Friday, December 29, 2017
Corporate Child Abuse: The Unseen Global Epidemic
today children may be assaulted, diseased, or killed by pervasive corporate drugs, junk-foods and beverages, perverted by mindless violence in multiple modes, deployed as dead-end labour with no benefits, and then dumped into a corporate future of debt enslavement and meaningless work. How could this increasing systematic abuse be publicly licensed at every level? What kind of society could turn a blind eye to its dominant institutions laying waste the lives of the young and humanity’s future itself?
Bakan’s classic film and book,The Corporation has revealed step by step the “corporation as psychopath”.
Bakan reports copious findings on Big Pharma buying doctors with favours, planting articles in name journals, inventing child illnesses to prescribe medications to, and drugging the young from infancy on with the unsafe substances they push (pp. 65-114). Along with the corporate invasion of children’s healthcare goes the invasion of public education (pp. 139-71, 245-56). Administrators with now corporate executive salaries for no educational function collaborate with the agenda, and mechanical testing devices closed to independent academic examination are the Trojan horse for a mass lock-step of miseducation (pp. 140-62). Bakan is aware that the whole trend of corporatization of the classroom and educational institutions “undermines the role of education in promoting critical thought and intelligent reflection” (p. 47). Indeed it wars against them in principle. For reasoning and critical research require learners to address problems independently of corporate profits and to penetrate behind market-conditioned beliefs. Big-business demands the opposite. It maximizes money returns as its first and final principle of thought and judgement, and selects against any truth or knowledge conflicting with this goal.
Corporate child abuse, in short, far surpasses all other forms of child abuse put together. But in a world where both parents are at work to survive and big money always wins elections, the life interests of children are bullied out of view. “Corporations [are] large, powerful and dominating institutions”, Bakan summarizes, “deliberately programmed to exploit and neglect others in pursuit of wealth for themselves” (p. 175).
So what is the resolution? Bakan emphasizes the pre-cautionary principle and laws against clear harms to the young. He emphasizes “values” and “teaching what is good for them and what is not” (pp. 49-50). Yet we have no principled criterion of either. They are self-evident once seen. The good for children is whatever enables life capacities to coherently grow, and the bad is whatever disables them. Corporate dominion goes the opposite direction. Thus unfitness, obesity, depression, egoic fantasies, aggressive violence, and aimlessness increase the more its profitable child abuse runs out of control. This is the heart of our disorder. Public regulation of corporations by tested life-capacity standards is the solution.
Tuesday, December 26, 2017
Dirt Poor: Fruits and Vegetables are Less Nutritious
A landmark study on the topic by Donald Davis and his team of researchers from the University of Texas (UT) at Austin’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry was published in December 2004 in the Journal of the American College of Nutrition. They studied U.S. Department of Agriculture nutritional data from both 1950 and 1999 for 43 different vegetables and fruits, finding “reliable declines” in the amount of protein, calcium, phosphorus, iron, riboflavin (vitamin B2) and vitamin C over the past half century. Davis and his colleagues chalk up this declining nutritional content to the preponderance of agricultural practices designed to improve traits (size, growth rate, pest resistance) other than nutrition.
Recent studies of historical nutrient content data for fruits and vegetables spanning 50 to 70 years show apparent median declines of 5% to 40% or more in minerals, vitamins, and protein in groups of foods, especially in vegetables
Acknowledging assessment difficulties, since the 1850s, wheats have declined in Mg concentration 7–29 %; USA and English vegetables’ Mg declined 15–23 %, 1930s to 1980s. The nadir of USA food Mg supply in 1968 coincides with the USA peak in CVD mortality. As humans transition from “traditional” to modern processed food diets, Mg intake declines.
Monday, December 4, 2017
The haves and have-nots: four cities in crisis | Cities | The Guardian
About | Rebuild By Design
Resilient by Design | Bay Area Challenge is a collaborative research and design project that brings together local residents, public officials and local, national and international experts to develop innovative solutions to the issues brought on by climate change that the Bay Area region faces today.
Design Teams have spent the last two months touring communities around San Francisco Bay, learning about challenges the communities are facing related to severe storms, flooding and sea level rise, layered on the broader challenges around infrastructure, affordability and inequity throughout the Bay Area. On November 15th, the Design Teams publicly presented 3-5 Design Opportunities, and following the event these design opportunities were posted for public input and review until December 1st on their website.
Thursday, November 23, 2017
THE POWER OF C40 CITIES
About City Diplomacy
In the lead up to a series of important international events culminating in COP 21 (Paris, December 2015), C40 developed a City Diplomacy Strategy as a mechanism to further accelerate city action and support efforts to better link these to national ambitions.
