Tuesday, July 27, 2021

 HELLO GENTLE PEOPLE!


   LIKE MOST PEOPLE IN QUEBEC WHO WERE TWICE VACCINATED, I WAS PREPARED TO RELAX AND ENJOY MY SUMMER UNTIL TODAY, WHEN I DID A LITTLE RESEARCH AND DISCOVERED HOW EXPERTS AND DOCTORS ARE CONCERNED THAT QUEBEC IS UNDERESTIMATING THE PRESENCE OF THE DELTA VARIANT. 

 THE DELTA VARIANT IS MUCH MORE CONTAGIOUS THAN THE ORIGINAL STRAIN AND IF ALLOWED TO INFILTRATE UNSUSPECTING QUEBEC CITIZENS; IN OTHER WORDS IF WE LOWER OUR GAURDS AND RELAX, MANY OF US COULD DIE!

 DAVID FISMAN IS AN EPIDEMIOLOGIST AND PROFESSOR AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO AND HE CLAIMS, ALONG WITH A FEW MORE EXPERTS, THAT THE DELTA VIRUS WILL CAUSE LARGER EPIDEMICS AND BE MORE DIFFICULT TO CONTROL. "WE FIND THAT PATIENTS WITH THE DELTA STRAIN ARE THREE TIMES MORE LIKELY TO GO TO INTENSIVE CARE AND TWICE AS LIKELY TO DIE THAN PATIENTS WITH THE ORIGINAL STRAIN OF SARS-CoV-2.."

====================

“Right now, things are going well in Canada from a COVID-19 perspective. But who knows what awaits us?“ said Paul Warshawsky, head of the intensive care unit at the Jewish General Hospital. “It’s not over, it’s just a new normal. And what’s frustrating for us in the health-care system is that for a lot of the population (the pandemic) is over. And it’s not.”

 THE DELTA VARIANT HAS SEVERAL MUTATIONS IN THE S PROTEIN ON THE SURFACE OF THE VIRUS WHICH SEEMS TO MAKE IT MORE TRANSMISSIBLE.

What You Need to Know About the Delta Variant

Here's What You Should Know About The Delta Variant - Texas A&M Today

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has classified Delta as a “variant of concern” circulating in the U.S., which means it may carry a risk of more severe illness and transmissibility. 
It accounts for about 10 percent of the country’s COVID-19 cases.

Estimates vary, but Ben Neuman, virologist at Texas A&M University, said the Delta variant is
 “considerably” more transmissible than the Alpha variant, which was the contagious strain first
 detected in the U.K. that quickly became the dominant variant. Alpha, at that time, was considered 
more transmissible than regular non-variants. As the different variants continued to compete against 
each other throughout the pandemic, Delta has pushed out the others as the more dominant strain.

“These viruses are fighting for our lungs, and this appears to be one that has an advantage                        over other strains of SARS-CoV-2,” he said.

Neuman explains that viruses must change in order to survive. One virus can turn into around 
100 million inside an infected person over the course of a day. He said viruses are also sloppy
 in that they’ll make a random mistake in about one of every three copies it makes – and in 
some instances, those mutations can give the virus an advantage over other versions.
“Mutation is how the virus responds to the world. It’s basically how they are able to stay in the
 game, how they’re able to stay competitive,” he said. “That’s all they are. They’re just 
competitive little things that make mistakes in order to adapt or respond to their environment.”
In the Delta variant, the mutation is a change in position in its spike protein, which allows the 
virus to penetrate and infect healthy cells. Neuman said a similar variant circulating in Texas 
and Mexico has the same mutation.

Though a strain may have advantages over others, Neuman said its spread often comes down
 to the activity of people. Two people standing 20 feet away from each other probably won’t 
transmit the virus, regardless of the variant. But if an individual is in close contact with 
someone who’s infected, they’re likely to be exposed and likely will catch that variant if they
 don’t have immunity.
“Our vaccination rates are not high enough to where we can expect that this virus will go away
 on its own,” Neuman said.

---------------------------------

More severe and more contagious 

The Delta variant is much more contagious than the other 
variants identified so far.                      

