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What A Week It Was: Apocadocuments from
View By Scenario:
Species Collapse:(7)
Plague/Virus:(5)
Climate Chaos:(6)
Resource Depletion: (2)
Biology Breach:(10)
Recovery:(7)
This Week's Top Ten Very Scary Tags:
contamination  ~ food crisis  ~ pandemic  ~ stupid humans  ~ antibiotic resistance  ~ efficiency increase  ~ overfishing  ~ global warming  ~ toxic water  ~ arctic meltdown  ~ flame retardants  



ApocaDocuments (37) gathered this week:
Mon, May 12, 2008
from Jamaica Observer:
Supermarket prices too high for low-income earners
Corporate Area supermarket shopping has gotten more expensive for minimum wage and middle income earners as price increases on basic food items continue to wreak havoc on the salaries of employed persons. A survey of five supermarkets by the Sunday Observer last week showed a staggering variation in prices on basic food items, and the only competition appeared to be which supermarket is the most expensive. ...


Thank goodness the tourists are still buying the expensive stuff!
You get what you pay for, after all.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, May 12, 2008
from Yonhap News (South Korea):
S. Korea to ban import of Japanese potatoes
South Korea will expand its existing ban on Japanese potatoes to cover products grown on the main island of Honshu, the government said Monday. The National Veterinary Research and Quarantine Service (NVRQS) said the measure that goes into effect on Wednesday is in response to the discovery of Globodera rostochiensis, or yellow potato cyst nematodes. The nematodes are insects that are classified as a serious threat to the plant roots of both potatoes and tomatoes, with most countries banning imports from a country if an outbreak is reported. ...


Whoops!
Guess we can't trust our near neighbors
not to promote biome transgressions,
if the money's right.
Luckily, S.Korea doesn't import
many potatoes from Japan.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, May 12, 2008
from Times of India:
Antibiotics rule pharma retail market
New Delhi: The first quarter (January-March) of this year has witnessed a change in the domestic pharma retail market with antibiotics and anti-bacterial drugs dominating the show in top 10 brands.... Interestingly, the growth of the industry is mainly driven by the chronic segment (like cardio-vasculars, diabetics, central nervous system), which have grown by 17-18 percent last year. Against this backdrop, offtake of acute segments (anti-infectives, gastro-intestinals, nutritionals) has been slow and grown by 10-15 percent only, industry experts said. ...


Finally, Viagra out of the spotlight.
Wait, these seem to be for chronic problems, rather than for the new, antibiotic-resistant infections... "only" a 10-15 percent increase. Where's the profit in that?

ApocaDoc
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Mon, May 12, 2008
from Forbes (US):
Oil over USD 126, new peak for 5th straight day
Oil prices leapt to a new peak of more than $126 a barrel on Friday, hitting a record for the fifth straight session, in a market given an additional spur by tight supplies of diesel. U.S. crude for June delivery rose $1.87 to $125.56 by 1335 GMT, off a record high of $126.20 a barrel. London Brent crude rose $2.81 to $125.65 per barrel. "I'm not particularly surprised by the speed of the rise in crude. There are many market bulls hoping for prices to rise heading into the summer," said Tetsu Emori, fund manager at Astmax Co Ltd in Tokyo. ...


EX-cellent!
I'm thrilled the market wants to suck more money, from me to Big Petro, while continuing to encourage me to consume. Glad to help the oil speculators!

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Sun, May 11, 2008
from London Sunday Mirror:
Will giant vegetables help solve world food shortage?
"They came from Outer Space... huge monsters never seen on Earth before. And they could soon be heading towards a supermarket near you... These giant fruit and veg, grown from seeds sent into space, are now being grown in southern China where they are being heralded as a solution to the world's food shortage." ...


Just so they don't go all Audrey II on us!

