Archive for July, 2009

Food Saftey Bill Approved by The House

Friday, July 31st, 2009

150px-food_safety_1svgAs reported by the Washington Post and others, the first major legislation to impact food-safety laws in 70 years was passed yesterday by the House of Representatives. The Food and Drug Administration gains significant new authority to regulate all aspects of food and how it gets to American tables under the measure.

Over the past three years the public has seen wave after wave of food-borne illnesses. According to the Washington Post, food-borne illnesses sicken one in four Americans and kill 5,000 each year. And, the monetary costs for such illnesses is estimated to be in the billions of dollars.

The bill was passed 283 to 142. It now moves to the Senate, which will take it up after the August recess.

Microsoft and Yahoo Reach Deal

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

201px-yahoo_logosvgAccording to the New York Times, Microsoft and Yahoo are joining forces in a partnership in Internet search and advertising.  The partnership is intended to create competition and rival Google.

As reported by the Times, the Microsoft-Yahoo partnership is a pragmatic division of duties between the two companies. It also presents the most serious challenge to Google’s 250px-microsoft_wordmarksvg1dominance in Internet search and advertising to date.

Tanning Beds May Cause Cancer

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

240px-715px-sunbedoff_largeAs reported on the CBS Evening News (7/28, story 8, 2:15, Couric), and according to a paper published online July 29 in The Lancet Oncology, tanning beds may “pose as big a risk as tobacco and asbestos.” Medical correspondent Jon LaPook, MD, explained that the “international panel of cancer experts upgraded the warning on tanning beds from probably to definitely able to cause cancer.”

And as reported by the Associated Press (click here), the risk of skin cancer increases by 75 percent when individuals begin tanning in tanning beds prior to age 30, according to 20 different studies.

KBR Exposed Soldier to Unacceptable Risks

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

kbr_logoAs reported by the Washington Post, and according to Defense Department’s Inspector General report released on Monday, military contractor KBR Inc., based in Houston, installed water pumps and adjacent water tanks and failed to protect Staff Sgt. Ryan Maseth, 24, of Pittsburgh. Ryan was electrocuted while showering in his barracks in Iraq.

The Defense Department’s report indicated that “multiple systems and organizations” failed and exposed Ryan to “unacceptable risk.” According to the Post, a spokeswoman for KBR “said the company had not seen the report and would not comment on the contents.”

Judiciary Committee Approves Judge Sotomayor

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

250px-sonia_sotomayor_portraitAccording to the Wall Street Journal, the Senate Judiciary Committee has approved Judge Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court.  She will be the first Hispanic justice.

The Judiciary Committee voted 13-6 this morning to send Judge Sotomayor’s nomination for the Supreme Court to the full Senate. She is expected to be confirmed.

South Carolina republican Lindsey Graham joined Democrats in voting for President Barack Obama’s first high court nominee.

Child Seats Recalled

Monday, July 27th, 2009

According to the Chicago Tribune, The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced on Friday a recall involving certain Dorel Juvenile Group Maxi-Cosi Mico infant child restraints. The company is recalling the child restraints due to attachment difficulties with the infant carrier and its base.400px-childsafetyseat1

Wyeth Ordered to Unseal Ghostwritten Documents

Monday, July 27th, 2009

175px-wyeth_logosvgAccording to the AP, and as reported by the Chicago Tribune, a federal judge has ordered Wyeth Pharmaceuticals to unseal thousands of pages of documents. The documents pertain to Wyeth’s ghostwriting practices.

According to the Tribune, a drug company conjures up the concept for an article in order to counteract criticism of a drug, hires a professional writing company, retains a physician to sign off as the author, and finds a publisher – that’s ghostwriting. Then, the drug company disseminates these articles to sales representatives. And the articles are passed off as independent proof that the company’s drugs are safe and effective.

Hopefully the judge’s order will shed light on this dishonest practice and inform the public of drug companies’ actions.

Google Moves Foward with Ambitious “Google Books”

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

250px-google1According to the Wall Street Journal’s Law Blog, while Manhattan federal judge Denny Chin reviews the deal and settlement reached between Google and a handful of publishers (reported on here on this blog), Google is moving forward with its broader Google Books project and has scanned some 10 million books. According to a Boston Globe article out yesterday, 1.5 million books are now available online for free.

The concern, according to the Globe article and the WSJ, focuses not copyright (as was the concern with the settlement) but antitrust issues — will Google end up with a monopoly on access to millions of scanned digital books?

According to the WSJ, however, such concerns are not slowing Google. They are reportedly scanning thousands of books per day and plan to complete the project with 40 – 50 million scanned books online.

As reported by the WSJ, Judge Chin is slated to make a final determination on the proposed settlement later this year.

Blue Dogs and Lobbyist – Here Puppy…

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

180px-austrcattledogblue_wbJoe Conason of Salon has an excellent piece this morning on Blue Dog Democrats’ opposition to the public option aspect of health care reform.

In Conason’s own words, “If the Blue Dogs were truly worried about wasteful spending, they might use their influence to curb the outrageous looting of the federal Treasury by defense contractors, which remains by far the largest drain on the public purse. They might have spoken out against the brazen theft of billions of dollars by private contractors in Iraq, whose thievery harmed troops as well as taxpayers. They might have cautioned against squandering hundreds of billions of dollars on programs that don’t work and probably never will, from the F-22 jet fighter to the Ballistic Missile Defense System.”

“Yet with precious few exceptions, the Blue Dogs whisper nary a word against military extravagance. If they are like Ross, they mindlessly endorse the expansion of virtually any and all military programs, simply because some of those dollars end up in their districts. At a time when thue Pentagon’s annual cost overruns approach $300 billion a year — dwarfing the entire defense budgets of most developed countries — these “fiscal watchdogs” simply have nothing useful to say on the subject. Their silence is regularly shamed, or should be, by the efforts of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., an actual conservative who at least tries to trim around the fattiest edges of the defense budget.”

Health care reform absent a public option is no reform.

Special Interests Going All Out Against Public Option

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

252px-usdnotesAccording to The Washington DC publication The Hill, the US Chamber of Commerce is launching a $2 million ad campaign to oppose a public insurance option in the pending healthcare reform legislation. The ads will be both on the Internet and in print and will run in five states – Arkansas, Colorado, Louisiana, Maine and North Carolina. Not surprisingly, all five states are represented by centrist senators like Mary Landrieu from Louisiana and Olympia Snowe from Maine.

Now, just so everyone is on the same page: the House healthcare bill includes a public option plan, so does a bill approved by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee.

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