“It is about 2.6 times more infectious than the original strain,” 
said David Fisman, epidemiologist and professor at the 
University of Toronto. 

“This means it will cause larger epidemics and be more difficult to
 control.” 

 “We find that patients with the Delta strain are three 
times more likely to go to intensive care and twice as likely to 
die than patients with the original strain of  SARS-CoV-2,”

 he added.

The Delta variant has several mutations in the S protein on the surface of the virus,                      one of which seems to make it more transmissible.
 Limited data from China suggest  that the viral load of Delta infections can be up to 
1,000 times that of the original  strain, Fisman said. “People also seem to become
contagious more quickly with the  Delta strain,” he added. 
This variant, first identified in India, currently exists in 124 countries, 
13 more than last week. In comparison, the Alpha variant, first identified in the 
United Kingdom, is present in 180 countries (six more than last week);                                                                             the Beta variant, first identified in South Africa, 
is in 130 countries (an increase of seven); and the 
Gamma variant, first identified in Brazil,  has reached three more
countries this week, for a total of 78.

Criticism of the variant detection protocol

Experts and doctors are concerned that Quebec is underestimating the presence of 
the Delta variant in the province. Most establishments are not allowed to carry out 
screening and sequencing of cases themselves, so when COVID-19 patients are 
admitted to hospital, health-care workers are often unaware of the strain they are 
dealing with.

 While this does not change the work of staff in the health network, it does raise 
concerns among specialists and in certain establishments, who would like to be able 
to screen the cases themselves. 

“We don’t know, but we don’t need to know, because it is the same precautions, the
 same treatments and the same support,” said François Marquis, head of the 
intensive care unit at Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital.

  According to him, Quebec has seen low case numbers from the Delta variant
 “because the borders are closed and because we are mostly vaccinated,” adding that fully        vaccinated people seem relatively well protected against severe illness and death related to                                  the variant.

 But some experts say the screening should be carried out by the health centres 
themselves. “Most have been banned from screening or sequencing variants in their 
labs and must send their samples to the provincial public health lab (LSPQ). 
I wonder if this method is reliable, and if we really are at five per cent,“ 
said Roxane Borgès Da Silva, professor at the Université de Montréal’s school of 
public health (ESPUM).

“Outside of major urban centres, I know there are several regional microbiologists 
who would like to be able to do the screenings and who, at the moment, are not 
allowed to,” she added.

Like others, Borgès Da Silva believes it is essential to give health establishments the 
necessary tools to screen cases before the possible increase in Delta variant cases.

 “There is no reason why, at some point, this strain won’t become dominant, like in 
many countries. There is a risk, as with the other variants, of getting there one day. 
We must prepare for it,” she said.


Tracking progress

Hugues Loemba, family physician, virologist and professor at the University of 
Ottawa’s faculty of medicine, agrees, adding that it is necessary to 
screen and sequence as many cases as possible.
“It is important to monitor the progress of the different variants, because it would 
allow us to put more stringent measurements in the regions where the presence of 
the Delta variant is greater,” he said.
Loemba added that the Delta variant can cause large outbreaks and infect entire
 regions. “We would not have to put the public health restrictions back in place in all
of Quebec, but we could set them in the regions most affected, to limit the spread of 
the variant,” he said.

 Ultimately, the goal is not to stop the spread of the variant altogether, but to slow
 its progression, to allow time for the population to be adequately vaccinated,
 he said. “We are not an island. We’re going to have a Delta variant wave for sure, 
but it’s going to come later than in other countries.” He added that the Alpha variant
 also caused a wave of cases in the United Kingdom and in Europe before arriving in
 Canada a few months ago.

 “The Delta is sure to become dominant. It’s written in the stars. The only reason this
wouldn’t be the case is either because we vaccinated everyone, or a new variant
 arrives and takes the place of the Delta,“ Marquis said.

The symptoms of a COVID-19 infection from the Delta variant do not appear to be
 the same as those from the initial strain of the virus. Loss of smell no longer seems
to be one of the main symptoms. The symptoms are more like the flu, Marquis said. 

“Right now, in the northern hemisphere, there isn’t influenza, so if anyone has 
flu-like symptoms, it’s COVID-19,” he said.

