Beast System: Laying The Foundation Of The Beast

CDC scrambles to reassure on vaccine safety


Officials with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scrambled yesterday to reassure the public that childhood vaccines are safe after news spread that another agency had acknowledged a link between a child's autism and the shots she received as a toddler.

"Our message to parents is that immunization is life-saving," Dr. Julie Gerberding, the CDC's director, said at a hastily convened conference call with reporters. "There's nothing changed. ... This is proven to save lives and is an essential component of protection for children across America and around the world."

During the years, despite a small and vocal group of parents who insist otherwise, studies have consistently shown no credible link between vaccines and autism. But pediatricians who have long reassured suspicious parents braced for another cascade of questions.

Yesterday, the parents of Hannah Poling, now 9, took their case public, sharing news that federal health officials have conceded that a series of vaccines she got when she was 19 months old - and living in Ellicott City - worsened an underlying condition and ultimately led to her diagnosis of autism.

That concession - believed to be the first of its kind - makes her eligible for money from a federal vaccine-injury fund.

Many experts say Hannah's case is unique and that her rare condition led to a rare consequence. They say her case should not be extrapolated to the thousands of other autistic children whose parents say they believe they were harmed by the vaccines.

"This is not an admission that vaccines cause autism," said Dr. Neal Halsey, director of the Institute for Vaccine Safety at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

But the publicity surrounding the case - the family held a news conference yesterday on the courthouse steps in Atlanta and was expected to tell their story last night on CNN's Larry King Live - could set back public health officials' efforts to convince parents that polio, tetanus and measles are far more dangerous than the vaccines that protect against them.

"Vaccines have been the greatest leap forward in childhood health in 100 years," said Dr. Timothy Doran, a pediatrician at Greater Baltimore Medical Center. "There's no pediatrician who would vaccinate if they thought they [vaccines] were unsafe."

Doran said he spends "a tremendous amount of time" explaning to parents that vaccines do not cause autism. He said he reminds them that thimerosal - a mercury additive long used as a preservative - is no longer an ingredient in any shot.

"In some ways we've been so successful in eliminating disease that people are resisting vaccines," he said yesterday. "If we had polio cases in the community, this issue of vaccines and autism would go away very fast."

The evidence has mounted for years against the link between thimerosal and autism - a spectrum of neurological disorders diagnosed in as many as 1 in 150 children that makes it difficult to establish normal interactions.

Many public health experts said they hoped a recent study by the California Department of Public Health would discredit the autism-vaccine theory forever. It showed that since 2001, when nearly all thimerosal was removed from vaccines, the autism rate has continued to rise in California. Had thimerosal been the culprit, the rate should have decreased.

Hannah Poling was vaccinated in 2000, before thimerosal was taken out of vaccines. Her family described her as a healthy toddler who could speak 20 words, walk and point to body parts. She had suffered a series of ear infections, so she was behind on vaccinations when she visited her Catonsville pediatrician.

"They did a catch-up on her shots - five shots, nine vaccines - in one sitting," said her father, Dr. Jon Poling, a Johns Hopkins-trained neurologist.

Within 48 hours, she developed a high fever and couldn't stop crying. Soon she stopped walking and became less verbal.

Ultimately, she was diagnosed with a mitochondrial disorder, a deficiency that prevents the body from producing enough energy from food. Symptoms can include fatigue, muscle problems, seizures and other neurological disorders. Her disorder was exacerbated by the vaccines, doctors concluded, which triggered her autism.

"Not only did she lose brain function, she lost her growth, she lost her ability to walk. She lost everything," said Poling, an Upper Marlboro native who moved his family from Ellicott City to Athens, Ga., in 2001.

Still, he said, "if I had it to do over again, I would vaccinate my child, but I would spread the vaccines out," perhaps skipping some of the shots he didn't get as a child, such as chickenpox .

Estimates put the rate of mitochondrial disorder between 1 in 2,000 and 1 in 4,000. Children are typically vaccinated before they show signs of the disorder and there is no easy screening test, said Charles Mohan Jr., executive director of the United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation.

Advocates see the Poling case as a victory for their contention that vaccines cause autism.

The government has kept mum on the Poling case. It was decided by the Department of Health and Human Services' Division of Vaccine Injury Compensation - a vaccine court of sorts that Congress established to resolve claims and keep manufacturers from bailing out of the vaccine business for liability reasons. How much money the Polings will get has not been determined.

Mohan said he is pleased that the link between mitochondrial disorders and autism has been made and hopes there will be more research exploring it. Still, he said, he thinks even those with mitochondrial disorders, which weaken the immune system, should be vaccinated.
 
Bush to veto bill banning waterboarding

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WASHINGTON - The White House says President Bush will veto legislation on Saturday that would have barred the CIA from using waterboarding — a technique that simulates drowning — and other harsh interrogation methods on terror suspects.

Bush has said the bill would harm the government's ability to prevent future attacks. Supporters of the legislation argue that it preserves the United States' right to collect critical intelligence while boosting the country's moral standing abroad.

"The bill would take away one of the most valuable tools on the war on terror, the CIA program to detain and question key terrorist leaders and operatives," deputy White House press secretary Tony Fratto said Friday.

The bill would restrict the CIA to using only the 19 interrogation techniques listed in the Army field manual.

The legislation would bar the CIA from using waterboarding, sensory deprivation or other coercive methods to break a prisoner who refuses to answer questions. Those practices were banned by the military in 2006, but the president wants the harsh interrogation methods to be a part of the CIA's toolbox.

Backers of the legislation, which cleared the House in December and won Senate approval last month, say the interrogation methods used by the military are sufficient.

"President Bush's veto will be one of the most shameful acts of his presidency," Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., said in a statement Friday. "Unless Congress overrides the veto, it will go down in history as a flagrant insult to the rule of law and a serious stain on the good name of America in the eyes of the world."

He noted that the Army field manual contends that harsh interrogation is a "poor technique that yields unreliable results, may damage subsequent collection efforts, and can induce the source to say what he thinks the (interrogator) wants to hear."
 
All UK citizens in ID database by 2017

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Tories think the National Identity Register could be a target for criminals, hackers and terrorists


All British citizens will have their fingerprints and photographs registered on a national ID database within 10 years under plans outlined by the Government.

Millions in sensitive jobs, including teachers, carers and health workers, will be among the first to be entered on to the identity register.

In a bid to kick start the project - the world's biggest - foreign nationals working in Britain will begin to be issued with cards from November. Starting next year, the first British citizens will be enrolled beginning with some airport staff, power station employees and people working on the London Olympics site.

Fingerprint kiosks, modelled on existing photograph booths in stations and shops, could be set up around the country to help people enrol. Plans outlined by Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, yesterday envisage a fee of £30 for a stand-alone card, and more than £100 for a combined ID card and passport.

But ministers have been told by their own expert that enrolment should be free if the scheme is ''to win hearts and minds.''

A report commissioned by Gordon Brown from Sir James Crosby, a former banking chief, raised the prospect of the taxpayer stumping up the full cost. The Government has insisted all along that the multi-billion pound scheme would be funded through fees and not taxes.

Sir James also came out against including a digital image of the cardholder's fingerprints on the microchip in each ID card. For security reasons, the card and database should only hold some elements of a biometric, he said.

His report was published alongside a new Government timetable for introducing a universal ID scheme by 2017.

From the start of 2010 young people will be able to get an identity card if they chose and will be issued with a unique personal identity number. Later that year the scheme will be opened up to voluntary applicants of any age.

From 2012 - after the next general election - anyone applying for a new passport will automatically be fingerprinted and 49 pieces of personal information logged on the database. This is three years later than planned when the scheme was first proposed after the September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001.

In another change from original plans, Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, said it will be possible to decline the card itself and rely upon a passport as an identity document. Ministers might even revive the idea of linking the database entry to the driving licence.

There had been suggestions that Gordon Brown was cooling on the ID project because of the cost and civil liberties implications. But far from being a retreat, the announcement was designed to show that the Government is still committed to the project.