The key goals of C40’s city diplomacy strategy are to:
- Demonstrate How Cities Are Leading the Way
- Catalyze Action and Secure Resources for C40 Cities
- Have a Positive Impact on an Inter-Governmental Agreement to Tackle Climate Change
The Compact of Mayors is the world’s largest cooperative effort among mayors and city officials to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and climate risks in cities.
By establishing a common platform to capture the impact of cities’ collective actions through standardized measurement of emissions and climate risk, and consistent, public reporting of their efforts, it provides hard evidence that cities are true climate leaders, and that local action can have a significant global impact.
On 22 June 2016, the Compact of Mayors and the Covenant of Mayors announced the new Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy, a newly merged initiative to bring these two efforts together. See C40 blog for more details of the announcement.
To be fully compliant with the Compact of Mayors, cities commit to taking action in three phases, with requirements covering both climate mitigation and adaptation. The status of each committed C40 city can be explored in the dashboard below, along with all city-reported data. More details on the requirements can be found here.
Partners to the Compact of Mayors include C40, ICLEI, UCLG and UN Habitat. CDP is the reporting partner for C40 cities.
Requirements
Learn More
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Olives - Gardening Solutions - University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
Several other Florida plants are commonly called "olive," so be sure you're purchasing a European olive tree if you intend to grow an edible fruit.
While olives have been grown in Florida for years on a small scale, they are a relatively new commercial crop here, so there is still much to be learned about the cultural requirements for keeping healthy and productive trees. Researchers have been testing olive trees as far south as Orlando. Growers further south will have to decide whether it's worth the chance or wait for more research to be done to see just how far south these trees will grow and thrive.
Floral development (and thus, fruit production) in the olive can be quite complex. Planting more than one cultivar close together may increase fruit set. If you want to jump in and give it a try, the cultivar 'Arbequina' from Spain has been the most popular in Florida. It is a self-pollinator, meaning it can use its own pollin to fertilize and produce fruit, but having other cultivars nearby seems to help. 'Koroneiki' and 'Arbosona' are often planted to support pollination of 'Arbequina'. 'Mission', the common black "table olive" (for eating as opposed to those better for oil), is another cultivar that is self-fertile and may do well in a Florida landscape.
BUY AN OLIVE TREE
BUY AN OLIVE TREE
Friday, October 13, 2017
Patent US20070170306 - Unity method - Google Patents
Like, Suzanne said how the PTSD was so apparent, with the Irma Hurricane passing by so close!
So I graduated again and so my Son said how I've done this before. He told me how I've written a journal since high school, so each degree/transition was written up. Discussions on what was attempted, and what was completed, and what was next. . . . Like My first Handyman business in NJ, lasted two months before my Dad hired me to clean out his Garage so he could move to Tampa!
Funny, last week my Dad hired me as a Handyman, again!
I wonder if I'll be cleaning out the garage again! Course back then, he offered me "room and board" but then included a vacation to Tampa where he had moved dellem associate inc. . . wanting me to go to college. . . hum, http://www.dellem.com/ . . . lol. . . wow scobey still has it up there. .
YES JOURNALS, lol, since 1980 when . . . dellem started, and i died. . . what a trip is that! And back then, I journalled a ton before my first degree. . . as I came to Tampa for College because I wanted KIDS, and could not raise a child the WAY I wanted as a Handyman. I needed a professional degree, so I could work from home like at dellem, and spend all my time with my kids.
Obviously, I wrote a lot after that first degree. . . Finished it and got married ASAP! But what about all the others? Heck my last degree was 5 months ago now, . . . And again I learned a TON from my kids, as I wrote up for my teaching portfolio. Like my Son's first question to me was about E=mc2. . . Explain that!
c) The mathematical and physical conception of the integration of Einstein's Equation is considered, whereby the uniform distribution of matter and energy transformations are recognized as universal and continuous throughout space and time is envisioned.
Thursday, October 5, 2017
Agile Open Florida: October 6, 2017 | Lakeland, Florida
Agilists from across the state of Florida and beyond for Agile Open Florida 2017 in Orlando, Florida in October. Our theme this year is … Beyond Agile
Agile Open Florida will be facilitated using the Open Space Technology (OST) format, with the ultimate goal being to connect, learn, and share. Using the Open Space Technology (OST) approach, the Agile Open Florida encourages agile practitioners from around the state of Florida to self-organize around topics that are most important to them. In this framework, participants with common issues and interests share their experiences and learn from others. There is no preset agenda for the event, rather, sessions are created “live” by the participants at the start of the day. In order to get the most out of this event, please come prepared with topics that are of interest to you, either to learn more about or to share your experiences
Wednesday, October 4, 2017
The Huffington Post: Biohacking the Organization - The Bumble Bee
An excellent article on Bioteams by Doug Kirkpatrick, US Partner at NuFocus Strategic Group concludes: "The power and elegance of bioteaming is indisputable. Whether organizational leaders will detach themselves from the perceived security blanket of traditional, artificial hierarchy in order to fully experience that power is another question entirely?"