Sequencing and screening, what’s the difference?

Sequencing is the most efficient method of identifying variants, as it allows the 
analysis of the complete genetics of a virus. However, it is a long and expensive 
procedure that can only be done with a fraction of COVID-19 cases. Screening is a 
faster, low-cost technique to determine if positive cases are due to any of the
 variants. If a screening test is positive, health authorities may perform full 
sequencing to determine precisely which variant it is.

– In collaboration with Pierre-André Normandin, La Presse, 
and Agence France-Presse


Friday, July 23, 2021

GREENPEACE WINS AGAIN!

🎉 HUGE VICTORY! GNL Québec has been rejected 🎉

Inbox

Isabelle L'Héritier, Greenpeace Canada Unsubscribe

Wed, Jul 21, 5:35 PM (2 days ago)
to me

Legault backed down in the face of citizen pressure!

Nelson,

We won against GNL Québec! Legault backed down in the face of citizen pressure and rejected the protest.

After defeating the Energy East pipeline in 2017 [1] and the setback to Goldboro LNG earlier this month [2], Quebec premier Legault's announcement that the GNL Québec plant will not go ahead sends a clear message: the era of polluting and destructive energy is over. It is high time to prohibit all new fossil fuel projects, turn the page, stop extracting fossil fuels and take concrete action for a just and green transition.

This decisive victory is collective!

It was possible thanks to the sustained mobilization of tens of thousands of citizens, Indigenous groups and NGOs across the province, who have been fighting this project for the past three years. 

We saw many strong moments, like :

  • More than 120,000 citizens who signed a petition, called or wrote to the government to express their opposition [3];

  • The incredible convergence of dozens of student associations [4], hundreds of health professionals, scientists [5], economists, civil society groups [6], Indigenous communities [7] and opposition parties [8] who united in this struggle;

  • The public consultations of the Bureau d'audiences publiques en environnement (BAPE), which saw historic participation [9] with the submission of more than 2,500 briefs, of which more than 90% were opposed to the project [10], and which led to a devastating report for the project;

  • and our decentralized actions to deploy giant banners across the province [11]. 

Let's take time to celebrate! It's not every day that we win such a big environmental battle. 

And let's continue to contribute to the environmental, social and economic transition together with local communities — who are leading resilient projects that sustain and respect traditions and ecosystems.Let's continue the fight to protect life and prevent destruction everywhere.

Thank you for everything you do.

Isabelle,

Mobilisation campaigner, Greenpeace Canada

P.S. For more details, take a look at our blog and don’t hesitate to share it with friends and family.

[1] https://350.org/energyeast-win/

[2] https://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/press-release/49101/goldboro-lng-fails-to-secure-investor-by-june-30th-deadline-federal-government-ignores-request-for-nearly-1-billion-in-loans-or-grants/ 

[3] https://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/press-release/46568/no-to-gnl-quebec-banners-blossom-across-the-province-in-rejection-of-the-project/ 

[4] https://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/environnement/2021-03-09/actions-dans-six-villes-du-quebec/des-groupes-appellent-au-rejet-de-gnl-quebec.php 

[5] http://www.collectif-scientifique-gaz-de-schiste.com/accueil/images/BAPE_M%C3%A9moire_Collectif_26_octobre_Version_finale_compressed.pdf 

[6] https://www.greenpeace.org/canada/fr/communique-de-presse/47015/la-societe-civile-et-les-partis-dopposition-uni%C2%B7es-contre-gnl-gazoduq/

[7] https://nationalpost.com/pmn/news-pmn/canada-news-pmn/three-innu-first-nations-say-they-are-ready-to-take-measures-to-stop-quebec-pipeline 

[8] https://www.greenpeace.org/canada/fr/communique-de-presse/46756/tous-les-partis-sauf-la-caq-sopposent-a-gnl-gazoduq/ 

[9] https://coalitionfjord.com/2020/11/05/bape-sur-gnl-une-participation-historique-expose-les-failles-dun-projet-depasse/

[10] https://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/press-release/44494/bape-on-gnl-quebec-historic-participation-exposes-the-flaws-of-an-outdated-project/ 

[11] https://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/press-release/46568/no-to-gnl-quebec-banners-blossom-across-the-province-in-rejection-of-the-project/

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Thursday, July 15, 2021

 DO YOU REMEMBER?

