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Archive for the 'Health & Well Being' Category

Wonderful Women Of The World

Posted by Michelle Moquin on 2nd April 2011


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Good morning!

I saw this the other night on 60 minutes. I love what this woman is doing.

Global Medical Relief Fund: One child at a time

How one Staten Island woman has changed over 100 young lives

(CBS News)Of all the tragedies of war, none are greater than those that involve children. Caught in the crossfire or hit by a roadside bomb, children are often wounded but rarely receive the heroic, high tech medical care that our troops depend on.

Recently, we heard about a woman in Staten Island, New York, who has devoted herself to wounded children. Elissa Montanti has little money and no training in humanitarian relief, but against the odds she has changed the fortunes of more than 100 crippled children, one child at a time.

“60 Minutes” and correspondent Scott Pelley wanted to see how she does it, so, for four months we followed Montanti on a journey with one child, a nine year old boy from Iraq named Wa’ad.

Wa’ad arrived in America last April with his mother Waffa. Montanti brought them to the U.S. after an American soldier told her Wa’ad’s story.

“He was walking with his friends and they were kicking a bottle. I think the first child kicked a bottle. And then maybe the second. And then he kicked it and it exploded,” she explained.

What Wa’ad had kicked was a bomb.

The blast shattered his face, tore out his eye, and took away his right arm and left leg. Wa’ad would receive treatment for all those wounds from a network of volunteers and charities that Montanti has recruited one by one over the last 15 years.

How to help: Global Medical Relief Fund
Photos: Rebuilding Wa’ad’s Face and Spirit

Wa’ad first stop was at the Shriners Hospital in Philadelphia; Shriners has 22 hospitals that provide free care to burned and crippled children.

Wa’ad pushed through physical therapy to strengthen his muscles, but slowed down long enough to get fitted for a new arm and leg that the Shriners made for him. Then it was a trip to see an ocular specialist, Annette Kirzrot, who also volunteers for Montanti. A prosthetic eye was the first step in improving Wa’ad’s appearance.

But the tougher part would be reconstructing his face. That was the challenge for plastic surgeon Kaveh Alizadeh. He’s with Long Island Plastic Surgical Group and was recruited by Montanti.

Extra: Taking first steps
Extra: Giving Sarah her youth back

“So, there’s this increasing pool of people that get drawn into her world. And if you have, if you’re lucky or unlucky enough to be excited about this stuff, you get pulled in,” Alizadeh explained.

“When you first approach a hospital or a doctor to ask them for potentially, hundreds of thousands of dollars in free medical care, what’s your pitch? What do you tell ‘em?” Pelley asked Montanti.

“I tell ‘em this true story. Here’s a child that’s battered. I just tell them the reality. I expect them to help. I’m grateful ’cause they don’t have to help. But I expect that they would, because how could you not?” she asked.

After the earthquake hit in Haiti, she went to the island and brought back three girls who lost limbs. Montanti’s work with crippled children began back in 1996 when a friend asked her to raise money to buy school supplies for kids in war-torn Bosnia. That led to a meeting with the Bosnian ambassador to the U.N.

“And he said to me, ‘You know, quite frankly, we have much stronger needs right now than pencil cases.’ He reached in his drawer. And he handed me this letter that this boy had written to him asking for help, two new arms and a leg. And I saw his picture. And that’s really when my whole life started to change,” she remembered.

She brought that boy to the U.S. for treatment. Kenan Malkic, now 28, helps Montanti run her tiny charity with a mighty name: the “Global Medical Relief Fund.”"Global Medical Relief sounds really big,” Pelley pointed out.

“It’s big in the sense that we reach out to the world. But it’s small in that it’s really me,” Montanti said.

She runs Global Medical Relief out of her home – a 57-year-old single woman with a computer and a phone.

“My office is my former walk-in closet. And I added a window. And it works. And I speak to the world right outta my walk-in closet,” she told Pelley.

Asked where the 112 children she has helped come from, Montanti told Pelley, “Bosnia, El Salvador, Liberia, Niger, Sierra Leone, Iraq, China, Indonesia, Pakistan, Haiti. Did I say Nepal?”

Asked how she keeps it running, Montanti told Pelley, “On a prayer.”

She simply begs and borrows from doctors and hospitals – whatever it takes. She has traveled to the Middle East, arranging passports, cutting red tape and getting wounded children out one at a time. Word spread among soldiers in Iraq that an American charity called Global Medical Relief is a lifeline.

Now she gets a dozen e-mails a month from the war zone, most of which start with “Dear Sir.”

“How do these letters end?” Pelley asked.

“Please help,” Montanti said.

It was an e-mail like that that started Wa’ad on his journey with Montanti.

Readers: This is a wonderful story. Read on to see how Elissa Montanti, my choice for Wonderful Women of The World today, helped give this boy, Wa’ad a new beginning…a new childhood…a new life.

********

Joyce: You got that right. There are never ending ridiculous reasons.

Hector: Really, I wasn’t sure if your story was a joke or not so I went along for the ride and assumed it was real. So…I am relieved to hear that you wouldn’t force your own children ”to do anything they would not wish to do sexually”. I would HOPE that you wouldn’t even introduce sexual acts to them at such a young age, to even to give them a choice.

Now you say that you were having sex with your sisters when they were underaged too. Why would your mother encourage her children to have sex with each other, at any age? Your mother is one sick bitch. I’m sorry I didn’t say it in my blog yesterday.

And yes, I also said that a man won’t get a hard on unless he wants it, and  it’s obvious you wanted it. But c’mon at 7 years old, and with a sexually persuasive mother, probably just a little hot breath on your dick made it hard. Hard as a child not to love it when mommy is making you feel good. And obviously you continued to love it.

And from your statement, “My sisters seem to love the upbringing they received from mother”, evidently your sisters not only loved it from you but demanded it too.  I don’t know what to say about that. Thanks to your very persuasive mother, all of you were introduced to sex all very young, and with each other, and yet everyone seems to be okay about it. So I’ll just leave that alone - Obviously this is the best of incest.

Now…your mother…well your mother is another story. I say she is a sick bitch, but hey, I have to question, “What country are you from? Outside the U.S.?” Taboos here aren’t necessarily taboos in other parts of the world. Just curious.

But really, I have gotten in way too deep – your story has interrupted my thoughts quite a few times the past two days. Wish that I didn’t even comment in the first place, except to say to you, “Break away; it is time.” This is beyond me. I don’t even want to ask what you meant by, Some even hint to having helped her hurry some of her husbands “to the hell men deserve.”

And now with sister (?) Lucy chiming in…it seems Lucy thinks you still love the pussy. Haha! This is just too too much.  Like I said,  the best of incest.

Let me repeat, “real life is stranger than fiction”. And this proves it. I am going to end it here. What more is there to say? I wish you and your family well, although according to you, it seems like you don’t need any well wishing. Break away Hector - that is, if you really want to. :)

On another but similar note….I usually don’t disagree with Doug on many things, but what he said made me want to jump in with both feet…and HOPEfully I won’t land on his neck!

Doug: I know you know what I meant when I was speaking about rape.  I am not bringing other men into the picture. I am speaking strictly about Hector’s sexual experiences with his mother and his sisters. Perhaps I need to be clearer. A woman can not rape a man – forcing herself on him for sex. A woman can not rape a man unless he has a hard on. And a hard on says that he wants it – the missionary position or not, does not matter. He needs to be hard.

Now…regarding your comment about a woman using a strap-on. Show me a man who would allow a woman to don on a strap-on, bend him over and fuck him. It isn’t going to happen unless he wants it to. Unless she has help tying him down against his will, and please why bother? Like Cass says, “What is she going to get out of it?”, he can not be raped by a woman this way.
You will never read a story about a man getting raped by a woman with a strap-on, unless he wanted it and gave some bullshit excuse that he got raped, because he didn’t want to admit that he wanted to get fucked in the ass in the first place.

Women can have a challenging enough time in the bedroom to begin with, why introduce something that is not going to give her pleasure? Perhaps a woman who dons on a strap-on and wants to fuck her man in the ass is doing it for revenge. Maybe she’s getting fucked in the ass, not enjoying it, and wants him to feel what it’s like…to feel the pain. Who knows. Regardless, revenge or what have you, unless he desires it, it isn’t going to happen.

