Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Reason Foundation's nonpartisan public policy research promotes choice, competition, and a dynamic market economy as the foundation for human dignity



Founded in 1968, Reason advances a free society by developing, applying, and promoting libertarian principles, including individual liberty, free markets, and the rule of law.

Reason produces respected public policy research on a variety of issues and publishes the critically acclaimed monthly magazine, Reason. Together, our top-tier think tank and political and cultural magazine reach a diverse, influential audience, advancing the values of individual freedom and choice, limited government, and market-friendly policies.

Reason Foundation's nonpartisan public policy research promotes choice, competition, and a dynamic market economy as the foundation for human dignity and progress. Reason produces rigorous, peer reviewed research and directly engages the policy process, seeking strategies that emphasize cooperation, flexibility, local knowledge, and results. Through practical and innovative approaches to complex problems, Reason seeks to change the way people think about issues, and promote policies that allow and encourage individuals and voluntary institutions to flourish.

Reason is the monthly print magazine of "free minds and free markets." It covers politics, culture, and ideas through a provocative mix of news, analysis, commentary, and reviews. Reason provides a refreshing alternative to right-wing and left-wing opinion magazines by making a principled case for liberty and individual choice in all areas of human activity. For more information on Reason magazine, please visit www.reason.com.

Monday, March 24, 2008

The Information Collective is a clearinghouse of information that has been submitted by scholars, activists, students, educators, and community member


The Information Collective is working to create a comprehensive and reliable clearinghouse of information that will supplement traditional news media to meet the information needs of the community.

The Information Collective is devoted to making academic information accessible and is working to deconstruct academic texts and government documents into an understandable format.

The Information Collective is in full support of non-violent efforts to address and correct social and economic injustice. We work to supply activist initiatives with requested information and sponsor and contribute to popular education initiatives.

Research Organizations/Resources

The Memory Hole is a clearinghouse of information devoted to preserving and making accessible information that is in danger of being lost or is hard to find. It includes government and court documents, corporate memos and reports, police reports, and more.

The National Security Archive is an independent research institute and library at the George Washington University that collects and publishes declassified documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.

Cooperative Research is an organization that conducts in-depth research on topics of national and international importance through an open-content collaborative process.

The Center for Public Integrity is a non-partisan non-advocacy organization that conducts high quality investigative journalism with the mission of making institutions of power transparent and accountable.

Wikipedia is the one of the largest informational resources based on open content software.

Global Research is an independent research and media organization that produces in depth reports and investigations on topics of domestic and international importance and provides international media coverage.

Radical Reference is a collective of volunteer librarians devoted to providing activists, community organizations, and journalists with research assistance and access to information.

NameBase is a project of Public Information Research, Inc. that provides information on individuals, organizations, and corporations involved in scandals, organized crime, covert actions, and the intelligence community.

Media Organizations

Active Ingredients is a media resource that includes audio files of political lectures and panel discussions and links to informational resources.

COA News is an independent on-line news network that serves as a reliable source of alternative news on current events.

Project Censored is a student-faculty run media research group out of Sonoma University that annually compiles a list of the top stories that have been censored from traditional news media.

Popular Education Organizations

Center for Popular Economics is a grassroots collective of economists who work to provide an alternative analysis of the economy, produce economic theories that challenge systems of oppression, and educate social justice activists about the root causes of economic injustice and inequality.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Allergy Alert: Breathe Easy, Naturally


Allergy Alert: Breathe Easy, Naturally


Itchy, watery eyes, running nose, an aching head, and sinus congestion. Sound familiar? You may be among the 37 million people in the United States who suffer from allergic rhinitis or sinusitis. Consider combating your springtime woes naturally with these time-tested self-healing techniques.

Allergens in the Air
When your sinuses, the air-filled hollow cavities around your nose and nasal passages, become inflamed, fluid can accumulate and interfere with normal drainage of mucus in the sinuses. This condition is known as acute sinusitis. The result? You may have trouble breathing through your nose and feel your eyes and facial tissue swell up.

Your symptoms may include a headache, fever, a nagging cough, post-nasal drip, thick green or yellow discharge, and a feeling of facial "fullness" that gets worse when you lean forward; during a severe sinus infection, some people even experience a toothache.

This uncomfortable condition has many possible causes, including bacterial, viral, and fungal infections, allergies, or a deviated septum. Synonymous with spring, allergic rhinitis, commonly called hay fever, is the inflammatory result of your immune system's overreaction to allergens in the air.

Pollen is one famous offender. Other allergens include dirt, pollution, animal hair, food particles cloth fibers, and mold.

Surprising Secrets for Sinus Health
Here are some all-natural ways to gain freedom from sinus suffering.

• Clear your sinuses and your mind with a steamy stovetop spa. Add a few drops of wintergreen oil to a pot of boiling water and inhale the steam. Take care not to be burned by the vapor.

