Monday, September 27, 2010

Good advice from the unknown -slow down and live

Slow me down, LORD,
    Ease the pounding of my heart
    by the quieting of my mind.
    Steady my hurried pace with a vision
    of the eternal reach of time.
    Give me, amid the confusion of the day,
    the calmness of the everlasting hills.
    Break the tensions of my nerves and
    muscles with the soothing music of the
    singing streams that live in my memory.
    Help me to know the magical, restoring
    power of sleep.
    Teach me the art of taking minute vacations
    of slowing down to look at a flower, to chat
    with a friend, to pat a dog, to read a few
    lines from a good book.
    Slow me down, Lord, and inspire me to
    send my roots deep into the soil of life's
    enduring values that I may grow
    toward the stars of my greater destiny."
 
 
Trying to make this work for me and the community we live in
Short points and pledge
https://sites.google.com/site/siegholleward1com/siegholledraft
--

Monday, September 20, 2010

Holle candidate profile candidate information -press -Expositor

For your information -pass it on please
provide comment in the discussion link
 
Attracting business is a top priority
Local News: http://www.brantfordexpositor.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2764244
Discussion: http://www.brantfordexpositor.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2764244

--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants" http://www.ic.gc.ca/ccc/search/cp?l=eng&e=123456239975 .


Back to Eden communities
 Sunridge -261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford
 backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
www.backtoeden.bravehost.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -quality 24/7 care

Friday, September 17, 2010

SEPTEMBER 16 AGENDA.doc

Message from siegholle@gmail.com:
September Agenda 
Click to open:
Google Docs makes it easy to create, store and share online documents, spreadsheets and presentations.
Logo for Google Docs

Good advice to move on

1. Letting Go of the Past

The Apostle Paul said, "Brethren, I do not regard myself as having laid hold of it yet; but one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus."1

At some time every one of us will experience painful circumstances of one kind or another. The important issue is not what happens to us, but how we respond to what happens. Painful experiences can make us bitter or better. The choice is up to each one of us. Like the Apostle Paul we need to learn how to let go of what lies behind so we, too, can "press on" to achieve God's goal for our life.

To do this requires the following steps on our part:

Quit playing the blame-game. One lady I was working with in a group setting complained bitterly saying, "I can't understand why God gave me such a terrible husband." "Who chose him?" I asked. "God did," she replied. She had deceived herself into believing that fantasy. God will guide us if we genuinely seek his direction, but he won't make our decisions for us. As adults we are totally responsible for every decision and choice we make. As long as we play the blame-game, we can never get on with our life. We stay stuck where we are and can do so for years.

Overcome denial. Fred (not his real name), has been divorced for close to twenty years. His former wife re-married soon after their divorce. But Fred is still living in the delusion that his former wife will return to him. He is refusing to let go of the past, and is stuck there. Denial is deadly if we ever hope to fully live and fully love.

Forgive to be free. No matter how badly we feel we have been hurt, failing to forgive keeps us bound by the past as we are unconsciously allowing bitter memories of past hurts to control our present life. As another has said, "Failing to forgive is like drinking poison and waiting for the other person to die."

Resolve supercharged negative emotions. Regardless of the reason, whenever we feel let down, rejected, or even abused, we have hurt and angry feelings. This is normal. To nurse these negative emotions is damaging to all present and future close relationships and meaningful living. Until we resolve these negative emotions, it is impossible to forgive.

Denying, suppressing, and/or repressing supercharged negative emotions is also destructive of physical, emotional, and spiritual health. No wonder God's Word advises: "So get rid of your feelings of hatred [unresolved anger]. Don't just pretend to be good! Be done with dishonesty … deception, envy and fraud."2 Stuffing negative emotions is not getting rid of them.3

As we follow these steps for letting go, we are freed to forget what lies behind and move onward and upward to achieve our God-given goals and life-purpose.
 
Sieg Holle
Ward 1 candidate -Brantford

--

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Smile of the day

Getting Old
- Long ago when men cursed and beat the ground with sticks, it was called witchcraft. Today, it's called golf.

- Eventually you will reach a point when you stop lying about your age and start bragging about it.

- The older we get, the fewer things seem worth waiting in line for.

- Some people try to turn back their odometers. Not me, I want to people to know "why" I look this way. I've traveled a long way and some of the roads weren't paved.

- How old would you be if you didn't know how old you are?

- When you are dissatisfied and would like to go back to youth, think of Algebra.

- You know you are getting old when everything either dries up or leaks.

- One of the many things no one tells you about aging is that it is such a nice change from being young.

