Contents contributed and discussions participated by J Scott Hill
In Central Africa, Bitter Cassava Is Linked to Mental Deficits - NYTimes.com - 1 views
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Konzo, a disease that comes from eating bitter cassava that has not been prepared properly — that is, soaked for days to break down its natural cyanide — has long been known to cripple children.
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In the Democratic Republic of Congo, Dr. Boivin and colleagues gave tests of mental acuity and dexterity to three groups of children. Two groups were from a village near the Angolan border with regular konzo outbreaks: Half had leg problems; half did not but had cyanide in their urine. The third was from a village 125 miles away with a similar diet but little konzo because residents routinely detoxified cassava before cooking it.
It's Lose-Lose vs. Win-Win-Win-Win-Win - NYTimes.com - 2 views
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Writing in this newspaper in support of a carbon tax back in 2007, N. Gregory Mankiw, the Harvard economist, who was a senior adviser to President George W. Bush and to Mitt Romney, argued that “the idea of using taxes to fix problems, rather than merely raise government revenue, has a long history.
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Using a Pigovian tax to address global warming is also an old idea. It was proposed as far back as 1992 by Martin S. Feldstein on the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal.
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he federal deficit could be reduced by approximately $1.25 trillion over 10 years” — roughly what we are trying to do through the foolish sequester. Such a tax would add about 21 cents per gallon of gasoline and about 1.2 cents per kilowatt-hour of electricity. It could be phased in gradually as the economy improves.
Philanthrocapitalists propose a Social Progress Index | Humanosphere - 2 views
Humanosphere | News and analysis of global health and the fight against poverty - 2 views
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"umi Abedin was making 18 cents an hour as a seamstress, putting together garments for Sean "P Diddy" Combs' clothing line (known as Sean John Clothing) when the factory she worked in located outside Dhaka, Bangladesh, began burning. "The door was locked and we couldn't get out," Abedin said, speaking through translator and Bangladeshi labor activist Kalpona Akter. She ended up having to leap from a three-story window, breaking an arm and a leg - and feeling lucky to have survived. More than a hundred did not."
Public Citizen Globalization and Trade - 1 views
Movement Against Patenting of Seeds in India: Negative Effects of Patenting Seeds - 0 views
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"As of 2010, six biotech and chemical companies owned 77 percent of the world's patents on living organisms. These companies were DuPont, BASF, Monsanto, Syngenta, Bayer and Dow. Only 9 percent of similar patents were in the public sector. These patents extend beyond the genetic material of the seeds themselves, and also claim potential ownership of the crops they produce, and even to the food and feed products produced after harvest."
The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race - 5 views
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With agriculture came the gross social and sexual inequality, the disease and despotism, that curse our existence.
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revisionist interpretation
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Just count our advantages
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Scientific racism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views
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This page, while it has some problems, highlights the history of scientific racism and how these ideas have been used by politicians and the public to justify genocide, ethnocide, slavery, segregation, etc. It also should give some idea of how these deeply entrenched attitudes linger in our society and continue to have some effect on continuing inequalities.
A Family Tree in Every Gene - 0 views
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Who speaks of "racial stocks" anymore? After all, to do so would be to speak of something that many scientists and scholars say does not exist. If modern anthropologists mention the concept of race, it is invariably only to warn against and dismiss it. Likewise many geneticists. "Race is social concept, not a scientific one," according to Dr. Craig Venter—and he should know, since he was first to sequence the human genome.
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But now, perhaps, that is about to change
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The dominance of the social construct theory can be traced to a 1972 article by Dr. Richard Lewontin, a Harvard geneticist, who wrote that most human genetic variation can be found within any given "race." If one looked at genes rather than faces, he claimed, the difference between an African and a European would be scarcely greater than the difference between any two Europeans.
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"A Family Tree in Every Gene By Armand Marie Leroi Published on: Jun 07, 2006 Armand Marie Leroi, an evolutionary developmental biologist at Imperial College in London, is the author of Mutants: On Genetic Variety and the Human Body." This Article is a fairly sensible, nuanced, defense of the race concept based on recent genetic analyses of hundreds of genetic variables at a time.