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Discussion starter · #4,461 ·
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/2013/08/15/China-zoo-under-fire-for-disguising-dog-as-lion

China Zoo Under Fire for Disguising Dog as Lion

from AFP 15 Aug 2013, 1:46 AM PDT

Image


A Chinese zoo's supposed "African lion" was exposed as a fraud when the dog used as a substitute started barking.

The zoo in the People's Park of Luohe, in the central province of Henan, replaced exotic exhibits with common species, according to the state-run Beijing Youth Daily.

It quoted a customer surnamed Liu who wanted to show her son the different sounds animals made -- but he pointed out that the animal in the cage labelled "African lion" was barking.

The beast was in fact a Tibetan mastiff -- a large and long-haired breed of dog.

"The zoo is absolutely cheating us," the paper quoted Liu, who was charged 15 yuan ($2.45) for the ticket, as saying. "They are trying to disguise the dogs as lions."

Three other species housed incorrectly included two coypu rodents in a snake's cage, a white fox in a leopard's den, and another dog in a wolf pen.

The chief of the park's animal department, Liu Suya, told the paper that while it does have a lion, it had been taken to a breeding facility and the dog -- which belonged to an employee -- had been temporarily housed in the zoo over safety concerns.

Users of China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo service mocked the zoo.

"This is not funny at all. It's sad for both the zoo and the animals," said one.

"They should at least use a husky to pretend to be a wolf," said another.
 
Gupta politely tells America to pull its head out of its ass concerning marijuana:


http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/08/health/gupta-changed-mind-marijuana/index.html