- One must wait until evening to see how splendid the day has been.

- Ahh, being young is beautiful, but being old is comfortable.

- Old age is when former classmates are so gray and wrinkled and bald, they don't recognize you.

- If you don't learn to laugh at trouble, you won't have anything to laugh at when you are old.

- First you forget names, then you forget faces. Then you forget to pull up your zipper, then...Oh, my goodness, you forgot to pull your zipper down!

- If you jog in a jogging suit, lounge in lounging pajamas, and smoke in a smoking jacket, WHY would anyone want to wear a windbreaker??

And best of all...

- I don't know how I got over the hill without getting to the top.

--

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Health-care system is on life support - Chatham Daily News - Ontario, CA

Health-care system is on life support - Chatham Daily News - Ontario, CA



this worhwhile reading

We can't cure the patient, folks, until we cut out the rot.

Q-jumpers-The Health Myth Busters: Signs that an Aging Loved One Needs Help

Q-jumpers-The Health Myth Busters: Signs that an Aging Loved One Needs Help

Political veteran enters council race - Brantford Expositor - Ontario, CA

Political veteran enters council race - Brantford Expositor - Ontario, CA

Political veteran enters council race Local News Posted By MICHAEL-ALLAN MARION

A former longtime Ward 4 councillor says it's time for him to get back into the political fray because he believes the city needs "stable" leadership through a difficult time.
"At this point in time, the city needs mature, stable leadership," said Andy Woodburn, who once represented Ward 4 for 19 years and is running the fall municipal election.

I recognize that the major issues in this election are jobs, economic development and holding down taxes. Council needs experienced hands in tackling them.
"We can cut down on taxes by eliminating major waste."
Woodburn also says he wants a greater fight against crime.
"The label crime theft capital of Canada is not something I want for Brantford.
Woodburn also contends that in the area of public health care the majority of people in Brantford want a second hospital dedicated to seniors.
He also wants councillors to obtain a higher level of decorum. "I think it's important that the city hall politicians treat the staff and each other with courtesy.
"The fact that allegations of violating code of conduct were made against four councillors this term shows a major change is needed," he said.'
Woodburn is looking forward to starting the implementation of waterfront master plan as soon as the new council takes office in December.
"We now have a cohesive plan to follow," he said. "I predict that the new council will put some of its recommendations in the 2011 budget and there will be some action on the plan by May or June."

He also wants the city to stop being adversaries of Six Nations and Brant and to seek partnership with its neighbours instead.
Woodburn served seven terms in Ward 4 in the 1980s and 1990s. In 1997 he ran for mayor but was defeated by then-incumbent Chris Friel. He attempted to return to his ward in 2000, but was unsuccessful in that year's election.

During the past 10 years he has devoted himself to community causes. He is currently vice-chairman of the Seniors Resource Centre, is vice-chairman of the Canadian Association of Retired Persons, and a member of the Knights of Columbus.

During the summer, Woodburn ran a series of all-candidates' meetings for this election, and then suddenly threw his hat in the ring on the last day just before the close of nominations.
Although his entry raised eyebrows, he said the meetings were a non-confrontational public exercise, and maintained that he did not consider running at the time.

Woodburn is one of seven candidates in Ward 4. The others include Cheryl Antoski, Bob Brown, Richard Carpenter, Rob Ferguson, Mike Gomon and Dave Wrobel.
mamarion@theexpositor.com



Sunday, September 12, 2010

RE: Favorite wisdom from Mencken

My favourite

 

The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.
H. L. Mencken

 

Global Warming...

 

From: Sieg Holle [mailto:siegholle@gmail.com]
Sent: September-12-10 9:49 AM
To: xk; Peter Holle; Amanda Holle; Erika Holle; q-jumpers.sieg@blogger.com
Subject: Favorite wisdom from Mencken

 

 

Classic Quotes by H. L. Mencken (1880-1956) US writer
A bore is simply a nonentity who resents his humble lot in life, and seeks satisfaction for his wounded ego by forcing himself on his betters.

------------------------

A church is a place in which gentlemen who have never been to heaven brag about it to persons who will never get there.

------------------------

A cynic is a man who, when he smells flowers, looks around for a coffin.

------------------------

A good politician is quite as unthinkable as an honest burglar.

------------------------

A judge is a law student who marks his own examination papers.

------------------------

A man always remembers his first love with special tenderness, but after that he begins to bunch them.

------------------------

A man may be a fool and not know it, but not if he is married.

