Monday, February 28, 2011

AP IMPACT: Past medical testing on humans revealed - Yahoo! News

AP IMPACT: Past medical testing on humans revealed


ATLANTA – Shocking as it may seem, U.S. government doctors once thought it was fine to experiment on disabled people and prison inmates. Such experiments included giving hepatitis to mental patients in Connecticut, squirting a pandemic flu virus up the noses of prisoners in Maryland, and injecting cancer cells into chronically ill people at a New York hospital.

Much of this horrific history is 40 to 80 years old, but it is the backdrop for a meeting in Washington this week by a presidential bioethics commission. The meeting was triggered by the government's apology last fall for federal doctors infecting prisoners and mental patients in Guatemala with syphilis 65 years ago.

U.S. officials also acknowledged there had been dozens of similar experiments in the United States — studies that often involved making healthy people sick.

.... AP IMPACT: Past medical testing on humans revealed - Yahoo! News

Thursday, February 24, 2011

It's the Inequality, Stupid | Mother Jones

Numerous interesting graphs like this at Mother Jones:

Average Income by Family, distributed by income group.

It's the Inequality, Stupid | Mother Jones

Dimmable windows with solar panels could power zero-energy buildings

Dimmable windows with solar panels could power zero-energy buildings

News and Information 

Windows – typically a drain on a building’s energy consumption – are being re-imagined to help boost buildings’ energy efficiency. UW engineers and architects are collaborating on smart windows that can change transparency, depending on conditions, and actually harvest energy from the sun’s rays.

“Architects like color-changing windows such as the one developed at the UW because they don’t want to use mechanical blinds,” said principal investigator Minoru Taya, a UW professor of mechanical engineering. “Now we have developed a switchable dye that is not only blocking sunlight, but harvesting sunlight.”

The work is being funded through a $2 million grant from the National Science Foundation’s Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation branch, which funds interdisciplinary teams. The UW proposal was selected for last year’s competitive Science in Energy and Environmental Design program, aimed at engineering sustainable buildings.
The window includes a compound developed at the UW that can darken on command – either automatically in response to light levels, or as the user adjusts the settings. This project will add a compound that converts incoming solar energy to electricity, to be used immediately or stored in a lithium-ion battery in the window’s frame. The solar panel can even harvest energy from artificial lights, so at night it can absorb energy from the room’s lights.

.... http://www.washington.edu/news/articles/dimmable-windows-with-solar-panels-could-power-zero-energy-buildings

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

The Muzzle Man: Flea Market

I apologize for finding this funny

Increased U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan killing few high-value militants

Increased U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan killing few high-value militants

Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, February 21, 2011; 12:07 AM

CIA drone attacks in Pakistan killed at least 581 militants last year, according to independent estimates. The number of those militants noteworthy enough to appear on a U.S. list of most-wanted terrorists: two.

Despite a major escalation in the number of unmanned Predator strikes being carried out under the Obama administration, data from government and independent sources indicate that the number of high-ranking militants being killed as a result has either slipped or barely increased.

Even more generous counts - which indicate that the CIA killed as many as 13 "high-value targets" - suggest that the drone program is hitting senior operatives only a fraction of the time.

....Increased U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan killing few high-value militants

Friday, February 18, 2011

New Scientist TV: Friday Illusion: Escher's gravity-defying waterfall

New Scientist brings us Escher Waterfall



New Scientist TV: Friday Illusion: Escher's gravity-defying waterfall

Belgians celebrate 250 days without government - UPI.com

250 day without a government -- Belgians rejoice

UPI

Odd News

Published: Feb. 18, 2011 at 10:02 AM

BRUSSELS, Feb. 18 (UPI) -- Belgium has been without a government for 250 days -- breaking a modern-day record that was held by Iraq -- and some Belgians managed to joke about it.

Across the country, Belgians marked the event with mock celebrations toasting their non-government leaders who haven't been able to form a working coalition since elections in June, The Guardian reported Friday.

Iraq was without a government for months after its elections in March but leaders late last year reached consensus on coalition governance.

"Our politicians are heroes," joked Edmund Cocquyt in Flanders. "We're proud of this. Finally we can send out a positive message about Belgium -- my country is the world record-holder."



Belgium No. 1 in days without government - UPI.com

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Houston, we have a planet

Houston, we have a planet



When George W Bush became president, there were nine planets in the Solar System, but by the time he left there were only eight. Now it looks like we could be getting a ninth planet again:

Up telescope! Search begins for giant new planet - Science, News - The Independent

Monday, February 14, 2011

HorsesAss.Org » Blog Archive » A Drug War Tragedy in Snoqualmie

by Lee, 11/30/2010, 11:59 PM

On the morning of Saturday June 19, 2010, two Snoqualmie police officers showed up at the home of Jeff Roetter, a 33-year-old medical marijuana patient. The officers were expecting Roetter to help them in their attempts to prosecute a man who claims he was Roetter’s designated provider, a former Snoqualmie business owner named Bryan Gabriel. Instead, the police and Roetter’s housemate discovered him dead in his room. Roetter, an epileptic, had a violent seizure overnight, banged his head and died.

