Conservative extremists of the Fox/Limbaugh persuasion hate Barack Obama so much, theyll apparently believe anything, and everything, negative about the President thats thrown their way. If it's not supposed connections with terrorists, its a missing birth certificate, and so on. On Friday, Mighty Rush himself, along with the FoxNation Web site and all its little imitator rightwing Web sites, made fools of themselves theres no other way to say it by pushing another anti-Obama fairy tale. The story was about a supposed thesis Obama wrote while at Harvard, in which he praised the distribution of wealth and other conservative bugaboos. Limbaugh and ultra-conservative bloggers pounced on the story, which originated at the Jumping in Pools blog, written by one Matthew Avitabile. Heres the priceless part: at the bottom of the Jumping in Pools blog post, is a clearly marked "satire" tag. As the author of the satire, Avitabile told Media Matters, Out of the 50,000 people who looked at it, only three had the good sense to contact me and see if it was true." Needless to say, FoxNation and Limbaugh were not among those three. Also needless to say, neither Fox nor Rush have apologized for reporting the satire as truth. Does anyone else remember when conservatives were champions of "responsibility"?
The lovely, lovely folks at BlueCrossBlueShield of North Carolina, as you know, have your health care interests, and the interests of your fellow citizens, topmost in their minds. While were at it but you know this already, too the Pope is a Southern Baptist. But I digress. As part of its aggressive effort to defeat, or water down, health care reform legislation making its way through Congress, BCBSNC sent out untold numbers of postage-paid postcards, urging its customers to forward it to Sen. Kay Hagan, in order to tell her that the sender is opposed to federal intervention in the private health insurance market." As if "the private health insurance market" isn't U.S. health care problem No. 1. Anyhow, some people arent taking kindly to BCBSNCs postcard campaign, and theyre doing something about it: sending the card to Sen. Hagan, but only after having changed the message to strongly support reform. Theres a very good diary posted on DailyKos that shows how to do it. BCBSNC has made it clear it has even less shame than it has concern for its hostages, er, customers, so as long as theyre paying the postage, tell Hagan what you really think.
Help farmers help themselves. Simple.
Charged with growing entrepreneurs in rural Rutherford County, Tim Will surveyed foothills numbed by 14 percent unemployment and illiteracy and limited by few high-speed links to the global marketplace.But one other statistic caught the newcomer's eye: the county's 6,000 small plots of land, much of it overgrown former farmland.
What if played-out cotton fields, Will wondered, grew fruits and vegetables again? And what if the produce was marketed online to Charlotte restaurants hungry for locally raised foods?
The result is Farmers Fresh Market, now ending its third year. Charlotte chefs log on to its Web site, clicking on the purple potatoes or haricot verts that please them. The produce is delivered to their kitchens within 24 hours of harvest.
This year, 87 Rutherford growers marketed their produce that way.
A San Francisco think tank, Civic Ventures, got wind of the market, which is believed to be the only one of its kind in North Carolina. Each year Civic Ventures awards "Purpose Prize" to social innovators over 60 who do good things in their "encore" careers.
That's why, today, Tim Will is $100,000 richer.
"Getting change, getting things done, that's what's important to me and my wife," he said. "It's not my money. The community has earned it."
So he will give his $100,000 prize to the farm program.
This isn't what you think. This isn't about people choosing to have sex-change operations. This is about water quality.
Here's something rather rotten from the State of Denmark. Its government yesterday unveiled official research showing that two-year-old children are at risk from a bewildering array of gender-bending chemicals in such everyday items as waterproof clothes, rubber boots, bed linen, food, nappies, sunscreen lotion and moisturizing cream.The 326-page report, published by the environment protection agency, is the latest piece in an increasingly alarming jigsaw. A picture is emerging of ubiquitous chemical contamination driving down sperm counts and feminising male children all over the developed world. And anti-pollution measures and regulations are falling far short of getting to grips with it.
