Tuesday, May 11, 2010

There’s 16 faces in this picture – how many can you find?

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Oil companies pass the buck for big spill as the lawsuits pour in

Image: Lamar McKay, Chairman and President of BP America, waits to testify

At Senate hearing, lawmaker predicts 'liability chase' among companies

As BP critics stand up behind him, Lamar McKay, chairman and president of BP America, waits to testify Tuesday before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee in Washington.

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As oil gushes out, damage claims pour in…

Fisherman, hotel operators and others likely to seek compensation

Image: Sign forĀ "Oil Spill Law Group" in Bayou LaBatre, Ala.

A new sign advertises the "Oil Spill Law Group" in Bayou LaBatre, Alabama. A BP lobbyist says the company has already paid $3.5 million in damages.

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Long-suffering tribe fears oil may strike final blow

The native Houma people, who have long relied on fishing and trapping in the marshlands of Louisiana, have been through a lot as a tribe.

They have been robbed of their lands, subjected to segregation, witnessed the steady erosion of marshlands and been displaced by hurricanes. Now, some fear the oil slick that threatens to invade the bayou could be the final blow to their culture and traditions.

Antoine Dardar

Antoine "Whitney" Dardar (right), a Houma tribal elder, has been fishing and trapping in the bayou near Golden Meadow, La., for his whole life.

 

Monday, May 10, 2010

Coming Soon: As It Stands will review a new book to be released in June - ‘Denial: A Memoir of Terror’

Denial: A Memoir of Terror

Every now and then someone asks me to read their book and to do a review on it. I’m not really sure why I’m picked for this honor, but it’s happened several times in the last 18 months.

I’m certainly not a respected book critic, nor do I ever expect to be one. I do love reading and there’s very little I won’t read. My curious mind is constantly on the prowl. Research is a joy I lavish upon myself.

Karen Louie-Joyce, the web manager for Jessica Stern, a world-class social scientist, Harvard lecturer, and one of the foremost U.S. experts on terrorism and post-traumatic stress disorder, contacted me with a request to review Stern’s new book.

In her new book DENIAL: A Memoir of Terror, Jessica investigates her own unsolved adolescent sexual assault at the hands of a serial rapist, and, in so doing, examines the horrors of trauma and denial.

The book is in the mail,thanks to Karen, and I should have it by the end of the week. I’m not sure how long it is, so I won’t make any predictions on when the review will appear. But fear not readers, I will do my best. As some of you may know, trauma is a subject near to me as I’m a Vietnam veteran with service-connected PTSD.

More toxic jewelry for kids recalled – guess where it’s from?

Cadmium: Walmart, Claire's pull children's jewelry from shelves

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We can thank China once more for sending us toxic products. If it isn’t kids toys it’s drywall!

Claire's bracelets have high levels of harmful cadmium

Also:

Cadmium: Walmart, Claire's pull children's jewelry from shelves

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Reefer madness: The race to save corals

Introduction

Coastal development and overfishing contribute to decline

Climate change, coastal development and overfishing have effectively wiped out nearly a fifth of the world's coral reefs, and by the end of this century they "are unlikely to look much like the reefs that we are familiar with today," said Peter Mumby, a marine biologist at the University of Queensland in Australia, who envisions smaller and weaker reefs that harbor fewer fish.

"But there will still be reefs and they will still be very important," he said. "And so what we really have to do is take all the steps we can locally to preserve reefs for future generations, including Australia's Great Barrier Reef, shown here.

Click here to see 7 ways you can help locally.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

As It Stands: Oil politics legacy: Destroying gulf coast ecosystem since 1950s

oil_spill_on_fire

By Dave Stancliff/For the Times-Standard

Posted: 05/09/2010 01:30:19 AM PDT

The Deepwater Horizon oil spill may signal the final battle in a war on the fragile ecosystems of the coastal states that was launched decades ago by Big Oil.

Oil companies steadily destroyed the Gulf Coast's ecosystems since the 1950s, when they carved canals through the marsh to make way for drilling rigs and pipelines, according to John Lopez, director of sustainability at the Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation.

No one knows exactly how much oil is escaping (estimates keep going up). Last week President Obama said, “We're dealing with a massive and potentially unprecedented environmental disaster.” Environmentally, the spill couldn't have happened at a better time to cause maximum damage to wildlife and the fishing industry.

As if that damage isn't bad enough, even the coastal land is threatened, as the dwindling marsh grasses will be killed by the oil. “The result,” said Michael Parr, vice president of the American Bird Conservancy “could mean the elimination of a natural barrier that keeps Louisiana's coastline from eroding.”

Go here to read the rest.

Related stories: Federal regulators haven’t kept up up with oil drilling expansion

               Try to divert Gulf oil aborted; tar blobs hit Ala.

                   Photos from the Deepwater Horizon oil leak in the gulf

UPDATE:

Blogs/web sites that have picked up today’s column: (as of 10:16 a.m. PST) 

Politics Today 

ALL Voices   

Political Wind                                     

Examiner.com Eureka

Google News

Oil Online

Caring for Environment

My Blue Planet

Waterintel.com

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Legalize pot? Get mom onboard

Image: Crystal Guess

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Crystal Guess talks during a news conference to launch the Women's Marijuana Movement in the State Capitol in Denver on Thursday.

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Activists target women in push to legalize marijuana

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She founded, and fought, Mother's Day

Anna Jarvis

Anna Jarvis' life was consumed by the holiday she started

She started Mother’s Day then spent the rest of her life fighting the holiday’s commercial and political exploitation of it.

Mother’s Day or Mothers’ Day?

Photograph of Anna M. Jarvis, founder of Mother’s Day, taken in Westchester, Pennsylvania, in 1907.

When her mother died on May 23, 1905, Miss Jarvis worked untiringly to have the second Sunday in May set aside each year as a day of honor to the mothers of the nation.
© Bettmann/CORBIS

This airy illusion leaves you looking for the birds

FIND THE EAGLES – There’s SEVEN of them in this image…

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

Image source

Should women live in fear of male athletes?

Image: Ben Roethlisberger

Recent incidents show the ‘culture’ of sports has taken a terrible turn

Excerpt:

Is there something in our sports culture that condones the demeaning treatment of women by athletes, like the alleged acts of Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (photo on left)?

 

Friday, May 7, 2010

Cosmologist outlines three concepts for time travel

Image: Discovery

The laws of physics actually accommodate the notion of time travel, through portals known as wormholes.

In an article in the Daily Mail this week, British cosmologist Stephen Hawking outlined not one, but three, theoretically realistic ideas for traveling through time one of which he says is even practical.

Blog Break Until Presidential Election is Over

I finally hit the wall today. I can't think of what to say about all of the madness going on in this country right now. I'm a writer...