------------------------

A metaphysician is one who, when you remark that twice two makes four, demands to know what you mean by twice, what by two, what by makes, and what by four. For asking such questions metaphysicians are supported in oriental luxury in the universities, and respected as educated and intelligent men.

------------------------

A national political campaign is better than the best circus ever heard of, with a mass baptism and a couple of hangings thrown in.

------------------------

A newspaper is a device for making the ignorant more ignorant and the crazy crazier.

--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants" http://www.ic.gc.ca/ccc/search/cp?l=eng&e=123456239975 .


Back to Eden communities
 Sunridge -261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford
 backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
www.backtoeden.bravehost.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -quality 24/7 care

FYI: Daily Dose Digest- another invasion of privacy

Why do we let them get away with it?



Daily Dose with William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.

You have received this e-mail because our records indicate that you signed up for a free subscription to the Daily Dose eLetter.

 

Your naked body, now on file

I hope you look good naked -- because the feds are snapping pictures of your privates. They're keeping them and even sharing them, thanks to the invasive new full-body scanners being put into use everywhere.

In fact, the U.S. Marshalls say they've saved more than 35,000 full-body scanner images from a single courthouse in Florida alone, according to CNET news.

What's more, the Marshalls say they also stored images in a unit used at a Washington, D.C. courthouse... and then sent the unit back to the manufacturer with the images still inside!

Looks like someone knows what's under the judge's robes.

This isn't limited to courthouses, because the TSA has already admitted that every unit it buys for airport "security" will be capable of saving and storing images.

But don't worry, they say. They plan to turn that part off.

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Scanning the news for nudes,

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What I talked about in the Daily Dose this week...

Tylenol linked to asthma in kids
If all the recalls and the already well-known side effects haven't been enough to convince you to ditch the Tylenol for good, maybe this will: Researchers say acetaminophen may be responsible for up to 40 percent of all wheezing and severe asthma cases in teens.
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Magazine's baseless attack on supplements
Consumer Reports has practically organized an entire supplement-hating campaign over a handful of obscure herbal remedies. The press is just eating it up. But don't stop taking your supplements just yet.
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How drug companies always win
Talk about stacking the deck and loading the dice. A new study shows that when Big Pharma plays the research game, they win nearly every time. You might even say they have it down to a science -- with more science put into gaming the system than you'll ever see in their phony baloney drug studies.
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There may come a time when a pill will help make you less fat. But if you keep eating McCrap, no drug in the world will make you healthy -- and all you have to do is look at the results of an aborted drug experiment to see why.
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Big Pharma doesn't want you to have this over-the-counter cure... because it actually reverses the growth of cancer cells. So they are using everything in their power to keep it from you -- while their expensive cancer drugs do nothing. But that's just the start -- this underground miracle can reverse the damage from diabetes and so much more... Get the story "they" don't want you to have here.
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Wacky new plan to give drugs with fast food
In one of the most irresponsible and outrageous public health proposals in human history, British researchers say fast food restaurants should give out statins with each meal. What is WRONG with these people?
Read the full story.

Low-carb diets great for cholesterol
They're playing my song! The tune is "I was right all along" and the lyrics are all about the benefits of a healthy low-carb diet. That's because a new study finds that the best way to raise your cholesterol to healthy levels -- and lower your deadly triglycerides -- is through delicious fatty foods.
Read the full story.

WHO NEEDS GLASSES?
In as little as eight weeks you could be reading without your glasses or contact lenses...and without surgery or strenuous eye exercises. Now, thanks to an exciting program developed at the internationally acclaimed Cambridge Institute for Better Vision, you may be able to discard your glasses -- for life!
Read the full story.

Mealworms for your meals
Let them eat insects! That's the buggy new rallying cry of the United Nations climate kooks... because now they claim we all need to eat insects if we hope to reverse global warming.
Read the full story.

Almond farmers in courtroom victory
California farmers have won a major victory in the nuttiest story I've ever written about -- the war over raw almonds.
Read the full story.

If you thought your Glory Days were behind you, think again!
Now you can have the best sex of your life for the REST of your life, with the REVOLUTIONARY BREAKTHROUGH FOR MEN directly from natural medicine's most respected doctor, Jonathan V. Wright, M.D.! If you thought those days were long gone, there's some critical news you need to know... About the groundbreaking formulation directly from Dr. Wright that can help you GET IT ALL BACK -- and then some.
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--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants" http://www.ic.gc.ca/ccc/search/cp?l=eng&e=123456239975 .


