Author: Truth & Hammer

  • LA County Halts Use of Popular Weed Killer on County Property

    LA County Halts Use of Popular Weed Killer on County Property

    The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Tuesday directed all departments to stop using a popular weed killer until more is known about its potential health and environmental effects.  Supervisor Kathryn Barger recommended the moratorium on glyphosate — a main ingredient in the herbicide brand Roundup.  “I am asking county departments to stop the use of this herbicide until public health and environmental professionals can determine if it’s safe for further use in L.A. County and explore alternative methods for vegetation management,” Barger said.

    Roundup was developed decades ago by Monsanto Co., now owned by Bayer, and is believed to be the most widely used herbicide worldwide.  The motion, co-authored by Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, cites “a growing body of scientific study” of herbicide safety and the potential for negative impacts.  “In a 2015 study led by 17 experts from 11 countries, the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer concluded that glyphosate should be classified as ‘probably carcinogenic to humans,’” Kuehl said. “That conclusion makes it imperative that we question any long-term use of this controversial herbicide, and that’s exactly what this motion calls for.”

    The WHO finding has been disputed by Monsanto, and other governmental agencies have stopped short of reaching the same conclusion.  The federal Environmental Protection Agency says the weed killer has low toxicity for humans and concluded in 2017 that it is not likely to cause cancer in humans. California disagreed and tried unsuccessfully to force the company to label the weed killer with a warning.  The European Food Safety Agency does not agree with the WHO. However, a recent court ruling requires EFSA to disclose the details of its own studies.

    A jury in a federal lawsuit brought against Bayer by a Sonoma man concluded that his non-Hodgkins lymphoma was caused by exposure to Roundup, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday. That panel will now hear evidence related to whether the company should be held liable.  The Board of Supervisors directed the Department of Public Works to coordinate with public health and other personnel to survey current use of the chemical and explore alternatives, including identifying best practices followed by other jurisdictions.  A report is expected back in 30 days.

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  • Bookstore Removes Jordan Peterson Book Over Mosque Shooting, Continues Selling ‘Mein Kampf’

    Bookstore Removes Jordan Peterson Book Over Mosque Shooting, Continues Selling ‘Mein Kampf’

    A New Zealand bookstore stopped selling Jordan Peterson’s book in light of the Christchurch mosque shootings, but continues offering “Mein Kampf.”

    Management at Whitcoulls, one of the largest bookstores in New Zealand, said it would be wrong to support Peterson by selling “12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos” in light of “some extremely disturbing material being circulated prior, during and after the Christchurch attack,” according to an apparent customer service email, likely referencing a photograph in which Peterson embraced a fan wearing an “I’m A Proud Islamaphobe” T-shirt.

    The store, however, continues to offer Adolf Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” and Albert Cooper’s “Why Islamic Society Is Not Compatible With American Society,” according to its website.

    Peterson, a clinical psychologist, and professor of psychology at the University of Toronto advocates self-improvement and has not promoted bigotry in his writings or lectures. The book in question only makes one reference to Muslims, which is not derogatory.

    ACT Party leader David Seymour criticized Whitcoull’s decision to remove Peterson’s book, saying restricting books was an ineffective way to combat neo-Nazism.

    “You don’t fight neo-Nazism by suppressing reading and books. Anyone who knows any history knows that’s the opposite of how you fight these kinds of ideas,” Seymour told Newshub.

    “A self-help book is an incredibly strange thing to suppress. I think Whitcoulls have made the wrong decision, but I respect they’re a private company, it’s their right.”

    Whitcoulls did not respond to The Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment by the time of publication.

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  • Ditch the Electoral College, and Small States Will Suffer

    Ditch the Electoral College, and Small States Will Suffer

    “As Maine goes, so goes Vermont.”

    That’s what Franklin D. Roosevelt’s campaign manager famously joked in 1936 after Roosevelt, a Democrat, won re-election as president in a massive landslide.