Over the last year, I have been working on a new documentary called "Weed." The title "Weed" may sound cavalier, but the content is not.
I traveled around the world to interview medical leaders, experts, growers and patients. I spoke candidly to them, asking tough questions. What I found was stunning.
Long before I began this project, I had steadily reviewed the scientific literature on medical marijuana from the United States and thought it was fairly unimpressive. Reading these papers five years ago, it was hard to make a case for medicinal marijuana. I even wrote about this in a TIME magazine article, back in 2009, titled "Why I would Vote No on Pot."
Well, I am here to apologize.
I apologize because I didn't look hard enough, until now. I didn't look far enough. I didn't review papers from smaller labs in other countries doing some remarkable research, and I was too dismissive of the loud chorus of legitimate patients whose symptoms improved on cannabis.
Instead, I lumped them with the high-visibility malingerers, just looking to get high. I mistakenly believed the Drug Enforcement Agency listed marijuana as a schedule 1 substance because of sound scientific proof. Surely, they must have quality reasoning as to why marijuana is in the category of the most dangerous drugs that have "no accepted medicinal use and a high potential for abuse."
Dr. Sanjay Gupta is a neurosurgeon and CNN\'s chief medical correspondent.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta is a neurosurgeon and CNN's chief medical correspondent.
They didn't have the science to support that claim, and I now know that when it comes to marijuana neither of those things are true. It doesn't have a high potential for abuse, and there are very legitimate medical applications. In fact, sometimes marijuana is the only thing that works. Take the case of Charlotte Figi, who I met in Colorado. She started having seizures soon after birth. By age 3, she was having 300 a week, despite being on seven different medications. Medical marijuana has calmed her brain, limiting her seizures to 2 or 3 per month.
I have seen more patients like Charlotte first hand, spent time with them and come to the realization that it is irresponsible not to provide the best care we can as a medical community, care that could involve marijuana.
We have been terribly and systematically misled for nearly 70 years in the United States, and I apologize for my own role in that.
Medical facts of Marijuana WEED: A Dr. Sanjay Gupta Special
I hope this article and upcoming documentary will help set the record straight.
On August 14, 1970, the Assistant Secretary of Health, Dr. Roger O. Egeberg wrote a letter recommending the plant, marijuana, be classified as a schedule 1 substance, and it has remained that way for nearly 45 years. My research started with a careful reading of that decades old letter. What I found was unsettling. Egeberg had carefully chosen his words:
"Since there is still a considerable void in our knowledge of the plant and effects of the active drug contained in it, our recommendation is that marijuana be retained within schedule 1 at least until the completion of certain studies now underway to resolve the issue."
Not because of sound science, but because of its absence, marijuana was classified as a schedule 1 substance. Again, the year was 1970. Egeberg mentions studies that are underway, but many were never completed. As my investigation continued, however, I realized Egeberg did in fact have important research already available to him, some of it from more than 25 years earlier.
High risk of abuse
In 1944, New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia commissioned research to be performed by the New York Academy of Science. Among their conclusions: they found marijuana did not lead to significant addiction in the medical sense of the word. They also did not find any evidence marijuana led to morphine, heroin or cocaine addiction.
We now know that while estimates vary, marijuana leads to dependence in around 9 to 10% of its adult users. By comparison, cocaine, a schedule 2 substance "with less abuse potential than schedule 1 drugs" hooks 20% of those who use it. Around 25% of heroin users become addicted.
The worst is tobacco, where the number is closer to 30% of smokers, many of whom go on to die because of their addiction.
There is clear evidence that in some people marijuana use can lead to withdrawal symptoms, including insomnia, anxiety and nausea. Even considering this, it is hard to make a case that it has a high potential for abuse. The physical symptoms of marijuana addiction are nothing like those of the other drugs I've mentioned. I have seen the withdrawal from alcohol, and it can be life threatening.
I do want to mention a concern that I think about as a father. Young, developing brains are likely more susceptible to harm from marijuana than adult brains. Some recent studies suggest that regular use in teenage years leads to a permanent decrease in IQ. Other research hints at a possible heightened risk of developing psychosis.
Much in the same way I wouldn't let my own children drink alcohol, I wouldn't permit marijuana until they are adults. If they are adamant about trying marijuana, I will urge them to wait until they're in their mid-20s when their brains are fully developed.
Medical benefit
While investigating, I realized something else quite important. Medical marijuana is not new, and the medical community has been writing about it for a long time. There were in fact hundreds of journal articles, mostly documenting the benefits. Most of those papers, however, were written between the years 1840 and 1930. The papers described the use of medical marijuana to treat "neuralgia, convulsive disorders, emaciation," among other things.
A search through the U.S. National Library of Medicine this past year pulled up nearly 20,000 more recent papers. But the majority were research into the harm of marijuana, such as "Bad trip due to anticholinergic effect of cannabis," or "Cannabis induced pancreatitits" and "Marijuana use and risk of lung cancer."
In my quick running of the numbers, I calculated about 6% of the current U.S. marijuana studies investigate the benefits of medical marijuana. The rest are designed to investigate harm. That imbalance paints a highly distorted picture.
The challenges of marijuana research
To do studies on marijuana in the United States today, you need two important things.
First of all, you need marijuana. And marijuana is illegal. You see the problem. Scientists can get research marijuana from a special farm in Mississippi, which is astonishingly located in the middle of the Ole Miss campus, but it is challenging. When I visited this year, there was no marijuana being grown.
The second thing you need is approval, and the scientists I interviewed kept reminding me how tedious that can be. While a cancer study may first be evaluated by the National Cancer Institute, or a pain study may go through the National Institute for Neurological Disorders, there is one more approval required for marijuana: NIDA, the National Institute on Drug Abuse. It is an organization that has a core mission of studying drug abuse, as opposed to benefit.
Stuck in the middle are the legitimate patients who depend on marijuana as a medicine, oftentimes as their only good option.
Keep in mind that up until 1943, marijuana was part of the United States drug pharmacopeia. One of the conditions for which it was prescribed was neuropathic pain. It is a miserable pain that's tough to treat. My own patients have described it as "lancinating, burning and a barrage of pins and needles." While marijuana has long been documented to be effective for this awful pain, the most common medications prescribed today come from the poppy plant, including morphine, oxycodone and dilaudid.
Here is the problem. Most of these medications don't work very well for this kind of pain, and tolerance is a real problem.
Most frightening to me is that someone dies in the United States every 19 minutes from a prescription drug overdose, mostly accidental. Every 19 minutes. It is a horrifying statistic. As much as I searched, I could not find a documented case of death from marijuana overdose.
It is perhaps no surprise then that 76% of physicians recently surveyed said they would approve the use of marijuana to help ease a woman's pain from breast cancer.
When marijuana became a schedule 1 substance, there was a request to fill a "void in our knowledge." In the United States, that has been challenging because of the infrastructure surrounding the study of an illegal substance, with a drug abuse organization at the heart of the approval process. And yet, despite the hurdles, we have made considerable progress that continues today.
Looking forward, I am especially intrigued by studies like those in Spain and Israel looking at the anti-cancer effects of marijuana and its components. I'm intrigued by the neuro-protective study by Lev Meschoulam in Israel, and research in Israel and the United States on whether the drug might help alleviate symptoms of PTSD. I promise to do my part to help, genuinely and honestly, fill the remaining void in our knowledge.
Citizens in 20 states and the District of Columbia have now voted to approve marijuana for medical applications, and more states will be making that choice soon. As for Dr. Roger Egeberg, who wrote that letter in 1970, he passed away 16 years ago.
I wonder what he would think if he were alive today.
 
Legalizing pot wouldn't make it less of a "gateway drug".
One big way it's supposed to be a Gateway(TM) drug is who you buy it from, who always has something else to sell you if you have the money.

Make it legal and you're buying from the same guy who'll sell you a Big Gulp (insert favorite Mayer Bloonberg joke here).
 