Sperm counts are falling so fast that young men are less fertile than their fathers and produce only a third as much, proportionately, as hamsters. And gender-bending chemicals are increasingly being blamed for the mystery of the "lost boys": babies who should normally be male who have been born as girls instead.
The Danish government set out to find out how much contamination from gender-bending chemicals a two-year-old child was exposed to every day. It concluded that a child could be "at critical risk" from just a few exposures to high levels of the substances, such as from rubber clogs, and imperilled by the amount it absorbed from sources ranging from food to sunscreens.
Read more from the UK's Daily Telegraph.
Women's Voices for the Earth speaks out about this issue, as it relates to cleaning products:
Editing science = lying. We the People deserve to know what's being pumped into our air, water, underneath the ground and into our bodies.
While the last Bush administration edited science to suit the needs of big business, the Obama administration takes their job a little more seriously. They seem to understand that no amount of corporate profit or shareholder praise is worth our health or the earth's.
The apparent interference by Council on Environmental Quality during the Bush administration prompted a 16-month congressional investigation beginning in July 2006 that pored over 27,000 pages of White House documents. "The evidence before the committee leads to one inescapable conclusion: the Bush administration has engaged in a systematic effort to manipulate climate change science and mislead policymakers and the public about the dangers of global warming," the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform wrote in its report on the matter in December 2007. "White House officials and political appointees in the agencies censored congressional testimony on the causes and impacts of global warming, controlled media access to government climate scientists, and edited federal scientific reports to inject unwarranted uncertainty into discussions of climate change."The CEQ also helped shape the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) declaration that it did not have the authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions as well as its decision not to declare them a danger to public health under the Clean Air Act, despite an internal EPA analysis noting that greenhouse gas emissions endangered public welfare. "The decision to go with an advanced notice [of proposed rule making] or not was ultimately Steve Johnson's" (the EPA administrator at the end of the Bush tenure), Connaughton says. "That comes out of a broader policy management discussion about how far [you] could go with the Clean Air Act versus how far you could go with legislation I would have tried to get the climate legislative piece going earlier. If I could have gotten that going a year-and-half earlier, that would have heightened prospects of climate legislation by the end of our term."
The EPA's stance, however, was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in April 2007, and one of the first actions of Lisa Jackson, the new EPA administrator under the Obama administration, was to declare CO2 and other greenhouse gases a threat to public health and welfare and release a proposed endangerment finding largely built on the earlier ignored analysis.
With the advent of the Obama administration, CEQ again reorganized, and some of its duties under the previous administrationsuch as taking the lead in climate change policymakingwere given to a newly created White House Office of Energy and Climate Policy directed by former Clinton-era EPA administrator, Carol Browner.
Her new approach at CEQ "is to be guided by science and law," Sutley says. "I'm not a scientist and I'm not going to comment on the science. My role here and CEQ's role is to advise the president on environmental policy. The science is what the science is."
Read the entire Scientific American article here.
As reported by ProPublica.org and co-published with The New York Times:
New York state health officials recently laid out this wrenching scenario for a small group of medical professionals from New York-Presbyterian Hospital:A 32-year-old man with cystic fibrosis is rushed to the hospital with appendicitis in the midst of a worsening pandemic caused by the H1N1 flu virus, which has mutated into a more deadly form. The man is awaiting a lung transplant and brought with him the mechanical ventilator that helps him breathe.
New Yorks governor has declared a state of emergency and hospitals are following the states pandemic ventilator allocation plan -- actual guidelines drafted in 2007 that are now being revisited. The plan aims to direct ventilators to those with the best chances of survival in a severe, 1918-like flu pandemic where tens of thousands develop life-threatening pneumonia.
Because the mans end-stage lung disease caused by his cystic fibrosis is among a list of medical conditions associated with high mortality, the guidelines would bar the man from using a ventilator in a hospital, even though he is, unlike many with his illness, stable, in good condition, and not close to death. If the hospital admits him, the guidelines call for the machine that keeps him alive to be given to someone else.
