Zionism
Project Veritas Obtains Photos of Biden’s Migrant Detention Centers
According to leftist media and their feckless followers on Twitter, Donald Trump put migrant children in cages. Never mind the policy was a carry over from President Obama. When a narrative is a foot, you’re not supposed to ask questions. Such was the hoopla, even AOC made a little hay with a dramatic photo op of crying in front of a “detention center.” The quotation marks there are not accidental. All this is relevant to the story Project Veritas has for us today. New alleged photos of migrant detention centers in Donna, Texas. Note who’s president and who’s not president for this one.
BREAKING: Project Veritas Obtains Never-Before-Seen Images Inside Texas Detention Facility
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Biden’s detention centers don’t (ALLEGEDLY) seem all that different from a five letter word that rhymes with rages. I don’t know about you, but when I’m feeling a bit chilly, I don’t reach over and grab a sheet of aluminum foil. It just doesn’t have the feel of a faux fur throw or even low thread count duvet. Then again, I tend to sleep on places a little north of the floor. I guess that’s just my human privilege rearing its entitled head again.
Look it, migrants who came here illegally shouldn’t have the red carpet rolled before them. I’m not saying they should. But I didn’t burst the veins in my forehead for the past four years while feigning outrage about the conditions under which migrants were detained. I can’t say the same for some of our favorite Who’s Who idiots on the left. Who I can’t help but notice are as silent as the dead today. Seems problematic.
If keeping migrants, children or otherwise, detained in “cages” was wrong under Trump then it should also be wrong under Obama and the former Vice President Biden. Yet in Obama’s presidency 2.0, when we get images of migrants kept in cages wrapped like burritos from Chipotle we get nothing?
YouTube AGE-RESTRICTED Crowder?! War Against Big Tech Heats Up | Louder with Crowder
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Elections Aren’t The Only Thing The Power Structure Rigs | Monsanto & The World Wildlife Fund Sustainability Certificates
According to WDR research, the influential environmental organization WWF with its annual donations of around 500 million euros, around 4,000 employees and branches in more than 100 countries has become entangled in the interests of the industry – the report raises the question of whether the association’s work with the Slogan “For a living planet” (“For a living planet”) is compatible.
In the WDR documentary “Der Pakt mit dem Panda” (The Pact with the Panda), which the ARD broadcast last Wednesday at 11.30 pm, the multiple Grimme Prize winner Wilfried Huismann suggests that the gullibility of the donors is in some places properly strained for interests that barely preserve serve the planet.
Huismann documents that the WWF apparently helps dubious companies to obtain “sustainability certificates”. The association works at “round tables” with genetic engineering companies such as the agricultural giant Monsanto and the multinational Wilmar – and confirms to them that they produce soy and palm oil “sustainably”.
How It All Started To Crumble | Bayer Discovers “Black Ops” Division Run by Monsanto
For over a decade, Monsanto has been engaged in building and maintapining “hit lists” of journalists, lawmakers and regulators to be taken out if they opposed the evil agenda of GMOs and toxic glyphosate weed killer chemicals that now inundate the world food supply. Any influential person who opposed the Monsanto agenda was subjected to one or more of the following:
- Attempted bribery
- Death threats and intimidation
- Character assassination through well-funded “negative P.R.” campaigns
- Defamation via coordinated Wikipedia attacks, run by Monsanto operatives
- Career destruction, such as getting scientists blacklisted from science journals
- Being doxxed, having their home addresses publicized and their families and co-workers threatened
Revealed: Monsanto predicted crop system would damage US farms
The US agriculture giant Monsanto and the German chemical giant BASF were aware for years that their plan to introduce a new agricultural seed and chemical system would probably lead to damage on many US farms, internal documents seen by the Guardian show.
Risks were downplayed even while they planned how to profit off farmers who would buy Monsanto’s new seeds just to avoid damage, according to documents unearthed during a recent successful $265m lawsuit brought against both firms by a Missouri farmer.
The documents, some of which date back more than a decade, also reveal how Monsanto opposed some third-party product testing in order to curtail the generation of data that might have worried regulators.
