Sandra Finley

Mar 312014
 

I was looking for the answer,

Did we win the battle over Government purchase of Lockheed Martin’s F-35 stealth bombers?

I found this ballad to the F-35.  Love it!  I have to share it before answering the question.

http://www.straightgoods.ca/2012/ViewArticle.cfm?Ref=348

The answer?

This CBC Report,  March 18, suggests that we can’t stop to celebrate for too long!

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/f-35-s-french-rival-pitches-canadianized-fighter-jet-1.2577234

Dassault Aviation of France is making an aggressive bid to sideline the F-35 and to sell its own jet fighter to Canada, offering to transfer technology, create jobs and share billions of dollars in business if Canada buys its Rafale fighter to replace its outdated fleet of CF-18s.

Think of what gets starved if an economy is invested in war.  Use the American example:

http://useconomy.about.com/od/usfederalbudget/p/military_budget.htm

U.S. Military Budget

By Kimberly Amadeo,  January 17, 2014

The U.S. military budget is $612.4 billion for FY 2014. This includes $91.9 billion for Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) to pay for the War in Afghanistan, and $520.5 billion to maintain the Department of Defense. It does not include Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs or the State Department. (Source: House Appropriations Committee, FY 2014 Graphs)     . . .

Military spending is second only to Social Security ($860 billion).  It’s greater than Medicare ($524 billion), Medicaid ($304 billion), or the interest payment on the debt ($233). It’s also more than the three next largest departments combined: Health and Human Services ($78.3 billion), Education ($71.2 billion) and Housing and Urban Development ($33.1 billion).

The military budget alone doesn’t capture all defense-related spending. Many other departments support the military, and you have to know where to look. The total is $771.1 billion when you add: Veterans Administration ($63.2 billion), the State Department ($26.9 billion), Homeland Security ($39.3 billion), the National Nuclear Security Administration ($11.2 billion from the Energy Department), Military Construction ($9.8 billion) and the FBI ($8.3 billion from the Justice Department).

You can see in the CBC article the SAME THING happening in Canada, as has happened in the U.S.:

The war industry promises JOBS.   They lobby the politicians hard, with lots of $$$.

Production plants are built.  The Politician becomes dependent upon the production plants.   Once the jobs are created IN THAT INDUSTRY,  the politicians must continue to support spending on war – – or risk unemployment in their district.  (Think what would happen if the plant was for the production of an innovative “truly green” technology.)

Tax-payers get fleeced.

The war industry vacuums up investment dollars – – starving good, clean, opportunities for investment.

It’s really citizens who pay because we are the only ones who purchase “war” – with tax dollars.

The public interest is drained.

The double tragedy:  it is because the war industry gets access to the public purse that they are so profitable.  Canadians who have saved for retirement then find themselves invested in war, because investment portfolios (including CPP Investment Board) look for good returns.

The economy becomes dependent upon the waging of war (very easy to see from the American experience, think:  Iraq War).   There is a huge financial incentive to make war.

WHAT TO DO ?

We have entered a new era.  People see through things.  War is not waged between the citizens of different nations.  It is waged by the elites in the power structures.

  • Learn the name  Dassault Aviation of France, just like we learned  Lockheed Martin of the U.S.A
  • Mount the steeds . . . and charge!   Let’s find creative ways to send these guys packing.
  • Refuse to elect any Party that supports this monstrous investment in war.
  • The war industry specifically targets poor neighbourhoods to recruit young people to go to war.  Every time you speak up against inequality,  you help re-distribution of wealth.   Be vocal about the income gap:  why is it widening?   why do the CEO’s of Health Districts, the Presidents and Vice-Presidents of Universities, the CEO’s of corporations receive ridiculous compensation?   There was a time when they did not.
  • Think and act globally about inequality, but do the same locally.
  • Peace flourishes when there is Justice.
Mar 292014
 

If you think that the efforts by the people below are worthy,

All that is required to give them a boost:  pass this email along.

 

AWARENESS will put an end to craziness.

 

(NOTE:  the links take you to the info on my blog. I always recommend to click on the URL there, to take you to the source. Sometimes the URL becomes “invalid” which is why I capture the text on my blog.)

 

1. Terrific work being done in the Philippines to stop mercury fillings.  Article contains a good description of the International Treaty to ban dental amalgam.

2014-03-25   Immediate Ban on Dental Amalgam in the Philippines Pushed, Mercola

 

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2. Citizens in the U.S. take the FDA to court over mercury fillings (the FDA is required by law to respond to citizen petitions. It seems they think they can ignore the law!).  The second half of this article has an excellent review of the new science used in the petitions to the FDA.

2014-03-27  Are Millions of Americans Being Poisoned by Their Own Dental Fillings?, AlterNet

 

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3. An on-line health magazine presents a “balanced” view on mercury fillings. I tried to “Comment”, to provide the information on the International Treaty.  (Personally, I think it is unconscionable that a “balanced” view includes NO mention of the Treaty and Canada’s obligations under it.)

2014-03-21  Mercury fillings:  Best Health On-line Magazine doesn’t publish my input re International Treaty 

(MAYBE the reason for failure to publish was my opening line?)

 

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4. A friend has migraines.  My daughter was plagued by migraines with aura, prior to removal of mercury fillings. Note sent to my friend.

2014-03-26  Information sent to friend re migraines and MS connection to mercury fillings

 

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5.  Many people tell of their personal experience with MS and the mercury fillings connection.  Here’s one from the collection of postings on this blog:

2009-08  YouTube: Multiple Sclerosis from Mercury (Silver) Fillings. Linda Brocato testifies before the FDA joint Medical/Dental panel 

 

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6. How did Canada get a reputation for being “progressive” because we took steps to stop the use of mercury fillings in children and pregnant women?  (This one drives me bananas!  A million Canadian kids have had mercury fillings inserted since we bamboozled the rest of the world!)

