country whose government is criticized more than Israel."
But Dershowitz, author of The Case for Israel, says that a line must be drawn when critics "single out Israel, and only Israel, in a world where so much is going on elsewhere. And where Israel is held to a standard no other country is held to."
Carrying stenographers' notebooks with him on his travels, Dershowitz writes his books in pen and ink. In the latest, titled The Case for Peace, he explores "how a democracy like Israel should respond to terrorism while the peace process is going on, so as not to create a cycle of violence. Terrorists shouldn't have a veto over the peace process."
Although Dershowitz's views on Israel have been heckled on occasion, it's his post-Sept. 11 suggestion that terrorism suspects could, in cases of extreme urgency, be tortured under a special warrant that has won him most outrage.
But, he insists, "I'm against torture. I'd like to see no torture ever used. But most countries would use torture in a `ticking bomb' case (where it could stop an imminent terrorist attack). So why not let the president of the United States personally authorize it, and let us know that he has authorized it? Getting it in writing is the best protection you could have against abuses."
The Abu Ghraib prison scandal in Iraq, in which prisoners were humiliated and abused by U.S. forces, was an example of out-of-control rights violations, Dershowitz added.
"Abu Ghraib is the perfect model of everything I am against. It was torture without authorization, without a good reason, and without a ticking bomb.
"It became routinized, and it was absolutely wrong."

Bikes on Buses, excellent idea

Mar. 15, 2005. 01:00 AM
TTC racks up the bike vote$155,000 pilot project would transport bicycles on buses
Cycling advocate `pleasantly surprised' by bike rack proposal
KEVIN MCGRAN
TRANSPORTATION REPORTER
The TTC is considering putting bike racks on a few buses in a $155,000 pilot project to see whether the two modes of transportation can cross-promote each other.
"It's a relatively cost-efficient thing to do and it gets more people riding buses," said Councillor Adam Giambrone (Ward 18, Davenport), a TTC commissioner who pushed for the bike racks. "We're trying to promote alternative transportation, whether that be walking, cycling or taking public transit. It just seems to make sense to have this intermodal (connection)."
Toronto cyclists — often banned from bringing their bikes inside buses — welcomed the TTC's initiative.
"The TTC has been one of the few major transit properties not to embrace some sort of cycling initiative," said cycling advocate Steve Brearton. "They're way behind on this.
"They've been very resistant to including cyclists. I do see this as a positive first step. I'm pleasantly surprised."
TTC commissioners will vote at their April 6 meeting whether to start the project in June. Racks that hold two bikes each would be placed on most of the buses on six routes: 7 Bathurst, 29 Dufferin, 47 Lansdowne, 98 Willowdale-Senlac, 161 Rogers Rd. and 310 Bathurst.
Brearton applauded the choice of routes, saying they connect cyclists in the suburbs to the core. "In the outlying areas, there are a lot of roads that aren't very friendly. Steeles, Wilson, Bathurst: the traffic moves pretty quickly and most cyclists don't feel safe riding on those roads."
Since Ottawa put the racks on eight of its routes in 2000, it's averaged three cyclists for every 1,000 regular bus passengers.
"The cycling community has received it well," said Helen Gault, manager of transit services planning and development for OC Transpo.
Bikes are securely clipped by the cyclist on the rack, which takes only a few seconds, said Gary Carr, the TTC's chief engineer of operations and planning. "The bus driver has to be familiar enough to know what a properly secured bike looks like from his seat," but will not attach or detach the bikes, he said.
Meanwhile, the TTC is also expected to approve the rollout of flat video screens to replace 132 dot-matrix Metron units on subway platforms system-wide.
The new screens, already in use at the Bloor-Yonge, St. George and Eglinton stations, display headlines, scores and weather, as well as TTC service updates and advertisements, in the format of cable news station CP24. There is no audio.
OneStop Communications will install the units, paying the TTC about $770,000 over seven years to place ads on the system. After seven years, the TTC will own the video screens.

Monday, March 14, 2005

OK this makes the Chinese look marginally better

OK you aren't cartoonishly evil, but you aren't off the hook either China! Stop buying products from endangered animals! I'm watching you.
China trials AIDS vaccine
Sunday, March 13, 2005 Posted: 0750 GMT (1550 HKT)
BEIJING, China (Reuters) -- China, criticized for a slow initial response to its AIDS/HIV crisis, has begun its first human trials of a new AIDS vaccine, Xinhua news agency said.
A 20-year-old man became the first volunteer to receive the AIDS vaccine on Saturday, followed by seven others, four of them women, Xinhua said.
Some 49 volunteers aged between 18 and 50 would receive the tests in three phases, the first lasting 14 months.
Experts have faulted China for being slow to recognize a growing AIDS problem, exacerbated by the cover-up of the blood-selling schemes in the central province of Henan that infected scores of people in the mid-1990s.
The government estimates that China, with a 1.3 billion population, has 840,000 people with HIV. Activists and experts say a more accurate figure would be between 1 million and 1.5 million.
The United Nations has said that the number of HIV/AIDS victims in China could rise to 10 million by 2010 unless serious steps are taken to fight the disease.
On World AIDS Day in 2003, Premier Wen Jiabao shook hands with AIDS patients at a Beijing hospital in a symbolic display of commitment to fighting the disease.
But efforts to step up AIDS prevention remain shackled by politics and conservative attitudes toward sex.
The AIDS virus has infected more than 43 million people worldwide and killed 25 million. The incurable virus spreads through sexual contact, blood products and mothers' milk but can be controlled to some degree with cocktails of drugs called highly active antiretroviral therapy.
The International AIDS Vaccine Initiative has said dozens of potential vaccines are being tested and more than 70 human clinical trials have taken place although none has yet promised to conquer the virus.

What's wrong with the Chinese?

