Thursday, April 30, 2009

La Shona Duit Lá Bealtaine!


Beltane or Bealtaine is an ancient Gaelic holiday celebrated around May 1st. Historically, this festival was celebrated in Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man. There were similar festivals held at the same time in the other Celtic countries of Wales, Brittany and Cornwall. The festival survives in folkloric practices in the Celtic Nations and the diaspora, and has experienced a degree of revival in recent decades.

For the Celts, Beltane marked the beginning of the pastoral summer season when the herds of livestock were driven out to the summer pastures and mountain grazing lands. In modern Irish, Mí na Bealtaine ('month of Bealtaine') is the name for the month of May. The name of the month is often abbreviated to Bealtaine, with the festival day itself being known as Lá Bealtaine. The lighting of bonfires on Oidhche Bhealtaine ('the eve of Bealtaine') on mountains and hills of ritual and political significance was one of the main activities of the festival.

In ancient Ireland the main Bealtaine fire was held on the central hill of Uisneach 'the navel of Ireland', the ritual centre of the country, which is located in what is now County Westmeath. In Ireland the lighting of bonfires on Oidhche Bhealtaine seems only to have survived to the present day in parts of County Limerick, especially in Limerick itself, as their yearly bonfire night, though some cultural groups have expressed an interest in reviving the custom at Uisneach and perhaps at the Hill of Tara. The lighting of a community Bealtaine fire from which individual hearth fires are then relit is also observed in modern times in some parts of the Celtic diaspora and by some Neopagan groups, though in the majority of these cases this practice is a cultural revival rather than an unbroken survival of the ancient tradition.

Another common aspect of the festival which survived up until the early 20th century in Ireland was the hanging of May Boughs on the doors and windows of houses and of the erection of May Bushes in farmyards, which usually consisted either of a branch of rowan (mountain ash) or whitethorn (hawthorn) which is in bloom at the time and is commonly called the 'May Bush' in Hiberno-English. The practice of decorating the May Bush with flowers, ribbons, garlands and colored egg shells has survived to some extent among the diaspora as well, most notably in Newfoundland, and in some Easter traditions observed on the East Coast of the United States.

Beltane is a cross-quarter day, marking the midpoint in the Sun's progress between the vernal equinox and summer solstice. Since the Celtic year was based on both lunar and solar cycles, it is possible that the holiday was celebrated on the full moon nearest the midpoint between the vernal equinox and the summer solstice. The astronomical date for this midpoint is closer to May 5 or May 7, but this can vary from year to year. This year it is very close on May 2nd.

In Irish mythology, the beginning of the summer season for the Tuatha Dé Danann and the Milesians started at Bealtaine. Great bonfires would mark a time of purification and transition, heralding in the season in the hope of a good harvest later in the year, and were accompanied with ritual acts to protect the people from any harm by Otherworldly spirits, such as the Sídhe. Like the festival of Samhain, opposite Beltane on Oct. 31, Beltane was a time when the Otherworld was seen as particularly close at hand. Early Gaelic sources from around the 10th century state that the druids of the community would create a need-fire on top of a hill on this day and drive the village's cattle through the fires to purify them and bring luck (Eadar dà theine Bhealltainn in Scottish Gaelic, 'Between two fires of Beltane'). In Scotland, boughs of juniper were sometimes thrown on the fires to add an additional element of purification and blessing to the smoke. People would also pass between the two fires to purify themselves. This was echoed throughout history after Christianization, with lay people instead of Druid priests creating the need-fire. The festival persisted widely up until the 1950s, and in some places the celebration of Beltane continues today. A revived Beltane Fire Festival has been held every year since 1988 during the night of 30 April on Calton Hill in Edinburgh, Scotland and attended by up to 15,000 people (except in 2003 when local council restrictions forced the organizers to hold a private event elsewhere).

Beltane as described in here is a specifically Gaelic holiday. Other Celtic cultures, such as the Welsh, Bretons, and Cornish, do not celebrate Beltane, per se. However they celebrated or celebrate festivals similar to it at the same time of year. In Wales, the day is known as Calan Mai, and the Gaulish name for the day is Belotenia.

