Saturday, April 19, 2008

What You Don't Know About Your Health Insurance, Could Soon Be Costing You Thousands. - Election ’08 - Care2

What You Don't Know About Your Health Insurance, Could Soon Be Costing You Thousands. - Election ’08 - Care2

THIS IS F'ING OBSCENE......

Patrick from Nuts & Boalts says it best...

Does anyone really think it is a coincidence that patients with conditions like MS, Hemophilia and Hepatitis C also tend to be the patients who *gasp* require more medical services in general? The new pricing scheme is not a way to "curb rising drug costs." It is a way to discriminate against people with chronic disease, who are not fortunate enough to be in a position to self-advocate.

The immediate effect of the change will be that patients with unprofitable disease will either go bankrupt trying to pay, or stop taking the medication. The ultimate effect will be that patients with chronic AND unprofitable disease leave the health system (a euphemism for dying) more quickly, and cease to be a profit-suck.

Bear Stearns Buy-Out... 100% Fraud .: Articles

Bear Stearns Buy-Out... 100% Fraud .: Articles: "This article is about how the Bear Stearns collapse was artificially created so insiders could get massively short prior and how J.P. Morgan would in effect be paid $55 Billion of US tax payer money to shore up themselves to buy Bear Stearns." read on...

Friday, April 18, 2008

Senator urges FCC to block XM-Sirius deal | Technology | Reuters

Senator urges FCC to block XM-Sirius deal | Technology | Reuters: "Sen. Byron Dorgan, a high-ranking member of the Senate Commerce Committee, wrote to the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission saying the agency should not follow the 'illogical' decision of the Justice Department, which last month granted the deal antitrust approval."

Lets see if this guy moves to block the Northwest Airlines meger as well....this is bull shit.

Puny Banner! Hulk much stronger! Check out the poster! -- Ain't It Cool News: The best in movie, TV, DVD, and comic book news.

Puny Banner! Hulk much stronger! Check out the poster! -- Ain't It Cool News: The best in movie, TV, DVD, and comic book news.: "Puny Banner! Hulk much stronger! Check out the poster!"

Thursday, April 17, 2008

ESPN - Tejada admits to being two years older than he had said - MLB

ESPN - Tejada admits to being two years older than he had said - MLB: "E:60 correspondent Tom Farrey presented Tejada with a copy of a birth certificate, filed by his father in his hometown of Bani, that showed he was born on May 25, 1974. The document was acquired by a Dominican law firm hired by ESPN after clerks at the town hall in Bani declared -- improperly -- that his records were confidential.

When asked if the birth certificate E:60 acquired was the real one, the former American League MVP said 'probably' and walked out of the interview. He said he considered the information 'personal.'

Earlier in the interview, before being presented with the birth certificate, Tejada was asked how old he was. His answer was '32' -- which is neither his real age nor his listed age."

More Bad Press for Nestlé in their Quest to Pilfer Spring Water | Water | AlterNet

More Bad Press for Nestlé in their Quest to Pilfer Spring Water | Water | AlterNet: "Opposition to the beverage giant's inroads in rural communities is gaining steam."

By Tara Lohan, AlterNet
Posted on April 15, 2008, Printed on April 17, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/www.alternet.org/82493/

Rural communities beware. Although we've reported it before, Nestlé's attack on rural communities and the corporation's pilfering of spring water has made the news again -- this time in Business Week. In "A Town Torn Apart: How a deal for a bottled water plant set off neighbor against neighbor in struggling McCloud, Cailf.," Michelle Conlin explains how the small NorCal town is fighting to keep the world's largest food and beverage company from taking their spring water.

It is here that Nestlé Waters North America (NWNA), a subsidiary of the Swiss food and beverage giant, plans to operate one of the largest spring-water bottling plants in the U.S. The 1 million-square-foot facility -- picture five Wal-Mart supercenters strung together -- is to rise on the site of McCloud's defunct lumber mill, a 250-acre swath of land that bends around the base of the mountain. Nestlé aims to draw 1,250 gallons a minute of water from McCloud's glacier-fed springs. The company would then pack 300 semi-trailers a day full of Arrowhead brand water, truck it as far away as Los Angeles and Reno, and sell it at prices that are as much as 1,000 times more than the cost of tap water. In exchange, Nestlé has agreed to pay McCloud roughly $350,000 a year for the water and create up to 240 jobs in and around the town.