With respect to Lolita, I think Lolita is in the minority when it comes to getting pleasure from strapin’ it on. But I can tell you, most women aren’t doing it for her own sexual pleasure, and she definitely isn’t going to get away with it unless he wants it. Hence, I woman can not rape a man. Period.

I’m with Cass, if I had my druthers, I too would prefer it if men raped men.

Hey ZL: Loved your description of The Donald.

Ireme: The public has just been told. Thank you. I don’t drink milk but I love ice cream. Guess I will be giving up my love of it until further notice. Contaminated cows – what next? We really have no idea just how bad our planet, not to mention our bodies, are going to be polluted by this nuclear disaster in Japan.

I wish everyone a safe and happy weekend.

Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.

Gratefully your blog host,

michelle

Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)

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Posted in Health & Well Being, Human Rights and Equality | 16 Comments »

Women’s Herstory Month ends today…

Posted by Michelle Moquin on 31st March 2011


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…but recognition and appreciation of women should be forever ongoing.

Are ya with me?

Good morning!

Since AH and A Librarian are both recognizing all that happened in 1862, I  thought I would jump in and join in on this moment in herstory. The term “history” is catered to the men. I, like Claudia have used, and enjoy the term “herstory” especially when the subject is “women”.

July 16th 1862 might not have been a date for anything special, but for a certain mother-to-be it was a day of celebration. For this mother-to-be became a mother, by giving birth to her little baby daughter whom she named Ida.

Little did Elizabeth and James Wells know in their moment of bliss, that their daughter Ida B. Wells would grow up to be one amazing woman, that they surely would be proud of.

Another gem from Wikipedia. Like the others that I have posted, this is such an interesting read. I encourage you all to really read it. This is our history… women’s herstory.

On another note, I find this especially interesting because most of our women in herstory that I have blogged about, I have heard of…their stories are told and they are revered…and not just during Women’s History Month… I mean Women’s Herstory Month.:)

But how many of you have heard of Ida B. Wells? I had not. Could it be because she was a “woman”, and not to mention a “black” woman, and hasn’t had the recognition that she deserved? Or am I just not on the up and up when it comes to women in herstory? Maybe so. You tell me.

All I can say is what Wells accomplished in her life is truly remarkable and inspiring, and she should be recognized and revered by all for all that she as done for women and men.

Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (July 16, 1862 – March 25, 1931) was an African American journalist, newspaper editorand, with her husband, newspaper owner Ferdinand L. Barnett, an early leader in the civil rights movement. She documented the extent of lynching in the United States, and was also active in the women’s rights movement and the women’s suffrage movement.

Life

Ida B. Wells was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi in 1862,[1] just beforePresident Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. Her father James Wells was a carpenter and her mother was Elizabeth “Lizzie” Warrenton Wells. Both parents were enslaved until freed at the end of the Civil War.

Ida’s father James was a master at carpentry and known as a race man. He was also very interested in politics, but he never took office. Her mother Elizabeth was a cook for the Bolling household before she was torn apart from the family. She was a religious woman who was very strict with her children, for their best interests. Wells’ parents took their children’s education very seriously. They wanted their children to take advantage of having the opportunity to be educated and attend school.

Wells attended the Freedmen’s School Shaw University, now Rust College in Holly Springs. She was expelled from Rust College for her rebellious behavior and temper after confronting the President of the college. During her time at college, on a visit to her grandmother in Mississippi Valley, she received word that her hometown of Holly Springs had been hit by the Yellow Fever epidemic.[citation needed] When she was 16, both Wells’ parents and her 10-month old brother, Stanley, died of yellow fever during a epidemic that swept through theSouth.[2]

At a meeting following the funeral, friends and relatives decided that the six remaining Wells children would be sent to various foster homes. Wells was devastated by the idea and, to keep the family together, dropped out of high school and found employment as a teacher in a black school. She was determined to keep her family together, even under the difficult circumstances. Her grandmother, Peggy Wells, along with other friends and relatives as well, stayed with the children during the week while she was away to teach; without this help she would have not been able to provide for the family. She used teaching as a way to support herself and her family, however she didn’t have a passion for it. She thought it was unfair that white teachers were making $80 a month when she was only making $30. This had caused her to find an interest in racial politics and improving education of blacks.

In 1883, Wells moved to Memphis. There she got a teaching job, and during her summer vacations she attended summer sessions at Fisk University in Nashville, whose graduates were well respected in the black community. She also attended LeMoyne Institute. Wells held strong political opinions and she upset many people with her views on women’s rights. When she was 24, she wrote, “I will not begin at this late day by doing what my soul abhors; sugaring men, weak deceitful creatures, with flattery to retain them as escorts or to gratify a revenge.”

On May 4, 1884, a Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company train conductorordered Wells to give up her seat on the train and move to the smoking car, which was already crowded with other passengers. At the time, the Supreme Court had just struck down, in the Civil Rights Cases (1883), the federal Civil Rights Act of 1875, which banned racial discrimination in public accommodations. Several railroad companies were able to continue legal racial segregation of their passengers.

Wells protested and refused to give up her seat, 71 years before Rosa Parks. The conductor and two other men dragged Wells out of the car. When she returned to Memphis, she immediately hired an African American attorney to sue the railroad. Wells became a public figure in Memphis when she wrote a newspaper article, for “The Living Way,” a black church weekly, about her treatment on the train.

When her lawyer was paid off by the railroad, she hired a white attorney. She won her case on December 24, 1884, when the local circuit court granted her a $500settlement. The railroad company appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court, which reversed the lower court’s ruling in 1885, concluding that, “We think it is evident that the purpose of the defendant in error was to harass with a view to this suit, and that her persistence was not in good faith to obtain a comfortable seat for the short ride.” Wells was ordered to pay court costs. While teaching elementary school, Wells was offered an editorial position for the Evening Star. She also wrote weekly articles for The Living Way weekly newspaper under the pen name “Iola.”

She slowly gained a reputation for writing about the race issue in the United States. In 1889, she became co-owner and editor of Free Speech and Headlight, an anti-segregationist newspaper based at the Beale Street Baptist Church in Memphis that published articles about racial injustice.

In March 1892, racial tensions were rising in Memphis. Violence was becoming the norm, especially with the appearance of the KKK. A grocery store, the People’s Grocery Company, owned by three black men, Thomas Moss, Calvin McDowell, and Henry Stewart, was perceived as taking away a substantial amount of business from a white-owned grocery store that was across the street. One night, while Wells was out of town in Natchez, MS, selling newspaper subscriptions, a white mob invaded the grocery store, which ended in three white men being shot and injured. Moss, McDowell, and Stewart, who were Wells’ friends, were jailed. A largelynch mob stormed the jail cells and killed them.

After the lynching of her friends, Wells wrote an article in the Free Speech urging blacks to leave Memphis: “There is, therefore, only one thing left to do; save our money and leave a town which will neither protect our lives and property, nor give us a fair trial in the courts, but takes us out and murders us in cold blood when accused by white persons.” Wells emphasized the public spectacle of the lynching. Over 6,000 blacks did leave; others organized boycotts of white-owned businesses. Being personally threatened with violence, Wells wrote in herautobiography that she bought a pistol: “They had made me an exile and threatened my life for hinting at the truth.”[3]

The murder of her friends sparked Wells’ interest in researching the real reason behind lynching. She began investigative journalism about lynching, looking at the charges given as reasons to lynch black men. She wrote an article that implied that liaisons between black men and white women were consensual. While she was away in Philadelphia, The Free Speech was destroyed on May 27, 1892, three months after the murders of Moss, Stewart, and McDowell.

She went from Philadelphia to New York City. The New York Age printed her articles as she continued her fight against lynching. Her speaking abilities were tested for the first time when she was asked to speak in front of many important African American women of the time.

As she spoke about the lynchings of Moss, McDowell, and Stewart, she began to cry. Wells became the head of the Anti-Lynching Crusade, later moving to Chicagoto continue her work.