    It was a catchy line, oft-repeated—but it was also a joke. It referenced Maine’s long-standing reputation at the time for accurately predicting presidential elections based on its own governor’s races, which had given rise to the widely used phrase “As Maine goes, so goes the nation.”

    Vermont may have voted the same way as Maine, but no one really thought Vermont would blindly follow Maine’s lead and trust it to do the right thing.

    The liberal Left continue to push their radical agenda against American values. The good news is there is a solution. Find out more >>

    Unfortunately, that’s exactly what many on the left are proposing should happen. An anti-Electoral College effort working its way through state legislatures would ensure that some states would never be allowed to think for themselves.

    The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact would require signatory states to award their presidential electors to the winner of the national popular vote—regardless of which candidate won within their own borders.

    Twelve states plus the District of Columbia (with a combined total of 181 electors) have already agreed to the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact. That number includes Colorado, which just joined the effort on March 15. Two additional states—New Mexico and Delaware—are gubernatorial signatures away from joining the effort.

    The compact would go into effect when 270 electors—enough to win the presidency—are committed to its terms.

    At its heart, the National Popular Vote proposal is as strange as expecting Vermont to concede its votes to Maine. The organization claims that voters across America should be able to dictate who Delaware electors cast their Electoral College votes for—even if Delaware voters vehemently oppose the candidate who won the popular vote.

    How odd. Would Delaware allow Texas voters to select its two senators? Would such an abdication of responsibility even be legal? Could California voters choose New Mexico’s governor? Would it be permissible for Florida voters to cast ballots for all statewide officers in Colorado? What if Delaware’s U.S. senators were somehow bound to vote on the border wall exactly as Texas’ senators do?

    These examples are ridiculous, but no more so than the National Popular Vote compact. Votes cast in California should have no bearing on how Delaware’s electors vote. Those individuals hold statewide office in Delaware. Their single constitutional duty—and their public trust—is to represent their own state in the presidential election.

    Worse yet, the compact could even force Delaware to award its electoral votes to a presidential candidate who doesn’t qualify for the ballot in Delaware. Each state, after all, has its own rules for ballot qualification.

    What if a candidate chose to ignore small states like Delaware and purposefully catered to other regions like the South or the West? Under the compact, Delaware would have to award its own electors to such a candidate if he or she wins the national popular vote, even after ignoring the interests of Delaware.

    Why should Texas and California voters get to boss Delaware around like that? No one would dream of allowing it in any other statewide election.

    The answer, of course, is that National Popular Vote supporters are desperate. They want to eliminate the Electoral College, but they know they cannot meet the supermajority requirements in the Article V constitutional amendment process.

    They hope to get their way—albeit, indirectly at first. In honest moments, they also concede their real goal: They believe that a formal amendment eliminating the Electoral College would be the logical consequence of the compact.

    “We’re just trying to get past the initial inertia,” John Koza, the founder of National Popular Vote, told a reporter in 2008.

    How far the country has fallen. In 1787, Delaware never would have considered such a meek submission to the preferences of large state voters.

    “I do not, gentlemen, trust you,” Delaware Delegate Gunning Bedford memorably blasted at the large-state delegates during the Constitutional Convention. “If you possess the power, the abuse of it could not be checked; and what then would prevent you from exercising it to our destruction?”

    He’d surely be puzzled to find that Delaware legislators today have turned that principle on its head: They now meekly follow and trust, hoping that “As California goes, so goes Delaware” will work out well.

    It won’t.

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  • FDA WARNS ABOUT POPULAR MAKEUP FOR TEENS AFTER FINDING ASBESTOS

    FDA WARNS ABOUT POPULAR MAKEUP FOR TEENS AFTER FINDING ASBESTOS

    The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released a report Tuesday, March 5, providing an updated assessment about a recall of toxic cosmetic products containing asbestos sold by Claire’s and Justice retailers in late 2017.

    FDA officials became aware of the problem when Justice Stores, LLC recalled eight cosmetic products in Sept. 2017, and when Claire’s Stores Inc. withdrew eight of their cosmetic products from shelves in Dec. 2017, according to the report’s update on the FDA’s 2017 findings.

