Tag Archives: health

Today on Planet 100: Botox Kills Emotions (Video)

Read more from the original source:
Today on Planet 100: Botox Kills Emotions (Video)

In Defense of "Eco" Fast Food

A pretty scathing critique of “eco-restaurants” recently ran in Newseek. Called Your Carbon Foodprint , the article honed in on the now-fully formed trend of eateries capitalizing on environmentally conscious values to appeal to a growing market — and, it charges, doing little but greenwashing in the process. The focus is on the vegetarian fast food chain Otarian , which is predictably assaulted it for committing a number of hypocrisies: Its owners don’t liv… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Originally posted here:
In Defense of "Eco" Fast Food

Supreme Court Case a Defeat for Monsanto’s Ambitions

It should be no surprise that Monsanto's PR machine is working hard to spin the truth in this morning's decision in the first-ever Supreme Court case on genetically engineered crops (Monsanto v. Geertson Seed Farms). Despite what the biotech seed giant is claiming, today's ruling isn't close to the victory they were hoping for. The 7-1 decision issued today by the Supreme Court was on the appeal of the Center for Food Safety's (CFS) successful suit, which resulted in a ban on GMO alfalfa. And, while the High Court ruled in favor of Monsanto by reversing an injunction that was part of the lower court's decision, more importantly, it also ruled that the ban on GMO alfalfa remains intact, and that the planting and sale of GMO alfalfa remains illegal. This point, which seems to be lost in some news reports, is actually a huge victory for the Center for Food Safety and – most importantly – for the farmers and consumers who we represent. The Supreme Court ruled that an injunction against planting was unnecessary since, under lower courts' rulings, Roundup Ready Alfalfa became a regulated item and illegal to plant. In other words, the injunction was “overkill' because our victory in lower federal court determined that USDA violated the National Environmental Policy Act and other environmental laws when it approved Roundup Ready alfalfa. The court felt that voiding the USDA's decision to make the crop legally available for sale was enough. A different ruling could have had far-reaching ramifications that might have extended beyond our borders, affecting the health and status of world markets for U.S. alfalfa, and impacting the fastest growing sector of the US agriculture market – organic. But the court clearly saw that, and opted instead to rule very narrowly. And yet, Monsanto is out there in a public statement saying that they've won a great victory. They claim that they're ready to sell Roundup Ready Alfalfa seeds now, and that they hope that their farmers should be able to plant by fall 2010. It's a canny statement, but neither of those potential situations is by any means possible at this point. The bottom line: the ban on planting Roundup Ready Alfalfa still stands. The Center is victorious in this case in several other ways: most importantly, the High Court did not rule on several arguments presented by Monsanto about the application of federal environmental law. As a result, the Court did not make any ruling that could have been hurtful to National Environmental Policy Act or any other environmental laws. In addition, the Court opinion supported the Center's argument that gene flow is a serious environmental and economic threat. This means that genetic contamination from GMOs can still be considered harm under the law, both from an environmental and economic perspective. This Court opinion is in many ways a victory for the environment, the Center for Food Safety, for farmers and for consumers and a defeat for Monsanto's hopes of a green light. To represent this opinion in any other way is just spin. added by: treewolf39