Even though the case involving Roetter and Gabriel had previously generated some local media attention, Roetter’s death went unreported. Roetter’s family and friends believe that the pressure being put on him by Snoqualmie Police led to his seizure and death, but their attempts to contact various media outlets led nowhere. Months later, they remain angry and frustrated about what happened to him, and they blame Snoqualmie Police.

....
HorsesAss.Org » Blog Archive » A Drug War Tragedy in Snoqualmie

Welfare State by Goldy - The Stranger

The Stranger

News

Welfare State -- Washington's Republican counties depend on Western Washington's money. How can they survive the state budget cuts they demand?


When our state's rural Republicans toss around pejoratives like "socialism," "redistribution of wealth," and "welfare state," they're usually hurling them at the People's Republic of Seattle and the Democratic legislators we send to Olympia. As a commenter on the Spokane Spokesman-Review's website recently carped: "Eastern Washington... has always been shorted/slighted where state expenditures are concerned! Nearly to the point that we don't exist!"

That's not an uncommon complaint. Republican lawmakers make a similar accusation, albeit more veiled, that the state is serving as an engine of wealth redistribution. However, the money is not exactly moving in the direction most Eastern Washingtonians suspect.

Indeed, if Washington is a welfare state, it is residents in these mostly rural, mostly Eastern, mostly Republican counties who are the biggest beneficiaries, while taxpayers here in the blue parts of the state are left footing the bill. And while your typical liberal Seattleite might be neither surprised nor disturbed at this revelation, the degree of the gap between who benefits from state government and who pays for it may come as a bit of a shock.

http://www.thestranger.com/binary/ea57/CityLead-CLICK.jpg
.... Welfare State by Goldy - News - The Stranger, Seattle's Only Newspaper

Thursday, February 10, 2011

U.S. Drought Portal

See drought conditions across the USA:

U.S. Drought Portal
US Drought Monitor, February 8, 2011

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

iWitness: Snow explodes off semi

I hate when that happens:
iWitness: Snow explodes off semi

Higher costs of more nutritious diets contribute to socio-economic disparities in health: UW research | University of Washington News and Information

Jan. 24, 2011 | Health and Medicine

Higher costs of more nutritious diets contribute to socio-economic disparities in health: UW research


Mary Guiden mguiden@u.washington.edu
Socio-economic disparities in diet patterns and nutrient intake are well documented in research. People with lower incomes and less education typically have less healthful eating habits than people with higher incomes and more education. But little is known about the extent to which those disparities are driven by higher monetary costs of nutritious foods.
Now, a new study from University of Washington researchers concludes, for the first time, that socio-economic disparities in diet quality are directly affected by diet costs. The study, "Are socio-economic disparities in diet quality explained by diet costs?" is published in advance online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.
UW researchers have previously found that better quality diets are more costly than less nutritious diets, and that there is a rising disparity in the price of healthful foods. "The twist with this new study is that we've connected the dots that could explain why people in a lower socio- economic status have less nutritious diets," said Pablo Monsivais, UW acting assistant professor of epidemiology.
Monsivais, with Program Manager Anju Aggarwal and UW Professor Adam Drewnowski, studied data of more than 1,300 men and women from the Seattle Obesity Study, a population-based study of food access, diet quality and health among King County, Wash. residents.
The researchers first looked at how diet cost was associated with educational attainment and household income, two indicators of socio-economic position. They used statistical methods to control for total calorie intake and other factors. The average diet cost was higher for people with higher educational attainment and higher household income. People with lower educational attainment had diet costs that were an average of $1.09 per day lower than that of persons in the highest group ($8.19 to $9.28 per day).
People with the highest educational attainment or income also enjoyed the most nutritious diets. Those in the highest income group reported diets that were on average 9.3 points higher in nutrient density than diets reported by the lowest income group (96.6 versus 87.3 percent), after controlling for dietary and demographic factors. However, after taking the cost of food into account, the difference in dietary nutrient density between the highest and lowest groups shrank to 1.4 percentage points (93.0 versus 91.6 percent). "These results tell us that cost is a major factor in explaining the differences in eating habits between people of lower and higher socioeconomic level" said Monsivais.
Monsivais said the Seattle study should be replicated on a wider, more diverse (in terms of education, income) section of Americans--or in another country. "What is the average person's concept of nutritious food, too?" Monsivais said. "We don't know that, and it might explain some amount of the variation we found."
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's NHANES (National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey) could also be tapped to further explore the socio-economic question, he said.
Study results provide fodder for new and different nutrition policy and interventions, which for the last several decades have been mostly premised on the idea that poor diets were due to a lack of nutrition knowledge or insufficient motivation for healthy eating. "The most universal policy change or intervention would be to rethink how we encourage the production of foods," said the researcher. "In this country, we have a very expensive agricultural subsidy program that targets a limited range of foods that are not part of a nutritious diet. We do not support fresh produce or seafood, but instead support the production of inexpensive sugars, fat and refined grains. We need to align public health priorities with agricultural policies because it affects the largest number of people."
In addition, Monsivais said states could be more creative with public school food programs and other nutrition efforts that impact low-income people. California has experimented with an electronic benefits transfer program (food stamps) that rewards people who buy fresh produce, which makes having a healthier diet easier and more affordable.
Food retailers and grocers could also help consumers make healthier choices, said Monsivais. When you swipe a "member" card at a local store, it could be used in a helpful and healthful way, offering up coupons for items that are nutrient-rich. "If we could overlay a health lens on top of the member cards and make recommendations that are aligned with the way consumers eat and incentives, we could make it interesting for people."