    Cosmetics are sold daily across the U.S. and are often used on some of the skin’s most sensitive areas. They are routinely monitored by the FDA to keep unsafe cosmetics away from consumers, according to the report, but under the current regulatory framework, there is no legal requirement for cosmetic manufacturers in the U.S. to test their products.

    “Because the 2017 testing was done by third-party laboratories, the agency believed it was important to scientifically confirm that these reports are accurate,” said the FDA’s report.

    The agency’s report confirmed the presence of asbestos in product samples collected from both Claire’s and Justice retailers. All possibly toxic Justice products were recalled by the company in 2017, but the FDA was forced to issue a safety alert warning about three asbestos-containing products from Claire’s that could possibly still be in the hands of consumers: eye shadow, compact powder, and contour.  “Claire’s has informed us that it does not believe that affected products are still available for sale,” said the FDA’s safety alert

    Claire’s has refused to comply with the FDA’s request to recall these products and the agency does not have authority to mandate them to comply, according to the report.  “The FDA is, therefore, warning consumers not to use these products and will continue to communicate our safety concerns,” said the report.

    These findings from the FDA serve as a reminder about the limited authority they have over ensuring the safety of cosmetic products coming onto the market. Ultimately, the FDA is dependent on manufacturers to take the necessary action to ensure the safety of their products.

    Claire’s could not be immediately reached for comment.

  • Cambridge University withdraws visiting fellowship of academic who refuses to refer to transgender people by chosen pronouns

    Cambridge University withdraws visiting fellowship of academic who refuses to refer to transgender people by chosen pronouns

    Cambridge University has rescinded its offer of a visiting fellowship to controversial academic Jordan Peterson, who refuses to refer to transgender people by their chosen pronouns, after an outcry from faculty and students.

    The Canadian psychologist, who has hundreds of thousands of fans, styles himself as the “professor against political correctness”, and has argued for enforced monogamy, and pushed the view that men are victims of gender discrimination.

    He has also said that the idea of white privilege is a “Marxist lie.”

    The professor first came to fame in 2016 because he opposed an anti-discrimination bill that meant he had to use the preferred pronouns of his students and colleagues. He said that the law infringed on his free speech, refusing to use any other pronoun than “he” or “she”.  Students protested across the university’s campus and caused a media storm in Canada and the US.

    He was due to take part in a two-month academic fellowship at the Faculty of Divinity, planning to run around ten public lectures on the Bible, which would be a continuation of his work at the University of Toronto.

    Academics and the student union publicly protested his appointment, with lecturer PriyamvadaGopal sarcastically tweeting: ” Jordan Peterson to be my colleague later this year? So EXCITED. So much to learn, so much wisdom to glean. Well done, Cambridge, no better way to signal our commitment to diversity and decolonization.”

    Hours later, the university U-turned, writing in a statement: “We can confirm that Jordan Peterson requested a visiting fellowship, and an initial offer has been rescinded after a further review.”

    Cambridge Student Union said in a statement to student paper Varsity: “We are relieved to hear that Jordan Peterson’s request for a visiting fellowship to Cambridge’s Faculty of Divinity has been rescinded following further review. It is a political act to associate the University with an academic’s work through offers which legitimize figures such as Peterson.

    “His work and views are not representative of the student body and as such we do not see his visit as a valuable contribution to the University, but one that works in opposition to the principles of the University.”

    “I heard about the rescinded offer through the grapevine, via a colleague and friend, and gathered what I could about the reasons from social media and press coverage.

    “I think the Faculty of Divinity made a serious error of judgment in rescinding their offer to me (and I’m speaking about those unnamed persons who made that specific decision). I think they handled publicizing the rescindment in a manner that could hardly have been more narcissistic, self-congratulatory and devious.

    “I believe that the parties in question don’t give a damn about the perilous decline of Christianity, and I presume in any case that they regard that faith, in their propaganda-addled souls, as the ultimate manifestation of the oppressive Western patriarchy, despite their hypothetical allegiance to their own discipline.”