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Sun, May 11, 2008
from Lawrence Journal:
Kansas group appointed to look at climate change
A new group will soon tackle the politically charged issue of reducing climate-changing carbon dioxide emissions in Kansas. "Experts agree that Congress will institute a carbon tax in the coming years," Gov. Kathleen Sebelius said. "By taking steps to prepare now, we better position our state for potential costs in the future." Sebelius has appointed 20 members to the Kansas Energy and Environmental Policy Advisory Group, including industry and scientific leaders. The group will have its first meeting May 20 in Wichita. The Kansas Legislature has just ended its session after a bruising battle over a proposal to build two 700-megawatt coal-fired power plants in western Kansas. Sebelius opposes the project because of the plants' annual emission of 11 million tons of carbon dioxide. ...


Imagine! A governor more concerned about the environment than the coal industry. We ApocoDocs say: keep an eye on Gov. Sebelius!

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Sun, May 11, 2008
from Linköping University via ScienceDaily:
Carbon Dioxide Capture And Storage: Grasping At Straws In The Climate Debate?
"Great hopes are being placed on undeveloped technology. Capturing and storing carbon dioxide is predicted to be one of the most important measures to counter the threats to our climate. But the technology still hasn’t been tested in full scale, and the complications and risks it entails may have been grossly underestimated." ...


Will carbon dioxide capture and storage go the way of corn-based ethanol? Maybe we need to just get off carbon altogether and focus on renewable energy.

ApocaDoc
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Sun, May 11, 2008
from The Milford Daily News:
Honeybee deaths still on the rise
"Colony collapse disorder started appearing in hives in the past two years and is marked by massive desertion and die-offs in bee yards. Theories on its cause range from microwaves from cell phone use to a combination of poor nutrition, varroa mites - an external parasite of honeybees - and stress. This week, a national survey of bee health from the Apiary Inspectors of America showed 36.1 percent of beehives were lost since last year. That's up from the previous year's losses of 32 percent." ...


To our knowledge no one has theorized that the drones are sick of slaving for the queen!

ApocaDoc
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Sun, May 11, 2008
from The London Observer:
How the world's oceans are running out of fish
"...Is anyone not aware that wild fish are in deep trouble? That three-quarters of commercially caught species are over-exploited or exploited to their maximum? Do they not know that industrial fishing is so inefficient that a third of the catch, some 32 million tonnes a year, is thrown away? For every ocean prawn you eat, fish weighing 10-20 times as much have been thrown overboard. These figures all come from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), which also claims that, of all the world's natural resources, fish are being depleted the fastest. With even the most abundant commercial species, we eat smaller and smaller fish every year - we eat the babies before they can breed... Once stocks dip below a certain critical level, the scientists believe, they can never recover because the entire eco-system has changed." ...


Give a man a fish and he'll eat for a day. Teach him industrial fishing and he'll waste 32 million tonnes of fish a year.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, May 10, 2008
from The Asian Pacific Post:
Everest turning into world's highest cesspool
"A deadly peril lurks on Mount Everest, the highest summit in the world. It is far more dangerous than the freezing cold, gale winds and recently posted security forces who are empowered to shoot at the sight of political activities. The new hazard comes from hundreds of tonnes of human waste scattered along the mountain slopes... While conscientious mountaineers have been trying to clear the garbage left on the mountains, nothing has been done to treat the human waste." ...


The ghost of Sir Edmund Hillary must be shitting a brick over this news!

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Sat, May 10, 2008
from Fort Worth Star-Telegram:
Contamination is linked to dust from TV sets
"Common household dust has long been known to carry pesticides, allergens and other irritants.... Now, a study by researchers at Boston University's School of Public Health appears to have pinpointed the largest source of chemical flame retardants as the dust on television sets. ...


So the boob tube truly has been killing us all along.

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Sat, May 10, 2008
from Public Library of Science via ScienceDaily:
Seed Dispersal In Mauritius -- Dead As A Dodo?
"...Recent work has highlighted how it is not species diversity per se, which breathes life into ecosystems, but rather the networks of interactions between organisms. Thus, the real ghosts in Mauritius are not as much the extinct animals themselves, but more importantly the extinct networks of interactions between the species." ...