Miss Smith said the aim was to make coverage of the population ''universal'' by 2017. Officials said by that date, around 80 per cent of adults would be covered.

At that point, or possibly earlier, there will be a vote in parliament to include the rest of the population still not on the register.

Miss Smith said there would be greater involvement of the private sector in delivering the scheme. There would also be a drive to encourage more people to join the scheme voluntarily. As a result, Miss Smith said the Home Office could scale back the projected £5.4bn cost by around £1bn.

The Tories have promised the scrap the scheme if they take power after the next election, likely in 2010. David Davis, the shadow home secretary, said: "The government may have removed the highly visible element but they have still left the dangerous core of this project.

"The National Identity Register, which will contain dozens of personal details of every adult in this country in one place, will be a severe threat to our security and a real target for criminals, hackers and terrorists.

"This is before you take the government's legendary inability to handle people's data securely into account."

Shami Chakrabarti, director for Liberty said: "Yet another re-launch of the ID scheme looks suspiciously like a new sales pitch for the same bad product. '

'ID cards remain disastrous for our purses, privacy and race relations. A slow soft sell won't change this thoroughly bad idea."

Phil Booth of NO2ID, which campaigns against the scheme, said: "This is a marketing exercise.

"Whether you volunteer or are coerced on to the ID database, there's no way back. You'll be monitored for life.

"That's why the Government is targeting students and young people, to get them on before they realise what's happening."
 
AP probe finds drugs in drinking water

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A vast array of pharmaceuticals — including antibiotics, anti-convulsants, mood stabilizers and sex hormones — have been found in the drinking water supplies of at least 41 million Americans, an Associated Press investigation shows.

To be sure, the concentrations of these pharmaceuticals are tiny, measured in quantities of parts per billion or trillion, far below the levels of a medical dose. Also, utilities insist their water is safe.

But the presence of so many prescription drugs — and over-the-counter medicines like acetaminophen and ibuprofen — in so much of our drinking water is heightening worries among scientists of long-term consequences to human health.

In the course of a five-month inquiry, the AP discovered that drugs have been detected in the drinking water supplies of 24 major metropolitan areas — from Southern California to Northern New Jersey, from Detroit to Louisville, Ky.

Water providers rarely disclose results of pharmaceutical screenings, unless pressed, the AP found. For example, the head of a group representing major California suppliers said the public "doesn't know how to interpret the information" and might be unduly alarmed.

How do the drugs get into the water?

People take pills. Their bodies absorb some of the medication, but the rest of it passes through and is flushed down the toilet. The wastewater is treated before it is discharged into reservoirs, rivers or lakes. Then, some of the water is cleansed again at drinking water treatment plants and piped to consumers. But most treatments do not remove all drug residue.

And while researchers do not yet understand the exact risks from decades of persistent exposure to random combinations of low levels of pharmaceuticals, recent studies — which have gone virtually unnoticed by the general public — have found alarming effects on human cells and wildlife.

"We recognize it is a growing concern and we're taking it very seriously," said Benjamin H. Grumbles, assistant administrator for water at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Members of the AP National Investigative Team reviewed hundreds of scientific reports, analyzed federal drinking water databases, visited environmental study sites and treatment plants and interviewed more than 230 officials, academics and scientists. They also surveyed the nation's 50 largest cities and a dozen other major water providers, as well as smaller community water providers in all 50 states.

Here are some of the key test results obtained by the AP:

_Officials in Philadelphia said testing there discovered 56 pharmaceuticals or byproducts in treated drinking water, including medicines for pain, infection, high cholesterol, asthma, epilepsy, mental illness and heart problems. Sixty-three pharmaceuticals or byproducts were found in the city's watersheds.

_Anti-epileptic and anti-anxiety medications were detected in a portion of the treated drinking water for 18.5 million people in Southern California.

_Researchers at the U.S. Geological Survey analyzed a Passaic Valley Water Commission drinking water treatment plant, which serves 850,000 people in Northern New Jersey, and found a metabolized angina medicine and the mood-stabilizing carbamazepine in drinking water.

_A sex hormone was detected in San Francisco's drinking water.

_The drinking water for Washington, D.C., and surrounding areas tested positive for six pharmaceuticals.

_Three medications, including an antibiotic, were found in drinking water supplied to Tucson, Ariz.

The situation is undoubtedly worse than suggested by the positive test results in the major population centers documented by the AP.

The federal government doesn't require any testing and hasn't set safety limits for drugs in water. Of the 62 major water providers contacted, the drinking water for only 28 was tested. Among the 34 that haven't: Houston, Chicago, Miami, Baltimore, Phoenix, Boston and New York City's Department of Environmental Protection, which delivers water to 9 million people.

Some providers screen only for one or two pharmaceuticals, leaving open the possibility that others are present.

The AP's investigation also indicates that watersheds, the natural sources of most of the nation's water supply, also are contaminated. Tests were conducted in the watersheds of 35 of the 62 major providers surveyed by the AP, and pharmaceuticals were detected in 28.

Yet officials in six of those 28 metropolitan areas said they did not go on to test their drinking water — Fairfax, Va.; Montgomery County in Maryland; Omaha, Neb.; Oklahoma City; Santa Clara, Calif., and New York City.

The New York state health department and the USGS tested the source of the city's water, upstate. They found trace concentrations of heart medicine, infection fighters, estrogen, anti-convulsants, a mood stabilizer and a tranquilizer.

City water officials declined repeated requests for an interview. In a statement, they insisted that "New York City's drinking water continues to meet all federal and state regulations regarding drinking water quality in the watershed and the distribution system" — regulations that do not address trace pharmaceuticals.

In several cases, officials at municipal or regional water providers told the AP that pharmaceuticals had not been detected, but the AP obtained the results of tests conducted by independent researchers that showed otherwise. For example, water department officials in New Orleans said their water had not been tested for pharmaceuticals, but a Tulane University researcher and his students have published a study that found the pain reliever naproxen, the sex hormone estrone and the anti-cholesterol drug byproduct clofibric acid in treated drinking water.

Of the 28 major metropolitan areas where tests were performed on drinking water supplies, only Albuquerque; Austin, Texas; and Virginia Beach, Va.; said tests were negative. The drinking water in Dallas has been tested, but officials are awaiting results. Arlington, Texas, acknowledged that traces of a pharmaceutical were detected in its drinking water but cited post-9/11 security concerns in refusing to identify the drug.

The AP also contacted 52 small water providers — one in each state, and two each in Missouri and Texas — that serve communities with populations around 25,000. All but one said their drinking water had not been screened for pharmaceuticals; officials in Emporia, Kan., refused to answer AP's questions, also citing post-9/11 issues.

Rural consumers who draw water from their own wells aren't in the clear either, experts say.

The Stroud Water Research Center, in Avondale, Pa., has measured water samples from New York City's upstate watershed for caffeine, a common contaminant that scientists often look for as a possible signal for the presence of other pharmaceuticals. Though more caffeine was detected at suburban sites, researcher Anthony Aufdenkampe was struck by the relatively high levels even in less populated areas.

He suspects it escapes from failed septic tanks, maybe with other drugs. "Septic systems are essentially small treatment plants that are essentially unmanaged and therefore tend to fail," Aufdenkampe said.

Even users of bottled water and home filtration systems don't necessarily avoid exposure. Bottlers, some of which simply repackage tap water, do not typically treat or test for pharmaceuticals, according to the industry's main trade group. The same goes for the makers of home filtration systems.

Contamination is not confined to the United States. More than 100 different pharmaceuticals have been detected in lakes, rivers, reservoirs and streams throughout the world. Studies have detected pharmaceuticals in waters throughout Asia, Australia, Canada and Europe — even in Swiss lakes and the North Sea.

For example, in Canada, a study of 20 Ontario drinking water treatment plants by a national research institute found nine different drugs in water samples. Japanese health officials in December called for human health impact studies after detecting prescription drugs in drinking water at seven different sites.