She was known as one of the most influential and inspiring black leaders of the time, along with Fredrick Douglas. Wells and other black leaders, among themFrederick Douglass, organized a boycott of the 1893 World’s Columbian Expositionin Chicago. Ida B. Wells, Frederick Douglass, Irvine Garland Penn and Ferdinand L. Barnett wrote sections of a pamphlet to be distributed during the exposition. Reasons Why the Colored American Is Not in the World’s Columbian Exposition detailed the progress of blacks since their arrival in America and the workings of Southern lynchings. She later reported to Albion W. Tourgée that copies of the pamphlet had been distributed to over 20,000 people at the fair.[4] After the World’s Fair in Chicago, Wells decided to stay in the city instead of returning to New York City and in 1893 took work with the Chicago Conservator, oldest African American newspaper paper in the city.

Also in 1893, Wells contemplated a libel suit against two black Memphis attorneys. She again turned to Tourgée, who had trained and practiced as a lawyer and judge, for possible free legal help. Deeply in debt, Tourgée could not afford to do the work, but he asked his friend Ferdinand L. Barnett if he could. Barnett accepted the pro bono job. Ferdinand was born in Alabama. Along with being a lawyer, he was the editor of the “Chicago Conservator” in 1878. The first time Ida met Ferdinand was at a meeting of the Ida B. Wells Club, where Ferdinand was president of the club. Ferdinand was an assistant state attorney for 14 years.[5] In 1895, he and Wells were married.[6] She set an early precedent as being one of the first married American women to keep her own last name with her husband’s. This was very unusual for that time.

The two had four children: Charles, Herman, Ida, and Alfreda. In a chapter of her autobiography titled “A Divided Duty”, she explains the difficulty she had splitting her time between her family and her job. Wells continued to work after the birth of her first child, traveling and bringing him along with her. Although she tried to balance the two worlds, she was not as active and, as Susan B. Anthony said, Wells “was distracted”. She returned home after having her second child because she could no longer balance her job with her family.

She received much support from other prolific social activists and her fellow clubwomen. In his response to her article in the Free Speech, Frederick Douglass expressed approval of Wells-Barnett’s literature: “You have done your people and mine a service…What a revelation of existing conditions your writing has been for me” (Freedman, 1994). Wells- Barnett took her campaign into Europe with the help of many supporters. In 1896, Wells founded the National Association of Colored Women, and also founded the National Afro-American Council, which later became the NAACP. Wells formed the Women’s Era Club, the first civic organization for African-American women. This club later became the Ida B. Wells Club, in honor of its founder.

In 1899, Wells was struggling to manage a home life and a career life, but she was still a fierce competitor in the anti-lynching circle.[7] This was illustrated when The National Association of Colored Women’s club met that year in Chicago. To Wells’ surprise, she was not invited to take part in the festivities. When she confronted the president of the club, Mrs. Terrell, Wells was told that Terrell had received letters from the women of Chicago that if Wells were to take part in the club, they would no longer aid the association. However, Wells later came to find out that the real reason she had not been invited was because Mrs. Terrell’s selfish intentions. Mrs. Terrell had been president of the association 23years’ running and wanted to be elected a third time. Mrs.Terrell thought the only way of doing that was to keep Wells out of the picture.[citation needed]

After traveling through the British Isles and the United States teaching and giving speeches to bring awareness to the lynching problems in America, Wells settled in Chicago and worked to improve conditions for the rapidly growing African American population there. The rapid increase of African Americans into the population led to racial tensions much like those in the South. There were also tensions between the African American population and the immigrants from Europe, who were now in competition for jobs. Wells spent the latter thirty years of her life working on urban reform in Chicago. While there, she also raised her family and worked on her autobiography. After her retirement Wells wrote her autobiography, Crusade for Justice (1928). The book, however, was never finished; in fact, it ends in the middle of a sentence, in the middle of a word. She died of uremia in Chicago on March 25, 1931, at the age of sixty-eight.

Europe

Ida B. Wells took two tours to Europe on her campaign for justice, the first in 1893 and the second in 1894. While she was in Europe she spent her time in both Scotland and England, where she gave many speeches and newspaper interviews.

In 1893, Wells went to Great Britain at the behest of British Quaker Catherine Impey. An opponent of imperialism and proponent of racial equality, Impey wanted to be sure that the British public was informed about the problem of lynching. Wells went to rally a new reform moral crusade to the English. Although Wells and her speeches, complete with at least one grisly photograph showing grinning white children posing beneath a suspended corpse, caused a stir among audiences, they still remained doubtful. Her intentions were to raise money and expose the United States problem with lynching, but Wells was paid so little that she could barely pay her travel expenses.[8]

Many people that heard her speak were repulsed by the information they were given. This helped to keep the audience interested and engaged in what Wells was trying to educate them on. Christian churches in Europe did not like Wells because she talked badly about American churches, stating that they did not help her with her cause.

Relationships of mixed race were looked harshly upon in those times and were seen as rape. This resulted in the lynching of black individuals (mostly men). Wells, however, worked very hard to make a point that these relationships were actually voluntary relations.

Wells returned to Great Britain in 1894. Before leaving she called on the Editor ofDaily Inter-Ocean, Mr. William Penn Nixon, and told him about her return to Britain. As she points out in her book Crusade for Justice, the Daily Inter- Ocean,a Chicago-based paper, was the only paper in America which had persistently denounced lynching. Mr. Nixon asked her to write for the newspaper while away, and she very gladly accepted the opportunity.[9] In doing so, she became the first black woman to be a paid correspondent for a mainstream white newspaper.[10](Tourgée had been writing a column for the same paper, which was the local Republican Party organ and competitor to the Democratic Chicago Tribune.)[11]

Wells column was called “Ida B. Wells Abroad.” An example of an article that she wrote was called “In Pembroke Chapel.” [12] This specific article focused on her invitation to speak in the Pembroke chapel whose reverend was C.F. Aked. She describes the reverend as “one of the most advanced thinkers in the pulpit of today.”[13] He himself was not confident about the stories that Ida B. Wells told, but he went to New York for the World’s Fair and actually saw the reports on the Miller lynching in Bardwell, Kentucky.[14] After that point he knew that Ida B. Wells was telling the truth. She was well accepted in Europe. Most of the people there were shocked about the treatment of African Americans in the United States. Wells was successful in spreading the news and getting people to formally release statements saying they disapproved of the situation in America. On a number of accounts, she was faced with people who protested what she was saying, and in these moments she was able to support all of the information with research and studies that she had found.

Ida B. Wells’ two tours to Europe helped gain support for her cause. She called for the formation of groups to formally protest the actions of white Americans and the lynchings they commit. Wells was a major influence for the formation of many groups across Europe, which helped lead to the international pressure on America for equality.

Willard controversy

It was in England that Wells and Frances Willard first clashed. Willard was the secretary of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, one of the most formidable Women’s organization in the country, with branches in every state and a membership of over 200,000. Willard had used the issue of Temperance to politicize women who saw organizing for suffrage as too radical.[15]

Wells’ anti-lynching campaign brought the two to England concurrently. As Wells described the horrors of American lynchings, British liberals were incredulous that White women such as Willard-who had been heralded in the English press as the “Uncrowned Queen of American Democracy”- would turn a blind eye to such violence. Wells correctly accused Willard of being silent on the issue of lynchings, and of making racial comments which would add fuel to the fire of mob violence.[16] To support her assertion, Wells referred to an interview Willard had conducted during a tour of the South in which Willard had blamed Blacks for the defeat of temperance legislation there and had cast aspersions on the race. “The colored race multiplies like the locusts of Egypt,” she had said, and “the grog shop is its center of power… The safety of women, of childhood, of the home is menaced in a thousand localities.”[16]

In response, Willard and her powerful hostess and counterpart, Lady Somerset, attempted to use their influence to keep Wells’ comments out of the press. Wells responded by revealing that despite Willard’s abolitionist forbears and Black friends, no Black women were admitted to the WCTU’s southern branches.[citation needed]

The dispute between Wells and Willard in England intensified the mean campaign against Wells in the American Press. The New York Times ran an article insisting that Black men were prone to rape, and that Wells was a “slanderous and nasty minded mulatress” who was looking for more “income” than “outcome.” These vitriolic attacks in the American press swayed many Britons to Wells’ cause. “It is idle for men to say that the conditions which Miss Wells describes do not exist,” a British editor wrote. “Whites of America may not think so; British Christianity does and all the scurrility of the American press won’t alter the facts.”[17]

Wells’ British tour was ultimately a personal success, and led to the formation of the British Anti-Lynching Committee, which included such notables and the Duke of Argyll, the Archiboshop of Canterbury, members of Parliament, and the editors of The Manchester Guardian.[17]

Writings (Southern Horrors and The Red Record)

In 1892 she published a pamphlet titledSouthern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases, and A Red Record, 1892-1894, which documented research on a lynching. Having examined many accounts of lynching based on alleged “rape of white women,” she concluded that Southerners concocted rape as an excuse to hide their real reason for lynchings: black economic progress, which threatened not only white Southerners’ pocketbooks, but also their ideas about black inferiority.

