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Current News France

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    • France's model heath care for new mommies

      Morning Edition, July 10, 2008 · Mary Lou Sarazin went to Paris to teach. When the job ended, she was newly married to a French husband and pregnant. Her visa had expired, however, and she couldn't renew it right away, so she returned to New York a little over a year ago to finish graduate school and have the baby.

      Sarazin, 34, has since received health care in both France and the United States. Her experience has given her a firsthand look into why France has earned a reputation for being a good place to be pregnant and have a child.

      In New York, pregnant and unable to find work, Sarazin couldn't find health insurance that she could afford. Eventually, she did get limited coverage through New York Medicaid, the state program for the poor and uninsured, but it only covered her prenatal and hospital care. Once the baby was born, she would be uninsured again.

      "I just felt like when I was in New York, it was always stress, stress, stress," she says. "I just didn't like the care I was receiving. And I didn't want to stress out about something I shouldn't have to stress out, not at the time of my pregnancy."

      ----WAY more at the link. You may choose to read it or listen. It clocks in at 8 minutes. It's a great article and gives way to thinking. I believe that every Country has something uniquely awesome about them that if all countries took something from each other the world would most defiantly become better....and in this case the French know their mommies.
      Morning Edition, July 10, 2008 · Mary Lou Sarazin went to Paris to teach. When the job ended, she was newly married to a French husban... more

      J_Jammer

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      32 responses

      15 hours ago
    • The Art Pack ~ Meets modern new people

      A project envisaged and curated by Jean-François Sanz (head of cultural projects agnès b.)
      Between the late 70s and mid-80s in France, a prolific and chaotic music scene that combined the energy of rock-n-roll, punk nihilism and electronic experimentation.

      A kind of hope and frenzied vitality could also be detected during these years. A breed
      of modernist utopia, which was sometimes wilfully ironic, fed them both. A whole segment of, they were nonetheless resistant to the post-Hippie utopias of the previous generation. In search of an identity, they recognised themselves in the dark lyrics, the

      cold synthetic music and the laid-back attitude of the new groups hatching all over the country, as much in the provinces as in Paris.


      With the benefit of thirty years’ hindsight, the “Mödern Young People” project reactivates this post-punk/novo diskö/French new & cold wave scene, through an exhibition, a book, an audio compilation, and a documentary film. One of the project’s ambitions is to highlight a cross-section of the specific creative diversity of this scene. It does so by engaging with the music produced by this scene, but also with the aesthetics and the attitudes.





      The Art Pack Thanks: Agnès b., Jean-François Sanz, Marie Schneier, Annie Maurette, Yann Le Marec, Gilles Le Guen, Les éditions Naïve (Laurence Patrice et Corinne Stenneler), Maripol, Patrick Vidal, Pierre René-Worms, Dominique Fury, Patrick Eudeline, Claude Arto, Gilles Riberolles, Laurent Fétis, J-B Guillot & Born Bad Records,



      Directed & Produced by The Art Pack:

      - Vincent Tajan

      - Victor Lech

      - Pierre Zandrowicz



      - Book and audio cd compilation produced by agnès b. / Naïve.

      - Vinyl compilation produced by Born Bad Records.

      - Documentary directed by Emmanuel Bovet and Jean-François Sanz, produced by Love

      Streams / agnès b.

      www.theartpack.fr

      www.agnesb.com

      www.myspace.com/deseunesgensmodernes

      www.naive.fr
      A project envisaged and curated by Jean-François Sanz (head of cultural projects agnès b.) ... more

      FatCat_Films

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      3 responses

      18 days ago
    • US quits Human Rights Council?

      Excerpt:

      Eric Sottas, director of the International Organisation against Torture sees it as a a political gesture. “The US has always clearly shown its opposition to the Council. This is a slightly more public way of putting pressure on it in order to raise the stakes. What is more the Bush dynasty is coming to the end of its mandate,” he said. “It reminds me of the time when the Nixon administration, which backed Pinochet in Chile, chastized the UN for criticising the Chilean dictator. But when Carter was elected in 1977, the American government took the floor at the Human Rights Commission to ask forgiveness. After a presidency like that of Bush, you can expect some important changes in US policy on human right.”
      Excerpt: ... more

      Vierotchka

      added this

      70 responses

      3 days ago
    • Toxic ocean

      An island of plastic and trash, the size of TEXAS floats in your ocean. If this doesn't make you stop using plastic, I don't know what will. Please, stop using disposable water bottles, and stop using plastic bags.

