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To: SheLion

You know, I've had a wonderful evening...it's our anniversary, 34th, the kids and grandkids are here, I made filets mignon and stuffed portobellos, we taste-tested some nice Aussie and Italian wines, the kids are all piled on the bed with the big mastiff puppy, they're watching "A Knight's Tale" with Grampa, DIL and daughter are in doing dishes, the guys are talking...Christmas decorations, family prayers...

I'm as close to heaven as I can get, on this earth, right this moment. Name-calling anti-smoking bigots are so much dirt to me, right now. They don't answer questions, they sling around taxpayer money like it grows on trees, and they have this supercilious "Why aren't YOU perfect like me, you stinky sick addict trash?" attitude...

When they learn to see smokers as human beings with rights and a habit that they personally have a problem with, for NO GOOD REASON, then I might actually care what they think. Until then, not a chance.

Happy New Year to you, my dear FRiend. May you be blessed with every good thing, and a whole lot of fun. ;-D


101 posted on 12/26/2004 6:47:12 PM PST by Judith Anne (Thank you St. Jude for favors granted.)
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To: Judith Anne
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY SIS!!!! May you have many, many more!


117 posted on 12/26/2004 7:25:20 PM PST by SheLion (Happy Holidays to all my friends in Free Republic!)
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To: All
December 24, 2003 -- IT is that time of the year: parties, presents, family gatherings - and dining-room tables laden with a tempting array of mouthwatering, delicious, seasonal chemicals.

Chemicals? Yes.

We live in an intensely chemical-phobic society, one where food labels and menus brag of being "all-natural" and "purely organic." Poultry sections offer fryers from "happy, free range chickens." "Chemical-free" cuisine is in.

So it may come as a shock to you that even an all-natu- ral holiday feast (and every other meal you consume throughout the year) comes replete with chemicals, including toxins (poisons) and carcinogens (cancer-causing chemicals) - most of which average consumers would reject simply on the grounds that they can't pronounce the names.

Assume you start with an appetizer, then move on to a medley of crispy, natural vegetables, and proceed to a traditional stuffed bird with all the trimmings, washing it down with libations of the season, and topping it all off with some homemade pastries.

You will thus have consumed holiday helpings of various "carcinogens" (defined here as a substance that at high dose causes cancer in laboratory animals), including:

* hydrazines (mushroom soup);

* aniline, caffeic acid, benzaldehyde, hydrogen peroxide, quercetin glycosides and psoralens (your fresh vegetable salad),

* heterocyclic amines, acrylamide, benzo(a)pyrene, ethyl carbamate, dihydrazines, d-limonene, safrole and quercetin glycosides (roast turkey with stuffing);

* benzene and heterocyclic amines (prime rib of beef with parsley sauce);

* furfural, ethyl alcohol, allyl isothiocyanate (broccoli, potatoes, sweet potatoes);

* coumarin, methyl eugenol, acetaldehyde, estragole and safrole (apple and pumpkin pies);

* ethyl alcohol with ethyl carbamate (red and white wines).

Then sit back and relax with some benzofuran, caffeic acid, catechol, l,2,5,6,-dibenz(a)anthra- cene with 4-methylcatechol (coffee).

And those, all produced courtesy of Mother Nature, are only the carcinogens you just scarfed down. Your l00-percent natural holiday meal is also replete with toxins - popularly known as "poisons." These include the solanine, arsenic and chaconine in potatoes; the hydrogen cyanide in lima beans and the hallucinogenic compound myristicin found in nutmeg, black pepper and carrots.

Now here is the good news: these foods are safe.

Four observations are relevant here:

* When it comes to toxins, only the dose makes the poison. Some chemicals, regardless of whether they are natural or synthetic, are potentially hazardous at high doses but are perfectly safe when consumed at low doses like the trace amounts found in our foods.

* While you probably associate the word "carcinogen" with nasty-sounding synthetic chemicals like PCBs and dioxin, the reality is that the more we test naturally occurring chemicals, the more we find that they, too, cause cancer in lab animals.

* The increasing body of evidence documenting the carcinogenicity (in the lab) of common substances found in nature highlights the contradiction we Americans have created up to now in our regulatory approach to carcinogens: trying to purge our nation of synthetic carcinogens, while turning a blind eye to the omnipresence of natural "carcinogens."

* While animal testing is an essential part of biomedical research, so is commonsense. A rodent is not a little man. There is no scientific foundation to the assumption that if high-dose exposure to a chemical causes cancer in a rat or mouse, then a trace level of it must pose a human cancer risk.

If we took a precautionary approach with all chemicals and assumed that a rodent carcinogen might pose a human cancer risk ("so let's ban it just in case"), we'd have very little left to eat. (A radical solution to our nation's obesity problem!)

The reality is that these trace levels of natural or synthetic chemicals in food or the environment pose no known human health hazard at all - let alone a risk of cancer.

So the next time you hear a self-appointed "consumer advocate" fret about the man-made "carcinogen du jour" and demand the government step in and "protect" us - remember, you just ingested a meal full of natural carcinogens without a care in the world and with no risk to your health.

Pass the methyl eugenol! Bon Appetit!