Eminem Plays Surprise Set At Red Bull EmSee Contest In New York

Em took the Bowery Ballroom stage for three songs during Road to 8 Mile rap battle. By Jayson Rodriguez Eminem (file) Photo: Chelsea Lauren/ Getty Images NEW YORK — Looks like the Jimmy B-Rabbit inside of Eminem is still alive. The Detroit rapper seemed to channel the scrappy character he played in his breakout movie role early Tuesday morning (June 22) as he took to the stage for a surprise performance during the Red Bull EmSee : The Road to 8 Mile freestyle rap battle. Just hours earlier, he had been on the rooftop of the Ed Sullivan Theater for a taping of Jay-Z’s appearance on the “Late Show With David Letterman.” Decked out in jeans, a white T-shirt, black, zip-up hoodie and black military cap, Em hit the stage shortly after midnight with a burst of furious rhymes. The Shady One delivered a rapid succession of rhymes to Drake’s “Over” before the DJ, the Alchemist, flipped the record to Lloyd Banks’ “Beamer, Benz or Bentley.” The intimate audience at Manhattan’s Bowery Ballroom — a space with a capacity of under 600 — were cheering wildly for Em and D-12’s Mr. Porter. Eminem quickly segued into “On Fire” and “Won’t Back Down,” from his new album, Recovery, which dropped on Monday. On the latter (without collaborator Pink), he was particularly energetic, delivering the rousing lyrics with added urgency. “Listen, garden tool/ Don’t make me introduce you to my power tool/ You know the f—ing drill,” Em rapped. “How you douche bags feel?/ Knowing you’re disposable, Summer’s Eve, Massengill.” After the third song, Eminem ended his brief set and directly addressed the crowd, hinting that their support was what carried him through recovery from his well-documented drug dependency. “New York, on some real sh–, we didn’t get time to rehearse this, but we wanted to come out for y’all,” he said. “If it wasn’t for y’all, I wouldn’t even be here. Thank you to each and every one of y’all. We love you. Peace.” Chants of “encore” soon filled the venue, but the rapper was gone. “Thanks to everyone for coming out to the Redbull EmSee battle,” he tweeted later. “I appreciate all the love New York. Yes, I’m really typing this.” Prior to Eminem’s set, underground supergroup Slaughterhouse performed. Royce Da 5’9″, Joe Budden, Joell Ortiz and Crooked I all drew cheers with their various slick rhymes. Royce, a fellow Detroit MC and longtime Em affiliate, spoke to the crowd about the collective’s ongoing negotiations with Shady Records, where the four hope to sign after releasing last summer’s group debut via E1 Entertainment. “It’s Shady for life,” he told the crowd. The event was hosted by Shade 45 morning-show host Angela Yee and D.R.E.S. Tha Beatnik. The night featured a three-round battle, judged by producers Just Blaze and the Alchemist, along with legendary freestyle rapper Craig G. Rapper DNA scored the biggest reaction from the crowd with his boastful rhymes and eventually earned the win. The winners of Red Bull EmSee contests across the country will battle at the finals in Detroit, where Em himself made his name as a lyrical mudslinger. Have you been at one of Em’s recent appearances? Where would you like to see Eminem pop up next? Let us know in the comments. Related Photos The Evolution Of: Eminem Related Artists Eminem

See the rest here:
Eminem Plays Surprise Set At Red Bull EmSee Contest In New York

Lady Gaga Opens Up About Her Health Issues In Rolling Stone

‘I make much more of an effort now to minimize the drama or the stress,’ she says of lupus running in her family. By James Montgomery Lady Gaga on the July 2010 issue of Rolling Stone Photo: Rolling Stone Earlier this month, Lady Gaga frightened fans when she revealed to Larry King that she had been tested for lupus and that results had shown she was “borderline positive” for the disease. “Lupus is in my family and it’s genetic, and it’s funny, ’cause my mother told me the other day that my fans were quite worried about me, because I did talk about the fact that I was tested for lupus,” Gaga told King. “And the truth is, I don’t show any signs, any symptoms of lupus, but I have tested borderline positive for the disease. So as of right now, I don’t have it. But I do have to take good care of myself.” And in the upcoming issue of Rolling Stone magazine — which hits newsstands Friday — Gaga expounds even further on her condition, telling writer Neil Strauss that she doesn’t want her fans to worry about the disease and that she’s already taking steps to ensure she’ll remain healthy in the midst of her seemingly endless world tour. “It’s more making sure that I reduce stress in my life to make sure I don’t develop [the disease],” she said. “I make much more of an effort now to minimize the drama or the stress. … I take care of myself. I drink and still live my life, but I could never let my fans down. That would kill me to have to face that extra obstacle every day to get onstage. It’s completely terrifying, so I’m just really focused on mind, body and soul.” Gaga also said that, though she’s been tested for lupus, she’s not interested in following doctor’s orders when it comes to preventing the disease. Rather, since lupus is thought to be hereditary, she’s sought the advice of her family on how to live. “It’s in my family, so I don’t really listen to doctors very much when it comes to it, because it’s so personal,” she said. “I talk to people that I know that have it or my father, whose sister died from it. There’s nothing to worry about, but I do get very tired sometimes, and I naturally wonder [about the disease].” And to that end, Gaga admitted to Strauss that she does worry sometimes about the effect her schedule (and her fame) has on her health but that she continues to press on, no matter what those closest to her may be saying. “I don’t want to be [a hypochondriac], so most of the time, I’m like, ‘F— it, I’m fine,’ ” Gaga told Strauss. “At a certain point, you’re so beyond the point of exhaustion that you don’t know: Do I have a health problem that may or may not be real, or am I just really tired?” Are you worried about Gaga’s well-being? Let us know in the comments. Related Photos The Evolution Of: Lady Gaga Related Artists Lady Gaga