 DO YOU REMEMBER

ROBERT FROST

AND WHAT WAS HIS 

THAT WE HAVE LOST?

DO YOU REMEMBER

WHERE HE STOPPED HIS LITTLE HORSE

FOR POETIC THOUGHT?

HIS PRECIOUS WOODS SO

DARK AND DEEP 

WERE A TREASURE FOR US ALL

TO KEEP...

AND NOW THEY ARE A PARKING LOT

SOMEONE BOUGHT

ON A BUSINESS STREET!!

DO YOU REMEMBER OR DON'T YOU CARE

HOW PRECIOUS WOODS ARE WHEN DARK AND DEEP?

WITH TREES WE MUST SAVE AND SHARE

AND NOT REMOVE  FOR BUSINESS STREETS!

N.J.R.

===========================


OH TO BE A TREE!

OH TO BE A TREE

STANDING QUIET AND TALL

IN ELEGANT SIMPLICITY...

TALL AND QUIET AND MAJESTIC

IN A FOREST OF MAGNIFICENT TREES....

BUT A TREE NEVER SO PROUD

AS TO HUMBLE THOSE AROUND ME

AND NEVER SO HUMBLE AS TO BE SHADOWED

UNDER THEIR CANOPY.

N.J. RAGLIONE . JAN 2013

=============================

Saturday, July 10, 2021

Global warming and deforestations is destroying the Amazon.

The Amazon Rainforest Could Die in Your Lifetime — Here's Why

Climate change, fires and deforestation create a perfect storm that will destroy the Amazon in about 40 years.

By Anna FunkMar 5, 2021 3:00 PM
shutterstock 1583883709
The Curuaés River passing through Menkragnoti Indigenous Land in the Amazon Rainforest in the Brazilian state of Pará. (Credit: marcio isensee/Shutterstock)

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Deforestation in the Amazon has long been the poster child of man-made environmental destruction. But recent trends reveal that the changing climate will likely come for this beloved rainforest long before the last tree is cut down. One researcher has even put a date on his prediction for the Amazon’s impending death: 2064. That’s the year the Amazon rainforest will be completely wiped out.

Dramatic? Yes. “I’m a doom-sayer,” admits Robert Walker, a quantitative geographer at the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies, who came up with the 2064 prediction. “I don’t want to be Chicken Little, telling you that the sky is falling, but the numbers speak for themselves,” he says.

Walker has been studying the Amazon for decades. To come up with this new prediction, he compiled figures from recent studies that have quantified aspects of the changing forest like drought frequency, fire frequency, deforestation and rainfall patterns. When you look at the trajectories, he found, there’s a concrete point when the rainforest will no longer be able to recover in-between increasingly frequent and widespread perturbations. When that happens — around 2064, Walker predicts — there will be no more rainforest; in its place will be a scrubby, grassy savanna. 

A Steady Collapse

The situation in the Amazon may have actually been looking up at the turn of the century, albeit briefly. Deforestation rates dramatically declined between 2004 and 2012. But since then, they’ve been back on the rise, and in 2020, deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon was up to its highest rate of the decade.

In 2018, scientists projected that the rainforest would be able to handle losing 20-25 percent of its forest area before it would collapse into a drier ecosystem. This is because losing trees actually changes the weather patterns — due to the way trees give and take moisture from the air — so a certain amount of deforestation will likely cause enough atmospheric change to collapse the rainfall system. 

Then in 2020, researchers updated their estimates of how much forest had actually already been lost, finding 11 percent of the Amazon had been deforested, and another 17 percent had been significantly disturbed. How does that fit into the 20-25 percent threshold? It’s tricky; disturbance isn’t the same as deforestation. Cutting down forest to make way for a pasture or agriculture field is true deforestation. A degraded forest, on the other hand, might be burned, have roads cut through it, be selectively logged or be degraded by other disturbances — yet still remain a forest. At least, it is at first.