Sounds like this island could use an internet social networking site!

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Sat, May 10, 2008
from American Society of Agronomy:
Large Reductions In Agricultural Chemical Use Can Still Result In High Crop Yields And Profits
Researchers investigated whether yield, weed suppression, and profit characteristics of low-external-input (LEI) farming systems could match or exceed those of conventional farming systems. Yields and profits were similar or higher in the LEI systems as in the conventional system, and lower herbicide inputs did not lead to increased weed problems. The results suggest that large reductions in agrichemical use can be compatible with high crop yields and profits. ...


Since profits are all that matter, this opens up all sorts of new opportunities!

ApocaDoc
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Want more context?
Try reading our book FREE online:
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
More fun than a barrel of jellyfish!
Sat, May 10, 2008
from University of Montreal, via ScienceDaily:
University Research Contributes To Global Warming, Professor Discovers
Herve Philippe, a Université de Montréal professor of biochemistry, is a committed environmentalist who found that his own research produces 44 tonnes of CO2 per year. The average American citizen produces 20 tonnes. ""I did my PhD on nucleotide sequencing in the hope of advancing our knowledge of biodiversity, but I never thought that the research itself could have a negative impact on biodiversity," he said, during a recent biology department symposium." ...


Better stop studying this, then, I suppose...

ApocaDoc
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Fri, May 9, 2008
from Edinburgh Scotsman:
Ventilator superbug resistant to antibiotics
"HOSPITALS face a dangerous new superbug threat in the form of a drug-resistant microbe that clings to catheters and ventilation tubes. Doctors studying the genetic code of the bug, commonly known as Steno, are worried about its ability to shrug off antibiotics. Around 1,000 cases of blood poisoning caused by Stenotrophomonas maltophilia are reported in the UK each year. Of these, almost a third are fatal." ...


Maybe the healthiest idea is to stay out of hospitals.

ApocaDoc
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Fri, May 9, 2008
from St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Evangelicals press to fight global warming
"When the Senate takes up legislation next month to confront global warming, environmental groups will have some fervent new allies: evangelicals and other Christian activists. Concerned about what they see as a moral and biblical issue, religious groups from the right are joining with environmental organizations from the left in supporting strong measures to fight global warming." ...


Thank God and Dog!

ApocaDoc
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Fri, May 9, 2008
from UCSF, via ScienceDaily:
Common Herbicide Disrupts Human Hormone Activity In Cell Studies
A common weedkiller in the U.S., already suspected of causing sexual abnormalities in frogs and fish, has now been found to alter hormonal signaling in human cells, scientists from the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) report. The herbicide atrazine is the second most widely used weedkiller in the U.S., applied to corn and sorghum fields throughout the Midwest and also spread on suburban lawns and gardens. ...


What's a little change in my hormonal signaling?
Look at my lawn!

ApocaDoc
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Fri, May 9, 2008
from Salt Lake Tribune:
Beleaguered Utah prairie dog needs greater protection, or faces extinction
In the third management area, its supposed stronghold in the West Desert, numbers will quickly plummet if plans go through to translocate some of the largest remaining populations, such as at the Cedar Ridge golf course in Cedar City. While FWS rallied for the condor, crane and ferret, the agency has turned its back on the Utah prairie dog. It refers to Utah prairie dogs as a nuisance, characterizes its numbers as exploding in the spring (although scientists report low reproduction rates), and allows hundreds to be moved every year. Fewer than 10 percent of the animals survive translocation. They are simply being thrown away. ...