2012-04-26 “Go softly” approach to getting rid of mercury fillings (“dental amalgams”) 

 

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If you have any doubts about the use of mercury fillings, check out the postings – –  Look for the button under the category “Health” on the right-hand side.

Have fun!

Mar 292014
 

I am very sorry to hear that you have migraines, Beth.

But happy to hear that you are staying in bed.

 

I don’t know if it can be of any use to you:

We struggled for many years with my daughter who had recurring migraines with aura.

My son also had them.

 

My daughter is free of them, now.

The thing that seems to have been the “removal of cause” was the careful removal of dental amalgams (the “silver” fillings that are 50% mercury).   Also did some very slow de-tox following removal.

Following Kelly’s success, my son then had the mercury fillings removed from his mouth.   I haven’t asked him recently for an update.

A few years back I had a series of health issues that I thought I had cleared up.  But then struggled for a year with pain in the back side of my neck, numbness in one arm, and intense pain in it whenever I sneezed (like a thousand little needles all going in at once – the pain didn’t last, fortunately.)   I thought I had a pinched nerve, had massages, chiropracty, etc

Then, I happened to hear an interview on CBC Radio with Dr. Jock Murray from Dalhousie University who I kind of knew from the 15 years that we lived in Halifax-Dartmouth.   He had moved into specialization on MS.   Near the end of the conversation he mentioned in passing, that there was a symptom they could not figure out:  pain in the neck.

I immediately googled “MS symptoms”.  And found a very good description of what I had been dealing with for the past year.   I immediately booked an appointment and started the removal of mercury fillings.

There was immediate relief from symptoms.  I could sneeze with abandon!  The numbness stopped.

I did not lose another night’s sleep because of neck pain, although it did take some time before there was complete alleviation of sometimes low-level ache.

Anyhow – if you happen to have any mercury fillings in your mouth, you may want to consider removal.

Mercury ain’t good for you!!

I have posted a lot of the science on my blog.  There’s a group of people centred in Radisson who work on it.  We organized a “Mercury Jamboree” at the University and brought in resource people.   But the Dental College declined to attend, as did Toxicology, Hydrology, and Medical College.

In January 2013 through the UN, the 5th and final round of negotiations on stopping the use of products that contain mercury set out the Agreement for member countries for the phase-out of mercury fillings (among other things).

I discussed the Agreement with President Busch-Vishniac of the University of Sask hoping that there might be some pressure brought on the intransigent Dental College.     At the last meeting of Senate I had a conversation with Ken Sutherland, Acting Dean of Dentistry.   They continue to defend the use of mercury fillings (I think because of liability issues).  HOWEVER!   He said he’d been in the U.S. and in conversation with dentists down there, he understood that the International Treaty meant that IT IS THE LAW:  the dentists HAVE TO stop using mercury.   He was fine with that:  we have to comply because that is the law.   Nothing to do with “the science” of mercury fillings, even though this is a University!!  But never mind – I don’t care HOW they get there, just as long as they arrive!

Take good care,

Sandra

Mar 292014
 

http://www.alternet.org/personal-health/are-millions-americans-being-poisoned-their-own-dental-fillings?akid=11656.23437.Chsfmv&rd=1&src=newsletter976247&t=3

By Jill Richardson

 

A controversial theory linking amalgam fillings and mercury poisoning is starting to gain scientific acceptance.

 

Kris Homme, a retired engineer, did not know what was happening to her. At age 33, she was diagnosed with macular degeneration — a disease that  usually does not appear until old age. Not one to give up, she somehow managed to complete two graduate degrees with impaired vision. Then, in her 40s, she developed chronic fatigue and multiple chemical sensitivities.

“I was pretty much housebound for a couple years,” she recalls. “I just didn’t have the strength to leave the house by myself. I was able to keep my house fragrance-free but I had trouble being in a crowd, like on a bus or in an audience where you’re sitting next to people because so many people wear fragrances. Or walking on the streets, the car exhaust would be overpowering.”

A friend suggested her problem might be mercury exposure from her dental fillings, but she dismissed the idea. After all, her neurologist had already tested her blood for mercury and did not find anything to worry about.

Homme had a mouth full of amalgam fillings, each of which is 50 percent mercury. The mercury in them was long thought to be inert, but scientists later discovered that some of the mercury is released as vapor and absorbed into the body. Still, the Food and Drug Administration and the American Dental Association maintained they were perfectly safe.

As an engineer, Homme cannot be easily fooled. Even when telling her own story, she repeatedly questions why anyone would want to hear one story when it cannot constitute proof of anything. Knowledge and facts come from carefully controlled, randomized, statistically significant scientific studies, not anecdotes and stories.

The theory that amalgam fillings caused mercury poisoning “all sounded so flaky,” she remembers. “The anti-mercury movement has a lot of unfortunate bedfellows so I dismissed the argument.”

What’s more, she had a degree in Environmental Health Sciences from UC Berkeley. “I just thought that if that was an issue it would have been covered in my prestigious degree program.”

Finally, her friend gave her a book to read, Amalgam Illness, Diagnosis, and Treatment by Andrew Hall Cutler. “I stayed up late, reading and crying. All my symptoms fit and all the theory fit, the theory about how it’s not going to show up in a blood test because you’re retaining it, you’re not excreting it. My whole world turned upside down when I realized my doctors and dentists were so wrong and my degree program was so inadequate and it was like, if I can’t believe any of that, what is true? Who can I believe?”

Today Homme is one of several plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the FDA, demanding it respond to several petitions that ask it to ban — or at least seriously restrict — the use of amalgam fillings. Other plaintiffs include the International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology, Moms Against Mercury, and the Cooperative Food Empowerment Directive (CoFED), as well as several individuals. She’s also published a peer-reviewed paper summarizing new studies demonstrating the harm of amalgam fillings.

