Letter from Truthout…its the truth

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Fancy a blast of electromagnetic radiation? The US Navy has plans to fly at least 2,900 “training exercises” up to 16 hours per day for 260 days over national parklands and forest in the Pacific Northwest. Their plan is to blast electromagnetic radiation at stations they position in these public “protected” lands as part of their electromagnetic warfare training against, most likely, Russia and China.

It doesn’t matter that electromagnetic radiation at the levels they will use is already known to cause miscarriage, breast cancer, brain tumors and cardiovascular problems in humans, or that it will scramble the bio-navigation abilities of over one billion birds using that area as part of their migration. The Navy has already said the war games will cause “no significant impact” on humans or animals, so apparently that’s that.

Yet there is resistance. An in-depth article I wrote for Truthout about the Navy’s planned war games is now being used by thousands of people who are outraged by the plans and aim to stop them. Possible lawsuits are being investigated and the Navy might not get its way after all. The expanse of US militarism can be halted by people just like you – with the help of the information Truthout provides.

In turn, though, we need your help – we’re dedicated to bringing you the information you need, but we can’t do it without your support. Will you join the readers who fund my work and the other vital independent journalism published at Truthout? Make a tax-deductible donation today!

Bernie Buzz Update: Senator Bernie Sanders

Bernie Buzz Update: Senator Bernie Sanders <bernie_sanders@sanders.enews.senate.gov>

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Bernie Buzz Update
SIGN THE PETITION: Support Bernie’s bill to establish a national “Democracy Day” Holiday
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 Make Election Day a Holiday
Coming off an Election Day with extremely low voter turnout, Sen. Bernie Sanders announced legislation to make Election Day a national holiday. “In America, we should be celebrating our democracy and doing everything possible to make it easier for people to participate in the political process. Election Day should be a national holiday so that everyone has the time and opportunity to vote. While this would not be a cure-all, it would indicate a national commitment to create a more vibrant democracy,” said Bernie, who was not on the ballot on Tuesday.
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Colorado State University provides new findings on controversial racehorse drug

Information from  Jeff.Dodge@colostate.edu

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For Immediate Release
Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Contact for Reporters:
Jeff Dodge
Jeff.Dodge@colostate.edu

Colorado State University provides new findings on controversial racehorse drug

Note to Reporters: A photo of Dr. Paul Morley is available with this news release online atwww.news.colostate.edu.

FORT COLLINS – As the debate over the controversial drug Lasix heats up in advance of the Breeders’ Cup this week, a Colorado State University researcher has released new study results about the impact that bleeding in the lungs has on racehorses’ performance and the effectiveness of the most common treatment for the condition.

Lasix, the original brand name for a diuretic called furosemide, is used by horse owners to reduce exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhaging (EIPH), the bleeding in the lungs that commonly occurs while horses are racing.

The use of the medication was banned by the Breeders’ Cup last year in races that were limited to 2-year-old horses, but race officials reversed that policy and are allowing Lasix to be used in all races this year. The industry in North America is divided over the issue, with proponents of the diuretic arguing that Lasix protects horses’ health and improves performance, and opponents saying that permitting the drug is marring the sport’s good name.

The Breeders’ Cup, a 30-year-old series of Thoroughbred races, will be held Oct. 31-Nov. 1 at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif.

Recent research by Paul Morley, a CSU professor in the Department of Clinical Sciences and one of the foremost experts on Lasix and EIPH, is providing important new information to stakeholders in the debate. Morley is part of a long-standing collaborative group that has published three new papers in Equine Veterinary Journal that address the effects of EIPH on performance as well as the efficacy of Lasix in controlling the condition.

In the first study, Morley and his co-authors studied EIPH in 1,000 racehorses, and showed that the condition has detrimental effects on their ability to perform as elite athletes. However, in another study that followed the lifetime racing careers of more than 700 horses, the research group was unable to find an association between EIPH and the number of races the horses were able to run or their earning potential, except in the most extreme form of the condition. In the third project, Morley and his research team examined existing studies on Lasix and concluded that there is high-quality, albeit limited, evidence that Lasix is effective in reducing the incidence and severity of EIPH in racehorses. The finding supports the results of his team’s landmark 2009 clinical trial on Lasix.

“Dr. Morley is very highly regarded worldwide,” said Dr. Thomas Tobin of the Gluck Equine Research Center at the University of Kentucky. “Everything he does carries significant weight because of the longtime recognition of his research and the quality of his work.”

“These studies build on our earlier work to provide horsemen and regulators with the evidence they need to inform the highly charged debate about EIPH and Lasix,” added Ken Hinchcliff, dean of the Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences at the University of Melbourne, Australia, and one of Morley’s longtime collaborators on the studies. “Our international team has explicitly addressed the key issues facing racing around the management of EIPH.”

