Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Congratulations China!

China enlists 60,000 soldiers to plant trees in war against air pollution

MATT HICKMAN
February 26, 2018, 10:27 a.m.
Troops with China's People Liberation Army are ready to plant
Sometimes it takes a village ... and an army: Thousands of soldiers with China's People's Liberation Army have been pulled from service and enlisted in tree-planting activities outside of Beijing. (Photo: China Photos/Getty Images)
China is under attack on its own soil. And just as most countries with a large armed force would do, the country is deploying troops — over 60,000 members of the People’s Liberation Army — with no delay.
The invading force is insidious and can’t be dealt with using traditional military tactics — the raw manpower is needed but none of the standard maneuvers of warfare apply. And this is why China is arming its soldiers with two of the most effective weapons possible: shovels and saplings.
By planting a massive number of trees, China seeks to further suppress air pollution, a formidable adversary responsible for one-third of all deaths in China in 2016. The Chinese government is so serious about battling smog that a large regiment of soldiers along with a number of the country’s armed paramilitary police force have been pulled from their posts patrolling the northern border and reassigned to Hebei province on tree-planting duty, reports the Independent. By the end of this year, it's expected that the troops will have planted an air pollution-absorbing swath of forested land — an arboreal sponge, essentially — roughly the size of Ireland at 32,400 square miles.
And China doesn’t plan on relenting. By 2020, the government aims to increase the total amount of forest coverage to 23 percent of the Chinese landmass. Currently, forests cover roughly 21 percent of the country — about 208 million hectares (roughly 514 million acres). Per state officials, about 33.8 million hectares (84 million acres) of new forest has been planted over the last five years.
This won’t completely eradicate air pollution in Chinese cities. Not even close. But when combined with other air quality-improving efforts such as banning vehicles with combustion engines, replacing coal with natural gas and leading the world in the production of solar energy, thousands of new square miles of air pollution-mitigating forests do make a small dent. And in a country as polluted and as populous as China is, every dent, no matter how small, is an improvement.
Shovels at a Chinese tree-planting ceremony Shovels at the ready: China aims to increase the amount of tree coverage from 21 to 23 percent of the country's total landmass. (Photo: China Photos/Getty Images)

Hebei: On the front line

By 2035, officials hope for a 5 percent increase in China's forest coverage. This means that not too far down the line, over a quarter of all China will be forested. In addition to their size, the most important aspect of the current military tree-planting campaign is the strategic location in Hebei province near the Chinese capital of Beijing. Densely populated and highly polluted, particularly in winter when smog levels soar, Hebei encircles most of Beijing.
Per the Independent, the sprawling region is believed to be "a major culprit for producing the notorious smog" known to wrap China’s second most populous city with a stifling, grey embrace. However, the Chinese government has been makingsignificant inroads in Beijing, neighboring Tianjin and the smaller cities of Hebei thanks largely to anti-coal measures. Greenpeace Asia reports that smog levels fell by an encouraging 54 percent in the fourth quarter of 2017.
Officials in Hebei have pledged to boost the total forest coverage within the province to 35 percent by the end of 2020, which is largely why a majority of shovel-wielding troops have been deployed to this largely mountainous region. Additional tree forest coverage-boosting efforts will also commence in the relatively sparsely populated northwestern province of Qinghai and further afield.
It’s worth noting that to achieve its goals, the government isn’t just deploying troops. Civilians are also more than welcome to join the effort. "Companies, organisations and talent that specialise in greening work are all welcome to join in the country's massive greening campaign," Zhang Jianlong, head of China's State Forestry Administration, tells the China Daily. "Cooperation between government and social capital will be put on the priority list."
Tree planting in Beijing, ChinaChinese soldiers have been tasked with planting trees before, including before the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. (Photo: China Photos/Getty Images)

