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Monday, March 24, 2008
Cats and Babies: Kaku Moves In
Curiously, Kaku went missing last night and this morning after changing the poo pans and feeding the kids, I found her scurrying around in the kitchen. She made herself quite comfortable on the left couch head while Boy remained on his right side of the couch and on his rug when it pleased him. So I laid out a bowl of food and water for her so she could eat.
Instead, Boy has taken to eating her food and leaving his alone. They seem quite contented together but I wonder now if the mad scurrying and hiss I heard last night from Boy was actually him chasing her around the kitchen and under the couch, or was it the cockroach I thought I saw?
Anyhow, mission accomplished without me lifting a finger. She must have tired of the other three bullying her and decided to move in or become too alarmed by Buffy's diarrhoea (Kaku had her run last week). Perhaps a combo of both.
While she is still hissy when I get close, when I watched her from the window and blinked at her, she went up close to look at me, roll over on her back for a while, realise I couldn't quite pet her, came closer to the window, repeated the same another two times before she disappeared from my view right under the window.
She doesn't run when I come into the kitchen anymore and she even watched Jack when he came in to look for me. She stayed there the whole while when I made dinner and only when I got a metre or so close, she'd hiss. So I have left her be for now.
The two boys were quite happy sunning themselves today, grooming each other but Buffy only appeared at mealtime. I think she is still unwell. Hope it clears soon. It is tiring cleaning diarrhoea every day. I'm even pondering buying the Litter-Robot. Sigh...
The Mommy Life / Organic Living: Sick Season with Martha Stewart
The past ten days has been a sick season for the whole family. The kids are down with diarrhoea. Kaku hissed at me today when I went to feed her although later she watched me serenely from her perch. I've been down with some strange upper respiratory throat infection with a thick cough, laryngitis, a twisted shoulder, and an odd head pain like there's a tumour in it. The doctor says I strained some neck muscle while coughing but it hurts like thunder in my head when it happens. Jack escaped the worst of it with only a polite cough, thanks to him guzzling gallons of my milk every morning and night.
Still we managed a children's party on Sunday where we bumped into two unexpected acquaintances and their families. A not unpleasant encounter, I must say. Jack charmed everyone with his gentle manners and cheery independence, and even the host's mother who was astonished that he delightedly ate green capsicums.
I've tired of eating out, paying an extra 17 percent tax for mostly non-organic unsustainably produced and usually over enhanced food. So to eat in more, I have to actually produce a repertoire of edible, actually enjoyable healthy foods. Hastily thrown together pastas seem to elicit ecstatic cheers from the hubby while grilled and fried combos a usual hmm-nice. Thankfully Jack loves my cooking, regardless of how it turns out. My spanking new cast iron pan has become my new best friend. I even give it a little caress with extra virgin olive oil after the meal is done.
In being homebound the last 2 weeks (plus my housekeeper also homebound too after breaking a rib - poor thing), I've begun a routine of doing laundry every 3 days, folding them after 2, and fastidiously reorganising the clothes in the wardrobe according to categories of use. In a week, I was cooking 3 things at a time, making tea, and running laundry at the same time.
I've even started taking stock of our groceries and tracking which items are gone and to be replenished, which are low in supply, and which are well-stocked. I think I can run a supermarket! Oddly enough, as much as I had loathed being domestic, I found a certain pride in feeling like Martha Stewart. Now all I need is to write my first book and go on TV.
How safe is your city's drinking water? Do you know? Now, it is not just the government and the utilities companies that might keep such information all hush hush. Researchers too keep such information quiet for fear of public panic. Is there then, any point then writing to them to ask for information? I thought I'd try anyway. Keep you posted if there's a reply.
So what if all the pharmaceuticals, industrial chemicals, endocrine disruptors*, pesticides, and other stuff people flush away get recycled and reintroduced into the water supply again can cause reproductive problems, birth defects, cancer, messed up med cocktails, and other nasty things? Well, if the wheel of life stops turning, we'll all go extinct in a few generations.
Well-documented in Our Stolen Future, scientists found that sperm counts have halved every 20 years in the last 80 years. They have found endocrine disruptors and a truckload of other industrial chemicals in the bodies of animals like polar bears as far north as the Arctic. This stuff does cumulative damage over generations so the contaminants from my grandma's body passed to my mom to me has trebled (plus all the crap I have been eating pre-pregnancy too). All this can hijack your genes and affect gene expression, amongst other things.
