Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Tell USDA to Reject the GE Apple!

Organic Connections



Tell USDA to Reject this GE Apple! Comments are due December 9th, so please sign the petition today.

Tell USDA to Reject the GE Apple!

via Center for Food Safety
After decades of promises from the biotech industry that genetically engineered (GE) food would feed the world, cure the sick, reduce agricultural dependence on toxic chemicals, and save countless crops from imminent collapse, industry is poised to finally release a product they think will solve a problem humans have struggled with for centuries… an apple that doesn’t brown when you slice it… Seriously; we couldn’t make this stuff up.
A public comment period on the GE apple is open through December 9th.
GE apples are being touted as the best thing since…well, since sliced apples. In our homes, we just add a little lemon juice. Gosh! We have been living in the Stone Age!
While these GE apples are a waste of time and money, we don’t want to downplay the real concerns about them. Pre-sliced apples are actually a frequently recalled food product. Once the whole fruit is sliced, it has an increased risk of exposure to pathogens. Since browning is a sign that apples are no longer fresh, “masking” this natural signal could lead people to consume contaminated apples, which is why some folks are calling it the “botox apple.”

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Monday, November 25, 2013

"Origins of Disease : Depression - Legacy of the Survival Instinct"

NHK Documentary: "Origins of Disease Episode 3: Depression - Legacy of the Survival Instinct"-

MissingSky101 MissingSky101


   



Published on Nov 17, 2013
Depression causes people to feel sad or down for a long period of time. More than 350 million people suffer from this disease worldwide. Depression was once considered an illness of the mind. But doctors have found physical abnormalities in the brains of people being treated for depression. Now scientists are coming up with a range of treatments, including one that directly controls brain function. How can we overcome depression? We'll look into the origins of this all-too-common disease.

I apologize for the poor quality of the video. The problem is a broadcast issue.

Thank you to the special person who requested this upload :)



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The Origins of Disease : Heart Disease

NHK Documentary: The Origins of Disease Episode 4: Heart Disease

MissingSky101 MissingSky101


 


Published on Nov 24, 2013
Pitfalls of State-of-the-Art Pump -
Every year, over 7 million people die from heart disease worldwide. It's the number-one cause of death for human beings. Human ancestors gained a high-performance heart. But as they evolved, they put a bigger burden on the organ, forcing themselves to live with a higher risk of disease. Heart disease is an evolutionary fate for humans. We'll look at its origins and recent research that aims to find a cure.



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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

How About Some Carbon Monoxide in Your Meat?

TRUTHstreammedia TRUTHstreammedia


   



Published on Nov 19, 2013
(Truthstream Media) On top of all the other troubling ingredients found in foods and/or used in its production and cultivation, there is apparently also carbon monoxide to be concerned about. Apparently the FDA -- our loving watchdogs -- have ok'd its use as a color preservative in meats, as it apparently helps keep us appearances for as much as 20 days. The carbon monoxide (known for its deadly tail pipe exhaust and as a carcinogen in cigarette smoke) is used to give fish and meat a fresh "red" look to appeal to buyers. However, some have warned this can also give spoiled or less-than-fresh foods the same glossy red-appearance -- that is, until consumers come home to a rotten surprise.
Consumer groups and a natural flavor, color and extract company named Kalsec have challenged the use of carbon monoxide, arguing that while it can keep meat appealing for nearly three weeks while unwrapped meat is remains attractive for only a few, it poses a problem, claiming that consumers might be 'fooled into buying spoiled or old meat.'
"The gas not only keeps meat red while on the shelf but after it's spoiled."
http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/money/...
http://www.examiner.com/article/fda-a...

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A small company in Kalamazoo, Mich., has the meat industry on the run over how the meat you buy is packaged.

Jim Rekas looks over meat selections at a Giant store in Herndon, Va. The grocery chain has dropped carbon monoxide-infused packaging.Enlarge image EnlargeBy Tim Loehrke, USA TODAYJim Rekas looks over meat selections at a Giant store in Herndon, Va. The grocery chain has dropped carbon monoxide-infused packaging.