A folklorist wrote:

" In many parts of the Highlands, the young folks of the district would meet on the moors on 1st May. They cut a table in the green sod, of a round figure, by cutting a trench in the ground of sufficient circumferences to hold the whole company. They then kindled a fire, dressed a repast of eggs and milk of the constituency of custard. They kneaded a cake of oatmeal, which was toasted at the embers against a stone. After the custard was eaten, they divided the cake into as many portions as there were people in the company, as much alike as possible in size and shape. They daubed one of the pieces with charcoal, til it was black all over, and they were then all put into a bonnet together, and each one blindfolded took out a portion. The bonnet holder was entitled to the last bit, and whoever drew the black bit was the person who was compelled to leap three times over the flames. Some people say this was originally to appease a god, whose favour they tried to implore by making the year productive. (Dwelly, 1911, "Bealltuinn")

Beltane has a complex etymology and a resultant variety of different spellings.

The word Beltane derives directly from the Old Irish Beltain, which later evolved into the Modern Irish Bealtaine. In Scottish Gaelic it is spelled Bealltainn. Both are from Old Irish Beltene ('bright fire') from belo-te(p)niâ. Beltane was formerly spelled 'Bealtuinn' in Scottish Gaelic; in Manx it is spelt 'Boaltinn' or 'Boaldyn'.

In Modern Irish, Oíche Bealtaine is May Eve, and Lá Bealtaine is May Day. Mí na Bealtaine, or simply Bealtaine is the name of the month of May.

In the word belo-te(p)niâ) the element belo- is cognate with the English word bale (as in 'bale-fire'), the Anglo-Saxon bael, and also the Lithuanian baltas, meaning 'white' or 'shining' and from which the Baltic Sea takes its name.

In Gaelic the terminal vowel -o (from Belo) was dropped, as shown by numerous other transformations from early or Proto-Celtic to Early Irish, thus the Gaulish deity names Belenos ('bright one') and Belisama.

From the same Proto-Celtic roots we get a wide range of other words: the verb beothaich, from Early Celtic belo-thaich ('to kindle, light, revive, or re-animate'); baos, from baelos ('shining'); beòlach ('ashes with hot embers') from beò/belo + luathach, ('shiny-ashes' or 'live-ashes'). Similarly boil/boile ('fiery madness'), through Irish buile and Early Irish baile/boillsg ('gleam'), and bolg-s-cio-, related to Latin fulgeo ('shine'), and English 'effulgent'.

Beltane is observed by Neopagans in various forms, and by a variety of names. As forms of Neopaganism can be quite different and have very different origins, these representations can vary considerably despite the shared name. Some celebrate in a manner as close as possible to how the Ancient Celts and Living Celtic cultures have maintained the traditions, while others observe the holiday with rituals culled from numerous other unrelated sources, Celtic culture being only one of the sources used.

Celtic Reconstructionist
Like other Reconstructionist traditions, Celtic Reconstructionist Pagans place emphasis on historical accuracy. They base their celebrations and rituals on traditional lore from the living Celtic cultures, as well as research into the older beliefs of the polytheistic Celts.

Celtic Reconstructionists usually celebrate Lá Bealtaine when the local hawthorn trees are in bloom, or on the full moon that falls closest to this event. Many observe the traditional bonfire rites, to whatever extent this is feasible where they live, including the dousing of the household hearth flame and relighting of it from the community festival fire. Some decorate May Bushes and prepare traditional festival foods. Pilgrimages to holy wells are traditional at this time, and offerings and prayers to the spirits or deities of the wells are usually part of this practice. Crafts such as the making of equal-armed rowan crosses are common, and often part of rituals performed for the blessing and protection of the household and land.

Wicca
Wiccans and Wiccan-inspired Neopagans celebrate a variation of Beltane as a sabbat, one of the eight solar holidays. Although the holiday may use features of the Gaelic Bealtaine, such as the bonfire, it bears more relation to the Germanic May Day festival, both in its significance (focusing on fertility) and its rituals (such as maypole dancing). Some Wiccans celebrate 'High Beltaine' by enacting a ritual union of the May Lord and Lady.