The FDA’s strongest evidence of the safety of amalgam fillings are two studies published in 2006 called the “Children’s Amalgam Trials.” One was conducted in New England, the other in Portugal. In them, hundreds of healthy children with low levels of mercury and lead, plenty of unfilled cavities and no previous amalgam fillings were divided into two groups. One group received amalgam fillings, and the other received composite fillings. The children were then monitored over a period of years for changes in mercury levels, IQ, memory and several other neurological tests. They also tracked major health problems in the children over the course of the study.

Both studies found higher levels of mercury in the urine of children who received amalgam fillings, but, on average, they found no significant differences in neurological development and function between the two groups. The New England study also tested kidney function and found no significant differences between the two groups.

But reanalysis of the data from these studies show that perhaps the amalgam fillings were not so benign.

As Homme points out, humans differ both in their exposure to mercury and their susceptibility to it. When a person who is highly susceptible to mercury is exposed to enough of it, he or she gets sick — even if the same dose would not cause problems for someone who is less susceptible.

Scientists have already identified several genes that cause increased susceptibility to mercury. One of them is called CPOX4. A 2012 study looked at a subset of 330 children from the Children’s Amalgam Trial conducted in Portugal and found that about 28 percent of them had the susceptible variant of the CPOX4 gene.

Rather than simply averaging the results of the amalgam group and the composite group, the researchers looked at the correlations between urinary mercury levels and neurological test results. Among boys (but not girls) who had the CPOX4 gene variant, the researchers found several significant neurobehavioral deficits associated with increased mercury exposure.

Three other studies also re-examined the data from the Portugal study. One found evidence that amalgam fillings are a “significant chronic contributor to Hg [mercury] body-burden.” A second found that children with the CPOX4 gene variant also had biomarkers of mercury-related kidney damage. The third found neurobehavioral deficits in children who had two other gene variants that made them more susceptible to mercury.

In other words, amalgam fillings impact on your health depends on your genes, your exposure (how many fillings you have and how long you’ve had them) and maybe your sex. But if you’re among the susceptible population and your exposure is high enough, it appears that you might suffer health consequences as a result.

These latest studies were all published between 2011 and 2013, but critics of amalgam fillings sounded the alarm long before then.

The story of U.S. regulation of amalgam fillings begins in 1976, when Congress passed the Medical Device Amendments to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Safety Act. The amendments required the government to place all medical devices into one of three classifications based on risk. The riskiest items would be put into Class III, which means they would require pre-market approval by the government to verify their safety and effectiveness before they could be sold.

Years went by, and the FDA did nothing. In 2006, it released a draft white paper on amalgam filling safety and held a two-day meeting with a panel of experts to discuss it. The experts voted down the white paper by a margin of nearly two to one.

The next year, Moms Against Mercury and other plaintiffs filed a lawsuit against the FDA commissioner, asking the FDA (which still had not classified amalgam fillings) to remove the fillings from the market. The case was settled a year later, with the FDA promising to classify amalgam fillings by July 28, 2009.

A few days before the deadline, Moms Against Mercury and others submitted a Citizens Petition, again asking the FDA to ban amalgam fillings, or — if it was unable to do that — classify them as Class III and “seek strict proof of safety and effectiveness” before allowing them to be sold. At the very least, the group asked the FDA to place restrictions on the use of amalgam fillings in the most susceptible populations, such as pregnant women and children. Additionally, they called on the FDA to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement or an Environmental Assessment for amalgam fillings.

Days later, the FDA issued a final rule, classifying dental amalgam fillings as Class II. Class II medical devices are subject to what the FDA calls “special controls,” which might include testing or warning labels, but they do not require any FDA approval before they are allowed on the market.

The petitioners almost immediately submitted a second petition, this one asking the FDA to reconsider its classification. At the time, scientists already knew the significance of the CPOX4 gene variation. The petitioners also disputed the FDA’s estimation of how much mercury one was exposed to from amalgam fillings, particularly because the FDA ignored children under six and assumed that nobody got more than 10 amalgam fillings. And they felt that some of the FDA’s data was out of date.

One important part of the debate is the idea of a “ reference concentration,” the amount of mercury one can be exposed to without “appreciable risk of deleterious effects during a lifetime,” even for sensitive individuals.

In 1995, the EPA set its reference concentration for elemental mercury (the type of mercury in amalgam fillings) at 0.3 micrograms per cubic meter. (Jim Love, the lawyer who filed the petitions on behalf of Moms Against Mercury and others, calls their number “outdated.”) California’s EPA set its reference concentration 10 times lower, at 0.03 micrograms per cubic meter.

Using 2001 to 2004 population statistics, a 2011 study estimated that, using the U.S. EPA’s reference concentration, 67.2 million were getting too much mercury from their fillings. The number of Americans absorbing an unsafe level of mercury from their fillings jumps to 122.3 million if one uses California’s lower reference concentration instead.

In other words, how much mercury are Americans getting from their fillings, and how much mercury equals too much? According to the FDA, Americans are not getting too much mercury from their fillings, and according to the petitioners — and the 2011 study — they are. Love, the petitioners’ lawyer, feels, “It’s beyond debate based on the weight of the evidence that we’re getting too much mercury.”

After several years without a response from the FDA, the group filed an addendum to their petition with updated science in 2013. Love is passionate about the cause.

“If we do clinical studies, are we going to find people with neurobehavioral harm?” he asks. “Are we going to find people with impaired kidney function? The answer is yes, and those studies have come out also. So when you talk to a dentist and he says there isn’t any evidence, ask him if he’s read our 2013 petition. I wouldn’t have filed the petition if I didn’t think the evidence was there.”

Now, in 2013, the FDA has yet to respond to the petitions. On behalf of his clients, Love has filed a lawsuit against the FDA.

“It’s a very simple lawsuit,” he says. “It’s under the Administrative Procedure Act. FDA is duly obligated to respond to our petition. They haven’t done that. They are allowed 180 days by statute and they can ask for and receive more time.”

