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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Showing posts with label Big Ag. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Ag. Show all posts

Saturday, March 30, 2019

FOCUS: Bernie Sanders | I'll Fight for Farmers Against Powerful Agribusiness



Reader Supported News
29 March 19

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29 March 19
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FOCUS: Bernie Sanders | I'll Fight for Farmers Against Powerful Agribusiness 
Senator Bernie Sanders arrives for a town hall meeting in Davenport, Iowa, May 28, 2015. (photo: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg)
Bernie Sanders, The Des Moines Register
Sanders writes: "Whether it's in Iowa, my home state of Vermont or anywhere else, the crisis in America's small towns and rural communities is the result of deliberate policy choices by a political class that neglects rural America, rather than investing in it."
READ MORE



SEE ALSO: 

Investigation Reveals Tyson Foods as #1 Culprit in Largest “Dead Zone” on Earth



Monday, March 11, 2019

Robert Reich | Elizabeth Warren Is Right - We Must Break Up Facebook, Google and Amazon





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11 March 19 AM
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Robert Reich | Elizabeth Warren Is Right - We Must Break Up Facebook, Google and Amazon 
Robert Reich. (photo: unknown)
Robert Reich, Guardian UK
Reich writes: "We're now in a second Gilded Age, ushered in by semiconductors, software and the internet, which has spawned a handful of hi-tech behemoths and a new set of barons like Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, and Sergey Brin and Larry Page of Google."
READ MORE

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) speaks at a recent campaign stop. (photo: Scott Eisen/Getty Images)
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) speaks at a recent campaign stop. (photo: Scott Eisen/Getty Images)

Sanders Taking Tough Jabs at Trump
Cleve R. Wootson Jr., The Washington Post
Wootson writes: "Two minutes into his stump speech in this strongly Democratic college town, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) made his first of many references to President Trump, calling him 'the most dangerous president in modern American history.'"
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Exterior view of the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington, D.C. (photo: Bill O'Leary/WP/Getty Images)
Exterior view of the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington, D.C. (photo: Bill O'Leary/WP/Getty Images)

Even Money Managers No Longer Want OxyContin-Tainted Sackler Cash
Stephanie Griffith, ThinkProgress
Griffith writes: "It would seem that money from the billionaire Sackler family is no longer in as much demand as it once was."
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Chief Justice Cheri Beasley. (photo: Paul Woolverton/Fayetteville Observer)
Chief Justice Cheri Beasley. (photo: Paul Woolverton/Fayetteville Observer)

North Carolina State Supreme Court Appoints First Black Woman Chief Justice
Ibn Safir, The Root
Safir writes: "Chief Justice Cheri Beasley, the first black woman supreme court justice to lead the state Supreme Court, was sworn in this past weekend in front of more than 1,000 people, according to the Fayetteville Observer."
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'They want cars. They want to open new restaurants. They want to throw bigger parties. And they want houses.' (photo: Yaroslav Kushta/Getty Images)
'They want cars. They want to open new restaurants. They want to throw bigger parties. And they want houses.' (photo: Yaroslav Kushta/Getty Images)

Thousands of New Millionaires Are About to Eat San Francisco Alive
Nellie Bowles, Medium
Bowles writes: "Big wealth doesn't come in monthly paychecks. It comes when a startup goes public, transforming hypothetical money into extremely real money. This year - with Uber, Lyft, Slack, Postmates, Pinterest and Airbnb all hoping to enter the public markets - there's going to be a lot of it in the Bay Area."
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Women in Spain are striking. (photo: Getty Images)
Women in Spain are striking. (photo: Getty Images)

Inside Spain's Radical, Union-Led Women's Strike
Kim Kelly, Splinter News
Kelly writes: "For two hours on March 8, 2018, they flooded the streets - students and politicians, domestic workers and business leaders, women of all stripes and identities - to call for an end to Spain's machista culture, and the toxic societal blights that come along with it: structural inequality, sexual harassment, domestic violence, and a pervasive wage gap."
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Semi-automated pig barns now dominate large parts of rural Iowa. (photo: Scott Morgan/The Observer)
Semi-automated pig barns now dominate large parts of rural Iowa. (photo: Scott Morgan/The Observer)