The lesson this teaches and which every Afro-American should ponder well, is that a Winchester rifle should have a place of honor in every black home, and it should be used for that protection which the law refuses to give. When the white man who is always the aggressor knows he runs as great a risk of biting the dust every time his Afro-American victim does, he will have greater respect for Afro-American life. The more the Afro-American yields and cringes and begs, the more he has to do so, the more he is insulted, outraged and lynched.

-excerpt from Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases

The Red Record is a one hundred page pamphlet describing lynching in the United States since the Emancipation Proclamation, while also describing blacks’ struggles since the time of the Emancipation Proclamation. The Red Recordbegins by explaining the alarming severity of the lynching situation in the United States. An ignorance of lynching in the U.S., according to Ida, developed over a span of ten years. Ida talks about slavery, saying the black man’s body and soul were owned by the white man. The soul was dwarfed by the white man, and the body was preserved because of its value. Ida mentions that “ten thousand Negroes have been killed in cold blood, without the formality of judicial trial and legal execution,” therefore launching her campaign against lynching in this pamphlet, The Red Record. Frederick Douglass wrote an article explaining three eras of Southern barbarism and the excuses that coincided with each. Ida goes into detail about each excuse.

The first excuse that Ida explains is the “necessity of the white man to repress and stamp out alleged ‘race riots.’” Once the Civil War ended, there were many riots supposedly being planned by blacks; whites panicked and resisted them forcefully.

The second excuse came during the Reconstruction Era: blacks were lynched because whites feared “Negro Domination” and wanted to stay powerful in the government. Wells encouraged those threatened to move their families somewhere safe.

The third excuse was: Blacks had “to be killed to avenge their assaults upon women.” Ida explains that any relationship between a white woman and a black man was considered rape during that time period. In this article she states, “Nobody in this section of the country believes the old threadbare lie that Negro men rape white women.” Ida lists fourteen pages of statistics concerning lynching done from 1892-1895; she also includes pages of graphic stories detailing lynching done in the South. Ida credits the findings to white correspondents, white press bureaus, and white newspapers. The Red Record was a huge pamphlet, not only in size, but in influence.

Ida B. Wells and W. E. B. Du Bois

The lives of W.E.B. Du Bois and Ida B. Wells often ran along parallel tracks. Both used their journalistic writing to condemn lynching. Wells and Du Bois seemed to disagree on the story of how Ida B. Wells’ name was removed from the original list of NAACP founders. Du Bois was more silent on the issue implying Wells chose not to be included.[18] However, in her autobiography, Wells complains that Du Bois deliberately excluded her from the list. [19]

Legacy

Throughout her life Wells was militant in her demands for equality and justice forAfrican-Americans and insisted that the African-American community win justice through its own efforts. Since her death interest in her life and legacy has only grown. Her life is the subject of a widely performed musical drama, which debuted in 2006, by Tazewell Thompson, Constant Star.[20] The play sums her up:

“…A woman born in slavery, she would grow to become one of the great pioneer activists of the Civil Rights movement. A precursor ofRosa Parks, she was a suffragist, newspaper editor and publisher, investigative journalist, co-founder of the NAACP, political candidate, mother, wife, and the single most powerful leader in the anti-lynching campaign in America. A dynamic, controversial, temperamental, uncompromising race woman, she broke bread and crossed swords with some of the movers and shakers of her time: Frederick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, Marcus Garvey, Booker T. Washington, W. E. B. Du Bois, Frances Willard, and President McKinley. By any fair assessment, she was a seminal figure in Post-Reconstruction America.”

On February 1, 1990, the United States Postal Service issued a 25 cent postage stamp in her honor.[21] In 2002, Molefi Kete Asante listed Ida B. Wells on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans.[22]

*************

Readers: Well…what do you think? The last quoted paragraph pretty much says it all in a nutshell. Blog me your thoughts…your praises of Wells.

Lena: I realize it is frustrating. You are doing nothing wrong. Who gets in, is all just random and the luck of the draw…for lack of a better way to explain it.

Anonymous #12: You and me both. :)

Urte: I can’t imagine that people wouldn’t already realize this, but thanks for the confirmation, and warning. I haven’t touched seafood since the oil spill. Call me paranoid but after the reports that I have blogged here, I’m erring in my favor. And now, I’m certainly not going to eat any fish from Japan. So much for my love of sushi.

I have more to say but I’ll save it for tomorrow. Until then….

Peace & Love: “Live it, Give it”

Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.

Gratefully your blog host,

michelle

Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)

If you love my blog and my writes, please make a donation via PayPal, credit card, or e-check, please click the “Donate” button below. (Please only donations from those readers within the United States. – International readers please see my “Donate” page)

Or if you would like to send a check via snail mail, please make checks payable to “Michelle Moquin”, and send to:

Michelle Moquin PO Box 29235 San Francisco, Ca. 94129

Thank you for your loyal support!

For archives dated before January 17, 2008 click on my Blogroll:

or click here: “A Day in the life of…”

All content on this site are property of Michelle Moquin © copyright 2008-2011

" Politics, god, Life, News, Music, Family, Personal, Travel, Random, Photography, Religion, Aliens, Art, Entertainment, Food, Books, Thoughts, Media, Culture, Love, Sex, Poetry, Prose, Friends, Technology, Humor, Health, Writing, Events, Movies, Sports, Video, Christianity, Atheist, Blogging, History, Work, Education, Business, Fashion, Barack Obama, People, Internet, Relationships, Faith, Photos, Videos, Hillary Clinton, School, Reviews, God, TV, Philosophy, Fun, Science, Environment, Design, The Page, Rants, Pictures, Church, Blog, Nature, Marketing, Television, Democrats, Parenting, Miscellaneous, Current Events, Film, Spirituality, Obama, Musings, Home, Human Rights, Society, Comedy, Me, Random Thoughts, Research, Government, Election 2008, Baseball, Opinion, Recipes, Children, Iraq, Funny, Women, Economics, America, Misc, Commentary, John McCain, Reflections, All, Celebrities, Inspiration, Lifestyle, Theology, Linux, Kids, Games, World, India, Literature, China, Ramblings, Fitness, Money, Review, War, Articles, Economy, Journal, Quotes, NBA, Crime, Anime, Islam, 2008, Stories, Prayer, Diary, Jesus, Buddha, Muslim, Israel, Europe, Links, Marriage, Fiction, American Idol, Software, Leadership, Pop culture, Rants, Video Games, Republicans, Updates, Political, Football, Healing, Blogs, Shopping, USA, Class, Matrix, Course, Work, Web 2.0, My Life, Psychology, Gay, Happiness, Advertising, Field Hockey, Hip-hop, sex, fucking, ass, Soccer, sox"

Posted in Health & Well Being, Human Rights and Equality, Wonderful Women Of The World | 14 Comments »

flap your lips friday

Posted by Michelle Moquin on 25th March 2011


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Good morning!

Rose: I was about to respond to you with a, “Thanks for the info! I am in dressing rooms a lot.” But before I did, I decided to check what you posted, first on Snopes. Only because the post seemed a bit suspicious to me. I’ve learned the hard way about passing along info that isn’t exactly true.

When I checked Snopes, they found the information to be “false”. Hmm…Why? Ruby discovered that her uncle had several 2-way mirrors in his house. Evidently, the fingernail test worked for her.  It was then I decided to read Snopes write to find out why. It turns out Snopes and the advice were both correct.  It was the terminology used to describe the item that wasn’t exactly correct, which is why they labeled it “false”.

