Society's Child
A 2008 health law passed in Brussels limits the amount of cinnamon allowed in "everyday baked goods" to 15mg per kg of food.
The measure, following consultation with the European Food Safety Authority, aims to limit intake of coumarin, a naturally-occurring toxic chemical found in the most commonly used cinnamon, cassia.

A rally in September in Austin, Tex., before a State Board of Education public hearing on proposed science textbooks.
The debate over the Pearson Biology textbook was the latest episode of a lengthy battle by evangelicals in Texas to insert Christian and Biblical teachings into public school textbooks.
Two years ago, conservatives pushed for changes in history textbooks, including one that would have downplayed Thomas Jefferson's role in American history for his support of the separation of church and state. That effort was unsuccessful.
The second-most populous U.S. state, Texas influences textbook selections for schools nationwide.
In the case of the biology book, an unidentified volunteer reviewer complained to the Texas State Board of Education that it presents evolution as scientific fact rather than a theory, which conflicts with the creation story written in the Book of Genesis in the Bible.
According to police reports, the woman - who is Lebanese and was wearing a headscarf - pulled into Bill and Ruth's Deli. When she exited her vehicle, Stuart Manning began to berate her for having parked too close to his Jeep.
"Hey, you f***ing b***h Muslim, why did you get so close to my car?" he reportedly said. She claims he followed her to the door of the restaurant yelling, "Muslim b***h!" As she entered the store, she says she observed Manning crouching by her car.
Francis meet with 120 superiors general of men's religious orders at the Vatican in November. His comments were published Friday by La Civiltà Cattolica, a Rome-based Jesuit weekly.
"I am convinced of one thing: the great changes in history were realized when reality was seen not from the center but rather from the periphery," the pope said.
To look at something from the periphery, the pope explained, meant analyzing reality through a variety of viewpoints, rather than filtering all experience through a centralized ideology.
"It is not a good strategy to be at the center of a sphere," he said. "To understand we ought to move around, to see reality from various viewpoints. We ought to get used to thinking."

Penny Trusty, a retired software designer, poses for a photo in her home in Rockville, Md., Thursday, Dec. 26, 2013.
The poll conducted by Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research said 54 percent of those surveyed expect American life to go downhill by 2050. Fifty-four percent of respondents said life in the United States is worse today than four decades ago when asked to rate the change in American life from 1972 until 2012.
According to the survey, 23 percent think life will improve and 21 percent predict life will remain the same. Middle-aged, older, and those who earn mid-level incomes are pessimistic about the future.
"I really worry about my grandchildren, I do," said 74-year-old Penny Trusty of Rockville, Md., a retired software designer and grandmother of five. "I worry about the lowering of morals and the corruption and the confusion that's just raining down on them."
The music blog Slipped Disc reported that Boujemaa Razgui - whom it described as a "flute virtuoso" - had built all of the instruments by hand.
Razgui, a Canadian citizen and native of Morocco who holds a U.S. Green Card, was returning home to New York from Morocco over the Christmas holiday when Customs agents opened his luggage for inspection.
"I told them I had these instruments for many years and flew with them in and out," he told Slipped Disc on Tuesday. "There were 11 instruments in all. They told me they were agricultural products and they had to be destroyed. There was nothing I could do. The ney flute can be made with bamboo. Is that agricultural?"
"Bouzemaa was both upset and unwilling to risk a confrontation with the US authorities," Slipped Disc reported, adding that the blog had sent the flutist's contact information to major media outlets hoping for wider coverage of the story.
According to WOWK, the shooting occurred in the Comfort area of Boone County on Joe's Creek Road at around 9 a.m.
Investigators believed that the man shot his wife and then turned the gun on himself. The wife was found with at least two gunshot wounds.
"I'm not allowed to have children because I'm a Nazi," said Heath Campbell, 40, to the Daily News. "That's what they're saying. Well, I'll stop making them when they stop taking them."
Campbell first came to national attention in 2008 when a grocery store refused to write "Happy Birthday Adolf Hitler" on a birthday cake for Campbell's son, Adolf Hitler Campbell.
The Nazi-obsessed father of nine has had children with five women but currently has custody of none of them. In addition to Adolf Hitler Campbell, he is the father of girls JoyceLynn Aryan Nation Campbell and Honzlynn Jeannie Campbell and son Heinrich Hons Campbell. Eva Lynn Patricia Braun Campbell was born on November 11.
Paul Elam, founder of the website A Voice For Men, hosted an online discussion Wednesday with his site's editor-in-chief, John Hembling, and feminist critic Karen Straughn to discuss their plan to harass executive director of the Sexual Assault Centre of Edmonton.
"I have looked at a number of cases where people have reported alien abductions were they were prodded and poked and had different orifices in their bodies explored by aliens in spaceships, and a common theme among these is that it turns out, in most of these cases, it was Karen Smith," Elam said. "It wasn't aliens."
The men's rights movement has been angry at Smith since at least this summer, when she helped promote the "Don't Be That Guy" rape prevention campaign that inspired imitators in other cities and a counter campaign blaming women for their own sexual assaults.
Men's rights activists also conspired to shut down a website that allowed the anonymous reporting of sexual assaults by flooding the system with false complaints.

More and more American workers are trapped in supply and subcontracting chains for big and powerful employers.
Move over, farmers, factory workers and technology "creatives" - the emblematic American workers are now low-wage immigrant day laborers and guest workers. More and more, Americans are trapped in the uncertainty and injustice that immigrant workers know all too well, whether they're here on temporary work visas cleaning luxury condos or undocumented and scrambling for daily construction jobs.
Increasingly, from an economic standpoint, office parks and store aisles in America are coming to resemble the street corners where day laborers gather and the labor camps where guest workers are trapped. We can either continue to pretend that low-wage immigrant workers are on the fringes of our economy - that their problems are theirs alone - or we can face the fact that their conditions are what we're all moving toward, and what millions of US-born workers already face.
Immigrant workers have long experienced vulnerability and instability, and have long been treated as disposable by their employers. Today, roughly one-third of American jobs are part-time, contract or otherwise "contingent." And the number of contingent workers in the United States is expected to grow by more than one-third over the next four years. That means more and more families are without the benefits of full-time work, such as health insurance, pensions or 401(k)s. And more of us are without the employment certainty that leads to economic stability at home - and to the consumer spending that drives the economy.












Comment: Take a good look around. America is already sliding swiftly down that slippery slope.