Discussion starter · #4,468 ·
One big way it's supposed to be a Gateway(TM) drug is who you buy it from, who always has something else to sell you if you have the money.

Make it legal and you're buying from the same guy who'll sell you a Big Gulp (insert favorite Mayer Bloonberg joke here).
The dealer can also add other drugs to it without the buyer's knowledge, too.
 
One big way it's supposed to be a Gateway(TM) drug is who you buy it from, who always has something else to sell you if you have the money.

Make it legal and you're buying from the same guy who'll sell you a Big Gulp (insert favorite Mayer Bloonberg joke here).
I have never heard that interpretation of the phrase.
 
What, exactly, is the greater good of this thread? I posted the dog story and the one following it specifically to prove a point.
To escape the daily horroshow of our existence, at least in my case.

What point was that? To show just how quickly this thread can get bogged down with political posts that are being put here because people don't want them responded to, let alone debated.
Well could just see how this thread goes if you maybe do not respond for a while and just post interesting news you find. :)

Depends on who you ask. Explaining it, however, would require breaking the rules of this thread.
Are we not just a little over dramatic here?
I am pretty sure you are smart enough to come up with a very brief pg13 rated explanation a person with very limited brain function like myself could understand.
 
After Obama-mocking rodeo clown, Missouri fair requires 'sensitivity training'
By Josh Levs, CNN

http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/15/polit...8/15/politics/missouri-rodeo-clowns-sensitivity-training-obama-clown/index.html

Simple question: If you are not allowed to mock a powerful politician because of some secondary trait, does that alone make them unqualified for office?





:hiding2:

Of course not, we are all happy shiny people now who sing kum ba yah my love all day long.
 
Are we not just a little over dramatic here?
Hmmm. No. Don't think so.


I am pretty sure you are smart enough to come up with a very brief pg13 rated explanation a person with very limited brain function like myself could understand.
Sure I could. However, refuting things in this thread is apparently a no-no and I don't find it worth the effort to start another thread when you've already said you don't much care how accurate the story is.
 
Hmmm. No. Don't think so.
Uh uh, time for a movie quote, “No, We Don’t Wanna Think, We Wanna Know.”


Sure I could. However, refuting things in this thread is apparently a no-no and I don't find it worth the effort to start another thread when you've already said you don't much care how accurate the story is.
No they are not, but there is refuting and than there is refuting refuting which you seem to be a fan of.

Funny that I speak here like anything I say carries any weight.

This time you would not even be refuting unless my statement was worth refuting which I doubt.
I would say you would just clarify why he was let go or did he just leave?
Because no one, even fox news, could handle the truth only he knew.
So he left their protective realms and put himself out there, made himself even more vulnerable against the onslaught of the elite liberal mass media and the sheeps that follow them for the greater good.
Gosh, that sounds almost like a movie script.





BaB, please forgive me that I insult your intellect with my grammar again but I am trying.
 
I am a fan of refuting things that I feel are wrong and need refuted.

I'm not a fan of having others decide for me what should and shouldn't be refuted.

Since this particular one seems to be of interest to you, I'll answer it (and, I'd need to look for the link again to find the actual article on it so you'll just have to excuse me responding to it without it).

Neither Fox News nor Glenn Beck maintain that he was "let go" in any way other than being allowed to leave. According to both Fox News and a spokesman for Beck, Beck had gone to the network in January of that year and asked to re-negotiate his contract so he could voluntarily end his show early.

As I understand it, he had been wanting to move to different mediums for a while and didn't want to be restricted by time slots and what not. So, he had made it known prior to that that he would likely not be renewing his contract. So, they came to a mutual agreement to let him end his show early.

Now, I could probably speculate what else went on with that. Glenn Beck's radio company struck a deal with Fox News shortly after that agreement was reached to do more radio work with them (utilizing other talent besides himself, I think). So, it's unlikely that he had a huge issue with them or them him.

I have not watched Beck's web show and almost never listen to his radio show. I have caught snippets of both here and there and it would be unfair to come to any conclusion beyond the information that has been released by both sides.

Speaking strictly for myself, I, personally, would not want to work for Fox News. While I might prefer it to working for any other news network, the simple truth is that they are neither what they profess to be nor what others profess them to be either.

I have no doubt what so ever that Fox News is the media wing of the GOP. What Fox News is not, however, is conservative as the GOP is not conservative. It is when it suits them and isn't when it doesn't.

As it stands right now, the only really far right guy on the network is Hannity (whose future other than extending his contract isn't entirely clear at the moment). It's interesting that rumors of Hannity's time slot going to somebody else started right around the same time that Hannity started getting overly critical of the GOP on his radio show.

There are, of course, numerous right of center hosts there as well. That's about as far as any real conservative would ever classify most of them.