The 180-day mark passed long ago, in 2010. The plaintiffs cannot force the FDA to ban amalgam fillings, but they can push the FDA, through the courts, to respond to their petitions. And that’s what they are trying to do.

“We don’t think there is an intellectually honest response that can continue to justify the ongoing use of mercury fillings,” continues Love. “Our contention is that the court should and almost certainly will compel the FDA to file a response to our citizens’ petitions.”

He adds, “In our complaint, we spell out the fact that the largest purchaser of amalgam fillings is the US government and they supply them to the indigent, those on welfare, the US military, those on Indian reservations, and as far as we can tell from where we sit, other alternatives are not available … One of our plaintiffs in fact is in prison. He would like his amalgam fillings removed.” But since the government says the fillings are safe, the prisoner is stuck with them.

Initially, Love thought that amalgam fillings were going the way of cassette tapes and VCRs. “Lots of people get composite fillings [instead of amalgam] because they are white and they are more attractive.” But, it turns out that even today, the majority of new fillings are still amalgam.

As the insurance company Delta Dental notes, tooth-colored composite fillings are more expensive than amalgam fillings and sometimes insurance companies do not cover them, or only cover them in teeth visible in a patient’s smile. The last time I had dental insurance, my insurance would have covered 90 percent of the cost of amalgam fillings but about half the cost of composite fillings. I found that out only after the dentist had placed several composite fillings in my mouth and the receptionist handed me a large bill. If I were informed of the cost difference in advance, would I have opted for mercury?

If you are worried about amalgam fillings in your mouth, you can have them removed. Kris Homme, who had hers removed in 2008, cautions that you should seek out a safe removal specialist because “a normal dentist might not use proper precautions.”

Mar 252014
 

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2014/03/25/philippines-dental-amalgam.aspx?e_cid=20140325Z1_DNL_art_2&utm_source=dnl&utm_medium=email&utm_content=art2&utm_campaign=20140325Z1&et_cid=DM41444&et_rid=465353288

By Dr. Mercola

Last year, a legally binding international treaty to control the use of toxic mercury was signed into action. The treaty marked the beginning of the end for dental amalgam around the world, as it mandates that each nation phase down amalgam use.

The Philippines was among those nations that signed the treaty last year, with the country saying they planned to have mercury-free health care facilities by the end of 2016. It’s a major victory… but, for those working with this deadly poison on a daily basis, it may not be soon enough.

Environmental activist groups in the Philippines are now calling for an immediate ban on dental mercury, following a new study that has revealed just how high levels of mercury vapor really are in dental institutions.

 

Mercury Vapors in Some Dental Institutions Are So High They Should Trigger Immediate Evacuations 

Anyone who has mercury fillings in their mouth is at risk from the mercury vapors they release. However, dental practitioners – including dentists, dental hygienists, dental students, clinical instructors, and even dental supply traders – are particularly vulnerable to mercury intoxication while working with this toxic substance.

A new study conducted by environmental justice group BAN Toxics (BT) in partnership with the International Association of Oral and Medicine & Toxicology-Philippines, World Alliance for Mercury-Free Dentistry, and Asian Center for Environmental Health, revealed just how high levels of mercury vapor actually are.

The mercury vapor concentrations in five Philippine dental institutions and three dental stores exceeded the standard reference levels set by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).1 As reported by BAN Toxics:2

“It was found that mercury concentration values varied from 967ng/m3 to a high of 35,617ng/m3—the majority of which were at levels beyond recommended reference standards such as the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) action level of 1,000 ng/m3. Some areas posted a concentration of >10,000 ng/m3, which is considered as the evacuation alert level by the US EPA.”

Rather than waiting until the end of 2016 for the phase-out, exposing dental students and workers to dangerous levels of mercury for essentially three more years, the environmental groups are calling for an immediate ban on dental amalgam in the Philippines, along with a change to the dental curriculum so that the future generation of dentists will know how to use mercury-free alternatives.

 

Pakistan Hospital Bans Mercury Due to Indoor Air Pollution 

Similar to in the Philippines, research conducted in collaboration with the Zero Mercury Working Group (ZMWG) and the Sustainable Development Policy Institute found that some dental hospitals in Pakistan had hazardous levels of mercury pollutants in the air.3

The study found some dental teaching hospitals with indoor air levels of mercury between eight and 20 times higher than the permissible level for human health, posing risks not only to patients but also to medical staff. In response to the study, Polyclinic Hospital in Pakistan became the country’s first to ban mercury fillings, citing hazards to human health.

 

One Dentist’s Poignant Warning About Mercury Dangers

 

The mercury used by dentists to manufacture dental amalgam is shipped as a hazardous material to the dental office. Any amalgam leftover is also treated as hazardous waste and requires special precautions to dispose of, yet it’s supposed to be “safe” to keep it in your mouth for years to come.

Sadly, many live with toxic reactions for extended periods of time, never connecting the dots between their failing health and the mercury in their teeth and their environment. This is even the case for dentists like Dr. Stuart Scheckner, who did not realize the risks of mercury poisoning until it was too late.

In his case, a bottle of mercury was spilled onto the rug in his dental office while a silver amalgam filling was being prepared. The accidental spill occurred in 1978. Today in 2014, he is still feeling the effects. As reported by the Herald Tribune:4

“Scheckner didn’t realize that he was working over what was essentially a toxic spill. Mercury is the most poisonous non-radioactive element known on Earth. It doesn’t have an odor, and breathing in the fumes is a terrible hazard. The dentist started to experience physical tremors, nausea, digestive problems and anxiety attacks. He also lost weight.”

Eventually, his symptoms of mercury poisoning became so bad that he had to stop working and close his dental practice. After receiving little help from conventional medicine, Dr. Scheckner spent two decades trying a variety of chelation therapies and nutritional supplements to help undo the damage the mercury did to his system.