In the United States, the problem isn't confined to surface waters. Pharmaceuticals also permeate aquifers deep underground, source of 40 percent of the nation's water supply. Federal scientists who drew water in 24 states from aquifers near contaminant sources such as landfills and animal feed lots found minuscule levels of hormones, antibiotics and other drugs.

Perhaps it's because Americans have been taking drugs — and flushing them unmetabolized or unused — in growing amounts. Over the past five years, the number of U.S. prescriptions rose 12 percent to a record 3.7 billion, while nonprescription drug purchases held steady around 3.3 billion, according to IMS Health and The Nielsen Co.

"People think that if they take a medication, their body absorbs it and it disappears, but of course that's not the case," said EPA scientist Christian Daughton, one of the first to draw attention to the issue of pharmaceuticals in water in the United States.

Some drugs, including widely used cholesterol fighters, tranquilizers and anti-epileptic medications, resist modern drinking water and wastewater treatment processes. Plus, the EPA says there are no sewage treatment systems specifically engineered to remove pharmaceuticals.

One technology, reverse osmosis, removes virtually all pharmaceutical contaminants but is very expensive for large-scale use and leaves several gallons of polluted water for every one that is made drinkable.

Another issue: There's evidence that adding chlorine, a common process in conventional drinking water treatment plants, makes some pharmaceuticals more toxic.

Human waste isn't the only source of contamination. Cattle, for example, are given ear implants that provide a slow release of trenbolone, an anabolic steroid used by some bodybuilders, which causes cattle to bulk up. But not all the trenbolone circulating in a steer is metabolized. A German study showed 10 percent of the steroid passed right through the animals.

Water sampled downstream of a Nebraska feedlot had steroid levels four times as high as the water taken upstream. Male fathead minnows living in that downstream area had low testosterone levels and small heads.

Other veterinary drugs also play a role. Pets are now treated for arthritis, cancer, heart disease, diabetes, allergies, dementia, and even obesity — sometimes with the same drugs as humans. The inflation-adjusted value of veterinary drugs rose by 8 percent, to $5.2 billion, over the past five years, according to an analysis of data from the Animal Health Institute.

Ask the pharmaceutical industry whether the contamination of water supplies is a problem, and officials will tell you no. "Based on what we now know, I would say we find there's little or no risk from pharmaceuticals in the environment to human health," said microbiologist Thomas White, a consultant for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.

But at a conference last summer, Mary Buzby — director of environmental technology for drug maker Merck & Co. Inc. — said: "There's no doubt about it, pharmaceuticals are being detected in the environment and there is genuine concern that these compounds, in the small concentrations that they're at, could be causing impacts to human health or to aquatic organisms."

Recent laboratory research has found that small amounts of medication have affected human embryonic kidney cells, human blood cells and human breast cancer cells. The cancer cells proliferated too quickly; the kidney cells grew too slowly; and the blood cells showed biological activity associated with inflammation.

Also, pharmaceuticals in waterways are damaging wildlife across the nation and around the globe, research shows. Notably, male fish are being feminized, creating egg yolk proteins, a process usually restricted to females. Pharmaceuticals also are affecting sentinel species at the foundation of the pyramid of life — such as earth worms in the wild and zooplankton in the laboratory, studies show.

Some scientists stress that the research is extremely limited, and there are too many unknowns. They say, though, that the documented health problems in wildlife are disconcerting.

"It brings a question to people's minds that if the fish were affected ... might there be a potential problem for humans?" EPA research biologist Vickie Wilson told the AP. "It could be that the fish are just exquisitely sensitive because of their physiology or something. We haven't gotten far enough along."

With limited research funds, said Shane Snyder, research and development project manager at the Southern Nevada Water Authority, a greater emphasis should be put on studying the effects of drugs in water.

"I think it's a shame that so much money is going into monitoring to figure out if these things are out there, and so little is being spent on human health," said Snyder. "They need to just accept that these things are everywhere — every chemical and pharmaceutical could be there. It's time for the EPA to step up to the plate and make a statement about the need to study effects, both human and environmental."

To the degree that the EPA is focused on the issue, it appears to be looking at detection. Grumbles acknowledged that just late last year the agency developed three new methods to "detect and quantify pharmaceuticals" in wastewater. "We realize that we have a limited amount of data on the concentrations," he said. "We're going to be able to learn a lot more."

While Grumbles said the EPA had analyzed 287 pharmaceuticals for possible inclusion on a draft list of candidates for regulation under the Safe Drinking Water Act, he said only one, nitroglycerin, was on the list. Nitroglycerin can be used as a drug for heart problems, but the key reason it's being considered is its widespread use in making explosives.

So much is unknown. Many independent scientists are skeptical that trace concentrations will ultimately prove to be harmful to humans. Confidence about human safety is based largely on studies that poison lab animals with much higher amounts.

There's growing concern in the scientific community, meanwhile, that certain drugs — or combinations of drugs — may harm humans over decades because water, unlike most specific foods, is consumed in sizable amounts every day.

Our bodies may shrug off a relatively big one-time dose, yet suffer from a smaller amount delivered continuously over a half century, perhaps subtly stirring allergies or nerve damage. Pregnant women, the elderly and the very ill might be more sensitive.

Many concerns about chronic low-level exposure focus on certain drug classes: chemotherapy that can act as a powerful poison; hormones that can hamper reproduction or development; medicines for depression and epilepsy that can damage the brain or change behavior; antibiotics that can allow human germs to mutate into more dangerous forms; pain relievers and blood-pressure diuretics.

For several decades, federal environmental officials and nonprofit watchdog environmental groups have focused on regulated contaminants — pesticides, lead, PCBs — which are present in higher concentrations and clearly pose a health risk.

However, some experts say medications may pose a unique danger because, unlike most pollutants, they were crafted to act on the human body.

"These are chemicals that are designed to have very specific effects at very low concentrations. That's what pharmaceuticals do. So when they get out to the environment, it should not be a shock to people that they have effects," says zoologist John Sumpter at Brunel University in London, who has studied trace hormones, heart medicine and other drugs.

And while drugs are tested to be safe for humans, the timeframe is usually over a matter of months, not a lifetime. Pharmaceuticals also can produce side effects and interact with other drugs at normal medical doses. That's why — aside from therapeutic doses of fluoride injected into potable water supplies — pharmaceuticals are prescribed to people who need them, not delivered to everyone in their drinking water.

"We know we are being exposed to other people's drugs through our drinking water, and that can't be good," says Dr. David Carpenter, who directs the Institute for Health and the Environment of the State University of New York at Albany.
 
Kentucky Lawmaker Wants to Make Anonymous Internet Posting Illegal


Kentucky Representative Tim Couch filed a bill this week to make anonymous posting online illegal.

The bill would require anyone who contributes to a website to register their real name, address and e-mail address with that site.

Their full name would be used anytime a comment is posted.

If the bill becomes law, the website operator would have to pay if someone was allowed to post anonymously on their site. The fine would be five-hundred dollars for a first offense and one-thousand dollars for each offense after that.

Representative Couch says he filed the bill in hopes of cutting down on online bullying. He says that has especially been a problem in his Eastern Kentucky district.

Action News 36 asked people what they thought about the bill.

Some said they felt it was a violation of First Amendment rights. Others say it is a good tool toward eliminating online harassment.

Represntative Couch says enforcing this bill if it became law would be a challenge.
 
On the drug in water post, the amounts found were miniscule, and it's the dose that makes the poison.

Dose makes the poison, yet one wonders if combining various poisons in small amounts makes for a lethal concoction? If there isn't enough of any one thing to hurt you, yet there's many separate poisons/drugs/chemicals/heavy metals present, is any person willing to continue drinking the water under the illusion that just because there isn't enough of any one thing to hurt you, that when you begin to factor the accumulated effect that you would still somehow come out unharmed? Many of the elites boil and filter their water religiously and won’t even touch the stuff. Paranoid? Perhaps. But if there’s a risk, some people are in the camp of “why even bother drinking this stuff?” Reports like this have been coming out for years. It’s interesting that it’s finally becoming mainstream news now.
 