The plan was made with the company by district board members behind closed doors and with no public input. McCloud, a town on the economic mend, apparently was looking for someone to fill the shoes of the departed lumber industry. But it seems like the board members weren't all that sure what they were getting into with Nestlé, considering their track record in other towns in Michigan and Maine. And according to this article, they couldn't afford to hire a lawyer to look over the paperwork.

When the town found out about the deal, there was a great deal of concern, followed by anger and then action.

Nestlé Waters has run into a wall of opposition, prompting it to delay construction and resubmit its environmental permit application. Since learning about the bottling plant, nearly half of McCloud's 1,300 residents have mobilized into a well-armed resistance force. Furious that their elected representatives inked the deal without consulting them and worried about the potential impact the plant could have on Mount Shasta's delicate local hydrology, they have ordered up studies, signed up wealthy backers, and lobbied politicians.

The Business Week story lightly touches on the growing movement against bottled water -- the "tappening" movement and includes some info after the end of the article from Food and Water Watch's Wenonah Hauter dispelling myths about how some erroneously believe all bottled water is better than tap as well as figures about the environmental footprint of bottled water. It would have been good to see that info built into the story, but at least it was there ... somewhere. Overall it is good to see this information about water privatization making it to more mainstream media.

Tara Lohan is a managing editor at AlterNet.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/www.alternet.org/82493/

How to Change the Way We Think about Water | Water | AlterNet

How to Change the Way We Think about Water | Water | AlterNet: "We need to shift our understanding of water as a commodity to an appreciation for water as a human and environmental right."

At Least 36 U.S. States Face Water Shortage | Water | AlterNet

At Least 36 U.S. States Face Water Shortage | Water | AlterNet: "Available freshwater supplies are dwindling across the country due to rising temperatures, droughts, increasing sprawl and population."

By David Gutierrez, Natural News
Posted on April 15, 2008, Printed on April 17, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/82378/

At least 36 states are expected to face water shortages within the next five years, according to U.S. government estimates. Available freshwater supplies are dwindling across the country due to rising temperatures and droughts, while increasing sprawl, population and inefficient resource usage are leading to rising demand.

"Is it a crisis? If we don't do some decent water planning, it could be," said Jack Hoffbuhr, executive director of the American Water Works Association. Rising temperatures due to global warming have increased evaporation rates across the country and reduced the availability of important water sources. One of these is the Sierra Nevada snowpack, which supplies a significant portion of California's water. Across the West, similar trends are expected to reduce flows of the Colorado River, which supplies water for seven states.

Meanwhile, rising sea levels are expected to cause saltwater to infiltrate freshwater aquifers in coastal states, rendering that water unusable.

California uses about 23 trillion gallons of fresh water per year. The United States as a whole uses more than 148 trillion gallons for all purposes, including agriculture, manufacturing and other uses.

Other threatened regions include the Midwest, where the Great Lakes are shrinking, and upstate New York, where reservoir levels have fallen to record lows. Georgia's crisis has already arrived, and Florida's is expected to hit soon.

While Florida has no shortage of rainfall, widespread draining and paving of the region's natural wetlands has left the water unable to drain back into the soil. As a consequence, the state is forced to flush millions of gallons of water into the ocean per year to avert floods. The state's environmental chief, Michael Sole, has asked the Florida legislature to increase the use of reclaimed wastewater. Other states are encouraging measures such as desalinization, but it is widely accepted that conservation is the cheapest alternative.

Even with such measures, the forecast is not expected to improve. "Unfortunately, there's just not going to be any more cheap water," said Randy Brown, utilities director for Pompano Beach, Fla.

