Home » Posts tagged with » america (Page 163)
Mining ‘threatens American heritage’

Pew Environment Group says national parks and heritage sites are at risk if Obama lifts mining moratorium • In pictures: Grand Canyon under threat America’s most majestic landscapes – from the Grand Canyon to Mount Rushmore – are at risk because of booming global demand for uranium, a new report warns. The report, by the Pew Environment Group , calls on the Obama administration to overhaul antiquated laws governing the mining of gold and uranium, and offer permanent protection to national landmarks. The administration must decide by July whether to extend a two-year respite on thousands of mining claims in areas around the Grand Canyon , Mount Rushmore, Joshua Tree national park and the area around Yosemite national park . If it does not, there is nothing to stop mining interests from drilling on its claims around the canyon, the report warns. “These claims are all still active, and there is nothing right now that the government can do to prevent them from becoming mines,” said Jane Danowitz, who works on public lands protection for Pew. Obama moved to protect public lands soon after coming to the White House, calling a two-year halt to mining in sensitive areas. The interior secretary, Ken Salazar , must now decide whether to extend the ban. But environmental organisations argue Obama had already demonstrated reluctance to take on a fight with Republicans over protecting America’s natural heritage. Under a spending deal reached last week , Obama agreed not to use money from a newly launched wilderness initiative that would have protected 7.3 million acres of land from drilling. Critics argued the initiative had only been launched last December, and had not been allotted funds, so the funding ban would make no impact on reducing the deficit that Obama is targeting. The last five years have seen a 2,000% increase in mining claims in the west. More than 8,000 mining claims have been staked in the Grand Canyon alone – mainly by major international companies rather than the pick and shovel claims of yore. The claims are a legacy of America’s antiquated mining laws, which were written to lure newcomers to the west. Mining National parks Conservation Mining United States Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Mining ‘threatens American heritage’

Pew Environment Group says national parks and heritage sites are at risk if Obama lifts mining moratorium • In pictures: Grand Canyon under threat America’s most majestic landscapes – from the Grand Canyon to Mount Rushmore – are at risk because of booming global demand for uranium, a new report warns. The report, by the Pew Environment Group , calls on the Obama administration to overhaul antiquated laws governing the mining of gold and uranium, and offer permanent protection to national landmarks. The administration must decide by July whether to extend a two-year respite on thousands of mining claims in areas around the Grand Canyon , Mount Rushmore, Joshua Tree national park and the area around Yosemite national park . If it does not, there is nothing to stop mining interests from drilling on its claims around the canyon, the report warns. “These claims are all still active, and there is nothing right now that the government can do to prevent them from becoming mines,” said Jane Danowitz, who works on public lands protection for Pew. Obama moved to protect public lands soon after coming to the White House, calling a two-year halt to mining in sensitive areas. The interior secretary, Ken Salazar , must now decide whether to extend the ban. But environmental organisations argue Obama had already demonstrated reluctance to take on a fight with Republicans over protecting America’s natural heritage. Under a spending deal reached last week , Obama agreed not to use money from a newly launched wilderness initiative that would have protected 7.3 million acres of land from drilling. Critics argued the initiative had only been launched last December, and had not been allotted funds, so the funding ban would make no impact on reducing the deficit that Obama is targeting. The last five years have seen a 2,000% increase in mining claims in the west. More than 8,000 mining claims have been staked in the Grand Canyon alone – mainly by major international companies rather than the pick and shovel claims of yore. The claims are a legacy of America’s antiquated mining laws, which were written to lure newcomers to the west. Mining National parks Conservation Mining United States Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Mining ‘threatens American heritage’

Pew Environment Group says national parks and heritage sites are at risk if Obama lifts mining moratorium • In pictures: Grand Canyon under threat America’s most majestic landscapes – from the Grand Canyon to Mount Rushmore – are at risk because of booming global demand for uranium, a new report warns. The report, by the Pew Environment Group , calls on the Obama administration to overhaul antiquated laws governing the mining of gold and uranium, and offer permanent protection to national landmarks. The administration must decide by July whether to extend a two-year respite on thousands of mining claims in areas around the Grand Canyon , Mount Rushmore, Joshua Tree national park and the area around Yosemite national park . If it does not, there is nothing to stop mining interests from drilling on its claims around the canyon, the report warns. “These claims are all still active, and there is nothing right now that the government can do to prevent them from becoming mines,” said Jane Danowitz, who works on public lands protection for Pew. Obama moved to protect public lands soon after coming to the White House, calling a two-year halt to mining in sensitive areas. The interior secretary, Ken Salazar , must now decide whether to extend the ban. But environmental organisations argue Obama had already demonstrated reluctance to take on a fight with Republicans over protecting America’s natural heritage. Under a spending deal reached last week , Obama agreed not to use money from a newly launched wilderness initiative that would have protected 7.3 million acres of land from drilling. Critics argued the initiative had only been launched last December, and had not been allotted funds, so the funding ban would make no impact on reducing the deficit that Obama is targeting. The last five years have seen a 2,000% increase in mining claims in the west. More than 8,000 mining claims have been staked in the Grand Canyon alone – mainly by major international companies rather than the pick and shovel claims of yore. The claims are a legacy of America’s antiquated mining laws, which were written to lure newcomers to the west. Mining National parks Conservation Mining United States Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
How the world fell in love with whisky