Although he has slowly improved, prolonged mercury exposure, as he experienced, often causes permanent, irreversible damage. To this day, Dr. Scheckner still experiences tremors related to the mercury exposure in his dental office decades ago.

After his personal ordeal, Dr. Scheckner has devoted himself to warning others about the dangers of amalgam fillings in his book, Time Bomb from Within: Mercury Poisoning and Dentistry. As he told the Herald Tribune, it’s essential to be informed and take steps to reduce your exposure to mercury.

Unfortunately, right now in the US and around the globe, many dentists are still implanting this poisonous metal into people’s mouths, including in extremely vulnerable populations like children and pregnant women. Dr. Scheckner stated:

“The good news is that knowledge is power… If we are informed and take steps to have good nutrition, and lessen our exposure to mercury, we can protect ourselves and keep ourselves healthy.”

 

Use of Dental Mercury Is a Leading Cause of Environmental Mercury Pollution 

 

Dental mercury is a danger to dental practitioners, patients, and the environment. In fact, in the US dentist offices are the largest source of mercury in wastewater entering publicly owned treatment works. Once there, dental mercury converts to methylmercury, a highly toxic form of mercury known to be hazardous to brain and nervous system function, particularly in fetuses and young children.

Mercury is extremely dangerous once in the air, water, and soil — levels gradually increase over time, as it accumulates. It’s no wonder then that contaminated fish and other seafood are the largest dietary source of mercury in the US, courtesy of polluted waterways. Several studies show that about 50 percent of the mercury entering municipal wastewater treatment plants can be traced back to dental amalgam waste.

This mercury waste amounts to about 3.7 TONS each year! An estimated 90 percent is captured by the treatment plants generally via sewage sludge5 — some of which ends up in landfills, while other portions are incinerated (thereby polluting the air) or applied as agricultural fertilizer (polluting your food), or seep into waterways (polluting fish and wildlife).

In 2010, the EPA announced it would create a rule requiring dentists who use dental amalgam to at least use best-management practices and install amalgam separators. An amalgam separator is a wastewater treatment device installed at the source, in the dental office, that can remove 95-99 percent of the mercury in the wastewater. As originally proposed, EPA said the regulation would be finalized by 2012. Unfortunately, the EPA is on the verge of withdrawing the rule that would order dentists to buy amalgam separators. The costs – and health risks –that ensue will be passed on to American taxpayers and families.

 

http://www.mercola.com/infographics/mercury-dental-fillings.htm

(The link takes you to an infographic on mercury)

 

Pro-Mercury Groups Are Already Engaging in Stalling Tactics 

 

In order to protect human health and the environment, mercury should be phased out as soon, and as quickly, as possible. The international treaty, named the United Nations Minamata Convention on Mercury, requires the phasing out of many mercury-containing products, including thermometers, by 2020, and also calls for an end to all mercury mining within 15 years. The treaty takes effect only after its ratification by 50 nations, which can take three or four years.

Instead of working for the phase-down and ultimate phase-out of amalgam use, FDA and the ADA  are pushing stalling tactics, saying that before phasing out amalgam we should go through a litany of diversions like (1) prevention of tooth decay, (2) research and mercury inventories, and (3) mercury waste management – none of which actually phase down amalgam use, as required by the Minamata Convention.

These stalling tactics can appear attractive at first glance. But don’t be fooled by the World Dental Federation: all three of their “amalgam phase-down measures” are designed to delay the demise of mercury fillings. No more research is needed before we take action – the many effective, affordable, and available mercury-free alternatives have already been researched for over half a century, and we certainly don’t need any more research telling us that mercury is a problem. And the realistic solution to waste management, of course, is to stop creating more mercury waste – i.e., stop using amalgam.

Clearly, if the World Dental Federation gets its way, amalgam will be around for a long time. But groups like BAN Toxics, which is calling for an immediate ban on amalgam in the Philippines, and others are pushing to get mercury phased out around the globe quickly and for good.

 

Why Wait? The Sooner Mercury Use Ends, the Better 

 

The Campaign for Mercury-Free Dentistry, the project organized and led by Charlie Brown of Consumers for Dental Choice, has made amazing progress toward mercury-free dentistry. But there’s still hard work ahead as Consumers for Dental Choice is now running education programs for consumers… holding training sessions for dentists… and organizing briefings for governments around the world. You can help stop dental mercury today! Will you please consider a donation to Consumers for Dental Choice, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to advocating mercury-free dentistry?

 

Donations are tax-exempt and can be made online at www.toxicteeth.org. Checks can be mailed to:

Consumers for Dental Choice

316 F St., N.E., Suite 210

Washington DC 20002

For updates on the movement for mercury-free dentistry, join Consumers for Dental Choice on Facebook or sign up to receive their newsletter. You can also take a stand with us and tell the EPA not to let polluting dentists off the hook: It’s time to stop dental mercury dumping.

 

The Philippines campaign was launched by Dr. Lillian Lasaten Ebuen, founder and president of the organization IAOMT-Philippines and vice president-East Asia for the World Alliance for Mercury-Free Dentistry.   (The World Alliance is the coalition that spearheaded the successful campaign to include amalgam in the new international mercury treaty, the Minamata Convention.)   Working with Charlie Brown, president of the World Alliance, Dr. Ebuen organized a conference in December 2012; its theme was “Philippines Toward Mercury-Free Dentistry.” Now BAN Toxics, Dr. Ebuen, and Brown continue their collaboration, reaching out to important stakeholders and developing a step-by-step amalgam phase-out plan for the Philippines.

Mar 242014
 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/marc-nadon-appointment-rejected-by-supreme-court-1.2581388

 

Marc Nadon cannot take his seat on the Supreme Court of Canada, the court’s justices said Friday, in an unprecedented move that blocks Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s latest appointment to the top court.