Retail gasoline price hits record: AAA

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. gasoline prices hit a record on Tuesday and were expected to keep climbing into summer, travel group AAA said, adding strain on consumers already feeling the pinch of an economic slowdown.

The White House said it was concerned about the effect of surging energy costs on consumers and small businesses, but said it would be wrong to give "false hope" about the ability to bring prices lower quickly.

Average regular gasoline prices touched an all-time high of $3.227 per gallon, up 27 cents in a month and surpassing the previous peak hit in May 2007, AAA said in its daily survey of more than 85,000 self-serve filling stations.

The travel group said it expected pump prices to rise further in the coming months, breaking above $4 a gallon in some areas by summer, when road travel typically peaks.

The rise in pump prices comes as crude oil vaults to new peaks near $110 per barrel amid an increase in speculative investing in commodities and concerns that world energy consumption will outpace new supply.

President George W. Bush has urged the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to boost crude oil production to ease record energy prices and help avert an economic slowdown, but the group has shrugged off calls for more supply.
 
Quarter of teen girls have sex-related disease

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than one in four U.S. teen girls is infected with at least one sexually transmitted disease, and the rate is highest among blacks, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Tuesday.

An estimated 3.2 million U.S. girls ages 14 and 19 -- about 26 percent of that age group -- have a sexually transmitted infection such as the human papillomavirus or HPV, chlamydia, genital herpes or trichomoniasis, the CDC said.

Forty-eight percent of black teen-age girls were infected, compared to 20 percent of whites and 20 percent of Mexican American girls. The report did not give data on the broader U.S. Hispanic population.

"What we found is alarming," the CDC's Dr. Sara Forhan, who led the study, told reporters. "This means that far too many young women are at risk for the serious health effects of untreated STDs, including infertility and cervical cancer."

Dr. John Douglas, director of the CDC's Division of STD Prevention, said a complex mix of factors is to blame for the higher rates among black girls, including the overall higher presence of sexually transmitted diseases, or STDs, in the broader black community.

"Therefore, for any given sex act with any given partner, a person who's not infected has a greater risk of coming into contact with infection and getting infected," Douglas said.

The CDC said the rate of STD infection among U.S. teen girls might be higher than the study indicates because it did not look at syphilis, gonorrhea or HIV infection, but said these generally are uncommon in girls this age.

The CDC said the report, released at a meeting in Chicago, was the first to gauge combined rates of common STDs in female adolescents, giving the best data to date.

MULTIPLE INFECTIONS

Among girls who had an STD, 15 percent had more than one. About half reported ever having had sex, and among those girls, 40 percent had at least one STD. Of girls who had just one lifetime sexual partner, 20 percent had at least one STD.

HPV, which can cause genital warts and cervical cancer, was the most common infection, seen in 18 percent of the girls. The CDC said this indicates teen girls, even those with few lifetime sexual partners, are at high risk for HPV infection.

CDC officials urge girls and women ages 11 to 26 who have not been vaccinated against HPV or who have not completed the full series of shots be fully vaccinated against the virus.

The next most common infection was chlamydia, caused by a bacterium that can damage a woman's reproductive organs. It was seen in 4 percent of the girls. Untreated infection can spread into the uterus or fallopian tubes and cause pelvic inflammatory disease. It also raises risk for infertility.

The CDC urges yearly chlamydia screening for sexually active women under age of 25.

Trichomoniasis, caused by a single-celled parasite, was seen in about 3 percent of the girls. Women with trichomoniasis have vaginal itching and discharge.

About 2 percent of girls were infected with herpes simplex virus type 2, which causes most cases of genital herpes.

The findings were based on data from 838 girls who took part in a nationally representative health survey in 2003 and 2004. They were tested for various STDs.
 
Dose makes the poison, yet one wonders if combining various poisons in small amounts makes for a lethal concoction? If there isn't enough of any one thing to hurt you, yet there's many separate poisons/drugs/chemicals/heavy metals present, is any person willing to continue drinking the water under the illusion that just because there isn't enough of any one thing to hurt you, that when you begin to factor the accumulated effect that you would still somehow come out unharmed? Many of the elites boil and filter their water religiously and won’t even touch the stuff. Paranoid? Perhaps. But if there’s a risk, some people are in the camp of “why even bother drinking this stuff?” Reports like this have been coming out for years. It’s interesting that it’s finally becoming mainstream news now.

Many of the elites do many things for no good reason. But what you said does not get around the fact that it is the amounts, not the mere prescence, that makes something toxic. In clear, cold rock filtered snowmelt, you have e.coli, crytosporidium, fish and animal droppings, animal parts, and the water is very safe to drink. The tests that they do are very sensitive ( which I like,) so they catch PPB (parts per billion) with some of these substances, and that is why I am not worried, and think this is a panic.
 
Many of the elites do many things for no good reason. But what you said does not get around the fact that it is the amounts, not the mere prescence, that makes something toxic. In clear, cold rock filtered snowmelt, you have e.coli, crytosporidium, fish and animal droppings, animal parts, and the water is very safe to drink. The tests that they do are very sensitive ( which I like,) so they catch PPB (parts per billion) with some of these substances, and that is why I am not worried, and think this is a panic.

The elites are sometimes in panic mode but some of the things they do are smart such as: getting out of paper currency and moving into precious metals, avoiding GMO food, and treating water with care. At worst they are being too cautious and at best, they are avoiding an unhealthy water supply that is potentially hazardous. Even if the water supply has trace elements of these drugs, the amount of fluoride in the water has long said to be harmful. Thus even if drugs can be debated as being harmless, the fluoride and in certain parts of the country, the heavy metals are in amounts that can be harmful. There was a study saying fluoride could (under worst conditions) lower a person's IQ by around 20 points or so.

My view is that even if the new findings turn out to be bogus or the amounts are too small (of the newer stuff they're talking about being in the water), I'm still concerned because the fluoride and heavy metals (even without that extra crap in the water), is more than enough for me to treat my water.
 
Don't get me wrong, I am not against testing and treating water, just against some of the way things are getting reported. The reason for testing the water is primarily because of the things you mentioned like the amount of flourine, heavy metals, and other materials. I have learned that many things are not worth the ink used to print them. We need not be too worried about many things, like GMO foods (for the most part), because many of the foods we have eaten for years would be classified as GMO. But, the lining us up for tagging and surveillance as well as some of the restrictions are VERY troubling, and I am glad you post it. Keep it up.
 
WH Press Sec NOT ALLOWED to Talk about the Dollar

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Lawmakers consider outlawing 'next marijuana'

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Daniel Siebert, an amateur botanist, poses with salvia divinorum plants outside his Malibu, Calif., home. Florida is considering making the herb illegal.


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - On Web sites touting the mind-blowing powers of salvia divinorum, come-ons to buy the hallucinogenic herb are accompanied by warnings: "Time is running out! ... stock up while you still can."

That's because salvia is being targeted by lawmakers concerned that the inexpensive and easy-to-obtain plant could become the next marijuana. Eight states have already placed restrictions on salvia, and 16 others, including Florida, are considering a ban or have previously.

"As soon as we make one drug illegal, kids start looking around for other drugs they can buy legally. This is just the next one," said Florida state Rep. Mary Brandenburg, who has introduced a bill to make possession of salvia a felony punishable by up to five years in prison.

Some say legislators are overreacting to a minor problem, but no one disputes that the plant impairs judgment and the ability to drive.

Native to Mexico and still grown there, salvia divinorum is generally smoked but can also be chewed or made into a tea and drunk.

Hour-long hallucinations

Called nicknames like Sally-D, Magic Mint and Diviner's Sage, salvia is a hallucinogen that gives users an out-of-body sense of traveling through time and space or merging with inanimate objects. Unlike hallucinogens like LSD or PCP, however, salvia's effects last for a shorter time, generally up to an hour.