Would doctors and nurses follow such rules? Should they?
In recent years, officials in a host of states and localities, as well as the federal Veterans Health Administration, have been quietly addressing one of medicines most troubling questions: Who should get a chance to survive when the number of severely ill people far exceeds the resources needed to treat them all?
The draft plans vary. In some states, patients with Do Not Resuscitate orders, the elderly, those requiring dialysis, or those with severe neurological impairment would be refused ventilators, or admission to hospitals. Utah divides epidemics into phases [1]. Initially, hospitals would apply triage rules to residents of mental institutions, nursing homes, prisons and facilities for the handicapped. If an epidemic worsened, the rules would apply to the general population.
Federal officials say the possibility that Americas already crowded intensive care units would be overwhelmed in the coming weeks by flu patients is small but they remain vigilant.
The triage plans have attracted little publicity. New York, for example, released its draft guidelines [2] in 2007, offered a 45-day comment period, and has made no changes since. The Health Department made 90 pages of public comments [3] public this week only after receiving a request under the states public records laws.
Mary Buckley-Davis, a respiratory therapist with 30 years experience, wrote to officials in 2007 that there will be rioting in the streets if hospitals begin disconnecting ventilators. There wont be enough public relations spin or appropriate media coverage in the world to calm the family of a patient terminally weaned from a ventilator, she said.
State and federal officials defend formal rationing as the last in a series of steps that would be taken to stretch scarce resources and provide the best outcome for the public. They say it is better to plan for such decisions than leave them to besieged health workers battling a crisis.
You change your perspective from thinking about the individual patient to thinking about the community of patients, said Rear Adm. Ann Knebel of the Department of Health and Human Services.
But some health professionals question whether the draft guidelines are fair, effective, ethical, and even remotely feasible.
Most existing triage plans were designed for handling mass casualties. They sort injured victims into priority categories based on the urgency of their medical needs and their potential for survival given available resources. Much of the controversy over the state plans focuses on two additional features.
These are exclusion criteria, which bar certain categories of patients from standard hospital treatments in a severe health disaster, and minimum qualifications for survival, which limit the resources used for each patient. Once that limit is reached, patients who are not improving would be removed from essential treatment in favor of those with better chances.
A version of these concepts was outlined in a post-9/11 medical journal article that suggested ways to handle victims of a large-scale bioterrorist event. The author, Dr. Frederick Burkle Jr., said he based his ideas in part on his experiences as a triage officer in Vietnam and the gulf war and on a cold war-era British plan for coping with a nuclear strike. Dr. Burkle said that during the gulf war he once instructed surgeons to halt an operation and work on another patient who was more likely to survive. Surgeons later returned to the first patient.
Dr. Burkles ideas were key aspects of guidelines Ontario authorities drew [4] up after SARS to plan for avian flu and other pandemics. This approach and one by a team of Minnesota doctors [5] were modified by groups developing similar guidelines in the United States.
There were important distinctions. Dr. Burkles original paper did not anticipate withdrawing care from patients and stressed the need to reassess the level of supplies sometimes on a daily or hourly basis in a fluid effort to provide the best possible care.
Some states triage guidelines are rigid, with a single set of criteria intended to apply throughout the severe phase of a pandemic. That disturbs Dr. Burkle. I have said to my wife, I think I developed a monster here, he said.
Recent research highlights the problem of a one-size-fits-all approach to triage. Many state pandemic plans call for hospitals to remove patients from ventilators if they are not improving after two to five days. Studies show that people severely ill with H1N1 flu generally need a week to two weeks on ventilators to recover.
There is also controversy over what values and ethical principles should guide triage decisions, how to engage the public, and whether withdrawing life support in the hospital and withholding it at the hospital door are distinct.
Normally, removing viable patients from life support against their or their families will would be considered murder. The New York-Presbyterian Hospital employees who participated in the recent exercise said they would not comply unless given legal protection.