In a six-to-one decision, a majority of justices on the top court ruled that Nadon doesn’t qualify to join them on the court.

■Read the Supreme Court ruling on the Nadon question

■Storify: Twitter reacts to ‘jaw-dropping’ Supreme Court ruling​

The court ruled that its composition is constitutionally protected, and Parliament’s attempt to change the Supreme Court Act through a budget bill is unconstitutional.

The government introduced changes in last December’s budget bill in an effort to make Nadon eligible as a former member of the Quebec bar — as opposed to a current member. The court says that section is void because the government does not have the power to make such amendments unilaterally.

Changes to the court’s makeup require a constitutional amendment with the unanimous consent of the provinces, the court says.

Nadon’s appointment to the country’s top court is declared void retroactively, and he is deemed to have never been sworn in.

A spokesman for Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Friday afternoon the government is “genuinely surprised” by the decision.

“Prior to Justice Nadon’s appointment, the Department of Justice received legal advice from a former Supreme Court justice, which was reviewed and supported by another former Supreme Court justice, as well as a leading constitutional scholar. None of them saw any merit in the position taken by the court,” Stephen Lecce said in a statement.

“We will review the details of the decision and our options going forward.”

 

Implications for Senate reference

 

“Today’s judgment will be of great importance, especially in constitutional matters,” said Sébastien Grammond, who represented two groups of retired Quebec judges in the case. “First and foremost because it makes important statements as to how the Constitution of Canada can be amended.”

The decision may also provide insight into how the court will rule on the Senate reference,  Grammond suggested, which includes the question of whether Parliament can reform the Senate without reopening the Constitution.

“It will take months and years perhaps to understand” all the implications of the decision, he said.

Toronto lawyer Rocco Galati had challenged Harper’s appointment of Nadon. Galati argued he didn’t qualify for one of the court’s three Quebec seats, because he came from the Federal Court and not from a Quebec court.

Quebec judges are a special category because of the province’s unique civil legal code, different from the common law applied in the rest of the country.

Harper referred the question to the court and Nadon stepped aside until the matter could be decided.

Nadon has been collecting a salary since he was named. It’s now up to the registrar of the Supreme Court to decide whether he has to pay the  money back, likely the first time the court has ever faced this question. Nadon’s annual salary would have been $351,700. He was named in October, so has been receiving a pay cheque for about six months.

One option the registrar is considering is having Nadon repay the difference between the Supreme Court and Federal Court salaries.

 

Court silent on some questions

In its ruling, the court repudiated the government’s claim that Nadon was eligible because the Constitution does not actually say he has to be a “current” member of the Quebec bar.

“In our view,” the ruling says, “the answer to this question is no: a current judge of the Federal Court of Appeal is not eligible for appointment under [section 6] as a person who may be appointed ‘from among the advocates of that province.’ This language requires that, at the time of appointment, the appointee be a current member of the Quebec bar with at least 10 years standing.”

The court is silent on whether Nadon could be appointed from another province, or whether he could simply re-join the Quebec bar, where he began his career, and then be properly named.

Justice Michael Moldaver was the only dissenter from today’s ruling.

Justice Marshall Rothstein, also appointed from the Federal Court, recused himself. He has given no public reasons for that, but it removes the perception of a conflict of interest.

Rothstein is from Manitoba and remains on the Supreme Court because the rules governing Quebec appointments are different. They impose additional requirements, the Supreme Court says, which Nadon does not meet.

Three of the six justices who ruled against Nadon’s appointment were appointed by Harper, as was Moldaver. The remaining three justices who ruled against the appointment were appointed by previous governments.

 

Quebec missing judge

 

New Democrat justice critic Françoise Boivin said it has been a year now that Quebec has gone without one of its judges on the Supreme Court.

She said Justice Minister Peter MacKay should follow the existing process: talk to lawyers in Quebec and consult the chief justice of Quebec’s Superior Court, the Quebec bar association and the Canadian Bar Association.

“It’s hard to play politics with that decision,” she said. “We shouldn’t play politics, in my book, with justice issues like this.”

“I feel for Justice Nadon this morning. He in no way is responsible for anything that is happening right now.”

Boivin was on the committee of MPs that advised on a final list of candidates from which Harper chose Nadon. She said it wasn’t a unanimous decision

Mar 242014
 

Edward Snowden made a surprise visit on TED Talks March 18th in Vancouver.

More than 100,000 people are watching the video every day.

 

http://on.ted.com/j07uc

 

Just watch the video, if you haven’t already.

If you have time for more, read on.  But not at the expense of watching the video!

 

Cheers!     Sandra

= = = = = = = = = = = = = =  =

 

March 18:   the Snowden video is posted

BY March 23:   805,203   views of it.

BY March 24:   942,215   views

 

You may experience the same high as I have?

 

To me, it’s about more than surveillance, internet freedom and data privacy.

 

Edward Snowden gives a glimpse of the future.   He gives me hope.    We have THE TOOLS to work our way through the mess we’re in.

 

Hallelujah!  We are creating a watershed moment in history.

Crossing over a divide,

leaving waters that flow into the ocean of self-destruction.

We have to discover where the waters on this side of the divide will take us.

It is an exciting time of adventure, with challenges.     . . .

 

A new acquaintance was surprised when I spoke of activism work.  She said, “You don’t look like the type.  You look like a nice quiet person”.    Ha! Ha!  And I had not even gotten onto the topic of Lockheed Martin and the census!

 

It reminded me:  I expected to exchange niceties with a sweet older woman who sings in the Island Soul Choir.  …  but don’t read a book by its cover!   We were soon plotting a time to discuss how we could mobilize community members around a local issue.  Good Lord,  She is a Revolutionary!

 

Which reminds me of the Soul Choir itself.   A hundred and fifty people.

They look . . .  ordinary.

They talk  . . . ordinary.

