Dienstag, 2. Oktober 2007

UFO observed on the Moon by Italian Astronomers

UFO observed on the Moon by Italian Astronomers
posted: 30 Sep 2007

During routine observations of the cosmos, Italian astronomers have recently spotted and tracked on video an Unidentified Flying Object or UFO.
02:00 MIn.

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

WATCH VIDEO: http://tinyurl.com/2pgrfc

Why Iraqi Farmers Might Prefer Death to Paul Bremer's Order 81

Why Iraqi Farmers Might Prefer Death to Paul Bremer's Order 81
By Nancy Scola, AlterNet.
Posted September 19, 2007.

Anyone hearing about central India's ongoing epidemic of farmer suicides, where growers are killing themselves at a terrifying clip, has to be horrified. But among the more disturbed must be the once-grand poobah of post-invasion Iraq, U.S. diplomat L. Paul Bremer.

Why Bremer? Because Indian farmers are choosing death after finding themselves caught in a loop of crop failure and debt rooted in genetically modified and patented agriculture -- the same farming model that Bremer introduced to Iraq during his tenure as administrator of the Coalition Provisional Authority, the American body that ruled the "new Iraq" in its chaotic early days.

In his 400 days of service as CPA administrator, Bremer issued a series of directives known collectively as the "100 Orders." Bremer's orders set up the building blocks of the new Iraq, and among them is Order 81 [PDF], officially titled Amendments to Patent, Industrial Design, Undisclosed Information, Integrated Circuits and Plant Variety Law, enacted by Bremer on April 26, 2004.

Order 81 generated very little press attention when it was issued. And what coverage it did spark tended to get the details wrong. Reports claimed that what the United States' man in Iraq had done was no less than tell each and every Iraqi farmer -- growers who had been tilling the soil of Mesopotamia for thousands of years -- that from here on out they could not reuse seeds from their fields or trade seeds with their neighbors, but instead they would be required to purchase all of their seeds from the likes of U.S. agriculture conglomerates like Monsanto.

That's not quite right. Order 81 wasn't that draconian, and it was not so clearly a colonial mandate. In fact, the edict was more or less a legal tweak.

What Order 81 did was to establish the strong intellectual property protections on seed and plant products that a company like the St. Louis-based Monsanto -- purveyors of genetically modified (GM) seeds and other patented agricultural goods -- requires before they'll set up shop in a new market like the new Iraq. With these new protections, Iraq was open for business. In short, Order 81 was Bremer's way of telling Monsanto that the same conditions had been created in Iraq that had led to the company's stunning successes in India.

In issuing Order 81, Bremer didn't order Iraqi farmers to march over to the closest Monsanto-supplied shop and stock up. But if Monsanto's experience in India is any guide, he didn't need to.

Here's the way it works in India. In the central region of Vidarbha, for example, Monsanto salesmen travel from village to village touting the tremendous, game-changing benefits of Bt cotton, Monsanto's genetically modified seed sold in India under the Bollgard® label. The salesmen tell farmers of the amazing yields other Vidarbha growers have enjoyed while using their products, plastering villages with posters detailing "True Stories of Farmers Who Have Sown Bt Cotton." Old-fashioned cotton seeds pale in comparison to Monsanto's patented wonder seeds, say the salesmen, as much as an average old steer is humbled by a fine Jersey cow.

Part of the trick to Bt cotton's remarkable promise, say the salesmen, is that Bollgard® was genetically engineered in the lab to contain bacillus thuringiensis, a bacterium that the company claims drastically reduces the need for pesticides. When pesticides are needed, Bt cotton plants are Roundup® Ready -- a Monsanto designation meaning that the plants can be drowned in the company's signature herbicide, none the worse for wear. (Roundup® mercilessly kills nonengineered plants.)

Sounds great, right? The catch is that Bollgard® and Roundup® cost real money. And so Vidarbha's farmers, somewhat desperate to grow the anemic profit margin that comes with raising cotton in that dry and dusty region, have rushed to both banks and local moneylenders to secure the cash needed to get on board with Monsanto. Of a $3,000 bank loan a Vidarbha farmer might take out, as much as half might go to purchasing a growing season's worth of Bt seeds.