Pesky endangered species. Wish the EPA and FWS would just get rid of 'em.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, May 8, 2008
from Sacramento Bee:
Law firm vows to sue if U.S. links climate to polar bear
"A Sacramento law firm known for its conservative advocacy is poised to join the political melee over the fate of the polar bear, vowing Wednesday to sue the government if global warming is cited as a threat to the species. The Pacific Legal Foundation's warning comes in response to a much-anticipated decision next week by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on whether to protect Alaskan polar bears under the Endangered Species Act. The service faces a court-ordered deadline of May 15 for that ruling.... Reed Hopper, a foundation attorney, claimed polar bears are thriving and already adequately protected." ...


Thriving? Howzabout Reed Hopper goes and gets some polar bear facts from, say, http://www.wwf.ca/?

ApocaDoc
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Thu, May 8, 2008
from Environmental Science and Technology:
Metal pollution is toxic for endangered eels
"One of the world's most bizarre creatures is vanishing. Freshwater eel populations began crashing worldwide in the 1980s. The decline has been rapid, and scientists think eels are probably succumbing to a variety of ills, including overfishing, habitat loss, pollution, and eel-chewing hydropower turbines." ...


The wh/eels are coming off this species.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, May 8, 2008
from ClimateChangeCorp:
Ten eco-innovators to watch
All of these innovative companies have something in common. They took an essential industry, such as clothing, housing, or energy, turned it upside down and gave it a shake. They shook out wasted energy, extra costs and excess materials, and in many cases they created something that stands to revolutionise the industry. ...


Maybe if enough industries are revolutionized, society will be revolutionized.
Wait, that's kinda Marxist, isn't it?

ApocaDoc
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Thu, May 8, 2008
from San Francisco Chronicle:
Flame retardant found in peregrine falcon eggs
"The eggs of peregrine falcons living in California's big cities contain some of the highest levels ever found in wildlife of a flame retardant used in consumer products, a new study has found. Studies of peregrine falcon eggs and chicks by state scientists reveal that the birds hunting in San Francisco, Long Beach, Los Angeles and San Diego are ingesting the flame retardant called PBDEs, believed to leach out of foam mattresses, synthetic fabrics, plastic casings of televisions, electronics and other products. The research shows that the indoor chemicals can contaminate the outdoors and even humans." ...


Arguably, it would be better to go up in flames, than ingest such toxins.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, May 8, 2008
from Environmental Expert (UK):
British company fined for polluting National Trust beauty spot
Thames Water was ordered to pay more than £40,000 after admitting destroying the ecology of a high-quality stream and lake after a burst pipe churned raw sewage out onto National Trust land. Thousands of fish, including notable species of brook lamprey, brown trout, bullhead, and native crayfish were left dead as the sewage caused oxygen levels to plummet and ammonia to rocket... "When I first arrived at the Penwood Stream I was struck by the smell of raw sewage. The water had turned a cloudy orange colour and the stream bed was covered in slimy sewage fungus; thousands of fish, including some important and rare species, where dead or in distress, gasping at the surface of the water..." In February 2007 Environment Agency officers were called out after Thames Water reported the same pipe had burst again, just 15 metres from the previous incident. ...


Gosh, forty thousand pounds -- that's about eighty thousand US dollars. Talk about punitive fines. I'm sure that'll make them think once.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, May 7, 2008
from Associated Press:
EPA might not act to limit rocket fuel in drinking water
"An EPA official said Tuesday there's a "distinct possibility" the agency won't take action to rid drinking water of a toxic rocket fuel ingredient that has contaminated public water supplies around the country... The toxin interferes with thyroid function and poses developmental health risks, particularly to fetuses." ...


I don't mind rocket fuel in my water -- it makes me work faster!

ApocaDoc
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Wed, May 7, 2008
from Newsday:
Australia's Koalas at risk from climate change
"Koalas are threatened by the rising level of carbon dioxide pollution in the atmosphere because it saps nutrients from the eucalyptus leaves they feed on, a researcher said Wednesday....An increase in carbon dioxide favors the trees' production of carbon-based anti-nutrients over nutrients, so leaves can become toxic to koalas..." ...


