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Thursday, 26 February 2015

Deadly winter takes toll on waterfowl in Michigan


© Andrew Jowett / Times Herald

Ducks sit on a shelf of ice Monday along the St. Clair River in Port Huron.



Harsh weather is taking a toll on the waterfowl concentrated in the St. Clair River.

Terry McFadden, a wildlife biologist with the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, said waterfowl across the state are dying because of the extreme cold and growing ice cover.


Below-zero temperatures have caused rapid ice formation, blocking ducks from food sources in the water and sometimes trapping the birds in the ice.


"Most likely it's going to be similar to last year, we lost quite a few last year," McFadden said. "We don't have a really good estimate, but it was in the thousands."


McFadden said waterfowl, including long-tailed and canvasback ducks, are concentrated in the St. Clair River, where some of the region's only remaining open water is located.


That large concentration of birds depletes available resources as the ice forms.




"I don't know if we're going to lose as many (ducks) this year, but it's hard to say, we got hammered with these conditions fast," McFadden said.

While it is tough to see, he said people need to leave the ducks alone. The ice is unstable, and even if a duck is freed, he said its fate may already be sealed.


"It's a terrible way for any wild animal or any animal out there to go. It's unfortunate," McFadden said. "There's not much you can do at this point."


But John and Chelsea Borkovich of Fort Gratiot couldn't stand to watch the birds die Monday.


The Fort Gratiot father and daughter had originally ventured down to the river in Port Huron to see some of the migratory diver ducks that fly in from Saskatchewan, Manitoba and northern Michigan.


With camera and binoculars, the two discovered something unexpected along the icy shoreline of the river near where the Coast Guard cutter Hollydock docks.


"We found probably seven dead ducks, all different types," Chelsea said. "We found three that were still alive. We came back and saved a couple others stuck in the ice."


John Borkovich, who worked as a Michigan conservation officer for 27 years, said he knows it can be all too common in Michigan waters.


"Last year we lost thousands of ducks in the state," he said. "It's important to save anything that can't fend for itself."


The two began freeing the ducks by pulling the still-attached feathers out of the ice. They also used a 20-foot aluminum pole to test and later break up the ice that surrounded the ducks.


Afterward, they brought the ducks up the bank to their van to warm up. The ended up freeing five ducks.


The female redhead was one of the last they brought up to get warm.


"Probably within 10 minutes, she would have been dead," Chelsea said. "She was sideways and her eyes were closed."


Minutes after being released back into the St. Clair River, the bird could be seen diving down for food once more.


"Some people would say, 'It's just a duck,'" John said. "But that's not fair. It's still a living creature."


Why is there a Department of Homeland Security in the first place?

homeland security

© The Daily Beast

When it’s not making us take our shoes off, it’s trampling our civil liberties and ‘building’ centers that don’t exist. Enough already.



Are you nervous, America?

If nothing happens before Friday, the mighty Department of Homeland Security (DHS)—every bit as much a WTF legacy of George W. Bush as those surreal White House Christmas videos that featured Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson talking to Barney "the First Dog" like the Son of Sam killer—will lose its funding due to a budget fight between congressional Republicans and President Barack Obama.


And when DHS funding ends, then...well, nothing much, actually, it turns out.


Without funding, about 30,000 "non-essential" DHS employees will be told not to show up for work. The other 210,000 or so workers who are considered "essential" and "exempt" will still have to punch the clock, although most of them won't get paid until after the budget stalemate is ended. Not optimal, but not the worst outcome, either.


DHS oversees almost two dozen agencies and groups, including the Coast Guard, Customs and Border Patrol, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), immigration processing and enforcement, the Secret Service, and the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), the brave folks responsible for an endless series of junk-touching, drug-stealing, and kiddie-porn scandals.


Given all those fearsome responsibilities, you'd figure Barack Obama would be sweating gravy over even a partial shutdown of DHS. Instead, last week he stressed not the "security" part of the department's functioning, but all the dollars its workers spend in a congressional district near you. After noting that most DHS employees would be working for IOUs during a funding freeze, he said: "These are folks, who if they don't have a paycheck, are not going to be able to spend that money in your states. It will have a direct impact on your economy." That's about as open an admission that federal employment is essentially a form of workfare as you're likely to hear. Only later in his comments did Obama get around to the idea that these same workers also, you know, keep us safe from the odd underwear bomber and all those undocumented Mexicans we hire to cook our food and clean our houses.


