OUR DAILY DOSE a film by Jeremy Seifert

Hailed by the Centers for Disease Control as one of the top ten public health achievements of the 20th century, water fluoridation is something most of us assume to be safe and effective. But new science has upended this assumption, revealing that fluoride is a developmental neurotoxin and an endocrine disruptor. The CDC tells us that drinking fluoride decreases tooth decay, at best, by 25%. That is one-half to one cavity per person over a lifetime. Is one less cavity worth risking a child’s long-term brain and thyroid health? It’s time to rethink this very old practice. In OUR DAILY DOSE, filmmaker Jeremy Seifert (GMO OMG) lays out the dangers of water fluoridation informatively and creatively, highlighting the most current research and interviewing top-tier doctors, activists, and attorneys close to the issue. Through thoughtful examination of old beliefs and new science, the film alerts us to the health threat present in the water and beverages we rely on every day. This is an eye-opening look at how we have less control over our health than we may have thought. http://www.ourdailydose.com

Taronga Park Zoo

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-07-10/covid-live-updates-coronavirus-press-conference-sydney-lockdown/100282612

https://taronga.org.au/taronga-tv

Taronga Zoo Sydney is temporarily closed. Taronga Western Plains Zoo Dubbo is still operating. Read more.

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Coronavirus Outbreak

COVID live updates: NSW braces for more community transmission, as police checkpoints set up along Victorian border

By Bridget Judd and Jessica RigaPosted 46m ago46 minutes ago

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New South Wales is bracing for more locally acquired cases of COVID-19 and the prospect of a longer lockdown as authorities work to get the outbreak under control.

Stay up-to-date on the coronavirus outbreak

It comes as police checkpoints are set up along the Victorian border to ensure those returning from school holidays are carrying the correct permits.

Follow all of Saturday’s COVID-19 updates in the live blog below. 

Key events

The Coronavirus and Me

In a few weeks I am going to be 87. So, it is very likely, that sooner or later I am going to die anyway, isn’t it? I just hope that I can die at home and not in hospital. And I also hope, that my family can be amply prepared for my death.

I maintain ‘Social Distancing’ with each and everyone. I want to avoid to be vaccinated and hope, that this is possible. I mean, why should a very old person be afraid of dying?

Uta’s Diary

I can report, that the backyard looks beautiful now. A lot of work has been done to it during the last few weeks. I am very happy about this!

auntyuta's avatarAuntyUta

https://auntyuta.com/2016/08/22/big-loss/

https://auntyuta.com/2020/11/08/__trashed/

https://auntyuta.com/2011/11/

https://auntyuta.com/2020/12/27/after-peter-died-the-third-sunday/

Today is the4thSunday after Peter died/On th 8th of November, that is just a few weeks ago, when Peter was still alive and able to visit the local doctor (with Olivia’s help that is), yes on the 8th of November I republished one of the posts from November 2011.

Now, I assume that most of my readers would not like to go to the trouble of looking up all these posts. However, for me it was most interesting to read through all of them again. It helps to give some kind of substance to what I do remember about the past nine years or so. These posts show me, that already nine years ago I could not help myself thinking about what would happen when Peter and I would come into our eighties. Well, Peter made it to 85 without any significant changes in our surroundings…

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The Lambda coronavirus variant has arrived in Australia. Here’s what we know so far

https://www.abc.net.au/news/health/2021-07-06/what-we-know-about-the-lambda-variant/100267978

Key points:

  • The Lambda variant is one of 11 official SARS-CoV-2 variants recognised by the World Health Organization
  • It was first detected in Peru and has spread to 29 countries, including Australia
  • A new study that has yet to be peer-reviewed found signs that the variant could be more infectious and harder to tackle with vaccination, but it’s early days

Coronavirus variants

The World Health Organization has identified 11 coronavirus variants so far (there are 24 letters in the Greek alphabet).

There are four variants of concern:

  • Alpha
  • Beta
  • Gamma 
  • Delta

And seven variants of interest (most of which you’ve probably never heard of). They are:

  • Epsilon
  • Zeta
  • Eta
  • Theta
  • Iota
  • Kappa
  • Lambda

All SARS-CoV-2 variants are distinguished from one another by mutations in their spike proteins — the components of the virus that allow it to invade human cells.