How America's Food Giants Swallowed the Family Farms
Chris McGreal, Guardian UK
McGreal writes: "Across the midwest, the rise of factory farming is destroying rural communities. And the massive corporations behind this devastation are now eyeing a post-Brexit UK market."
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Friday, March 8, 2019

Jeffrey Toobin | The Supreme Court Is Quietly Changing the Status of Religion in American Life



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08 March 19

Fighting Budgets a Thousand Times Ours
Each Day we face the challenge of rebutting, challenging falsehoods promulgated by organizations with budgets a thousand times the size of RSN's budget. Koch, Murdoch, the NRA you name it we confront it.
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Reader Supported News
07 March 19
It's Live on the HomePage Now:
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Jeffrey Toobin | The Supreme Court Is Quietly Changing the Status of Religion in American Life 
In recent years, conservatives have contrived ways to obtain government money for religious entities, and the Supreme Court has been more sympathetic to the lawyers representing them. (photo: Mark Wilson/Getty)
Jeffrey Toobin, The New Yorker
Toobin writes: "Donald Trump may be imperilled by the ever-growing number of investigations into various avenues of his conduct, but his agenda continues apace at the Supreme Court."
READ MORE


Senator Bernie Sanders. (photo: Andrew Kelly/Reuters)
Senator Bernie Sanders. (photo: Andrew Kelly/Reuters)

Sanders, Harris, Warren Defend Ilhan Omar Amid Controversy Over Israel Comments
Caroline Kelly and Gregory Krieg, CNN
Excerpt: "Democratic presidential candidates Sens. Bernie Sanders, Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren on Wednesday defended Rep. Ilhan Omar against the backlash to her comments slamming pro-Israel groups and politicians, which have been called anti-Semitic."
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Border Patrol officer. (photo: No More Deaths)
Border Patrol officer. (photo: No More Deaths)

US Border Patrol New Guidelines Explicitly Target Central American Migrants: Report
teleSUR 
Excerpt: "New Border Patrol's guidelines in the United States explicitly ask its agents to target Spanish speakers and migrants from Latin America in carrying out a Trump administration program requiring asylum seekers to wait in Mexico and not enter the U.S., according to memos obtained by The Associated Press Thursday."
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Representative Steve King. (photo: Drew Angerer/Getty)
Representative Steve King. (photo: Drew Angerer/Getty)

Far-Right, White Supremacist Group Identity Evropa Worked the Phones to Keep Steve King in Office
Colin Kalmbacher, Law and Crime
Kalmbacher writes: "Far-right, white supremacist group Identity Evropa, which has been designated as a hate group, worked feverishly to keep Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) in office, according to internal chat logs released Wednesday by an independent media organization."
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Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal Pushes. (photo: Jason Redmond/Getty)
Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal Pushes. (photo: Jason Redmond/Getty)

Rep. Pramila Jayapal: Medicare for All Will Lower Costs and Expand Healthcare Coverage to Everyone
Democracy Now!
Excerpt: "More than 100 Democratic lawmakers are co-sponsoring a new House bill to dramatically revamp healthcare in the United States by creating a Medicare-for-all system funded by the federal government."
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Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross at the White House on March 6. (photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross at the White House on March 6. (photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

Wilbur Ross Broke Law, Violated Constitution in Census Decision, Judge Rules
Fred Barbash, The Washington Post
Barbash writes: "Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross acted in 'bad faith,' broke several laws and violated the constitutional underpinning of representative democracy when he added a citizenship question to the 2020 Census, a federal judge ruled Wednesday."
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The original Allensworth, now a park and very small town, was an experiment in self-determination started by a military retiree. (photo: Barbara Davidson/Getty)
The original Allensworth, now a park and very small town, was an experiment in self-determination started by a military retiree. (photo: Barbara Davidson/Getty)

Dried Out: Big Ag Threatens Clean Water in Rural California
Judith Lewis Mernit, Guardian UK
Mernit writes: "Allensworth is not unique among rural communities in California. Nor is it so different from thousands of other rural communities, from New Mexico to Missouri to Alabama, where attempts to treat water to state and federal drinking water standards have run up against a fundamental absence of infrastructure and community."
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Friday, January 24, 2014

Indian Woman Gang-Raped on Orders of Village Court



Advocate for Saving Dogs's photo.