Why is it that almost every time you hear of an animal being pointlessly driven to extinction - the Chinese are behind it? Is it a conspiracy of the mainstream media? Do the Chinese hate biodiversity? If you only have one child does that drive you to frivolously buy unethical products - after all the devil makes work for idle hands. This is my question to you China, "What the heck is your problem? Rhino horns? Bear gallbladers? Why can't you just kill the trees with over packaged products and use up more than your share of fossil fuels like the rest of us? You are all starting to seem cartoonishly evil.
Africa illegal ivory trade growing
Monday, March 14, 2005 Posted: 1307 GMT (2107 HKT)
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -- Poachers are killing between 6,000 and 12,000 elephants a year to supply illegal ivory markets in Sudan -- among the largest in the world -- to meet growing Chinese demand, experts said Monday.
Most of the elephants are killed in southern Sudan, Congo and the Central African Republic, with some ivory also coming from Kenya and Chad, said Esmond Martin, an expert on the illegal ivory trade who recently conducted a survey in Sudan on behalf of Care for the Wild International.
Martin said he found 11,000 ivory products on display in 50 shops in Sudan's capital, Khartoum, and in nearby Omdurman. He also visited 150 ivory craftsmen making new products, much of it jewelry.
Martin extrapolated the number of elephants being killed every year -- 6,000 to 12,000 -- from the amount of ivory seen in Khartoum and Omduram. It was difficult to determine what percentage that represented of the elephants in central Africa, where researchers have not worked for more than a decade, but Martin said he believed the killings were at an unsustainable rate for the central Africa elephant population.
Despite international and Sudanese laws forbidding trade in ivory outside of internationally supervised sales, traders and craftsmen openly displayed and discussed the industry with Martin and his team during their research last month.
"Practically every trader we talked to said the Sudanese national army was doing the killing in southern Sudan," Martin said. "Almost everybody we talked to said the army was the main group of people involved in the transport (of ivory from central Africa)."
The average price per kilogram of quality ivory has risen from about US$45 in 1997 to US$105 now, Martin said. The average price paid in central Africa, where the elephants were killed, is US$20 a kilogram, he added.
"Over 75 percent of all of the ivory bought in Khartoum and Omdurman on the retail side is bought by Chinese people," Martin said. "They are not buying small quantities, they are buying huge quantities to take back home."
Bans flouted
There are between 3,000 and 5,000 Chinese who live and work in Sudan, mainly in the oil, mining and construction industry. He said ivory name seals and chopsticks were recently introduced to meet Chinese demand for those item.
More than 50 percent of Africa's elephants were killed by poachers between 1979 and 1989, when an international ban on the ivory trade was introduced.
That poaching was driven by economic prosperity in Japan, but the current increase in demand is a result of China's growing economy, said Nigel Hunter, director of the Monitoring the Illegal Killing of Elephants unit of the U.N. organization that regulates trade in wildlife.
Hunter said the Chinese government has stepped up efforts to intercept illegal ivory imports, but that Sudan has done little to discourage the trade. Shops throughout Khartoum advertise ivory and display items in store windows, though the Sudanese government pledged last year to crack down on the trade by March 31.
Sudanese officials were not immediately available for comment.
"All the Sudanese need to do is enforce their own laws," said Martin, whose research was financed by the British-based Care for the Wild International conservation group.
Martin also found rhino horn, crocodile and other products from endangered species on sale in Khartoum, despite international bans on trade in such products.

Gun control anyone?

Mar. 13, 2005. 11:40 AM
Four-year-old shoots toddler brother in head
Two-year-old wounded with mother's gun
HOUSTON (AP) — A two-year-old was shot by his four-year-old brother, who may not have known the difference between a real gun and toy one, police said.
The two-year-old, who suffered a single gunshot wound to the temple, was in critical condition Saturday night at Ben Taub Hospital. The shooting occurred Saturday afternoon at a home in southwest Houston.
Police Sgt. Cameron Grysen said the boys had been arguing when the younger one threw a toy at his brother. The mother thought the boys had returned to their room, but they had instead gone to her room, where the older boy took a loaded gun from the woman's purse.
"The four-year-old was angry. He went and got the gun, put it to his brother's head and shot the gun," Grysen said.
The mother told police she had the .32-calibre automatic to protect her family because of recent neighbourhood burglaries, and that Saturday was the one day that she did not secure the weapon. She could face criminal charges.
Authorities said the four-year-old didn't seem to understand what he had done.
"He's wondering where his brother is, and when his brother's coming back," Grysen said.

Friday, March 11, 2005

Critics call for great white shark's release

Second shark dies at Monterey Bay Aquarium
Thursday, March 10, 2005 Posted: 1612 GMT (0012 HKT)
(AP) -- A great white shark that has been held in captivity in California has killed two smaller tankmates, heightening critics' calls for the animal's release.
One of the soupfin sharks at the Monterey Bay Aquarium died February 23 after an attack by the great white. The second soupfin died Tuesday from injuries received in an attack a day earlier, said Randy Kochevar, a marine biologist at the aquarium.
The year-old shark has been at the aquarium for nearly six months; no other great white has stayed alive for more than 16 days in captivity. The female shark came to the aquarium September 15 after a halibut fisherman accidentally netted it off the Orange County coast.
Aquarium officials believe the 88-pound, 5-foot-3-inch shark attacked the smaller, slower animals only as a reflex when it bumped the other sharks, not in a predatory rage.
The animal hasn't attacked anything else in the tank, including a variety of tuna, California barracuda, black sea turtles and scalloped hammerhead sharks. Two other soupfin sharks have been removed from the great white's tank, Kochevar said.
Even so, some naturalists say great whites can't adjust to aquarium life.
"They really have huge travel migration routes. This type of animal typically travels 50 miles in a day," said Sean Van Sommeran, executive director of the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation in Santa Cruz.
Van Sommeran said the million-gallon tank where the shark lives "is really just a bucket. ... His nose is raw from repeated contact with the barrier walls.
"This animal is injured and becoming agitated," he said.
Kochevar countered that the animal is under constant medical supervision and is healthy, and eventually will be released.
He said the aquarium has had 700,000 visitors come see the shark display, and researchers are gathering data on its biology and behavior they say will help in conservation efforts for sharks in the wild.
"We are doing something here that nobody else has done. ... And we have found that the very best way to inspire people and educate people is to put them face-to-face with the real thing," Kochevar said.

Imagine that, TV isn't realistic:

The proliferation of shows based on forensic evidence, such as CSI and its various offspring, have created unrealistic expectations not only among families whose loved ones have been victims of crime, but among police officers and juries as well, actual forensic scientists say. Not only does everyone seem to think that complicated cases involving hundreds of hair, saliva and other samples can be solved in under an hour, but the amount of forensic evidence being collected and submitted to labs has skyrocketed, on the assumption that it can all be processed as easily as it is on TV. At a recent conference in Washington, a forensic expert said that between 200,000 and 300,000 DNA samples are currently backlogged at U.S. research labs, part of an overall evidence backlog that is likely 10 times that size. But did anyone mention how every show has a foxy blonde scientist who always wears tight T-shirts, and every lab has more high-tech equipment than NASA?

Thursday, March 10, 2005

Agent Orange doesn't kill people, the American Government does!

Mar. 10, 2005. 09:37 AM
U.S. court dismisses Agent Orange suit
NEW YORK (AP) — A federal judge today dismissed a lawsuit charging that American chemical companies committed war crimes against Vietnamese citizens by making Agent Orange, the defoliant used during the Vietnam War that allegedly caused birth defects, miscarriages and cancer.
"There is no basis for any of the claims of plaintiffs under the domestic law of any nation or state or under any form of international law," U.S. District Judge Jack Weinstein in Brooklyn wrote in a 233-page ruling. "The case is dismissed."
Lawyers who filed the lawsuit on behalf of some four million Vietnamese argued that Agent Orange, which is laden with the highly toxic chemical dioxin, was a poison barred by international rules of war.
Lawyers for Monsanto, Dow Chemical and more than a dozen other companies said they should not be punished for following what they believed to be the legal orders of the nation's commander in chief.

Ikea - Swedish for Crap

So the Norwegian Prime Minister can't put together Ikea furniture either! Seriously though, if the instructions were easier to follow and they put all the parts in that you need to put the crap together, then nobody would have noticed that they only had men in the instructions, because they wouldn't have to read the instructions as closely. If they'd make it easier to put that shit together, I wouldn't care if the pictures in the instructions were of women in burkhas, or monkeys in tutus or naked fat guys!