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  • Disney-Fox deal is complete; CEO Bob Iger’s big swing could change media industry

    Disney-Fox deal is complete; CEO Bob Iger’s big swing could change media industry

    Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Bob Iger has scaled the mountain.

    Through a series of sure-footed moves, Iger has worked tirelessly to position Disney as the world’s preeminent entertainment company. Now he is closer to realizing his vision as the Burbank giant late Tuesday finalized its $71.3-billion purchase of much of Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox.

    The acquisition is the boldest — and riskiest — of Iger’s 14-year stewardship of Disney. It’s the culmination of an expansionist strategy that has guided Iger as he has transformed the storied company through a series of takeovers that have made Disney the home of “Star Wars,” “Black Panther” and “Incredibles 2.”

    With the landmark purchase of Fox assets, Disney, already valued at $168 billion, is poised to be an even bigger force in Hollywood. Disney is taking over Fox’s movie and TV production studios and the rights to such valuable properties as “Avatar,” “Ice Age,” “Modern Family” and “The Simpsons.” The owner of ESPN and ABC also scoops up the FX and National Geographic channels, a controlling stake in streaming service Hulu and Fox’s international television portfolio.

    This is an extraordinary and historic moment for us — one that will create significant long-term value for our company and our shareholders,” Iger said in a statement Tuesday.

    Analysts say the consolidation highlights massive shifts that are underway in media.

    “This is a game changer for the industry,” Jessica Reif Ehrlich, a media analyst at Bank of America’s Merrill Lynch, said in an interview. “When the Murdochs decided to sell Fox, the entire industry was turned upside down. The message was: ‘You either need to get bigger — or get out.’ ”

    Iger sought the Fox assets to fortify Disney against the onslaught from the north. Technology giants with mounds of cash — Netflix Inc., Google Inc., Apple Inc., and Amazon.com Inc. — have attracted millions of customers to their streaming services.

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  • Pesticide residues found in 70% of produce sold in US even after washing

    Pesticide residues found in 70% of produce sold in US even after washing

    • Strawberries, spinach, and kale among most pesticide-heavy
    • Conventionally farmed kale could contain up to 18 pesticides

    About 70% of fresh produce sold in the US has pesticide residues on it even after it is washed, according to a health advocacy group.

    According to the Environmental Working Group’s annual analysis of US Department of Agriculture data, strawberries, spinach, and kale are among the most pesticide-heavy produce, while avocados, sweetcorn and pineapples had the lowest level of residues.

    More than 92% of kale tested contained two or more pesticide residues, according to the analysis, and a single sample of conventionally farmed kale could contain up to 18 different pesticides.

    Dacthal – the most common pesticide found, which was detected in nearly 60% of kale samples, is banned in Europe and classified as a possible human carcinogen in the US.

    “We definitely acknowledge and support that everybody should be eating healthy fruits and vegetables as part of their diet regardless of if they’re conventional or organic,” said Alexis Temkin, a toxicologist working with the EWG.

    “But what we try to highlight with the Shopper’s Guide to Produce is building on a body of evidence that shows mixtures of pesticides can have adverse effects.”

    Other foods on the group’s “dirty dozen” list include grapes, cherries, apples, tomatoes, and potatoes. In contrast, its “clean 15” list includes avocados, onions, and cauliflower.

    Leonardo Trasande, an environmental medicine specialist at the New York University medical school, called the EWG report “widely respected” and said it can inform shoppers who want to buy some organic fruits and vegetables but would like to know which ones they could prioritize.

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  • Most People Don’t Know The Sadly True And Tragic Story Of Keanu Reeves

    Most People Don’t Know The Sadly True And Tragic Story Of Keanu Reeves

    Source

    https://educateinspirechange.org/inspirational/sadly-true-keanu-reeves/

  • Ford Explorer Owners Say Their SUVs Are Making Them Sick

    Ford Explorer Owners Say Their SUVs Are Making Them Sick

    Migraine headaches, fatigue, and dizziness were sidelining Bert Henriksen several times a week. Evenings were the worst, after his 30-mile commute home in his 2017 Ford Explorer.

