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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Stewart Trashes GOP On Gay Marriage-Bestality Link: ‘What Is It With You People And The Animal-F*cking?’ | Mediaite

Stewart Trashes GOP On Gay Marriage-Bestality Link: ‘What Is It With You People And The Animal-F*cking?’ | Mediaite:

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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Rupert Sheldrake - The Science Delusion BANNED TED TALK - YouTube

Rupert Sheldrake - The Science Delusion BANNED TED TALK - YouTube:

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Agent Orange outrage | Local | News | Timmins Press

Agent Orange outrage | Local | News | Timmins Press:

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A news article uncovering the use of the chemical Agent Orange in Northern Ontario forests has MPP Gilles Bisson (NDP - Timmins-James Bay) "shocked."
Bisson said he awoke Thursday morning to calls from a Toronto media outlet about Ministry of Natural Resource documents revealing a spraying program on the Gordon Cosens forest between Hearst and Kapuskasing in the 1950s and 1960s.
"It's absolutely nuts," said Bisson. "I really don't believe they knew the harmful effects at the time, but when the MNR and the industry found out what this chemical does to people, they should have informed the public.
"Certainly to God, when they found out it causes cancer, they had an obligation to to tell people."
Agent Orange is a herbicide and defoliant used by the U.S. military during the Vietnam war.
It may have been used by lumber companies to defoliate leafy trees, said Bisson.
The MPP is calling on the Ontario government, along with forestry companies to release documents containing more information about the harmful spraying.
"We don't have any other information about it. We don't know where else this has happened," Bisson said.
"What we do know is that rates of cancer in Northern Ontario are higher than even the provincial average."
He said lumber companies who used the chemical should be tracking former employees, or anyone who may have been exposed, so people can be tested and treated.
Studies show the chemicals found in Agent Orange can remain in the body for decades, causing skin disorders, liver problems, certain types of cancer, and impaired function.
"I'm not pointing a finger at anyone, but the issue here is the conspiracy of silence," Bisson said. "This is a democracy, and we don't work that way in a democracy. Now that they know, they have an obligation to investigate this.
"There are campers, blueberry pickers, forestry workers. Anyone who used that forest in the 1950s, '60s, or '70s."
He said although people affected may deserve compensation, the most important thing is safety.
"It's a matter of having to do everything we can to inform people. It's a question of people affected needing to see a doctor for possible effects of these toxins."
Bisson said he will be addressing the issue with Minister of Natural Resources Linda Jeffrey in Queens Park on Tuesday.
"The questions I'll be asking the Minister are very straightforward.
"Quite frankly, I can't believe this happened in Northern Ontario."

Agent Orange outrage | Local | News | Timmins Press

Agent Orange outrage | Local | News | Timmins Press:

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A news article uncovering the use of the chemical Agent Orange in Northern Ontario forests has MPP Gilles Bisson (NDP - Timmins-James Bay) "shocked."
Bisson said he awoke Thursday morning to calls from a Toronto media outlet about Ministry of Natural Resource documents revealing a spraying program on the Gordon Cosens forest between Hearst and Kapuskasing in the 1950s and 1960s.
"It's absolutely nuts," said Bisson. "I really don't believe they knew the harmful effects at the time, but when the MNR and the industry found out what this chemical does to people, they should have informed the public.
"Certainly to God, when they found out it causes cancer, they had an obligation to to tell people."
Agent Orange is a herbicide and defoliant used by the U.S. military during the Vietnam war.
It may have been used by lumber companies to defoliate leafy trees, said Bisson.
The MPP is calling on the Ontario government, along with forestry companies to release documents containing more information about the harmful spraying.
"We don't have any other information about it. We don't know where else this has happened," Bisson said.
"What we do know is that rates of cancer in Northern Ontario are higher than even the provincial average."
He said lumber companies who used the chemical should be tracking former employees, or anyone who may have been exposed, so people can be tested and treated.
Studies show the chemicals found in Agent Orange can remain in the body for decades, causing skin disorders, liver problems, certain types of cancer, and impaired function.
"I'm not pointing a finger at anyone, but the issue here is the conspiracy of silence," Bisson said. "This is a democracy, and we don't work that way in a democracy. Now that they know, they have an obligation to investigate this.
"There are campers, blueberry pickers, forestry workers. Anyone who used that forest in the 1950s, '60s, or '70s."
He said although people affected may deserve compensation, the most important thing is safety.
"It's a matter of having to do everything we can to inform people. It's a question of people affected needing to see a doctor for possible effects of these toxins."
Bisson said he will be addressing the issue with Minister of Natural Resources Linda Jeffrey in Queens Park on Tuesday.
"The questions I'll be asking the Minister are very straightforward.
"Quite frankly, I can't believe this happened in Northern Ontario."

Agent Orange probe widens | Toronto Star

Agent Orange probe widens | Toronto Star: "Senator Brazeau's "

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Ontario's Minister of Natural Resources Linda Jeffrey has asked the WSIB to open a special hotline for forestry workers who may have been exposed to Agent Orange and other toxic defoliants.