And the same goes the next season, and the next season after that. In traditional agricultural, farmers can recycle seeds from one harvest to plant the next, or swap seeds with their neighbors at little or no cost. But when it comes to engineered seeds like Bt cotton, Monsanto owns the tiny speck of intellectual property inside each hull, and thus controls the patent. And a farmer wishing to reuse seeds from a Monsanto plant must pay to relicense them from the company each and every growing season.

But farmers who chose to bet the farm, literally, on Bt cotton or other GM seeds aren't necessarily crazy or deluded. Genetically modified agricultural does hold the tremendous promise of leading to increased yields -- incredibly important for farmers feeding their families and communities from limited land and labor.

But when it comes to GM seeds, all's well when all is well. Farming is a gamble, and the flip side of the great potential reward that genetically modified seeds offer is, of course, great risk. When all goes badly, farmers who have sunk money into Monsanto-driven farming find themselves at the bottom of a far deeper hole than farmers who stuck with traditional growing. Farmers who suffer a failed harvest may find it nearly impossible to secure a new loan from either a bank or local moneylender. With no money to dig him or herself out, that hole only gets deeper.

And that hole is exactly where farmers have found themselves in India's Vidarbha region, where crop failure -- especially the failure of Bt cotton crops -- has reached the level of pandemic.

In may be that Bt cotton isn't well-suited to central India's rain-driven farming methods; Bollgard® and parched Vidarbha may be as ill-suited as Bremer's combat boots and Brooks Brothers suits. It may be the unpredictable and unusually dry monsoon seasons that have plagued India of late. But in any case, the result is that more and more of India's farmers are finding themselves in debt, and with little hope for finding their way out.

And the final way out that so many of them -- thousands upon thousands -- have chosen is death, and by their own hands. Firm statistics are difficult to come by, but even numbers on the low end of the scale are downright horrifying. The Indian government and NGOs have estimated that, so far this year, at last count more than a thousand farmers have killed themselves in the state of Maharashtra alone. The New York Times pinned it as 17,000 Indian farmers in 2003 alone. A PBS special that aired last month, called "The Dying Fields," claimed that one farmer commits suicide in Vidarbha every eight hours.

But let's not be so pessimistic for a moment, and say that Iraqi farmers see the risks of investing in unproven GM seeds. Let's say they reject the idea that the intellectual property buried inside the seeds they plant is "owned" not by nature, but by Monsanto. Let's say they decide to keep on keeping on with nonengineered, nonpatented agriculture.

The fact is, they may not have a choice.

Here is where Order 81 starts to look a lot like the forced and mandatory GM-driven agricultural system that cynics tagged it as when it was first announced. Read the letter of the law, and the impact of Order 81 seems limited to using public policy to construct an architecture that's simply favorable to a company like Monsanto. The directive promotes a corporate agribusiness model a lot like the one we have in the United States today, but it doesn't really and truly put Monsanto in the driver's seat of that system.

Actually handing the keys to Monsanto is instead biology's job.

Biology -- how so? That's a good question for Percy Schmeiser, the Saskatchewan farmer featured in the film The Future of Food, who found himself tangled with Monsanto in a heated lawsuit over the presence of Roundup® Ready canola plants on the margins of his fields.

The Canadian farmer argued that he had purchased no Monsanto canola seeds, had never planted Monsanto seeds, and was frankly horrified to find that the genetically modified crops had taken hold in his acreage. Perhaps, suggested Schmeiser, the plants in question were the product of a few rogue GM seeds blown from a truck passing by his land?

Monsanto was uninterested in Schmeiser's theory on how the Roundup® Ready plants got there. As far as the company was concerned, Schmeiser was in possession of an agricultural product whose intellectual property belonged to Monsanto. And it didn't matter much how that came to pass.

Monsanto's interpretation of the impact of seed contamination is, of course, a good one if its goal is to eventually own the rights to the world's seed supply. And that goal may well be in sight. In fact, a 2004 study by the Union of Concerned Scientists found that much of the U.S. seed pool is already contaminated by GM seeds. If that contamination continues unabated, eventually much of the world's seeds could labor under patents controlled by one agribusiness or another.