In Venezuela, China and India, drinkers can’t get enough Venezuela Venezuela produces some of the Caribbean’s best rum, but go to any bar, party or beach and you see that the national drink is imported Scotch whisky. Invariably served with lots of ice, it outsells other liquors by a ratio of about two to one, making Venezuela one of the world’s biggest markets. Ask Venezuelans why a tropical country in the midst of a socialist revolution should drink so much – more than 3m boxes a year – and the answer is simple: because we like it, and we can. It has been thus for decades since oil turned this corner of south America into a dysfunctional petro-state which can afford to import luxury cars – Ferraris and Hummers bounce over Caracas potholes – and other symbols of wealth and status. While the super-rich sip 18-year-old blends on yachts off Margarita island, the poor opt for cheaper brands, which you find passed around at family dinners, roadside bars and domino games. “Ever since I can remember whisky was the thing. Rum is for when you can’t afford the good stuff,” says Freddy Afanador, 62, the driver of a battered taxi. Tequila, vodka and gin are exotic curiosities that tend to gather dust on liquor-store shelves. President Hugo Chavez has assailed his compatriots’ taste for alcohol in general and imported Scotch in particular. “Is this the whisky revolution?” he once thundered. Whisky sales are growing fast across the region of Latin America, especially Brazil, making it one of the most important markets. Rory Carroll China For Yang Chen, the appeal is simple: “The smell of charcoal, smoke and fruit and strong flavour are enough to attract any man. Life goes very fast nowadays, and it is a great pleasure to sit down and enjoy a whisky slowly,” he observes. The 45-year-old executive is exactly the kind of customer the Scotch Whisky Association is wooing: he usually drinks Chivas Regal or Johnny Walker, but says he is always willing to try something new. The Chinese market for Scotch is worth £80m a year – around 2.5% of global sales – but the association predicts it will double in the next five years. Ministers recently signed a deal to improve legal protections for the brand. Jim Boyce, whose Beijing Boyce blog covers the capital’s drinks and bar scene, says that for many Chinese customers the appeal is “the cachet of spending big, trying something rare and showing your status. But I’ve been to tastings where people are really interested. You have people who appreciate baijiu [Chinese liquor]; it’s not a huge leap to learning about malts from different parts of Scotland.” Not everyone back home in the Highlands is happy about this growing thirst, however. “I’ve been in touch with aficionados in Scotland who are afraid China will get into it in a big way and buy everything up. Production is not that big,” Boyce says. Tania Branigan India In the hit 1984 ITV series Jewel in the Crown, set in the dying days of the British Raj, a minor maharani screams on tasting a single malt gifted to her by Charles Dance – she thinks he’s trying to poison her. Though the British introduced Indians to the drink, what passed for whisky in India until barely a decade ago was mostly locally-produced alchohol distilled from molasses – amber-coloured rum, actually. “There’s been a huge change since the early 2000s,” says whisky expert Sandeep Aurora. “Until then, the idea of whisky was one big blotch. People were ignorant about the different kinds of whisky. When I first introduced rare whiskies at appreciations, people would ask, ‘Are you sure it hasn’t gone bad after 30 years?’ Now there’s a very high understanding – people are fascinated by the depth and character of the drink, whether it’s rare, single malt or blended scotch whisky.” So much so that even the gender barrier has fallen. In the past, at parties women had to be content with pink and green cocktails – or a vodka, at best. No longer. And last month Aurora helped open India’s first women’s whisky club. “We already have 56 members, and 38 more want to join,” she says. Many of the new scotch connoisseurs, no doubt, are from the new rich created by the economic boom. Import of liquor is also easier now, though the tariffs remain very high. But as the recent experience of Outlook editor Vinod Mehta showed, all this high-value quaffing doesn’t go down well with the masses, still surviving on cheap molasses liquor. When Mehta recently wrote that he had drunk Blue Label whisky for the first time at writer Khushwant Singh’s 96th birthday, so many readers protested that he promised it would remain a “once-in-a-lifetime indulgence”. But for India’s elite, genuine and good whisky has now become a lifelong passion. Maseeh Rahman • How the world fell in love with whisky. Jon Henley reports Food & drink Whisky Venezuela India China Rory Carroll Maseeh Rahman Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Earl Sweatshirt