PM: IKEA manuals 'show sex bias'
Thursday, March 10, 2005
OSLO, Norway (Reuters) -- Swedish home furnishings giant IKEA is guilty of sex discrimination by showing only men putting together furniture in its instruction manuals, Norway's prime minister says.
IKEA, which has more than 200 stores in 32 nations, fears it might offend Muslims by depicting women assembling everything from cupboards to beds. Its manuals show only men or cartoon figures whose sex is unclear.
"This isn't good enough," Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik was quoted on Thursday as telling the daily Verdens Gang.
"It's important to promote attitudes for sexual equality, not least in Muslim nations."
"They should change this," he said. "There's no justification for it."
IKEA stores are visited by 365 million people a year around the world. Many products have to be assembled by the buyer -- the "flat pack" concept saves the company huge amounts in transport, storage and sales space.
Bondevik added: "I myself have great problems with screwing together such furniture."
Verdens Gang quoted an IKEA spokeswoman as saying: "We have to take account of cultural factors. In Muslim countries it's problematic to use women in instruction manuals."
IKEA was not immediately available for comment.

EBay removes Montrealer's ink-and-blood artwork

Well, so much for my plan to buy body parts on EBay!
Last Updated Thu, 10 Mar 2005 09:22:15 ESTCBC Arts
TORONTO - Artwork by a Montreal artist has been removed from an internet auction this week because of the artist's use of blood as a medium.
Last weekend, the Toronto gallery that represents artist John David Margo posted some of his work, which features human blood mixed with ink, for sale on the eBay Canada website. However, because the website's policy prohibits the sale of anything containing human body parts and remains – including blood – the listing was removed.
"The abrupt cancellation of our listing by eBay was unexpected," Sabrina Lee, co-director of the Mariemar Gallery, said in a release issued Wednesday. "We felt that the sale of artwork containing blood was not the same as the actual sale of human body parts. We were misinformed."
David Melnick, another co-director of the private contemporary art gallery, told CBC News that they were unaware of that aspect of the site's policy.
"We didn't realize they have a list – a large list – of prohibited items they refuse to allow people to sell on the site," Melnick said. "So within 24 hours, they removed it, emailed us and said '[we] cannot allow you to sell a human body part.'"
Though gallery officials say they don't consider selling a painting containing human blood the same as selling human body parts, they've complied with the removal. However, they added that Margo is planning to re-create the works using acrylics instead of blood.
For the artwork in question, Margo used blood – obtained from an Ottawa-area donor campaign – and mixed it with ink for use in his series entitled 101 Views of Jerusalem, which explores religious extremism and post Sept. 11 terrorism victims. The series features re-worked pictograms with words, phrases and symbols drawn from the Islamic, Jewish and Christian faiths.

Mount St. Helens blows off more steam

Last Updated Wed, 09 Mar 2005 18:27:55 EST
CBC News
VANCOUVER, WASH. - Seismologists watching Mount St. Helens in Washington state say the latest eruptions are just a lot of hot air.
On Wednesday morning, wisps of steam were rising from the volcano, which is found in the southwest region of the state.
The volcano's eruption on Tuesday.
The volcano released a white ash plume 7,600 metres into the air at 5:25 p.m. local time on Tuesday. It happened about one hour after scientists registered an earthquake of magnitude 2.0 beneath the mountain.
Jon Major, a U.S. Geological Survey researcher, said there was no danger to most people in the area.
Last October, the volcano sent up a 3,000-metre plume of steam and ash, lasting 24 minutes.
FROM DEC. 24, 2004: Mount St. Helens regrows odd shaped top
Mount St. Helens grew a dome top the size of an 80-storey building in December, expanding at a rate never seen before by scientists studying the volcano. Infrared images showed fresh lava was rising at temperatures of almost 800 C.
Bill Steele of the Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network said a partial collapse of the dome in the crater may have triggered Tuesday's ash burst. He said he did not believe the explosion had increased the risk of a significant eruption.
When the dome formed, scientists said it would take 11 years before the volcano would erupt the way it did back in 1980, killing 57 people and covering towns more than 400 kilometres away with ash.
That eruption ejected more than a cubic kilometre of steam, ash, lava and rock, and reduced the height of the mountain by some 400 metres.
The explosion flattened every tree in an area the size of Toronto, and killed 57 people, 1,500 elk, 5,000 deer and an estimated 11 million fish. It also destroyed 200 homes, 47 bridges and 300 kilometres of highway.

WHO underestimates prevalence of malaria, scientists warn

Last Updated Wed, 09 Mar 2005 20:22:47 EST
CBC News
LONDON - At least half a billion cases of malaria occur each year, say scientists who warn the World Health Organization's estimates are off by nearly 50 per cent.
Figures compiled by a team of tropical medicine specialists add up to 515 million clinical attacks of the deadliest form of malaria worldwide.
Southeast Asia accounts for about 25 per cent of the total, according to the study in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.
On the other hand, the UN agency estimated a global incidence of 273 million cases in 1998, 90 per cent of which were in Africa.
"These global estimates are up to 50 per cent higher than those reported by the World Health Organization and 200 per cent higher for areas outside Africa," the researchers wrote.
Lead author Prof. Bob Snow of the Kenyan Medical Research Institute in Nairobi and his colleagues used epidemiological data, studies and reports published in the medical literature, and population information.
The team also used satellite data to find where the disease is most prevalent.
The WHO bases its estimates on surveys by doctors and health workers in sub-Saharan Africa and the numbers reported by governments elsewhere in the world.
Both approaches fail to offer a true picture of the disease, which is important to be able to target drugs where they're needed most, Snow said.
The Nature study is important, agreed Richard Feachem, executive director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
"Many have believed that existing data grossly under-estimates malaria, morbidity and mortality in Africa and Asia," Feachem said in a release. "We now have confirmation of this."

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

Law lets librarians oust reeking readers

You know, I'm not advocating this law for Toronto, I'm just saying, if you'd ever been in one of the downtown libraries you wouldn't ask, like one of the librarians in this article, "A woman who wears a strong perfume? A person who had a garlicky meal?" I probably object to strong perfume more than the next guy, but some of those folks in the downtown libraries in Toronto, the smell permeates the whole building, I don't think I could work in a place that smelled that bad all day, every day.
Last Updated Tue, 08 Mar 2005 14:54:34 EST
CBC News
SAN LUIS OBISPO, CALIF. - Librarians in a county in California can kick out readers who stink, under a law recently adopted by the system's board.
The 14 libraries in San Luis Obispo County have had rules that ban offensive body odours since 1994, but the policy became law after the board of supervisors adopted an ordinance last month that lets them oust reeking guests.
Visitors can also be asked to leave if they fight, sleep, play games, eat, drink, or print or look up illegal materials on library computers.
"The point is to make the library a comfortable, safe place for everyone to use," Moe McGee, assistant director of the San Luis Obispo City-County Library, told the Associated Press.
Yet some librarians are already predicting they could have trouble enforcing the new rule.
"What is bad odour?" said Irene Macias, Santa Barbara's library services manager. "A woman who wears a strong perfume? A person who had a garlicky meal?"
The county is located on the state's central coastline, halfway between Los Angeles and San Francisco.

