FREEDOM with honesty, justice, and courage..
COMPASSION with dignity, humour, and tolerance..
KNOWLEDGE with effort, perseverance and sharing..
LOVE with peace and harmony towards all
LIFE ON EARTH.
A science-based international free press humanitarian organization...
created in 1972.. human4us2.blogspot.com...
This page reminds me to keep writing to government members in the slim hope someone will have the courage to make political and economic changes for the near future. I do not own a car but I do wish I could afford an Electric vehicle! I will, however, fix my Bicycle.
Death does not scare me. I feel sorry, however, for the younger people and the children who will survive into the near future. P.S. If you notice polluting gas burning cars advertised on the bottom of this page they are both unauthorized and unwanted and the same goes for anything that creates pollution. Joseph Raglione.
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Pierre Marcus:
Visualizing the Warmest August in 136 Years
August 2016 was the warmest August in 136 years of modern record-keeping, according to a monthly analysis of global temperatures by scientists at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS). It follows last July (http://goo.gl/NKsaje) which also was the warmest in 136 years of modern record-keeping.
Eleven months heat streak
Actually this record warm August continued a streak of by now eleven consecutive months (starting October 2015) to set new monthly temperature records.
Where to start when looking for information on climate change?
Check out NASA's Global Climate Change Vital Signs of the Planet website with lots of information on global climate change: http://climate.nasa.gov/
Image credit: NASA Earth Observatory chart by Joshua Stevens, based on data from the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS)
On another note: Thank you for your interest in this collection which, actually a few weeks ago, reached over 100,000 followers. Maybe take a look at my other collections as well? Try the Space/Space Technology collection (https://goo.gl/5KP0wx) or the Astronomy/Astrophysics collection (https://goo.gl/x0zPAJ), or follow me +Pierre Markuse to get every of my posts.
If you have been to France, I don’t have to remind you about how much cheese there is - every menu, fridge, and supermarket shelf has the most unbelievable choice of cheeses...except...Raw Vegan.
Inspired by my trip to Mont St Michel in France and my cravings for cheese the raw vegan way, this recipe has the creaminess of Cream Cheese and the tanginess of Cottage Cheese and is so divine it's hard to believe there are only 3 simple ingredients!
Something heavy to weigh down the bowl (I used dry peas, but dumbbells or jugs with water will also work well)
Ingredients
1/2 Cup Macadamia Nuts
1/2 Cup Cashew Nuts
1/2 Cup + 2 Tbsp Pure Water (or just enough to cover all the nuts when in blender)
Optional: Herbs and Spices
PREPARATION
Blend everything together (If you are not using a high speed blender, you may need to occasionally stop and scrape the mixture off the sides back onto the blade. Pulse from time to time, making sure there is always some mixture touching the blades). Make sure the nuts are well ground and the mixture is creamy.
Place the colander on a plate (this will stop the whey, which will be strained out in the process, from making a mess on the table). Place cheese cloth inside the colander.
Pour the mixture onto the cloth (on the right, you can see the consistency is blobby, not liquidy).
Place the bag inside another one, or if you only own one- try turn it over itself, just as long as no mixture can escape when placing a weight on top.
Place whatever you decided to use as a weight on top and put the stack in a place away from draughts (mine is inside the dehydrator with trays out).
Walk away for 24 hours. (I must admit I can never just walk away and readjusted the weight from time to time to squeeze more Whey out and also tasted the cheese in the process, but 24 hours seems to be the perfect time).
Transfer to the fridge for half an hour to harden, shape into logs and then roll into any herbs or spices you like (I had one log in Cracked Black, Red Pepper and Paprika and the other log in a Mix of Dried Herbs including Thyme, Marjoram, Parsley, Oregano, Sage and Basil).
NOTES
I hear it lasts in the fridge for over a week too, but I wouldn't know…
Tanya Alekseeva is a wellness coach, chef, author, Reiki do Satori master healer, and a renowned raw food and detox expert. Born in Russia, raised in New Zealand and now living in London, she focuses her coaching to ensure busy individuals achieve their most desired wellbeing and ultimate health objectives. She is the founder of Better Raw, co-founder of Lush Escapes, and author of eBooks which are available on Better Raw.
Writer, wildlife enthusiast, animal advocate, vegan. Senior Food Campaigner at the Center for Biological Diversity — http://TakeExtinctionOffYourPlate.com/
Sep 63 min read
It’s Time to Cut the Cheese
Why is the U.S. bailing out another big polluter?
Big Cheese is getting $20 million of your taxpayer dollars. No, the feds aren’t attempting the world’s largest plate of nachos. The U.S. Department of Agriculture just announced it will bail out the dairy industry by using government funds to purchase 11 million pounds of surplus cheese; cheese nobody wanted. This is more serious than wasting our hard-earned dollars to satisfy Tex-Mex lovers — the federal government is actually spending our money to destroy the planet.
Dairy adds nearly 95 billion pounds of greenhouses gases to the atmosphere every year. That’s more than what a dozen coal-fired power plants spew in the same time.
Every glass of milk and every block of cheese consumed adds to climate change, habitat loss and other significant threats to wildlife. The Center for Biological Diversity, where I work, crunched the numbers on the environmental impact of dairy production for our Extinction Facts labelscampaign, and it’s a pretty grim picture.
Americans eat about 36 pounds of cheese every year, 22.8 pounds of frozen dairy desserts, 14.9 pounds of yogurt, and 5.5 pounds of butter per person — about 90 pounds of dairy substances, including cheese. But wait, there’s more: On top of that, we consume nearly 300 cups of milk each year per person. So, where did this surplus — the highest in 30 years — come from?
Believe it or not, our consumption of dairy is declining. With healthy alternatives like rice, soy, almond and coconut milk readily available and new plant-based cheeses saturating the market, people are making smarter choices and the dairy industry is losing ground. Most other industries would have to adapt to market forces, but the USDA continues to keep animal agriculture afloat whether people want those products or not.
In 2015 the USDA refused to include recommendations from its own panel of experts for people to eat fewer animal-based products and more plant-based foods in the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. In that same year, 9.3 million dairy cows produced more than 208 billion pounds of milk, and the dairy surplus continued to grow.
Why is our government ignoring market demand and the advice of its own experts to prop up an unsustainable food system? A National Academy of Medicine committee is reviewing the procedures for producing the Dietary Guidelines in response to concerns over transparency and research standards.
But our planet can’t wait another five years, which is why we’re calling on the USDA to promote sustainable diets now and hold the meat and dairy industries responsible for the environmental harm they cause — instead of paying them to pollute.
It’s time for the feds to cut the cheese, acknowledge the importance of sustainability in American diets, and stop propping up industries that jeopardize our health and the health of the planet.
Jennifer Molidor is the senior food campaigner for the Center for Biological Diversity.