Among the Wiccan shabbats, Beltane is a cross-quarter day; it is celebrated in the northern hemisphere on May 1 and in the southern hemisphere on November 1. Beltane follows Ostara and precedes Midsummer (see the Wheel of the Year).

What ever your tradition celebrate this special time with fire and feasting, in the old countries like Ireland, Scotland and England...*wink* They are gathering the mayflower and embracing their loved ones.....

Peace....and Happy May Day Eve today and May Day tomorrow!




The Federal Government Needs Photoshop


Just imagine if you will the benefits to Democrats and the White House...if we could just help with the fair and accurate reporting at Faux News! You know their already 'stellar credibility' with the American Sheeple really opens this up for us Photoshoppers...

Snark.... So stay a bit here and enjoy the hilarious benefits of photoshop!

By Party Ben at Mother Jones

We, Party Ben and me, would like to introduce our federal government to photoshop.

Ben shows us how the profound idiocy of the White House Military Office's decision to stage a terrifying photo op for an Air Force One jet over New York City on Monday which has been widely, and rightly, condemned, could have been avoided. Anyone for some proactive, money-saving solutions? until now! Mr. President and employees of our federal government, please allow us, to acquaint you with a magical, spell-casting piece of computer wizardry called Photoshop. With Photoshop, anything can be anywhere, at any time! Skeptical? Well, just take a look at some examples after the jump!

Say that perhaps you're engaged in a delicate standoff with a ruthless, unhinged dictator. You'd love to swing by and give him the bird out the window, but that seems kind of dangerous. However, with the magic of Photoshop, Air Force One can be in Pyongyang in a flash, and what's more, poor Kim Jong-il will totally believe it really happened!



Perhaps most intriguingly, the magical powers of Photoshop mean that Air Force One can fly to places both real and imaginary. For instance, ever wondered what would have happened if our government intervened in the Imperial stormtrooper attack on Luke Skywalker's aunt and uncle's farm on Tatooine? We could have avoided all that Sand People nonsense!



For your convenience, I now present a cost-benefit analysis.
-Federal Government's Air Force One Manhattan Photo Shoot...Cost $328,000 and terrfying thousands of New Yorkers
-Photoshop Wizardry ...Cost $15/hour, benefit "really awesome"




Now are you going to argue with my tiny little Chihuahua Cricket?...I ask you!



Finally, the answers have been found!



Wednesday, April 29, 2009

First U.S. Swine Flu or H1N1 Death in Texas



President Obama confirmed the first death outside of Mexico from swine flu on Wednesday, and recommended that schools with confirmed or suspected cases of the disease “strongly consider temporarily closing.”

First U.S. Swine Flu Death

Dr. Richard Besser, acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Wednesday that the first American death of the disease was a 23-month-old child in Texas. He gave no other details about the child. President Obama said his 'thoughts and prayers' were with the child’s family.

The number of confirmed cases of the illness continued to rise in Europe. In France, the health minister took the extraordinary step of calling for a suspension of all flights from the European Union to Mexico, the epicenter of the outbreak, even as a Mexican health official said that the death toll appeared to be stabilizing.

Mr. Obama spoke a day after he had asked Congress to provide $1.5 billion in emergency funds to fight the disease, and his comments appeared to reflect a deepening sense of the risk the still ill-understood flu might pose.

This strain of the flu is suspected to have killed more than 150 people in Mexico and has been confirmed in at least seven countries around the globe, from Spain to Canada to New Zealand.

By urging parents to make contingency plans in the event of school closings — simply placing children in crowded day-care centers was 'not a good solution,' he noted — Mr. Obama indicated that his administration was contemplating the possibility, at least, of a serious increase in the flu’s prevalence.

France’s request to suspend all flights from the European Union to Mexico will be made at a meeting of European Union health ministers, due to be held Thursday in Luxembourg, French Health Minister Roselyne Bachelot said. The World Health Organization has argued against such travel bans, arguing that they are an ineffective way to stop to spread of the disease.