These sorts of forest disturbances can trigger a feedback loop where disturbance leads to even more disturbance. Let’s say a fire sweeps through a forested area, for example. Some trees and plants will survive while others die. In a healthy forest, this burned area would recover back to what it once was within a few years. But in a disturbed forest, it’s more likely that invasive grasses (which have been widely planted for pastures in the surrounding area) come in to fill the gaps the dead trees left instead. These invasive grasses out-compete the native forest tree seedlings, preventing the forest from regenerating. They’re also flammable, increasing the likelihood of more fires — meaning the cycle repeats with increasing frequency. 

What’s more, deforestation leads to an increase in man-made disturbances, since it brings people — and the roads they build — deeper into the forest.  “Deforestation is really what brings the fires … [and] we know fire moves down these roads,” says Walker. “All of those circumstances come together to give you the transition of the forest.”

Drier and Drier

Climate change adds another important layer to this story. Recent work from physical geographer Nafiseh Haghtalab and colleagues at Michigan State University found that some parts of the western Amazon Basin have been getting more rain than usual: over 7 additional inches of rainfall per year since 1982

But to the east and south — where deforestation is rampant — it’s getting drier. There, the dry season, an annual period of about seven months with little rainfall, has been increasing by about one day per year. This sort of phenomenon where wetter places get wetter and drier places get drier is one of the core predictions of how climate change will play out across the world’s landscape. This study shows that it’s already happening in the Amazon, and has been for decades. These drier conditions increase the likelihood of fire, further aggravating the already-aggravated systems.

When a severe drought hits, many trees drop their leaves and some even die — patterns which are easily documented by visual means, such as satellite imagery, across large landscapes. Researchers studying a particularly bad drought in 2005 found that the rainforest can recover, but it takes over 4 years to recover all of the canopy cover an area had prior to the drought. 

“Given that we know the 2005 drought was 20-30 days longer than the average dry season,” explains Walker, “We can calculate how long it will take to arrive at a point where that particular drought becomes the new normal.” Once the drought-return cycle hits 4 years or less — the time it takes the forest to recover — the next disturbance will be the last. The forest will no longer be a forest. The trees that die won’t be replaced, the invasive grasses will move in, and fires will maintain the new savanna system.

Walker’s confident in his prediction. “This is going to happen unless we do something radical to change whatever it is we’re doing,” he says. Not only would it take reducing greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation, but ultimately decreasing the likelihood that the forest will catch fire.

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

 LIFE.

 THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SENTIENT CONSCIOUS LIFE AND UNCONSCIOUS SENTIENT LIFE IS THE ABILITY TO ASK THE QUESTION: WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE?

 IF NATURE COULD TALK WHAT WOULD IT SAY?

WOULD IT SAY... 

I AM A TREE AND SO PLEASE DO NOT CUT ME FOR I AM SENTIENT!?

WOULD IT SAY...

I AM A FLOWER WAITING FOR A BEE AND SO...

PLEASE DO NOT PULL ME FROM THE GROUND FOR I AM  SENTIENT!?

WOULD IT SAY...

I AM A SMALL SENTIENT PART OF THE ETERNAL ENERGY OF THE UNIVERSE AND I AM ALIVE!?

WOULD IT SAY...

I HAVE VALUE AND SO DO YOU AND SO PLEASE PROTECT US BOTH!!?

N.J.R.

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

 Hello Gentle People:

  Many of you have been vaccinated at least twice against SarsCov2, otherwise known as Covid-19. Here is some new information for everybody who believes they are protected.

 The vaccines do protect against Covid-19 but do not provide as much protection against the new Delta variant and you can still become very sick if you catch the disease, especially if you are frail and elderly. Do not let your guard down or remove your masks too quickly. Wait for the hospitals to give the all clear signal.

 The reason the vaccines provide less protection against the variants is because they are designed to detect the protein spikes on the round Covid-19 virus. A variant of Covid-19 creates different protein spikes and thus requires a new vaccine. The game is called catch-up to the changing virus and an expert virologist who understands this game and who has created a friendly virus capable of interfering with the deadly virus and possibly all deadly viruses, works with his laboratory colleagues in the United States. His name is Leor Wineberger.  

WHAT I HAVE LEARNED SO FAR!

