May be Bankof America doesnot know how to cook books!they should learn from Goldman Sachs.
Story:
‘Bank of America, the largest US bank by deposits, on Friday said it had lost $1bn in the third quarter as weakened consumers continued to translate into credit losses.’
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/263220e0-ba43-11de-9dd7-00144feab49a.html
Tag: buzz yahoo
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Bank of America reports $1bn loss.
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Britain’s Terror Double Take
Double dealing is not new to Britain.Take any instance from monarchical days on its relations with the then Austrian Empire,Spain,France right upto relinquishing Palestine when the going was very hot to land Palestine and the world in a mess.
No surprises now on Britain taking a moralistic stand on war on terror by sending troops when every one knows it is a lost cause ,on the other ,planning to abstain from voting in UN on Gaza atrocities by Israel.
Truly,Democracy faithfully follows Monarchy.Keep it up.
Story.
‘British Prime Minister Gordon Brown this week made the politically hard call, no more than eight months before a national election, to send another contingent of 500 British troops to Afghanistan. Perhaps President Obama, playing Hamlet over whether to boost American forces, can take inspiration from Mr. Brown’s commitment. The British are concerned about American wavering and the mounting weeks of uncertainty, and they want to see Mr. Obama sign himself back up to his original Afghan war strategy.So it’s especially unfortunate to see Mr. Brown’s government take a different side in another front of this global war on terror. Today at the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva, the U.K. plans to abstain in a vote on a 575-page account of a “fact finding mission” into the January war in the Gaza Strip. Among Western allies, Britain will likely be alone in not trying to stop the so-called Goldstone report from reaching the Security Council, from where it could go on to the International Criminal Court.’
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704322004574475560854872736.html?mod=djemEditorialPage -
The Art of Defying Death.
‘On a misty spring night in 2005, I approached my apartment, on a tony block on the Upper West Side facing the Hudson. I felt relaxed and calm. Earlier that day I had attended a yoga workshop with a guru from India, then completed a writing assignment for a health and spirituality magazine about, as it happened, instinct — or antar-jñana, inner knowledge. I opened the outer door to my vestibule, then crossed through its inner door and into my lobby, leaving my back to the entrance. I got a prickly feeling, I don’t know why. I turned. There I saw, pushing open the inner door, an ink-black, gloved hand, exaggeratedly large, controlled and deliberate. It charged toward me. It was trailed by a body, the picture of death.’ NYT 14 Oct 2009
http://happydays.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/14/the-art-of-defying-death/#comment-23701Comment:
We do not think of Death normally as we are afraid to face its inevitability.Once we know that it is inevitable, our life, our ambitions and plans are fragile and shall end in a micro second ,we shall learn to be humble and more humane.We shall be thankful for what we have and not whine over what we imagine we do not have.
Purpose of Yoga is to possess equanimity both under pleasant and unpleasant circumstances,not conquering the fear of Death, for it is inevitable. -
Uganda MP urges death for gay sex .
“A Ugandan MP has proposed creating an offence of “aggravated homosexuality” to be punishable by death.
Ruling party MP David Bahati wants the death penalty for those having gay sex with disabled people, under-18s or when the accused is HIV-positive.
Homosexual acts are already illegal, but the Anti-Homosexuality Bill proposes new offences and urges the toughening of existing penalties.”
“Members of parliament are overwhelmingly supporting this bill because homosexuality is illegal “-John Otekat Emile
Independent MP-BBC 15 Oct 2009
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8308912.stm?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
Comment:
Totally inhuman.Homosexuals need understanding and medical and psychiatric help. -
Eating Meat May Cause Sickness, Paralysis and Death.
Published in AlertNet
By Tom Laskawy, Grist.org. Posted October 12, 2009.
http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/143136/warning:_eating_meat_may_cause_sickness,_paralysis_and_death/?page=entireThis year almost half a million pounds of E. coli infected beef have been recalled and sadly the government is far more concerned with protecting companies than public health.
It’s hard to draw any other conclusion from Michael Moss’s New York Times blockbuster investigative piece on E. coli in industrial beef, which is centered on the plight of Stephanie Smith, a young dance instructor left comatose, near death and now paralyzed from eating a single Cargill hamburger. Of course, a “single hamburger” can include meat from hundreds, some would say thousands, of animals. As Moss puts it:
Ground beef is usually not simply a chunk of meat run through a grinder. Instead, records and interviews show, a single portion of hamburger meat is often an amalgam of various grades of meat from different parts of cows and even from different slaughterhouses. These cuts of meat are particularly vulnerable to E. coli contamination, food experts and officials say. Despite this, there is no federal requirement for grinders to test their ingredients for the pathogen.