Protesting farmers sow traffic chaos

I was listening to an interview about this on CBC this morning and it really made my day when the farmer being interviewed said that rural Ontario wants to be its own province. Andy Barry asked the guy what he thought of Torontonians who wanted to separate from rural Ontario and he said something to the effect of 'right on.' So we're all in agreement then, let's make this happen, the only issue so far as I see it is who has to take the 905ers and maybe Ottawa. I say if the farmers won't take them then we send them to Alberta where they really belonged in the first place. That is unless anyone else has any bright ideas.

Mar. 9, 2005. 07:42 AM
Roads may be even worse on afternoon drive
FROM CANADIAN PRESS
Convoys of farm vehicles were preparing to converge at the Ontario legislature today in the province's latest farm-based protest.
The OPP was preparing for a three-pronged entry into downtown Toronto from highways surrounding the city.
"This is going to affect traffic throughout the day to some extent," said OPP Sgt. Cam Woolley.
One group was to arrive in Toronto from the Oshawa-Whitby area east of the city. A second was to approach from the north along Highway 404 and a third convoy was to arrive from the west, along Highways 401 and 427 and the Gardiner Expressway.
"Most of the groups are expected to leave around 9 a.m., so they'll just be at the tail end of the rush hour, and we think they'll take about an hour and a half to two hours to get down to Queen's Park." said Woolley.
"We expect them back on the highway probably around 3 p.m. for their return trip."
The OPP has cautioned farmers to limit their convoys to one lane on the highways.
"They are being reminded of the potential legal ramifications of disobeying the law — we'd rather have this organized than not, so they are going to be sticking to one lane," said Woolley.
"While these farmers are not getting an official escort, there will be additional officers to make sure the procession is safe."
Organizers of the protest said Tuesday they expected about 600 tractors to participate in the event, but the OPP is expecting a smaller number of farm vehicles.
"I think the cold weather has something to do with it. We're expecting maybe a bit over 300," said Woolley.
The protest follows one last week at the legislature.
The man behind today's rally says he is looking to make changes for rural Ontario — not just for farmers.
"We've created 11 resolutions which we want to have tabled in this legislature," said Lanark Landowners Association president Randy Hillier. "This government does not listen. Not only do they not listen, they don't respond and they don't act in the interests of rural Ontario."
Queen's Park security is taking more precautions for this protest than one held last week by farm groups. Employees have been cautioned against driving to work and are encouraged to use underground tunnels to enter the building.

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Yonge and Wellesley this morning

Mar. 8, 2005. 10:16 AM
Police subdue knife-wielding man with cruiser
CURTIS RUSH
STAFF REPORTER
THESTAR.COM
A dramatic standoff between a man wielding two knives and armed Toronto police officers at Yonge and Wellesley Sts. this morning was captured on video.
Footage of the standoff broadcast by CityPulse this morning showed an agitated assailant surrounded by police at about 7 a.m.
When the man refused to surrender, officers tried to use a police cruiser to herd the man into custody.
In the footage, the man is first bumped by the cruiser and ends up on the hood of the slow moving car.
When he jumps off, police surround him, but he continues to threaten them with his knives. The officers back off again.
The cruiser then strikes the assailant again, this time roughly pinning him between the car and a metal pole. He drops one knife when struck. After the car reverses, the assailant rises to his feet, drops the second knife and surrenders.
At this point, police close in and make the arrest. No charges have yet been laid.
The province's Special Investigations Unit has begun a probe of the incident. They are called in whenever death or serious injury results from an encounter between police and the public.
According to news reports, the assailant was only slightly injured.

Report: Milk alone not best for bones

Tofu, oats, broccoli, juice cited as alternatives
Tuesday, March 8, 2005 Posted: 0509 GMT (1309 HKT)
CHICAGO, Illinois (Reuters) -- Children who drink more milk do not necessarily develop healthier bones, researchers said on Monday in a report that stresses exercise and modest consumption of calcium-rich foods such as tofu.
The U.S. government has gradually increased recommendations for daily calcium intake, largely from dairy products, to between 800 and 1,300 milligrams to promote healthy bones and prevent osteoporosis.
But the report, published in the journal Pediatrics, said boosting consumption of milk or other dairy products was not necessarily the best way to provide the minimal calcium intake of at least 400 milligrams per day.
Other ways to obtain the absorbable calcium found in one cup of cow's milk include a cup of fortified orange juice, a cup of cooked kale or turnip greens, two packages of instant oats, two-thirds cup of tofu, or 1 2/3 cups of broccoli, the report said.
In a review of 37 studies examining the impact of calcium consumption on bone strength in children older than 7, researchers at the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine in Washington found 27 did not support drinking more milk to boost calcium.
"Currently, available evidence does not support nutrition guidelines focused specifically on increasing milk or other dairy product intake for promoting child and adolescent bone mineralization," lead researcher Amy Lanou wrote.
Several studies, which examined such factors as bone density and rate of fractures, concluded that exercise may be more important than increased calcium consumption in developing strong bones.
Data was scarce on the effect of calcium intake for children younger than 7 years.
Dairy products provide 18 percent of the total energy and 25 percent of the total fat intake in the diets of American children, who are developing increasing rates of obesity.
In an accompanying commentary, Frank Greer, a pediatrician at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, said the ideal way to achieve the goal of healthy bones is to make sure children exercise and consume up to 1,300 milligrams a day of calcium.
The easiest way to get that calcium is from low-fat dairy products, which also contain valuable nutrients such as vitamin D, which is generally not available from other dietary sources, he wrote.

Happy International Women's Day

Tens of thousands raped in eastern Congo, report says
Last Updated Tue, 08 Mar 2005 00:18:42 EST
CBC News
KINSHASA, CONGO - Militants and soldiers have raped or beaten tens of thousands of women and girls in eastern Congo and almost all of the crimes went unpunished, an international human rights group says.
INDEPTH: Congo
Rape was a standard military tactic during the country's civil war from 1998-2002 and hundreds of new victims – ranging in age from three years old to 80 – are still being reported each week, says the study released Monday by Human Rights Watch.
Some of the victims have been gang-raped or abducted by combatants for long periods of sexual slavery. Others were mutilated or, if they fought back, killed.
"Perpetrators of sexual violence are members of virtually all the armed forces and armed groups that operate in eastern Congo," says the report called Seeking Justice: The Prosecution of Sexual Violence in the Congo War.
Yet only 10 soldiers and militants have been convicted of rape in the region since 2002, says the report by the New York-based organization.
A United Nations study cited by Human Rights Watch documented more than 40,000 rapes in two eastern provinces during the 1998-2002 war in Congo, also known as Congo-Kinshasa
The warring ethnic Hema and Lendu militia and other armed groups still battling in the east continue to use rape as a weapon, the report says.
Some of the UN peacekeepers stationed in the unstable town of Bunia have also been accused of raping young girls living in a camp for displaced people or of trading candy for sex with minors.
The Human Rights Watch report criticizes the transitional government created in 2003, saying it has done little to crack down on the problem.
"We're not seeing arrests in these cases, we're not seeing trials," Anneka Van Woudenberg, a spokesperson for the group, told CBC News.
The group says the problem stems in part from outdated rape laws, lack of police and criminal courts and a widespread belief that rape isn't a crime.
The group called on the international community to step in and help the Congolese government rebuild the justice system in the country, formerly known as Zaire.