From RSN:

Andy Borowitz | Putin Warns Gays Against Flamboyant Displays at Olympics
Russian President Vladimir Putin. (photo: unknown)
Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
Borowitz writes: "Russian President Vladimir Putin said today that gay spectators should feel welcome at the upcoming Winter Olympics but warned them against 'any flamboyant displays that draw unnecessary attention to themselves.'"
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John Nichols | The Infrastructure of American Democracy Is Dysfunctional
John Nichols, The Nation
Nichols writes: "President Obama's second inaugural address touched on the reality that the United States has a dysfunctional election system."
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Autumn of the Patriarchy
Sally Kohn, The Daily Beast
Kohn writes: "As women's reproductive freedom faces an unprecedented onslaught of political and legislative threats, domestic violence is suddenly on the rise."
READ MORE

Amy Goodman | Aaron Swartz: The Life We Lost and the Day We Fight Back
Amy Goodman, Truthdig
Goodman writes: "Another fight for the freedom of the Internet has begun. This one will have to be waged without Aaron."
READ MORE

Al Jazeera Journalists Languish in Egypt Jail
Robert Kennedy, Al Jazeera English
Kennedy writes: "The arrests of Fahmy, Mohamed, and Greste on December 29 were made to preserve Egypt's 'national security and the highest interests of the country,' the prosecutor's office said."
READ MORE

Indian Woman Gang-Raped on Orders of Village Court
Sujoy Dhar, Reuters
Dhar reports: "A 20-year-old woman in eastern India was gang-raped by 13 men on the orders of a village court as punishment for having a relationship with a man from a different community."
READ MORE

Monsanto Is Going Organic in a Quest for the Perfect Veggie
Ben Paynter, Wired Magazine
Paynter reports: "Changing the agricultural game is what Monsanto does. The company whose name is synonymous with Big Ag has revolutionized the way we grow food - for better or worse."
READ MORE

Sunday, April 28, 2013

ALEC protects animal abuse



ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council): Exposing animal abuse is not a crime!


Petitioning ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council)


This petition will be delivered to:

ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council)
Executive Director
Ron Scheberle
Legislative Analyst, Energy, Environment and Agriculture and Civil Justice Task Forces
John Eick
Senior Director, Communications and Public Affairs
Bill Meierling

ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council): Exposing animal abuse is not a crime!

Will Potter

Petition by

Will Potter

Washington, DC

 
Undercover investigations have exposed patterns of horrific animal welfare abuses on factory farms and slaughterhouses, and led to criminal convictions and public health investigations. Rather than addressing these problems, a powerful organization called the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) wants to criminalize anyone who brings animal abuse to light.

I have documented this extensively in my many years of journalism about the repression of animal and environmental advocates. You can read more about ALEC at GreenIsTheNewRed.com. ALEC wants to make it a crime to document patterns of animal abuse. It thinks the solution is to have zero checks and balances on this huge industry, and leave it up to factory farms and slaughterhouses to regulate themselves.

In the past, whistleblowers (not farm owners or inspectors) have documented baby chicks being ground up alive, workers urinating near a live hanging area, and turkeys and pigs being sexually abused. Investigators caught a major school lunch meat supplier abusing cows who were too sick to even walk; this lead to the largest meat recall in US history. The Big Ag industry desperately want to put a stop to these investigations for one reason: money.

This bring us to "ag-gag" bills which target whistleblowers, undercover investigators, and journalists. They have been introduced in 9 states this year, and last year they became law in 3 states. Some go so far as to criminalize anyone who "possesses" or "distributes" photographs and YouTube videos. As NPR reported, this isn't just about animal activists: these bills put journalists at risk.

Who is behind this? Big Ag corporations, working with the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). ALEC has a model bill that labels whistleblowers, investigators, and those who share the footage as "terrorists." You may be familiar with ALEC because this is the same force behind many efforts to weaken environmental protections and silence free speech online. If you care about safe food, environmental and animal protection, transparency, workers' rights, or citizen-powered action, we need your voice!

