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What A Week It Was: Apocadocuments from
View By Scenario:
Species Collapse:(5)
Plague/Virus:(4)
Climate Chaos:(4)
Resource Depletion: (3)
Biology Breach:(12)
Recovery:(7)
This Week's Top Ten Very Scary Tags:
contamination  ~ ecosystem interrelationships  ~ white nose syndrome  ~ GMOs  ~ soil issues  ~ antibiotic resistance  ~ canary in coal mine  ~ oil issues  ~ global warming  ~ alternative energy  ~ pesticide runoff  



ApocaDocuments (35) gathered this week:
Mon, Feb 25, 2008
from 60 Minutes:
Honey Bees and Colony Collapse
"Normally, if there weren't soldier bees to protect a hive's honey, all the honey would be poached by bees from other hives in short order. But, this beekeeper said, "The hives are like a ghost town. The honey's there. The other bees won't touch it." He showed the honey, just sitting there in the dead hive." ...


The bee colonies are still collapsing; this week's 60 Minutes story may create help some buzz.

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from Market Oracle (UK):
A Very Alarming Picture in Energy Sector Peak Oil Trends
"If you think that at the moment the world is consuming 30-plus billion barrels a year of oil and is finding seven or eight billion barrels a year, and this state of affairs has been going on now for 20 or more years... It's obviously unsustainable." ... Dr. Buckee says the cost of a barrel of oil could reach as high as $200 by the third or fourth quarters of this year, and that prices would have to get that high before it would have any particular impact on demand. ...


$200/barrel oil may be the last best hope for the atmosphere.

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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from Sandia National Laboratories:
Sandia, Stirling Energy Systems set new world record for solar-to-grid conversion efficiency
31.25 percent efficiency rate topples 1984 record
"Gaining two whole points of conversion efficiency in this type of system is phenomenal," says Bruce Osborn, SES president and CEO. "This is a significant advancement that takes our dish engine systems well beyond the capacities of any other solar dish collectors and one step closer to commercializing an affordable system." ...


"Affordable" is a relative term, of course. If oil hits $200 this fall, this'll be a bargain.

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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from Earth Institute (Columbia):
Growing Threat Seen In Human-Wildlife Conflict, Drug Resistance
"An international research team has provided the first scientific evidence that deadly emerging diseases have risen steeply across the world, and has mapped the outbreaks’ main sources. They say new diseases originating from wild animals in poor nations are the greatest threat to humans. Expansion of humans into shrinking pockets of biodiversity and resulting contacts with wildlife are the reason, they say. Meanwhile, richer nations are nursing other outbreaks, including multidrug-resistant pathogen strains, through overuse of antibiotics, centralized food processing and other technologies." ...


If only that wildlife would just leave us alone!

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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from American Society of Agronomy:
Transgenic Cotton Cultivars Not More Profitable
"... Again in 2003, selection of the transgenic cultivars reduced returns, while similar, higher returns were attained from non-transgenic technologies. According to the authors, "Collectively these results indicate that profitability was most closely associated with yields and not the transgenic technologies." Continued research is necessary to analyze the 2005 and 2006 results with more recent types of transgenic cotton cultivars." ...


You mean the natural cotton was more profitable than the artificial? Surprise!

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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from University of New Hampshire:
Paving The Way For Green Roads
"We have a real opportunity to re-build the infrastructure the right way with sustainable materials and socially sensitive designs that protect air, water, land, and human resources".... "The cost of building a road is not reflected fully in the price of materials," Gardner adds. "The total cost of mining virgin materials, for instance, involves not only the cost of materials and labor, but also the environmental cost at the mining site, the environmental costs... of transporting these materials to the building site, and the environmental costs of building the equipment to mine and transport material and build the roads." ...


A wee bit oxymoronic -- a "green" road upon which to drive our SUVs -- but golly, they're talking about lifecycle "true costs"! Hooray!

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from Washington Post (US):
Exxon Oil Spill Case May Get Closure
"When a federal jury in Alaska in 1994 ordered Exxon to pay $5 billion to thousands of people who had their lives disrupted by the massive Exxon Valdez oil spill, an appeal of the nation's largest punitive damages award was inevitable. But almost no one could have predicted the incredible round of legal ping-pong that only this month lands at the Supreme Court." ...


At the Supreme Court, the Justices can play bad minton with the case.