Heavy metal warning for Ayurvedic medicinal products

Last Updated Fri, 04 Mar 2005 19:42:21 EST
CBC News
OTTAWA - People who take Ayurvedic medicinal products should be aware that the products may contain dangerous levels of lead, mercury or arsenic, Health Canada warned Friday.
Several commercially available Ayurvedic products sold in the Boston area contained potentially harmful levels of heavy metals, according to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Other studies have found high levels of heavy metals in Ayurvedic products sold in England and India, the department noted.
None of the products listed are currently authorized for sale in Canada, but Health Canada suspects at least three may be available in parts of country.
Health Canada tests showed one product, called Safi made by Hamdard (Wakf) Laboratories, contained arsenic levels more than 40 times the maximum allowable limit.
The Safi product is available in liquid form, packaged in a lime green box, with a black and red label on both the front and back.Consumers are advised not to use the product, which is sold as a blood purifier for skin diseases and digestive problems.
Ayurvedic medicinal products are often imported from India, where they are used in traditional Indian healing. Practitioners and followers believe the heavy metals in the products carry therapeutic value.
Western scientists say heavy metals pose a health risk because they accumulate in vital organs. Children are particularly susceptible to heavy metal poisoning.
The department said it was reviewing the results of the JAMA study. Health Canada is also assessing if the other products listed are available in Canada.
Consumers who used any of the products listed and have concerns about their health should contact a health-care professional, the department advised.
Health Canada describes the products tested in the JAMA study on its website.

Why Chimps Make Bad Pets

Mar. 8, 2005. 08:06 AM
Man tried to 'reason' with attacking chimps
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A man who was severely mauled by two chimpanzees at an animal sanctuary last week was quickly overwhelmed when the apes attacked, his wife said Monday.
"One was at his head, one was at his foot. But all that time ... he was trying to reason with them," a sobbing LaDonna Davis told ABC's Good Morning America. "I couldn't do anything."
Davis, 64, and her husband, St. James Davis, were visiting Animal Haven Ranch near Bakersfield on Thursday when two male chimps escaped their enclosure and attacked the couple.
"When we made eye contact, the charge was on," LaDonna Davis said. "There was no stopping anything, and the big chimp came around from behind me and pushed me into my husband. The male came around from behind and chomped off my thumb. ... My husband must have realized we were in deep trouble because he pushed me backward. At that time, they both went for him."
St. James Davis, 62, lost all the fingers from both hands, an eye, part of his nose, cheek, lips and part of his buttocks in the ferocious attack, his wife said over the weekend on NBC's Today Show. She also said one of his feet was mutilated. A Kern County Sheriff's commander also said his genitals were mauled.
St. James Davis was being treated at Loma Linda University Medical Center, where doctors were trying to keep his breathing constant, his wife said.
"That's all they can tell me, but I told him that he can't leave me. He has to be strong."
The Davises were visiting the sanctuary to celebrate the birthday of Moe — a 39-year-old chimpanzee who was taken from their home in West Covina, a Los Angeles suburb, after biting off part of a woman's finger in 1999.
Authorities were continuing to investigate how the two chimps, named Ollie and Buddy, got loose. Both were shot and killed during the attack. Test results released Monday showed the two chimps didn't have rabies.

New scan reveals what really killed King Tut

Mar. 8, 2005. 06:58 AM
Fracture, not murder, to blame, scientist believes
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) — The results of a CT scan done on King Tut's mummy indicate the boy king was not murdered, but may have suffered a badly broken leg shortly before his death at age 19 — a wound that could have become infected, Egypt's top archaeologist said today.
Zahi Hawass announced the results of the CT scan about two months after it was performed on Tut's mummy.
Hawass said the remains of Tutankhamun, who ruled about 3,300 years ago, showed no signs that he had been murdered — dispelling a mystery that has long surrounded the pharaoh's death.
"In answer to theories that Tutankhamun was murdered, the team found no evidence for a blow to the back of the head, and no other indication of foul play," according to a statement released Tuesday by Egyptian authorities.
"They also found it extremely unlikely that he suffered an accident in which he crushed his chest."
Hawass said some members of the Egyptian-led research team, which included two Italian experts and one from Switzerland, interpreted a fracture to Tut's left thighbone as evidence that the king may have broken his leg badly just before he died.
"Although the break itself would not have been life-threatening, infection might have set in," the statement said. "However, this part of the team believes it also possible, although less likely, that this fracture was caused by the embalmers."
Some 1,700 images were taken of Tut's mummy during the 15-minute CT scan aimed at answering many of the mysteries that shrouded his life and death — including his royal lineage, his exact age at the time of his death and the reason he died.
Tutankhamun is believed to have been the 12th ruler of ancient Egypt's 18th dynasty. He ascended to the throne at about the age of eight and died around 1323 B.C.

Monday, March 07, 2005

Way to go MacGyver! Sheesh!

Mar. 7, 2005. 01:00 AM
Leaky conservation boat rescued by Coast GuardGroup on way to videotape sealsAging vessel likely hit ice: Captain
SUSAN AITKENCANADIAN PRESSHALIFAX—The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society's quest to observe seal pups hit another snag yesterday, as their aging vessel had to be shepherded through ice-covered waters after springing a leak.
The 54-metre vessel, Farley Mowat, began taking on water around 9 a.m. in the Cabot Strait north of Cape Breton Island.
"The ice must have hit something ... We don't know where the water is coming in because (the leak) is underneath the engine," ship's captain Paul Watson said in an interview from aboard the ship about 15 kilometres north of Cape Breton.
The boat and 28 passengers from 10 countries left Halifax on Friday for Îles de la Madeleine, where they planned to videotape the birth of harp seals.
The departure was delayed four days, after Transport Canada said the vessel didn't have the proper certification stating that it would not pollute waters.
The federal agency detained the vessel until Watson provided the documentation.
By midday yesterday, an Aurora aircraft, Cormorant helicopter and Hercules aircraft had all reached the vessel, said navy Lieut. Pat Jessup.
"The reports from the Farley Mowat are that they are holding their own," said Jessup. "Their own pumps are doing the job right now but we are, as a precaution, going to send the extra pumps to help them out."
The coast guard ice patrol vessel, Sir Wilfred Grenfell, based in St. John's, Nfld., happened to be in the area at the time and met up with the 49-year-old leaking boat around 2 p.m.
Watson said the coast guard would help them plough through the ice to Port aux Basques, Nfld., where the crew hoped to find the source of the leak.
"Second thing is to put a temporary patch and third to permanently repair it," the captain said.
Despite the scare, Watson said all on board were doing just fine.
"These are things you have to expect on any ship really if you're going into the ice."
The ship is equipped with two zodiac vessels, life rafts and survival suits for all on board, including volunteers from Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Australia, Sweden, Bermuda, and Ecuador.
Richard Dean Anderson, better known as the handyman TV star in MacGyver, wasn't on the vessel when the leak occurred.
The actor, who is a member of the society's board of directors, is due to meet up with the group for a news conference protesting the annual seal hunt.
Reached by cell phone, Anderson joked that he couldn't have made ``a lick" of difference in fixing the boat.
"I'm old and grey and slow. He (MacGyver) is a character and I don't have my writers with me."