© 2008 Natural News All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/82378/

Are Coke's Water Conservation Intentions for Real? | Water | AlterNet

Are Coke's Water Conservation Intentions for Real? | Water | AlterNet: "The company is trying to sell itself as working toward water conservation, while at the same time depleting water sources."

By Tara Lohan, AlterNet
Posted on April 17, 2008, Printed on April 17, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/www.alternet.org/82631/

Coca-Cola just began their annual shareholders meeting yesterday and they were met with resistance from activists and some shareholders when it came to their environmental commitments.

"Coke is working very hard to avoid addressing reasonable questions about product quality testing and disclosure, all the while talking about its rigorous safety and quality requirements," said Gigi Kellett, national director of Corporate Accountability International's Think Outside the Bottle campaign. "People are wondering what exactly this corporation has to hide."

It seems Coke is trying to green (or blue) its image, but anyone with any real concern about the environment and our water crisis aren't buying it. Folks have been calling on the company to report on water quality, label their water sources, and stop pumping in regions that already have limited amounts of water.

One of the areas particularly hard hit has been India. As the India Resource Center reports:

A recent study funded by Coca-Cola confirmed that the company's bottling plants contribute to severe water shortages around some of its bottling plants in India. The report also recommended the closure of a bottling plant in Kala Dera in Rajasthan and cautioned Coca-Cola on the declining water tables in Mehdiganj in Uttar Pradesh.

"Coca-Cola's own report as well as government studies have confirmed what we have been saying all along -- that the company has worsened the water crisis for thousands of people," said Nandlal Master of Lok Samiti which coordinates the community campaign against Coca-Cola in Mehdiganj.

How has Coke responded? They've come up with some initiatives that don't hold much weight. Here's the rundown from Corporate Accountability International:

  • The TERI Report. Though Coke has spun the report green, the 500-page study by The Energy and Resource Institute (TERI) raised serious questions about decreased groundwater levels near bottling facilities. In fact, three of the six plants surveyed had been sited in areas where water resources were already overburdened. "[T]he basic focus of the Coca-Cola Company water resource management practices is on the business community -- community water issues do not appear to form an integral part of the water resource management practices of the Coca-Cola company," according to report authors. These findings support what community groups in India have been saying for years. "The report was an attempt to hid certain facts and 'whitewash' the corporation's operations," said R. Ajayan of the Plachimada Solidarity Committee. "But the Coca-Cola corporation's attempts to regain its lost credibility has once again failed."
  • The CEO Water Mandate. This voluntary, United Nations-endorsed initiative is being promoted as a way for corporations to make progress in protecting water resources. However, according to more than 125 public interest leaders from 35 countries, it lacks enforcement mechanisms, is fraught with conflicts of interest, and risks implicating the U.N. in corporate greenwashing. That's why it is being challenged as a "thinly veiled public relations effort."
  • Coke's Environmental Partnerships. Coke has entered into a partnership with the World Wildlife Fund to the tune of $20 million to fund watershed protection programs in seven global watersheds. While promising on the surface, the initiative has some communities affected by Coke's bottling asking, "how can the corporation justify contributing to water scarcity in some watersheds, to pay for the protection of others?"

Thankfully, activist groups are keeping the pressure on. But it raises some other questions about how we hold corporations accountable to environmental sustainability when they're drawing up the regulations.

You can read more about the statements Corporate Accountability International and its allies are giving to the Coca-Cola board of directors and shareholders.

And you can learn more about the Think Outside the Bottle, community struggles, and for facts about bottled water.

Tara Lohan is a Managing Editor at AlterNet.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/www.alternet.org/82631/

Goldman Prize Winner Saves One of the World's Most Important Drinking Sources | Water | AlterNet

Goldman Prize Winner Saves One of the World's Most Important Drinking Sources | Water | AlterNet: "How one activist took on President Putin and oil interests to save 20 percent of thew world's freshwater reserve."

By Fred Weir, Christian Science Monitor
Posted on April 16, 2008, Printed on April 17, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/82449/

Moscow -- In a land where oil dominates politics and environmental issues barely make the agenda, it was a veritable coup.

