Monday, February 9, 2009

Greg's View of Todays News - 02/08/2009

  • tags: press

    • A series of large buoys are tethered to piston pumps anchored in waters 15 to 50 meters deep (49 to 131 feet). The rise and fall of passing waves drives the pumps, generating water pressures of up to 1,000 pounds per square inch (psi).

      This drives the turbine onshore and forces the water through a membrane that strips out the salt, creating fresh water in a process that normally requires a lot of electricity.

      • How good is this? Generating green electricity AND desalinating sea water without adding to the carbon footprint.
        With Australia surrounded by the sea, we are probably in the best position in the world to completely provide for our energy and water needs without harm to populations or the environment - post by gnaylor

  • California law permits the sale of marijuana for medical purposes, though it is still against federal law.

    Thirteen states have laws permitting medicinal use of marijuana. California is unique among them for the presence of dispensaries, businesses that sell marijuana and even advertise their services. Legal under California law, such dispensaries are still illegal under federal law.

      • As a cancer sufferer who understands the medical use of marijuana, it amazes me that doctors can prescribe as much morphine as I need but cannot prescribe cannabis - even though they might privately recommend it.
        If the US changes federal law on the medical prescription of the drug, we might eventually do the same in Australia - post by gnaylor

  • The Bush administration turned the U.S. military into a global propaganda machine while imposing tough restrictions on journalists seeking to give the public truthful reports about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Associated Press chief executive Tom Curley said Friday.

    tags: press

      • We need the media on the ground in every war zone if we are to get any concept of the facts as they happen.
        Most recently, the media was banned from the Gaza strip with the resulting atrocities carried out by the Israelis only coming to light after the event.
        Embedded journalists in Iraq were only allowed to see what the military wanted them to see.
        Since the live coverage of the Tiannamin Square Massacre, we have come to trust the freelance Internet reporting before we accept the structured media - post by gnaylor

  • On Easter Sunday of 2008, 11-year-old Kara Neumann of Weston, Wisconsin, suffered waves of nausea as she lay motionless on her deathbed, too weak to walk or speak. Kara's parents — both followers of the Unleavened Bread Ministries, an online church that shuns medical intervention — knelt in prayer beside their dying daughter. They did not call a doctor for help. A few hours later, Kara died of diabetes, a relatively common — and curable — condition.

      • The state must step in when this happens. Nobody has the wisdom or the knowledge to declare religeous freedom as justification for allowing a child to die that could otherwise have been saved by modern medicine.
        This is not 'religeous freedom' - it is 'religeous fanaticism', the same fanatacism we find in religeous fundamentalism causing wars around the world. - post by gnaylor

  • Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan says he is willing to look at suggestions from the Greens on changes to the Government's economic rescue plan.

    • Treasurer Wayne Swan speaks during a press conference
    • "One of the issues he raised was bikeways - we'll have a look at that," he said.
    • The Greens also want to make sure new public housing is energy efficient and have raised questions provisions in the plan for unemployed people.
    • "When you have a number of leading commentators saying that we should be looking at fixing at the Murray Darling Basin for instance, spending the money on fundamental infrastructure that will improve productive capacity in the economy," he said.
      • Spending on infrastructure at this time is undoubtedly the best way to go as it helps keep 'Australians' employed and at the end of the day, our infrastructure will be better off than it is now.
        In building the new world order patadigm, it is also important to look towards more systainable practices that will benefit future generations - post by gnaylor

  • In a bid to eradicate human rights abuses against people suffering from mental illness in developing countries, the University of Melbourne in Australia has come up with an international observatory to improve global mental health.

    • Human rights abuse includes the restraining of mentally ill people in shackles, or stocks, in a practice known as Pasung, which is still active in Indonesia and many other low-income countries.
      • Well, i'm not too keen on the way we treat mental patients in Australia. Having closed down all the mental institutions, these poor sould are left to fend for themselves in our society. When they lose it, they end up in our prisons as there is nowhere else to treat them. That is an abise of human rights too! - post by gnaylor

  • Scientists at Melbourne's Burnet Institute claim to have developed a potential new treatment for prostate cancer patients - a monoclonal antibody to a unique tumour marker for the treatment of prostate cancer.

      • The tragedy is that those of us with advanced prostte cancer will never get to see the effectiveness of new treatments being discovered today.
        That is notwithstanding the incredible number of fatal cancers that have occurred to give us the treatments that are available today. Thus, we must encourge new research. - post by gnaylor

  • SECURITY guards at Burswood Casino have received baton training, which their union claims is a precursor to issuing them with weapons. ``Patrons would feel safer if there were more guards as opposed to guards with batons.

    tags: press

    • ``Security guards have to tread a fine line between doing their job to protect the public, but at the same time making sure they don't expose themselves to actions if people they deal with get injured,'' he said.
      • Well, I am not going near any entertainment venue that has armed guards employed to manage the customers - that is unAustralian. - post by gnaylor

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