No known deaths have been attributed to salvia's use, but it was listed as a factor in one Delaware teen's suicide two years ago.

"Parents, I would say, are pretty clueless," said Jonathan Appel, an assistant professor of psychology and criminal justice at Tiffin University in Ohio who has studied the emergence of the substance. "It's much more powerful than marijuana."

Linked to boy's suicide

Salvia's short-lasting effects and fact that it is currently legal may make it seem more appealing to teens, lawmakers say. In the Delaware suicide, the boy's mother told reporters that salvia made his mood darker but he justified its use by citing its legality. According to reports, the autopsy found no traces of the drug in his system, but the medical examiner listed it as a contributing cause.

Mike Strain, Louisiana's Agriculture and Forestry Commissioner and former legislator, helped his state in 2005 become the first to make salvia illegal, along with a number of other plants. He said the response has been largely positive.

"I got some hostile e-mails from people who sold these products," Strain said. "You don't make everybody happy when you outlaw drugs. You save one child and it's worth it."

An ounce of salvia leaves sells for around $30 on the Internet. A liquid extract from the plant, salvinorin A, is also sold in various strengths labeled "5x" through "60x." A gram of the 5x strength, about the weight of a plastic pen cap, is about $12 while 60x strength is around $65. And in some cases the extract comes in flavors including apple, strawberry and spearmint.

'Experience immortality'

Some Web sites tout the product with images like a waterfall and rainbow and include testimonials like: "It might sound far-fetched, but I experience immortality."

Among those who believe the commotion over the drug is overblown is Rick Doblin of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a nonprofit group that does research on psychedelic drugs and whose goal is to develop psychedelics and marijuana into prescription medication.

"I think the move to criminalize is a misguided response to a very minimal problem," Doblin said.

Doblin said salvia isn't "a party drug," "tastes terrible" and is "not going to be extremely popular." He disputes the fact teens are its main users and says older users are more likely.

"It's a minor drug in the world of psychedelics," he said.
 
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Student suspended for buying Skittles at school


NEW HAVEN, Connecticut (AP) -- Contraband candy has led to big trouble for an eighth-grade honors student in Connecticut.

Michael Sheridan was stripped of his title as class vice president, barred from attending an honors student dinner and suspended for a day after buying a bag of Skittles from a classmate.

School spokeswoman Catherine Sullivan-DeCarlo says the New Haven school system banned candy sales in 2003 as part of a districtwide school wellness policy.

Michael's suspension has been reduced from three days to one, but he has not been reinstated as class vice president.

He says he didn't realize his candy purchase was against the rules -- although he did notice the student selling the Skittles on February 26 was being secretive.
 
China hits back at US on rights

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The US said China had not undertaken democratic reform


China has accused the US of double standards over human rights in response to an official US report which labelled Beijing an authoritarian regime.

Beijing calls Washington's rights record "tattered and shocking".

The Chinese report cites rising violent crime in the US as posing a serious threat to the lives, liberty and personal security of its people.

The foreign ministry said the US should stop posing as a rights watchdog and concentrate on its own problems.

"Stop exercising double standards on human rights issues and wrongly meddling in the internal affairs of other countries," said ministry spokesman Qin Gang.

He added that China's achievements on human rights had been "widely recognised by the international community".

The Chinese report accuses the US of arrogance and is particuarly scathing about the Iraq conflict.

"The invasion of Iraq by US troops has produced the biggest human rights tragedy and the greatest humanitarian disaster in modern world," the document said.

Beijing's report, gathered from US and international news sources, quotes crime statistics and cites particular incidents such as the Virginia Tech massacre to back up its claims.

The report comes in response to the US State Department's annual survey of human rights across the world.

Although the report accuses China of denying its people basic freedoms, the country is not listed as one of the world's most systematic rights violators.
 
Ala. building can't shake swastika shape

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DECATUR, Ala. - From the ground, the Wesley Acres Methodist retirement home looks like any other building. But fly over in an airplane, and the outline is unmistakable: It's one big swastika.

Prompted by complaints from a Jewish activist, the agency that owns the government-funded building is planning to alter its shape to disguise the Nazi symbol. The move comes just a few years after a $1 million design modification meant to quiet similar complaints from a U.S. senator.

"The difficulty is there are a limited number of options for fixing a building that has been there for some time," said Mike Giles, counsel for the Methodist Homes Corp. of Alabama and Northwest Florida. "We have to come up with a way to fix an appearance that we want solved and not hurt our residents."

Wesley Acres provides government-subsidized housing for 117 low-income people ages 62 and above. Most have no reason to suspect their hallways take on a sinister shape.

The one-story building, designed in the mid-1970s and completed in 1980, underwent a $1 million alteration in 2001 with funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development following complaints by Democratic Sen. Howell Heflin, who has since died. But the addition of two wings did little to hide the offensive shape, and in some ways accentuates it.

Options for the new renovations include the addition of covered porches or other outdoor areas.

The latest push to rid the landscape of the broken cross shape follows complaints from Avrahaum Segol, the same Israeli-American researcher who last fall helped publicize a swastika-shaped barracks at Naval Base Coronado in San Diego. The Navy said it would spend about $600,000 to alter the building, which opened in the 1960s, but the work has not yet been done.

Segol calls the Alabama retirement home a "sister swastika" to the building in California and says they were both part of a tangled, government-funded conspiracy to honor Nazis.

Segol claims the swastika shape of Wesley Acres in Decatur pays homage to the German scientists who came to nearby Huntsville after World War II and designed the rockets that put Americans on the moon.

Methodist Homes' Giles said Segol's conspiracy claims are ridiculous. The building was originally designed to be much larger, he said, and cutbacks resulted in a shape that resembled the four-armed swastika used as the symbol of German Nazis during World War II.

"It was certainly not intentional," Giles said.

The shape of the retirement center is evident in satellite photos available on the Internet. But it is located in a residential section in a city with few tall buildings, and many in Decatur have no idea Wesley Acres resembles a swastika.

Giles said any changes to the building must be relatively inexpensive since the agency lacks money for an elaborate solution. Planners are considering modifications, he said, "so that from the air it takes your eye away from what was originally there."
 
Bill Clinton admits to attending 1991 Bilderberg Meeting

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Children as young as FIVE should be put on DNA list, says forensics expert

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DNA testing: A police forensics expert has suggested young children be added to the database


Children as young as five should be put on a DNA database if they behave badly, according to Britain's senior police forensics expert.
Gary Pugh, director of forensic sciences at Scotland Yard, said that if primary school children behaved in a way that indicated they could become criminals in later life, they could be put on the database.

Mr Pugh, who is also the new DNA spokes for the Association of Chief Police Officers, said a debate should be started on how far the country should go to identify potential offenders.

He told The Observer newspaper: "If we have a primary means of identifying people before they offend, then in the longer term the benefits of targeting younger people are extremely large.

"You could argue the younger the better.

"Criminologists say some people will grow out of crime; others won't. We have to find out who are possibly going to be the biggest threat to society."

He admitted the controversial idea would raise issues of parental consent, stigmatisation and the role of teachers in identifying future offenders.

There are 4.5million genetic samples on the UK database - but police believe that more would reduce crime further.

Civil liberty groups have condemned the idea as being like something from "a science fiction novel".
 
Jenny McCarthy On CityTV Speaking On Autism Mar.14, 2008

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CCTV in class spies on teachers, says union

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Schools are believed to have first installed classroom CCTV four years ago


Schools are becoming "Orwellian" societies where CCTV cameras in classrooms monitor pupil behaviour and staff performance, teachers will warn today.

They are relying on "Big Brother-style" tactics to crack down on assaults on staff and fellow children, it is claimed.

Many of the Government's semi-independent academies have installed cameras and two-way mirrors to let senior staff monitor pupils, they say.

But the 160,000-strong Association of Teachers and Lecturers fears that the systems are being used by heads to monitor staff performance, putting teachers' ability to work independently at risk.