The fact that Fox News was willing to undercut John McCain's acceptance speech in 2008 for a pre-recorded interview between O'Rielly and Obama says as much about Fox News as it does on whether or not the GOP really cared about winning that race.

The fact that not one single presidential debate took place on Fox (nor did the GOP push for one, apparently) should say something about the last race as well.

As I said. I, personally, would have little to no desire to work for Fox News. I could speculate about Beck, but it would be just that. Speculation without much of anything to base it on.
 
BaB, please forgive me that I insult your intellect
Zzzzzzz snork! hUh? What?


with my grammar again but I am trying.
You be careful what you say! I'm certain she's a charming woman and has been important in your life.


vulnerable against the onslaught of the elite liberal mass media and the sheeps that follow them for the greater good.
Gosh, that sounds almost like a movie script.
You seem to be mocking the idea of a MSM cartel that often distorts the news to serve other purposes. If you read through the Travon thread you would see many post where people were able to document the MSM doing exactly that. So much of the story carried in the MSM was a lie, as shown in the trial if you followed it and saw the actual testimony and evidence presented. It is rare that you get to examining coverage of a major story and “fact check” it. The malfeasance by the MSM there has to bring into question their reporting on other stories.

:idea1: The upside is a lot of things that have you feeling miserable and hopeless may be based on lies.
 
"They have evolved to mate quick and dirty"...Yeah, that's the way I like it!

http://news.yahoo.com/why-insects-gay-sex-124743482.html

Why Insects Have Gay Sex

Insect sex may seem fairly simple: fluttering dances, clasping abdomens, a quick mount on a forest floor. But a new review of homosexual insect encounters suggests the acts may not be that straightforward for the individuals involved.

Researchers have widely examined homosexual behavior in mammals and birds, but have addressed it less frequently in insects and spiders. To assess the range of evolutionary explanations for same-sex intercourse in the invertebrate world, a team of biologists from Tel Aviv University in Israel examined roughly 100 existing studies on the topic and compiled the first comprehensive review of homosexuality in invertebrates. The review was published earlier this month in the journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.

The team focused on male-male interactions to simplify the analysis, and found that most of these encounters occurred as accidents. Whereas larger animals have developed more complicated homosexual motivations — like maintaining alliances, which has been found in certain primate and seagull species — insects seem to mistakenly partake in it in a hasty attempt to secure mates. [Gay Animals: Alternate Lifestyles in the Wild]

"They have evolved to mate quick and dirty," said study co-author Inon Scharf, an evolutionary ecologist at Tel Aviv University. "They grab every opportunity to mate that they have because, if they become slow, they may give up an opportunity to mate."

Desperate mates

In some cases, males carry around the scent of females they have just mated with, sending confusing signals to other perusing males. In other cases, males and females look so similar to one another that males cannot tell if a potential mate is a female until he mounts "her" and prepares for the act, Scharf said.

Sometimes, such extreme indiscrimination leads to mating with inanimate objects, as has been observed in beetles trying to mount glass bottles.

The glass bottle "looks like a huge female to them," Scharf said. "They just try to mate with whatever gives them a vague impression of an opportunity."
Other studies do, however, show evidence of more intentional and malicious motivations behind homosexual insect sex. Male butterflies, moths and wasps, for example, use same-sex encounters to distract competitors from potential female mates. Certain beetles have even been found to use same-sex mounting as a way to spread sperm to other males that may then pass it along to the next female he mounts, though this mechanism does not appear to be very effective.

Since male insect anatomy is not designed to accept male genitals, improper penetration can cause bodily damage in aggressively competing mates. This anatomy blocker is not a problem for all species, since not all insect sex involves penetration. Even so, one study found that certain male insects have developed femalelike genitals to lower the risk of damage from homosexual penetration.

Is insect sex pleasurable?

On the other hand, female-female homosexuality appears to have a separate set of motivations, and deserves a whole separate analysis, Scharf said. In general, female-female interactions seem more intentional than male-male interactions. In fact, one study found that certain female beetles mount each other to look larger and attract more male mates.

The frequency of homosexual behavior in the insect world also remains unclear; however, more cases have been observed in the lab than in the field. This could indicate that the behavior occurs during stressful or isolating conditions, Scharf said, but more work is needed to confirm this idea.

And while the possibility that any sort of sexual encounter could induce pleasure in insects may seem unlikely, Scharf does not rule it out.

"I don't know if they enjoy things or not, or if they feel fear," Scharf said. "They have some stress hormones — and they sense it — but whether you can define this as fear, pleasure or pain is very difficult to say."

The team next hopes to conduct experimental studies on a species of beetle to determine how homosexual behavior affects different aspects of the animal's life, and whether the behavior is linked to any other specific types of behaviors.
 
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