Rep. John Dingell
USA TODAY file 
Kalsec has waged a two-year fight and spent $800,000 to battle food regulators and meat producers over a fledgling practice of packaging fresh meat with a harmless dose of carbon monoxide.
The gas keeps meat an appealing red for more than 20 days — about twice as long as other popular packaging and far longer than the few days unwrapped meat stays red in a butcher's case.
The red color is the problem, say Kalsec, consumer groups and several lawmakers. The gas not only keeps meat red while on the shelf but after it's spoiled.
They say consumers — who consider color when picking meat — will be fooled into buying spoiled or old meat and not smell trouble until they open the package at home.
The packaging presents "serious consumer deception and food-safety risks," Kalsec says in a filing to the Food and Drug Administration. It wants the practice banned.
The meat industry disputes Kalsec's claims and says it is running a "baseless" scare campaign because carbon monoxide packaging would obliterate a rival Kalsec product.
A family-run firm with 300 employees, Kalsec sells natural colorings, spices and herbs. One of its products is a rosemary extract that meat processors use in packaging that keeps meat a nice red for about half as long as the carbon monoxide-infused packaging.
When Kalsec saw major meat companies switch to carbon monoxide, "It started an attack campaign," says Janet Riley of the American Meat Institute, who says Kalsec's "arguments are hollow."
The meat industry says shoppers are tipped off to bad meat by bulging packages in stores and expired use-or-freeze-by dates. By keeping meat fresh-looking longer, the industry hopes to save millions of dollars a year by selling meat that consumers would have shunned before because of poor color.
Carbon monoxide packaging is "not a public health issue," says Michael Osterholm, a public health official at the University of Minnesota who often criticizes foodmakers for poor food-safety controls.
Osterholm, who also consults for food companies Fresh Express and Hormel Foods, says he's never heard of a food-borne illness outbreak tied to spoiled meat, in part because bacteria such as E. coli don't thrive in spoiled meat because spoilage bacteria out-compete them for nutrients. "There are huge issues in food safety right now, and this isn't one of them."
Yet the issue is playing big on Capitol Hill. Two Democrats from Kalsec's home state, Reps. John Dingell and Bart Stupak, have taken up the matter as part of a wide-ranging assault on the government's food-safety record.
Their committee, the Energy and Commerce Committee, has not only held two food-safety hearings this year in which the issue was discussed, but they've also sent letters to meat companies and grocers challenging the use of carbon monoxide packaging. Almost one by one, the letter-getters have folded.
Pages of questions
In June, the legislators wrote Safeway (SWY), noting that the company, "unlike most other supermarket chains," sold fresh meat packaged in a way to "alter the color of the meat to make it appear fresh and wholesome indefinitely."
The letter then posed pages of questions for Safeway, including how it "assures that consumers, particularly those of declining eyesight, can read the use-or-freeze-by dates on packages."
In its response a month later, Safeway said it would drop the packaging, explaining the committee's concerns may have "raised concerns with customers who do not have the benefit of the background on this process."
Tyson Foods (TSN) in August curtailed use of the packaging after it, too, got a letter. Tyson cited "lack of customer demand."
Giant Food, a Maryland-based chain, dropped it this month. It said, "Some customers found the retention of the red color … to be confusing." Kroger and Publix have also shunned the packaging.
But Hormel (HRL), one of the technology's biggest backers along with foodmaker Cargill, says it's put out 120 million packages of product using carbon monoxide and has a consumer complaint ratio that rivals "the Maytag repairman," Hormel Vice President Phil Minerich said Tuesday in a hearing before the House Committee on Agriculture.




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Examiner.com

Christy Maloney
The FDA says it is ok if US citizens ingest carbon monoxide.
Healthy eating is a loosely defined trend in itself these days. There are many variations on what “healthy” means and will likely differ among each person asked. While strolling through the supermarket, the average person would likely agree that, yes, eating a nice piece of baked tilapia with vegetables would be a healthy meal.
Until a person actually scans the ingredients list of anything, they never know exactly what they will be ingesting. Imagine the surprise when, on that nice, fresh-appearing tilapia, it is discovered that carbon monoxide is the ingredient that helps to “preserve color.”
Say what? People install carbon monoxide detectors in their homes to prevent sudden death from the colorless, odorless, tasteless gas. Carbon monoxide is emitted primarily through things such as automobiles and factories and generally poses little immediate threat when released in an open space.