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/great-work-cultures/biohacking-the-organizati_b_11080022.html
Monday, October 2, 2017
learning gardens
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Friday, June 16, 2017
Projects: Cities, scaling, & sustainability | Santa Fe Institute
We are seeking a quantitative understanding of the organizational and dynamical aspects of human social organization and urbanization.
SFI's Cities, scaling, and sustainability research is creating an interdisciplinary approach and quantitative synthesis of organizational and dynamical aspects of human social organizations, with an emphasis on cities.
Different disciplinary perspectives are being integrated in terms of the search for similar dependences of urban indicators on population size - scaling analysis - and other variables that characterize the system as a whole.
An important focus of this research area is to develop theoretical insights about cities that can inform quantitative analyses of their long-term sustainability in terms of the interplay between innovation, resource appropriation, and consumption and the make up of their social and economic activity.
This focus area brings together urban planners, economists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists, and complex system theorists with the aim of generating an integrated and quantitative understanding of cities. Outstanding areas of research include the identification of general scaling patterns in urban infrastructure and dynamics around the world, the quantification of resource distribution networks in cities and their interplay with the city's socioeconomic fabric, issues of temporal acceleration and spatial density, and the long-term dynamics of urban systems.
Lead Investigators
Geoffrey West, Distinguished Professor and Past President, Science Board, Science Steering Committee
Luis Bettencourt, Professor
His research interests also include the modeling of innovation and sustainability in developing human societies, the dynamics of infectious diseases and aspects of general information processing in complex systems. He is particularly interested in the interplay between information, structure and scale in setting the properties of diverse complex systems.
Wednesday, June 14, 2017
Distilling Essential Oils - An Art and a Science?
- Water Distillation;
- Water/Steam Distillation; and
- Straight Steam.
The Methods of Extracting
Essential Oils are Still Being Proven!
- Enfleurage
- Expressed Oils
- Steam Distillation
- Solvent Extraction
- Fractional Distillation and Percolation
- Carbon Dioxide Extraction
- Phytonic Process
How Are Essential Oils Extracted?
The Practice of Distillation

Tuesday, May 9, 2017
Fwd: What's new in The Water Network | by AquaSPE
Sent from my iPhone :-)
Begin forwarded message:
From: Meg Whitmer <meg@megwhitmer.com>
Date: May 9, 2017 at 1:46:55 PM EDT
To: Eric Weaver PhD <stars2man@icloud.com>, Maria Sgambati <sgambati2012@gmail.com>
Subject: Fwd: What's new in The Water Network | by AquaSPE
Eric - FYI, see below.Are you on this Water Network?Meg Whitmer
Meg Whitmer Landscape Architect LLC
Florida Lic #LA1038
772.708.7056
meg@megwhitmer.com
Coastal Landscapes and Living Shorelines
Landscape Design and Management
Public Parks and Gardens
"Let the beauty we love be what we do. There are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground"
RumiBegin forwarded message:From: The Water Network | by AquaSPE <no-reply@thewaternetwork.com>Subject: What's new in The Water Network | by AquaSPEDate: May 8, 2017 at 8:09:32 PM EDT
Daily updates from The Water Network | by AquaSPE
Questions (1)
Temple Oraeki May 8, 2017 09:48 Biodigester in Households for Sludge Treatment
How can a biodigester be successfully implemented in a household to generate energy and treat faecal sludge? Which type of biodigester is the most convenient for ...
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Karen Delfau May 8, 2017 07:47 Best practices for cost recovery in implement water management frameworks in international development / developing countries. In a recent Kini interview with Peter Sharry of Axiom Water Technologie...
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Prof. Dr. Hilmi S. Salem May 8, 2017 19:40 Abstracts: International Conference on Climate Change, Biodiversity and Food Security in the South Asian Region. Punjab State Council for Science & Technology, Dept. of Science, Technology & Environm...
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Articles (3)
Vishakha Rajput May 8, 2017 08:39 Why Modernize Water Data Management?
A new guide "5 Reasons to Modernize Water Data Management" written for government decision makers with oversight for water resource monitoring by Aquatic Informatics. This new guide descr...
Water Network Research May 8, 2017 11:36 Emefcy and RWL Water Merge to Become Fluence
Emefcy Group Limited has signed a letter of intent to merge with RWL Water. The merger aims to create a global provider of innovative, distributed water and wastewater treatment solutions. It is anti...
Water Network Research May 8, 2017 14:14 Blackstone to Invest in Italy's De Nora
Blackstone announces that funds managed by Blackstone Tactical Opportunities, have agreed to make a substantial investment in De Nora, designer, manufacturer and supplier of electrode and water techn...
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Peter McChesney May 8, 2017 22:11 Introducing the MadiDrop, the easy to use, economical, socially preferred solution for safe drinking water
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