Cuba and Argentina have both banned flights to Mexico, while the C.D.C. has advised Americans only to 'avoid all nonessential travel to Mexico.'

Mexico City, one of the world’s largest cities, has taken drastic preventative steps, shutting down schools, gyms, swimming pools, restaurants, and movie theaters. Many people on the streets have donned masks in hopes of protection.

Schools are closed throughout Mexico, affecting some 33 million students. Many tourist sites — including museums and archaeological sites — have been put off limits.

The number of confirmed swine flu cases in the United States rose Wednesday to 66 in six states, with 45 in New York, 11 in California, six in Texas, two in Kansas and one each in Indiana and Ohio, but cities and states suspected more. In New York, the city’s health commissioner said “many hundreds” of schoolchildren were ill at a school where some students had confirmed cases.

Germany confirmed three cases of the disease, becoming the third European country to report cases. The country’s disease control agency, the Robert Koch-Institut, said the three include a 22-year-old woman hospitalized in Hamburg; a man in his late 30s being treated at a hospital in Regensburg, north of Munich, and a 37-year-old woman from another southern town.

Health and airport authorities in Munich said the first direct flight carrying vacationers back to Germany since the outbreak of the disease in Mexico was expected and might be quarantined if passengers showed symptoms of swine flu.

Spain said Wednesday that the number of confirmed cases of the flu had risen from two to four, including one in the northern Basque region, all in people who had recently returned from Mexico. The health ministry said authorities were now observing 59 suspected cases.

In London, Prime Minister Gordon Brown told parliament that three more cases of swine flu had been confirmed in Britain, one of them a 12-year-old girl, in addition to a Scottish couple, bringing the total to five. All three had recently travelled from Mexico, had mild symptoms and were responding to treatment, he said. A school attended by the 12-year-old in southwest England had been temporarily closed, he added.

Canada has 13 confirmed cases, all of which are mild, Canada’s chief public health officer, Dr. David Butler-Jones, said Tuesday.

In all, the United Nations global health body, the World Health Organization, has confirmed 105 cases of swine flu in seven countries. More than half of those — 66 — are in the United States.




Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Mistakes On A Plane - Jon Stewart

The Daily Show With Jon StewartM - Th 11p / 10c
Mistakes on a Plane
thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Economic CrisisFirst 100 Days


Seriously, They had to fly that low and for a photo-op? I am not sure I believe it. Do you?



Texas Wants The United States?



Less than two weeks after raising the prospect of seceding from the union, Texas Gov. Rick Perry is calling on the federal government to come to his state's aid in the midst of the swine flu outbreak.

'Governor Rick Perry of Texas has no need for the Federal government'....A subject I have written about at length this month.

Perry got up before the legislature, the media and with the fires of hell in Texas and said so, expressing solidarity with the small percentage of Texans, (which must include only Texas Republicans polled), who think it would be a good idea if Texas seceded from the United States!

In that regard he has stated, along with other Texas politicians and certain brainless wingnuts, that as a 'sovereign' state, Texas doesn't need Federal stimulus help or anything else from the Federal Government.... unless it asks for it.

Wherein now lies a problem for Governor Rick Perry...

Texas is in trouble? No, say it ain't the Alamo!

Nope....Perry Federal Government

The new strain of influenza that has come north from Mexico has infected several people in New York, Kansas and Texas. It is a new strain, one that has the potential to become perhaps a pandemic. A flight was stopped in Texas today.

Gov. Rick Perry today in a precautionary measure requested the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) provide 37,430 courses of antiviral medications from the Strategic National Stockpile to Texas to prevent the spread of swine flu.

"As a precautionary measure, I have requested that medication be on hand in Texas to help curb the spread of swine flu by helping those with both confirmed and suspected cases of this swine flu virus, as well as health care providers who may have come in contact with these patients," said Gov. Rick Perry. "We will continue to work with our local, state and federal health officials to ensure public safety is protected."