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from Republican-American (CT):
Disease killing brown bats across the region... CT?
A mysterious disease has killed hibernating bats in New York and Vermont, is spreading into Massachusetts, and may already be in Connecticut.... Biologists have now identified sick bats in Chester, Mass., 40 miles north of Connecticut's Barkhamsted Reservoir, and will be looking for them here in March. ...


Not just in NY and VT and parts of MA. Now possibly in CT.
Maybe also in SOL.

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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from Science Daily (US):
First Documented Case Of Pest Resistance To Biotech Cotton
"Bt-resistant populations of bollworm, Helicoverpa zea, were found in more than a dozen crop fields in Mississippi and Arkansas between 2003 and 2006.... "What we're seeing is evolution in action," said lead researcher Bruce Tabashnik. "This is the first documented case of field-evolved resistance to a Bt crop."" ...


Evolution? Isn't that just a theory?

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Feb 24, 2008
from Science Daily (US):
New Fuel Cell Cleans Up Pollution And Produces Electricity
"Scientists in Pennsylvania are reporting development of a fuel cell that uses pollution from coal and metal mines to generate electricity, solving a serious environmental problem while providing a new source of energy. They describe successful tests of a laboratory-scale version of the device in a new study." ...


Sweet! Now, if only we could get funding
to roll it out, since there's no
obvious business model...

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Feb 23, 2008
from Science Daily (US):
Chemicals In Our Waters Are Affecting Humans And Aquatic Life In Unanticipated Ways
"Substances that we use everyday are turning up in our lakes, rivers and ocean, where they can impact aquatic life and possibly ourselves. Now these contaminants are affecting aquatic environments and may be coming back to haunt us in unanticipated ways.... The researchers looked at mixtures of five common insecticides and found that some combinations were much more toxic to the juvenile salmon than any one of the chemicals acting alone." ...


What, I have to think about combinations of toxic chemicals? How can they label that?

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Feb 23, 2008
from Science Daily (US):
New possibilities for removing NOx
"A discovery in molecular chemistry may help remove a barrier to widespread use of diesel and other fuel-efficient "lean burn" vehicle engines. Researchers at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have recorded the first observations of how certain catalyst materials used in emission control devices are constructed." ...


First: discovery/understanding.
Second: innovation/application.
Third: emergency implementation.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Feb 23, 2008
from Guardian (UK):
2004: Pentagon tells Bush: climate change will destroy us
"Climate change over the next 20 years could result in a global catastrophe costing millions of lives in wars and natural disasters.... A secret report, suppressed by US defence chiefs and obtained by The Observer, warns that major European cities will be sunk beneath rising seas as Britain is plunged into a 'Siberian' climate by 2020. Nuclear conflict, mega-droughts, famine and widespread rioting will erupt across the world.... The threat to global stability vastly eclipses that of terrorism..." ...


Funny. Four years ago. Oh yeah, we had that Iraq terrorism thing goin' on. Be very afraid.

ApocaDoc
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Want more context?
Try reading our book FREE online:
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
More fun than a barrel of jellyfish!
Sat, Feb 23, 2008
from The International News (Pakistan):
Palm at new peak on record soy oil
"Malaysian palm oil futures jumped more than 2 per cent to a new peak for the sixth straight session on Thursday on tight global vegetable oil supplies and crude oil's record over $101.... Palm oil has climbed nearly 21 per cent this year, driven by increased Chinese and European demand, a flood of funds into commodity markets and Jakarta's plans to hike export taxes for palm oil." ...


Rainforests are mown down in Malaysia and Indonesia, to make way for palm oil plantations. Why is it allowed to be profitable?

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Sat, Feb 23, 2008
from National Geographic:
Rat Invasions Causing Seabird Decline Worldwide
"The global analysis found that non-native rats have been observed preying on roughly a quarter of all seabird species, often with disastrous consequences.... Now 102 of 328 recognized seabird species are considered threatened or endangered by the World Conservation Union, with predation by invasive species ranking among the top dangers." ...


"Traveling with humans as ship stowaways, three rat species native to Europe and Asia have become established on about 90 percent of the world's major islands and island chains, experts say."
Now that's globalization!

