Earth Changes
In light of this quote, had Monsanto been around during Roosevelt's time, he would not have taken too kindly to their business strategy. After all, in 2007, 176 million lbs of an extremely toxic herbicide known as glyphosate,1 first created by Monsanto, was sprayed onto the soil (and everything standing between it) in this country, with untold environmental and human health fallout.
Untold, that is, until now...
Roundup (Glyphosate): The Science Vs. Marketing
2011 was a watershed year, as far as scientific revelations into the nature and extent of the damage associated with glyphosate-based herbicide usage and exposure is concerned.
An accumulating body of peer-reviewed and published research now indicates glyphosate may be contributing to several dozen adverse health effects in exposed populations.
The Fukushima Diary reports a survey of Tokyo Bay being performed by Kinki University scientists shows level of radioactive contaminates on the bottom of Tokyo bay is steadily.
In samples of mud take 5 centimeters deep at 36 different points the latest survey showed 511 Bq/Kg of average Cesium contamination.
That represents a sharp increase from a survey taken last August which averaged 308 Bq/Kg and another taken in October which measured 476 Bq/Kg.
Saturday, March 03, 2012 at 12:19:55 UTC
Saturday, March 03, 2012 at 11:19:55 PM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location
22.157°S, 170.317°E
Depth
15.2 km (9.4 miles)
Region
SOUTHEAST OF THE LOYALTY ISLANDS
Distances
180 km (111 miles) W of Ile Hunter, Loyalty Isl., New Caledonia
260 km (161 miles) ESE of Tadine, Loyalty Islands, New Caledonia
399 km (247 miles) E of NOUMEA, New Caledonia
1686 km (1047 miles) NNW of Auckland, New Zealand
A group of scientists has released a report condemning a Carleton University professor who taught a course centred on the idea that climate change is not caused by human emissions.
Tom Harris taught Climate Change: An Earth Sciences Perspective to mostly second-year non-science students between 2009 and 2011.
The Committee for the Advancement of Scientific Skepticism says in its report entitled Climate Change Denial in the Classroom that Harris hosted speakers who argued that climate change is not caused by humans but hosted "no scientist speaking to the generally accepted consensus."
The authors note that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has fingered green-house gas emissions as the "unequivocal" cause of global warming observed since the 1950s.
Windsor-West MP Brian Masse brought up the issue during a business trip in Washington, D.C., this week, where he met with Michigan Congressman John Dingell.
The noise, which sounds like an idling semi truck, started in February 2011.
Government officials and a consultant hired by the city of River Rouge, Mich., admitted late last year the rumbles and vibrations are an airborne sound wave originating from the vicinity of Zug Island, which is home to several industries on the U.S. side of the Detroit River.
Comment: Read The Cs Hit List 06: Let's Do the Planetary Twist to the Tune of the Brothers Heliopolis to learn more about the mysterious noises all over the world.
Israel- Heavy snow fell in the Jerusalem area on Friday, and for the first time in four years, parts of Jerusalem were white with snow.
Snow fell in Ramot, Givat Ze'ev and Har Gilo, and three centimeters of snow fall were reported.
The Jerusalem municipality, which had prepared for the weather conditions in recent days, was due to clear snow from the streets of Jerusalem on Friday.
Snow also fell in the Golan Heights in the early hours of Friday morning, and classes were canceled in the Golan and in the area around Safad because of the weather. Safad area residents were also asked not to drive by the municipality, and there was no public transport in the area.
Cold and stormy weather swept through Israel since Tuesday, and Friday was expected to be the coldest day of the year.

Jerry Vonderhaar, left, comforts Charles Kellogg after severe weather hit the Eagle Point subdivision in Limestone County, Ala. on Friday, March 2, 2012. A reported tornado destroyed several houses in northern Alabama as storms threatened more twisters across the region Friday
From the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes, the storms touched nearly all walks of life. A fire station was flattened. Roofs were ripped off schools. A prison fence was knocked down and scores of homes and businesses were destroyed. At least 28 people were killed, including 14 in Indiana and 12 in Kentucky, and dozens of others were hurt in the second deadly tornado outbreak this week.
It wasn't immediately clear how many people were missing.
The threat of tornadoes was expected to last until late Friday for parts of Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana and Ohio. Forecasters at the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center said the massive band of storms put 10 million people at high risk of dangerous weather.
"We knew this was coming. We were watching the weather like everyone else," said Clark County, Ind., Sheriff Danny Rodden. "This was the worst case scenario. There's no way you can prepare for something like this."
In Henryville, the scene was eerie and somewhat chaotic. Cell phones and landlines were not working. Hundreds of firefighters and police zipped around town. Power lines were down and cars were flipped over. People walked down the street with shopping carts full of water and food, handing it out to whoever was in need.
A substantial, possible multiple vortex tornado was on the ground near Henryville around 3:30 ET Friday. Affiliate WAVE 3 is reporting one person has died there.
The storm is just the latest in a series of dangerous weather systems that have swept across the eastern part of the U.S. just two days after another storm system killed 13 people in the Midwest.
Search and rescue efforts are under way in two counties in Alabama as more severe weather heads toward Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio. The storm system was taking aim at Lexington, KY, and Cincinnati, OH, on Friday afternoon.
There are "critical" injuries in the Chattanooga, TN, area. Hamilton County Emergency Management report 6-10 people have been transported to local hospitals and that officials set up a triage area to treat patients on-site in Ooltewah, a suburb of Chattanooga.
The damage covered a 4 to 5 mile swath in northern Madison County, Paige Colburn, emergency management officer at the Huntsville-Madison County Emergency Management Agency, told msnbc.com.
"The reason that it is so wide is because we're not talking about one tornado, we're talking about a very large super cell that spawned several smaller tornadoes and there's possibly one very large one in there, too," she said.
Buckhorn High School was hit and has reported minor damage to the roof. Students sheltered at the school and there were no injuries reported. Some 17,000 people in the county are without power, but that was possibly a low estimate, Colburn said.
"Temporary shelter is being setup," Colburn said. "The storm has passed the county, thank goodness, and we are now working on response/recovery, life-saving and property-saving procedures," she added.

The single-celled organism Stensioeina beccariiformis survived the mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs but went extinct 56 million years ago, when the oceans acidified due to a massive carbon dioxide release.
The oceans are becoming more acidic faster than they have in the past 300 million years, a period that includes four mass extinctions, researchers have found.
Then, as is happening now, increases in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere warmed the planet and made the oceans more acidic. These changes are associated with major shifts in climate and mass extinctions.
But while past increases in the atmosphere's carbon dioxide levels resulted from volcanoes and other natural causes, today that spike is due to human activities, the scientists note.
Comment: This is a total lie. The increase in carbon dioxide is coming from changes in the solar system that include all the other planets and is being released from Earth itself. The amount of carbon dioxide produced by humans is a minimal contribution to the effect.
"What we're doing today really stands out," lead researcher Bärbel Hönisch, a paleoceanographer at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, said in a news release. "We know that life during past ocean acidification events was not wiped out - new species evolved to replace those that died off. But if industrial carbon emissions continue at the current pace, we may lose organisms we care about - coral reefs, oysters, salmon."
Comment: Not to mention stupid humans who can't even get the science right.













Comment: It is quite ironic that this committee calls itself "The Committee for the Advancement of Scientific Skepticism while it attacks a scientist to defend a belief in a "consensus.
For a more informative perspective on the global warming debate and what is really coming our way see: Forget About Global Warming: We're One Step From Extinction!