So now Gove Rick Perry (Idiot-Texas) and the rest of the Texas secessionists suddenly discover that they need the United States now. The pathetic thing is that it is the Republicans who took money for fighting diseases out of the Federal Stimulus Program.

Wait until the next hurricane comes blazing across Texan shores.




Blown Away Chihuahua Reunited With Owners



Tinker Bell Comes Home!

Wonderful news for owners of little dogs around the world! Tinker Bell has been reunited with her owners after a 70-mph gust of wind picked up the six-pound Chihuahua and tossed her out of sight. Dorothy and Lavern Utley credit a pet psychic for guiding them on Monday to a wooded area nearly a mile from where 8-month-old Tinker Bell had been last seen. The brown long-haired dog was dirty and hungry but otherwise OK.


My little guy...Cricket is such a heartbreaker!

The Utleys, of Rochester, had set up an outdoor display Saturday at a flea market in Waterford Township, 25 miles northwest of Detroit. Tinker Bell was standing on their platform trailer when she was swept away by the winds.

This is just terrifiying, as we have these kinds of winds in Colorado. It is not uncommon to take your dogs out, in this case my Chihuahua and Papillon and end up spending the afternoon flying them like kites!

Needless to say they are extremely worn out after such an experience.

Dorothy Utley, Tinker Bells Mommy told The Detroit News that her cherished Chihuahua "just went wild" upon seeing her.

We know, Dorothy, we know.




Loch Lommond



This is beautifully performed as the other songs are on this video.
I learned the first along with my nursery songs growing up as a child. It was always my favorite one to sing.

Enjoy!




Sunday, April 26, 2009

In Times of Hardship - Towns Print Their Own Money


This video is from the BBC ~ Proof the English are still watching us!


The Russians are even watching.

A way to compete with Internet stores, big-box chains, and banks that will not lend to business and consumers...has seen the light of day and it is taking the form of printed money.

And it isn't U.S. dollars...more communities are looking into printing their own currencies.

Shop With Berkshares


This concept isn't new. During the Great Depression dozens of complementary currencies flourished as thousands of banks failed. Today, it's estimated there are at least 2,500 complementary currency systems around the world, says Bernard Lietaer, a co-founder of the Euro and a local currency proponent. Watch how one town uses their own currency.

In the United States, there are alternative currency systems in California, Wisconsin, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Massachusetts.

People pay 95 federal cents to get one BerkShare or $95 for 100 BerkShares.


The above picture is of 'Berkshares' from Berkshires, MA

Complementary currencies are colorful slips of paper designed with images of local scenes or landmarks. People can use this currency to purchase local goods and services. It's designed to encourage locals to spend money within their own area.

Paul Glover, the founder of the Ithaca Hours complementary currency for use in Ithaca, New York, has been bombarded with requests to help set up local currencies around the country.

"As the economy has fallen apart, my phone has been ringing off the hook," Glover says from his home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Printing and distributing local currency isn't illegal. But there are rules, says Lewis Solomon, a law professor at George Washington University. First, the currency can only be paper; no coins are allowed. And the currency can't resemble a dollar. Finally, any income received in local currency must be taxed as if it were federal dollars.

While local currency may not be helpful outside a town's limits, residents say they use the money as a way of supporting their local community. Stephen Burke, the current director of Ithaca Hours, accepts the currency at his music store. He spends his Hours locally, too.

"Recently people have begun to understand the value of spending money locally," Burke says.

And businesses, in turn, use local currency as a way to promote their connection to the community and build loyalty.

"The trouble in our global financial system has people very concerned," says Witt. "They don't know how to fix it. It seems out of their control. The concept of a citizen group taking responsibility for its own regional economy and finding a way to issue a medium for exchange in its own area is such a powerful image."

However, there are challenges. Some community members dismiss the idea of a local currency, arguing that it won't have much of an impact in a global economy. The local currency Colgrove is trying to launch is still only in the beginning stages. But thanks to the economy, residents are more enthusiastic about creating their own medium of exchange.

"If the economy were booming, people wouldn't be so interested," she says.