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Feb 22, 2008
from American Chemical Society:
Translation: Earthworms and transmission of toxins
"Earthworms are an important link in transporting environmental contaminants from soil to other organisms in terrestrial food webs. Large molecules (>0.95 nm), such as PBDEs, are thought to not readily cross membranes, and thus do not accumulate in organisms. However, earthworms have been shown to accumulate contaminants of considerable size (8), including significant bioaccumulation from sludge-amended soils with mean biota-soil accumulation factors (BSAFs) of 4-8 for BDE-47, -99, and -100 (7). Similarly, studies of the aquatic worm, Lumbriculus variegatus, in PBDE-spiked sediments gave BSAFs of 3 for BDE-47 and -99 (9)." ...


Translation: "Worms were thought not to gather toxins from human-sewage sludge. However, that idea was wrong, even though we sell human-sewage sludge to farmers these days."
What that implies: every early bird who gets the worm also gets concentrated toxins. It's as if the "prime soil predator" was concentrating toxins, not unlike bats (for prime air predator) and killer whales (prime ocean predator), concentrating toxins.

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Feb 22, 2008
from United Press International:
Study: Global cooling a 1970s myth
"A U.S. climatologist said there was no consensus in the 1970s that the Earth was headed for a new ice age. Thomas Peterson of the National Climatic Data Center said a survey of scientific journals of the era showed that only seven supported global cooling, 44 predicted warming and 20 others were neutral, USA Today reported Thursday...The study, which will be published in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, said a review of the literature suggests that greenhouse warming even then dominated scientists' thinking. ...


You mean ... we could have gotten started on all this 40 years ago?

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Feb 22, 2008
from University of Georgia:
Emerging Infectious Diseases On The Rise: Tropical Countries Predicted As Next Hot Spot
"It's not just your imagination. Providing the first-ever definitive proof, a team of scientists has shown that emerging infectious diseases such as HIV, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), West Nile virus and Ebola are indeed on the rise. By analyzing 335 incidents of previous disease emergence beginning in 1940, the study has determined that zoonoses -- diseases that originate in animals -- are the current and most important threat in causing new diseases to emerge. And most of these, including SARS and the Ebola virus, originated in wildlife. Antibiotic drug resistance has been cited as another culprit, leading to diseases such as extremely drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR TB)." ...


So that's why we're trying to destroy other species -- before they destroy us!

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Feb 21, 2008
from The Age:
Dire new warning on climate
Recent work by scientists suggests climate change is advancing more rapidly and more dangerously than previously thought, according to Canberra's top adviser on the issue. In a dire warning to the Rudd Government, Ross Garnaut has declared that existing targets for cuts in greenhouse emissions may be too modest and too late to halt environmentally damaging rises in temperature. On the eve of the release today of his interim report on climate change, Professor Garnaut told a conference in Adelaide yesterday that without intervention before 2020, it would be impossible to avoid a high risk of dangerous climate change. "The show will be over," he said. ...


For some, the show will have only begun.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Feb 21, 2008
from The Boston Globe:
Bat sickness reaches mines in Western Massachusetts
"A mysterious and deadly sickness that has killed off thousands of bats in New York has now been discovered in two Western Massachusetts mines. Researchers say they expect to find more affected wintering bat populations as they lead expeditions into dark caves and mines in the Northeast over coming weeks. They predict that hundreds of thousands of the furry creatures will be wiped out before the end of winter. The illness ... does not appear to pose any risk to people... ...


What part of interconnectedness does this writer and these researchers not understand. The loss of any species poses a "risk" to all other species.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Feb 21, 2008
from Nature:
Map pinpoints disease
"A detailed map highlighting the world's hotspots for emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) has been released. It uses data spanning 65 years and shows the majority of these new diseases come from wildlife. Scientists say conservation efforts that reduce conflicts between humans and animals could play a key role in limiting future outbreaks." ...


We need an intermediary, such as a really intelligent chimpanzee, to act as an arbitrator between humans and animals.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Feb 21, 2008
from Environmental Science and Technology:
Worms bear sludge load
"Pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) end up in the tons of solid sludge left behind by wastewater treatment processes. Those so-called biosolids are often repackaged and sold as fertilizers for both industrial and small-scale agriculture. In a new survey, published in ES&T (DOI: 10.1021/es702304c), researchers show for the first time that those compounds can turn up in earthworms ... Bioaccumulation of PPCPs by worms is not entirely a surprise, according to Stockholm University's Cynthia De Wit, who points to her own work looking at PBDEs and other persistent compounds in earthworms. However, the new research underscores that worms could serve as monitoring organisms, she says. Because the worms seem to concentrate compounds that may be present at undetectable levels in the soils, they can be "a sort of sentinel, or magnifying glass of what's in the soil," she adds." ...