• Herbs and spices like ginger, scallion, basil, garlic, oregano, cayenne peppers, white pepper, horseradish and turmeric will have your sinus passageways unblocked in no time!

• The supplement bromelain - a papaya and pineapple-based enzyme - helps reduce histamine release, the body's natural allergic response.

• Clear your nasal passageway daily for healthy, happy sinuses. Add 1 tsp of sea salt, 1 drop of oregano oil, and 1 drop of wintergreen to a cup of warm water. Fill a small-spouted squeeze bottle with this warm solution. Squirt into one nostril at a time and blow out through the nose. Alternate nostrils.

• Press one clove of garlic, mix with 1 tsp of olive oil and soak a clean cotton ball with the oil mixture and place in nostrils after having washed the nostril with warm salt water. Leave in for 20 minutes and repeat three times a day until the symptoms clear up.

• These two simple self-massage practices that follow are incredibly effective for relieving sinus congestion. For both, sit at the tip of a sturdy chair with your back erect, spine stretched, and your head tilted slightly forward.

1. Inhale and gently press your forehead just inside the temples with your palms. Exhale and release. Repeat three times.

2. Cross your middle and index fingers by placing the tips of your middle fingers on top of the fingernails on your index fingers. Rub the sides of your nose 36 times in a circular motion, warming your fingers first if they're cold.

What you eat affects your sinus health
Avoid the foods that produce mucous and dampness: dairy products, cold and raw foods, corn (including corn syrup), and simple sugars. Choose whole grains like quinoa, amaranth and brown rice instead of wheat, rye and barley, which are typically high allergy grains. Opt for papaya, cranberries, pear, pineapple, cherries, mango, and citrus fruits. Eat more green vegetables such as artichoke, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, kale, cauliflower, and spinach.

Both alcohol and smoking should be avoided during a sinus flare-up as they irritate the respiratory tract and worsen nasal inflammation. Also, sinus congestion is often worse with lack of quality rest so be sure to get plenty of sleep and keep your stress level low.

I hope that you find the ways to keep your sinuses clear and freely flowing. I invite you to visit often and share your own personal health and longevity tips with me.

May you live long, live strong, and live happy!

-Dr. Mao

5 Things You Can Do to Improve Your Health


5 Things You Can Do to Improve Your Health

1. Externalize stress.
2. Internalize joy.
3. Eat foods in their raw, natural state.
4. Get sunshine every week.
5. Exercise.









Monday, March 10, 2008

Indians gather to save the planet




Participants of the meeting of 'Indigenous People to Heal Our Mother Earth'', take part in a pre-dawn ceremony at the foot of Mayan ruins in Palenque, Mexico, Monday, March 10, 2008. Hundreds of Indians from Mexico, the United States and Canada gathered to ask forgiveness from what they call 'our Mother Earth' and explore traditional solutions to environmental pollution in what they called a critical moment for the planet.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Expensive sugar pills work better than cheap ones

Expensive sugar pills work better than cheap ones

Want a sugar pill to work really well? Charge more for it.

A study published on Tuesday shows the well-known "placebo effect" works even better if the dummy pill costs more.

Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist at Duke University in North Carolina, and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology tested 82 volunteers.

All got a light electric shock and were offered what they were told was a painkiller.

Half were given a brochure describing the pill as a newly approved painkiller that cost $2.50 per dose and half were given a brochure describing it as marked down to 10 cents.

Writing in a letter to the Journal of the American Medical Association, Ariely and colleagues said the effects were unexpectedly strong.

Eighty-five percent of volunteers who thought they were getting a $2.50 pill said they felt less pain after taking it, compared with 61 percent of those who thought they were getting a discounted drug.

The results fit with other studies that show charging more for something makes people value it more. But Ariely said the combination with the placebo effect was especially interesting.

"The placebo effect is one of the most fascinating, least harnessed forces in the universe," Ariely said in a statement.

The word placebo comes from the Latin word for "I shall please." Placebos, or sugar pills, are routinely used in trials of new drugs to see if they really work.

"How do we give people cheaper medication, or a generic, without them thinking it won't work?" Ariely asked.

The World's Frontline Organisation Fighting Hunger








WFP Ambassador Against Hunger, Drew Barrymore, makes a big announcement and talks about her work with WFP on Oprah Winfrey's US chat show.

click link for story







personal note, worked on 'Fire Starter' 1st flic filmed in Wilmywood where I live and worked before i move to El Salvador in 1994 and I worked on other movies in the 80's 90's
I have had a crush on her for some years
this is a personal hurrah for me, as she is a movie actress/meat puppet, but she did something with her money
and is demonstrating that we all can live with less for those less fortunate than ourselves
thanks Ms. Drew Barrymore