Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Bush warns of new Vietnam in Iraq



Wed, 22 Aug 2007 23:07:30
Source: Agencies http://www.presstv.ir

Bush has warned that US withdrawal from Iraq leads to a catastrophe similar to what occurred in South East Asia after US forces left Vietnam.

President George W. Bush told members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars that one unmistakable legacy of Vietnam is that the price of America's withdrawal was paid by millions of innocent citizens, whose agonies would add new terms to our vocabulary like 'boat people,' 're-education camps' and 'killing fields".

Bush began his speech at the annual convention for the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) group, in Kansas City, by flagging up US successes, in particular, in turning Japan from an enemy into a key ally.

He also tied anti-war forces in the Vietnam era to the hundreds of thousands of people killed as the result of the US pullout, and hinted at a parallel disaster in Iraq if US forces leave too soon.

Bush said the Vietnam War had taught us the need for US patience over Iraq.

Critics of Bush's handling of the Iraq war have also invoked the US experience in Vietnam but drawn different lessons, saying escalating the US military presence in Iraq will only make matters worse.

Thursday, August 16, 2007



Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor, Reuters
Published: Thursday, August 16, 2007
http://www.canada.com

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A new presidential report on cancer takes on not only tobacco companies but the food industry while calling on the federal government to "cease being a purveyor of unhealthy foods" and switch to policies that encourage Americans to eat vegetables and exercise.

The report, issued on Thursday, also urged changes in public and private insurance policies to encourage doctors to spend more time counseling patients on how to stay healthy by eating right, exercising and avoiding tobacco.

Federal, state, and local policies have actually made healthful foods more expensive and less available, have limited physical education in schools and created an environment that discourages physical activity, the report said.

"Ineffective policies, in conjunction with limited regulation of sales and marketing in the food and beverage industry, have spawned a culture that struggles to make healthy choices -- a culture in dire need of change," said the report, available on the Internet at http://pcp.cancer.gov.

Margaret Kripke of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson cancer center, a member of the President's Cancer Panel, said in a telephone interview, "What became clear to me is that we simply don't have the political will to protect the public health."

Several reports have shown that a third of all cancers are caused by tobacco use, and another one-third by obesity and inactivity.

"This country must not ignore its moral obligation to protect the health of all Americans. We can and must empower individuals to make healthy choices through appropriate policy and legislation, and the panel urges you to use the power of your office toward this life-saving goal," the panel, chaired by Howard University's Dr. LaSalle Leffall, wrote in a letter to Bush.

PURVEYOR OF UNHEALTHY FOODS

The report recommended much stricter control of the tobacco industry and urged Congress to authorize the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to regulate tobacco.

"The report also supports increasing the federal cigarette tax, which is currently 39 cents per pack," American Cancer Society Chief Executive Officer John Seffrin said in a statement.

"The panel's recommendation runs counter to the president's public opposition to a tobacco tax increase."

The federal government also should "require the elimination of unhealthy foods from school breakfast and lunch programs" and "must cease being a purveyor of unhealthy foods that lead to disease and increased health care costs," the report said.

This includes regulation of food advertising and changing agricultural support policies, it said.

"We heavily subsidize the growth of foods (e.g., corn, soy) that in their processed forms (e.g., high fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated corn and soybean oils, grain-fed cattle) are known contributors to obesity and associated chronic diseases, including cancer," the report reads.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

President Bush had Lyme disease and kept it secret


August 8, 2007

Washington, DC - President Bush had Lyme disease last summer and the White House kept it secret claiming it wasn't worth reporting.
President Bush had Lyme disease last summer and the White House kept it secret claiming it wasn't worth reporting.

The annual report on the 61-year-old president's health, released Wednesday, showed he was treated last August for symptoms "consistent with early, localized Lyme disease" without any reoccurrence.

White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said it is "not uncommon" for Bush to get tick bites during his frequent bike rides. He said the president noticed he had a small rash in a "localized area" of his body last August and had it treated by his doctors. "It's been resolved," said Stanzel. "He's had no reoccurrence and no other symptoms."

Asked why the White House kept it quiet for so long, Stanzel said it occurred after the details of the president's 2006 physical exam were released and officials did not believe it was serious enough to be revealed until this year's annual report.

© AlaskaReport News

Monday, August 6, 2007

Outbreak of Foot-and-Mouth Linked to Laboratory

by Diane Smith http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Outbreak_of_Foot_and_Mouth_Linked_to_Laboratory_07491.html


The outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in Surrey, Britain could be linked to a laboratory located near the farm currently isolated, officials informed on Saturday.

Authorities confirmed that the infestation could have leaked from the Institute for Animal Health Laboratory at Pirbright, a facility that uses the same strain in its research laboratories situated five kilometers away from the quarantined farm.

Even so, officials from the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) couldn’t confirm that the mentioned laboratory is in fact the source of this outbreak and urged people to stay on alert until further results of an ongoing investigation.

“We don't know for sure, and therefore it's very important that people continue to be vigilant,” British Environment Secretary Hilary Benn said.

After this discovery, Defra established only one surveillance zone that encompasses the Gilford farm and the Pirbright facility. Meanwhile, a thorough investigation of the laboratory’s biosecurity has been launched

”The present indications are that this strain is a 01 BFS67-like virus, isolated in the 1967 foot-and-mouth disease outbreak in Britain” Defra said in a press release.

This statement points at a firm producing vaccines against the disease inside the Pilbright facility, Merial Animal Health Ltd. The joint venture between Merck & Co. and Sanofi-Aventis halted the production of vaccines from own initiative until the investigation is complete.

“This incident remains at an early stage. It is too soon to reach any firm conclusions. All potential sources of the virus will continue to be investigated. All other precautionary measures announced (Saturday) remain in place,” Defra said regarding speculations that the virus could be located only in the isolated area.

Several cases reported throughout the country proved to be false alarms, analysis results turning out negative and fueling rumors that the outbreak could have been confined.