Beyond the call of duty

In addition to this particular military-led greening effort in Hebei and further afield, construction commenced this past summer on a so-called "forest city" that will generate much-needed new housing for roughly 30,000 new residents while also sucking pollution from the air. Clad in upwards of a million plants and over 40,000 trees, this first-of-its-kind development in Liuzhou was conceived by Stefano Boeri, an Italian architect and urban planner with an inimitable knack for festooning buildings with all matter of lush plant life.
As John Vidal recently outlined in a hopeful opinion piece published in the Guardian, China is in good company.
Latin American countries have vowed to restore 20 million hectares (49.4 million acres) of forest while African countries are aiming to plant more than 100 million hectares (247 million acres.) India and England are also both on notable tree-planting tears. Last year, residents of India planted a record-breaking 66 million new trees in under 12 hours all within a single state. In England, there are plans to plant 50 million new trees as part of a proposed 120-mile-long ribbon of forested land that would stretch from coast to coast in the northern part of the country alongside the heavily trafficked M62 motorway. (England is surprisingly lightly forested — just 10 percent of the country is covered by woodland although the government aims to bump the number up to 12 percent at a minimum.)
As Vidal writes, "For 200 years forested countries barely knew what to do with their trees. They were treated as expendable and a waste of space. But in a great cultural shift, they have changed from being dark and fearsome places to semi-sacred and untouchable."
However, Vidal notes that despite a cultural shift that has yielded truly remarkable/necessary tree-planting and reforestation efforts like the ones mentioned above, global tree cover loss is on the rise reaching a record-breaking 51 percent in 2016 when 29.7 million hectares (73.4 million) acres of forested land were lost, an area roughly the size of New Zealand. While the usual human-caused suspects — logging and clearing for agriculture — still play a major role in global tree loss, disease, drought and fires exacerbated by a warming planet are a larger threat than ever.

Meet Jagmeet Singh.

NDP
Joseph,
Canadians keep hearing that the economy is doing great, but they’re not seeing the benefits. That’s why yesterday’s budget was so disappointing.
The Liberals talk a good game – but when it comes time to act, they don’t have the courage to make the bold changes that would make a difference in people’s lives.
Joseph, millions of Canadians are facing the choice between paying the bills and filling their prescriptions again this year – but rather than make a real investment in pharmacare, the Liberals are doing yet another study.
And it’s not just pharmacare. This budget doesn’t come close to addressing the housing crisis. It doesn’t allocate the money that’s needed to end all boil water advisories in First Nations communities. It delays almost all of the funding that was promised for climate change until after the next election. And once again, the Liberals have refused to close tax loopholes and get their wealthy friends to pay their fair share.
This government keeps moving the goal posts. But we’ve waited long enough.
Joseph, in two years time, I’m hoping to present Canadians with a different kind of budget. One that will make life better for the millions of Canadians that are struggling.
Our budget will tackle inequality. We’ll close tax loopholes and use the billions we save to make immediate investments in pharmacare, childcare, and housing. We’ll work towards reconciliation and build meaningful nation-to-nation relationships. We’ll finally address post-secondary education and end student debt for young Canadians trying to build their future. We’ll treat climate change with the urgency it deserves, and we won’t wait to act.
Millions of Canadians are still working hard, but they can’t get ahead. But we don’t have to get used to the growing gap between the super rich and the rest of us, Joseph.
This isn’t as good as it gets.
Our team is standing up for a fairer, more just Canada every day. I’m proud of the work we’ve done. But there’s so much more to do if we’re going to build a Canada where everyone can get ahead.
That’s why our team is hard at work, from coast to coast to coast. And we won’t stop until we have a bold, progressive, New Democratic budget – that puts people first.
With love and courage,
Jagmeet Singh
Leader
Canada’s NDP
Dear Jagmeet Singh

Find the school teacher Stephen Fritz in New York and listen to him.
He teaches and inspires six year old children to grow Hydroponic vegetables inside the school class rooms and everywhere else in New York! He certainly inspired me and I am 70 years old and also a kid at heart. 
 Such schools are spreading quietly across North America and hopefully they will in the near future undermine the belief that money and budgets and political power are all important. The economy is an artificially created human social construct and presently it is dangerous and destructive to all that is natural and beautiful. It can only be useful if it saves and protects and enhances Nature.
 Hydroponic oriented schools and buildings here and around the world are presently saving and protecting and enhancing Nature. They are spreading fast!  Learn and use the information to win your election. P.S. Imagine growing flowers and vegetables within the Arctic circle.

Tuesday, February 27, 2018


I was wondering if my favorite milk substitute, 'magnificent Soya' was a threat to the environment. Now I know. They are cutting down the rain forest in Brazil in order to make room for growing Soya for cattle feed. Read the following and then send a message to Brazil's government that destroying the rain forest is suicide for the planet!
 After that, ask certain import companies to stop importing Beef and Soya originating from Brazil until their government orders a halt to the cutting and destruction of the rain forest.