Concerned with plans to route a major oil pipeline within 900 yards of pristine Lake Baikal, Marina Rikhvanova and her Baikal Environmental Wave advocacy group led thousands of people into the streets of nearby Irkutsk; collected over 20,000 petition signatures; and summoned "flash mobs," which used tactics such as handing bottles of murky "Baikal water" to embarrassed officials.

After two months of protests, President Vladimir Putin pointedly asked the chief of state-owned oil company Transneft on TV whether an alternative route was possible. "If you are hesitating, then there is such an opportunity," Putin told the quavering official. The pipeline was subsequently rerouted.

In recognition of her work, Ms. Rikhvanova will on Monday receive the Goldman Environmental Prize at a ceremony in San Francisco. A biologist and veteran environmental crusader, she has spent her life battling to save Siberia's "sacred sea" -- which holds over 20 percent of the world's fresh water reserves -- from the depredations of Soviet industrial planners and unregulated Russian businessmen.

"Around here she is a major authority, in both public and scientific circles," says Yelena Tvorogova, president of the environmental nongovernmental organization (NGO) Revival of Siberian Land Foundation in Irkutsk. "[Rikhvanova] is one of the founders and is still a key leader of the movement to save Lake Baikal. She's always been persistent and uncompromising in her principles."

In addition to cofounding Baikal Environmental Wave, Rikhvanova is cochair of the International Socio-Environmental Union, a network of Russian NGOs, many of whom cooperate with her group on Baikal issues. Her organization has received support in the past from a wide variety of international sources, including the US Agency for International Development, Germany's Green Party, the Ford Foundation, the Moscow-based Vernadsky Foundation (an environmental NGO), and others. Its international collaborators include the Earth Island Institute in San Francisco, The Heinrich Boll Foundation, the Pacific Environment Research Center.

Encouraged by the success of Baikal Environmental Wave in banning the pipeline from a sensitive seismic zone near Baikal's shores, Rikhvanova is now organizing to block the expansion of a state-run uranium enrichment facility at Angarsk, just 50 miles from Lake Baikal, where the Russian government is planning to import nuclear waste from around the world for reprocessing.

"It is extremely dangerous for people who live in Irkutsk and along the Angara River, because underground waters move in their direction," says Rikhvanova. "I don't think Rosatom has considered the danger to the region and to Lake Baikal. They do not provide information to the public about their plans, or the possible damage."

Rikhvanova still lives in her cramped Soviet-era flat in Irkutsk, trying to juggle motherhood, scientific work, and environmental activism. "I have studied Lake Baikal all my life and worked and protested," she says by phone. "It hasn't been easy, but it has been interesting."

Rikhvanova has endured frequent harassment from the FSB security service, including several search and seizure raids of her home and office. Last year her adult son Pavel was one of 20 people arrested after a still-unexplained attack on her group's environmental encampment, apparently staged by nationalist thugs, in which one activist was killed and several injured.

She describes it as an attempt to intimidate her. "Pavel is still in prison, although I believe the authorities know everything that happened," she says. "My son never belonged to any nationalist groups."

Environmental activism is growing increasingly hazardous in Putin's Russia, say other ecologists. "If you oppose Transneft or any other state company, you can expect to come to the attention of the state security services," says Roman Vazhenkov, Baikal campaign coordinator for Greenpeace-Russia. "We have growing limitations on freedom of speech in Russia. I know that Marina has had a lot of that kind of trouble. She's been heavily involved in opposing reckless development near the lake, and I fear her troubles are just beginning."

Such determination, evidenced throughout her decades of work, made Rikhvanova one of seven recipients of this year's Goldman Environmental Award, given in recognition of "sustained and significant efforts to preserve the natural environment." The world's largest prize for grass-roots environmentalists, it is sometimes dubbed the environmental "Nobel Prize" and comes with $150,000.

