Monday, February 23, 2015

Ralph Nader to Harper

REMEMBER RALPH NADER?
and his forced recall of the 1960 Chevrolet Corvair?
Fancy, shiny and deadly

This open letter to Harper is taken from a February 2015 Globe and Mail editorial titled “Parliament Must Reject Harper’s Secret Policeman Bill,"

February 18, 2015

The Right Honourable Stephen Harper, P.C., M.P.
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A2


Dear Prime Minister:

Many Americans love Canada and the specific benefits that have come to our country from our northern neighbor’s many achievements (see Canada Firsts by Nader, Conacher and Milleron). Unfortunately, your latest proposed legislation—the new anti-terrorism act—is being described by leading Canadian civil liberties scholars as hazardous to Canadian democracy.

A central criticism was ably summarized in a February 2015 Globe and Mail editorial titled “Parliament Must Reject Harper’s Secret Policeman Bill,” to wit:
“Prime Minister Stephen Harper never tires of telling Canadians that we are at war with the Islamic State. Under the cloud of fear produced by his repeated hyperbole about the scope and nature of the threat, he now wants to turn our domestic spy agency into something that looks disturbingly like a secret police force.
Canadians should not be willing to accept such an obvious threat to their basic liberties. Our existing laws and our society are strong enough to stand up to the threat of terrorism without compromising our values.”
 Particularly noticeable in your announcement were your exaggerated expressions that exceed the paranoia of Washington’s chief attack dog, former vice-president Dick Cheney. Mr. Cheney periodically surfaces to update his pathological war-mongering oblivious to facts—past and present—including his criminal war of aggression which devastated Iraq—a country that never threatened the U.S.

You are quoted as saying that “jihadi terrorism is one of the most dangerous enemies our world has ever faced” as a predicate for your gross over-reaction that “violent jihadism seeks to destroy” Canadian “rights.” Really? Pray tell, which rights rooted in Canadian law are “jihadis” fighting in the Middle East to obliterate? You talk like George W. Bush.

How does “jihadism” match up with the lives of tens of millions of innocent civilians, destroyed since 1900 by state terrorism—west and east, north and south—or the continuing efforts seeking to seize or occupy territory.

Reading your apoplectic oratory reminds one of the prior history of your country as one of the world’s peacekeepers from the inspiration of Lester Pearson to the United Nations. That noble pursuit has been replaced by deploying Canadian soldiers in the belligerent service of the American Empire and its boomeranging wars, invasions and attacks that violate our Constitution, statutes and international treaties to which both our countries are signatories.

What has all this post-9/11 loss of American life plus injuries and sickness, in addition to trillions of American tax dollars, accomplished? Has it led to the stability of those nations invaded or attacked by the U.S. and its reluctant western “allies?” Just the opposite, the colossal blowback evidenced by the metastasis of al-Qaeda’s offshoots and similar new groups like the self-styled Islamic state are now proliferating in and threatening over a dozen countries.

Have you digested what is happening in Iraq and why Prime Minister Jean Chrétien said no to Washington? Or now chaotic Libya, which like Iraq never had any presence of Al-Qaeda before the U.S.’s destabilizing military attacks? (See the New York Times’editorial on February 15, 2015 titled “What Libya’s Unraveling Means”.)

Perhaps you will find a former veteran CIA station chief in Islamabad, Pakistan, Robert L. Grenier more credible. Writing in his just released book: 88 Days to Kandahar: A CIA Diary (Simon & Schuster), he sums up U.S. government policy this way: “Our current abandonment of Afghanistan is the product of a… colossal overreach, from 2005 onwards.” He writes, “in the process we overwhelmed a primitive country, with a largely illiterate population, a tiny agrarian economy, a tribal social structure and nascent national institutions. We triggered massive corruption through our profligacy; convinced a substantial number of Afghans that we were, in fact, occupiers and facilitated the resurgence of the Taliban” (Alissa J. Rubin, Robert L. Grenier’s ‘88 Days to Kandahar,’ New York Times, February 15, 2015).