Speaking at the ATL's annual conference in Torquay, Julia Neal, the union's president, said the shift was symptomatic of the "current reality of over-measured, over-monitored education".

She also criticised the increasing use of league tables and examination targets which, she said, stifled teachers' ability to work and undermined pupils' learning.

"Teachers will talk about surveillance cameras in classrooms, about over-zealous observation of their teaching," she said. "We will hear about teachers delivering a prescriptive curriculum and teaching to the tests in order to secure a good place in the league tables for their school.

"These issues all add up to an education system which focuses on targets and outcomes, and fails to meet individual pupils' needs.

"It is time for a re-think by the Government on what constitutes real success for pupils before the push for better results, increased monitoring and more measurements means young people can only function in a society which has been so spoon-fed that it cannot think for itself and cannot challenge and grow in the future."

Schools are believed to have first installed classroom CCTV four years ago, with an academy in Middlesbrough using cameras to monitor pupil behaviour and protect expensive equipment.

Mary Bousted, the union's general secretary, said many teachers were alarmed by the technology which meant many would "never take risks" for fear of being penalised.

"If you are always on your guard, you end up, quite frankly, teaching by numbers," she said.
 
One million children on DNA database


One in 10 children will be on the national DNA database by next year - including almost 50 under 10, it emerged last night.

The news has prompted concerns from civil liberties campaigners that Britain is becoming a "surveillance state".

The Conservatives said the country was "witnessing the end of the presumption of innocence in our country, especially for our young people".

New figures show the DNA profiles of 44 children under 10 are on the database even though they are below the age of criminal responsibility.

They are among more than one million taken from youngsters under 18 - many of whom have never committed an offence.

The database now contains more than 4.3 million profiles and is growing at more than half a million a year.

By next year, it is predicted that 1.5 million will be from youngsters who were aged between 10 and 18 when their profiles were added.

With an estimated 13.1 million children under 18 in the UK in 2006, it means that as many as one in 10 children could be on the database by 2009.

Researchers say more than 1.1 million young people been added between 1995, when the database started, and April last year. When the youths become adults they are reclassified, resulting in a much lower number of minors being recorded.

David Davis, the shadow home secretary, said Britain was "witnessing the end of the presumption of innocence in our country, especially for our young people". He added: "Samples are being entered on the DNA database in a totally arbitrary fashion. It is outrageous that hundreds of thousands of innocent children are on this database but all of the serious criminals in our jails are not.

"This is why the Government should answer our calls for a proper Parliamentary debate on the issue so it can be put on a statutory basis." Guy Herbert, the general secretary of the No2ID campaign, said: "Ever more people are becoming outraged as they wake up to the steady encroachments of the database and surveillance state.

"Once an innocent child - or anyone else - finds themselves, unconvicted on the national DNA database, then they don't have any rights over it. They can beg a Chief Constable to remove the record in theory; but in practice he will always refuse. A free country is progressively becoming a nation of suspects."

Separate research by the campaigners Genewatch says some 100,000 children on the database are "innocent" in that they were not even given a caution after being arrested.
 
America is ALREADY in recession, say top economic global experts

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Traders in New York watch as share prices dive. Experts claim the economy is already in a recession


Experts have accused the International Monetary Fund of "driving the car using the rear view mirror" after the global body warned the U.S. was on the verge of a recession.

The world's biggest economy is already in a recession, they claim, as a draft version of the IMF's World Economic Outlook declared the U.S. economy is "very weak". Nigel Gault, chief US economist at Global Insight, a worldwide economic forecasting and consultancy firm, said he believed the US was in recession already - and that spelt problems for other countries, including the UK.

He said: "The US has, for years, been the primary motor for growth in the global economy. However, now consumer spending in the US has seen a downturn, the tables are turned, and the US is looking to the rest of the world for support, through strong export growth, and cutting imports.

"This is happening, US exports are doing extremely well, but it's not enough to keep the economy out of recession.

"We do not expect to see the problems in the housing market in the US bottoming out before 2009, and while spending will be helped by tax rebates to be given this summer, that may give only temporary relief, and in the first quarter next year growth may dip back close to zero.

"The longer either the recession or period of weak growth goes on, the longer the US market is going to be weak, and very difficult for anybody trying to sell goods to it."

Jeremy Batstone, head of research at stockbrokers Charles Stanley, said the IMF "has a history of driving the car using the rear view mirror".

He added: "For the whole of 2007, it was not looking through the windscreen, it was merely reporting what the prevailing economic data releases were telling it.

"This report suggests nothing has changed, the IMF using backward-looking data is taking the view that the US economy might be in recession.

"Recent economic releases make it entirely clear that the US economy is already in recession, it's confirmed by diverse economic statistics, including retail sales, sharply falling house prices, rising unemployment, deteriorating industrial production and manufacturing output.

"The 64,000-dollar question, indeed the 64-trillion dollar question, is not what happened in the first quarter, but what might happen in the second quarter, and beyond that.

"The hope among economists is that radical action by the US Federal Reserve might be enough to nip this crisis in the bud, and maybe there can be gradual recovery in the second quarter of the year, but at the moment we just don't know.

"I do find myself becoming a little more hopeful, as the hour is darkest before the dawn. Just maybe radical action will prove that in the second quarter - or the third quarter if we are unlucky - that the storm abates."

The draft version of the International Monetary Fund's World Economic Outlook concluded the US economy "remains very weak, certainly close to a possible recession".

The report is due to be published ahead of a meeting next month, and was leaked to Italian news agency Ansa.

The verdict comes after the cash crisis and cut-price rescue of troubled US investment bank Bear Stearns sent markets plummeting at the beginning of the week.

The Federal Reserve, the US central bank, dropped its main interest rate by three quarter-points on Wednesday - the latest in a series of cuts which have seen the rate trimmed by 2 per cent in the first three months of this year - and 3 per cent since the credit crunch first erupted in global markets last August.

The moves come as the Fed attempts to rescue the world's biggest economy from the brink of recession and ease the pressure on the banking system.

The bank holiday brings a pause in efforts to create stability in the London markets after a week of stock market turmoil for the biggest companies.

The Bank of England pumped an extra £5 billion into frozen money markets yesterday.

Its second such move in three days came as it held talks with the heads of major banks starved of cash in the credit crunch.

The FTSE 100 Index finished nearly 1 per cent lower, with the leading share index down 2.5 per cent overall after four days of volatile trading and the launch of a probe into claims of market abuse.

The Bank's £5 billion extra brought its total funding available to £10.9 billion yesterday, though financial institutions called for almost three times as much.

The increased funds will be made available until the beginning of April.

The Bank held discussions over the turmoil and the Treasury consultation under way on reforms to improve stability and protect savers' deposits.

The UK's biggest mortgage lender, Halifax Bank of Scotland, saw a stock market recovery yesterday after being struck by Wednesday's rumours of funding problems.

The Bank of England was forced to step in and deny the talk about HBOS swirling around the City, which prompted a probe by the City watchdog, the Financial Services Authority (FSA). Yesterday HBOS was the Footsie's third-best performer however, gaining more than 6 per cent.
 
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AIDS research in crisis as 'miracle' vaccines actually INCREASE chance

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Big blow: Researchers have found that two 'miracle' AIDS cures not only failed to work but can actually increase people's chances of contracting the virus


The search for a cure for Aids was in crisis last night after it was revealed that two supposed "miracle" vaccines not only fail to protect people from the virus, but could put them at greater risk of becoming infected.

It is a massive blow to Aids research, which has ground to a halt - with seven other trials of similarly designed would-be vaccines either suspended or called off indefinitely.

The US government alone pumps £250million a year into research to try to find a "Holy Grail" vaccine which would put an end to Aids.

Now scientists fear the disastrous outcome of the two most promising trials leaves them back at square one.