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Monday, November 11, 2013

NHK Documentary: "Healing Children through Art"

MissingSky101 MissingSky101


 



Published on Nov 11, 2013
Note:
This video does not pertain to any radiation issues from the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant meltdown. "Healing Children through Art" is a message of hope, support, encouragement and love for the children living in the disaster stricken area of Tohoku.
Healing Children through Art
Ms. Harumi Torii, Founder of Kids Earth Fund, believes in the healing power of creative activities. She holds variety of events to help children in the disaster area to freely express their feelings through painting. One day she shows some children a big canvas and encourages them to complete a painting of artistic messages from children around the world. This is a story of how traumatized children reacted and were comforted through heart to heart exchanges with the world.
Kids Earth Fund
Sadly, even in affluent countries such as Japan there are many children who suffer emotional problems as a result of the damaging influence they have received growing up in a materialistic society. In Japan, KIDS EARTH FUND hosts projects and workshops that are designed to help these children. Professional artist, specialist and musician volunteers design programs that foster children's imagination and help build their self-esteem and interest in helping others. 1000 children have participated in these Japan-based events.
http://www.kidsearthfund.jp/en/injapa...
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Bagged salads suspected in multistate E coli outbreak

King 5 .com

Trader Joe's, Walgreens, Whole Foods named in E.Coli recall


by Associated Press
Posted on November 11, 2013 at 9:10 AM

RICHMOND, Calif. -- More than 90 tons of ready-to-eat salads and sandwiches by a California catering company are being recalled after 26 people in three states were sickened by a bacterial strain of E. coli linked to its products, federal health officials said Sunday.
Richmond-based Glass Onion Catering are recalling approximately 181,620 pounds of salads and sandwich wraps containing cooked chicken and ham, the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service said.
The recall lists Walgreens, Trader Joe's and Whole Foods as companies that received the items.
Check list for UPC numbers.
The products were produced between Sept. 23 and Nov. 6, and were shipped to distribution centers in California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Texas. The Contra Costa Times reports the company supplies food to Trader Joe's, Super Fresh Goods and Delish.
Products regulated by FSIS bear the establishment number "P-34221" inside the USDA mark of inspection. FSIS products subject to recall include:
- 12 oz. packages of "delish pan pacific chop salad"
- 13.4 oz. packages of "delish California style grilled chicken salad"
- 9.9 oz. packages of "delish uncured applewood smoked ham & cheese wrap"
- 10.5 oz. packages of "delish grilled chicken caesar wrap"
- 10.9 oz. packages of "delish southwestern chicken wrap"

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Bagged salads suspected in multistate E coli outbreak

Lisa Schnirring | Staff Writer | CIDRAP News
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Nov 11, 2013
Federal and state health officials are investigating a multistate Escherichia coli O157:H7 outbreak linked to prepackaged salads made by a California firm and sold in some western-state Trader Joe's stores that has so far sickened 26 people in three states.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said yesterday that public health investigators are using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and data from PulseNet, a national subtyping network to detect other infections that may be part of the outbreak. The CDC said the outbreak strain's PFGE pattern has never been seen before in PulseNet.
In addition to the CDC, groups investigating the outbreak include the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), and health officials from three states reporting cases so far: California, Arizona, and Washington. So far most of the cases have been reported from California (22), with Washington reporting 3 and Arizona reporting 1.
The USDA said it started monitoring a cluster of E coli O157:H7 illnesses on Oct 29, then was notified by the FDA on Nov 6 that California health officials had reported patients who got sick after eating prepackaged salads that contained grilled chicken.
So far the investigation points to two ready-to-eat salads produced by Glass Onion Catering, based in Richmond, Calif., and sold at Trader Joe's stores as one likely source of the outbreak. More efforts are under way to determine the source of the contamination and flag other tainted products that are still in the marketplace.
Yesterday the company recalled 181,620 pounds of ready-to-eat salads and sandwich wrap products with fully-cooked chicken and ham that may be contaminated, according to a notice posted by the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS). The products also include food regulated by the FDA, which posted a list of recalled products and other information on the outbreak.
FSIS-regulated products include 15 different kinds of grilled chicken salads, grilled chicken wraps, plus one type of ham-and-cheese wrap. The items were produced between Sep 23 and Nov 6 and were shipped to distribution centers for retail sale in eight western states: Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas, Utah, and Washington.

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