You may recall George W. Bush’s White House counterterrorism czar, Richard Clarke, who wrote in his 2004 book, Against All Enemies: Inside America’s War on Terror—What Really Happened, “It was as if Osama bin Laden, hidden in some high mountain redoubt, were engaging in long-range mind control of George Bush, chanting, ‘Invade Iraq, you must invade Iraq.’”
Mr. Bush committed sociocide against that country’s twenty-seven million people. Over 1 million innocent Iraqi civilians lost their lives, in addition to millions sick and injured. Refugees have reached five million and growing. He destroyed critical public services and sparked sectarian massacres—massive war crimes, which in turn produce ever-expanding blowbacks.
Canadians might be most concerned about your increased dictatorial policies and practices, as well as this bill’s provision for secret law and courts in the name of fighting terrorism—too vaguely defined. Study what comparable practices have done to the United States – a course that you seem to be mimicking, including the militarization of police forces (see The Walrus, December 2014).
If passed, this act, piled on already stringent legal authority, will expand your national security bureaucracies and their jurisdictional disputes, further encourage dragnet snooping and roundups, fuel fear and suspicion among law-abiding Canadians, stifle free speech and civic action and drain billions of dollars from being used for the necessities of Canadian society. This is not hypothetical. Along with an already frayed social safety net, once the envy of the world, you almost got away with a $30 billion dollar purchase of unneeded costly F-35s (including maintenance) to bail out the failing budget-busting F-35 project in Washington.

You may think that Canadians will fall prey to a politics of fear before an election. But you may be misreading the extent to which Canadians will allow the attachment of their Maple Leaf to the aggressive talons of a hijacked American Eagle.

Canada could be a model for independence against the backdrop of bankrupt American military adventures steeped in big business profits…a model that might help both nations restore their better angels.

Sincerely,

Ralph Nader

Saturday, February 7, 2015

MEDICAL PROGRESS / NO - HI P0T



        For a closer look at the robots check, out the 2015 CES Field Guide.


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Thursday, January 22, 2015

Looking Forward To 2015 . . . and beyond

LOOKING GOOD




2) Mercedes-Benz  F 015 Luxury in Motion in an autonomous car.







3) The future for legalized Pot.  Oct 19th is the "fixed" Federal election date in Canada with legalization of "pot" a likely major issue in the election. It has been a year since Colorado became the first U.S. state to legalize marijuana for recreational use, Denver now has some $1 billion US in sales in a city of about 650,000. It has more than 60 marijuana outlets, which sell different hybrids of the drug as well as cookies, creams, pipes and T-shirts.      
4) Volvo announced a new safety system that warns drivers of approaching cyclists via a symbol on their car's head-up display. Not to be outdone, Jaguar Land Rover has just announced its own system, which takes a more tactile approach – among other things, it buzzes drivers' hands and feet, and even taps them on the shoulder.

5) CES 2016,  Las Vegas, Nevada.  6-incredile facts obout CE2015


THE JURY IS STILL OUT


1) 3D printed shelby cobra model

This Shelby Cobra sports car, 3D-printed at Department of Energy's Manufacturing Demonstration Facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, on display this week at the Detroit Auto Show Technology Showcase.

2) HitchBOTThe Canadian twin of the original hitchBOT, (a chatty internet-connected robot that hitchhiked across Canada last summer) is scheduled to hitchhike in Germany from Feb. 13 to 22.


NOT LOOKING GOOD

     OXFAM predicts that by 2016 the richest 1% of the global population will control 50% of the total global wealth unless the current trend of rising inequality is checked.
     If you find it hard to grasp just how unequal the global economy is, here's one stat that should put it all in perspective: The richest 80 people on Earth are now as wealthy as the world's 3.5 billion poorest people. In other words, 80 people control as much wealth as half the population of the planet.
    That's one of the most shocking findings from a report released Monday by Oxfam, an international charity dedicated to finding solutions to global poverty. The report's overall point is that global inequality is soaring to amazingly high levels as the world's richest just keep getting richer.

oxfam chart
As you can see from the chart above, it hasn't always been this bad. In 2010, it took a slightly greater number of rich people -- 388 billionaires, to be exact -- to equal the collective wealth of the world's poorest 50 percent.


YOU GOTTA BE KIDDING ? 



 1)  How NOT To Make Friends (With A Powerful Neighbor)       (CLICK HERE)


2) Would You Ride These?

(a) The Worlds Wildest Thrill Ride - The Insanity in Las Vegas


(b) The World's Craziest and Highest Roller coaster - the Xstream in Las Vegas




        Final thought:  "If you want to live the American Dream go to Denmark".
                                       


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Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Michael Harris and "Party of One" (video)

Michael Harris speaks about PM Harper and the Canadian Government prior to his book, "Party of One".

He presents an objective look at facts about Canada and its political policies during the past nine years.