Unsurprisingly, Obama didn't mention the Secret Service, which is supposed to protect the president but has lately been way too busy opening White House doors for knife-wielding psychos and cheating whores down South America way to focus on its core businesses.


Even Obama's Secretary of Homeland Security, Jeh Johnson, couldn't muster much in the way of if-then fearmongering. Earlier this month, Johnson trotted out a parade of horribles that was about as scary as a late-night rerun of . Without uninterrupted funding, warned the secretary, some of the "government activities vital to homeland security and public safety" that might be affected included "new communications equipment for over 80 public safety agencies in the Los Angeles area to replace aging and incompatible radio systems," "fifteen mobile command centers for possible catastrophic incidents in the state of Kentucky," and "bomb squads in the state of Idaho." My God, where have our priorities as a nation gone? Come Friday, Pocatello is a sitting duck.


The current funding situation is the product of an impasse stemming from Obama's executive action, issued last November, temporarily expanding the number of illegal immigrants protected from deportation proceedings. The Migration Policy Institute figures about 3.7 million illegals (out of a total of around 11 million) would be protected by the action. That move didn't sit well with Republicans in Congress, who passed a continuing resolution that pointedly left out full funding for DHS until this year, when they would control majorities in the House and the Senate.


How any of this will play out is anybody's guess, especially since a federal judge in Texas has at least temporarily blocked Obama's plan and it's far from clear that the administration's legal appeals will prove successful.


Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has tried his damnedest to force reluctant Democrats to vote yes or no on the president's immigration action before any sort of DHS funding bill hits the floor. Perhaps mindful of those "fifteen mobile command centers" for Kentucky hanging in the balance, it seems as if McConnell has "thrown in the towel" on the cause even if House Republicans are ready to hang tough.


Such hijinks may well be smart—or dumb—politics, but they distract from a far more important and serious question: Why do we even have a Department of Homeland Security in the first place?


Created in 2002 in the mad crush of panic, paranoia, and patriotic pants-wetting after the 9/11 attacks, DHS has always been a stupid idea. Even at the time, creating a new cabinet-level department responsible for 22 different agencies and services was suspect. Exactly how was adding a new layer of bureaucracy supposed to make us safer (and that's leaving aside the question of just what the hell "homeland security" actually means)? DHS leaders answer to no fewer than 90 congressional committees and subcommittees that oversee the department's various functions. Good luck with all that.


But don't feel sorry for the shmoes running DHS. Over the last decade, the budget for DHS has doubled (to $54 billion in 2014) even as its reputation for general mismanagement, wasteful spending, and civil liberties abuses flourishes. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) routinely lists DHS on its "high risk" list of badly run outfits and surveys of federal workers have concluded "that DHS is the worst department to work for in the government," writes Chris Edwards of the Cato Institute. He also notes, a " investigation found that many DHS employees say they have 'a dysfunctional work environment' with 'abysmal morale.'" Somewhere, the Postmaster General is pumping his fist.


It only gets worse when you look at the sheer amount of junk DHS spends money on. The Customs and Border Patrol (CBP), for instance, built 21 homes for agents in a remote part of Arizona. The price tag was $680,000 per house in a part of the country where the average home sold for less than $90,000. When the TSA isn't hiring defrocked, child-molesting priests, Edwards notes that it is shelling out hundreds of millions of dollars on radiation detectors for cargo containers that don't work and full-body airport scanners without bothering to "perform a cost-benefit analysis...before rolling them out nationwide."


And while the spooks at the National Security Agency and other intelligence and law-enforcement agencies get most of the ink when it comes to imperiling civil liberties, DHS is more than holding its own. It administers "fusion centers," which pull together all sorts of legal, semi-legal, and flatly illegal surveillance methods of citizens by state and local police.