In one agricultural realm like Iraq's, GM contamination could in short order give a company like Monsanto a stranglehold over the market. Post-Order 81 Iraqi farmers who want to resist genetically modified seeds and stick to traditional farming methods may not have that choice. Future generations of Iraqi growers may find that one seed shop in Karbala is selling the same patented seeds as every other shop in town.

And when that happens, what had been a traditional farming community -- where financial risk is divided and genetic diversity multiplied through the simple interactions between neighboring farmers -- finds itself nothing more than the home to lone farmers caught up in the high-stakes world of international agribusiness.

It's a world not unfamiliar to former CPA honcho Bremer, if the company he keeps is any indication. Robert Cohen, author of the book Milk A-Z, talks about the Bush administration as the "Monsanto Cabinet."

Among the many connections between that company and the current White House: Former Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman served on the board of directors of Calgene, a Monsanto subsidiary; one-time Secretary of Defense Don Rumsfeld had an eight-year stint as president of Searle, another Monsanto subsidiary; Clarence Thomas worked as an attorney in Monsanto's pesticide and agriculture division before coming to the Supreme Court as a George H.W. Bush appointee.

Those connections, as much as anything else, might help to explain the impetus behind and timing of Order 81. Let's suppose for a minute that GM-driven globalized agriculture is, indeed, in the long-term best interests of the new Iraq. Even in the best of circumstances, such a significant policy shift in so core an economic sector can be expected to cause short-term pain. When Bremer issued the directive, Iraq was hardly in a good place: It had recently been invaded, its government dismantled. Considering the desperate need for immediate stability in Iraq in April 2004, Order 81 begins to look like the triumph of connections and ideology over clear-headed policymaking.

In India, seed activists like Vandana Shiva are working to weaken the connection between that world of U.S. agribusiness and the farmers in villages and towns across India. Shiva, featured in the PBS special The Dying Fields, implores local farmers to stop forking over their money to commercial seed producers and return to the days of homegrown seeds. While Monsanto sells seeds that become India's corn, rice, potatoes, and tomatoes, it's cotton where Monsanto is king, as Shiva well knows. "You have become addicted to Bt cotton," she chides farmers. Though if the perpetuation of the GMO-seed/crop-failure cycle is any indication, few Indian farmers are listening.

Will Iraqi farmers making their way in the new post-Order 81 agricultural world fare any better? Maybe. Can they manage to reap the benefits of genetically modified farming, trading their newfound dependence on Monsanto and other corporate behemoths for the increased yield their patented and IP-protected seeds promise? Hopefully.

But it's possible that Iraq's farmers will indeed find themselves in the same predicament that India's farmers have ended up in -- a world where growers no longer rely upon their fields and their communities to meet their needs but in a world in which, when hard times strike, the only way out seems like the final exit. A world in which, in a twist perhaps worthy of Shakespeare, the farmer borrows one last time from whatever bank or moneylender will hand over a few last rupees, buys one last bottle of Roundup®, and -- as has happened so many times in India -- ends it all by drinking it down.

Monsanto to the end.

Nancy Scola is a Brooklyn-based writer and chief blogger for Air America. Before focusing fully on writing, Nancy served on Capitol Hill under Rep. Henry Waxman of California and was an aide to former Governor Mark Warner as he explored a run for the presidency.
http://tinyurl.com/34b2wd

Carbon dioxide did not end the last Ice Age

Carbon dioxide did not end the last Ice Age
September 27, 2007

Carbon dioxide did not cause the end of the last ice age, a new study in Science suggests, contrary to past inferences from ice core records.

“There has been this continual reference to the correspondence between CO2 and climate change as reflected in ice core records as justification for the role of CO2 in climate change,” said USC geologist Lowell Stott, lead author of the study, slated for advance online publication Sept. 27 in Science Express.


“You can no longer argue that CO2 alone caused the end of the ice ages.”

Deep-sea temperatures warmed about 1,300 years before the tropical surface ocean and well before the rise in atmospheric CO2, the study found. The finding suggests the rise in greenhouse gas was likely a result of warming and may have accelerated the meltdown – but was not its main cause.

The study does not question the fact that CO2 plays a key role in climate.

