Thursday, September 04, 2014
how corporate power converted wealth into philanthropy for social control
By CNu at September 04, 2014 7 comments
Labels: banksterism , corporatism , egregores , Living Memory , What IT DO Shawty...
doctors without borders condemns global response to ebola
The agency, as well as the World Health Organisation and the US Centers for Disease Control, is warning the situation gets harder to control by the day.
North America Correspondent Jane Cowan reports.
JANE COWAN: Six months into the worst Ebola epidemic in the nearly 40 year history of the disease, it's a grim picture. Doctors Without Borders president Joanne Liu told a UN forum her agency is completely overwhelmed and the world is "losing the battle" against the virus. She says a global intervention involving both military and civilian personnel is needed to curb the outbreak.
JOANNE LIU: Leaders are failing to come to grips with this transnational threat. In West Africa, cases and death continue to surge. Riots are breaking out. Isolation centres are overwhelmed. Health workers on the front lines are becoming infected and are dying in shocking numbers. Others have fled in fear, leaving people without care for even the most common illnesses.
Entire health systems have crumbled.
Ebola treatment centres are reduced to places where people go to die alone, where little more than palliative care is offered. It is impossible to keep up with the sheer number of infected people pouring in our facilities.
JANE COWAN: The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Tom Frieden says the medical community knows what to do to stop the spread of Ebola, but the challenge is to put those measures in place on the massive scale that's required.
TOM FRIEDEN: There is a window of opportunity to tamp this down, but that window is closing. We need action now to scale up the response.
JANE COWAN: Latest figures show more than 1500 people have died from the virus, with more than 3,000 confirmed cases, mostly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
To make things worse, the areas are about to be hit by food shortages as neighbouring countries close land borders, restricting the flow of grain from abroad.
The World Health Organisation chief Margaret Chan says the borders need to be reopened.
MARGARET CHAN: The three hardest hit countries are literally isolated and marginalised. And this is hampering very fast response when we cannot fly in our experts to help.
JANE COWAN: The CDC says there's a small chance the virus could become more infectious through a process of genetic mutation but so far it appears to be spreading the same way it always has.
By CNu at September 04, 2014 0 comments
cdc director: window is closing on containing ebola
Days after returning from West Africa, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Thomas Frieden opened a press conference with a sobering admonition about the effort to contain the Ebola epidemic to West Africa: “The window is closing.”
In an impassioned call to action, he urged American doctors, nurses, and health care professionals to join Africa in its fight. “This isn’t just the countries’ problem,” he said. “It’s a global problem.” With vivid detail, Frieden painted a gruesome picture of overcrowded isolation centers in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, where health care workers are struggling to keep up with “basic care.” He mentioned deficiencies not only in the number of doctors, nurses, and health managers available, but the protective gear needed to keep them safe. Without an immediate change in the current landscape, he said, the worst is yet to come. “The level of outbreak is beyond anything we’ve seen—or even imagined,” Frieden said.
At one particular 35-bed facility, Frieden described the chilling sight of more than three-dozen Ebola patients without beds, left with no other place to fight their infections but the floor. The health care workers, too, face “distressing” conditions. “Roasting hot” personal protective gear including robes, masks, boots, and goggles, make simply drawing an IV a near impossible task. “It is very difficult to move…sweats pours into goggles, [the health workers] see the enormous need but the great risk, too,” he said.
But even more alarming than the disturbing images, was the lack of outside support. “The most upsetting thing I saw was what I didn’t see,” he said. “No data from countries where it’s spreading, no rapid response teams, no trucks, a lack of efficient management,” he said. “I could not possibly overstate the need for an urgent response.”
By CNu at September 04, 2014 0 comments
Labels: cull-tech , horror , Livestock Management
Wednesday, September 03, 2014
the evolutionary roots of human altruism...,
By CNu at September 03, 2014 15 comments
Labels: culture of competence , ethics , evolution , Gender , People Centric Leadership , tactical evolution , What IT DO Shawty...
if nuns ruled the world
By CNu at September 03, 2014 0 comments
Labels: scientific morality , tactical evolution , The Straight and Narrow
the great nunquisition: why the vatican is cracking down on sisters
Nuns are an endangered species. They are dying and not being replaced.
If you think the news is bad now, a world without nuns would be a far worse place. The nuns that I know are much too humble to tout their achievements and all of the good they contribute to society, but make no mistake, they are an integral part of the fabric that holds our civilization together.
In 2014 there were just 49,883 religious Catholic sisters in the United States, down 13% percent from 2010 according to figures from the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate. To put it in greater perspective, that is a 72% decline since 1965.
Because nuns don’t brag about all of the good that they do or hashtag how awesome they are on Facebook, many people have no idea about the things they accomplish on a daily basis.
You probably haven’t heard about Sister Joan Dawber. Sister Joan, a Sister of Charity of Halifax, runs a safe house in Queens for victims of human trafficking—former sex and labor slaves. She takes these women in when they have no one else to protect them and risks her life to help them rebuild theirs.
About 20 minutes away by car from Sister Joan’s safe house, Sister Tesa Fitzgerald works tirelessly to raise the children of mothers who are incarcerated. When those women get out of prison Sister Tesa helps them get clothes, jobs and an apartment. Those women credit Tesa with nothing less than saving their lives.