Hailed as major breakthroughs when the tests began, the US-funded STEP and Phambili studies were shut down when it became clear the vaccines could leave patients more susceptible to the virus, which attacks the immune system and which killed more than two million victims last year - 320,000 of them children.

More than 25million people have died from Aids since 1981 and an estimated 33million are living with the disease, most in Africa.

In the UK, there have been at least 17,600 Aids-linked deaths and more than 88,000 people have contracted the HIV virus which leads to Aids.

The two aborted studies used the same vaccine, made from a common respiratory virus loaded with fragments of HIV.

The STEP study involved male homosexuals in North and South America, the Caribbean and Australia.

The Phambili trial, involving more than 3,000 men and women heterosexual volunteers in South Africa, was halted less than one year into its four-year schedule after it, too, raised fears that the vaccine could endanger patients.

The vaccine was supposed to cut the number of infections and make the HIV virus less deadly and less contagious in those who had already contracted it.

But, rather than protect the immune system, the tests appeared to show that the vaccine somehow primed it to become more susceptible to HIV.

Results from both trials, which cost about £16million, suggested that people were twice as likely to become infected after having the vaccine.

The debacle has sent shockwaves through Aids organisations that have raised millions of pounds towards research over the past 20 years.

"This is on the same level of catastrophe as the Challenger disaster that destroyed a Nasa space shuttle," said Robert Gallo, co-discoverer of the HIV virus and head of the Institute for Human Virology in Baltimore.

Mark Harrington, head of Treatment Action Group, an Aids activist organisation, said: "We can't afford any more trials like this. We have to stop and reassess and recommit to basic science, or people will begin to lose faith."

However, John Moore, an Aids virologist at America's Weill Cornell Medical College, said: "I do think that what happened in this trial is an example of scientists blindly rushing into dangerous things."

Even before the tests came to a grinding halt, some experts were questioning whether the type of vaccine being looked at would be successful.

Rather than a drug to help ease the effects of the virus, people in areas worst hit by the epidemic were looking for a wholesale cure. As it turned out, the vaccine's abject failure has rendered arguments over marketing unnecessary.

The US National Institutes of Health, which funded both programmes, is holding a crisis meeting next week.

But experts fear a bleak future. "None of the products currently in the pipeline has any reasonable chance of being effective in field trials," said Harvard University molecular geneticist Ronald Desrosiers.

"We simply do not know at the present time how to design a vaccine that will be effective against HIV."
 
Re: AIDS research in crisis as 'miracle' vaccines actually INCREASE chance

lol. Not only did they make AIDS and distribute it, but now they have figured out how to make sure you get it. LOL
 
US army deaths in Iraq hit 4,000

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Sunday saw widespread violence in Iraq


The number of United States military personnel killed in Iraq since the US-led invasion five years ago has passed the 4,000 mark.

The latest to die were four soldiers whose patrol vehicle was blown up by a bomb in southern Baghdad on Sunday.

The deaths bring the total to 4,000, according to the US military and independent monitoring groups.

In other violence, Baghdad's Green Zone came under fire, and a suicide bomber killed 13 Iraqi soldiers in Mosul.

In Baghdad, the heavily-fortified Green Zone suffered sustained mortar and rocket fire, which killed at least 15 civilians.

The US military said it killed 12 militants preparing suicide attacks in a house east of Baquba.

The bloodshed comes despite an overall reduction in violence since last June.

That was when the US deployed an extra 30,000 troops in violence-hit areas - the so-called "troop surge".

But Sunday's violence underlines the fragile, reversible nature of the apparent improvements in security, say correspondents.

Huge blast

At least 40 people were injured in Sunday's early-morning suicide strike in Mosul.

The suicide attacker ploughed an explosives-laden tanker into the army base, causing a massive blast.

Iraqi and US soldiers have been engaged in a major offensive in Mosul, which US commanders say is al-Qaeda's last urban stronghold in Iraq.

In another deadly attack, at least seven shoppers in a Baghdad market were killed when gunmen travelling in three cars opened fire.

Our correspondent says previous rocket attacks on the Green Zone have been blamed on rogue elements of Moqtada Sadr's Mehdi Army militia, which is supposed to be observing a ceasefire.

Also on Sunday, the US military said it had killed 12 men in a raid east of Baquba city, in Diyala province.

Spokesman Major Winfield Danielson claimed six of the men killed were found to have shaved their bodies, which he said was "consistent with final preparation for suicide operations".

He added that a cache of weapons and ammunition had also been found in the raid and destroyed.
 
US cops beat the shit out of Tibetans

US cops beat the shit out of Tibetans

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Patient turns harsh light on clinics reusing syringes

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When Evelyn McKnight was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2000, she knew she was facing the fight of her life. What she couldn't know was that the people treating her cancer would cause another life-threatening illness.

In 2002, McKnight, 53, an audiologist from Fremont, Neb., found out she had been infected with hepatitis C a year earlier at the clinic where she went to get chemotherapy. It turned out the clinic was reusing syringes and spreading infections.

She was one of 99 people at the clinic in Fremont, population 25,000, to be infected with the liver disease often associated with IV drug users, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says.

"I went to the doctor to be healed, and I came away with a life-threatening illness," McKnight says. "There is a huge sense of betrayal."

To keep that from happening elsewhere, last fall she co-founded a patient advocacy group, HONOReform, that uses advocacy and education to stop the kind of medical errors by which blood-borne diseases are transmitted.

So when she heard about the latest outbreak, which came to light late last month in Las Vegas, "I just felt sick to my stomach. This shouldn't still be happening. This should not be going on in a first-world country in 2008."

But it is.

Though the vast majority of medical professionals practice safely and cleanly, 31 outbreaks of viral hepatitis associated with unsafe medical practices, including those in Fremont and Las Vegas, have occurred since 1999, the CDC says. An outbreak is defined by two or more people being infected.

Letters to 40,000 people

In the case in Las Vegas, seven people with acute hepatitis C were found to be infected at two related endoscopy centers, according to the Southern Nevada Health District.

Health officials have sent letters to about 40,000 people who were treated between March 2004 and Jan. 11, urging them to be tested for hepatitis C, hepatitis B and HIV. Officials may not know for several more months how many people are infected, says Brian Labus, senior epidemiologist for the Southern Nevada Health District.

Though most people know sharing needles is unsafe, sharing or reusing syringes can be equally dangerous.

During an injection, a tiny amount of blood is often inadvertently drawn back into the syringe. Most of the time, that doesn't make a difference because it is common practice to use a new syringe and a new needle for each injection.

But in some cases, practitioners may change the needle but not the syringe, says Michael Bell, CDC associate director for infection control.

They then use that dirty syringe to draw more medicine from a vial. By doing so, the small amount of blood that was in the dirty syringe inadvertently flows back into the vial, contaminating the entire vial.

Getting the word out

In Las Vegas, health practitioners giving patients anesthesia were reusing syringes routinely, Labus says. "This wasn't something that just occurred on one day. They were basically doing something that was a dangerous practice over an extended period of time."

That specifically runs contrary to commonly accepted medical protocol, Bell says. That it's happening in more than one place "is very concerning," Bell says. "And we want to make sure that the word gets out as quickly and as completely as possible that these are unacceptable errors in practice."

For McKnight, that word can't travel fast enough.

McKnight says HONOReform has helped her heal emotionally. Her group has called for congressional hearings as well as more spending to study the problem and improve education.

But she still must deal with the everyday reality of her illness.

Symptoms of hepatitis C can range dramatically from one person to the next. About 20% immediately develop acute infections with symptoms ranging from jaundice and fatigue to abdominal pain, and 80% don't develop signs or symptoms, according to the CDC. However, 75% to 85% may develop a chronic infection but may not exhibit symptoms for many years. Of those with chronic infections, 20% may develop cirrhosis, and 1% to 5% may die as a result of liver disease.

There is no vaccination for hepatitis C and no one universal cure, although treatments can work for many.

For McKnight, whose cancer is in remission, chronic hepatitis C "is like having the flu 24/7. I'm fatigued. I have body aches. It certainly is compromising the quality of my life."