“I don’t want anyone to leave thinking that this is evidence that CO2 doesn’t affect climate,” Stott cautioned. “It does, but the important point is that CO2 is not the beginning and end of climate change.”

While an increase in atmospheric CO2 and the end of the ice ages occurred at roughly the same time, scientists have debated whether CO2 caused the warming or was released later by an already warming sea.

The best estimate from other studies of when CO2 began to rise is no earlier than 18,000 years ago. Yet this study shows that the deep sea, which reflects oceanic temperature trends, started warming about 19,000 years ago.

“What this means is that a lot of energy went into the ocean long before the rise in atmospheric CO2,” Stott said.

But where did this energy come from" Evidence pointed southward.

Water’s salinity and temperature are properties that can be used to trace its origin – and the warming deep water appeared to come from the Antarctic Ocean, the scientists wrote.

This water then was transported northward over 1,000 years via well-known deep-sea currents, a conclusion supported by carbon-dating evidence.

In addition, the researchers noted that deep-sea temperature increases coincided with the retreat of Antarctic sea ice, both occurring 19,000 years ago, before the northern hemisphere’s ice retreat began.

Finally, Stott and colleagues found a correlation between melting Antarctic sea ice and increased springtime solar radiation over Antarctica, suggesting this might be the energy source.

As the sun pumped in heat, the warming accelerated because of sea-ice albedo feedbacks, in which retreating ice exposes ocean water that reflects less light and absorbs more heat, much like a dark T-shirt on a hot day.

In addition, the authors’ model showed how changed ocean conditions may have been responsible for the release of CO2 from the ocean into the atmosphere, also accelerating the warming.

The link between the sun and ice age cycles is not new. The theory of Milankovitch cycles states that periodic changes in Earth’s orbit cause increased summertime sun radiation in the northern hemisphere, which controls ice size.

However, this study suggests that the pace-keeper of ice sheet growth and retreat lies in the southern hemisphere’s spring rather than the northern hemisphere’s summer.

The conclusions also underscore the importance of regional climate dynamics, Stott said. “Here is an example of how a regional climate response translated into a global climate change,” he explained.

Stott and colleagues arrived at their results by studying a unique sediment core from the western Pacific composed of fossilized surface-dwelling (planktonic) and bottom-dwelling (benthic) organisms.

These organisms – foraminifera – incorporate different isotopes of oxygen from ocean water into their calcite shells, depending on the temperature. By measuring the change in these isotopes in shells of different ages, it is possible to reconstruct how the deep and surface ocean temperatures changed through time.

If CO2 caused the warming, one would expect surface temperatures to increase before deep-sea temperatures, since the heat slowly would spread from top to bottom. Instead, carbon-dating showed that the water used by the bottom-dwelling organisms began warming about 1,300 years before the water used by surface-dwelling ones, suggesting that the warming spread bottom-up instead.

“The climate dynamic is much more complex than simply saying that CO2 rises and the temperature warms,” Stott said. The complexities “have to be understood in order to appreciate how the climate system has changed in the past and how it will change in the future.”
Source: University of Southern California
http://tinyurl.com/3y9q2o

Interview with a historian of the Knights Templar

Interview with a historian of the Knights Templar
posted: 01 Oct 2007
An Interview with Oddvar Olsen
An exclusive interview with author Oddvar Olsen by Philip Gardiner

1) Well folks, we have here an exclusive interview with Oddvar Olsen of The Templar Papers fame (see http://thetemplebooklet.co.uk/Welcome.htm) and my welcome to you Oddvar and our thanks for giving us your valuable thoughts on the Knights Templar. I wanted to begin with a simple question, but one that seems to be answered in many ways: What were or indeed are, the Knights Templar?

Hi Philip and many thanks for inviting me to do this interview.

Yes, indeed, what should be an easy question to answer is simply not that easy. The reason for this is that contemporary chroniclers did not write much about the Templars, nor are many documents written by the Templars extant. So a degree of debate on what they really ‘were’ is understandable, knowing that historians are still arguing about events that have happened only during the last one hundred years. The Templars were famed in battle, defenders of the ‘truth’ and protectors of pilgrim’s routes to Jerusalem. This is basically how most of the contemporary chroniclers describe them. Were and indeed are they connected with the greatest mysteries in history? Well, as there seldom is smoke without fire, I am at present of the conviction that some of the Templars were adepts of something greater and were not simple Christian knights. Their immense expansion supports this and so does all the fabulous legends surrounding them.