Scientists are warning that the Amazon, the world’s largest tropical rainforest, is quickly reaching a “point of no return.” The study titled “Amazon Tipping Point” was written by Thomas  Lovejoy, a professor in the department of environmental science and policy at George Mason University, and Carlos Nobre, a member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences and senior fellow of World Resources Institute Brazil, and aims to identify how much deforestation would be able to occur before the forest’s natural water cycle would stop supporting its own ecosystem. Sadly, it doesn’t look like there is very much time left before this happens.
“If the climate changes – by deforestation or global warming – there’s a risk that more than 50 percent of the Amazon forest becomes a degraded savannah,” said Nobre.
According to the study, in the past 50 years, deforestation has impacted about 17 percent of its vegetation. By wiping out the remaining three percent, the rain forest would become totally unsalvagable.
“We believe that the sensible course is not only to strictly curb further deforestation, but also to build back a margin of safety against the Amazon tipping point, by reducing the deforested area to less than 20 percent, for the common sense reason that there is no point in discovering the precise tipping point by tipping it,” the scientists said.
This is devastating considering how the Amazon produces 20 percent of the earth’s oxygen and contains one in ten of all species on the planet, including 40,000 plant species, 300 freshwater fish species, 370 reptile species, 1,294 bird species, 427 mammals, and 428 amphibians. The Amazon River spans 4,100 miles long and is responsible for 20 percent of all free-flowing fresh water on earth. Up to 30 million people, including 280,000-350,000 indigenous people, rely on the rainforest as a source of food, income, and medicine.
So, how do we ensure we don’t reach the tipping point? We get to the root of the problem: industrialized animal agriculture.
It might not be a topic that is commonly talked about in reference to deforestation, but our global demand for cheap meat and dairy is eating the planet’s rain forests.
Industrialized animal agriculture is one of the largest drivers of global deforestation2,000 trees are chopped down in the Amazon rain forest every 60 seconds to make room for agriculture. 1,600 of those trees are chopped down every minute just to make room for cattle to graze and to grow livestock feed. Researchers at the University of Cambridge estimate that for every 10 percent of the rain forest that is destroyed, we will lose one or two species. The loss of species also plays a critical part in hindering the Amazon’s ability to function as a healthy ecosystem.
What is happening in the Amazon is a symptom of a much, much larger problem with our global food system. We are prioritizing producing meat, especially beef in the Amazon, over a bio-diverse array of crops for people to consume directly. Growing soy, which is responsible for a HUGE portion of deforestation in South America, and corn on vast swaths of land that used to be rain forest, and placing cattle in the middle of these vibrant biodiversity hot-spots is endangering the future of human life on the planet.
With the world’s population set to reach 9.8 billion by just 2050, we would need 50 percent more land to feed the growing population with factory farmed meat. Land that we simply don’t have.

The ONLY way we would be able to get close to this number would be to do away with every living forest on Earth – a possibility that’s not even that far away; scientists believe we could wipe out the planet’s rainforests in the next 100 years if we don’t make a change.
Luckily, there is something that we can do right here and now to lessen the burden on the Amazon, and all of the planet’s forests.

Saving the World One Bite at a Time

Seeing how industrial animal agriculture puts a huge burden on the Amazon, one of the best things you can do to help is lower or eliminate your consumption of meat. You might be thinking “But how is eating a burger in the U.S. impacting the Amazon?” Well, consider this: Brazil exports a large portion of the beef that it produces, and the United States imports approximately 200 million pounds of beef from the area! Not just that, the USDA estimates that the area of cultivated land used for soy production in Brazil will reach 30 million hectares by 2020 – that’s an area of land larger than the United Kingdom – and 75 percent of that soy will be turned into feed for livestock.
You can do something TODAY to save the Amazon rainforest. By simply opting for plant-based proteins instead of meat, you can help drive down demand and deforestation along with it. For more impact statistics like these and to learn how you can help the environment with your food choices, check out the new #EatForThePlanet book! Help us spread the word about this important movement by sharing this information with everyone you know.

Monday, February 26, 2018

Activate the United Nations Peace Force!

Gentle People:
 Only cowards sit buy and do nothing while others suffer abuse and torture and who are murdered in front of our eyes!!
 I demand that all people and governments who have courage stand up and denounce Hassad and his murderous regime in Syria along with his partner in murder, Putin of Russia.
 But words are not enough...I demand in the name of human rights that the United Nations organize a very large peace keeping army from dozens of countries who believe in peace and who have the courage to join together into one large United Nations peace force and who will parachute men of strength and courage into Syria. No matter what country and nationality, they all must wear the United Nations Blue Helmets and arm themselves for battle against any and all who resist.
The regime of Hassad is criminally responsible for human rights abuse against innocent men and women and children. Innocents  who are non combatants and who are being systematically murdered with gas and bombs. He must be stopped!
  Hassad and Putin will not listen to reason and both believe the United States leadership is afraid to stop them.
 We need countries from outside the United States to step forward and stop the violence. We need a fast and furious United Nations world police action activated to stop the violence.
 It is the only proven method of stopping the abuse and murder and it will send a message to future cold blooded psychopathic tyrants and dictators who believe they can butcher innocent people with impunity.
Thanks for reading and
Take action!