McKnight is careful to keep her razor and toothbrush separate from her husband's, and if she does cut herself shaving, she has to dispose of any bloody tissues safely.

'It's needless suffering'

The other day she tripped while walking from the pool to the hot tub at the YMCA. She scraped her toe, and it was bleeding. Several people instinctively rushed to help her. "I said, 'Don't touch me. Don't touch me. I have hepatitis C. Don't touch me.' "

Her husband, a family physician, helped her while the lifeguard used yellow biohazard tape to cordon off the area. All for a scraped toe.

"It was embarrassing," she says. "Everybody was trying to help me, but it just drew a lot of attention to an unpleasant thing in my life.

"I don't want that to happen to anybody else anywhere in the United States again. It's needless suffering."
 
UK military admits Iraqis tortured


LONDON, England (AP) -- The British military admitted Thursday that it breached the human rights of an Iraqi man who died in custody, and that its soldiers also violated the rights of eight other detained Iraqis.

The Ministry of Defense said it expects to negotiate compensation for the survivors of the dead man, Baha Mousa, and with the eight former detainees.

The MoD admitted breaching prohibition on torture laws in the cases of all nine men.

The nine -- taken into custody as alleged insurgents -- were held in stress positions and deprived of sleep for about two days in extreme heat at a British army barracks near the southern Iraqi city of Basra in September 2003, prosecutors told a British military court.

Mousa, a 26-year-old hotel receptionist, died from asphyxia after soldiers restrained him following an escape attempt.

One soldier, Cpl. Donald Payne, 35, was convicted of inhumane treatment in that case, making him the first British soldier to plead guilty to a war crime under international law.

"I deeply regret the actions of a very small number of troops and I offer my sincere apologies and sympathy to the family of Baha Mousa and the other eight Iraqi detainees," Armed Forces Minister Bob Ainsworth said in a written statement.

"All but a handful of the over 120,000 British troops who have served in Iraq have conducted themselves to the highest standards of behavior, displaying integrity and selfless commitment. But this does not excuse that during 2003 and 2004 a very small minority committed acts of abuse and we condemn their actions."

Defense officials are due in court Friday to answer claims on behalf of the detainees.

In Mousa's case, the Ministry of Defense admitted "a substantive breach of Articles 2, right to life, and 3, prohibition of torture, of the European Convention on Human Rights."

It also admitted breaching the prohibition on torture in the cases of Mohammed Dhahir Abdulah, Maitham Mohammed Ameen Challab Al-Waz, Satar Shukri Abdullah, Joad Kadhim Jamal Al-Faeaz, Dhahir Abdullah Ali Al-Mansori, Radif Tahir Muslem Alhawan, Baha Hashim Mohamed and Ahmed Taha Mosah.

"The Ministry of Defense further accepts that the admitted substantive breaches of the convention give rise to claims for compensation," it said.

Britain's highest court, the House of Lords, ruled in June that prisoners held by British troops are protected by European human rights law.

Mousa was one of six Iraqis killed by British troops in separate incidents in 2003 whose cases were reviewed by the Lords. The other five cases did not involve detention -- a critical factor in determining whether British laws should be applied.

In 2005, the Court of Appeal upheld a High Court ruling that both the European Convention on Human Rights and the domestic Human Rights Act applied in Mousa's case, but not in the others. The Lords affirmed that ruling.
 
Russian intelligence sees U.S. military buildup on Iran border

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MOSCOW, March 27 (RIA Novosti) - Russian military intelligence services are reporting a flurry of activity by U.S. Armed Forces near Iran's borders, a high-ranking security source said Tuesday.

"The latest military intelligence data point to heightened U.S. military preparations for both an air and ground operation against Iran," the official said, adding that the Pentagon has probably not yet made a final decision as to when an attack will be launched.

He said the Pentagon is looking for a way to deliver a strike against Iran "that would enable the Americans to bring the country to its knees at minimal cost."

He also said the U.S. Naval presence in the Persian Gulf has for the first time in the past four years reached the level that existed shortly before the invasion of Iraq in March 2003.

Col.-Gen. Leonid Ivashov, vice president of the Academy of Geopolitical Sciences, said last week that the Pentagon is planning to deliver a massive air strike on Iran's military infrastructure in the near future.

A new U.S. carrier battle group has been dispatched to the Gulf.

The USS John C. Stennis, with a crew of 3,200 and around 80 fixed-wing aircraft, including F/A-18 Hornet and Superhornet fighter-bombers, eight support ships and four nuclear submarines are heading for the Gulf, where a similar group led by the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower has been deployed since December 2006.

The U.S. is also sending Patriot anti-missile systems to the region.
 
Airport security force woman to remove nipple ring with pliers

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A WOMAN in the US says she was forced by airport security guards to remove her nipple ring with a pair of pliers before she could board a flight.

Mandi Hamlin, 37, is demanding a civil rights investigation, as well as an apology from federal security agents after being forced to remove a nipple ring before boarding a flight from Lubbock to Dallas in Texas.

During a press conference today, Ms Hamlin said she was scanned by a female Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agent using a handheld detector that beeped when it passed in front of her chest.

Ms Hamlin told the agent she had nipple piercings. The female agent then called over her male colleagues, one of whom said she would have to remove the body piercings.

Ms Hamlin said she asked if she could display her pierced breasts in private to the female agent but several other male officers told her she could not board her flight until the jewellery was removed.

She was taken behind a curtain and managed to remove one bar-shaped nipple piercing but had trouble with the second, a ring.

“Still crying, she informed the TSA officer that she could not remove it without the help of pliers, and the officer gave a pair to her,” Ms Hamlin's lawyer, Gloria Allred, told the director of the TSA's Office of Civil Rights and Liberties.

Ms Allred, who also represents Paul McCartney's ex-wife Heather Mills, used a nipple ring on a mannequin at the press conference to show what happened.

“After nipple rings are inserted, the skin can often heal around the piercing, and the rings can be extremely difficult and painful to remove,” said Ms Allred.

Ms Hamlin said she heard the male security agents snickering as she took out the ring, before being scanned again and eventually allowed on the plane.

Ms Allred said Ms Hamlin had filed a complaint to the TSA's customer service manager at Lubbock airport, who said the screening was handled properly.

The lawyer said Ms Hamlin was “publicly humiliated and has undergone an enormous amount of physical pain to have the nipple rings reinserted' because of scar tissue”.

“The conduct of TSA was cruel and unnecessary,” said Ms Allred. “The last time that I checked a nipple was not a dangerous weapon.”

The TSA, a unit of the Department of Homeland Security that was set up after the September 11 attacks in 2001, said it was investigating the incident but agents were trained to search people with piercings in "sensitive areas" with dignity and respect.

"TSA is well aware of terrorists' interest in hiding dangerous items in sensitive areas of the body, therefore we have a duty to the American public to resolve any alarm we discover," the agency said in a statement.

The TSA said incidents of female terrorists hiding explosives in "sensitive areas" were on the rise and provided a picture of a "bra bomb" that was used in training its agents.

Transportation Security Administration (TSA) spokesman Dwayne Baird said he had not heard of the nipple ring incident.

Mr Baird said the TSA had no specific policy about body jewellery but if it was big enough to sound an alarm, the person wearing it would not be allowed to pass security until the alarm was investigated.

"I'd be really curious to know what this woman had in her nipples," Mr Baird said on CBS.

"Sometimes they have a chain between their nipples, or a chain between their nipples and their belly button. It would have to be made of heavy metal to be detected."

“I wouldn't wish this experience upon anyone,” said Ms Hamlin.

“My experience with TSA was a nightmare I had to endure. No one deserves to be treated this way.”

Ms Allred said the incident followed a similar claim by reality TV star Nicole Richie, who said she had her breasts inspected by security at an airport because of her nipple rings.
 
U.S. Marines Invade Manhattan, New York!

U.S. Marines Invade Manhattan, New York!

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