2) Thanks for that. Secondly, there is a question that many of us have and that your all-round knowledge may help us with. Were the Freemasons evolved from the Knights Templar?

We know that at least 2000 Knights Templar slipped away from the schensnals of Philip the Fair in France. As the eradication of the Templar in Britain happened months later, it would not surprise me if they camouflaged themselves and created a new society. The earliest Masonic papers don’t confirm a linage to the Knights Templar, so we can only speculate. The elaborately carved Rosslyn Chapel has been suggested as evidence that the Freemasonic rituals came from the Templars and there are some indications that its builder, William St Clair, may have been privy to Templar heritage. The Templars in Portugal and Spain were not persecuted as most of their brethren had been across Europe, but nowhere is it suggested that Freemasonry came through that line. As of today, I cannot ignore the possibility that Freemasonry arose out of the surviving Templars, but I would like to see further evidence to be able to confirm this.

3) What do you think the true origin and time of the Templars was?

The Knights Templar, were constituted (at least in name) in 1118 or 1119, and most of the Templars met with an horrific death after being imprisoned by the King of France in 1307. I am of the opinion that if the Templars were created earlier, just before or during the First Crusade would most likely have been the period. This is because the families involved amongst the ‘original’ nine knights were closely related to Godfrey de Bouillon. A document called The Larmenius Charter claims a list of Grand Masters that succeeded Jaques de Molay after his death in 1314 until the present day. However, much debate has ensued and we still do not know if it is reliable or a forgery.

4) Why do you think the Templars were eradicated (supposedly) in the 14th century?

King Philip the Fair of France was afraid of the popularity and power the Knights Templar possessed. The king being bankrupt, the dissolution of the Templars was generated simply by greed and to secure and strengthen his own position and kingdom. Not at all an unusual thing to do, the Cathars had suffered a similar fate only a few years earlier, and so had many other ‘heretical sects’ done before them. For the people with power to dissolve opposing groupings was not unusual then, nor is it today.

5) Do you think the Priory of Sion is a real secret society and if so was it really connected to the Knights Templar?

Yes, I think the Priory is a real secret society, but not as described in The Da Vinci Code or The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail. If such a powerful society has existed for as long as Dan Brown and the authors of The Holy Blood Holy Grail suggest, and had had as its members the elite of intellectuality throughout history, it strikes me as highly unlikely indeed that the Priory would impart their mission and secrets to any author. One would have thought that there were and are other more powerful people in the world that would have been more beneficial for the Priory’s alleged agendas, or maybe not, when one consider how many people that has read The Da Vinci Code! Claims made that the Templars were a branch of ‘The Priory of Sion’ is as doubtful as the Dossiers claiming so. I think all evidence we possess today confirms that this ancient lineage was but a fantasy of Pierre Plantard.

6) Were the Templars involved in the Jesus and Mary marriage concept of Dan Brown, Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln et al?

Hm, I not sure yet – As Bernard of Clairvaux, the main promulgator and patron of the Templars, was clearly very dedicated to the Sacred feminine and by the numerous dedications to the Magdalene in the Templar Rule, it is still an open issue that I am still investigating.

7) Were the Knights Templar Gnostics and if so what do you think of their connections to the Sufi Order?

Well, I do think that the Templars favoured Gnostic visions and also that the Templars took on Sufi principles. However, it is important to clearly differentiate between those three orders.

8) What do you think of the myriad modern day Templar organizations?

As there are so many neo-Templar organisations it is difficult to answer this question directly. From extreme neo-nazi Templar orders that I don’t think offer much personal progress or do much positive for mankind in general, whilst there are other modern Templar organisations that have built their society on chivalric principles, brotherly love and charity. And I think if more people subscribed to these principles, the world would surely be a much better place to live.

9) And finally why do you think your book The Templar Papers excels from the plethora of Templar books published over the last years?