The mirror that Ruby discovered was not 2-way mirror, nor was it the expensive first-surface mirror that Snopes talked about. As Snopes said that type of mirror, while it would allow the fingernails to touch, would not be used in a bathroom because of its expensiveness. What Ruby discovered was a “transparent mirror.”

The fingernail test, although it is not the most reliable test to do, it evidently helped Ruby and her aunt discover her scoundrel of an uncle, thanks to Rose’s post. But If you want to determine if it is definitely a “transparent mirror”, and you don’t want to “hurl an object”  into the mirror as the article suggested, I would suggest that you read Snopes, as there are better tests based on the more obvious physical features of “transparent mirrors”. One of them being that the real mirror hangs on a wall, the transparent mirror is part of the wall.

To read the rest of Snopes findings, Click here. I found it interesting, Perhaps you will too. Unfortunately snopes doesn’t allow you to copy and past. :(

Thanks Rose for peaking my interest, and Ruby for inspiring me to want to investigate it further. All in all, the advice was worth heeding.  When in question It is usually good to err on your side. For you, Ruby, regardless of whether the terminology was correct, the information lead to the discovery in your uncle’s house.

*******

Hey Jackie: Welcome! Believe me, sometimes it’s a bit overwhelming for me too.

Hi Glenda: Thank you and welcome to you too! I’m happy to hear that you find my blog to be helpful for you. Good luck in school. Keep reading. When new girls are needed, I always post it here. Any girl who volunteers to be beamed up into space has the potential to be one of my girlz.

Doug: I love watching Elena Lev – she is so amazing at her craft. Thank you for the nice reminder that my hoops are gathering dust. And yes Lacy, I am a very lucky girl.

With respect to your link on Trump: I loved Whoopi before and I love her even more now. I don’t know how she contains herself. I would’ve been jumping out of my seat with anger and frustration toward Trump…and Hasselbeck – Ugh…she just rubs me so wrong; the way she sits there with that smirk on her face. It’s not the first time she’s shown her racist side.

Zen Lill, Lisa: I so wished I had received it. I have so few republican friends; they all know me well enough to know not to send it to me. I’d love to hear any reactions that you get. Blog it.

Heddie: Hi and welcome! I used to watch General Hospital soo many years ago. Can’t say I was hooked but I had many friend that were. I am always so shocked that soap is still on the air. So…are you hooked on the blog too? :) It does get pretty steamy here.

AH: I am not much into cowboys, but I know aliens love that time period as well as country music. However I did find your chronicle interesting. Once again, the white guy gets away with murder… a typical thug with a gun trying to be something bigger than what he really is…a coward.

Oh…But I have to say I loved the bit about the banquet. And hilarious that Adam was running off, absconding with the seconds in hand. Too funny. I bet Adam wants Bita to steer again. Can I come along some time? :) Nice to hear from you again. Oh and Doug: Your addition was a hoot too. It seems you were up a bit earlier than you thought.  :)

Quote of the day honoring Women’s History Month. I love this one:

“The world has never yet seen a truly great and virtuous nation, because in the degradation of women, the very fountains of life are poisoned at their source.”

~Lucretia Mott, a Quaker, was known as an antislavery advocate and women’s rights activist

Readers: It’s Friday. Flap whatever moves you . :)

Blog me.

Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.

Gratefully your blog host,

michelle

Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)

If you love my blog and my writes, please make a donation via PayPal, credit card, or e-check, please click the “Donate” button below. (Please only donations from those readers within the United States. – International readers please see my “Donate” page)

Or if you would like to send a check via snail mail, please make checks payable to “Michelle Moquin”, and send to:

Michelle Moquin PO Box 29235 San Francisco, Ca. 94129

Thank you for your loyal support!

For archives dated before January 17, 2008 click on my Blogroll:

or click here: “A Day in the life of…”

All content on this site are property of Michelle Moquin © copyright 2008-2011

" Politics, god, Life, News, Music, Family, Personal, Travel, Random, Photography, Religion, Aliens, Art, Entertainment, Food, Books, Thoughts, Media, Culture, Love, Sex, Poetry, Prose, Friends, Technology, Humor, Health, Writing, Events, Movies, Sports, Video, Christianity, Atheist, Blogging, History, Work, Education, Business, Fashion, Barack Obama, People, Internet, Relationships, Faith, Photos, Videos, Hillary Clinton, School, Reviews, God, TV, Philosophy, Fun, Science, Environment, Design, The Page, Rants, Pictures, Church, Blog, Nature, Marketing, Television, Democrats, Parenting, Miscellaneous, Current Events, Film, Spirituality, Obama, Musings, Home, Human Rights, Society, Comedy, Me, Random Thoughts, Research, Government, Election 2008, Baseball, Opinion, Recipes, Children, Iraq, Funny, Women, Economics, America, Misc, Commentary, John McCain, Reflections, All, Celebrities, Inspiration, Lifestyle, Theology, Linux, Kids, Games, World, India, Literature, China, Ramblings, Fitness, Money, Review, War, Articles, Economy, Journal, Quotes, NBA, Crime, Anime, Islam, 2008, Stories, Prayer, Diary, Jesus, Buddha, Muslim, Israel, Europe, Links, Marriage, Fiction, American Idol, Software, Leadership, Pop culture, Rants, Video Games, Republicans, Updates, Political, Football, Healing, Blogs, Shopping, USA, Class, Matrix, Course, Work, Web 2.0, My Life, Psychology, Gay, Happiness, Advertising, Field Hockey, Hip-hop, sex, fucking, ass, Soccer, sox"

Posted in ChitChat, Health & Well Being | 43 Comments »

taming the microwave dragon

Posted by Michelle Moquin on 22nd March 2011


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Good morning. Go grab a cup of coffee and a comfy chair – this is a long read.

You Wouldn’t Give Your Child A Cigarette — This May be Far Worse

In the video above, Dr. Magda Havas PhD points out the many hurdles we face when trying to address the growing concerns about microwave radiation, such as that from cell phones and wireless technology.

In the end however, regardless of how strongly anyone feels about being able to use these modern technologies, there is a price to be paid. According to Dr. Havas, microwaves will likely end up killing far more people than smoking and asbestos combined if we do not start thoroughly addressing its dangers

I tend to agree. I believe our wireless, electro-polluted society is an enormous experiment that cannot end well. It has already started taking its toll. Unlike cigarette smoke or asbestos, microwave radiation from wireless technologies is almost ubiquitous in urban settings.

Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity on the Rise

Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity Syndrome (EHS) is gaining recognition as a very real and increasing problem. Sweden is leading the pack in acknowledging and addressing this issue, mainly due to the progress made by FEB – The Swedish Association for the ElectroSensitive. The association produces and distributes educational literature that has helped raise awareness about the phenomenon around the world.Mast Action UKRadiation Research Trust and Electrosensitivity U.K. are doing similar work in Great Britain, as well as the Electromagnetic Radiation Alliance in Australia.

Electrosensitivity U.K. publishes a terrific primer explaining this condition containing over 800 scientific and medical references, written and compiled by Michael Bevington, Chairman of the Trustees of Electrosensitivity U.K.

Camilla Rees of www.ElectromagneticHealth.org says:

“Electrosensitivity U.K.’s primer on electrosensitivity offers an extensive review of symptoms, sources of exposure, pathological markers, treatment approaches, references for other illnesses linked to EMFs, and lists references to numerous resolutions on this topic by organizations of international scientists, medical doctors and psychologists.

For a small donation to the U.K.charity, people who are electrically sensitive or who think they may be can bring their own physicians up to speed on this important new condition quickly. We encourage all to share the ES primer with their doctors, families, schools and government officials.”

Early signs of electrosensitivity should be heeded to prevent escalation of symptoms and the development of even more serious conditions, such as cancers.

Director of the Radiation Research Trust in the U.K., Eileen O’Connor, a breast cancer survivor, recently told the audience at the Commonwealth Club of California about what happened when the Wishaw T-Mobile phone mast went up in her small U.K. village. An estimated 77 percent of the residents within 500 meters became ill with a range of health problems from symptoms of electrosensitivity to infertility and cancer. Seven years later a cancer cluster was discovered in the village, after which the tower was forcefully removed.