But creating a local currency isn't easy. First, there are the start-up costs. Witt's group spent $250,000 in grant money to create the BerkShares. There are costs associated with designing a currency, printing costs, the costs of educating residents and businesses. And maintaining the whole program is expensive. Witt estimates Newark could spend about $1 million in implementing a local currency.

Some economists are skeptical that complementary currencies will ever have much impact. Since the early 1990s, there have been about a dozen local currencies that have failed in the United States.

But advocates say that it's not the scale of the program that makes it important. It's about the connections that form around it.

It comes down to people helping people survive. Which we Americans are very good at.




The Beauty of A Woman



For attractive lips, Speak words of kindness.

For lovely eyes, Seek out the good in people.

For a slim figure, Share your food with the hungry.

For beautiful hair, Let a child run his or her fingers through it once a day.

For poise, Walk with the knowledge that you will never walk alone.

People, even more than things, have to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed; Never throw out anybody.

Remember, If you ever need a helping hand, you'll find one at the end of your arm.

As you grow older, you will discover that you have two hands, one for helping yourself, the other for helping others. The beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears, The figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair.

The beauty of a woman must be seen from in her eyes, Because that is the doorway to her heart, the place where love resides. The beauty of a woman is not in a facial mole, But true beauty in a woman is reflected in her soul. It is the caring that she lovingly gives, the passion that she shows. And the beauty of a woman, with passing years, only grows....

Author Unknown




Swine Flu Is Not Just for Pigs



It May Be To Late to Contain Oubreaks in the United States

Key Facts about Swine Influenza (Swine Flu)

What is Swine Influenza?
Swine Influenza (swine flu) is a respiratory disease of pigs caused by type A influenza virus that regularly causes outbreaks of influenza in pigs. Swine flu viruses cause high levels of illness and low death rates in pigs. Swine influenza viruses may circulate among swine throughout the year, but most outbreaks occur during the late fall and winter months similar to outbreaks in humans. The classical swine flu virus (an influenza type A H1N1 virus) was first isolated from a pig in 1930.

From The CDC


How common is swine flu infection in humans?
In the past, CDC received reports of approximately one human swine influenza virus infection every one to two years in the U.S., but from December 2005 through February 2009, 12 cases of human infection with swine influenza have been reported.
This has just changed with the deaths in Mexico and the disease showing up in several Southwestern States. Today there is a report that a High School in New York has confirmed cases.

What are the symptoms of swine flu in humans?
The symptoms of swine flu in people are expected to be similar to the symptoms of regular human seasonal influenza and include fever, lethargy, lack of appetite and coughing. Some people with swine flu also have reported runny nose, sore throat, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.

Can people catch swine flu from eating pork?
No. Swine influenza viruses are not transmitted by food. You can not get swine influenza from eating pork or pork products. Eating properly handled and cooked pork and pork products is safe. Cooking pork to an internal temperature of 160°F kills the swine flu virus as it does other bacteria and viruses.

How does swine flu spread?
Influenza viruses can be directly transmitted from pigs to people and from people to pigs. Human infection with flu viruses from pigs are most likely to occur when people are in close proximity to infected pigs, such as in pig barns and livestock exhibits housing pigs at fairs. Human-to-human transmission of swine flu can also occur. This is thought to occur in the same way as seasonal flu occurs in people, which is mainly person-to-person transmission through coughing or sneezing of people infected with the influenza virus. People may become infected by touching something with flu viruses on it and then touching their mouth or nose.

What do we know about human-to-human spread of swine flu?
In September 1988, a previously healthy 32-year-old pregnant woman was hospitalized for pneumonia and died 8 days later. A swine H1N1 flu virus was detected. Four days before getting sick, the patient visited a county fair swine exhibition where there was widespread influenza-like illness among the swine.

How can human infections with swine influenza be diagnosed?
To diagnose swine influenza A infection, a respiratory specimen would generally need to be collected within the first 4 to 5 days of illness (when an infected person is most likely to be shedding virus). However, some persons, especially children, may shed virus for 10 days or longer. Identification as a swine flu influenza A virus requires sending the specimen to CDC for laboratory testing.