From canaries in the coal mine to earthworms in the soil, other species bear too much of a load.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Feb 21, 2008
from Associated Press:
Wolves to be removed from species list
"BILLINGS, Mont. - Gray wolves in the Northern Rockies will be removed from the endangered species list, following a 13-year restoration effort that helped the animal's population soar, federal officials said Thursday. An estimated 1,500 wolves now roam Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. That represents a dramatic turnaround for a predator that was largely exterminated in the U.S. outside of Alaska in the early 20th century." ...


We're guessing the deer aren't so pleased with this announcement.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Feb 20, 2008
from National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (UCSB):
A Global Map of Human Impacts to Marine Ecosystems
The goal of the research presented here is to estimate and visualize, for the first time, the global impact humans are having on the ocean's ecosystems. Our analysis, published in Science, February 15, 2008, shows that over 40 percent of the world's oceans are heavily affected by human activities and few if any areas remain untouched. ...


Check out the map. It's a terrible thing to see the ocean burning.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Feb 20, 2008
from AP, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review:
Bats in NY, VT dying from mysterious malady
In New York, Hicks cautioned in a report that he and his colleagues were "one survey short of saying that every substantial collection of wintering bats in the state is infected." "If you are not worried, you should be," his report said. "The two sites infected last year that have been surveyed so far this winter have experienced a 90 percent and 97 percent drop in populations since this began, with most of the survivors currently in poor health." Worse, said Hicks, nobody knows the cause. "We don't know what the problem is. All we can do is just sit back and watch them die." ...


Bats have only one pup per year. Recovery, if possible, will be very slow. Perhaps a new species should be used for the cliche "canary in a coal mine"?

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Feb 20, 2008
from Terra Daily:
Fish Devastated By Sex-Changing Chemicals In Municipal Wastewater
"While most people understand the dangers of flushing toxic chemicals into the ecosystem through municipal sewer systems, one potentially devastating threat to wild fish populations comes from an unlikely source: estrogen. After an exhaustive seven-year research effort, Canadian biologists found that miniscule amounts of estrogen present in municipal wastewater discharges can decimate wild fish populations living downstream ... Male fish exposed to estrogen become feminized, producing egg protein normally synthesized by females." ...


Bad for the fish's health and bad for their self-esteem as the males are considered girly-fish.

ApocaDoc
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You're still reading! Good for you!
You really should read our short, funny, frightening book FREE online (or buy a print copy):
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
We've been quipping this stuff for more than 30 months! Every day!
Which might explain why we don't get invited to parties anymore.
Wed, Feb 20, 2008
from The Asahi Shimbun:
Pesticide dichlorvos detected in sliced frozen mackerel imported from China
"TAKAMATSU--The pesticide dichlorvos, which had contaminated gyoza dumplings imported from China, was detected in sliced frozen mackerel processed in an area of China that handles a large volume of farm produce. The fish was sold in Japan by Kouzai Bussan Co., based in Sanuki city, east of here, company officials said Monday. They said 0.14 parts per million (ppm) of the organophosphorus pesticide was found in the product called Aburi Toro Shimesaba Suraisu, a package of 20 slices weighing about 200 grams." ...


I suppose you could say that's an unholy mackerel.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Feb 20, 2008
from Associated Press:
Oil jumps above $100 on refinery outage
"NEW YORK - Oil futures shot higher Tuesday, closing above $100 for the first time as investors bet that crude prices will keep climbing despite evidence of plentiful supplies and falling demand. At the pump, gas prices rose further above $3 a gallon. There was no single driver behind oil's sharp price jump; investors seized on an explosion at a 67,000 barrel per day refinery in Texas, the falling dollar, the possibility that OPEC may cut production next month, the threat of new violence in Nigeria and continuing tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela. The fact that there was no overriding reason for such a price spike could be a bad omen for consumers already bearing the burdens of high heating costs and falling real estate values." ...