Despite the controversy surrounding the issue, Morley said he and his fellow researchers don’t have a horse in the race, so to speak; they are simply trying to provide independent, unbiased information so that ongoing discussions about Lasix are based on sound facts.

Morley acknowledged that there is much more research to be done, since the long-term effects of EIPH and Lasix on the wellbeing of horses are still unclear.

“We want to continue providing high-quality evidence for the decision-makers, to inform the debate,” he said.

CADEM California Democratic Party

Today at 3:05 PM

Humboldt Democrats

Oct 15 at 7:23 PM

http://westerlypost.com/blog/2014/10/17/583/

Jeanne Shaheen for U. S. Senate

Shaheen for Senate

Dear Ralph/Westerlypost Readers From

Jodi Picoult info@jeanneshaheen.org via mail.salsalabs.net

New Hampshire is my home. It’s where I hang my hat, write my books, and raise a menagerie of animals.

Right now, it’s also our firewall against a Republican Senate. My friend Jeanne Shaheen is locked in a razor-close contest with Scott Brown, and needs our help NOW to meet her critical $100,000 goal by October 22.

I don’t know which would be worse: watching Scott Brown do to New Hampshire what he did to Massachusetts – back outsourcing and huge tax breaks for Big Oil – or seeing extremist Mitch McConnell become Senate Majority Leader.

And you know what? I don’t want to find out. This is SO urgent that if you contribute bymidnight October 22, you’ll be automatically entered for a chance to win lunch with Jeanne and me. If you win, we’ll cover your hotel and airfare – just rush $5 or more now.

Jeanne has been an unstoppable force in the Senate for women’s rights and LGBT equality.

Losing Jeanne – AND our Democratic majority – to Scott Brown is not something Jake, my son Kyle, who’s gay, or I are wiling to risk.

Thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for supporting Jeanne and my beloved New Hampshire. I hope we get to meet very soon.

Sincerely,

Jodi

 

 

Colorado State University SoGES panel looks at the challenges of water and climate for a sustainable future

Thursday, October 09, 2014

Contact for Reporters:
Kate Hawthorne Jeracki
Kate.Jeracki@colostate.edu

Colorado State University SoGES panel looks at the challenges of water and climate for a sustainable future

FORT COLLINS – Ensuring the availability of freshwater resources for a growing human population and fragile ecosystems is one of the greatest challenges of the coming century.  How do we achieve a sustainable path forward when considering the potential impacts of climate change at a global scale? How can we work together to address an issue with no easy answers?

A panel of experts from Colorado State University and the U.S. Forest Service will tackle these tough questions on Wednesday, Oct. 15, 5–6:30 p.m. at Avogadro’s Number, 605 S. Mason St.

This is part of the CSU School of Global Environmental Sustainability (SoGES) Managing the Planet Topics in Sustainability series, held once a semester. This panel is co-sponsored by the CSU Water Center.

Panelists for “A Wicked Problem: Challenges of the water and climate nexus for a sustainable future” include Ellen Wohl, professor, Department of Geosciences; Reagan Waskom, director, and Brad Udall of the Colorado Water Institute at CSU; and Kelly Elder, U.S. Forest Service. The panel will be moderated by Gene Kelly, professor, CSU Department of Soil and Crop Sciences.

Panelists will discuss how a changing climate can influence the availability and quality of our planet’s finite water resources – for humans, the natural and built environments, and for growing our food, fiber and fuel. To build on this continuing conversation, the panel will put forward the key questions and potential solutions for consideration, discussion, and action.

The panel is free and open to the public. For more information, go to sustainability.colostate.edu.

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Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA
© 2014 Colorado State University

Steak on the line as Colorado State University veterinary dean rallies scholarship support in #VetBet

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Monday, September 08, 2014Contact for Reporters:
Jeff Dodge

Steak on the line as Colorado State University veterinary dean rallies scholarship support in #VetBet

Note to Reporters: Photos of CSU vet students getting fired up for the game are available with this news release online at www.news.colostate.edu.

FORT COLLINS – One is staking ribeyes, the other locally grown olive oil.

Sounds like the beginnings of a great meal, but it’s a wager between the deans of top veterinary programs leading up to the Aggies vs. Rams football game in Fort Collins on Saturday. The University of California, Davis and Colorado State University are home to the No. 2 and No. 3 veterinary schools in the nation; each veterinary dean hopes to be No. 1 in the gridiron contest – and in generating donations to veterinary student scholarships.

It’s the #VetBet!

As their teams face off in football, Dr. Mark Stetter, dean of the CSU College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, and Dr. Michael Lairmore, dean of the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, are challenging supporters to channel fan enthusiasm into scholarship funds for vet students.

To donate to scholarships for CSU veterinary students, visit https://advancing.colostate.edu/CVMBS/SCHOLARSHIP.