Originally posted here:
Lady Gaga Opens Up About Her Health Issues In Rolling Stone

After Only Six Days, Olbermann Kisses and Makes Up with Daily Kos Blog

Keith Olbermann just couldn’t stay mad at the radical leftists at the Daily Kos. Six days after walking away in a huff, the MSNBC host returned to his spot on the blog on Tuesday morning, with the headline “So, uh, this looks like a nice site.” He began: “OK, I’m back.” I’ve always liked to invent backstories behind cliches and one of my oldest ones is the idea that the first guy who said “You can’t see the forest for the trees” was actually running through a forest when he ran head first into a tree and didn’t enjoy the experience. You do tend to swear at the trees, and, if you hit your head hard enough, you might even swear off that particular forest for awhile. Olbermann claimed to be delighted that responses to his “I’m out of here” blog entry brought a wide spectrum of opinion, and that perhaps he had a new thought buried beneath his self-admitted daily pomposity:  It occurs to me, in the full flower of the pomposity that always strikes me at midday, that this might be somewhat metaphorical for progressives and other centrists, particularly relative to criticism of the Administration. I was reminded of this last night when somebody asked me why I wasn’t pounding the President more on Afghanistan, and I linked him the Comment I did last year saying Obama should declare victory and go home. “Sure,” the guy replied, “you’ve been critical of that, once, but you seem to go lightly on them.” And I said, you’re right…other than this stuff about the BP disaster, and the Public Option, and the political strategy on Health Care Reform, and Afghanistan, and not prosecuting torture, and the Kagan nomination, and maybe six dozen complaints about process or tone. I mention this because the last diary was misinterpreted by 99% of the old media and 99.5% of the new media. I didn’t ‘quit Daily Kos because I got criticized for criticizing POTUS.’ I wrote what I wrote because there was a body of us here which assumed any criticism of this administration had to originate in a nefarious and wholly nugatory plan to destroy it. There certainly are such nefarious and wholly nugatory plans, active, this very minute: The most prominent is called the Republican Party (GOBP). Meanwhile, one group of progressives/liberals/Democrats has assumed no such conspiracy theory, demanded no purity test, and taken no instant and farfetched umbrage. These are the individuals known as the Obama Administration. I haven’t been in contact with anybody there since my comments on the President’s speech, but I sure as hell was in contact with them after every single one of the criticisms I mentioned above. Nobody ever called me up to complain. Nobody ever called me up to dissuade. Nobody schmoozed me, and nobody threatened me. They seem to assume it comes with the job. And they correctly assume that if I’m critical of them, they’re entitled to be critical of my criticism. This differs from the previous occupants of the White House in more ways than this site has members and lurkers and trolls combined. You will recall that every criticism of Bush was a plot to destroy America. Criticism of Obama is…democracy. That’s funny. Keith usually suggests criticism of Obama is….racist. Olbermann apologized for his wounded ago, even as he’s accustomed to dishing it out at least as viciously as he takes it:  The show I do and the positions I take are under assault, every day, from every possible direction, and I’m not complaining about it: I can afford the suit of armor. I just get pissed off now and again when I’m busy dodging bazookas and somebody bounces a nine-volt battery off my shiny metal ass claiming I’m actually an agent trying to make dough the easy way. I should have laughed at the ludicrousness of the idea. I didn’t. Sometimes it gets sweaty inside the armor. I’m not given to rash decisions (and when I say “I’m not,” of course I mean, “I am.”)