And in some of the internal emails, employees appear to joke about sharing “voodoo science” and hoping to stay “out of jail”.
Bayer Won’t Ask U.S. Supreme Court to Reverse First Roundup Loss
Bayer AG won’t seek U.S. Supreme Court review of the first verdict finding its Roundup herbicide caused cancer.
Strawberries, Spinach, Kale Top EWG’s 2021 ‘Dirty Dozen’ List
Collard and mustard greens join kale among the most pesticide-contaminated fresh produce on the Environmental Working Group’s (EWG) 2021 Dirty Dozen list. For the first time, bell peppers and hot peppers have made the list.
The Dirty Dozen and the Clean Fifteen together make up EWG’s annual Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in Produce
, which analyzes Department of Agriculture test data to identify which fresh fruits and vegetables are most and least contaminated with pesticide residues.
“Whether organic or conventionally grown, fruits and vegetables are critical components of a healthy diet,” said EWG toxicologist Thomas Galligan, Ph.D. “We urge consumers who are concerned about their pesticide intake to consider, when possible, purchasing organically grown versions of the foods on EWG’s Dirty Dozen, or conventional produce from our Clean Fifteen.”
This year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) tests found residues of potentially harmful chemical pesticides on nearly 70% of the non-organic fresh produce sold in the U.S. Before testing fruits and vegetables, the USDA washes, scrubs and peels them, as consumers would.
Leafy greens
Until this year, kale was alone in the number three spot on the Dirty Dozen. A total of 94 different pesticides were found on leafy greens, including neonicotinoids, or neonics. One sample of mustard greens had 20 different pesticides, and some kale and collard samples had as many as 17.
On all three types of greens, the pesticide most frequently detected by the USDA was DCPA, sold under the brand name Dacthal. The Environmental Protection Agency classifies DCPA as a possible human carcinogen, and the European Union banned it in 2009.
Neonics are the fastest-growing class of insecticides, despite a decade of research making it clear that they are highly toxic to honeybees and other pollinator species. Some studies on human health also suggest that exposure to neonics may be harmful to the developing fetus and to children.
Peppers
Bell peppers and hot peppers, tested for the first time since 2012 and 2011, respectively, are also included in this year’s list at number 10. The USDA found 115 pesticides on peppers — the most, by far, on any item.
Bell peppers and hot peppers contain concerning levels of acephate and chlorpyrifos, respectively – organophosphate insecticides that can harm children’s developing brains and are banned from use on some crops in the U.S. and from all uses in the EU. In 2017, the EPA, under the Trump administration, rejected a proposed chlorpyrifos ban, allowing it to remain on the market and subsequently in foods.
Citrus
Although no citrus fruits landed on the Dirty Dozen, this year’s Shopper’s Guide highlights the concerning levels of toxic pesticides found on these fruits, not only in USDA tests but also in independent laboratory tests commissioned by EWG.
Imazalil, a fungicide linked to cancer and hormone disruption, was detected on over 95% of tangerines tested by the USDA in 2019. In independent tests commissioned by EWG, nearly 90% of all the oranges, mandarins, grapefruit and lemons sampled contained either imazalil or thiabendazole, another endocrine-disrupting fungicide. More than half the samples had both. Almost all of the tests were conducted on conventionally grown fruit.
“The average concentration of imazalil in the citrus EWG had tested was an astonishing 20 times more than the limit we recommend to protect children from cancer,” said EWG toxicologist Alexis Temkin, Ph.D. “Yet this amount is perfectly legal. The EPA has abdicated its responsibility to adequately safeguard children from exposure to this pesticide.”
Legal does not mean safe
Most pesticide residues the USDA finds fall within government-mandated restrictions. But legal limits aren’t always safe.
The EPA’s safety levels, called tolerances, help agency regulators determine whether farmers are applying pesticides properly. If tolerance levels were set to protect all children eating produce, as EWG believes they should be, more fruits and vegetables would fail to meet them.