Sometimes called "Russia's Galapagos," Lake Baikal is a unique ecosystem with almost 2,000 endemic plant and animal species. Nearly 400 miles long and more than a mile deep, it is a vast reservoir of pure water - the world's largest - collected in an ancient rift valley at Asia's heart. Rikhvanova, a native of the region, was profoundly influenced as a young girl in the late '60s, when the Soviet Union's first environmental protest movement erupted over a plan to build a pulp and paper mill to take advantage of the lake's unlimited supply of clean water. The factory, which still operates at Baikalsk on the lake's southern shore, has remained a potent symbol of economic abuse for generations of Russians.

"Any biologist dreams of working at Lake Baikal, it's one of the most special places in the world," says Irina Pokrovskaya, a biogeographer at the official Institute of Geography in Moscow. "It's a crime that there's a pulp and paper mill operating there."

Rikhvanova recalls being taken by her father in the 1970s to visit Valentin Rasputin, the traditionalist writer who did much to publicize Lake Baikal's plight within the tough literary controls of the Soviet system. At university, she made friends with Jennifer Sutton, a British woman who'd lived and taught English in Irkutsk for many years.

"Jennifer was interested in ecology, and she would discuss it in class," Rikhvanova says. "At one point she brought in a lot of [Western] literature about the environment and, gradually, our English-language club became an ecological organization."

After graduating, Rikhvanova worked as a biologist at the famous Limnologicial Center on Lake Baikal's shore, classifying the lake's unique fish species. But she turned to activism in the early 1990s after growing disappointed with local politicians' lack of commitment to ecological priorities. "We saw it was no use to work with them, so we decided to do it ourselves," she says. Members of the Baikal Environmental Wave, which Rikhvanova cofounded with Ms. Sutton about 16 years ago, started out lecturing in schools, collecting books for the local library, and producing a monthly magazine about the struggle to save Lake Baikal.

"Rikhvanova and her group never let public opinion in this region fall asleep," says Vadim Takhteyev, chair of biology at Irkutsk University. "One might criticize their actions at times, but on the whole it's positive. Their magazine has done a lot to improve ecological education around here."

Since Putin came to power, an increasingly authoritarian, economically-interventionist Kremlin has clashed repeatedly with local environmentalists. The Baikal Environmental Wave's protests in 2006 and the subsequent rerouting of the pipeline was the first big victory for environmentalists in Russia. Despite the official harassment she's suffered, Rikhvanova says there's hope that Russian authorities will learn to respect the environment. "The authorities are watchful toward us, but at least they are paying attentionk," she says.

© 2008 Christian Science Monitor All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/82449/

Asia Teeters Toward Food Crisis from Lack of Water | Water | AlterNet

Asia Teeters Toward Food Crisis from Lack of Water | Water | AlterNet: "In countries like India, overpumping of groundwater for agriculture is reaching crisis level."

The Debate Debacle | Philly | 04/17/2008

The Debate Debacle | Philly | 04/17/2008: "Thirty six minutes into the debate, my wife says I can turn on the Red Sox game. 'They are not asking them anything about anything that matters,' she says.

Amen.

We've revisted bitter. We've gone back to Bosnia. We've dragged Rev. Wright back up onto the podium. We've mis-spent this debate by allowing Charlie Gibson and George Stephanopoulos to ask questions that skirt what in my mind is what we need to know now.

What would they do about the mess they'd inherit? The war. Health care. The economy. Stupid."

In Pa. Debate, The Clear Loser Is ABC

In Pa. Debate, The Clear Loser Is ABC: "When Barack Obama met Hillary Clinton for another televised Democratic candidates' debate last night, it was more than a step forward in the 2008 presidential election. It was another step downward for network news -- in particular ABC News, which hosted the debate from Philadelphia and whose usually dependable anchors, Charlie Gibson and George Stephanopoulos, turned in shoddy, despicable performances."

Open Left:: Philadelphia Debate Thread

Open Left:: Philadelphia Debate Thread: "Update: Halfway through the debate, not a single question on any policy issue had been asked, it was obvious that this debate was prime-time hit job on Obama. The questions so far have been why he doesn't wear a flag pin, whether or not his pastor loves America, why he can't win, and how many people were offended by his bittergate comments. Except for Clinton being asked about why she wasn't trustworthy, and both of them being asked about their vice-presidential choices, that has been the entire debate."