Like Edward Snowden . . . ordinary.

 

But listen to the lyrics they’re belting out.  Singing and rockin’,  Revolution.

 

I’m a living sunset, lightning in my bones,

Push me to the edge

But my will is stone

‘Cause I believe in a better way.   . . .

 

I will look the world straight in the eyes  . . .

What good is a man who won’t take a stand?

What good is a cynic with no better plan? . . .

 

Hope these words feel pleasant as they rest upon your ears

Reality is sharp

It cuts at me like a knife.

Ev’ryone I know is in the fight of their life

Cause I believe in a better way.

 

Take your face out of your hands

And clear your eyes  …

 

It’s not just ONE song, here’s another from the repertoire:

go out and make some noise . . .

put down your toys

the world needs your voice

and it sure could use your light

 

There’s no doubt about it

youʼve got to be your own light  . . .

 

We are making the eloquent words of former president of the United States, General Dwight Eisenhower come true.   It may have taken fifty years for us to do it!  but I don’t think it could have happened earlier.

 

The missing ingredient was something that Ed Snowden talks about:  the ability to connect with people all around the world.    (Snowden, Vancouver:  http://on.ted.com/j07uc)

 

Western countries have to be stopped, for example, from dropping bombs out of unmanned drones, terrorizing people in other countries.  But so also, do the leaders of other countries have to be stopped from their brutalities.   Ordinary people around the Planet understand that we have to change our ways.   We are connected and working together on a thousand both common and different fronts to make things better.

 

Edward Snowden WON against the NSA.   He could do that because of the earlier work of Julian Assange and Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning.

 

I think we also helped:

Lockheed Martin’s work in the world is the same as the NSA:  surveillance.

It is accomplished through data capture on individual citizens.

There isn’t a separation between the NSA and Lockheed Martin.

Canadian activists said “NO” to Lockheed Martin, starting back in 2003.

 

I don’t think we would have

  • so clearly understood the need to stand steadfastly behind Assange, Manning, Snowden and Greenwald
  • and shared that understanding with so many other Canadians over the last ten years

if we had not become active resisters of Lockheed Martin.

 

So, the work of those four (Assange, Manning, Snowden and Greenwald) was aided by our work.  More people “got it”.  Which made it almost impossible for a successful propaganda campaign to be mounted by the American military-industrial-congressional complex, against Snowden.

 

By the way:

  • UPDATE  re Eve Stegenga, a delightful young woman from Powell River BC, who is on trial over Lockheed Martin and the 2011 census:   I attended Eve’s pretrial (March) – a daunting road ahead for her.   BUT NOW!  Wonderful serendipity, angels to the rescue and it’s looking good!   Will keep you posted.  The trial itself is likely a few months in the offing.
  • UPDATE  re StatsCan, data collection through SURVEYS:   The traffic to my blog from people who google for information because they are feeling harassed by StatsCan continues unabated.  “Comments” (usually questions) get posted to different pages.  A couple from last week, with my responses,  are at the bottom of Are StatsCan surveys mandatory? Interpretation of the Law.

 

BUT GETTING BACK TO EISENHOWER who spoke in relation to war.

Our “war” today is as much against the environment and the FUTURE, as it is against our fellow inhabitants of the Earth.

 

EXCERPTS FROM EISENHOWER

I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.

I like to believe that people in the long run are going to do more to promote peace than our governments. Indeed, I think that people want peace so much that one of these days governments had better get out of the way and let them have it.

Dwight D. Eisenhower, From a speech before the American Society of Newspaper Editors, April 16, 1953:

Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. This is not a way of life at all in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron.

The problem in defense is how far you can go without destroying from within what you are trying to defend from without.
A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both.


Public Papers of the Presidents, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1960, p. 1035- 1040

Full text: http://www.h-net.org/~hst306/documents/indust.html

EXCERPT:

Our military organization today bears little relation to that known by any of my predecessors in peacetime, or indeed by the fighting men of World War II or Korea.

Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But now we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense; we have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security more than the net income of all United States corporations.

This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence — economic, political, even spiritual — is felt in every city, every State house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood are all involved; so is the very structure of our society.

In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.

Akin to, and largely responsible for the sweeping changes in our industrial-military posture, has been the technological revolution during recent decades.

In this revolution, research has become central; it also becomes more formalized, complex, and costly. A steadily increasing share is conducted for, by, or at the direction of, the Federal government.

Today, the solitary inventor, tinkering in his shop, has been overshadowed by task forces of scientists in laboratories and testing fields. In the same fashion, the free university, historically the fountainhead of free ideas and scientific discovery, has experienced a revolution in the conduct of research. Partly because of the huge costs involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity. For every old blackboard there are now hundreds of new electronic computers.

The prospect of domination of the nation’s scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present

  • and is gravely to be regarded.

Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific technological elite.

It is the task of statesmanship to mold, to balance, and to integrate these and other forces, new and old, within the principles of our democratic system — ever aiming toward the supreme goals of our free society.

V.

Another factor in maintaining balance involves the element of time. As we peer into society’s future, we — you and I, and our government — must avoid the impulse to live only for today, plundering, for our own ease and convenience, the precious resources of tomorrow. We cannot mortgage the material assets of our grandchildren without risking the loss also of their political and spiritual heritage. We want democracy to survive for all generations to come, not to become the insolvent phantom of tomorrow.

VI.

Down the long lane of the history yet to be written America knows that this world of ours, ever growing smaller, must avoid becoming a community of dreadful fear and hate, and be instead, a proud confederation of mutual trust and respect.

Such a confederation must be one of equals. The weakest must come to the conference table with the same confidence as do we, protected as we are by our moral, economic, and military strength. That table, though scarred by many past frustrations, cannot be abandoned for the certain agony of the battlefield.