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Ontario has widened its probe of Agent Orange spraying to include all areas of the province, government officials say.
The Ministry of Natural Resources plans to release details of its toxic chemical spraying operations in Ontario next week, Minister Linda Jeffrey said in her first interview since aToronto Star investigation published Thursday revealed Agent Orange was used to strip Crown land during the 1950s, 60s and 70s.
“I can understand how worried some families may be,” Jeffrey said.
“We’re going to probably have to do a fairly large public information outreach to reach everybody we feel may have been exposed and may be experiencing symptoms.”
A ministry official confirmed to the Star it is not just looking at Northern Ontario but all government managed forests on Crown Land.
The ministry is in the process of assembling information from its district offices including records showing when and where spraying occurred and what chemicals were used.
“I’m committed to obtaining all the facts and I’m prepared to share all of that information in a very transparent fashion,” said the Brampton-Springdale MPP. “I will do everything in my power to make sure we deal with this issue properly.”
Documents obtained from provincial archives by the Star reveal the government and timber companies conducted extensive aerial herbicide spraying programs in Northern Ontario. Forestry records showed they were using the same chemicals that were employed to defoliate dense jungles during the Vietnam War, including the infamous Agent Orange. Exposure to this chemical cocktail has been associated with more than 50 diseases and medical conditions by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
In Canada, the chemicals targeted what forestry reports described as “weed trees” — including birch, maple, poplar — which competed for sunlight and soil nutrients with the more commercially viable spruce trees.
The chemicals caused the broad leaves on these unwanted trees to grow so quickly they starved to death, leaving the spruce to flourish.
Jeffrey noted that the chemicals used were all federally approved at the time.
Spraying reports obtained by the Star describe how forestry workers — often high school students and junior rangers — acted as human markers holding red, helium-filled balloons on fishing lines while low-flying planes sprayed chemical cocktails on the boys and brush below.
With the ministry’s blessing, Spruce Falls Power and Paper Company launched the first aerial spraying program in Kapuskasing, Ont. in 1956.
Company records filed at the archives show it used the Agent Orange chemical mix of 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T in equal parts during the summer of 1964. The company was sold to Tembec in 1991.
Jeffrey said her ministry would talk with the company about contacting former employees of Spruce Falls.
In an emailed statement, Tembec told the Star it is “committed to providing the assistance we can to the authorities.”
On Thursday, Premier Dalton McGuinty encouraged forestry workers who may have been exposed to these harmful chemicals to call the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board so the province can begin to “build up a data bank and assess what we’re looking at here.”
Jeffrey said she has asked the WSIB to create a special hotline for forestry workers.
In the meantime, anyone concerned about exposure to these herbicides should call the general Occupational Disease Information line and register their case.
WSIB information line: 416-344-4440 or toll-free at 1-800-387-0750, ext. 4163444440.
Diana Zlomislic can be reached at (416) 869-4472 or dzlomislic@t

AGENT ORANGE

jorma_jyrkkanen:

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Agent Orange and Other Toxins in Pesticides Used in BC

24 Sept 2008

When I was habitat protection technician for the BC Fish and Wildlife Branch between 1981 and 1987, I got a request by the BC Ministry of Forests to use Estron 3-3E in a sensitive area near the mouth of the Lakelse River. Upon examination of the ingredients, I determined that it was in fact one of the Agent Orange (AO) concoctions and rejected the application along with a note to MOF that I was not very pleased that they had entertained such an option.

I wondered how widespread had been the use of AO in BC when In a personal communication with the former head of the BC Pesticide Branch, Mike Whately, I was informed that AO had been in wide-spread use especially for alder and other brush control and had seen considerable use on the west coast and the Queen Charlottes.

Bill Brinnen, the applicant on behalf of MOF, died not long after from some rare blood disorder and was unable to explain to me what applications were underway at that time and was silent about what applications he had been involved with formerly. I met an applicator, and in fact beat him and the champion (right arm only) in arm wrestling at the pub's annual competition, Vince Helsenfels, who said he was using the stuff all over the place without any protective clothing or respirators as were others because they were told it was harmless.

Regarding my concerns about certain pesticide application referrals, I was ordered by my boss not to become an expert on pesticides on government time and was instructed to rubber stamp pesticide applications.

It dawned on me that the MOF had a culture of recklessness with public and environmental safety and was deceitful and misleading with safety information and that we in the Fish and Wildlife Habitat Division of MOE had a culture of supporting that. The argument advanced was that these pesticides were approved for use in Canada by the Federal government who are experts and so they must be assumed safe if used as directed.

I had found from personal examination of the literature and from having had a sample of forestry herbicide Vision tested for 1,4-dioxane, that carcinogen residues were in fact being applied to much of BC's Forests and workers and the general public were not appraised of the fact by the MOF or pesticide branch.

The information on carcinogenicity was not available through MOF and was only discovered by me personally by investigative journalism and personal research. The Feds, DOF and DOE and DOA did not and would not divulge the name of the surfactant being used (polyoxyethyleneamine) nor that the contaminant 1,4-dioxane was present nor that both were probable carcinogens arguing that these were 'Trade Secrets'.

I found all of this out by becoming an expert on my own time. They only confessed after I sent them the lab results with the help of MP Jim Fulton who graciously paid for my research.

( I affirm that everything I have said above is true and correct.)

Jormawankenobe

© 2008 J. Jyrkkanen
 

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