Monday, December 22, 2014

OUTSIDE THE BOX

MEDICAL 


1) Google has just revealed a method for diabetics to monitor glucose Smart contact lenses with tiny glucose-tracking technology will monitor wearers’ glucose levels by tracking it in their tears.
  “It doesn’t look like much, but it was a crazy amount of work to get everything so very small,” said Google Brian Otis in a statement.


  2) Tiny Vehicles For Medical Applications
 Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems have constructed swimming bodies that simultaneously meet two requirements: they are small enough to be used in bodily fluids, and they are able to navigate through complex biological fluids. Like tiny submarines they could navigate through the body to deliver drugs precisely to a target location, making it possible to carry out gene therapy in a specific cell.


3) Controlling Genes With Thoughts

Thoughts control a near-infrared LED, which starts the production of
 molecule in a reaction chamber. ( Prof. M. Fussenegger, ETH Zurich)
ETH researchers led by Professor Martin Fussenegger have developed the first gene network to be operated via brainwaves. Depending on the user’s thoughts, it can produce various amounts of a desired molecule. The inspiration behind the project was a game that picks up brainwaves in order to guide a ball through an obstacle course.



4) VTT Technical Research Centre has demonstrated a technique for generating electrical energy by harvesting energy from mechanical vibrations of the environment and converting it into electricity. These could be used in wireless self-powered sensors and medical implants to replace batteries in application areas such as wearable electronics



 LAST MINUTE "OUTSIDE THE BOX"
 CHRISTMAS PRESENTS

CLICK HERE

It will show you how far from being "outside the box" you are..  (It is a safe link - DudeIWAntThat.com).

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Canada In Election Mode

The Globe and Mail
      Canada will have a federal election no later than October 19th, 2015 (the "fixed by law" date).  The general feeling is that it will be earlier than that - possibly in the Spring of 2015. I will try to provide periodic special blogs of FACTUAL information (not partisan and no spin).
     If you haven't been following political activity for the past 9 years in the media, this article in the Globe and Mail might help to get you up to speed in time to VOTE.


Click on the underlined type below.

"If I could shake Harper’s hand, 

this is what I’d tell him"



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Friday, December 5, 2014

CANADA GOES GREEN and Movie Myths

 CANADA AND THE  ENVIRONMENT
(A Step Back and Steps Forward)

1)  "TAR SANDS" (bitumen, euphemistically referred to as "Oil Sands")

   - The first bitumen  tanker arrives in Sorel-Tracy port on the St. Lawrence River from the tar sands in Alberta. The Minerva Gloria is not only the first tanker of its size to arrive in Sorel-Tracy, but it will also be the first to carry diluted bitumen from Alberta. Its arrival deepens community concern for possible crude oil spills on the St. Lawrence River.

2) Report (Dec. 2014) of Clean Energy Canada:  More Green jobs last year than oilsands

     - There were 23,700 total direct jobs in the green energy sector in 2013,
       compared to 22,340 jobs in the oilsands
    - in the past five years employment in Green Energy increased by 37 per cent with
      investments of more than $24 billion
   - The complete 34-page "Tracking the Energy Revolution" report is available online

3) Energy Market Reports (2014)
       View trends, analysis and statistics by country. ReportLinker.com offers download access
       to top market reports on the Energy Industry comparing energy sources by country.

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Ridiculous Movie Myths That Turned Out to Be True
Disclaimer: I have taken the link to this article (by Chris Hoffman on December 2nd, 2014)
 from the web site of  How-to- Geek  without checking the veracity of the information.
How-to-Geek deals mostly with electronic and high technology issues. Subscription is free.

                                     1) The NSA Spying on Everybody
                                     2) Your Location Can Be Tracked
                                     3) Webcam Hijacking
                                    4) Hacking Traffic Lights and Cameras
                                    5) Darknet Drug Rings, Arms Trafficking, and Hitmen
                                    6) Hacking Security Cameras and Security Systems
                                    7) Hacking ATMs for Cash
                                    8) Security Backdoors in Encryption Protocols
                                    9) Hotel Key Cards Can Be Easily Hacked
                                   10) Passwords Can Be Easily Hacked

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Winnipeg, Manitoba, Has A World Champion 

Canadian Corey Gallagher won the First Beer Mile World Championship Race with a time of 5 min 23 milliseconds in Austin Texas. He credits his ability to down a beer in one breath as helpful.
    In a nut shell, the race is 4 laps around a 440 metre track with the requirement of drinking a bottle of beer (355 ml) before each lap.

2014 Manitoba Summer Beer Mile (click for video)
Gallagher's time of 5:01.57 min prior to winning World event in Austin Texas