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WITHDRAWING FROM USE
The Ambler
Saturday, June 10, 2006
All the news thats fit to blog about...
Mood:  amorous
Science of nutriiton in the news. You are what you eat. And dont eat. Will the folk wisdom initially enshrined in the saying : Let food be your medicine, be twisted by science?

-- -


A recent report on child nutrition alerted the world to a staggering health risk: More than one quarter of all children under the age of five in developing countries are underweight.

The World Bank says the prevalence of underweight children in India is among the highest in the world.

Equally of concern, though, are the dramatic increases in childhood obesity. At the World Health Organisation (WHO), we estimate more than 20 million children under the age of five worldwide are overweight or obese.

Recent studies also link low birth-weight to the development of overweight and diabetes in later years, demonstrating a clear link between under- and over-nutrition. These are issues that directly affect the economic growth of the country.



-- --


The U.S. government may soon have to review their genetically engineered food or genetically modified food on a mandatory basis, if a new lawsuit filed Wednesday proves successful.

The lawsuit, filed by the Center for Food Safety in U.S. District Court in Washington against the Food and Drug Administration, not only calls for a mandatory review of genetically modified food, but also requires sellers to label the food to buyers as such.



- --

The use of antipsychotic drugs prescribed for children has soared six-fold since the early 1990s, a new report finds.

The surge appears to be largely due to doctors who prescribe the drugs to treat mental illnesses -- including behavior disorders and mood disorders -- that don't have a psychotic component. In many cases, the U.S. government frowns on such "off-label" treatment, but it is legal.




- -

Oh yeah...Harvard gets green light for testing human cloning experiments in the name of science
related to stem cell research.

- - -

Posted by mach1231 at 7:15 PM PDT
Updated: Saturday, June 10, 2006 7:25 PM PDT
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Boss stops in for 30 seconds
Mood:  special


I think that it's about nine seconds in that...Downbound Train

Lifted from :

http://www.brucespringsteen.net/songs/DownboundTrain.html

- - -

Harrowing.

Posted by mach1231 at 1:34 PM PDT
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Friday, June 9, 2006
Chilean navy ship docks to protests
Mood:  don't ask

This is a toy.

Don't think its the same vessel docked in San Diego recently to protests, seen here docking in Auckland.

... and here

File:Esmeralda BE-43.jpg

Protestors included International Humans Rights Museum (maybe they need a new exhibit), Amnesty International and surviving families and relatives of those who were lost to the former floating torture chamber under the prosecuted leaders Pinochets regime.

Fellow by the name of Patricio Henr?quez has made a documentary about the Chilean Navy’s training vessel. It is called: THE DARK SIDE OF THE WHITE LADY .

--- -

Esmeralda Chilean Navy Training Ship docks to protests

 UPDATE: story; Arturito is becoming famous for solving mysteries that people cannot. In June, it discovered the massive arms cache buried at the German rightwing paramilitary compound Colonia Dignidad. Then, in August, it detected the remains of the body of businessman Francisco Yuraszeck, who went missing in 2004. In both cases, officials were unable to find anything on their own and relied on Arturito to solve the mystery. lost gold found

See also herehere and  here.

Germans?And gee I didnt know Citibank was involved.


YAHOO! RESEARCHER SPEAKS IN CHILE

The director of Yahoo!’s research department, Prabhakar Raghavan, gave a presentation Monday on internet ethics, search engines, and Yahoo! “Challenges in Internet Seaches” at the Núcleo Mileno Centro de Investigatión de la Web.

http://ngnewsarticles.blogspot.com/2005/11/yahoo-researcher-speaks-in-chile.html

 

 


Posted by mach1231 at 12:04 AM PDT
Updated: Sunday, August 7, 2011 1:34 PM PDT
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Wednesday, June 7, 2006
Coffee?
Mood:  flirty



Read about which peoples, according to University of British Columbia History Professor Nicholas Hudson,
became the "most vilified people on Earth".

The women, in particular, were deemed to have an almost animalistic sexual appeal.

The Khoekhoen.

In the new: enduring over three centuries of shame and degradation, the descendants of the first people to meet southern Africa's white settlers may be able to return to the land that was once theirs.

--

Brad Pitt in Namibia? Leo Di Caprico in a film called The Blood Diamond? Word is that the diamond industry is scrambling to set its publicity machines in motion just in time for its release. 3 years after the Kimberly Agreements were formalized, detractors who staked a claim in its neglibleness now have merit.

But I wonder if Pitt is related by lineage to

Thomas 'Diamond' Pitt.

