what internet

ONENESS, On truth connecting us all: https://patents.google.com/patent/US7421476B2

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Fw: Global Diversity. PedalPub. Graduate Tampa Bay.

The fastest way to shift things is to get involved!!!!

New Feedback On Downtown Tampa Masterplan!
Downtown Tampa Masterplan [support@mindmixer.com]
Sent: Tuesday, May 08, 2012 10:07 AM

Hello,

There has been new feedback on "Students Taking an Active Role in Society" idea.

To view it, go to:
http://www.youinvisiontampa.com/tampa-florida-improve-jobs-downtown-and-surrounding-neighborhoods/students-taking-an-active-role-in-society

Thanks for making your community better. Have a great day!

Thank you,
The MindMixer Team

--
http://mindmixer.com
http://www.youinvisiontampa.com


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Monday, May 07, 2012 | Follow Us:
visit: www.83degreesmedia.com
PedalPub St. Pete rolls to a stop as pedestrians and a horse carriage pass by. - Julie Busch Branama

Online Magazine for the Week May 8, 2012

Features

Not Your Average Speakers: Global Diversity, 83 Degrees

By Diane Egner
Saturday, May 05, 2012
Art, music, culture, food, perspectives, context, traditions, visions. The list goes on when it comes to the importance of global diversity to a community. But did you know that diversity also is a key indicator of economic success throughout history? Let's talk about it on May 17 with "Not Your Average Speakers.''

Photo Slideshow: PedalPub, St. Petersburg

By Julie Busch Branaman
Tuesday, May 08, 2012
Can you work off the belly without giving up the beer? Maybe. Try exploring downtown St. Pete atop PedalPub, a moving tap powered by your own two feet and a round of beer. Shots, anyone?

Graduate Tampa Bay: Alistair Glover, St. Petersburg College

By Megan Hendricks
Tuesday, May 08, 2012
Alistair Glover is among college students earning degrees that will count toward Graduate Tampa Bay's efforts to win the Talent Dividend, a $1 million national prize. Glover is a student at St. Petersburg College.

Saratopia Rivals Portlandia For Laughs, Sarasota

By Megan Voeller
Tuesday, May 01, 2012
Saratopia pokes fun at Sarasota for being uncool in the same vein that Portlandia mocks Portland for being hyper-hip. The lovingly comedic webisode series was launched by serial entrepreneur Rich Swier, Jr., one of the founders of the HuB.

"Hold My Paw'': St. Pete Puppy's Story Aids PARC

By Missy Kavanaugh
Tuesday, May 01, 2012
Proceeds from Hold My Paw, a fully illustrated children's book about Snapper, a yellow Lab, who overcomes illness and his fear of injections, will go to PARC, a Pinellas County provider of services for children and adults facing physical and mental challenges.

In The News

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A Focus On: KidsBay

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Featured Places

Land O' Lakes

Once considered simply a bedroom community for Tampa workers, Land O' Lakes has been steadily growing into a full-fledged place to stick around to live, work and play. Since 2000, new businesses have sprouted up, many family-owned and offering specialty services and products. Recent real estate developments include both commercial parks and luxury estate communities, such as Plantation Palms, Ballantrae and Connerton.  

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Monday, May 07, 2012

Blogger threatened with jail

Blogger threatened with jail for writing on health

By Jack Minor

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buster-keaton-jail
By Jack Minor
A blogger in North Carolina has been threatened with jail time for “practicing nutrition without a license” by writing about his experiences with diabetes and telling readers what types of food he was eating.
 
It was in January when the North Carolina Board of Dietetics and Nutrition told blogger Steve Cooksey, who writes at diabetes-warrior.net, that it was investigating him for providing nutrition care services without a license.

Cooksey was accused of violating Chapter 90, Article 25 of the North Carolina General Statutes, which makes it a misdemeanor to “practice dietetics or nutrition” without state permission – a license. According to the law, “practicing” nutrition includes “assessing the nutritional needs of individuals and groups” and “providing nutrition counseling.”