RELATED CONTENT FROM UWNEWS.ORG

Retail prices of healthy foods rising: UW study Aug. 2, 2010

Better diets more costly, enjoyed by the most educated May 1, 2009

MORE UWNEWS.ORG STORIES ABOUT PABLO MONSIVAIS (pm@u.washington.edu )
RSS news feed: uwnews.org news releases about Pablo Monsivais


Higher costs of more nutritious diets contribute to socio-economic disparities in health: UW research Jan. 24, 2011

Retail prices of healthy foods rising: UW study Aug. 2, 2010

Better diets more costly, enjoyed by the most educated May 1, 2009

MORE UWNEWS.ORG STORIES ABOUT ADAM DREWNOWSKI (
adamdrew@u.washington.edu )
RSS news feed: uwnews.org news releases about Adam Drewnowski


Higher costs of more nutritious diets contribute to socio-economic disparities in health: UW research Jan. 24, 2011

Retail prices of healthy foods rising: UW study Aug. 2, 2010

UW research helps consumers, policymakers identify and access healthy, affordable food May 24, 2010

Better diets more costly, enjoyed by the most educated May 1, 2009

Price of lower-calorie foods rising drastically, UW researchers find Dec. 4, 2007

ZIP codes and property values predict obesity rates Sept. 1, 2007

Study shows cane sugar, corn sweeteners have similar effects on appetite July 10, 2007



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uwnews.org | Higher costs of more nutritious diets contribute to socio-economic disparities in health: UW research | University of Washington News and Information

Forgiveness via iPhone: Church approves confession app

Forgiveness via iPhone: Church approves confession app

Niall Firth, technology editor

Even for the most ardent Catholic, it can sometimes be tricky making the time to confess your sins. So the Church, as part of a new technology-friendly push, has now approved an iPhone app that lets busy Catholics admit their wrongdoings while on the move.

Selling for $1.99, "Confession: A Roman Catholic App" was developed as an aid "for those who frequent the sacrament and those who wish to return," according to Little iApps, the firm behind the idea. Its makers insist it is not a replacement for confessing in person with a priest, but instead helps to keep track of all the evil things you have done since the last time you confessed by ticking off some of the most common failings. Deviants get the opportunity to add their own, bespoke, sins as they go.

The app offers a step-by-step guide to the different ways in which the user might have sinned and offers them seven acts of contrition - ways in which they can atone for their sins. The app was given the Church's official seal of approval, the imprimatur, by Bishop Kevin Rhoades of Fort Wayne-South Bend in Indiana.
....
One Per Cent: Forgiveness via iPhone: Church approves confession app

Monday, February 07, 2011

A world after Wikileaks -- Bill Thompson

A world after Wikileaks

Things will be different after Wikileaks, but not in ways we might expect, says regular commentator Bill Thompson.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange may not be Time Magazine Person of the Year for 2010 - that distinction has gone to Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg - but he has certainly managed to dominate the global conversation over the past few weeks.

...
Aaron Bady's compelling analysis of Assange's politics, as published on the zunguzungu blog.

Bady uses a close reading of an essay by Assange on State and Terrorist Conspiracies to argue that Assange sees modern governance as a conspiracy by those with power that goes against the interests and desires of the governed, and that Wikileaks exists in order to undermine the ability of governments to communicate secretly and diminish the power of authoritarian states.

... BBC News - A world after Wikileaks