This is why a food safety expert who helped develop tracking systems for E. coli in meat can declare that, “Ground beef is not a completely safe product.” No kidding. The problem, however, is not with E. coli in general. The problem is that the particular strain of E. coli which infected Smith — known as E. coli O157:H7 — is virulent, deadly, persistent and endemic in industrial beef. How virulent, deadly and persistent? This much:
Food scientists have registered increasing concern about the virulence of this pathogen since only a few stray cells can make someone sick, and they warn that federal guidance to cook meat thoroughly and to wash up afterward is not sufficient. A test by The Times found that the safe handling instructions are not enough to prevent the bacteria from spreading in the kitchen.
In other words, if a piece of infected meat ends up in your kitchen, you are almost guaranteed exposure to it no matter how carefully you handle it. And how endemic? This year alone almost half a million pounds of E. coli infected ground beef have been recalled nationwide (and that doesn’t include the 800,000 pounds of Cargill beef recalled for contamination with antibiotic-resistant salmonella). Indeed, if Moss’s work proves anything, it’s that the safety systems in industrial beef processing are both barely functioning and almost fully opaque. And while the government is able to peek behind the curtain at these massive slaughterhouses and processing facilities, it seems far more concerned with protecting companies’ intellectual property than with the public health:
The meat industry treats much of its practices and the ingredients in ground beef as trade secrets. While the Department of Agriculture has inspectors posted in plants and has access to production records, it also guards those secrets. Federal records released by the department through the Freedom of Information Act blacked out details of Cargill’s grinding operation that could be learned only through copies of the documents obtained from other sources. Those documents illustrate the restrained approach to enforcement by a department whose missions include ensuring meat safety and promoting agriculture markets.
In one of the most chilling, and I thought devastating, quotes in the entire piece, a top official at the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service observed that his options were somewhat limited since he had to “look at the entire industry, not just what is best for public health.” Note the fact that his phrasing sets the meat industry’s needs at odds with ours — the two can’t be reconciled in his eyes. What does that say about the government’s ability to ensure a safe food supply? No matter how you structure it, the industry now appears too big and too powerful to be regulated. What other explanation is there for the fact that the top food safety job at the USDA remains unfilled if not regulatory paralysis — the meat industry seems to have veto power over its regulators and hasn’t found a federal overseer to its liking.
One area that Moss does not cover is how E. coli O157 got into industrial beef in the first place. In fact it’s there because of the meat industry’s insistence on feeding cows corn — something they cannot easily digest — instead of grass. Among other things, corn feeding requires cows to be fed a steady dose of antibiotics, which has led to the rise of antibiotic resistance among various pathogens. But more importantly, it has caused very real changes in the cow’s gut which has allowed this toxic strain of E. coli to take hold, a strain that research suggests cannot survive in the gut of cows that eat only grass.
In short, E. coli didn’t just “happen” to the meat industry — it’s a consequence of industrial practices. But nowhere in the article (or in the halls of the USDA or the largescale beef producers for that matter) is the possibility of moving away from this corn-based system raised as a solution for the industrial system. Surprisingly, the article includes virtually no proposed solutions for this crisis — just vague assurances that the USDA isn’t “standing still” on the issue. In reality, the industry focuses exclusively on “managing” the ongoing presence of E. coli O157 though the development of an E. coli vaccine for cows, and irradiation or chemical washes for the meat. All of which are attempts to mask the risks of a failed system and represent an institutionalizing of the underlying failures. And none of which make me ever want to touch industrial meat again.
Indeed, if there ever was a powerful argument for eating only grass-fed beef from small producers, this article is it. The only conclusion worth drawing from this expose is that industrial ground beef simply isn’t worth the risk. And without wholesale industry and regulatory reform — neither of which appears likely or even possible, it may never be.
Comment:
When one eats nen vegetarian food,the animal proteins are converted into vegetable proteins and only then is ingested by human system.Why then go for non veg. food?Remember, animal’s meat ,which we eat, gain their nourishment from vegetables and grass.
Why don’t we go to the source as animals do?
Also meat has a chance of being infected as is evidenced in this case.
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