Cute koalas under threat may be just the tipping point we need to stop polluting!

ApocaDoc
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Wed, May 7, 2008
from Times of India:
Arctic ice melt could see rise of "Grolar bear"
"Scientists have suggested that due to the adverse effects of Arctic ice melting, the hybrid of a polar bear and grizzly bear - dubbed the 'grolar bear', might rise in numbers. According to a report in The Sun , the effects of climate change means that the hybrid bears could become more common as their habitats increasingly overlap due to global warming." ...


Just so we also get an increase of ligers.

ApocaDoc
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You're still reading! Good for you!
You really should read our short, funny, frightening book FREE online (or buy a print copy):
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
We've been quipping this stuff for more than 30 months! Every day!
Which might explain why we don't get invited to parties anymore.
Wed, May 7, 2008
from Planet Ark via Reuters:
Risk Of Bird Flu Pandemic Probably Growing-Experts
"Some 150 experts are attending a meeting hosted by the World Health Organisation (WHO) to update its guidance to countries on how to boost their defences against a deadly global epidemic. The H5N1 avian flu virus has infected flocks in much of Asia, Africa and parts of Europe. Experts fear it could mutate into a form that passes easily from person to person, sparking an influenza pandemic that could kill millions." ...


In other words the sky will soon be falling.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, May 6, 2008
from Planet Ark via Reuters:
Alberta Puts C$55 Million Into Pine Beetle Fight
"VANCOUVER, British Columbia - Alberta will spend C$55 million ($54 million) this year to stem the spread of pine beetles, which have ravaged forests in neighbouring British Columbia, the Alberta government said Monday." ...


Paying the pine beetles off won't work! They'll know they have us over a barrel then!

ApocaDoc
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Tue, May 6, 2008
from Chicago Tribune:
Who should MDs let die in a pandemic? Report offers answers
"Doctors know some patients needing lifesaving care won't get it in a flu pandemic or other disaster. The gut-wrenching dilemma will be deciding who to let die. Now, an influential group of physicians has drafted a grimly specific list of recommendations for which patients wouldn't be treated. They include the very elderly, seriously hurt trauma victims, severely burned patients and those with severe dementia." ...


And anyone who doesn't score very well on the Post-Apocalypse Survival Aptitude Test.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, May 6, 2008
from Edinburgh Scotsman:
Humble mould could be the key to cleaning nuclear test zones
"FUNGI could be the answer to cleaning up war zones and nuclear testing sites, according to research published this week by Scottish scientists. Experts at Dundee University say fungi – related to the blue streaks in some cheeses – have the ability to clear away radioactive waste. Their study – which appears in the journal Current Biology– shows the organisms can transform depleted uranium, the radioactive metal used in nuclear weapons, into a stable mineral." ...


Of course, once this humble mould gets all full of himself, he'll demand higher wages, better working conditions, etc...

ApocaDoc
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Tue, May 6, 2008
from Guardian (UK):
Breeding toxins from dead PCs
Thousands of discarded computers from western Europe and the US arrive in the ports of west Africa every day, ending up in massive toxic dumps where children burn and pull them apart to extract metals for cash.... "We filmed children as young as six searching for metal scraps in the earth, which was littered with the toxic waste from thousands of shattered cathode ray tubes," said Benjamin Holst, co-founder of DanWatch. "A whole community is virtually living and working in this highly toxic environment, which is growing every day." ...


If we can't dump on the poor and the uneducated, who can we dump on?

ApocaDoc
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Tue, May 6, 2008
from University of Washington, via ScienceDaily:
Trouble In Paradise: Global Warming A Greater Danger To Tropical Species
Polar bears fighting for survival in the face of a rapid decline of polar ice have made the Arctic a poster child for the negative effects of climate change. But new research shows that species living in the tropics likely face the greatest peril in a warmer world.... [T]ropical species have a far greater risk of extinction with warming of just a degree or two. That is because they are used to living within a much smaller temperature range to begin with, and once temperatures get beyond that range many species might not be able to cope.... "Unfortunately, the tropics also hold the large majority of species on the planet," he said. ...