While I have been focusing on the food we have been eating and the plastic bottles** we have been drinking from (learn to read your plastics - see below), I conveniently forgot about our water supply from which so many things are not being filtered out. Apparently the only method of filtering out everything is reverse osmosis plus an activated carbon filter. But I'll have to check that one out more thoroughly.
If we don't fix this, life could very well go extinct in a matter of generations. Oh yes, there's that global warming thing too.
* Endocrine disrupting chemicals alter development of the fetus in the womb by interfering with the natural hormonal signals directing fetal growth. Their impacts, sometimes not detectable until years or decades after exposure, include reduced disease resistance, diminished fertility and compromised intelligence and behavior (quote from Our Stolen Future).
** Avoid using plastic bottles, especially for your children. Learn to id the types of plastic from looking under the bottle for the triangle recycling label with a number inside.
In the UK, consumers boycott factory farmed chickens, forcing supermarkets to consider bringing in free range chickens instead. A lofty and much lauded move from the consumers.
Thu, Feb 28, 2008 (HealthDay News) — Researchers have uncovered another damaging consequence of spanking: risky sexual behaviors, or even sexual deviancy, when the child grows up.
"This adds one more harmful side effect to spanking," said Murray Straus, a spanking expert who was expected to present the findings of four studies at the American Psychological Association's Summit on Violence and Abuse in Relationships in Bethesda, Md., on Thursday.
"I think that it's pretty powerful," said Elizabeth Gershoff, an assistant professor at the University of Michigan's School of Social Work. "It's across several studies and across different forms of either risky or deviant sexual behavior."
Straus, who was the author of all four studies, hopes the findings will raise awareness among child development experts.
"My hope is to convince my colleagues that they ought to put this in their textbooks," said Straus, co-director of the Family Research Laboratory at the University of New Hampshire, in Durham. "It's amazing. Something experienced by all American kids gets an average of half a page in child development textbooks, and not a single one comes to the conclusion that parents should never spank."
Even the revered Dr. Spock, who was anti-spanking, never came right out and advised parents outright not to do it, he added. Instead, Spock advised "avoiding it if you can."
A meta-analysis of spanking studies conducted by Gershoff found 93 percent agreement among studies that spanking can lead to such problems as delinquent and anti-social behavior in childhood along with aggression, criminal and anti-social behavior and spousal or child abuse as an adult.
"There's probably nothing else in child development that has 93 percent agreement in results," Straus said.
Five percent of people who have never been spanked hit their partners, versus 25 percent of those who were spanked frequently.
However, some 90 percent of U.S. parents spank toddlers, according to Straus.
The review being presented at the meeting are the first to look at the relationship of spanking to sexual behavior.
They found that spanking and other corporal punishment is associated with an increased probability of verbally and physically coercing a dating partner to have sex; risky sex such as premarital sex without using a condom; and masochistic sex such as spanking during sex.
There is a "dose response" at work here. "The more parents spank, the higher the probability of harmful side effects," Straus noted.
Of course, there's a similar dose response for smokers. But if someone reaches the age of 65 without developing lung cancer, it doesn't mean that smoking isn't harmful. It means the person was one of the lucky ones.
It's the same with spanking, Straus said. "If a person says, 'I was spanked, and I don't have any interest in bondage and discipline sex, that's correct, but it's not because spanking is OK, it's because they're one of the lucky ones."
And spanking a child once may be like picking up that first cigarette. "The trouble is, if you have a 2-year-old, you pretty soon decide you can't avoid it. The recidivism rate for whatever 'crime' you correct a 2-year-old for is about 50 percent in two hours."
"I've been researching corporal punishment for 30 years and, in the course of that time, the evidence has accumulated that it doesn't work any better than non-corporal punishment but has harmful side effects. I have come to the conclusion that parents should never, ever spank because, although it does work, it's no better than non-hitting methods that don't have harmful side effects. If there was an FDA for spanking, they'd say use an alternative that doesn't have harmful side effects."
This made me cry. For the babies and the mothers (both links open as PDFs). It is every mother and child's most horrific, agonising nightmare and it is lived out every day by these mothers and children.