In February 2009, after being hospitalized with diabetes and wanting to avoid the fate of his grandmother who eventually died from the disease, Cooksey decided to embrace the low-carb, high-protein Paleo, or “caveman,” diet.

As a result of the diet, he was drug- and insulin-free within 30 days. By May of that year, he had lost 45 pounds and decided to start a blog in which he would write about his success.

In January, Cooksey received a call from the director of the nutrition board telling him he was not allowed to offer nutrition advice without a license and that his website was being investigated. He was also told that if he did not comply with the “suggestions” in a 19-page report, his website could be shut down and he could be sentenced to up to 120 days in jail.

The first page of the report shows Cooksey responding to an email he received from a person who is concerned about a friend that has diabetes. In the response he says, “Your friend must first and foremost obtain and maintain normal blood sugars.”

The official hand wrote a note in the column saying “assessing and advising requires a license.”
When Cooksey provided a list of what he eats as part of his diet, he was told, “It is acceptable to provide just this information, but when you start recommending it directly to people you speak to or write to you, you are now providing diabetic counseling which requires a license.”

In a statement on his blog site, Cooksey said that in response to the investigation he stopped writing his published advice column, took down his diabetes support packages and made the disclaimer more prominent.

The steps appear to have satisfied government officials, who announced April 9 they were closing the case.

However, Cooksey says he does not consider the issue to be over.

“All this means is that the board has violated my First Amendment rights by silencing me in altering how I express my opinions. My compliance is compliance with their violation of my rights, not an agreement between us that I was wrong and they were right,” he said. “I have absolutely no intention of complying with the board’s violation of my free speech rights. I intend to defend those rights, not only for myself, but for everyone.

“This is America and America people should be free to give each other advice about things like diet.”
He went on to say the letter sent by the board threatened to keep monitoring his website.
Charla Burrill, executive director for the NCBDN, confirmed to WND that the case was closed. However, she claimed the reports of threatening him with jail time were false, saying the board has no authority to criminalize any actions taken by Cooksey.

“By law, if a person has violated Chapter 90, Article 25 of the North Carolina General Statutes, the NCBDN may report such an action to a local prosecutor, however, it would be the prosecutor’s decision whether or not to seek a misdemeanor charge,” Burrill said.

Coincidentally, just a day earlier, a new report from the New England Journal of Medicine revealed that diabetes in America’s young people is linked to obesity.

It was the first large study of Type 2 diabetes in children, Dr. Robin Goland of the Naomi Berrie Diabetes Center at Columbia University said, because the disease previously has not been prevalent in children.

“The report documented that as obesity problems grow in children, so does the probability of diabetes.
The actions against Cooksey are part of a growing trend by government officials to crack down on any groups or persons that offer alternatives to traditional medical treatment.

In 2010, the FDA raided the offices of Daniel Chapter One, a Christian ministry that promotes a diet based on the bible chapter that is its namesake after a federal judge refused to allow the FTC to level a massive fine against the company.

“They came in screaming and hollering, ‘This is a raid, hands up.’ I saw a gun in my face,” said Jim Feijo, founder of the company.

“They patted Jim down and removed him from the office. They didn’t show me a warrant. They came in very aggressively, that was needless,” said Tricia Feijo, Jim’s wife and partner and a trained homeopath.

“They locked us out of the building and for the next four hours they went through everything. They took personal correspondence, they took phone records. It’s so over the top that they’re going through personal e-mail to see if I told a friend how to use a certain product, or told somebody what they could do for an illness.”

The Supreme Court declined to take up a case over whether the Feijo’s rights were violated or not.
Under Obamacare, the FDA has determined that a person’s own body is considered a drug and subject to regulation.

The Centeno-Schultz clinic in Denver pioneered Regenexx, a treatment in which a patient’s stem cells are removed, cultivated for two weeks in a lab then re-injected back into the body. The procedure is used to treat patients with knee injuries, partial rotator cuff tears in the shoulder and lower back disc bulges.

In 2008, the FDA informed Dr. Christopher Centeno that it considered the stem cells to be a drug and subsequently stopped the clinic from cultivating patients’ stem cells.