Eileen, who today counsels members of the British Parliament and EU on EMF health policy, said six ladies developed breast cancer, there was one case of prostate cancer, one case of bladder cancer, one case of lung cancer, three cases of pre-cancerous cervical cells, one man developed a spinal tumor and motor neuron disease (MND), many cases of breast lumps and pervasive symptoms of electrosensitivity, such as sleep problems,headaches, dizzy spells, vertigo, fertility problems, immune disregulation, and fatigue. An Olympic level horse was also treated for blood problems.

When the mast came down, the symptoms of electrosensitivity went away, and with few exceptions, cancers people were treated for never recurred and the Olympic horse no longer suffered with blood problems.

Eileen also presented compelling research from the European Reflex Report, visually showing DNA breaks in a comet assay test from 24 hours of cell phone radiation exposure compared with DNA breaks from 1600 chest x-rays. (See graphic below.)

Source: Reflex Report as presented by Eileen O’Connor at the Commonwealth Club of California, November 18, 2010

The point to understand is that microwave radiation not only leads to electrosensitivity but can lead to cancer when DNA damage occurs. So take any signs of electrosensitivity very seriously and learn to shield yourself from this pervasive toxin.

For parents concerned about electrosensitivity as it relates to children in schools, a good resource is theCampaign for Radiation Free Schools on Facebook .

The site advocates schools follow the guidance in Dr. Havas’ BRAG Antenna Ranking of Schools Report to minimize children being harmed by radiation, and teaches schools how to do this. It also offers both theEMF-Help BlogTM and a new series of EMF Remediation Interviews by Camilla Rees with leading environmental consultants, including Vicki Warren, past Executive Director of the Institute for Bau Biology & Ecology.

Dirty Electricity and Microwaves-The Cigarettes of the 21st Century

Most of you reading this are too young to remember the ads touting the health benefits of cigarettes and portraying physicians smoking. These ads began appearing in various publications in the 1920s-including JAMA (Journal of the AMA), one of the most widely distributed medical journals.

It took nearly a century for truth to win out and defeat the corporate marketing fraud, but now science and the courts have definitively established the destructive effects of tobacco and everyone can agree that the claims in these ads are preposterous.

Unfortunately, many fail to appreciate that there are massive similarities between the telecommunications and tobacco industries with respect to their manipulative and deceptive tactics to deceive you about the health dangers of their product.

There is often a delay of several years to several decades between new scientific findings and a change in public policy-a time period that is critical in preventing irreversible health damage. By waiting for government regulations to change, it is often too late. Researchers have now concluded that just as smoking doesn’t cause immediate signs of cancer, the latency period for brain tumors from microwave radiation can be 10, 20, or even 30 years.

That means, it’s still too soon for most cell phone-induced brain tumors to show up!

So the question is, do we learn from history and choose to leap-frog over the inevitable resistance and denials from industry, or do we go along with the program until the health ramifications are so disastrous and the connections so obvious they cannot be ignored by anyone?

Personally, I opt for preemptive action.

The links between non-thermal radiation and health problems have already been scientifically established, and researchers who specialize in this field can now explain at least some of the mechanisms behind this controversial finding. The time to take precautionary action is now. Not 75 years from now when our children and grandchildren start dropping like poisoned canaries…

Beware of Plans to Exponentially Increase Wireless Technology Inside Your Home, Whether You Want it or Not

Keep in mind that exposures to radiation comes not only from telecommunications technologies such as cell phones, wireless networks, wireless routers, wireless computers, iPads and portable phones, but also from new utility technologies like ‘smart’ meters, which despite their name are not very smart at all.

The plan for the coming ‘smart grid’ is first to have utility meters transmit data on your household energy usage wirelessly through neighborhoods and back to the utility. The next step includes having household appliances within the home individually transmit to the ‘smart’ meter! Yes, that means all major appliances, like washing machines, stoves, dishwashers and electronics like stereos will be outfitted with transmitters. Interoperability standards are well along in development for this new generation of radiation-emitting home appliances to be integrated into smart grids.

An excellent interview on the radiofrequency these new energy strategies will bring into your home can be found at on ElectromagneticHealth.org. It features Blake Levitt, author of Electromagnetic Fields and a long-time science writer on this topic, and Duncan Campbell, Esq, a visionary thinker on the future of utilities and new energy technologies.

What all this is pointing to is there is rampant unchecked proliferation of wireless technologies in our lives, perpetrated by corporations who have no appreciation for the health impacts, or worse, who simply don’t care about the health consequences, perhaps considering health damage to the population akin to ‘collateral damage’ par for the course in pursuit of a larger goal. It is going to take citizens saying NO MORE to the lack of corporate conscience and failure of global governments to protect public health before the current trajectory we’re on is reversed.

We recommend you consider signing the EMF Petition to Congress, signed now by thousands of Americans in every state.

Ask your friends and neighbors to sign it, too. And if any of them need convincing, point them to the telecom industry’s own report on the biological effects, commissioned by T-Mobile and Deutsche Telecom MobilNet, GmbH, called The Ecolog Report. This should end all doubt that the industry knows they are harming us.

Alasdair Philips of Powerwatch estimates that “33 percent of people are electrosensitive to an extent, and an increasing number, currently about 3 percent, are highly sensitive.”

He says electrosensitivity symptoms seem to increase with the age of the person, especially over 40 years of age:

“It is becoming a major cause of chronic and, increasingly, acute illness. ES symptoms start gently by just increasing general stress levels resulting in chronic health problems of poorer sleep, irritability, fatigue, headaches, etc, and at that point it is usually not clear what the cause is. Gradually people become more and more sensitive and can link their now acute reactions with cordless phones, cell phones and their masts, Wi-Fi, etc.”

I wonder how many people will need to become electrosensitive before citizens will start taking decisive action, taking this issue up with their legislators. Already the telecom industry is pushing to dismantle the hard-wired, landline telephone system in the U.S., which would leave millions of electrically sensitive people without the means to make a phone call.

And the wireless ‘smart grid’ is well underway. When these kinds of large infrastructure decisions are made without feedback or pushback from citizens, they will certainly be impossible to reverse once implemented.

The Science is Clear: Non-Thermal Radiation DOES Cause Biological Harm

If you missed Dr. Martin Blank’s presentation in which he explains how wireless devices affect your cells and DNA, I highly recommend you take 20 minutes and listen to it now.

Dr. Blank is an Associate Professor at Columbia University in the department of physiology and cellular biophysics, and a researcher in bioelectromagnetics. He is adamant when he says that there IS evidence ofharm within the non-ionizing range of radiation, and that the harm to human health can be significant.

This evidence has been peer-reviewed, published, and that the results have been replicated, evaluated and “judged by scientists capable of judging it,” as Dr. Blank says.

Most importantly, researchers are now beginning to understand the actual mechanisms causing the damage, and anyone who has been hoodwinked by the standard brush-off that “non-thermal radiation is incapable of causing biological damage” should pay close attention, because the scientific discoveries are moving swiftly these days.

Which can be to our benefit, as long as we don’t fall for the shallow assurances of safety from those who stand to gain from suppressing these discoveries.

One plausible EMF mechanism was published in the Journal of Cell Physiology in 2008. Other mechanisms of effect have been compiled and recently published in the European Journal of Oncology in collaboration with ICEMS, and the Ramazzini Institute. The report, called “Non-Thermal Effects and Mechanisms of Interaction Between Electromagnetic Fields and Living Matter”, can be downloaded at www.ElectromagenticHealth.org.

The Danger of Cumulative Load and Chronic Exposure

It has become clear that it is the cumulative load of exposure to the entire spectrum of frequencies-from ELF’s all the way up to the ionizing rays of x-rays-as well as the chronic duration of these exposures that are capable of causing significant harm to your health.

We all need to become cognizant of these exposures and take measures to protect ourselves against them.

Dr. Blank aptly compares your DNA to a fractal antenna, which can pick up a range of frequencies across the EMF spectrum. Your DNA is constantly busy creating proteins to maintain the health of your cells. Heat shock proteins (HSP) are created in response to stress (any harmful stimulus). This is known as the cellular stress response.

And guess what?