Worst. Debate. Ever. | Deadline USA | Guardian Unlimited

Worst. Debate. Ever. | Deadline USA | Guardian Unlimited: "The blogosphere is unanimous in declaring ABC's Democratic debate an absolute stinker
April 16, 2008 11:30 PM

Almost a year since the Democrats had their first debate of the presidential campaign, and what did we get in the latest one? A stinker, an absolute car crash - thanks to the host network ABC. It was worse than even those debates last year with 18 candidates on stage, including crazy old Mike Gravel."

Clinton-Obama Debate: ABC Hit on Focus on Minor Issues

Clinton-Obama Debate: ABC Hit on Focus on Minor Issues: "NEW YORK In perhaps the most embarrassing performance by the media in a major presidential debate in years, ABC News hosts Charles Gibson and George Stephanopolous focused mainly on trivial issues as Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama faced off in Philadelphia.

Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the health care and mortgage crises, the overall state of the economy and dozens of other pressing issues had to wait for their few moments in the sun as Obama was pressed to explain his recent 'bitter' gaffe and relationship with Rev. Wright (seemingly a dead issue) and not wearing a flag pin while Clinton had to answer again for her Bosnia trip exaggerations."

ESPN - Bulls dismiss Boylan as interim coach - NBA

ESPN - Bulls dismiss Boylan as interim coach - NBA: "DEERFIELD, Ill. -- John Paxson used words like 'disappointing' and 'disturbing' while describing the Chicago Bulls' nightmare of a season. The general manager talked about pride and accountability, too."

Has Capitalism Failed? - Ron Paul - Mises Institute

Has Capitalism Failed? - Ron Paul - Mises Institute: "Capitalism should not be condemned, since we haven't had capitalism. A system of capitalism presumes sound money, not fiat money manipulated by a central bank. Capitalism cherishes voluntary contracts and interest rates that are determined by savings, not credit creation by a central bank. It's not capitalism when the system is plagued with incomprehensible rules regarding mergers, acquisitions, and stock sales, along with wage controls, price controls, protectionism, corporate subsidies, international management of trade, complex and punishing corporate taxes, privileged government contracts to the military-industrial complex, and a foreign policy controlled by corporate interests and overseas investments. Add to this centralized federal mismanagement of farming, education, medicine, insurance, banking and welfare. This is not capitalism!

To condemn free-market capitalism because of anything going on today makes no sense. There is no evidence that capitalism exists today. We are deeply involved in an interventionist-planned economy that allows major benefits to accrue to the politically connected of both political parties. One may condemn the fraud and the current system, but it must be called by its proper names — Keynesian inflationism, interventionism, and corporatism."

deputydog | top 10 physically modified people

deputydog | top 10 physically modified people: "top 10 physically modified people"

deputydog | 10 annoyingly brilliant office interiors

deputydog | 10 annoyingly brilliant office interiors: "10 annoyingly brilliant office interiors"

Bloomberg.com: Worldwide

Bloomberg.com: Worldwide: "Citigroup's Market Value Drops Below Apple's Amid Credit Crisis"

Monday, April 14, 2008

PHOTO: Dell Breaks Your Laptop, Sends Replacement Full Of Pubes

PHOTO: Dell Breaks Your Laptop, Sends Replacement Full Of Pubes

Gas Prices Slip, but Could Hit $4: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance

Gas Prices Slip, but Could Hit $4: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance

CFI Issues Critique of Civics Textbook | Center for Inquiry

CFI Issues Critique of Civics Textbook | Center for Inquiry: "The Center for Inquiry recently learned that a civics textbook used in many secondary schools around the country contains inaccurate and misleading statements, in particular in its analysis of certain constitutional law issues, including school prayer, and global warming. CFI has analyzed the textbook, American Government Institutions and Policies (10th edition), and prepared a critique that sets forth recommended changes to the textbook."