- - - -




Posted by mach1231 at 6:19 PM PDT
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Bigger tobacco stories
Mood:  bright
Topic: Crime and Punishment


    For years, Canada's three big tobacco companies have denied allegations they encouraged or condoned smuggling operations that moved more than 28 billion cigarettes into the black market from 1990 to 1994, when Canadian tobacco taxes were at their highest. The companies have claimed they simply sold to licensed traders who regularly ordered their products. What happened to the cigarettes, they have said, was not their concern



Yet according to documents obtained by The Gazette,
published here by
a non-smokers rights group, a strategy was already in place planned and executed by senior executives, with the knowledge and approval of their parent companies, RJR International in Geneva and RJR Nabisco in New York City.



In essence this means major firms were deeply involved in cross-border smuggling according to one former executive.



This article here from Corpwatch.com details how
one former director of British American Tobacco's biggest distributor of contraband cigarettes to Asia had been abducted, ritually tortured, gagged, suffocated and thrown into the harbor just weeks before he was to testify against his ex-associates.

He was a star prosecution witness in an international tobacco smuggling investigation launched in 1993 by Hong Kong's Independent Commission Against Corruption

-- -





Posted by mach1231 at 2:17 PM PDT
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CN faces charges in derailment
Mood:  caffeinated
Topic: Crime and Punishment
Five arrested in Ontario auto-theft scam

Smugglers used fake ID
to pay for vehicles destined for sale in Nigeria, police allege

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060601.AUTOS01/TPStory/TPNational/Ontario/



Calgary police announced that three Alberta residents have been charged with selling to unwitting buyers more than $700,000 worth of stolen sport-utility vehicles, including brands such as Mercedes-Benz, Lincoln and Lexus.

Most of those cars are believed to have originated in Ontario

Dubai, Saudi Arabia and Hong Kong were the chief destinations of the 25 cars recovered in which eight people were charged


Next week, an export development comittee themes auto theft for its meeting


Posted by mach1231 at 1:29 PM PDT
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Tuesday, June 6, 2006
And DID YOU KNOW THAT
Mood:  accident prone
From the And DID YOU KNOW THAT Department

-- -

DID YOU KNOW THAT the high heel shoe caught on because it was the perfect solution to the problem of hopelessly muddy and waste-filled streets in cities like London and Paris?

But also continued use is bad for the knees and
a real no-no when driving. Unassociated with naughtiness or fashion, it is a safety issue on both counts.

Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha

- - - -


Posted by mach1231 at 11:42 AM PDT
Updated: Wednesday, June 7, 2006 11:50 AM PDT
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Is this web de-centralization or inborne democracy?
Mood:  not sure
- - - - -/ - - - -/ - - - -

And hence, Kafka-sque was borne

    I have no memory for things I have learned, nor things I have read, nor things experienced or heard, neither for people nor events; I feel that I have experienced nothing, learned nothing, that I actually know less than the average schoolboy, and that what I do know is superficial, and that every second question is beyond me. I am incapable of thinking deliberately; my thoughts run into a wall. I can grasp the essence of things in isolation, but I am quite incapable of coherent, unbroken thinking. I can't even tell a story properly; in fact, I can scarcely talk . . . -Franz Kafka

Blog snippet from Andrew Keen, veteran Silicon Valley entrepreneur and digital media critic:

"One of the unintended consequences of the Web 2.0 movement may well be that we fall, collectively, into the amnesia that Kafka describes. Without an elite mainstream media, we will lose our memory for things learnt, read, experienced, or heard. The cultural consequences of this are dire, requiring the authoritative voice of at least an Allan Bloom, if not an Oswald Spengler. But here in Silicon Valley, on the brink of the Web 2.0 epoch, there no longer are any Blooms or Spenglers. All we have is the great seduction of citizen media, democratized content and authentic online communities. And weblogs, course. Millions and millions of blogs."

http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/006/714fjczq.asp?pg=2

---

Sounds like a good name for a band, no? Millions and Millions of Blogs? No.


Posted by mach1231 at 9:49 AM PDT
Updated: Wednesday, June 7, 2006 1:53 PM PDT
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Monday, June 5, 2006
Gangland Canada
Topic: Crime and Punishment
Gangland Canada



By KATHLEEN HARRIS, OTTAWA BUREAU




Families unto themselves


Street gangs focus in Montreal



Driven by huge profits and a propensity for violence, organized crime groups and street gangs are flourishing across Canada with greater sophistication, stronger networks and deadly influence.

From identity theft and hooker rings to hard-core drug operations, human trafficking and gun-smuggling, gangs are exploiting advanced technology and weapons to yield control over cash and turf.

But Justice Minister Vic Toews said traditional lines drawn between various street gangs and organized crime are becoming blurred as distinct groups join hands to maximize the profits and influence of their criminal enterprises.