Your cells respond to electromagnetic fields (EMF’s) as harmful. In a nutshell, your body is constructed with many fractal antennas inside each and every cell, which responds to the entire range of frequencies on the EMF spectrum!

The importance of this simply cannot be overstated.

Knowing this, it’s no wonder scientists have been able to link EMF exposure to a growing list of health concerns, including:

Steps You Can Take to Protect Yourself and Your Family

Unless you’re willing to give up your wireless conveniences, you need to at least make accommodations to minimize the inherent health risks to yourself and especially your children. Kids growing up today are exposed to an unprecedented amount of radiation and dirty electricity, and we already KNOW that some people simply cannot handle these levels of exposure.

It’s also only a matter of time before this generation of children reaches the age where health deterioration becomes evident. If it’s 30 years, then many of us older folk will die before the health effects become apparent. But 30 years for today’s children is another story-the health effects may hit them before they’ve even entered middle-age!

I also urge you to help spread awareness on this issue. People must be made aware. So please, help educate others, especially those in government responsible for setting exposure guidelines. We recommend you sign the EMF Petition to Congress and support local, national and international advocacy groups in this field.

Also, take as many of these proactive steps as you can to minimize your and your family’s exposure:

  1. Have your child avoid  wireless technology: Barring an emergency, children should not use a cell phone, or a wireless device of any type. Children are far more vulnerable to cell phone radiation than adults, because of their thinner skull bones. One alarming 2008 study indicated that that children and teenagers raise their risk of brain cancer by 500 percent if they use cell phones!
  2. Reduce your cell phone use: Turn your cell phone off more often. Reserve it for emergencies or important matters. As long as your cell phone is on, it emits radiation intermittently, even when you are not actually making a call.
  3. Use a land line at home and at work: Although more and more people are switching to using cell phones as their exclusive phone contact, it is a dangerous trend and you can choose to opt out of the madness.
  4. Reduce or eliminate your use of other wireless devices: You would be wise to cut down your use of wireless and electronic devices. Just as with cell phones, it is important to ask yourself whether or not you really need to use them, how often, and for how long. In your home it is usually a very simple matter to run multiple Ethernet cords to avoid the need for wireless internet and to replace wireless routers and wireless/hard-wire ‘combination’ routers with ‘wired-only routers’.
    Camilla Rees of ElectromagneticHealth.org cautions that in testing many homes she finds the ‘combination’ wireless/wired routers often still emit microwave radiation even if you have a hard-wired Ethernet cord plugged into it and believe you’re not using the wireless part of it!

    “Sometimes when I visit people’s homes they are concerned because of a new Smart Meter, wondering if that is causing their symptoms, but commonly it turns out very high levels of radiation are coming from a ‘combination’ wired/wireless router, both store-bought routers or those provided by the utility. Naturally, this can be dumbfounding, as all along they assumed they were using a safe router and didn’t know that they were being continually exposed to radiation,” she says.

    “This is not to say that smart meters are not  a problem, but very basic home electronics issues need to be ruled out first and the only way to do that is by measuring with a meter.”

    As for portable phones, if you must use a portable home phone, use the older kind that operates at 900 MHz. They are no safer during calls, but at least many of them do not broadcast constantly even when no call is being made.

    Note that the only way to truly be sure if there is an exposure from your cordless phone is to measure with an electrosmog meter, and it must be one that goes up to the frequency of your portable phone (so old meters won’t help much). Many people buy a meter and go searching for older model portable phones at thrift stores, where there is no packaging and one can actually test the phone.

    As many portable phones are 5.8 Gigahertz, we recommend you look for RF meters that go up to 8 Gigahertz, the highest range now available in a meter suitable for consumers. You can find RF meters at www.emfsafetystore.com. But you can pretty much be sure your portable phone is a problem if the technology is DECT, or digitally enhanced cordless technology.

    Alternatively you can be very careful with the base station placement as that causes the bulk of the problem since it transmits signals 24/7, even when you aren’t talking. So if you can keep the base station at least three rooms away from where you spend most of your time, and especially your bedroom, they may not be as damaging to your health.

    Ideally it would be helpful to turn off your base station every night before you go to bed.

    Obviously, apartment living poses special problems, where you could conceivably be exposed to multiple portable phones and multiple wireless routers from multiple neighbors. In cases like this, not only is it important to minimize exposures from your own personal communications devices, but inevitably, you must learn about measuring/detecting and RF shielding or face the consequences of potentially excessive exposures.

  5. Use your cell phone only where reception is good: The weaker the reception, the more power your phone must use to transmit, and the more power it uses, the more heating it generates (SAR), and the deeper the dangerous radio waves penetrate into your body. Ideally, you should only use your phone with full bars and good reception.
    Also avoid carrying your phone on your body as that merely maximizes any potential exposure. Ideally put it in your purse or carrying bag. Placing a cell phone in a shirt pocket over the heart is asking for trouble, as is placing it in a man’s pocket if he seeks to preserve his fertility.
  6. Don’t assume one cell phone is safer than another.There’s no such thing as a “safe” cell phone. They all create biological effects, and a low SAR phone, depending on the angle with which you use it, or the duration of use, or the location of use, can be more damaging that a higher SAR phone. Consider all cell phones inappropriate in a truly health conscious lifestyle.
  7. Keep your cell phone away from your body when it’s on: The most dangerous place to be, in terms of radiation exposure, is within about six inches of the emitting antenna. You do not want any part of your body within that area.
  8. Respect others who are more sensitive: Some people who have become sensitive can feel the effects of others’ cell phones in the same room, even when it is on but not being used. If you are in a meeting, on public transportation, in a courtroom or other public places, such as a doctor’s office, keep your cell phone turned off out of consideration for the ‘second hand radiation’ effects. Children are also more vulnerable, so please avoid using your cell phone near children.
  9. Use safer headset technology: Wired headsets will certainly allow you to keep the cell phone farther away from your body. However, if a wired headset is not well-shielded — and most of them are not — the wire itself acts as an antenna attracting ambient information carrying radio waves and transmitting radiation directly to your brain.
    Make sure that the wire used to transmit the signal to your ear is shielded. The best kind of headset to use is a combination shielded wire and air-tube headset. These operate like a stethoscope, transmitting the information to your head as an actual sound wave; although there are wires that still must be shielded, there is no metal wire that goes all the way up to your head.

…..

Peace Out.

Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.

Gratefully your blog host,

michelle

Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)

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Posted in Health & Well Being | 32 Comments »

flap your lips friday

Posted by Michelle Moquin on 18th March 2011


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The focus has been on Japan, on almost every news and media outlet. And probably just like you, my focus has been there too. Everything that you wanted to know about nuclear reactors, but were too afraid to ask, you now know.

So…taking the focus away from Japan for a moment…just what is happening in your neighborhood? I’ve barely had a moment to think about that question. But it’s something we do need to address. We’ve got nuclear reactors in many states in the U.S. And California has them too. In fact we’ve got the most nuclear reactors here than any other country.

Just how safe are we?

This article came across my plate, and what I read, I didn’t like one bit.

At California Nuclear Plant, Earthquake Response Plan Not Required

As the world’s attention remains focused on the nuclear calamity unfolding in Japan, American nuclear regulators and industry lobbyists have been offering assurances that plants in the United States are designed to withstand major earthquakes.

But the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, which sits less than a mile from an offshore fault line, was not required to include earthquakes in its emergency response plan as a condition of being granted its license more than a quarter of a century ago. Though experts warned from the beginning that the plant would be vulnerable to an earthquake, asserting 25 years ago that it required an emergency plan as a condition of its license, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission fought against making such a provision mandatory as it allowed the facility to be built.

Officials at Pacific Gas and Electric Company, the utility that operates Diablo Canyon, did not respond to calls seeking comment before the story was published. After publication, a spokesman for the company said the plant does have an earthquake procedure that had been implemented during a 2003 earthquake near the facility, and that staff are trained to respond. The company did not provide further details upon request.

As Americans absorb the spectacle of a potential nuclear meltdown in Japan — one of the world’s most proficient engineering powers — the regulatory review that ultimately enabled Diablo Canyon to be built without an earthquake response plan amplifies a gnawing question: Could the tragedy in Japan happen at home?