You'd think those critters would just grow more hair. Isn't that how evolution works?

ApocaDoc
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Mon, May 5, 2008
from The Hindu (India):
Deadly viral outbreak in China may not peak for two months
A fast-spreading viral disease in eastern China, which has claimed the lives of at least 21 children, might not peak for another two months as it thrives in warm weather, the UN warned on Saturday. Reports from China said Enterovirus-71 or EV-71 has infected nearly 3,000 children, most of them under two. Called hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD), it starts with fever and leads to ulcers in mouth, hands and buttocks.... There is no vaccine or known cure and the disease takes its own course. In most cases, children recover after about a week without treatment but in serious cases, brain swelling and paralysis leading to death might occur. ...


Perhaps if nearly a billion Chinese didn't live hand-to-mouth, it'd only be a foot disease.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, May 5, 2008
from International Herald-Tribune:
U.S. electric companies offer "smart" power meters
As more utilities install "smart" power meters that track how much electricity flows into a home in real time, they are freer to offer alternatives to the average monthly rate that they traditionally charged to consumers.... Last year, about 95 percent of the participants saved money in ComEd's open-enrollment residential real-time pricing program, one of the first in the United States. The majority saved between 7 percent to 12 percent, the utility said. To date, about 4,000 of the utility's 3.3 million residential customers have signed up. ...


Sometimes the market can work. But can it work fast enough?

ApocaDoc
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Mon, May 5, 2008
from Science and Spirit:
Too few vultures for Zoroastrians to dispose of their dead
"There are thousands of bodies rotting on the site," said Baria, agitated and angry. "There are no vultures at all and without the vultures, it doesn't work. The solar collectors don't work. Nothing is working. My mother's body was there for a year and a half, naked and exposed."... In 2000, the Indian scientific community called out to their international colleagues and an all-out effort was launched to determine what had caused vulture numbers to plummet from an estimated 80 million to just a few thousand in less than ten years. It was the most catastrophic decline in an avian population in recent history.... [discovered that] the three species of Gyps vultures were dying from ingesting livestock carcasses treated with diclofenac, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory and antipyretic pharmaceutical drug used on both livestock and humans. It is a mild painkiller akin to aspirin. ...


Zoroastrian ghostly buildup might mean the end of the world. Got any mild painkiller handy?

ApocaDoc
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Mon, May 5, 2008
from The Globe and Mail (Canada):
Comfy stilettos? Give em the needle.
We keep beating down the flesh at the bottom of our feet, and with age we lose the fat pads. This can result in burning and pain, especially on the balls of the foot. But, as with many symptoms of aging, help is but a needle away. Dr. Suzanne Levine, a New York-based "podiatrist to the stars," has pioneered a treatment using injectables that creates the feeling of "pillows in your feet." "It's biodegradable hyaluronic acid and Sephadex [sugar glucose beads], which stimulates your own soft tissue to produce more collagen," Chelin explains. "We're just replacing what nature takes away." Results can last up to 18 months, he says, although "many high-heel devotees get treated about a week before their big glam outings." ...


Another possibility: simple bone implants for permanent stilettos. Troublesome for the trampoline, but if the screw-off option is included....

ApocaDoc
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Mon, May 5, 2008
from National Post via CanWest News:
Canadian schools sent brochures from climate change skeptics
"An American think tank [the Chicago-based Heartland Institute] has sent out more than 11,000 brochures and DVDs to Canadian schools urging them to teach their students that scientists are exaggerating how human activity is the driving force behind global warming." ...


Could the nearly $800,000 in funding from Exxon-Mobil since 1998 have anything to do with the Heartland Institute's perspective?

ApocaDoc
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