PostApocHaiku:
a perfect shitstorm
for the consumer idling
in traffic's gridlock

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Feb 19, 2008
from Science:
New Materials Can Selectively Capture Carbon Dioxide, Chemists Report
"UCLA chemists report a major advance in reducing heat-trapping carbon dioxide emissions in the Feb. 15 issue of the journal Science. The scientists have demonstrated that they can successfully isolate and capture carbon dioxide, which contributes to global warming, rising sea levels and the increased acidity of oceans. Their findings could lead to power plants efficiently capturing carbon dioxide without using toxic materials." ...


This could be very important -- though there's no description of how much energy it takes to produce the "zeolitic imidazolate frameworks, or ZIFs," nor what we'd do with megatons of ZIFs that had absorbed all the CO2 they could absorb, nor what other unintended consequences... but here's hoping!

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Feb 19, 2008
from Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council:
Sharks In Peril: Ocean
"Sharks are disappearing from the world's oceans. The numbers of many large shark species have declined by more than half due to increased demand for shark fins and meat, recreational shark fisheries, as well as tuna and swordfish fisheries, where millions of sharks are taken as bycatch each year." ...


Play the theme from Jaws in your head as you read this story ... then weep.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Feb 19, 2008
from The Guardian:
Consequences of GM crop contamination
"The consequences of contamination between GM crops and non-GM varieties will be much more serious with the next generation of GM crops, an influential group of US scientists has warned. Mixing between GM and non-GM varieties has already caused serious economic losses for producers in lost sales and exports. But the consequences of mixing will be much more serious with new crops that are altered to produce pharmaceuticals and industrial chemicals, the scientists argue. The crops could harm human health and be toxic to wild animals." ...


This story reminds us of recent findings that salmon farms are harming their wild counterparts. A case of the town salmon corrupting the country salmon.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Feb 19, 2008
from The Australian:
Snail loss catastrophic for food chain
"GLOBAL warming is threatening the future of a tiny marine snail which, if lost, could trigger a catastrophic collapse of Antarctica's food chain, experts say. Pteropods have been dubbed the "potato chip" of the oceans because they provide food for so many different species. But the lentil-sized snails - eaten by fish and other lower life forms, which are in turn eaten by species higher up the food chain - are highly sensitive to temperature and acidity, both of which are affected by climate change. Carbon dioxide building up in the atmosphere is expected to make the oceans more acidic. This could have dire consequences for pteropods, impairing their ability to make shells." ...


They call these snails the "potato chips" of the oceans -- bet they're delicious with that tasty chicken of the sea dish.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Feb 19, 2008
from Reuters:
Bird flu claims second life in Vietnam
"Hanoi - Bird flu has killed a second man in Vietnam this week, infected a child and poultry in two provinces and a health official warned more people would fall sick of the virus, the government and state media said on Saturday. The 27-year-old man died on Thursday night at a Hanoi hospital after he was taken there from the northern province of Ninh Binh on Tuesday with serious pneumonia, the official Vietnam News Agency reported." ...


Someday, we'll look back on the days of these sporadic deaths from bird flu with a whiff of nostalgia -- because if the experts are right, bird flu could mutate into a person to person form that will kill millions.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Feb 19, 2008
from The Star Press:
Activists fear new list could harm river cleanup efforts
"INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A shift in how Indiana compiles a federally mandated list of its polluted waterways has removed about 800 stretches of rivers and streams from that list, leaving environmentalists worried that it could hamper watershed restoration efforts. State officials contend the new methodology has produced a more accurate picture of Indiana’s “impaired” waterways, and will allow them to focus on cleaning up those most tainted with mercury, PCBs and other contaminants. But environmentalists say Indiana’s new approach is problematic because it’s “de-listed” parts of rivers and streams simply because it doesn’t have data on whether they are polluted." ...


Why are "activists" afraid of this de-listing process; why isn't everybody afraid?

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Feb 19, 2008
from Los Angeles Times:
Huge beef recall issued
"The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced the largest beef recall in its history Sunday, calling for the destruction of 143 million pounds of raw and frozen beef produced by a Chino slaughterhouse that has been accused of inhumane practices. However, the USDA said the vast majority of the meat involved in the recall -- including 37 million pounds that went mostly to schools -- probably has been eaten already. Officials emphasized that danger to consumers was minimal." ...


This story is so crazy I hardly know where to start -- however, the fact that they are recalling meat that has pretty much already been consumed might be the most surreal aspect. Of course, the saddest part is that this meat went to school children.

ApocaDoc
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Other
Weeks' Archived
ApocaDocuments:

Sep 26 - Dec 31, 1969
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