Experts who recall how the California plant came to be erected offer a disconcerting answer: Yes. And some are calling for more urgent government action to review safety at nuclear plants across the country.

“What they’re displaying now is exactly what was wrong in the past with the nuclear establishment, which is that they didn’t have their priorities right,” said Victor Gilinsky, who served on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission during the Diablo Canyon debate and agreed with the call for greater attention to earthquakes in emergency plans. “They’re more concerned about the protection of the plants, and installation of further plants, than they are about public safety. The president should be saying, ‘I want every single plant reviewed.’”

Back when the California plant was being finalized in the mid-1980s, local activists and environmental lawyers sued the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in an effort to slow the project, arguing that the clear risks from earthquakes nearby required additional planning.

The case made its way to the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., where a 5-4 majority — including current Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and former Clinton independent counsel Kenneth Starr — ruled that earthquakes did not have to be included in the plant’s emergency response plans.

The underlying theory was that the plant’s design, which came after years of planning and geological studies, could withstand any foreseeable earthquake in the area — the same assumption that guided thinking in Japan.

“What they’re saying is that there could be an earthquake, but in no way could it ever cause a radioactive release at the same time,” said Rochelle Becker, who led the San Luis Obispo, Calif., group that first sued the Nuclear Regulatory Commission over earthquake preparedness in the 1980s. “I’m pretty sure we now have evidence that it does.”

A spokeswoman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission confirmed that the Diablo Canyon plant is not required to have an emergency response plan specifically for earthquake-triggered releases because the commission is satisfied that the plant’s structure will be able to withstand an earthquake in the area — calculated as a maximum magnitude of 7.5. But she said that should not imply that the plant lacks an overall emergency response plan.

Officials at Tokyo Electric Co., the operator of Japan’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi plant, said over the weekend that the strongest earthquake they had anticipated was much lower than the magnitude-9.0 quake that struck last Friday.

“That’s a lesson that we ignore at our own peril, because we could be wrong, too,” said Joel Reynolds, the attorney who originally brought the case against the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and who is now a senior attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council in California. “It is a story as old as science that we’re always learning new things. We’re always discovering the unexpected.”

Critics have raised particular questions about how a standard emergency response to a nuclear disaster could be complicated if it had been caused by an earthquake, where roads and other surrounding infrastructure would also be impaired.

The NRC spokeswoman said that all plants are required to have an overall emergency response plan in place, regardless of what triggers an emergency. At Diablo Canyon, she said there are sensors to alert employees to shut down the plant if tremors are felt, the spokeswoman said. Then depending on the circumstances, the plant would alert local authorities, who would handle questions such as how evacuations would be handled.

“All our plants are designed to withstand significant natural phenomena like earthquakes, tornadoes and tsunamis,” the commission’s chairman, Gregory B. Jaczko, said earlier this week. “We believe we have a very solid and strong regulatory infrastructure in place now.” He added that the commission would “continue to take new information and see if there are changes that we need to make with our program.”

Michael Mariotte, the executive director of the Nuclear Information and Resource Service, a group critical of the nuclear industry and the regulatory process, said the pushback on earthquake response planning years ago reflects an environment where the industry is helped along by regulators.

“That’s the logic behind a lot of our nuclear regulation, unfortunately, is that it’s designed to accommodate the operation of a plant, and not necessarily the protection of the public,” Mariotte said. “If they acknowledged that an earthquake occurred that damaged the plant, then they’re also acknowledging that an earthquake has damaged the transportation infrastructure, that you can’t get people out properly, that the plant doesn’t work, and then it can’t be approved.”

At the time the Diablo Canyon case was being litigated in the mid-1980s, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the electric utility looking to build the plant had been dealing with more than a decade’s worth of federal and state reviews for the facility. Federal regulators were comfortable with their seismic reviews of the remote coastal area between Los Angeles and San Francisco.

Comments made during closed meetings, later released to the public, showed that some NRC commissioners were concerned that additional public hearings surrounding the emergency response plan and earthquakes would slow the process further.

“One of the things that I think makes me shy away often from hearings is because as soon as we hear the word ‘hearing,’ you see so much time elapse that it maybe over-influences one,” then-NRC Chairman Nunzio J. Palladino, who has since passed away, said at the time. “I do feel that at this late stage, requiring a delay while we wait for a hearing is not in the best national interest.”

When the case involving earthquake response was eventually litigated all the way to the federal appeals court in D.C., which ultimately sided with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the five-member majority noted that there had already been extensive review of seismic activity around the plant.

“We can think of no potential natural or unnatural hazards, regardless of their improbability, that the Commission would not be required to consider,” failed Reagan Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork wrote in an opinion for the appellate court. “That is a prescription for licensing proceedings that never end and plants that never generate electricity.”

The four dissenting judges, including current Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, noted: “The very purpose of the exercise is to plan for the unthinkable eventuality that the design safeguards will not prevent an accident.”

“It defies common sense to exclude evidence about the complicating effects of earthquakes from a proceeding dealing with how to respond to a nuclear accident at a plant located three miles from an active fault, a plant in which seismic concerns dominated the design and construction proceedings for well over a decade,” the justices wrote.

In recent years, the utility that operates Diablo Canyon, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, has recently found another fault line less than a mile from the plant after conducting research with the U.S. Geological Survey. The plant’s original design had accounted for a fault that was farther offshore — about three miles from the plant.

The spokeswoman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Lara Uselding, said the utility has not found evidence that the newly discovered fault line would pose a risk to the plant. The commission is currently reviewing the company’s geological report.

….

Readers: The status quo has been “profit over people”. Now we are privy to to the term “protection of plants” over “protection of people”. Just where are our priorities? What is wrong with our society? Why would you ever rule that earthquakes do not have to be included in the plant’s emergency response plans?

You can say it’s not needed…it’s not necessary. But then, our actions, or lack of them, always comes back and bites us in the butt. We are constantly cleaning up our messes because we never quite prepare for the worst. We cut corners for profits and we the people suffer. Katrina, BP Deep Water Horizon, etc. Now Japan. What’s next? Is it too much to say, “Thank you bought and paid for Scalia and Starr for making that ruling”? I don’t think so.

Is it too much to ask that we get off of our lazy asses and do something? Is it too much to ask that we be responsible for our own livelihood, and support the livelihood of all?  I don’t think so. It all starts by getting involved, staying informed, and fighting for what’s right for all? The problem is, racism is always thrown into the mix. Or perhaps I should say racism is why people, (whites) don’t think in terms of “all”.

We have a lot to do in the months ahead of us. Big corporate America is killing us. And the republican party is their partner in crime. They are out to kill us too. And I don’t think I’m being to harsh here. Both of them need to be crushed. They have no interest in the livelihood of anyone but them and theirs: White America.

You could say that we are in a fight for our own survival. What are you going to do?

Robert: I like what you wrote. It’s unfortunate that the people who could convince white America to be proactive instead of reactive, are the ones in power who not only care more about profits than people, but are racist, and only looking out for them and theirs. They are not concerned about all, therefore they can lead the stupid people to follow their own self-aggrandizing agenda, and the people will simply follow in a daze.

If racism is so strong as we know it is, if we are reactive instead of proactive, and if no terrible experience is sufficient enough for us to change our ways, just what needs to happen that will make us change? I have to have faith that something can and will happen. It’s just going to take a lot of effort and everyone must get involved…everyone must care about each other, and start seeing and treating all of the people on this planet as One, as World Citizens. Possible?

I’m done flapping. Your turn.  Blog me.

Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.

Gratefully your blog host,

michelle

Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)

If you love my blog and my writes, please make a donation via PayPal, credit card, or e-check, please click the “Donate” button below. (Please only donations from those readers within the United States. – International readers please see my “Donate” page)

Or if you would like to send a check via snail mail, please make checks payable to “Michelle Moquin”, and send to:

Michelle Moquin PO Box 29235 San Francisco, Ca. 94129

Thank you for your loyal support!

For archives dated before January 17, 2008 click on my Blogroll:

or click here: “A Day in the life of…”

All content on this site are property of Michelle Moquin © copyright 2008-2011

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Posted in Health & Well Being, Human Rights and Equality, Long Live Planet Earth!, Political Powwow | 17 Comments »