      Here are the best alternatives I've found:
      http://www.amazon.com/WaterPik-F-5-Faucet-Water-Filter/... Or one like it...

      And reusable bags for groceries:
      http://www.amazon.com/Reusable-Grocery-World-Thanks-Pri...
      (you can also buy them CHEAP from Trader Joes and Ralphs)

      PLEASE PASS THIS ON! Thanks!
      An island of plastic and trash, the size of TEXAS floats in your ocean. If this doesn't make you stop using plastic, I don'... more

      onechance

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      32 responses

      4 days ago
    • Five cool ways to turn trash into treasure

      "When we think of waste, we don’t usually think utility. Yet, as we face droughts, limited landfill space, and depleting natural resources, we’ve been forced to reconsider our castoffs, with interesting results. These five case studies show that with innovation and a little planning, our dumps, sewers, and piles of manure are not necessarily the end of the line. Instead, they’re just the beginning. " "When we think of waste, we don’t usually think utility. Yet, as we face droughts, limited landfill space, and depleting natural ... more

      lemonsun12

      added this

      11 responses

      9 days ago
    • Global damage and its impact on the poor

      Damage to forests, rivers, marine life and other aspects of nature could halve living standards for the world's poor, a major report has concluded.

      Current rates of natural decline might reduce global GDP by about 7% by 2050.
      Damage to forests, rivers, marine life and other aspects of nature could halve living standards for the world's poor, a major rep... more

      April_5210

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      1 response

      2 months ago
    • Satellite images show Papua New Guinea deforestation at critical level

      The forests of Papua New Guinea are being chopped down so quickly that more than half its trees could be lost by 2021, according to a new satellite study of the region.

      The study, by the University of Papua New Guinea and the Australian National University, found that deforestation is much more widespread than was previously thought, even in so-called conservation areas. Papua New Guinea (PNG) has the world's third largest tropical forest, but it was being cleared or degraded at a rate of 362,000 hectares (895,000 acres) a year in 2001, the report said.

      Phil Shearman, lead author of the study, said: "The unfortunate reality is that forests in Papua New Guinea are being logged repeatedly and wastefully with little regard for the environmental consequences and with at least the passive complicity of government authorities." The destruction will drive global warming, because tropical forests are an important store of carbon.

      The researchers compared satellite images taken over three decades from the early 1970s. In 1972, the country had 38m hectares (94m acres), of rainforest covering 82% of the country. About 15% of that was cleared by 2002.

      "For the first time, we have evidence of what's happening in the PNG forests," Shearman said. " The government could make a significant contribution to global efforts to combat climate change. It is in its own interest to do so, as this nation is particularly susceptible to negative effects due to loss of the forest cover."
      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
      WE HAVE TO STOP. We also have to support any tree planting initiative and frankly, I think one should be part of any climate change bill passed in this country.
      The forests of Papua New Guinea are being chopped down so quickly that more than half its trees could be lost by 2021, according to a ... more

      JanforGore

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      12 responses

      4 days ago
    • Amazon Indians lead battle against power giant's plan to flood rainforest

      The Amazonian city of Altamira played host to one of the more uneven contests in recent Brazilian history this week, as a colourful alliance of indigenous leaders gathered to take on the might of the state power corporation and stop the construction of an immense hydroelectric dam on a tributary of the Amazon. By Patrick Cunningham in Altamira, Brazil The Amazonian city of Altamira played host to one of the more uneven contests in recent Brazilian history this week, as a colourful al... more

      lecoke

      added this

      24 responses

      3 days ago
    • Free energy coming? US Patent 7291944 - Electromagnetic engine

      US Patent 7291944 - Electromagnetic engine

      US Patent Issued on November 6, 2007

      The electromagnetic engine operates by having the solenoids receive input power from an external electrical power source and providing output power to the output shaft. The magnets include four outer magnets and four inner magnets. The inner magnets have magnetic forces that oppose the magnetic forces of the outer magnets. Electrical power provided to the solenoids causes the solenoids to oscillate the outer magnets. Springs provide stability and assist the solenoids.

      Once the electromagnetic motor has reached operating speed, it generates sufficient electrical energy to continue driving the electromagnetic motor for a period of time. Input energy can be supplied to the solenoids by an auxiliary electrical generator. However, the efficiency of the electromagnetic motor enables the output shaft to perform useful work. Useful work may be in the form of a mechanical attachment to the output shaft for the purpose of driving an auxiliary mechanical device. Alternatively, an electrical generator may be attached directly to the output shaft to provide electrical output energy to other electrical devices.