A 2012 investigation by the Senate's Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs found that fusion centers trafficked in "oftentimes shoddy, rarely timely [information, while] sometimes endangering citizens' civil liberties and Privacy Act protections." The material collected was "more often than not unrelated to terrorism." On the upside, as my Reason colleague Jesse Walker noted, the report found "some of the fusion centers touted by the Department of Homeland Security do not, in fact, exist."


With all this in mind, it would be better for Congress and the president to focus less on two-bit political wrangling over this or that part of DHS funding and more on heaving the whole department into the dustbin. From a politician's point of view, that might indeed mean fewer dollars being spent in your state right now, but you'd also be repaid in full with votes of grateful citizens from all over the place.


'Jihadi John' radicalized by UK govt? So says UK charity

jihadi john



Jihadi John.



Following the identification of the British extremist formerly known as Jihadi John, thought responsible for the execution of a number of ISIS held hostages, a charity has blamed the UK government for his radicalization.

Jihadi John was revealed on Thursday by the to be Mohammad Emwazi, a young British man from West London who was known to British security services.


The Home Office refused to confirm his identity due to operational risk, claiming lives were at stake if his identity was publicly known.




Emwazi is thought to have killed American journalist James Foley in a video released last August.

He is further believed to have featured in the videos of the beheadings of US journalist Steven Sotloff, British aid worker David Haines, British taxi driver Alan Henning and US aid worker Abdul-Rahman Kassig, also known as Peter.


At a press conference on Thursday afternoon, research director Asim Qureshi documented the communications between himself and Emwazi.


He said the suspected terrorist was in contact with independent advocacy group CAGE for two years after UK security forces interfered with his plans to travel to Kuwait and attempted to recruit him as a spy.


CAGE says he was also detained and interrogated in 2009 on what was supposed to be a safari holiday in Tanzania.




"I have been trying to find out the reason for my refused visa issue from my home country Kuwait, and a way to solve the issue. So through my friends in Kuwait, it has been said to me that Kuwait has no problem with me entering, and the reason for my refusal is simply because the UK agents have told them to not let me in!" CAGE reported him as saying.

Qureshi called the government's policies "suffocating."


"Like Michael Adebolajo, suffocating domestic policies aimed at turning a person into an informant but which prevent a person from fulfilling their basic life needs would have left a lasting impression on Emwazi. He desperately wanted to use the system to change his situation, but the system ultimately rejected him."




He further said the government has created a "narrative of injustice" where Muslims are persecuted and inevitably "felt like outsiders." He called for a radical overhaul of the system.

But Qureshi, who at one stage during the press conference became tearful and called Emwazi a softly-spoken "beautiful man," is believed to have links to other Islamist campaign groups.


The director was filmed at demonstrations at the US Embassy in 2006, calling for Muslims to "support the jihad of our brothers and sisters" in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and Chechnya.


"We know that it is incumbent upon all of us, to support the jihad of our brothers and sisters in these countries when they are facing the oppression of the West. Allahu Akhbar! Allahu Akhbar!" he said.


The comments from CAGE, however, have been criticized for presenting a skewed view of Emwazi's experience, with critics noting that it is normal for security services to try to recruit suspects, provided it is within the law.


The campaign group was also labeled "pro-Jihadi" in 2010 after an Amnesty International official stepped down over the charity's links with CAGE.


Emwazi is reported to have links to a former UK control order suspect, who fled to Somalia in 2006 and has alleged links to the funding of militant group Al Shabab, who recently threatened to carry out terror attacks on London's Oxford Street.


Emwazi is a computer programming graduate of the University of Westminster, who lived in Queen's Park, West London. The University has previously come under fire for giving radical speakers a platform.


He last had contact with CAGE in January 2012, Qureshi said, is believed to have traveled to Syria that year, where he later joined the Islamic State.


One of his friends told the that he had "no doubt" that "Mohammed is Jihadi John," but his family have yet to confirm the rumors, with Qureshi saying that they were in shock at the revelations.


"He was like a brother to me... I am sure it is him. There was an extremely strong resemblance. This is making me feel fairly certain that this is the same person" the friend added.


These fresh revelations contradict previous speculation of Jihadi John's identity as Abdel-Majed Abdel Bary, a rapper from London.