Most people don’t know about Sister Nora Nash, a Franciscan Sister who lives just outside of Philadelphia. As her order’s Director of Corporate Social Responsibility, Sister Nora wakes up every single morning determined to make corporations more responsible to the human race. Sister Nora and her assistant director, Tom McCaney have taken to task the grocery store chain Kroger over the rights of farm workers, Hershey’s chocolate company over child labor, McDonald’s over childhood obesity, Walmart on raising their minimum wage and Wells Fargo over predatory lending practices. Nash wakes up every single morning determined to make corporations more responsible to the human race. Then she follows through on it.
For more than four decades Sister Jeannine Gramick has been tireless in her fight for gay rights through her organization New Ways, despite coming under intense scrutiny from the Vatican.
Sister Dianna Ortiz made headlines in 1989 when she was abducted, tortured and raped while working as a teacher in Guatemala. After living through that horror, instead of allowing herself to sink into a terrible depression, she headed up an organization to help thousands of torture survivors around the globe find the will to keep living.
It’s a problem that you haven’t heard about these women. You would think that, during a time when the Church has suffered from great criticism and weathered very public scandals, it would be celebrating these incredible achievements. Think again.
By CNu at September 03, 2014 0 comments
Labels: de-evolution , Pimphand Strong , theoconservatism
detroit's thirsty negroe experiment continues....,
By CNu at September 03, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Collapse Casualties , Livestock Management , What Now?
Tuesday, September 02, 2014
who owns the nukes if wall st. owns the government?
By CNu at September 02, 2014 3 comments
Labels: Collapse Casualties , Collapse Crime , cull-tech , WW-III
Monday, September 01, 2014
not just EM drives, China's working on thorium reactors as well...,
By CNu at September 01, 2014 15 comments
Labels: cultural darwinism , The Straight and Narrow , What Now?
DOE posts a complete history of the Manhattan Project
By CNu at September 01, 2014 0 comments
Labels: unspeakable , you used to be the man
Sunday, August 31, 2014
what the heck?!?!
By CNu at August 31, 2014 2 comments
Labels: weather report
Saturday, August 30, 2014
the top lives off the yield of the bottom...,
By CNu at August 30, 2014 8 comments
Labels: niggerization , People Centric Leadership , What Now?
Friday, August 29, 2014
rule of law: cornel west calls out the charade right to the top
By CNu at August 29, 2014 3 comments
Labels: A Kneegrow Said It , Obamamandian Imperative , The Hardline
talking overseers, poverty, militarization and mindset
By CNu at August 29, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Collapse Casualties , de-evolution , institutional deconstruction , Livestock Management , What IT DO Shawty...
Thursday, August 28, 2014
rule of law: Demography, Territory, Law: Land Tenure and the Origins of Capitalism in Britain
By CNu at August 28, 2014 19 comments
Labels: ethology , Peak Capitalism , What IT DO Shawty...
a little on the history and consequences of not wanting for others what you want for yourself...,
But over the last three decades, the enclosure debate has been swept up in a broader discourse on the nature of common property of any kind. The overgrazing of English common land has been held up as the archetypal example of the "tragedy of the commons" — the fatal deficiency that a neoliberal intelligentsia holds to be inherent in all forms of common property. Attitudes towards enclosures in the past were always ideologically charged, but now any stance taken towards them betrays a parallel approach to the crucial issues of our time: the management of global commons and the conflict between the global and the local, between development and diversity.
By CNu at August 28, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Great Filters , Peak Capitalism , Rule of Law , What Now?
in the herd but above the herd...,
Washington Or Alabama - Who Is More Pro Science? |
It's no secret that anti-vaccination hotbeds correlate to income and other lifestyle choices. Put a pin in a Whole Foods store in California and you can find a hotbed of anti-vaccine sentiment in the parking lot and surrounding neighborhood. In America, red states have overwhelming vaccine acceptance while blue states are where the problems are occurring.
There are some poor kids who don't get vaccines, but that is due to lack of access to health care, not an anti-science mentality of poor parents.
By CNu at August 28, 2014 3 comments
Labels: ethology , Livestock Management , status-seeking
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
rule of law: sitting president of the cbc an utter disgrace and total business incompetent...,
By CNu at August 27, 2014 9 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , institutional deconstruction , Livestock Management , What IT DO Shawty...
rule of law: slave leasing capital misery designs and exports modes of human bondage
By CNu at August 27, 2014 0 comments
Labels: American Original , debt slavery , Livestock Management
rule of law: misery ground zero for extreme usury - another form of "poor peoples tax"...,
By CNu at August 27, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Collapse Crime , debt slavery , Rule of Law , What IT DO Shawty...
Fuck Robert Kagan And Would He Please Now Just Go Quietly Burn In Hell?
politico | The Washington Post on Friday announced it will no longer endorse presidential candidates, breaking decades of tradition in a...
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theatlantic | The Ku Klux Klan, Ronald Reagan, and, for most of its history, the NRA all worked to control guns. The Founding Fathers...
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Video - John Marco Allegro in an interview with Van Kooten & De Bie. TSMATC | Describing the growth of the mushroom ( boletos), P...
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dailybeast | Of all the problems in America today, none is both as obvious and as overlooked as the colossal human catastrophe that is our...