Corporations want to use ALEC and "ag-gag" bills to keep the public in the dark. But consumers have a right to make safe, healthy, and humane decisions about what they buy.
Please sign to tell ALEC to back off and stop criminalizing those who are trying to stop animal cruelty.

Sign this petition


Debate: After Activists Covertly Expose Animal Cruelty, Should They Be Targeted With "Ag-Gag" Laws?





So-called "ag-gag" bills that criminalize undercover filming on farms and at slaughterhouses to document criminal animal abuse are sweeping the country. Five states, including Missouri, Utah and Iowa, already have such laws in place. North Carolina has just become the latest state to consider such a law, joining a list that includes Arkansas, California, Indiana, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Vermont. Many of these bills have been introduced with the backing of the American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC, a mechanism for corporate lobbyists to help write state laws. We host a debate on the ag-gag laws with two guests: independent journalist Will Potter, and Emily Meredith, communications director for the Animal Agriculture Alliance.

http://www.democracynow.org/2013/4/9/debate_after_activists_covertly_expose_animal

 

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Will Monsanto Ties Influence Nutritionists' Stance on GMOs?

Interesting article by Tom Philpott --

Will Monsanto Ties Influence Nutritionists' Stance on GMOs?


| Sat Apr. 13, 2013
 
 
The GMO seed giant Monsanto recently flexed its muscles in Congress, working with a senator to sneak a friendly rider into an unrelated funding bill. Now it appears to be having its way with the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. As the New York Times reports, a dietician who'd been working on crafting the group's GMO policy claims she was pushed aside for pointing out her colleagues' links to Monsanto.

The controversy started during last fall's highly contested battle over a ballot initiative that would have required labeling genetically modified food in California. The prestigious dieticians' group was incorrectly listed by the official state voters' guide as one of the scientific organizations that had "concluded biotech foods are safe." Actually, the AND had taken no position on the issue, but it promised to come out with a position paper on it. (The ballot initiative ultimately failed.)

As part of the process of generating a position paper, the group appointed seven members to what it called the Advanced Technologies in Food Production working group. That's when things got hairy.

Two of the members, it turned out, had ties to Monsanto. One was a "dietitian who operates a farm in Maryland, [who] won a $5,000 prize from Monsanto and is a test farmer for the company," the Times reports. The other serves as senior vice president of the International Food Information Council, a group whose funders read like a roster of Big Ag and junk-food corporations, ranging from Monsanto, Bayer Cropscience, and Cargill to Coca Cola, Red Bull, Pepsi, and Dr. Pepper Snapple Group. Several of the International Food Information Council's donor companies also contributed heavily to the $45.6 million effort to defeat California's GMO ballot initiative.

One panel member, Carole Bartolotto, a dietician for Kaiser Permanante, had the temerity to point out her colleagues' potential conflicts of interest to the academy's leadership. The result? Bartolotto found herself purged from the committee, while the two Monsanto-connected panel members maintained their positions.

Bartolotto had written a blog post in favor of California's GMO labeling initiative, but that wasn't the reason cited for her sacking. Rather, the academy pointed to her failure to reveal a consulting practice she'd listed on her blog. According to Bartolotto, that's flimsy reasoning, because her "consulting practice" is purely theoretical. "I didn't list it because I didn't think it was an issue at all," she told the Times. "I created the link because at some point, I think it would be nice to have a consulting business, but right now, I work full time and don't have time to have one."

Meanwhile, the Times reports, the academy has hired a vocal opponent of California's labeling initiative to write its GMO position paper: Christine M. Bruhn, a professor at UC Davis' Food, Science and Technology program. And the whole flap over the Advanced Technologies in Food Production work group is apparently purely academic: Bruhn will write the final report even before the working group finishes reviewing the literature.

To summarize, at the nation's most prestigious dieticians' group, failure to disclose a non-existing consulting business is enough to get you bounced from making policy on GMOs, but ties to the GMO industry aren't. It remains to be seen what position the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics GMO paper will take, but this is shaping up to be another victory for Monsanto.

Tom Philpott

Food and Ag Blogger
Tom Philpott is the food and ag blogger for Mother Jones. For more of his stories, click here. To follow him on Twitter, click here. RSS |