What medications are available to treat swine flu infections in humans?
There are four different antiviral drugs that are licensed for use in the US for the treatment of influenza: amantadine, rimantadine, oseltamivir and zanamivir. While most swine influenza viruses have been susceptible to all four drugs, the most recent swine influenza viruses isolated from humans are resistant to amantadine and rimantadine. At this time, CDC recommends the use of oseltamivir or zanamivir for the treatment and/or prevention of infection with swine influenza viruses.

Is the H1N1 swine flu virus the same as human H1N1 viruses?
No. The H1N1 swine flu viruses are antigenically very different from human H1N1 viruses and, therefore, vaccines for human seasonal flu would not provide protection from H1N1 swine flu viruses.

How does swine flu spread among pigs?
Swine flu viruses are thought to be spread mostly through close contact among pigs and possibly from contaminated objects moving between infected and uninfected pigs. Herds with continuous swine flu infections and herds that are vaccinated against swine flu may have sporadic disease, or may show only mild or no symptoms of infection.

What are signs of swine flu in pigs?
Signs of swine flu in pigs can include sudden onset of fever, depression, coughing (barking), discharge from the nose or eyes, sneezing, breathing difficulties, eye redness or inflammation, and going off feed.

So another words, stay away from barking pigs and people!

Is there a vaccine for swine flu?
Vaccines are available to be given to pigs to prevent swine influenza.

There is no vaccine to protect humans from swine flu.
The seasonal influenza vaccine will likely help provide partial protection against swine H3N2, but not swine H1N1 viruses.



Thursday, April 23, 2009

Palin To Be Given Huge Assault Rifle




Run For Your Life Palins Packing Heat Again

A custom firearms manufacture plans to give Sarah Palin a smokin' gift at a May banquet of the National Rifle Association, according to RedState. Looks like all the wildlife in Alaska might want to cross the border into Canada for safety.

NRA members, keep an eye out for your copy of May's American Rifleman, if it hasn't already arrived. According to the latest edition of the magazine, Bob Reynolds, gunsmith and owner of Templar Consulting LLC, will make a special presentation at the NRA Foundation Banquet on May 14.

It's a modified AR-15 (civilian version of the milspec M16 rifle), specially customized in honor of Gov. Sarah Palin and dubbed "The Alaskan Hunter."

The gift is an assault rifle custom-engraved with the image of a moose, the Big Dipper, a map of Alaska, and the words "In Honor of Governor Sarah Palin."

The governor could really mow down a moose with this thing, or perhaps spray several wolves from a helicopter, or say, terrify one Levi Johnston.

Why do they give stupid people guns?





Today's Totally Priceless Picture



A startled kangaroo at the Belgrade zoo dropped her baby from her pouch and now won't let the tiny creature climb back in, so an international rescue operation has been mounted.

Baby Roo Gets A Second Chance

Belgrade zookeepers said Tuesday that 6-month-old Tijana fell out of the pouch last month after her mother was scared by an emu — a large Australian bird.

Now, the big-eyed baby kangaroo, which normally would feed on her mother's milk inside the pouch, is being fed in an incubator with special milk donated by Australia, the United States and Germany.

"The zoo has done a fantastic job," said Australia's Ambassador to Belgrade Clare Birgin, after delivering a shipment of kangaroo milk. "They really saved her life."

Belgrade zookeeper Mainga Hamadahamane said that advice from the zoos in Australia, Germany, the Czech Republic, the U.S. and Belgium saved Tijana's life.

"Without them, she wouldn't be alive," he said, cuddling the tiny creature.

The zookeepers said Tijana will be fed from a bottle for the next couple of months before getting such food as rice and bananas.




Great Pacific Ocean Trash Masses



We are killing our planet....