“I plan to have my steak and eat it, too,” proclaimed Stetter, who worked for years as the top veterinarian for Walt Disney Co. before joining CSU two years ago. “The Rams are favored in the football game, and I’d rather have interdigital phlegmon than see our rivals best us in the VetBet challenge.”

(That’s “footrot” for you non-veterinary smack-talkers.)

“I know both institutions value strong veterinary medical programs, and I look forward to enjoying Colorado steak from my friend and colleague, Dr. Stetter,” Lairmore, a CSU alumnus, deadpanned.

Lest fans think the #VetBet is all in fun, there’s a serious underpinning: Many veterinary students need support to avoid significant college debt. The CSU Doctor of Veterinary Medicine Program is addressing the concern with a strong new emphasis on career counseling and financial education.

In a nod to the university’s agricultural roots, Stetter is buying steaks for the wager from the well-known CSU Meat Sciences program. And he doesn’t want to give them up.

“Come on, Rams fans! Donate to veterinary scholarships,” Stetter urged. “I don’t want to eat crow. I want to keep my steak!”

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Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA

The American people are poised to make history.

Dear MoveOn member,  The American people are poised to make history.

If we act now, generations to come will remember the historic September 8, 2014, U.S. Senate vote on S.J. Res. 19, a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United. They will remember the coast-to-coast cheers that erupted from a nation desperate for a solid gain in the fight to rid U.S. politics of the corrosive influence of big money.

For months, I’ve been working side by side with MoveOn’s team to make sure that more Americans understand the sprawling impact of Citizens United, as well as their absolutely critical role in pushing for the very first Senate resolution dedicated to its demise.

We’re in a sprint to the finish line. Our work is paying off. Together with our allies, we have secured 50 senators who are on the record as supporting S.J. Res. 19. But there’s still much more to do before and after the vote on September 8. And, quite frankly, we need $200,000 to get it all done.

Please join me in supporting MoveOn’s work to overturn Citizens United by chipping in $3.

When folks ask me why defeating Citizens United is essential, here’s how I frame what’s at stake: In case after case, the Roberts majority of the Supreme Court has basically told a handful of billionaires, “You and your corporations already own and control our economy. Now, we’re going to give you the opportunity to purchase the U.S. government, as well.”Among these billionaires are Charles and David Koch, who—thanks to Citizens United—are now busy unabashedly buying Tea Party-esque politicians in key states such as North Carolina, Kentucky, Michigan, and Colorado. Koch candidates are hell-bent on twisting our nation to match the interests of the elite and ultraconservative.

Let’s put the Koch brothers on notice that our democracy is not—and will never be—for sale.

Will you support MoveOn’s work to help secure the first big milestone in our long-haul fight to overturn Citizens United?

Here’s MoveOn’s plan between now and September 8: With your support, MoveOn members will generate a blizzard of phone calls to cement existing Senate supporters of S.J. Res. 19. But that’s just the beginning. Using creative media and social-media tactics and hard-hitting on-the-ground events, they’ll also go after every senator conspicuously absent from the co-sponsor list, especially key Republicans.

It will be impossible to hide from MoveOn members. Each senator’s vote on S.J. Res. 19 will answer the question: Which side of history do you want to be on—that of your constituents or that of big money?

Please help MoveOn ask this critical question of every single senator and candidate by donating now.

Senators who have the nerve to vote against overturning Citizens United will be held accountable by MoveOn members through the midterm elections and beyond.

Think of S.J. Res. 19 as the American people’s first giant springboard. The fact that it’s coming to the Senate floor for a vote is already a big victory. Our job now is to secure as many votes as possible and—in a critical election year—not let the American people forget the senators who voted for the interests of big money instead of their constituents.

Will you join me in supporting MoveOn’s work before and after the groundbreaking September 8 vote? Click here to donate $3.

I can’t help but reflect on past constitutional amendment victories that changed our nation—like the ones propelled by people just like us to give women the right to vote or advance civil rights. We have big lessons to learn from each of these breathtaking victories and others like them.

The journey to a successful amendment passage—two-thirds majorities in both houses of Congress—was long and arduous. Millions and millions of Americans joined together in common cause. Every single person was necessary. And because of the grit and faith of our courageous predecessors, our nation emerged from these struggles a little wiser and a whole lot more just.

And so it will be when we rid our nation of Citizens United and take back our democracy. Let’s take a bold step forward on September 8, and let’s not look back until we win.

Thanks for all you do.

–Senator Bernie Sanders

Want to support our work? We’re entirely funded by our 8 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in here.


PAID FOR BY MOVEON.ORG POLITICAL ACTION, http://pol.moveon.org/. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s committee. This email was sent to Ralph W. McCarthy on August 29, 2014. To change your email address or update your contact info, click here. To remove yourself from this list, click here.