Back to Eden communities
 Sunridge -261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford
 backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
www.backtoeden.bravehost.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -quality 24/7 care

Favorite wisdom from Mencken

 

Classic Quotes by H. L. Mencken (1880-1956) US writer
A bore is simply a nonentity who resents his humble lot in life, and seeks satisfaction for his wounded ego by forcing himself on his betters.

------------------------

A church is a place in which gentlemen who have never been to heaven brag about it to persons who will never get there.

------------------------

A cynic is a man who, when he smells flowers, looks around for a coffin.

------------------------

A good politician is quite as unthinkable as an honest burglar.

------------------------

A judge is a law student who marks his own examination papers.

------------------------

A man always remembers his first love with special tenderness, but after that he begins to bunch them.

------------------------

A man may be a fool and not know it, but not if he is married.

------------------------

A metaphysician is one who, when you remark that twice two makes four, demands to know what you mean by twice, what by two, what by makes, and what by four. For asking such questions metaphysicians are supported in oriental luxury in the universities, and respected as educated and intelligent men.

------------------------

A national political campaign is better than the best circus ever heard of, with a mass baptism and a couple of hangings thrown in.

------------------------

A newspaper is a device for making the ignorant more ignorant and the crazy crazier.

--
Hollecrest & Associates Inc   -"Turnaround Consultants" http://www.ic.gc.ca/ccc/search/cp?l=eng&e=123456239975 .


Back to Eden communities
 Sunridge -261 Oakhill Drive, Brantford
 backtoeden.ontario@gmail.com
www.backtoeden.bravehost.com
"Building elder peer communities that are cozy,caring and comfortable" -quality 24/7 care

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

9 pictures for you -Knights make a community difference

You have been sent 9 pictures.


fundaward.jpg
blogo1.jpg
on the bus 003.jpg
P1080017.JPG
P1120004 l.jpg
on the bus KOC.jpg
P1010011.JPG
P2220006.JPG
collage4.jpg

These pictures were sent with Picasa, from Google.
Try it out here: http://picasa.google.com/

Friday, September 03, 2010

Fwd: [ProActive Rants] Ontario, like California, Going for Broke: FCPP - Frontier ...

Food for thought and a worthwhile read

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: BrantKnight <siegholle@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 11:41 AM
Subject: [ProActive Rants] Ontario, like California, Going for Broke: FCPP - Frontier ...
To: holcrest@worldchat.com


[http://www.fcpp.org/publication.php/3415]
Food for thought -can we afford to let Ontario at 35% of the Canadian economy go down or hit the debt wall?

Ontario, like California, Going for Broke: FCPP - Frontier Centre for Public Policy

Although California's economic policies (high spending, high taxes) are destructive, this is mainly a political drama. Democrats will not cut spending. Republicans will not raise taxes. As messy as this left-right struggle gets, California will almost certainly pay its bills, one way or another, in the fullness of time.

Will Ontario? The province has a distinctly different problem: It must now borrow more and more to accomplish less and less. It takes some sophistication to conceal this divergence. Ontario's effective interest rate – the rate it pays, on average, on all of its debt – is 4.5 per cent. Interest payments will thus cost the province $10-billion (Canadian) this year on its $220-billion debt. Ontario needs half its deficit to make its interest payments.

In 2000, Ontario's effective interest rate was much higher (8 per cent), its debt much lower ($114-billion). In 2000, interest payments cost $8.8-billion. Ontario, in other words, has used low interest rates to finance higher debt. Any increase in interest rates now will have profoundly disturbing consequences. Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty conceded the other day (in another context) that his government has made "some mistakes." Really? D'ya think?

--
Posted By BrantKnight to ProActive Rants at 9/03/2010 11:41:00 AM



--

Thursday, September 02, 2010

Fwd: FAIR Monthly Headlines

Information can make the difference ---------- Forwarded message ----------
 

Case Study: How Open data saved Canada $3.2 Billion

0

David Hutton – August 27, 2010

In his excellent blog about open government and open data, David Eaves describes how a Toronto consultant exposed a multi-billion charities fraud – simply by analyzing contributions data obtained from Canada Revenue Agency.

Using just a PC and a spreadsheet, the consultant analyzed the contributions reported by charities in Toronto during 2005 – a dataset that he had obtained from CRA – and uncovered some startling facts.

Sorting the spreadsheet by total contributions revealed that two hitherto obscure charities had each raised far more money than the United Way, Canada's leading charitable organization. This was clearly implausible and likely fraudulent. Worse, the data revealed that four out of the top 15 charities on the list were suspect.

The outcome was that over the next few years CRA deregistered numerous fraudulent charities and disallowed or questioned $3.2 billion in tax receipts claimed by 100,000 Canadian tax filers. And a class action suit against one of these charticies was launched by thousands of donors.