It's a disturbing trend that makes illicit webs increasingly tough for cops to crack.

"There are real concerns about the growth of violent crime that's associated with street gangs and organized crime, but also a very clear connection now between more established organized crime families and street gangs," Toews told Sun Media in an interview.

"We are committed to addressing this violence, and the first step is seen in our bills that ensure tougher sentencing, especially for gun crime."


The Conservatives recently tabled a bill that will impose tougher mandatory minimum penalties for gang and gun crimes, but Toews said it's just one means of tackling the problem.

More specially-trained police officers, enhanced intelligence capability and stronger laws to financially cripple organized crime are also required to get the upper hand over innovative gangsters, he said.

"It used to be that many of these gangs stayed in their own expertise or specialty, but that seems to have shifted with these co-ordinated efforts between gangs," Toews said.

"That involves everything from drug trafficking to loan sharking to white collar fraud, especially credit card and bank card frauds, prostitution, trafficking in human beings, grow-ops. The pattern is clear that there are connections now emerging between these various gangs."

Toews said evidence shows that hand-gun crime and gang-related homicides are increasing "quite dramatically" across the country, especially in metropolitan centres like Toronto. While addressing community and economic problems is key, he said the New York experience shows it's best to tackle crime first.

"You need to focus on getting the gunmen and the drug dealers off the street if you hope to have any success in dealing with social programs, economic programs and other community development programs," he said.

Toews said the water is muddied between gangs and terrorist organizations, which now partner internationally to finance their nefarious activities.



"It indicates that we are not simply dealing with local crime. We are dealing with crime that has international ramifications and that terrorist organizations are often working together with gangs in order to raise money," he said.

"That's not uncommon in other areas of the world if you look at Colombia and places where terrorist organizations deal in drugs to fund their terrorist activities.

"Terrorist organizations are making connections with organized crime families would not be unusual given that, that's how they would have to distribute the drugs that they're responsible for producing."

A 2005 report from Criminal Intelligence Service Canada notes that traditional biker, mob and street gangs have evolved with "increasingly complex dynamics."

Using violence and advanced technology, organized criminals are teaming together to bolster their ability to move illicit goods in and out of Canada by air, land and marine ports.

"They are increasingly networked, often engaging in co-operative criminal ventures based upon mutual need," the report concludes.

NDP MP Joe Comartin said the successful smashing of gangs in Quebec and Manitoba has pushed "residue" to grow in Ontario. He said a "realignment of resources" on security and fighting terrorism after 9/11 has also allowed the problem to fester.

"Focusing on the gangs, focusing on the drug trafficking and gun smuggling has relented somewhat because we have concentrated much of our resources on the security and the terrorism side," he said.

Comartin believes guns and gang violence pose a greater threat to public safety than terrorism.

The Conservative crackdown will spend millions on prison cells, yet most of those jailed will be low-level "mules" rather than high-level gang leaders.

"The Conservatives rant all the time about the gun registry, well we've got another boondoggle coming here," he said.

"We're going to spend all that money on prisons to keep people in jail, but what you really need to do is stop the crime in the first place, and the way to do that is to get the money in the hands of provincial and municipal police forces."

Liberal MP Sue Barnes said the Conservative anti-gang strategy is too narrowly focused on punishment to adequately tackle the problem. She said an "umbrella" approach that toughens penalties while addressing underlying root causes is the only way to control gangs in the long term.

Christa McGregor, a spokesman for Correctional Service of Canada, said inmates affiliated with gangs has climbed to 16% from 12% in 1997.

The system is now bracing for that violent, high-risk group to swell even more in coming years with the Conservative crackdown.


Chuck Guite, former bureaucrat. - Guilty. Five counts of fraud; breach of public trust. He tried to bribe Quebec into staying with Canada.

CSC is currently developing an enhanced strategy to cope with the burgeoning gang population behind bars, McGregor said.

--

From:

http://www.canadawebpages.com/pc-editorial.asp

'"Stephen Harper, defending the Conservatives for running as a candidate someone who is charged with smuggling a Mercedes and a huge quantity of liquor across the border, by saying "I depend on other people to do stuff like background checks for me."'

Derek Zeisman

Posted by mach1231 at 1:38 PM PDT
Updated: Wednesday, June 7, 2006 1:58 PM PDT
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12 countries failing in fighting the war onhuman trafficking

Belize

Cuba

Iran

Laos

Myanmar

North Korea

Saudi Arabia

Sudan

Syria

Uzbekistan

Venezuela

Zimbabwe

Posted by mach1231 at 1:34 PM PDT
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