They also never figured out what to do with that hypothetical patient who had his own ventilator, said Dr. Kenneth Prager, a pulmonologist and ethicist. The issue of removing patients from ventilators, he said, was so overwhelming that it precluded discussion of further case scenarios.
Here are the five best events going down in Charlotte and the surrounding area today, Oct. 26, 2009 as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.
Hollywood Undead at The Fillmore
Film screening of Shadow of a Doubt at ImaginOn
Faculty Music Series at Winthrop University
Laugh A Latte at PJ's Coffee & Lounge
Poetry Night at SK Netcafe
This week on Creative Loafing's long-running urban music podcast, Audiofloss, we're playing tunes from:
Angela Johnson (featuring Eric Roberson)
And Choklate
(To listen, click on the MP3 icon or link below.)
For more Audiofloss episodes, visit www.audiofloss.com.
Our Stupid Thing of the Week actually started last week, but like many stupid things, it probably wont end anytime soon. So with shaking heads and looks of disbelief, we present our weekly award to one of Charlottes all-time champions of Stupid Things, Rep. Sue Myrick.
Last week, Myrick announced at a press conference that she had written the foreword for a new book, Muslim Mafia, which charges that the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a nonprofit advocacy group, has, among other things, planted radical Islamist spies as Capitol Hill interns. Written by former Air Force investigator P. David Gaubatz and journalist Paul Sperry, the books primary piece of evidence is a one-page CAIR strategy document. This insidious CAIR document shows conclusively that American Muslims are planning to conduct a, umm, well, actually, they plan to conduct a pretty standard PR and lobbying plan, including placing Muslim interns in congressional offices. And thats it. No kidding, thats the evidence.
Er, Sue? Couple of problems. First, lobbying while being Muslim isnt a crime. Second, theres no mention, much less proof, of radical Islamists applying for congressional internships anywhere in the book you recommend, nor in the authors smoking gun, i.e., the strategy document. Yet, Sue, you claim the authors uncovered documents proving that radical Islamists live among us and are carrying out their subversive plan. Again, Sue, where is the evidence for this supposed plot that has you all agog and bug-eyed again?
The charges, as have been pointed out by a multitude of congressional staffers, members of Congress, foreign policy experts, journalists, and even a former Republican N.C. cabinet member, are laughable at best. Ill go one better and call Myricks statements what they are: batshit crazy paranoia. Then again, delusional nuttiness with a nasty undertone has been Myricks stock in trade for years.
Myrick's looniness or, to be more genteel, her overexcitability blended with paranoia and a dash of authoritarianism is familiar to anyone whos followed her political career. Does anyone else remember her City Council days, when she got all wigged out about heavy metal and Satanic rock groups, and wanted to set up a panel to judge which rock groups coming to Charlotte were suitable for teenagers, whom she branded as lemmings? And dont get me started on the talking coffeepot, or the homemade altar on the beach, both of which were sources of Gods guidance for Sue. Or her previous comments on how Muslims were taking over the country because so many of them run convenience stores. Yep, rabid Goofballism has long been Myricks approach to governance, which in a way, I suppose makes her a kind of pioneer for the off-the-wall comments coming from the GOP these days.
Yes, its all funny in a ridiculous way, which is something weve come to expect from Myrick, but heres whats not funny: millions of Americans eat this kind of junk for breakfast and, like Sue, believe themselves in a world thats crawling with evil people, probably brown ones, who are out to get them. Its way too reminiscent of the 1950s red-scare era for comfort. Whats next making American Muslims wear crescent-and-star patches on their clothes? Here's Sue on CNN, talking about this latest bit of craziness. Warning: watching this could be painful, because, seriously, you're about to watch one really sad human being.
By Matt Brunson
ASTRO BOY
**1/2
DIRECTED BY David Bowers
STARS Freddie Highmore, Nicolas Cage
Superheroes are known for showing up on the scene just in the nick of time, but in the case of Astro Boy and his big-screen debut, it's clear that his arrival comes when it's too late to really matter.