 GENTLE PEOPLE:

   LIKE THOUSANDS OF JOURNALISTS AROUND THE WORLD, I HAVE BEEN FOLLOWING THE PROGRESS OF VACCINE RESEARCH IN THE MOST HIGHLY SUBSIDIZED LABORATORIES AROUND THE WORLD...ONLY TO BE DISAPPOINTED WITH THE SLOW AND OFTEN NEGATIVE RESULTS PRODUCED BY THOSE SAME LABORATORIES. THIS IS ABOUT TO CHANGE, HOWEVER, AS THANKS TO  PROFESSOR LEOR WEINBERGER, THERE IS NEW HOPE ON THE HORIZON! I NOW UNDERSTAND WHY PROGRESS HAS BEEN SO SLOW AND IT IS NOT THE FAULT OF THE LABORATORIES BUT THE NATURE AND ABILITY OF VIRUSES TO MUTATE, SURVIVE AND INFECT. 

 THE SARS-COV-2 OR COVID-19 VIRUS ENTERS A HUMAN CELL AND HIJACKS THE REPLICATION MACHINERY OF THE CELL, SILENTLY REPLICATING ITSELF AND INFECTING MORE HUMAN CELLS AND THEN PROVOKING A DANGEROUS IMMUNE RESPONSE...

  NOW, HOWEVER,  IT WILL BE POSSIBLE, USING CAS 9 AND CRISPR, TO REPROGRAM AND CREATE GOOD VIRUSES THAT WILL DO THE EXACT SAME THING TO NASTY VIRUSES WITHOUT PROVOKING AN IMMUNE RESPONSE THAT KILLS BOTH THE VIRUS AND THE HUMAN CELL. 

 WHAT I HAVE LEARNED RECENTLY IS THAT DANGEROUS VIRUSES: REPLICATE, MUTATE AND TRANSMIT AND UP UNTIL RECENTLY, THE HEAVILY SUBSIDIZED VACCINES CREATED TO COMBAT HIV, FLU, AND SARS-COV2,  DO NOT REPLICATE, MUTATE AND TRANSMIT TO COMBAT THE KILLER VIRUS. 

  IT WAS AFTER TWENTY YEARS OF ALMOST BURN OUT EFFORT THAT PROFESSOR LEOR WEINBERGER AND HIS TEAM AT THE GLADSTONE INSTITUTE IN CALIFORNIA, DISCOVERED A METHOD TO CREATE AN ANTI-VIRUS VIRUS. A VIRUS SAFE FOR HUMANS BUT WHICH CAN: REPLICATE, MUTATE, AND HIJACK A DANGEROUS VIRUS AND THEN TRANSMIT ITSELF IN PLACE OF THE KILLER VIRUS, RENDERING THE KILLER VIRUS HARMLESS. THE POTENTIALLY EXCELLENT GOOD NEWS GOING ALONG WITH THIS DISCOVERY IS HOW THIS NEW FORM OF SELF-TRANSMITTING VACCINE CAN BE USED FOR ALL THE DANGEROUS VIRUSES AND NOT ONLY FOR THOSE MENTIONED ABOVE. THE CATCH 22 IS AS USUAL THE NECESSITY TO MAKE ABSOLUTELY SURE THIS NEW METHOD IS SAFE FOR USE. THE POSSIBILITY TO ERADICATE VIRAL CREATED DISEASES AROUND THE WORLD IS CLOSE...VERY VERY CLOSE!

"Viruses mutate and spread from person to person, a dynamic process that often leaves us playing catch-up when there's a new disease outbreak. What if vaccines worked the same way? Virologist Leor Weinberger shares a scientific breakthrough: "hijacker therapy," a type of medical treatment that could attack, modify and spread alongside a virus, potentially treating afflicted individuals and slowing the spread of infections like HIV."

  • Leor Weinberger and his team have developed novel therapies with profound implications in depriving infectious diseases, in particular HIV, of the ability to replicate.
    This video was produced by TEDMED. TED's editors featured it among our daily selections on the home page.

  Hello my good friend Valdemar Oliveira! I am happy to hear you had a successfull heart operation.  I hope you live to be 110. I may not be...