If one person with a spreadsheet could accomplish this by scrutinizing a tiny sliver of one department's records, imagine what waste and misconduct could be uncovered if the government would abandon its obsessive secrecy and open more of its books to scrutiny by citizens. Why not? It is our money.

See the complete post on David Eaves blog
From: FAIR (Federal Accountability Initiative for Reform) <subscriptions@fairwhistleblower.ca>
Date: Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 11:45 AM
Subject: FAIR Monthly Headlines
To: siegholle@gmail.com


FAIR Monthly Headlines: August 2010

A list of articles added to the FAIR website last month. These are about whistleblowing, whistleblowers, and the types of misconduct that they typically expose.


Alex Roslin – August 28, 2010

Dr. Shiv Chopra still remembers the words his friend spoke a few days before he died. "Every time I come here, I vomit," Dr. Chris Basudde, a fellow Health Canada doctor, had said. "I feel sick. I can't take this."

Chopra told his friend to see a doctor and take some time off work. Days later, he was stunned to learn that Basudde had died of a suspected heart attack.

Nico Hines – August 30, 2010

THE Chilean mine where 33 men are trapped should not have been allowed to reopen after fatal accidents forced its closure, say officials and miners.

Alejandro Garcia-Huidobro, chairman of the parliamentary committee investigating the tunnel collapse, has lent his support to widespread allegations of corruption and bribery surrounding the reopening in 2008 of the San Jose mine in Chile's Atacama desert.

Michael Smyth – August 29, 2010

If you think Vancouver's Winter Olympics were expensive, you should check out the mounting bills in Russia, where they're blowing so many rubles out the door they make the budget for our little party look like a peewee shinny tournament.

Costs for the Sochi 2014 Games are exploding due to blown construction budgets, soaring security bills, unforeseen costs to deal with the semitropical location and – especially – rampant corruption, the Moscow Times reports.

Wikileaks

Alex Roslin – August 28, 2010

Faced with mounting secrecy and the failure of official channels of complaint, whistle-blowers seem to be turning increasingly to the Internet and websites pledged to expose government and corporate secrets, in the public interest.

For whistle-blowers, the sites allow them to expose secrets as fast as they can hit "send." Critics argue the sites may endanger lives by posting national security information.

Moira Baird – August 26, 2010

ST. JOHNS, N.L. — Cougar Helicopters and eight insurance companies, led by U.K. firm Lloyd's, are suing Sikorsky Aircraft Corp., for more than $26.6 million in combined damages and losses resulting from the March 12, 2009, helicopter crash that killed 17 people off the coast of Newfoundland.

Also named as defendants in the lawsuit are Helicopter Support Inc., which is Sikorsky's parts and repair subsidiary, and Transport Canada.

David Hutton – August 27, 2010

In his excellent blog about open government and open data, David Eaves describes how a Toronto consultant exposed a multi-billion charities fraud – simply by analyzing contributions data obtained from Canada Revenue Agency.

Using just a PC and a spreadsheet, the consultant analyzed the contributions reported by charities in Toronto during 2005 – a dataset that he had obtained from CRA – and uncovered some startling facts.

Ottawa Citizen editorial – August 26, 2010

When Canada has trouble measuring how much snow is on the ground, something is seriously wrong with the state of government research.

An internal Environment Canada report from 2008, released through an access to information request, shows that cuts to the Meteorological Service of Canada have left this country without accurate weather data. We're not talking about a lack of money for fancy computer models or self-indulgent research projects. No, this is about basic measurement of stuff like temperature, rainfall and hours of sunshine.

Margaret Munro – August 26, 2010

Canada will pay a huge price for the Harper government's "short-sighted" decision to scrap the mandatory census, leading U.S. statisticians say.

"This decision will lower the quality and raise the cost of information on nearly every issue before Canada's government," Stephen Fienberg at Carnegie Mellon University and Kenneth Prewitt at Columbia University say today in the journal Nature.

Rhéal Séguin – August 24, 2010

Former Quebec justice minister Marc Bellemare has testified under oath that Premier Jean Charest gave his blessing to the role Quebec Liberal Party fundraisers played in the appointment of judges in the province.

Mr. Bellemare's testimony on Tuesday before a commission of inquiry into the nomination of judges was so politically damaging that Mr. Charest rushed to deny the charges.

Philip Authier and Marianne White – August 24, 2010

QUEBEC — Quebec Premier Jean Charest personally ordered his former justice minister to name two people to the bench because a party fundraiser wanted them to be made judges, Marc Bellemare testified on Tuesday.