No Comment
Earl Sweatshirt

Earl Sweatshirt – Dat Ass Earl Sweatshirt “Couch” HD Earl Sweatshirt – Dat Ass Finding Earl Sweatshirt | Pigeons & Planes Just in case you didn’t see, we found Earl Sweatshirt . Read the story at Complex. Don’t ask me questions about it. I was kind of torn about the whole. Odd Future's Earl Sweatshirt found! « Consequence of Sound It helps that the kids in Odd Future are über-talented, but the mystery surrounding the whereabouts of the collective’s Earl Sweatshirt has no doubt aided in the hype. The 17-year-old MC, whose self-titled debut was released last year, … Complex Found Earl Sweatshirt « The FADER earl-sweatshirt -cra-lead. About a month ago, we asked why none of the investigative reporters in America or abroad had managed to find and free Earl Sweatshirt , missing siren of the Odd Future family. Today the search is over. … Whoa: Complex Claims To Have Found Earl Sweatshirt Complex Magazine might have just dropped the bomb in the ‘Where is Earl Sweatshirt ?’ Internet sweepstakes, releasing this ridiculously comprehensive case that. Complex Magazine Found Earl Sweatshirt | JTTS.com EARL IS NOT DEAD. HE’S GETTING MINDFUCKED IN SAMOA. Towandateb says: http://greatquests.com/ Earl Sweatshirt

Continue reading …

Altoona, Pennsylvania, is selling its naming rights to a filmmaker with an axe to grind. The city’s new name? “POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold.” It’s the title of Morgan Spurlock’s documentary—his most famous is Supersize Me —about America’s inescapable advertising, and it will be the town’s…

Continue reading …

The volcanic plume that powers Yellowstone’s geysers and hot springs may be bigger than we thought, and it could someday erupt—not for the first time. The “hotspot” unleashed three major blasts long ago, covering a huge portion of the continent with ash, the BBC reports. Researchers made their discoveries…

Continue reading …

Pancreatic Cancer

No Comment
Pancreatic Cancer

Allen Grosnick: Pancreatic Cancer Survivor Micro-rockets capture cancer cells video4.mov Micro-rockets capture cancer cells video_3.mov Henry Ford, Karmanos Need Volunteers For Pancreatic Cancer Study … Henry Ford Health System is holding a special blood draw for those interested in participating in a study to develop a screening test for pancreatic cancer . THE SYMPTOMS OF PANCREATIC CANCER | NEWSi7 THE SYMPTOMS OF PANCREATIC CANCER : Yearly 37000 named with pancreatic cancer and 34000 citizenry die in U.S.A. In America pancreatic cancer conceived as 4th leading root of cancers death and the plus point of this cancer citizenry die … UCSF Scientists Discover Link Between Inflammation and Pancreatic … Solving part of a medical mystery, researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) have established a link between molecules found in an inflamed pancreas and the early formation of pancreatic cancer – a discovery that … Pancreatic Cancer : Causes, Prevention, Prognosis, Diagnosis And … Prevalence Pancreatic cancer is the fourth most common cause of adult cancer death, UCSF Scientists Discover Link Between Inflammation and Pancreatic … Solving part of a medical mystery, researchers at the University of California, San Francisco have established a link between molecules found in an inflamed pancreas and the early formation of pancreatic cancer – a discovery that may … r3shhirani says: Pancreas cancer vaccine trialled: Doctors say that more than 1,000 UK patients with advanced pancreatic cancer h… http://bbc.in/g0NVNj

Continue reading …

National Defense magazine reports that President Obama has recognized that our defense program is way overextended, and it’s now time to develop long-term strategic objectives for national defense. Tweets Sandra Erwin , “Obama calls for fundamental review of DOD missions a year too late. The 2010 QDR was supposed to do that.” Serious military analysts are skeptical . “Without a change in strategy, cuts in spending are worse than doing nothing,” said Christopher Preble, director of foreign policy studies at the libertarian Cato Institute. The absence of “strategic choice” is the reason why decisions about where to cut defense spending have been nearly impossible to make, said Gordon Adams, American University professor and former director of the Office of Management and Budget. Cutting the defense budget should not be about doing the same with less, Adams said.

Continue reading …

Why are they so surprised ? Let’s see: for the past 30 years, declining wages. People have tapped themselves out on expensive houses, putting their kids through college, and keeping themselves afloat through extended unemployment — not to mention medical expenses. If you didn’t cash in on the equity in your house when it was still worth something, or have a pension that has held its worth during this recession, how on earth would you have enough money to retire? Almost 40% of working Americans said they will never afford retirement, according to a report released Wednesday by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Retirement ranked as the most important issue out of all financial concerns facing Americans, including uninsured medical expenses and rising education costs. In fact, it topped the list for the second year in a row, the survey said. The majority, or 56%, of those polled said they were not saving for retirement, mostly because of the toll higher gas and food prices were taking on their budgets. Fifty-five percent said they didn’t even know how much they need to save for retirement, while those that thought they did know often underestimated the amount, the AICPA said. When asked to estimate how much savings they needed to retire at age 65 and live for 20 years, most of those earning $50,000 to $75,000 a year said they needed $250,000 in savings. But assuming inflation and annual expenses of $50,000, that amount would run out in less than 10 years, the AICPA said. “These statistics suggest we are on the verge of a retirement crisis in America,” Jordan Amin, chairman of the National CPA Financial Literacy Commission, said in a statement. “Americans don’t know how to prepare for their twilight years, and many have put off figuring it out because they’re struggling to make ends meet now.” Gee, you don’t suppose a national pension plan would be a good idea? That way, businesses would cut costs because they wouldn’t have to deal with the complex pension laws and workers might actually have a pension that was still there when they got old.

Continue reading …