I think its strengths lie in that it is a compilation of articles by various accomplished historians. This offers the reader a selection of theories and facts on the Templar order’s history, its legends and mythos. It also covers a range of subjects that are often overlooked in other books. The Temple, which The Templar Papers is a compilation of, is renowned for being a melting pot of the latest theories and historical facts, furthermore, it has no agendas apart from bringing understanding on all aspects of the Templars legacy. History needs to be revised as new evidence is found - and this is something that The Temple constantly does.
http://tinyurl.com/ynl3tk

User Status

Du bist nicht angemeldet.

Visitors

Suchen (scroll down)

Benutzen Sie die untere Suchfunktion für über 3150 Beiträge!

Aktuelle Beiträge

NEA Resolutions Promote...
NEA Resolutions Promote the Gay Agenda September 22,...
bin66 - 8. Nov, 00:17
Holocaust awareness group...
Holocaust awareness group criticizes Hezbollah 2009-11-05 Assoc iated...
bin66 - 7. Nov, 00:06
Ahmadinejad appoints...
Ahmadinejad appoints leading anti-Semite as new official...
bin66 - 7. Nov, 00:05
One Flu Over the Ukraine's...
One Flu Over the Ukraine's Nest November 03, 2009 By...
bin66 - 6. Nov, 00:03
Israel seizes ship, says...
Israel seizes ship, says Iran weapons aboard November...
bin66 - 5. Nov, 00:12
Are Populations Being...
Are Populations Being Primed For Nano-Microchips Inside...
bin66 - 4. Nov, 07:49
Manufacturers of Swine...
Manufacturers of Swine Flu vaccine who have immunity Pfizer...
bin66 - 3. Nov, 00:23
How best to understand...
How best to understand racism October 31, 2009 By Tim...
bin66 - 2. Nov, 00:21
Waco Siege “Enforcer”...
Waco Siege “Enforcer” To Rule Over Global...
bin66 - 2. Nov, 00:19
The 'Third "Templars"
The 'Third "Templars" Oct. 26, 2009 THE JERUSALEM POST It's...
bin66 - 2. Nov, 00:16
Soros: China Will Lead...
Soros: China Will Lead New World Order October 28,...
bin66 - 1. Nov, 00:17
Germany: Crypt and Drama
GERMANY: CRYPT AND DRAMA Sun, 18 Oct 2009 by Constantin...
bin66 - 31. Okt, 00:32
Is New York Facing a...
Is New York Facing a Financial China Syndrome? 01,...
bin66 - 30. Okt, 00:04
WHO memos 1972 explains...
WHO memos 1972 explains how to turn vaccines into a...
bin66 - 29. Okt, 00:26
Fascist-Zionist Coalition...
Fascist-Zionist Coalition in Italy Fascists and Zionists...
bin66 - 28. Okt, 00:35
Fed Plans to Vet Banker...
Fed Plans to Vet Banker Pay to Discourage Risky Practices October...
bin66 - 27. Okt, 00:07
Obama ruft nationalen...
JETZT GEHT’S LOS – OBAMA RUFT NATIONALEN...
bin66 - 26. Okt, 00:08
Argentina: UFO Emerges...
Argentina: UFO Emerges from River at Punta Piedras Date:...
bin66 - 25. Okt, 00:16
Russia 'needs to be'...
Russia 'needs to be' ready for 'large-scale conflicts' 23...
bin66 - 24. Okt, 00:30
UN study: Think upgrade...
UN study: Think upgrade before buying a new PC March...
bin66 - 23. Okt, 00:18

Suchfunktion

Benutzen Sie die Suche! (über 3150 Beiträge)

Suchen

 

Online-Übersetzung

Wetter

Das Wetter in Oldenburg


Temperatur: 10 C
UV Index: 0
Luftfeuchte: 76 %
Sichtweite: 10.0 km
Luftdruck: 1009.1 mb
Windstärke: 5 km/h

Weather data provided by weather.com

Archiv

Oktober 2007
Mo
Di
Mi
Do
Fr
Sa
So
13
 
 
 
 
 

Counter

stats7697

Credits

Knallgrau New Media Solutions - Web Agentur für neue Medien

powered by Antville powered by Helma

twoday.net AGB