    His behavior grew erratic. He’d get angry over minor things. “We were getting scared that he had some kind of a brain problem,” said his wife, Megan.

    An answer came last March in a phone call from his doctor: A blood test revealed that Henriksen had been exposed to toxic levels of carbon monoxide gas. But how? The result was consistent with someone who’d been in a house fire, his doctor said, but Henriksen hadn’t been through anything like that.

    He says his prime suspect was parked in his driveway.

    Henriksen is among more than 3,000 Ford Explorer owners who’ve complained to Ford or federal regulators that they suspect exhaust fumes have seeped into their sport-utility vehicles’ cabins. Many fear carbon monoxide gas may have made them ill, and dozens of drivers have complained to regulators that the company’s recommended fix wasn’t effective. Explorer owners have filed more than 50 legal claims nationwide against Ford. And some police departments in the U.S. said in 2017 that Explorers used as cruisers were exposing officers to carbon monoxide.

    Nauseated, Sick and Dizzy

    Explorer owners have complained to federal officials about various symptoms they attribute to exhaust fumes and carbon monoxide.
  • ‘Super-smeller’ helps develop swab test for Parkinson’s disease

    ‘Super-smeller’ helps develop swab test for Parkinson’s disease

    Scientists have developed a test for Parkinson’s disease based on its signature odour after teaming up with a woman who can smell the condition before tremors and other clinical symptoms appear.

    The test could help doctors diagnose patients sooner and identify those in the earliest stages of the disease, who could benefit from experimental drugs that aim to protect brain cells from being killed off.

    Perdita Barran, of the University of Manchester, said the test had the potential to decrease the time it took to distinguish people with normal brain ageing from those with the first signs of the disorder. “Being able to say categorically, and early on, that a person has Parkinson’s disease would be very useful,” she said.

    Most people cannot detect the scent of Parkinson’s, but some who have a heightened sense of smell report a distinctive, musky odour on patients. One such “super smeller” is Joy Milne, a former nurse, who first noticed the smell on her husband, Les, 12 years before he was diagnosed.

    Milne only realised she could sniff out Parkinson’s when she attended a patient support group with her husband and found everyone in the room smelled the same. She thought little more about it until she mentioned the odour to Tilo Kunath, a neurobiologist who studies Parkinson’s at Edinburgh University.

    Kunath tested Milne’s skills by having her sniff T-shirts worn by either healthy people or Parkinson’s patients. Milne identified all those worn by the patients and said one more T-shirt bore the same scent. Eight months later, the wearer was diagnosed with the disease.

    For the latest study, Barran worked with Kunath and Milne to identify the main substances that give rise to the distinctive Parkinson’s odour. They focused on compounds in sebum, a waxy fluid that is secreted by glands in the skin, particularly on the upper back where Milne said the scent was strongest.

    The scientists used a technique called mass spectrometry to measure levels of volatile chemicals in sebum on swabs from Parkinson’s patients and healthy volunteers. By testing different groups, they whittled down the number of fragrant compounds from thousands to just four that appear to be most important for the scent.

    Writing in the journal ACS Central Science, the researchers describe how Milne confirmed that mixtures of the four compounds had the same musky smell as Parkinson’s patients. Tests found that levels of three substances, eicosane, hippuric acid and octadecanal, were all higher than normal in the sebum of Parkinson’s patients, while levels of a fourth substance, perillic aldehyde, were lower.

    To see whether the test can spot Parkinson’s before doctors can, the scientists have teamed up with researchers in Austria who study people with REM sleep disorders. A separate study found people with a specific kind of such disorder have a 50% risk of developing Parkinson’s in later life.

    “If we can detect the disease early on, that would be very good news. It would mean we have a test that picks it up before motor symptoms appear,” Barran said.

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