End of suburbia draws nigh

Mar. 7, 2005. 06:16 AM
This 'living arrangement ... has no future' when cheap gas disappears: Documentary
CHRISTOPHER HUMEAlready the cold winds of change have started to blow through the suburbs. Everywhere around us there are signs of looming catastrophe.
But as anyone who watches the upcoming television documentary The End of Suburbia: Oil Depletion and the Collapse of the American Dream will see, that doesn't seem to have caused us even a moment's hesitation. If anything, we are rushing towards oblivion faster than ever.
The one-hour special, which airs Wednesday at 10 p.m. on Vision TV, should be a wake-up call to all those denizens of sprawl. If the talking heads who appear in this compelling and deeply disturbing Canadian-made program are right — and they most assuredly are — North America had better figure out new ways of living that don't depend on cheap, plentiful oil.
Perhaps the most compelling expert on hand, Matthew Simmons, chair of the largest energy investment bank in the world, puts the case against suburbia very eloquently.
"Everything in society we cherish ended when the blackout (of August 2003) came," Simmons states. "If that wasn't a fire drill for how important energy actually is ... but people didn't get it. I don't think we actually learned a thing from it."
Indeed, as other speakers make clear, rather than deal with these issues, we simply elect politicians who aid and abet our refusal to get real.
Their argument is simple: suburbia couldn't exist without cars, and people couldn't afford to drive those cars without endless cheap gas. As they also make clear, the amount of oil pumped out of the ground is expected to peak sometime between now and 2010 at the latest. After that, every gallon of gas grows more and more expensive, rendering auto-based sprawl obsolete.
"The whole suburban project can be summarized pretty succinctly as the greatest misallocation of resources in the history of the world," explains author James Howard Kunstler. "America took all its post-war wealth and invested it in a living arrangement that has no future."
What makes the situation even harder to understand is our unwillingness to face up to it while it's still possible. This cultural, intellectual and economic inertia can be seen right here in Ontario where the debate about the greenbelt has only just started. To his credit, Premier Dalton McGuinty has adopted a greenbelt plan, but the development industry and — God help us — some farmers will do everything they can to stop it. Groups such as the Fraser Institute and various home builders' associations parade their experts, mostly American, who for a fee explain people actually enjoy commuting, that sprawl is good and global warming isn't happening.
If only. The truth is we will have to learn how to make do with much less. As Kunstler points out, the days where the ingredients of a Caesar salad travel 4,800 kilometres to your table are over, whether we realize it or not. Those farmers busy railing against McGuinty's perfectly sensible, desperately needed scheme to stop sprawl will soon find themselves part of an agricultural system based on proximity to local markets. Future growth based on oil and natural gas is not possible, Simmons warns. Those holding their breath for hydrogen fuel should get serious; it's not going to happen. Instead, we'd rather carry on building suburbs destined to become the slums of tomorrow, McMansions that will be obsolete long before the mortgage has been paid off.
Though there's some discussion on the show about the New Urbanism, a movement that seeks to reform urban planning, it's unlikely to be the answer.
If author Richard Heinberg is correct, we are at the end of an era that stretches back uninterrupted almost 50 years. The question, he says, is whether future generations will look back on the second half of the 20th century as a golden age or a time of unmatched stupidity.
Not surprisingly, he opts for the latter.

