Dramatic new scientific discovery!

Conclusive evidence that mankind is part of nature!

Subtext = There are times when our arrogance and mindlessness beggars belief.

Sorry, if you pick up on a degree of emotion in today’s post.  It’s impossible to hide!

Here’s what has fed that.

A few days ago, I came across some stunning images of bees, over on the Flickr website.  Particularly, I was here and offer below a small sample of what was seen:

Chrysidid Wasp, U, Side, UT, Utah Co_2013-08-07-17.51.41 ZS PMax
Chrysidid Wasp, U, Side, UT, Utah Co_2013-08-07-17.51.41 ZS PMax

oooo

Lasioglossum quebecense, F, Back, MD, PG County_2013-07-24-15.43.07 ZS PMax
Lasioglossum quebecense, F, Back, MD, PG County_2013-07-24-15.43.07 ZS PMax

Much more may be learned about bees by going to the USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab (BIML).  The BIML website is here.

Then coincidentally (seems to be happening much of this week!) Jean and I watched the latest TED Talk by Marla Spivak.  It was called: Why bees are disappearing.

Marla’s talk is just 15-minutes long, and I beg of you to watch it because the ramifications for all of warm-blooded life on this planet are frightening if we don’t amend our ways – and amend them pretty damn soon!

Honeybees have thrived for 50 million years, each colony 40 to 50,000 individuals coordinated in amazing harmony. So why, seven years ago, did colonies start dying en masse? Marla Spivak reveals four reasons which are interacting with tragic consequences. This is not simply a problem because bees pollinate a third of the world’s crops. Could this incredible species be holding up a mirror for us?

Marla Spivak researches bees’ behavior and biology in an effort to preserve this threatened, but ecologically essential, insect. Full bio »

You may also want to go across to the University of Minnesota‘s Bee Lab website, where there is much more from Marla about our bees.

What next?  Well may you ask!

I came across an article in the San Francisco Chronicle about a “Report links antibiotics at farms to human deaths“.  Here’s a taste of that article:

Washington — The Centers for Disease Control on Monday confirmed a link between routine use of antibiotics in livestock and growing bacterial resistance that is killing at least 23,000 people a year.

The report is the first by the government to estimate how many people die annually of infections that no longer respond to antibiotics because of overuse in people and animals.

CDC Director Thomas Frieden called for urgent steps to scale back and monitor use, or risk reverting to an era when common bacterial infections of the urinary tract, bloodstream, respiratory system and skin routinely killed and maimed.

“We will soon be in a post-antibiotic era if we’re not careful,” Frieden said. “For some patients and some microbes, we are already there.”

The SFC report later goes on to say:

At least 70 percent of all antibiotics in the United States are used to speed growth of farm animals or to prevent diseases among animals raised in feedlots. Routine low doses administered to large numbers of animals provide ideal conditions for microbes to develop resistance.

“Widespread use of antibiotics in agriculture has resulted in increased resistance in infections in humans,” Frieden said.

It concludes, thus:

Legislation goes nowhere

Organic certification prohibits antibiotic use, but raising such animals is costly, he said.

Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Los Angeles, first introduced legislation in 1980 to restrict antibiotic use in livestock. For the past decade, Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., has introduced similar bills, joined in recent years by Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., but the measures have gone nowhere.

“We constantly hear from the pharmaceutical and livestock industry that antibiotic use in livestock is not a problem and we should focus on human use,” said Avinash Kar, a staff attorney at the San Francisco office of the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group that has sued the FDA to force it to ban using antibiotics to promote growth in livestock. The case is now pending before the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Carolyn Lochhead is the San Francisco Chronicle‘s Washington correspondent.clochhead@sfchronicle.com

See what I mean about mankind’s collective madness!

But I’m still not finished!

Because over at Alternet.org was this piece:

Americans Are 110 Times More Likely to Die from Contaminated Food Than Terrorism

September 17, 2013 – This article first appeared on  Truth-Out.org

One of the most important revelations from the international drama over Edward Snowden’s NSA leaks in May is the exposure of a nearly lunatic disproportion in threat assessment and spending by the US government. This disproportion has been spawned by a fear-based politics of terror that mandates unlimited money and media attention for even the most tendentious terrorism threats, while lethal domestic risks such as contaminated food from our industrialized agribusiness system are all but ignored. A comparison of federal spending on food safety intelligence versus antiterrorism intelligence brings the irrationality of the threat assessment process into stark relief.