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

CRISPER GENE EDITING

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The advance of CRISPR gene editing technology, which uses an RNA strand to guide an enzyme called Cas9 to cut a specific portion of DNA, has raised concerns and sparked debate as people envision a not-so-distant future populated by bioengineered super-crops,genetically flawless pets, and customized babies. While the method could be used for these purposes, it’s also showing potential as a valuable medical tool, with a seemingly new condition added each week to the list of what CRISPR may one day cure.
One recent addition to that list is Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). In a study from University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, researchers used CRISPR to make a single cut at a few strategic points along DNA in cells derived from DMD patients, with the result of potentially correcting most of the 3,000 gene mutations that cause DMD.
DMD is a genetic disorder characterized by progressive muscle degeneration and weakness. It mostly affects boys and is caused by defects in the gene that makesdystrophin, a protein that helps strengthen muscle fibers in skeletal and cardiac muscles. Many patients end up in wheelchairs, on respirators, or both, and while advances in cardiac and respiratory care have increased life expectancy into the early 30s, there’s still no cure for the condition.
The study on CRISPR for DMD was the cover story of this month’s Science Advancesand it builds on previous studies led by Dr. Eric Olson, director of UT Southwestern’s Hamon Center for Regenerative Science and Medicine, in which CRISPR was used to correct a single gene mutation that caused DMD in mice.
The new study showed that various DMD-related mutations can be corrected in human cells by eliminating flawed splice sites in genomic DNA. These splice sites instruct genes to build abnormal dystrophin molecules. The protein then doesn’t function as it should to keep muscle cells intact, and muscles start to break down.
Researchers developed 12 guide RNAs to find mutation sites along the dystrophin gene. They cut the DNA at these locations and, in doing so, directed the cellular machinery to skip over the faulty protein sequences. Once the gene was successfully edited, it started building functional dystrophin protein, enhancing the function of muscle tissue.
“We found that correcting less than half of the cardiomyocytes (heart muscle cells) was enough to rescue cardiac function to near-normal levels in human-engineered heart tissue,” said Dr. Chengzu Long, lead author of the study and assistant professor of medicine at New York University Langone Health.
This single-cut method is an efficient alternative to developing a separate molecular treatment for each one of the gene mutations that cause DMD, and could potentially be used to correct other single-gene mutations like cystic fibrosis or sickle cell anemia.
“Not only did we find a practical way of treating many mutations, we have developed a less disruptive method that skips over defective DNA instead of removing it,” said Dr. Rhonda Bassel-Duby, co-author of the study and professor of molecular biology at UT Southwestern. “The genome is highly structured and you don’t want to remove DNA that could potentially be important.” She added that while single-cut editing may be useful for treating other single-gene diseases, the genes involved must still be able to function after certain DNA or RNA sequences are removed.
Before we sing CRISPR’s praises too loudly or start banking on it curing all our ailments, though, we must keep in mind that the tool is still very new, and we don’t really know what long-term results or late-onset side effects its use could engender. In fact, we’re not even sure it’ll always work in its current form on humans; one recent study found that some people may be “immune” to CRISPR, as an adaptive immune response can be triggered in people who have been exposed to the bacteria that’s used to engineer CRISPR proteins.
Clinical trials using CRISPR to cure blood disorders and sickle-cell disease in humans are slated to start this year in the US. Human trials have already begun in China, where CRISPR is being used to treat cancer and HIV. No peer-reviewed studies from these trials have been published yet, but doctors claim the tool has succeeded in improving some patients’ conditions.
Dr. Olson’s lab will continue testing its DMD method for side effects and will also look for ways to improve the precision of the guide RNAs. The team’s work led to the creation of biotech company Exonics Therapeutics, which has licensed the technology from UT Southwestern and is working to optimize the approach and extend it to other neuromuscular diseases.
“This is a major advance,” Dr. Bassel-Duby said. “Many different therapies have been put forward, but this one provides real hope to extend and improve the quality of patients’ lives.”
Image Credit: nobeastsofierce / Shutterstock.com
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Vanessa is associate editor of Singularity Hub. She's interested in renewable energy, health and medicine, international development, and countless other topics. When she's not reading or writing you can usually find her outdoors, in water, or on a plane.

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