In explosive testimony before the Bastarache commission on Tuesday, Mr. Bellemare, the former justice minister, outlined a meeting between him and Mr. Charest on Sept. 2, 2003 in which he complained that powerful Liberal fundraisers were leaning on him to name certain people judges.

Mike De Souza – August 23, 2010

OTTAWA - Sustained cuts to Environment Canada weather-service programs have compromised the government's ability to assess climate change and left it with a "profoundly disturbing" quality of information in its data network, says a newly released internal government report.

The stinging assessment, obtained through an access-to-information request, suggests that Canada's climate network infrastructure is getting progressively worse and no longer meets international guidelines.

Andrew Hanon – August 20, 2010

White-collar crime is evolving so quickly that police and the public are struggling to keep up with the latest scams, according to the Criminal Intelligence Service of Canada.

"Criminal groups are constantly exploiting new ways and new opportunities," said Edmonton police Chief Mike Boyd. "It is important for Canadians to be aware the scope and range of illicit activity is constantly evolving."

RCMP

Lindsay Kines and Les Leyne – August 20, 2010

A draft copy of the Vancouver Police Department's internal report on the investigation of Robert Pickton confirms that police had compelling evidence pointing at the serial killer by August 1999 -- more than two years before his arrest.

But because of jurisdictional battles, bad management, and shoddy analysis of the information, police turned their backs on Pickton, while he continued to take women from Vancouver's Downtown Eastside and murder them on his Port Coquitlam, B.C., farm.

Pierre-Henry Deshayes (AFP) – August 19, 2010

REYKJAVIK — After Iceland's near-economic collapse laid bare deep-seated corruption, the country aims to become a safe haven for journalists and whistleblowers from around the globe by creating the world's most far-reaching freedom of information legislation.

The project, developed with the help of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, flies in the face of a growing tendency of governments trying to stifle a barrage of secret and embarrassing information made readily available by the Internet.

John Ibbitson – August 17, 2010

The Veterans Ombudsman isn't the first watchdog Stephen Harper has gotten rid of, but he is certainly the loudest.

Claiming he was mere "window dressing" for an "obstructive and deceptive" bureaucracy, Pat Stogran promised veterans Tuesday he would use his remaining three months on the job making sure "Canadians know how badly so many of you are being treated."

Sean Bruyea – August 17, 2010

As Canada attempts to remain buoyant after the recent economic flood, Ottawa's rush to cut the cost of government has one very large but often silent group on the chopping block: disabled veterans and their families.

When Canadians hear the word "veteran," we quickly imagine a blazer-and-beret-clad senior, wavering at attention in the November cold of so many Remembrance Days past. Canada's Second World War veterans were once more than a million, but their numbers have dwindled with time.

Chad Skelton – August 12, 2010

VANCOUVER — Money laundering by organized crime groups is rampant at Canadian casinos but police are essentially doing nothing to combat it, according to an internal RCMP report obtained by The Vancouver Sun.

"Since 2003, FINTRAC [the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada] has sent several disclosure reports to the RCMP on suspicious transactions involving casinos throughout Canada, with amounts totalling over $40 million," the 2009 report states.

Massimo Calabresi with Alice Park – August 12, 2010

Five days before a 2007 article in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that the diabetes drug Avandia was linked to a 43% increase in heart attacks compared with other medications or placebos, a group of scientists and executives from the drug's maker, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), gathered in a conference room at the offices of the Food and Drug Administration in White Oak, Md.

The GSK goal: to convince regulators that the evidence that the company's $3 billion-a-year blockbuster drug caused heart problems was inconclusive. To do that, the GSK officials focused not on heart-attack data but on a broader, less well defined category of heart problems called myocardial ischemia. The most recent studies of Avandia, the GSK officials told the FDA, had "yielded information that is inconsistent with an increased risk of myocardial ischemic events," according to sealed court proceedings obtained by TIME.

Brian Daly – August 10, 2010

MONTREAL – A Quebec City charter airline, grounded following two deadly crashes earlier this year, committed a litany of safety infractions over a nine-year period, according to Transport Canada.

Aeropro was found to have violated safety regulations more than 100 times since 2001, according to documents Transport Canada submitted to a Federal Court this week, where Aeropro is trying to have its operating license reinstated.

Jeremy Page – August 9, 2010

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan's devastating floods could have been contained if tens of millions of dollars for flood prevention projects had not been embezzled or misspent over the past three decades, water experts and activists have told The Times.