Every year, 9 million babies are snatched from their mothers after birth
All females used for milk are torn from their babies shortly after birth. Some try to fight off the attackers, some try to shield their babies with their own bodies, some chase frantically after the transport, some cry pitifully, some withdraw in silent despair. Some go trustingly with their keepers only to return to an empty stall.
They all beg for their babies in language that requires no translation: They bellow, they cry, they moan. Many continue to call for days and nights on end. Some stop eating and drinking. They search feverishly. Many refuse to give up and will return to the empty spot again and again. Some withdraw in silent grief.
They all remember to their last breath the face, the scent, the voice, the gait of every baby they carried for nine months, sundered to, birthed with difficulty, bathed, loved, and never got to know, nurture, protect, and watch live.
After repeated cycles of forced impregnations, painful births, relentless milkings, and crushing bereavements, their spirit gives, their bodies wither, their milk dries up. At the age when, in nature, a female cow would barely enter adulthood, the life of a dairy cow is over. When her milk “production” declines, she and her other “spent” herd mates are trucked off to slaughter. Some are pregnant. All are still lactating.
As they are shoved towards death, they drip milk onto the killing floor.
Every year, millions of newborns are killed for their mothers’ milk
All babies born to females used for milk production are torn from their mothers shortly after birth. They are barely days old, umbilical chords still attached, coats still slick from the birth fluids, legs wobbly, eyes unfocused. They are defenseless. They are frightened. They cry pitifully.
They all beg for their mothers in language that requires no translation. They beg for the life-sustaining warmth of their mothers’ presence, the heartbeat that promised life and protection long before they were born, the comfort of their mothers’ scent and voice, the nourishing milk that is their birthright.
Chained in dark, coffin-sized veal crates, they search feverishly for anybody to bond with, anything to nurse on. Their curious minds cling to any stray object that may break the endless monotony they are forced to endure, any opportunity to learn and expand. Their developing bodies desperately need movement, sunshine, play, nourishment, nurture.
Calves destined for veal are fed a nutrient deficient, anemia inducing diet and are denied any opportunity to move in order to make their muscles weak and pale enough to be sold as “white veal”. In their critical need for iron, they lick the rusty nails that stick out of the cage walls.
At 4 months old, having never been allowed to move or even turn around in their lives, they are too weak to walk on their own. Men drag them out of their cages by their legs, tails, or ears, shove them into trucks, push them down chutes and prod them onto the killing floor. Still desperate to nurse, many calves try to suckle the fingers of their killers.
All Dairy operations, including Organic, exist solely by doing to millions of defenseless females the worst thing anyone can do to a mother. Dairy consumers support this practice with their purchases.
Can we humans mothers who most certainly feel as acutely as these mothers the pain and agony of the dairy life of losing their children over and over make a difference simply by not choosing to buy dairy (milk, cheese, yogurt, beef, veal)?
Yes we can. Every bit counts, whether it is cutting out one dairy food item or all, for one meal a week, or all.
You feel as much as they do. Help them, because we know what it would feel like to lose our children.
Downers Video and massive beef recall reveal cost of stinting on food safety and basic humanity
The recall was prompted by a stomach-churning video filmed at a California slaughterhouse showing workers tormenting sick beef cows, known as "downers."
The workers beat, dragged and jabbed the animals' eyes, hoping pain would make them stagger to their feet. They sprayed a powerful water hose into one sick cow's nose.
Their motive? A cow that can't stand up is a cow that won't make money. Federal law discourages turning cows that can't walk or stand into food. Such symptoms mean a higher chance of contamination from feces. They might be a sign of mad cow disease.
The California abattoir where this savagery occurred was cited in 2005 for animal cruelty. But what made the case most shocking is the fact it probably isn't unique.
According to the worker for the Humane Society of the United States, who secretly filmed the slaughterhouse abuse, no one there took any care to hide it. Like all meat processing plants, the facility was supervised by federal inspectors.
And because the plant reportedly was chosen randomly, there's little reason to doubt that what happened there has been repeated elsewhere.
"To be without some of the things you want is an indispensable part of happiness." -- Bertrand Russell
"Non-violence leads to the highest ethics, which is the goal of all evolution. Until we stop harming all other living beings, we are still savages."
-- Thomas Edison (Harper's Magazine, 1890)