For instance, the Delta variant first detected in India has two key spike protein mutations — E484Q and L452R  — that allow it to infect cells more easily and evade the body’s immune response. 

According to research published last week but yet to be peer reviewed,  Lambda has seven unique spike protein mutations.

A Chilean team of scientists analysed blood samples from health workers in Santiago who had received two doses of the CoronaVac vaccine developed by Sinovac Biotech in China.

They found  the Lambda variant has a mutation called L452Q, which is similar to the L452R mutation seen in the Delta and Epsilon variants.

As the L452R mutation is thought to make Delta and Epsilon more infectious and resilient against vaccination, the team concluded that Lambda’s L452Q mutation might also help it spread far and wide. 

Dr. Norman Swan on So You Think You Know What’s Good For You?

Dr. Norman Swan was one of the first medically qualified journalists in Australia, with a broadcast career spanning more than 30 years. He currently hosts Radio National’s The Health Report and co-hosts Coronacast. He also reports on 7.30 and is a guest reporter on Four Corners; appears on The Drum and is an occasional host of Radio National Breakfast. In addition to being an active journalist and health broadcaster, Dr Swan has a deep strategic knowledge of the Australian healthcare system and is committed to evidence-based approaches. Ahead of the release of his new book ‘So You Think You Know What’s Good For You?’, Joel sat down with Dr. Swan to discuss chatting to different age groups, covering health for general audiences, the balance of diet and exercise, and more! Books mentioned in this podcast: Dr Norman Swan – ‘So You Think You Know What’s Good For You?’: https://bit.ly/3hgcWRH Host: Joel Naoum Guest: Dr. Norman Swan

Landline 2021

I always like watching the Australian ABC program ‘Landline’. But the story about the innovation of some beef farmers and the apple cider story I find especially interesting.

auntyuta's avatarAuntyUta

https://www.abc.net.au/news/newschannel/

Online Saviour: Going online saves struggling beef business

Pip Courtney

The decision to take their business online saved a couple’s struggling beef operation and provided a new secure market for dozens of other farmers.

https://www.abc.net.au/landline/online-saviour:-going-online-saves-struggling-beef/13375930

Diversifying After Disaster: Innovation aids recovery for Batlow apple growers

Luke Wong

Growers are implementing measures to help future-proof against fire and labour shortages, and some have turned to making cider as a way to diversify their income.

https://www.abc.net.au/landline/diversifying-after-disaster:-innovation-aids/13375906

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WHY Russia Saved the United States: The Forgotten History of a Brotherhood


Rising Tide Foundation

Why did Russia’s Czar Alexander II deploy the Russian navy to the coasts of the USA during the height of the Civil War in 1863? Why dynamic shaped the rise of the great rail building traditions across Russia, the USA, Germany, Japan and France in the 19th century and how did this shape the sale of Alaska and Bering Strait rail connection between old and new worlds? In this presentation delivered to a Vancouver audience as the first part of a seminar entitled “The Historic Clash Between Open vs Closed Systems“, Rising Tide Foundation President Cynthia Chung demonstrates that in order to answer these questions it is necessary to understand a broader historical dynamic shaped by the great scientist-statesman Gottfried Leibniz who guided Czar Peter the great in the creation of the Russian Academy of Science over 150 years earlier. Cynthia zeros in on the forgotten strategic friendship sparked by the Academy’s first female president Ekaterina Dashkova and America’s Benjamin Franklin beginning in 1780 which was integral to the Russian-led League of Armed Neutrality that tipped the balance in favor of US victory against the British Empire. While Dashkova became the first Russian inducted into Franklin’s Philosophical Society, Franklin became the first American inducted into Russia’s Academy of Science. The story follows the rise of Alexander von Humboldt who unleashed an incredible movement in America, Germany and beyond which drove a process of progress that has been all but written out of history and nearly gave rise to a world paradigm of win-win cooperation with an international array of rail and development corridors as outlined by the great Lincoln-ally William Gilpin in his 1890 Cosmopolitan Railway. How was this multi-polar potential derailed by a desperate British Empire? How might this lost potential be recaptured today? Watch the class to find out