Pesticides are toxic by design. They are created expressly to kill living organisms — insects, plants and fungi that are considered pests. Many pesticides also pose health dangers to people, including hormone disruption, brain and nervous system toxicity, and cancer. These hazards have been confirmed by independent scientists and physicians, U.S. and international government agencies.
“EPA’s tolerances are often far higher than what many scientists believe is safe — particularly for pregnant women, babies and young children,” said EWG president Ken Cook. “EWG releases our Shopper’s Guide each year so consumers can make informed decisions that will let them reduce their family’s exposure to toxic pesticides while allowing them to eat plenty of healthy fruits and vegetables.”
Health benefits of reducing pesticide consumption
Organic standards prohibit the use of synthetic pesticides, among other things. Eating organic food reduces pesticide exposure and is linked to a variety of health benefits, according to an article published last year in the peer-reviewed journal Nutrients. In four separate clinical trials, people who switched from conventional to organic foods saw a rapid and dramatic reduction in their urinary pesticide concentrations, a marker of pesticide exposure.
Additional studies have linked higher consumption of organic foods to lower urinary pesticide levels, improved fertility and birth outcomes, reduced incidence of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and lower BMI and reduced risk of Type 2 diabetes.
Babies and children are particularly vulnerable to many of the health effects associated with many pesticides, as the American Academy of Pediatrics recognized in a 2012 report on organic food.
“An all-organic diet is simply not affordable or accessible for many Americans,” said Dr. Philip Landrigan, a world-renowned pediatrician and epidemiologist. “EWG’s Shopper’s Guide provides useful, straightforward guidelines for choosing both organic and conventional produce to provide children with the healthy fruits and vegetables they need, but not the pesticide load they don’t.”
Landrigan is director of the Global Public Health Program and Global Observatory on Pollution and Health at the Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society at Boston College, a member of the National Academy of Medicine and one of the principal authors of the 1993 National Academy of Sciences study “Pesticides in the Diets of Infants and Children.” The study led to the enactment of the 1996 Food Quality Protection Act, which emphasized the importance of children’s health in the setting of safety standards for pesticides on foods.
How to use EWG’s shopper’s guide
The 2021 Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in Produce ranks the pesticide contamination of 46 popular fruits and vegetables. It is based on results of USDA and Food and Drug Administration tests of more than 46,000 samples of produce.
Released every year since 2004, the Shopper’s Guide is designed to help consumers make the healthiest choices for their families, given budgetary and other constraints. EWG recommends that whenever possible, consumers purchase organic versions of produce on the Dirty Dozen list. When organic versions are unavailable or not affordable, EWG advises consumers to continue eating fresh produce, even if conventionally grown.
The USDA’s pesticide analyses are not comprehensive. The agency rotates which fruits and vegetables it tests each year, and it doesn’t test for all pesticides.
Originally published by Environmental Working Group.
The post Strawberries, Spinach, Kale Top EWG’s 2021 ‘Dirty Dozen’ List appeared first on Children’s Health Defense.
America’s Proxy Wars With Iran Ramp Up | Saudi Navy Starts Drills to Protect Oil Sites as Attacks Mount
Saudi Arabia started naval exercises in the Persian Gulf to improve its ability to foil “terrorist attacks” on oil facilities, underscoring the kingdom’s concern about a rise in drone and missile strikes claimed by Yemen’s Houthi rebels.
Upcoming Pentagon report will detail ‘difficult to explain’ UFO sightings
A forthcoming government report will detail a number of “difficult to explain” UFO sightings, former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe said in a recent interview. Ratcliffe, the top intelligence official under former President Donald Trump, was asked about about incidents involving unidentified flying objects on Fox News Friday. “There are a lot more sightings…
Former Trump intel chief says some recorded UFO behaviors defy explanation
Some movements exceed current technology and were ‘traveling at speeds that exceed the sound barrier without a sonic boom,’ former DNI John Ratcliffe says.
US has secret evidence of UFOs breaking sound barrier without a sonic boom
The Pentagon and intelligence agencies were in December given a 180-day deadline to produce a report into UFO sightings, meaning it will be released by June 1.