      Source: http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/7291944/fulltext.html

      The device shown in the video is different from the listed patent. Though they both share the same approach to harnessing power from magnetic energy.
      US Patent 7291944 - Electromagnetic engine US Patent Issued on November 6, 2007 ... more

      YourMothersMilk

      added this

      25 responses

      6 hours ago
    • It’s the Stupid Politics!

      The world's poor are paying the price for years of bad government policy in agriculture.

      stopnoise

      added this

      1 response

      2 months ago
    • Soaring food prices and the rural poor

      The prices of basic food commodities have increased rapidly over the past three years. In only the first quarter of 2008, wheat and maize prices increased by 130 percent and 30 percent respectively over 2007 figures. Rice prices, while rising moderately in 2006 and more so in 2007, rose 10 percent in February 2008 and a further 10 percent in March 2008. The threat to food security in developing countries increases in stride. Coordinated action by the international community, and by the United Nations in particular, is essential. "Responding effectively to the impact of higher food prices must be a top priority for the global community, particularly when the impact is combined with the projected effects of climate change", says Lennart Båge, IFAD's President. The prices of basic food commodities have increased rapidly over the past three years. In only the first quarter of 2008, wheat and ma... more

      stopnoise

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      0 responses

      1 month ago
    • Investors demand tougher US climate legislation

      An influential coalition of investors has this week called on the US Senate to deliver binding emission reduction targets or risk undermining firms' long-term competitiveness.

      The group of more than 50 institutional investors, including Deutsche Asset Management, F&C Asset Management, and the world's largest hedge fund the Man Group, wrote to senate majority leader Harry Reid and senate minority leader Mitch McConnell, calling for a national climate policy to reduce US greenhouse gas emissions by between 60 and 90 per cent below 1990 levels by 2050.

      The targets are in line with those proposed under the Lieberman-Warner climate bill, which will be debated in the Senate early next month.

      The letter also urges Senate leaders to increase pressure on regulatory bodies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue clear guidance on what climate change risks firms should disclose to investors.

      The coalition, which has been organised by ethical investment lobby group Ceres, said there was a strong business case for enacting more stringent carbon targets and legislation.

      "Investors hate uncertainty, and that is the problem they face today," said Mindy S Lubber, president of Ceres and director of INCR. "Strong and decisive action from Washington will open the floodgates on large-scale clean technology investments, enabling US investors and businesses to lead instead of lag on climate change solutions."

      Oregon state treasurer Randall Edwards, whose office manages $80bn (£40bn) in assets, agreed that far from damaging the economy as its critics claim, the Lieberman-Warner bill would create opportunities for investors. "It is time for Congress to step up to the plate and tackle climate change. Any further delay is inexcusable," he said "The Lieberman-Warner bill would give investors such as myself the ability to see the risks involved so we can begin rebuilding our economy by investing in green technologies."

      The calls come in the same week as Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer released an overview of a package of amendments to the Lieberman-Warner bill which are expected to form part of the proposed legislation. The amendments contain a number of measures designed to minimise the financial impact of the planned cap-and-trade scheme, including a mechanism to reduce the price of carbon credits if they hit a certain level and proposals for an $800bn (£400bn) tax relief fund to help consumers cope with rising energy costs.
      ~~~~~~~~
      Yes, 90% by 2050... That's what I'm talking about.This bill is going to be debated on the floor starting tomorrow. Please contact your senators and tell them that even though this is a start, we need to do much better to pass a more comprehensive bill that truly meets the demands and addresses the adverse effects climate change will have on our country and our world if left unchecked. And that means new forms of energy aggressively brought to market to wean us off the destructive energies that pollute our planet and put us all at risk.
      An influential coalition of investors has this week called on the US Senate to deliver binding emission reduction targets or risk unde... more

      JanforGore

      added this

      28 responses

      17 days ago
    • Better than gasohol, new solution traps CO2 right at the power plant!

      Fortune Magazine, April 28, 2008... US companies [!] are working on a new technology that is more efficient than growing just about any plant crops for biofuel. The technology will surprise you.

      It can be bolted on to coal plants and not only sequester CO2 but create biofuel as a byproduct!

      Scale this baby up and it'll help give us the time to develop more efficient wind and solar-electric solutions!

      Reduce your taxes by turning off the flow of your money to wasteful corn-based biofuels!

      Open your mind to this possibility! ...................
      Fortune Magazine, April 28, 2008... US companies [!] are working on a new technology that is more efficient than growing just about an... more

      plusaf

      added this

      5 responses

      2 months ago
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