Many Pakistanis have blamed the disaster on the current civilian government, in particular President Asif Ali Zardari, who returned to an angry nation Sunday after refusing to cancel a six-day visit to France and Britain.

Dr Syed Mansoor Hussain – August 9, 2010

Sometimes things look so bad that even an optimist like me has a hard time finding some silver lining to the 'dark clouds' hanging over Pakistan. Man-made disasters, natural disasters, terrorism, target killings and now the complete collapse of the Pakistani cricket team.

What has emerged most forcefully out of the confluence of all these 'problems' is that those who run this country at almost all levels are totally incapable of doing what is expected of them. Corruption is often labelled as the root cause of all evils in Pakistan. What has become obvious is that the basic problem we face as a country is not just corruption but rather rank incompetence of those who supposedly govern us.

Sean Bruyea – August 9, 2010

There are 600,000 Canadian Forces veterans. More than 50,000 of them are suffering permanent injuries and will need some form of support for the rest of their lives. Why was this statistical elephant in the room ignored?

At first glance, an independent and soundly functioning Statistics Canada's has little in common with the manner in which Canada treats its injured soldiers. However, objective, sound and thorough statistical science has much to do with how we honour the military sacrifices made in Canada's name.

Michael Bronner – August 5, 2010

NEW YORK — It's the inner sanctum of Swiss banking — the heavily-guarded nexus between numbered Swiss bank accounts and their owner's good names — and it's the rare American that is allowed entry.

Bradley Birkenfeld was one of the few Americans who held the keys to the kingdom. A Boston-born, high-flying, cross-border banker at Switzerland's premier financial institution, UBS, he had access to the kind of secret account information that American law enforcement had only dreamed of through all the decades that terrorists, dictators, arms dealers, mafia dons and wealthy tax cheats had hidden behind the fortress of secrecy that Swiss banking promised.

Jeffrey G. MacIntosh – August 4, 2010

Looking for a formula to commit securities frauds with no downside risk? Look no further. Here's how it's done.

It's really quite simple. Load up on put or call options in a given company's stock (depending on how you plan to manipulate the market), and then, on a promise of confidentiality, pass false and misleading information about that company to a reporter. Cash your options in when the price moves. Then sip pina coladas on a beach of your choice.

Corruption

Steve Ladurantaye and Greg McArthur – August 04, 2010

Carpet-cleaning contracts are behind a criminal investigation at three Ontario government ministries, according to court records, with civil servants accused of accepting kickbacks and rigging bids to line their pockets with cash and electronics.

Premier Dalton McGuinty said last week that three government ministries were under investigation by the Ontario Provincial Police, but did not say why.

Nigel Morris – August 2, 2010

Hospital doctors who quit their jobs are being routinely forced to sign "gagging orders" despite legislation designed to protect National Health Service whistleblowers, it is revealed today.

Millions of pounds of taxpayers' money are being spent on contracts that deter doctors from speaking out about incompetence and mistakes in patient care.

The Canadian Press – August 1, 2010

MONTREAL - Transport Canada has grounded a Quebec-based charter aviation company, effectively ending its air operations. The agency revoked Aeropro's operating permit Saturday night following an audit that found repeated violations of Canadian aviation regulations.

The move by Transport Canada comes on the heels of an Aeropro plane crash near the airport last June that killed seven people.



About FAIR

Federal Accountability Initiative for Reform (FAIR) promotes integrity and accountability within government by empowering employees to speak out without fear of reprisal when they encounter wrongdoing. Our aim is to support legislation and management practices that will provide effective protection for whistleblowers and hence occupational free speech in the workplace. FAIR is a registered Canadian charity.

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Why fraternity is important to figt loneliness

Overcoming Loneliness, Part II

"Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their work: If one falls down, his friend can help him up. But pity the man who falls and has no one to help him up! Also, if two lie down together, they will keep warm. But how can one keep warm alone?"1

Continuing our series on loneliness, psychologist Norman Wright in An Answer to Loneliness quotes one lonely woman who said, "I hurt deep down in the pit of my stomach, my arms and my shoulders ache to be held tight . . . to be told that I am really loved for what I am."

"Deep within each of us is the hunger for contact, acceptance, belonging, intimate exchange, responsiveness, support, love, and the touch of tenderness," says Wright. "We experience loneliness because these hungers are not always fed."

For example, a child feels lonely when his parents are too busy for him. But to whom can he turn? The adolescent feels lonely when he feels misunderstood by his parents. A mother of small children feels lonely when she is too busy to have her own needs for companionship met.

When married couples cannot communicate effectively, especially with their feelings, loneliness can cut deeply.