In t­he broad expanse of the northern Pacific Ocean, there exists the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, a slowly moving, clockwise spiral of currents created by a high-pressure system of air currents. The area is an oceanic desert, filled with tiny phytoplankton but few big fish or mammals. Due to its lack of large fish and gentle breezes, fishermen and­ ­sailors rarely travel through the gyre. But the area is filled with something besides plankton: trash, millions of pounds of it, most of it plastic. It's the largest landfill in the world, and it floats in the middle of the ocean. It is twice the size of Texas. Think about it.

Pacific Ocean Trash Masses

Think before you toss away that plastic lid, Trash from as far as Indiana is found in the Pacific Ocean. We are not the only country which has used the ocean as a dumping ground, but we need to step up to the plate and make changes. What we throw into the ocean, ends up on our dinner plates because we live in a symbiotic world. What effect on species effects all. Recently scientist have discovered breast cancer in Beluga Whales. Can you imagine?

This was truly a sad Earth Day 2009.




Wednesday, April 22, 2009

We Don't Torture - Jon Stewart

The Daily Show With Jon StewartM - Th 11p / 10c
We Don't Torture
thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Economic CrisisPolitical Humor


No one can say it like Jon Stewart....




A Call for Federal Hate Crime Laws



Judy Shepard lost her son Matthew to an anti-gay hate crime more than 10 years ago. Since then tens of thousands more Americans have been the victims of hate violence. This is a call for a Federal Hate Crime Law




Colorado Transgender Case Sets Precedence - Justice for Angie Zapata

The story broke with a news conference out of Greeley Colorado Last Summer.



A young transgender women has been brutally murdered and today, the accused now stand convicted and sentenced today. Please visit Angie's page to learn more about her story.

Angie Zapata Website

The precedent was that this case also carried a charge of committing the crime with a bias-motivation.

Here is a synopsis of the Law in Colorado:

In 1988, Colorado became the first state in the United States to have a hate crimes law. Although an important first step, “The Ethnic Intimidation Act” included limited protections. In 2005, the state legislature amended the law - renamed it a 'Bias Motivated Crime' — and added sexual orientation and mental and physical disability as protections. The term 'sexual orientation' is specifically defined in the law to include “transgender status.” Therefore, the law also provides protection for gender identity and expression.

The Colorado hate crime law covers any crime committed with the intent to intimidate or harass another person because of that person’s actual or perceived race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, physical or mental disability, or sexual orientation. This does not just include acts of physical violence, but words or actions threatening injury and crimes committed to an individual’s property.

Strong hate crime laws send a message to victims, perpetrators, and law enforcement officials that crimes motivated by bigotry and hatred will not be tolerated in this state. Bias motivated crimes are not like any other crime because they are intended to create fear among an entire community of citizens.

Transgender Case Goes to Trial

This has been a closely watched case from around the country. It was turned on Allen Andrade confession. This is not uncommon for precedent setting cases. I ought to know, I set one myself in Colorado in 1993. My case was for Marital Sexual Assault.

I extend my deepest sorrow to the Zapata family. You have made it this far. Now you must pick up with your lives and move on. It will be difficult at first because of the media attention, and your suffering and grief. You can do it if you pull on your support systems. They will be critical in the next several months and even years ahead.

I will think of you often...May Angie rest in peace.





Prosecuting Bush - Several Way In

The Legal Framework for the Prosecution

'That the King can do no wrong is a necessary and fundamental principle of the English constitution.' -Sir William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, 1765

and...

'No living Homo Sapiens is above the law. -(Notwithstanding our good friends and legal ancestors across the water, this is a fact that requires no citation.'

Which statement do you prefer?



President Bush with then Attorney General Alberto Gonzales



Same ole same ole...double speak from Fox News and there is the postulations of the current Administration. Just where do we stand? Would someone stand up and hold George Bush and Dick Cheney responsible for 8 years of crime?

Obama Seems Open to Prosecution

Prosecuting Bush For Murder

Spain Seems Optimistic




So it seems like no one can stand up to the Teflon President...and we are weaker for it. He should have been prosecuted while in office. Impeached, but everything would still be be a hotmess. I wonder, would Obama pardon Bush as Ford pardoned Nixon?

Remember...




Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Caption This?



Go ahead...Let's see what you come up with?

~snark~