Elizabeth M. Whelan is president of the American Council on Science and Health

Full Story:

http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/14334.htm


159 posted on 12/27/2004 3:55:37 AM PST by SheLion (Happy Holidays to all my friends in Free Republic!)
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To: All
WOW! PREMATURE DEATHS! June 4, 2004
 
HOWARD JOHN BEATTIE (06/04/2004)
CALAIS - Howard John Beattie, 76, died May 28, 2004, at a Calais hospital. He was born April 4, 1928, in Placerville, Calif., the son of Alma and James Beattie. Howard was an active member of the Calais Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses and had been View Obituary

DANIEL P. CHANDLER (06/04/2004)
INDUSTRY - Daniel P. Chandler, 83, of Farmington, died at his camp on Clearwater Lake in Industry Wednesday morning June 2, 2004. He was born May 2, 1921, in Temple, a son of Andrew Jackson and Hester (Prescott) Chandler. He received his education in View Obituary

CLARA LYNN (ROBBINS) COUSINS (06/04/2004)
SUNSHINE - Clara Lynn (Robbins) Cousins, 87, died June 2, 2004, at a Bangor hospital. She was born Aug. 26, 1916, in Sunshine, the daughter of Horace Ellsbory and Ruth Ellen (Thompson) Robbins. Faith was important to Clara and she was very active in the View Obituary

GEORGE K. DRAKE JR. (06/04/2004)
OLD TOWN - George K. Drake Jr., 68, died in Zephyrhills, Fla., Jan. 12, 2004, after a long illness. He was born Aug. 20, 1935, in Old Town, the son of George Sr. and Etta (Young) Drake. George was a U.S. Army Veteran, serving from 1959 to 1962. He was View Obituary

JAMES W. FURTH (06/04/2004)
SURRY - James W. Furth, 81, died June 1, 2004, at an Ellsworth hos-pital. He was born July 16, 1922, in New Brunswick, N.J., the son of Frank Willard and Alice (Prost) Furth. He was raised in Highland Park, N.J. James served in the U.S. Marine Corps View Obituary

MARIE E. KEHOE (06/04/2004)
OLD TOWN - Marie E. Kehoe, 90, wife of the late Laurence F. (Larry) Kehoe, died Wednesday, June 2, 2004. She was born March 30, 1914, in Frenchville, the daughter of Marcel Raymond and Flavie Gauvin Raymond. Her childhood years were spent in View Obituary

CARO M. McGRAW (06/04/2004)
SURRY - Caro Marion McGraw, 92, died June 2, 2004, at a healthcare facility in Penobscot. She was born Aug. 9, 1911, in Bernard, the daughter of Linwood E. and Tillie (Marks) Leach. She was a lifetime member of the Arbutus Grange of Surry, as well as View Obituary

WARREN L. MOODY (06/04/2004)
CASTLE HILL - Warren L. Moody, 83, died Thursday, June 3, 2004, at a Presque Isle hospital. A complete obituary will appear in the Saturday's edition of the Bangor Daily News. Arrangements in care of Duncan-Graves Funeral Home. View Obituary

VERNON S. OAKES (06/04/2004)
BANGOR - Vernon S. Oakes, 77, died June 2, 2004, at the Maine Veterans Home in Bangor. He was born May 5, 1927, in Portage, the son of Frank and Jenny (Goding) Oakes. He is survived by two sisters, Ruth Washburn of Florida, and Barbara Graham of Texas; View Obituary

MARITA S. PINKHAM (06/04/2004)
ELLSWORTH - Marita S. Pinkham, 87, died June 1, 2004, at a local heathcare facility. She was born Dec. 21, 1916, in Cherryfield, the only child of Harlan Church Schoppe and Eleanor Kilton Schoppe. Marita graduated from Cherryfield Academy in 1934, and View Obituary

HARLEY C. PULK (06/04/2004)
BANGOR - Harley Chase Pulk, 89, of Bangor, died June 3, 2004, at a local healthcare center. He was born Oct. 30, 1914, in Princeton, the son of Fred Morton Pulk and Hattie Blanche (Fenlason) Pulk. Harley received his certificate in accounting from View Obituary

MARY ALICE THURSTON (06/04/2004)
STEUBEN - Mary Alice Thurston, 74, died Tuesday, June 1, 2004, at her home in Steuben. The former Mary Alice Klingensmith grew up in Athens, W.Va., and was a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Radcliff College. She was a member of the Unitarian Universalist View Obituary

ISAAC 'JR.' TILLEY JR. (06/04/2004)
WOODLAND - Isaac "Jr." Tilley Jr., 65, died June 3, 2004, at Caribou. He was born Sept. 10, 1938, at Caribou, the son of Isaac and Mary (Theriault) Tilley. He was a loving and devoted father to his family and his grandchildren were his life. He loved View Obituary

JOHN BAPTIST EDMOND BOURGOINE (06/04/2004)
CARIBOU - John Baptist Edmond Bourgoine, 96, husband of the late Lillian Mary (Cote) Bourgoine, for 73 years, died June 2, 2004, at his home in Caribou, surrounded by his family. He was born June 24, 1907, at Van Buren, the son of Edward and Agnes View Obituary
160 posted on 12/27/2004 3:57:54 AM PST by SheLion (Happy Holidays to all my friends in Free Republic!)
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