Disarmament, with mutual honor and confidence, is a continuing imperative. Together we must learn how to compose differences, not with arms, but with intellect and decent purpose. Because this need is so sharp and apparent I confess that I lay down my official responsibilities in this field with a definite sense of disappointment. As one who has witnessed the horror and the lingering sadness of war — as one who knows that another war could utterly destroy this civilization which has been so slowly and painfully built over thousands of years — I wish I could say tonight that a lasting peace is in sight.

Happily, I can say that war has been avoided. Steady progress toward our ultimate goal has been made. But, so much remains to be done. As a private citizen, I shall never cease to do what little I can to help the world advance along that road. . . .

These are difficult but exhilarating times.

I hope you are having fun!

Mar 212014
 

Grant tried to post rebuttal information to an article on dental fillings on the “Best Health Magazine” website.

I tried (March 21).  The article omits any mention of the International Treaty.   I received notification that my input was under consideration.

March  29 – –  I assume they decided against posting the info.   It’s not there.

GRANT WRITES:

Hi….please read this short news article on mercury / amalgam. The ever so wise in Canada are saying amalgam is no problem! I am so glad they put my mind at ease…..they left no facility for me to comment on their wonderful report.

http://www.besthealthmag.ca/get-healthy/oral-health/are-dental-fillings-safe

 

SANDRA REPLIES:   March-21-14

Subject:  Grant – I posted this to the HG article. It is waiting for approval

Hi Grant,

Will be interesting to see if my comment gets approved!!

This is what I posted:

I find this article to be disingenuous. 

Credibility requires at least a MENTION of the U.N. negotiations on mercury reduction, the fifth and final round of which concluded in January 2013.  Canada was party to the negotiations and agreements.  We are part of the international community that is striving to stop the use of products that contain mercury.  I don’t think I need to go into the reasons why that would be. 

Google the UN Treaty on Mercury.   

The “Parties” to the Treaty agreed to phased-in cessation of the use of dental amalgam (50% mercury). 

TEXT from the treaty: 

[1] UNEP(DTIE)/Hg/INC.5/CRP.4618, January 2013 

Article 6, Annex C, Part II, Dental amalgam Provisions 

Measures to be taken by a Party to phase down the use of dental amalgam shall take into account the Party’s domestic circumstances and relevant international guidance and shall include two or more of the measures from the following list: 

(i) Setting national objectives aiming at dental caries prevention and health promotion, thereby minimising the need for dental restoration; 

(ii) Setting national objectives aiming at minimising its use; 

(iii) Promoting the use of cost-effective and clinically effective mercury-free alternatives for dental restoration; 

(iv) Promoting research and development of quality mercury-free materials for dental restoration; 

(v) Encouraging representative professional organisations and dental schools to educate and train dental professionals and students on the use of mercury-free dental restoration alternatives and on promoting best management practices; 

(vi) Discouraging insurance policies, and programmes that favour dental amalgam use over mercury-free dental restoration; 

(vii) Encouraging insurance policies and programmes that favour the use of quality alternatives to dental amalgam for dental restoration; 

(viii) Restricting the use of dental amalgam to its encapsulated form; 

(ix) Promoting the use of best environmental practices in dental facilities to reduce releases of mercury and mercury compounds to water and land.

Mar 052014
 

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Mr. Obama: If     international law is so damn crucial, then stop violating it.

To     send the president a clear message in support of international law, click     here.

Days ago, responding to Russian military intervention in the Crimea,     President Obama denounced Russia for a “breach of international law.”

The Russian intervention deserves criticism. But let’s be clear. The     message from the White House is: Do as we say, not as we do.

The U.S. government routinely violates international law with drone strikes     in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and other countries, not to mention its own     interference in Ukraine’s government. Human-rights groups like Reprieve     have documented many of those violations in recent reports, and the     European Parliament has just condemned the practice as illegal — but the     USA’s missile attacks continue.

Click     here to tell President Obama that his tributes to international law are     worthless as long as he keeps violating it.

Some background articles below provide important context for the current     Ukraine crisis.

At this highly dangerous moment, please take action by signing     the petition and then forwarding this message to your friends.

Thank you!

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Background:

www.RootsAction.org

Feb 272014
 

http://www.thestarphoenix.com/news/confidence+vote+scheduled+reform+process/9556423/story.html

By Jason Warick, The Starphoenix

 

A non-confidence vote on the sweeping reform process at the University of Saskatchewan is expected today at a meeting of its influential university council.

“We’re expecting a good turnout. This has become an increasingly divisive issue on campus,” said Prof. Len Findlay, who crafted the motion coming to the council floor.

The council will debate a motion asking for an expression of non-confidence in the TransformUS process, one of several initiatives underway to fill what administrators believe is a potential $44.5-million budget shortfall. More than 300 professors, university staff and others have signed a non-confidence petition letter online in advance of the meeting.

Findlay said the few positive aspects of the work so far should be salvaged and then a new process undertaken. He said the reforms have been dictated by top-level administrators, rather than the traditional collegial model.

“It’s part of the creeping corporatization of universities,” he said.

Officials dispute this claim, saying all interested parties have been brought together to make decisions.

U of S provost and vicepresident academic Brett Fairbairn said TransformUS is one of several initiatives involved in the reform process. He said he welcomes all feedback, which has come from many different sources.

He said he couldn’t predict the outcome of Friday’s motion.

“I’m looking forward to the debate,” he said.

He said there is no escaping the fact more needs to be done. In 2012, U of S officials predicted a $44.5-million deficit by 2016 if the status quo continued. Workforce planning and job cuts have achieved roughly $15.5 million in savings so far, but that still leaves a gap of $29 million, he said.

“The university is facing a serious budget issue,” he said. “We have to get it under control.”

University of Saskatchewan Students Union executive members unanimously voted non-confidence in the process earlier this year.

The meeting is open to the public and is scheduled to begin at 2:30 p.m. at the Neatby-Timlin Lecture Theatre on campus.