In 2011, the year of Osama bin Laden’s death, the  State Department reported that 17 Americans were killed in all terrorist incidents worldwide. The same year, a single outbreak of listeriosis from  tainted cantaloupe killed 33 people in the United States. Foodborne pathogens also sickened 48.7 million, hospitalized 127,839 and caused a total of  3,037 deaths. This is a typical year, not an aberration.

See what I mean about our mindlessness!  That article continues:

We have more to fear from contaminated cantaloupe than from al-Qaeda, yet the United States spends $75 billion per year spread across  15 intelligence agencies in a scattershot attempt to prevent terrorism, illegally spying on its own citizens in the process. By comparison, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is  struggling to secure $1.1 billion in the 2014 federal budget for its food inspection program, while tougher food processing and inspection regulations passed in 2011  are held up by agribusiness lobbying in Congress. The situation is so dire that Jensen Farms, the company that produced the toxic cantaloupe that killed 33 people in 2011,  had never been inspected by the FDA.

I can’t stomach any more (whoops, pardon the pun!) so if you want to read to the end, it’s here.

OK, sufficient for today!  Need to find a dog to curl up with.

Damn, Jean’s beaten me to it!

One wonders how Dhalia copes! ;-)
One wonders how Dhalia copes! 😉

17 thoughts on “Dramatic new scientific discovery!

      1. Hi Paul: let me talk some BBCese to you. Note the date: 1998. Since then, laws have been tightened a lot. In USA even so called “organic food” can be antibiotics laden, even… fruits…

        Monday, December 14, 1998 Published at 17:04 GMT

        World: Europe

        EU bans farm antibiotics

        Antibiotics are used in animal feed to stop disease spreading through a herd

        The use of four antibiotics in animal feed has been banned throughout Europe because of the possible risks to human health.
        Twelve EU agriculture ministers including Britain’s Nick Brown, endorsed the Commission proposal, with Belgium, Portugal and Spain abstaining.

        The ban will be phased in over six months, with the use of the antibiotics outlawed in Britain from July 1 next year.

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  1. Now I’m confused! Because I can’t now find what I came across earlier – anyway, let it rest. More to the point, as both Jean and I are vegetarians, is wondering if you could offer links to that aspect of American ‘organic food’? Seems appalling if true!

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    1. Paul: the extract above was from the bBC… I wish I could help you, but lots to do here. My essays absorb lots of brain power, being creative and all that…I could not even reply to your kind mails of last week. The fact I was sneaked on, attacked and severely bitten by a possibly rabid pitbull 9 days ago also explains not just that learning from dogs can take primal aspects… but also that i have less time than ever…
      PA

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      1. Patrice, very sorry to hear of that run-in with a Pitbull. Hope you are over the worst of it soon. I’ll dig into the US organic scene (apologies for the pun) and see what I can find out. Best wishes, Paul

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      2. Speaking of dubious puns, I did not run into the pitbull, he sneaked from behind as I was slowly walking, perhaps smart, as I was reading The Economist…
        PA

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      3. ‘Run-in’ being another of what I suspect are English colloquialisms. Covers any form of meeting. Mind you, if you must read The Economist these days, no sympathy for you!! 😉

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  2. You highlight how Government lives in delusion and wrong priorities, when spending on terrorism vastly outstrips investment in citizen health and safety such as the FDA.

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  3. Love those images… and love to Jean! 🙂
    Paul this Post has so many fascinating things to explore I have saved to my favourite bar, as I hope to come back to later…
    But on skimming through your words It still makes me wonder how society has still not Seen through the mist of those who put the figures of Terrorists up as the World wide threat to mankind as the number one Killer! when as you have discovered via the links provided how we poison, ourselves daily with ingested foods and contaminants, pesticides, and toxins contained in manufactured foods, Suncreamssoaps, makeup products that we apply daily… Anti bacterial soap when we send back into the earth kills off the good bacteria

    Oh and did you know that TED has defected! in alliance with Monsanto ? read here

    http://www.naturalnews.com/042112_TED_conferences_pseudoscience_GMO.html

    More things that turn our stomachs !

    Great Post again Paul

    Like

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