When one loses a loved one through death or divorce or is isolated through illness, he or she feels incredibly lonely.

The elderly, who are often cut off from their families and whose friends have passed away, know the bitterness of loneliness.

People who feel inadequate are often lonely. Because they don't like themselves, they think others don't like them either, so they tend to withdraw, at least emotionally, from other people. Sometimes hidden hostility is a cause for loneliness. The hostile person is angry at people so he prevents them from getting too close through his negative attitude.

Another cause of loneliness is fear—fear of getting hurt, fear of rejection, fear of not measuring up, fear of losing a loved one, fear of failure, and so on. For instance, when Sharon was five her father left home, and she felt rejected by him. Ever since, she has had an unconscious fear that if she ever fully loved another man, he would leave her too. Thus she was afraid to fully love her husband until she realized why she was holding back from him.

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Wednesday, September 01, 2010

Loneliness -a killer

 Overcoming Loneliness, Part I

"The LORD God said, 'It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him.'"1

"I'm all alone in the universe. No one really knows me. No one really cares. God—if there is one—is far away. He got tired of the world and moved away. I looked in the mirror today and saw the real me—one hideous scar, an open sore. I'm going to sleep."

These were the words of a brilliant student at a large, well-known university. He was one of the most promising students there. He was exceptionally gifted, handsome, athletic, and popular, and he was headed for an outstanding career in medicine. In spite of all this, he was still a very lonely young man. After writing the above note, he injected poison into his veins and died.

Loneliness, like depression, is one of the plagues of contemporary society. Few escape it altogether. In its chronic form it is a killer. When we were still printing ACTS Encounter brochures, "Overcoming Loneliness," from which this series is taken, was one of the most requested pamphlets people requested.

Time magazine reported some years ago that health studies have long shown that unmarried or widowed people are much more susceptible to sickness than married people. For instance, the death rate from heart disease is five times as high among widows between 25 and 34 as it is among married women of the same age. And the divorced of all ages are twice as susceptible to strokes as are the married.2 I would expect that little has changed since this article was first written.

James J. Lynch, when he was a specialist in psychosomatic medicine at the University of Maryland Medical School, and author of The Broken Heart: The Medical Consequences of Loneliness, claimed that suicide, cancer, tuberculosis, accidents, mental disorders, and especially heart disease are "all significantly influenced by human companionship."

In other words, "loneliness and isolation can literally break your heart." Loneliness is a feeling of not being able to reach another person and his not being able to reach you. It is a feeling of being isolated even though you may be surrounded by people.

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Fwd: [Skimaire High Tech] The brighter side of global warming



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: BrantKnight <siegholle@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 11:18 AM
Subject: [Skimaire High Tech] The brighter side of global warming
To: siegholle@gmail.com


Receding ice could unlock arctic trove
HELSINKI, Finland (UPI) -- Receding arctic ice from global warming may open new avenues for tourism and trade and could reveal vast new natural resource reserves, researchers say.

The northern ice cover is becoming smaller and thinner, and scientists predict the Arctic Ocean could lose its icecap completely during summertime by the end of the century at the latest, and possibly as early as the 2030s, Finland's Helsingen Sonomat reported.

Twenty years from now it may be possible to travel to the North Pole by ship, they say. Russia has already organized luxury cruises to the North Pole in its nuclear-powered icebreakers, but the next generation may be able to reach the top of the world in their pleasure boats, they say.

More important would be what the opening of the sea channels could mean for world trade. The Northeast Passage along Russia's north coast and the Northwest Passage through Canada's Arctic archipelago would shorten the sea journey from Asia to Europe and to the east coast of North America by as much as a third.

The receding ice could also allow access to rich natural resources.

More than a quarter of the world's catches of fish currently come from Arctic waters. An estimated 20 percent to 30 percent of the world's untapped natural gas resources and 5 percent to 13 percent of oil resources are in the Arctic region, researchers say.

All this new opportunity would require the cooperation among countries, politicians in Arctic states say.

In April the World Wide Fund for Nature published a report on questions concerning the administration of the Arctic Ocean.

"Arctic states must remember that the Arctic Ocean is not their backyard," report author Professor Timo Koivurova of the Arctic Centre of the University of Lapland said. "International maritime law already guarantees the commercial fleets and fishing fleets of all countries in the world access to the area. It would be sensible to get them to commit to a treaty concerning the Arctic region."


Copyright 2010 by United Press International

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Posted By BrantKnight to Skimaire High Tech at 9/01/2010 08:18:00 AM



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Back to Eden communities
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