For the Sake of Our Children

We are living today in a science fiction nightmare, a world where, because somebody gave money to a politician, our children are brought into a world where the air is too poisonous for them to breathe.
by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
03/05/05 -
- Published in the Winter 2005 issue of EarthLight -
- I have been an environmental advocate for twenty years, and I've been disciplined during that period about being nonpartisan in my approach to this issue. The worst thing that can happen to the environment is if it becomes the province of a single political party. Most of the environmental leaders in our country agree with me. Five years ago, if you asked the leaders of the major environmental groups in America, What's the gravest threat to the global environment?, they would have given you a range of answers: overpopulation, habitat destruction, global warming. Today, they will all tell you one thing: it's George W. Bush. This is the worst environmental president that we have ever had. You simply cannot speak honestly about the environment in any context today without speaking critically about this president. If you go to the Natural Resources Defense Council's web site you will see over 400 major environmental rollbacks that have been promoted by this administration over the last three and half years. It is a concerted, deliberate attempt to eviscerate thirty years of environmental law. It is a stealth attack, one that's been hidden from the public. We found, in 2003, a memo from Frank Luntz, the president's pollster, to the president saying that if you go through with the evisceration of America's environmental law, you are going to alienate not just Democrats but the Republican rank and file. Eighty-one percent in both parties want clean air, they want stronger environmental laws and they want them strictly enforced. Luntz said that to the president, and he said, if we do this we have to do a stealth attack. He recommended using Orwellian rhetoric to mask this radical agenda: They want to destroy the forest, they call it the Healthy Forest Act, they want to destroy the air they call it the Clear Skies Act. Most insidiously, they have installed the worst, most irresponsible polluters in America, and the lobbyists from those companies, as the heads of virtually all the agencies and sub-secretariats and even Cabinet positions that regulate or oversee our environment. The head of the Forest Service is a timber industry lobbyist who is probably the most rapacious timber industry lobbyist in American history. The head of public lands is a mining industry lobbyist who believes that public lands are unconstitutional. The head of the Air Division at the EPA is a utility lobbyist who has represented the worst polluters in America for twenty years. The head of Superfund is a woman whose former job was advising companies how to evade Superfund. The second in command of EPA is a Monsanto lobbyist - these are not exceptions, these are the rules across the agencies. I think it's a good idea to bring business people into government, to bring that experience and expertise. These individuals did not enter government service for the purpose of promoting the public interest, but in each of these cases, rather to subvert the very laws that they are now charged with enforcing. We are seeing the impacts of this already. This year, for the first year on record, the EPA announced that the dead zone in Lake Erie - you remember Lake Erie was declared dead prior to Earth Day 1970 - is growing. Our water in this country, according to EPA, is getting dirty for the first time since the Clean Water Act was passed. The rollbacks from the Bush administration have affected the lives of millions and millions of Americans adversely. Consider just one industry: the coal-burning utilities. One out of every four black children in New York now has asthma. I have three sons who have asthma. We don't know why we have this epidemic of pediatric asthma, but we do know that asthma attacks are caused primarily by two components of air pollution: ozone and particulates. In the Los Angeles Times recently there was a description of a study that's about to be published in the New England Journal of Medicine that shows that even small amounts of ozone pollution do permanent damage to children's lungs. In San Bernardino, for example, ten percent of the children have lungs that are permanently damaged, that will never recover; and that lung injury precipitates in human beings a whole host of other diseases throughout their lifetime. We know that the principal source of ozone and particulates in our air is coming from 1,100 coal-burning power plants that are burning coal illegally. They were supposed to install controls over fifteen years ago. The Clinton administration was prosecuting 75 of the worst of those plants. But this industry gave $48 million to President Bush during the 2000 campaign, and they've contributed $58 million since. One of the first things that President Bush did when he came to office was to order the Justice Department to drop all 75 of those suits. The Justice Department lawyers were shocked. This has never happened in our history before, where somebody running as a presidential candidate accepts money from a criminal and then lets that criminal off the hook. Many of you remember what happened when President Clinton pardoned Mark Rich and how indignant the press and the public was at that action. But Mark Rich was one person, and he never killed anybody. According to EPA, these 75 plants, just the criminal exceedences from these plants, kill 5,500 Americans every year. After letting these criminals off the hook, the president then went and rewrote the Clean Air Act, illegally we believe. We're suing him, we'll win the suit, but it may take ten years, and in the meantime they'll discharge what they want. I live in New York State. Most of the fish in New York are now unsafe to eat from mercury contamination. I live two miles from the state of Connecticut; in Connecticut every freshwater fish is now unsafe to eat. Last week, the Fish and Wildlife Service announced that in 19 states it is unsafe to regularly eat any freshwater fish, and in 48 states at least some fish are unsafe to eat. The mercury is coming, largely, from those same 1,100 coal-burning power plants. We know a lot about mercury that we didn't know five or ten years ago. We know that one out of every six American women of childbearing years now has so much mercury in her womb that her children are at risk for a grim inventory of diseases: cognitive impairment; mental retardation; autism; blindness; kidney, liver or heart disease. I have so much mercury in my body, I was told by Dr. David Carpenter, who is the national authority on mercury contamination, that if I were a woman of childbearing years and produced a child, that the child would have cognitive impairment, and, he estimated, a permanent IQ loss of five to seven points. There are 630,000 children born in this country every year who have been exposed to dangerous levels of mercury in the womb. Recognizing this threat to the American public, the Clinton administration reclassified mercury as a hazardous pollutant under the Clean Air Act; that triggered the requirement that those companies remove 90 percent of that mercury within three and a half years. It would have cost, according to EPA, less than one percent of the revenues of those plants for them to do that. That's a great deal for the American people, but it's still billions of dollars for that industry. Eight weeks ago, Bush announced that he was scrapping the Clinton-era rules and substituting, instead, rules that were written by the industry's lobbying firm Latham and Watkins. On their face, they say that they have to clean up, within fifteen years, 50 percent of the mercury. But they've woven so many loopholes into the new rule that they will literally never have to clean up. The chief lobbyist for the firm who wrote it is now the head of the Air Division at EPA. We are living today in a science fiction nightmare, a world where, because somebody gave money to a politician, our children are brought into a world where the air is too poisonous for them to breathe. This is a world where, because somebody gave money to a politician, my children and the children of millions of other Americans can no longer enjoy the seminal, primal activities of their youth - which is to go fishing with their father or mother and come home and eat the fish. I live two hours south of the Adirondack Mountains. This is the oldest protected wilderness area on the face of the Earth; it's been protected since the 1880s. Today, one-fifth of the lakes in the Adirondacks are sterilized from acid rain which is coming from those same coal-burning power plants, and this president has put the brakes on the statutory requirement that those companies remove the materials that are causing the acid rain. I flew recently over the coalfields of the Appalachians. I saw something that if the American people could see there would be a revolution in this country. We are cutting down the mountains, literally cutting them down. The coal companies blow off the tops of the mountains, using 2,500 tons of dynamite in West Virginia alone every year. They fire the workers: When my father was fighting strip mining in West Virginia in 1968 there were 114,000 coal miners digging coal out of West Virginia. He told me that strip mining was not only going to destroy the economy of West Virginia in the long term but it was designed to destroy the jobs so that they didn't have to employ union labor. Now, there are only 12,000 miners left to get the same amount of coal. They do it by blowing off the tops of the mountains, and they take that rubble and they dump it into the adjacent river valley. They've already covered up 1,200 miles of our streams. We are destroying, flattening this landscape that is a part of American history. It's the source of our values, our virtues, our character as a people; the landscapes, the mountains where Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone roamed, and we are cutting them to the ground. Of course it's illegal, you cannot take rubble and debris and toxic waste and dump it into a river without a Clean Water Act permit, and the Clean Water Act could never let you get a permit to do that. So we sued. Joe Lovett, the attorney from West Virginia, sued the Bush administration and the Army Corps of Engineers for allowing this practice to happen. We won the lawsuit, and the judge enjoined all mountain top mining. Two days from that victory, the Bush administration rewrote the Clean Water Act to allow mountain top mining to continue forever; not only that, but changed the structure of the act so that anybody can dump rubble and debris simply by getting a rubber stamp permit from the Corps of Engineers. If you ask the people in the White House who are promoting this legislation, Why are you doing this?, what they'll say is: We have to choose between economic prosperity and environmental protection - that is a false choice. In 100 percent of the situations, good environmental policy is identical to good economic policy. We want to measure our economy based upon how it produces jobs and how it preserves the value of the assets of our community. If, on the other hand, we want to do what the Bush administration has been urging us to do, which is to treat the planet as if it were a business in liquidation, to convert our natural resources to cash as quickly as possible, to have a few years of pollution-based prosperity, we can generate an instantaneous cash flow and the illusion of a prosperous economy. But our children are going to pay for our joy ride. They are going to pay for it