Go here to read the rest:
After Only Six Days, Olbermann Kisses and Makes Up with Daily Kos Blog

Six Selfish Reasons You Don’t Want Dead Oceans

Photo by foodiesathome.com via flickr. TreeHugger asked Andrew Sharpless, CEO for the Oceana ocean protection organization, why we really personally care about the health and fate of the world’s big water bodies. Many of us, after all, live far from the coast. TH asked Sharpless to please tell us how and why the health of the oceans affects each of us directly. Here are his replies: … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Visit link:
Six Selfish Reasons You Don’t Want Dead Oceans

Danny Tickle signs new three-year contract with Hull

• 27-year-old had been linked with Huddersfield • Second-rower has scored 729 points in 99 appearances Hull’s goal-kicking forward Danny Tickle has ended speculation over his future by signing a new three-year contract. The 27-year-old former Halifax and Wigan second-rower was out of contract at the end of the season and, after stalling on his club’s offer, had been linked with a move to Huddersfield. “It is a decision I wanted to take some time over and it has been on my mind a lot recently,” said Tickle, who will make his 100th appearance for the club at Huddersfield on Sunday. “I had to consider what was best for me and my family. However, I made the decision easy for myself when I knew I wanted success because I feel that Hull is where I can achieve something. It is a club I love with some great people. The staff, the coaches and all the players are great and I have some really good friends here.” Tickle has scored 729 points in his 99 appearances so far and needs just 10 more to become the 14th highest scorer as well as the 12th highest goal scorer in the club’s history. Hull coach Richard Agar said: “I am delighted that we have secured the services of Danny on a longer-term deal. He plays a lot of games, a lot of minutes and is a top-line goalkicker for us and for those reasons he would be an integral part of any side.” Hull FC Super League Rugby league guardian.co.uk

See the rest here:
Danny Tickle signs new three-year contract with Hull

World Cup: The People v Barry Glendenning

Competition: Pit your wits against our betting “expert” throughout South Africa 2010

Go here to see the original:
World Cup: The People v Barry Glendenning

World Cup winner Nobby Stiles recuperating after ‘very minor’ stroke

• 1966 World Cup winner hospitalised last week • Former Manchester United star requires ‘a small operation’ Nobby Stiles MBE, a member of England’s victorious 1966 World Cup team, reassured fans about his health today after suffering a “very minor” stroke. The former footballer spent two days in hospital last week but has been recovering at home since the weekend, his agent Terry Baker said. Stiles, 68, who also won two league titles and a European Cup during an 11-year career with Manchester United, was hospitalised after a period of “disorientation” which has been diagnosed as a transient ischemic attack (TIA). Baker said: “The doctors have described it as a very minor stroke and nowhere near as serious as some strokes can be. When I spoke to him this morning he told me he had suffered a moment of disorientation. He joked that both of us have been having moments of disorientation for the last 30 years.” Baker said Stiles has seen a cardiovascular consultant and is expected to undergo surgery in the next few weeks. “There is going to be a small operation to put it right,” the agent added. “In the meantime, he’s at home and in good spirits. But he’s had to cancel a number of engagements for the time being.” Baker said Stiles would “definitely” be following England’s World Cup game against Algeria on the television tonight. England Manchester United guardian.co.uk

More here:
World Cup winner Nobby Stiles recuperating after ‘very minor’ stroke