Monday, April 26, 2010

the big 5 stories:

#1 - Monsanto's FrankenFoods go to Supreme Court




This could be a watershed moment in the history of genetically-modified foods as the High Court hears Monsanto Co. v. Geertson Seed Farms, revolves around an herbicide-resistant alfalfa, the planting of which has been banned in the U.S. since a federal court prohibited the multinational Monsanto from selling the seeds in 2007.

That decision found that the U.S. Department of Agriculture did not do a thorough enough study of the impacts the GM alfalfa would have on human health and the environment and ordered the agency to do another environmental impact statement (EIS) review. Full Story

#2 - Lawmakers Call for Troops on the Streets of Chicago



In what are the seeds of a full-blown police state in the US, Illinois state Reps. and Chicago Democrats John Fritchey and LaShawn Ford are calling for on the governor, Chicago mayor Daley and Superintendent Jody Weis to use the National Guard in response to crime in the city.

The Posse Comitatus Act prohibits members of the federal uniformed services, including the State National Guard, from exercising nominally state law enforcement, police, or peace officer powers that maintain law and order on non-federal property within the United States. The act does not apply to National Guard units while under the authority of the governor of a state. Full Story


#3 - Pennsylvania's Choice: Gas or Clean Water






In rural Pennsylvania, a process for extracting gas from shale known as fracking has released dangerous gases into a community's drinking water, forcing families to leave their native places.

For the Ely family, their problems run deep, underneath the soil, in their roots. Scott Ely grew up on this land, but things have changed since he was a child. For the last year and four months, he and his family have been unable to drink their water. The problems began when he agreed to allow Cabot Oil and Gas to drill on his property. The Elys are one of more than a dozen families in Dimock, Pennsylvania who have water that is full of methane gas. Full Story

#4 - Lawsuits Fly as Local Police Work With Homeland Security



In an article titled, DHS accomplices face legal liability, Checkpoint USA's seven year lawsuit against several tribal police officers was recently mentioned on the Identity Project's website. The article also references several other pending cases involving local police acting on behalf of Department of Homeland Security agencies such as the TSA.

In all the cases referenced in the article, the courts have been dismissing charges against federal agencies but have allowed the lawsuits to proceed against local and state actors. The primary reason appearing to be because local and state actors are playing the largest role in civil rights violations, even if they are taking their marching orders so to speak from federal agents. Full Story

#5 - Our Emerging Barter Economy



More Americans are swapping over spending. The current economy has seen an increase in families going through their homes to swap out clutter for items they want or, more and more, need. Full Story

also:
*GM slammed for using Bailout money to pay off loan

*Barring of candidates may change Iraq vote outcome

*The slippery slope to strikes on Iran

*Vermont is a step closer to its own single-payer health care system

*As volcano grounded aerial spraying, rare blue skies emerged
the Girls of CoOlDiGgY tm

(coming soon)

girl blurbs

...now being adapted for the silver screen


*She should've put a bra on it: Beyonce's nipples want freedom

*Child exploitation to pay Kate Gosselin's bills

*Lady Gaga gets raunchy for America's favorite barbershop magazine: Esquire

*Randy & Evi - arrested

*Taylor Swift has you never (wanted to) seen her before

*Bobby is now the successful one: Whitney Houston disappoints in front of a sold-out London arena

*Like the day you learn Santa wasn't real: 25 Celebrities Before & After Plastic Surgery

randomDiGgY

too literal

technocracy & the matrix

Video Game Censorship Goes to Supreme Court



We live in a world in which a 17-year old can sign up to possibly die in a foreign war but cannot buy a video game where his avatar would do the same thing. At least in California. Yes, that California. The state on the edge of bankruptcy has as one of its priorities the restriction of much needed commerce in the guise protecting the youth from "anti-social behavior."

Worrying about "anti-social behavior" in modern day video games is akin to having concern for your rabbi's foreskin. This is not the Pac Man days. Most of the games of concern have online components that usually exceed the popularity of the single-player campaigns. Playing with others - SOCIALLY - is how most of these games are marketed.

California censors also cite studies about the violence desensitization and aggression. These studies are as reliable as alchemy. The studies are so flawed, in fact, that they've figured into the prior actual rulings (all of which have stuck down gaming censorship). Judge Consuelo Callahan said in the 9th Circuit ruling:

"None of the research establishes or suggests a causal link between minors playing violent video games and actual psychological or neurological harm, and inferences to that effect would not be reasonable"


Ultimately, the national past time of America's soccer parents are feigning outrage over getting involved in their child's life. Their motto should be "Government, please raise my kid for me." And since all government start quelling free speech "for the children." we need to see protecting the First Amendment has a very grown-up matter. Full Story

The Daily P.P. Awards
Predictive programming - when TV tells you how it's gonna be



Sunday night's award goes to American Dad (episode "Bully for Steve") on Fox. In order to teach his son, Steve, how to stand up for himself, dad Stan becomes his bully. Father beating up son, or child abuse, is the humor here. Funny stuff? But this is only found out because of the surveillance system at Steve's school. A system in which the principal (who seems to have secret proclivities) is the only one with access. This is much like what is going on in Pennsylvania in which a school district used laptops to spy on the students at home in their bedrooms. Men in private rooms secretly watching teenagers - the new norm.



also:

*Senator calls for privacy protection from FaceBook and the other Info Pimps

*At Apple's orders, police seize Gizmodo editor's computers

*Frontline to broadcast Vaccine Wars Tuesday night

*The people vs Apple: Class action suit against iPhones, iPods liquid sensors

*Wall Street Journal now top paper in US

post-frivolous man

America the Obese - Once Freakish Now Normal



Above is a picture of Chauncy Morlan. He was part of the Barnum & Bailey circus in 1890 and sold as the "The World's Fattest Man." Mr. Morlan would go unnoticed in today's America. Full Story

also:

*Top 10 Recurring Dreams and What They Mean

*H1N1 vaccine study investigating hints of complications from vaccine

*The government has your baby's DNA!

*Source: Bret Michaels Brain Aneurysm Felt Like He'd Been "Hit with a Baseball Bat"

*Symptoms of Brain Aneurysms

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