with denuded landscapes and poor health and huge cleanup costs that are going to amplify over time and that they are never going to be able to pay. Environmental injury is deficit spending. It's a way of loading the costs of our generation's prosperity onto the backs of our children. There is no stronger advocate for free-market capitalism than myself. The free market spawns efficiency, and efficiency means the elimination of waste. Waste is pollution, so in a true free-market economy you would eliminate, as nearly as you can, pollution. In a true free-market economy you can't make yourself rich without making your neighbors rich and without enriching your community. Polluters make themselves rich by making everybody else poor. They raise standards of living for themselves by lowering the quality of life for everybody else, and they do that by escaping the discipline of the free market and forcing the public to pay their production cost. You show me a polluter, I'll show you a subsidy. Corporations are externalizing machines; they are constantly trying to figure out a way to avoid their own costs and foist it out on the public. I'll give you an example. When the coal companies, the utilities, discharge mercury into the air they are avoiding one of the costs of bringing their products to market, which is the cost of properly disposing of a dangerous processed chemical. When they avoid the costs they can out-compete their competitors, they can out-compete gas and oil and wind power. But the costs don't disappear. They go into the fish, they make children sick, they permanently injure children's lungs, they put people out of work, they acidify the lakes in the Adirondacks and they've destroyed the forest cover of the Appalachian Mountains all the way from Georgia up into Quebec. Those impacts impose costs on the rest of us that should be reflected in the price of that product. All of the federal environmental laws are meant to restore free-market capitalism in America. I don't even consider myself an environmentalist anymore. I'm a free marketeer. I go out into the marketplace, I track down the polluters and I say to them, We are going to force you to internalize your costs the same way that you're internalizing your profits. Americans have to understand that there is a huge difference between free-market capitalism which democratizes our country, that brings us prosperity and efficiency, and the kind of corporate crony capitalism which is as antithetical to democracy in America as it is in Nigeria. I work a lot with farmers trying to fight industrial hog meat production, which is not only one of the primary threats to the American environment but also one of the primary threats to the American worker. It's allowing a few monopolies to control our food supply and to put farmers out of business. Fifteen years ago there were 27,000 independent hog farmers in North Carolina, today there are none. They have been replaced completely by 2,200 hog factories, 1,600 owned or controlled by Smithfield Foods, one large corporation. They produce such huge amounts of waste they have to dispose of it illegally, and so they have to corrupt political officials in order to continue operating. I gave a speech a group of 1,200 farmers in Clear Lake, Iowa, and I said that I am more frightened of these large multinationals than I am of Osama bin Laden. I got a standing ovation from all the farmers in the room, but I got six months of abuse from the farm bureau. I stand by what I said. It's the same thing that Teddy Roosevelt said, that our country was too strong and too committed to ever be destroyed by a foreign enemy, but our democratic institutions would be subverted by what he called "malefactors of great wealth," who would destroy them from within. Another great Republican, Abraham Lincoln, during the heat of the Civil War in 1863, said, I have the South in front of me, and the bankers behind me and for my country, I fear the bankers more. From the beginning of American history our greatest political leaders - Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, John Adams and Andrew Jackson - have warned America against allowing large corporations to dominate our political systems and our lives. Another Republican, Dwight Eisenhower, the most famous speech he made was warning America against the domination by the military-industrial complex. Franklin Roosevelt said that the domination of our nation by large corporations is the definition of fascism. I have an American Heritage Dictionary, and the definition, if you look up fascism, says, "the domination of government by large corporations driven by right-wing ideology and bellicose nationalism" - that's getting to look pretty familiar. The problem with letting large corporations dominate our government is that it erodes democracy, it erodes our capacity to participate in public life, our capacity for dignity, and it allows these entities to squander resources that belong to our children. But the thing that we've squandered worst of all is our natural heritage: the air that we breathe, the water that we drink, the wildlife, the lands - all these things that make us proud to be American. This administration has taken the conserve out of conservatism. They claim to like the free market, but what they are really embracing is corporate welfare capitalism, socialism for the rich. They claim to love property rights, but only when it's the right of a polluter to use his property to destroy his neighbor's property or to destroy the public property. They claim to like law and order, but they are the first ones to let the large corporations and their corporate contributors violate the law at public expense. They claim to love local control and states' rights, but it's only in those instances when they're taking down the barriers to large corporations. They claim to embrace Christianity while violating the manifold mandates of Christianity: that we are stewards of the land, and that we are meant to care for nature. They have embraced this Christian heresy of dominion theology, which James Watt was the first to enunciate when he told the Senate, I don't think that there is any point in protecting the public lands because we don't how long the world is going to last before the Lord returns. The woman he mentored for twenty years, Gale Norton, is running the Department of the Interior. The reason that we protect nature is because it enriches us. It enriches us economically, yes, the base of our economy, and we ignore that at our peril. But it also enriches us aesthetically and recreationally, culturally and historically, and spiritually. Human beings have other appetites besides money, and if we don't feed them we're not going to become the kind of beings that our Creator intended. When we destroy nature we impoverish ourselves, we diminish ourselves and we impoverish our children. We're not protecting those ancient forests in the Pacific Northwest, as Rush Limbaugh loves to say, for the sake of a spotted owl. We are protecting those forests because we believe that the trees have more value to humanity standing than they would have if we cut them down. I'm not fighting for the Hudson for the sake of the shad or the sturgeon or the stripped bass but because I believe my life will be richer; my children, my community will be richer if we live in a world where there are shad and sturgeon and striped bass in the Hudson. Commercial fishing on the Hudson is 350 years old. Many of these people come from Dutch families that learned the same fishing methods that they're using today from the Algonquin Indians during the Dutch colonial period. I want my children to be able to touch them when they come to shore to repair their nets or wait out the tides, and in doing that, connect themselves to New York history and understand that they are part of something larger than themselves. I don't want my children to grow up in a world where it's all Unilever and 400-ton factory trolleys 100 miles offshore strip mining the ocean with no interface with humanity, and where we have no family farmers left in America; where we've driven the final nail into the coffin of Thomas Jefferson's vision of an American democracy rooted in tens of thousands of freeholds owned by family farmers, each with a stake in our democracy. I don't want a world where we've lost touch with the seasons and the tides and the things that connect us to the ten thousand generations of human beings that were here before there were laptops, and that connect us ultimately to God. I don't believe that nature is God or that we ought to be worshiping it as God, but I do believe that it's the way that God talks to us most clearly. God talks to human beings through many vectors: through each other, through organized religion, through the great books of those religions, through wise people, through art, literature, music and poetry - but nowhere with such clarity, texture, grace and joy as through Creation. We don't know Michelangelo by looking at his biography, we know him by looking at the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. We know our Creator best by studying Creation, which all of the religious texts mandate us to do. If you look at all of the great, central epiphany in every religious tradition in mankind's history, the revelation always occurs in the wilderness. Buddha had to go into the wilderness to experience self-realization. Mohamed had to go to the wilderness of Mount Hira in 629 and wrestle an angel in the middle of the night to have the Koran squeezed out of him. Moses had to go onto the wilderness of Mount Sinai to get the Commandments. The Jews had to spend 40 years in the wilderness to purge themselves of the 400 years of slavery in Egypt. Christ had to spend 40 days in the wilderness to discover his divinity. His mentor was John the Baptist, a man of the wilderness who lived in a cave in the Jordan Valley and dressed in the skins of wild animals. All of Christ's parables are taken from nature: I am the vine; you are the branch; The Mustard Seed; the little swallows the scattering, the seeds on fallow ground. He called himself a fisherman, a farmer, a vineyard keeper, a shepherd. That's how he stayed in touch with the people. He was saying things to them that contradicted everything that they had heard from the literate, sophisticated people of their time. They would have dismissed him as a quack but they were able to confirm the wisdom of his parables about the fishes and the birds through their own observations of the natural world. They were able to say: He's not telling us something new, he's simply illuminating something that's very, very old. When we destroy these things, we're cutting ourselves off from the very things that make us human, that give us a spiritual life. And for these people on Capitol Hill to be saying that they are following the mandate of Christ by liquidating our public assets, what they are really doing is a moral affront to the next generation. That's why we preserve nature. Not for our sake, but for the sake of the future. That obligation is expressed by the term sustainability. All that word means is that God wants us to use the things we've been given, to enrich ourselves, to improve our quality of life, to serve others - but we can't use them up. We can't sell the farm piece by piece in order to pay for the groceries; we can't drain the pond to catch the fish. We can't cut down the mountain to get at the coal. We can live off the interest; we can't go into the capital that belongs to our children. What you can do: To track the Bush record on the environment, go to http://www.nrdc.org/bushrecord at the website for the Natural Resources Defense Council, where you will also find alerts, updates on victories, and opportunities for action.