“You have the right to go to a doctor and have stem cells taken out and put back in your body that’s between you and me, it’s not the business of the federal government” Centeno said.
He said the ramifications are frightening.

“Under this logic, a doctor seeing a patient with high cholesterol may no longer be able to recommend fish oil as that is not an approved drug by the federal government.”

In another case involving raw milk, a federal court judge said that Americans “do not have a fundamental right to consume the milk from their own cow,” and they “do not have a fundamental right to produce and consume the foods of their choice.”

The FDA has even suggested that bottled water when used to treat dehydration should be regulated as a drug. Under the organization’s “Complementary and Alternative Medicine Products and Their Regulation by the Food and Drug Administration,” the agency said it should have the authority to regulate all vitamins, supplements, herbs and other natural substances, including water when used to “treat” dehydration.

Friday, May 04, 2012

This Weekend's 'Supermoon' Will be Year's Largest

how can you call this science?
On March 11, 2011 the Japan Earthquake hit

This Weekend's 'Supermoon' Will be Year's Largest | Supermoon Full Moon | Space.com: Though the unusual appearance of this month's full moon may be surprising to some, there's no reason for alarm, scientists warn. The slight distance difference isn't enough to cause any earthquakes or extreme tidal effects, experts say.

However, the normal tides around the world will be particularly high and low. At perigee, the moon will exert about 42 percent more tidal force than it will during its next apogee two weeks later, Rao said.

The last supermoon occurred in March 2011.

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how can 42% increased tidal force NOT be significant??

the Volume of Earth's Oceans: Volume in Thousands of Cubic Kilometers of water the Oceans is 1,310,302 Thousand KM3 is salty sea water. That's 1000kg per km3...  and moving this force 42% more is a big deal, look water a 2m wave can do:

here is the Japanese tsunami debris? Only the albatrosses know

A wave approaches Miyako City, Japan after the magnitude 8.9 earthquake struck the area March 11, 2011. Photo credit: Kordian
The earthquake analysis – released in January 2012 – came from the Center for Disaster Management and Risk Reduction (CEDIM) in Germany. According to their report, earthquakes and their consequences, including tsunamis and landslides, caused damages of $365 billion U.S. dollars. More than half of that was from the March 2011 Tohuku earthquake and tsunami.
According to the CEDIM report, in 2011, over 20,000 people died and about a million people lost their homes globally, due to earthquakes and their effects. The two countries hit hardest by earthquakes were New Zealand, with a large earthquake near Christchurch in February, 2011 – and Japan. In 2011, the earthquakes and their aftereffects destroyed or damaged more than 1.7 million buildings globally. Of these, Japan had more than one million damaged buildings.


Saturday, when the "supermoon" swings within 221,802 miles (356,955 kilometers) of Earth — its closest approach of the entire year. Because the moon's orbit is not exactly circular, there is a 3-percent variation in its closest approaches to Earth each month. The average Earth-moon distance is about 230,000 miles (384,400 km).

that's 27,445 km closer to the earth?  Mount Everest/  Sagarmatha / Chomolungma is only 8,848m high, not 8,848km, but only 8km - - that's 3430 Mount Everest s closer to earth moving the water here

Ocean - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

The area of the World Ocean is 361 million square kilometres (139 million square miles)[14] Its volume is approximately 1.3 billion cubic kilometres (310 million cu mi).[6] This can be thought of as a cube of water with an edge length of 1,111 kilometres (690 mi). Its average depth is 3,790 metres (12,430 ft), and its maximum depth is 10,923 metres (6.787 mi)[14] Nearly half of the world's marine waters are over 3,000 metres (9,800 ft) deep.[9] The vast expanses of deep ocean (anything below 200 metres (660 ft)) cover about 66% of the Earth's surface.[15] This does not include seas not connected to the World Ocean, such as the Caspian Sea.

The total mass of the hydrosphere is about 1,400,000,000,000,000,000 metric tons (1.5×1018 short tons) or 1.4×1021 kg, which is about 0.023 percent of the Earth's total mass. Less than 3 percent is freshwater; the rest is saltwater, mostly in the ocean.
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how can you say that 42% more motion of this mass will have no effect?