For World Health

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Lead in Fuels

George Bush wants to put lead back in gasoline. Lead poisoning and other lead-related illnesses are catastrophic. Exhaust has recently been linked to asthma in children by researchers in New York City. Imagine adding lead dust exposure to all of those cases, and also to anyone exposed to gasoline or other fuels.

How can this man promote putting lead in fuels? He should not lead.

Monday, December 11, 2006

UN Knows Industry/Energy Pollutes

We have hundreds of millions of cows, don't we? a 4-stroke engine is small change. a 2-stroke engine is literally thousands of times filthier than a 4-stroke engine. Industrial pollution is thousands of times filthier than automotive pollution, is it not? The world has ~400 nuclear plants and thousands to tens of thousands of coal burning plants, and as many major factories or more.

Cars are minor, immediately economically visible markers.

Friday, December 08, 2006

This is ADD - Neuroempathy

Attention Deficit Disorder is not classically well understood. Instead of suffering from a shortage of attention, an ADD may experience an overabundance of free attention available and waiting to be spent on everything, depending on mood. They will then place their attention on whimsy, a butterfly, a passing thought which they will play out every possible and probable stem to, and having assigned value through their attention to this action, they will seek to see it to fruition of a sort before moving on to an 'assigned' task.

This makes it appear that they do not have enough attention to pay to schoolwork or a comparably boring lesson or something that does not suit their 'whimsy'.

This can be treated using amphetamines, which even further increase the ADD's attention span by speeding up the chemical interaxn in their minds, allowing them to complete these primary thoughts of whimsy and even carry them on as they complete other 'assigned' tasks. They now have as much 'spare' attention as a normal person devotes 'direct' attention to an assigned task.

They may also benefit from increased mental proclivity allowing them to move rapidly along thought channels without losing their train, making small interruptions take less time and allowing the EM field of the thought to be stronger and easier to refind or reconnect to its original circuit. Muscular acuity may also increase, allowing faster or less attention-heavy completion of assignments.

This is ADD. See previous articles about ADD and thought logging or multiple task single channel recording. This article also opens a new field of medical science called 'neuroempathy'.