The International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation at Kings College London released a statement on Thursday afternoon, saying Emwazi fitted the profile of other British jihadis who had joined ISIS.


"'Jihadi John' is not special in the sense that all the foreign fighters have tried to hide their identity by using pseudonyms or literally by masking themselves," they said.


Emwazi was a middle-class university graduate, something the Centre said was important to note.


"This demonstrates what we have long said about radicalization, that it is not something driven by poverty or social deprivation. Ideology clearly plays a big role in motivating some men to participate in jihadist causes."


"British fighters have clearly demonstrated that they are not in this conflict to take a back seat. They are full participants in this war, operating as suicide bombers, hostage takers and executioners."


U.S. free press freezes about Italian Court Ruling that Vaccines cause Autism


© forums.canadiancontent.net



Have any readers read about the Italian court's ruling that vaccines have caused autism? Have you heard about it on your nightly TV news channels? Have you scanned it on your favorite online newspaper? Probably not—but even more so, why not?

Well, there were at least two such autism rulings, the latest being in September 2014. Here is the 8-page official court document written in Italian, signed by Judge Nicola Di Leo. Mary Holland, JD, wrote an article about that ruling, which everyone at the HHS, CDC, FDA and all state and local health agencies should read, know about and, furthermore, accept


The Italian court in Milan ruled against GlaxoSmithKline for damages caused by its hexavalent vaccine Infanrix Hexa, which is given to children during their first year of life.


Several factors were considered by the court in coming to the decision it rendered. One important fact was that the vaccine at the time administered contained Thimerosal (49.6% ethylmercury) "in concentrations greatly exceeding the maximum recommended levels for infants weighing only a few kilograms." In Italy, Thimerosal has since been banned due to its neurotoxicity. It still is present in many vaccines in the USA.


The other apparently incriminating factor(s) came from the 1271-page GlaxoSmithKline report , which GSK had to present to the Italian court. That document has since been posted online here, which I encourage readers to take the time to scan, especially the last 50 or so pages. Take note that a comprehensive listing of Adverse Events from Infanrix Hexa starts on pages 1129-30. On page 626, though, we see "Autism" listed two times for a total of 6 adverse events. Apparently, they did know!


In June of 2012, another court in Rimini, Italy, ruled that the MMR vaccine caused autism in a 15-month- old boy. The UK newspaper Daily Mail, however, did report on that ruling.


Isn't that an obvious legal vindication of Dr. Andrew Wakefield's hypothesis about the MMR vaccine?


The rather depressing, but interesting, aspect of both Italian court rulings is that their remarkable adjudications did not seem important enough to be reported by—or in—the supposed 'free press' of the United States of America! So, how can anyone in the USA believe the apparent 'fairytales' communicated about vaccines by the non-transparent and obviously controlled media, if they don't report all the facts, all the time?


However, in September of 2013, Natural News online reported something interesting at the U.S. "Vaccine Court":



Of particular note in the case is the fact that concession documents by the government remain under seal. While the court and the government at large openly admitted that the MMR vaccine caused Ryan's encephalitis, it did not make public its opinion on whether or not that encephalitis led to Ryan's other injuries, including those that fall into the category of ASD. But the fact that these documents remain censored shows that the government is hiding something of importance from the public, which most definitely has to do with the connection between the MMR vaccine and autism. [1]



The Huffington Post online reported in January of 2013 that the U.S. "Vaccine Court Awards Millions to Two Children With Autism". Why would the CDC, FDA, and health authorities say that vaccines don't cause autism? Something is categorically wrong when they don't acknowledge the Vaccine Court's decisions, plus claims payouts for autism resulting from vaccine adverse events. What kind of double-speak goes on regarding vaccines in federal health agencies? Congress needs to investigate that. See this rather 'nut-case-like' repartee that took place at a Congressional hearing between Senator Elizabeth Warren [D-MA] and Anne Schuchat, MD, Director of National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases at the CDC. [2]

[embedded content]




Their 'script' sounds more like something old-time comedians Laurel and Hardy would have concocted.

Shouldn't Dr. Schuchat know better than to lie under oath in testimony before a member of Congress? Should Dr. Schuchat be prosecuted for perjury? Aren't lies made in congressional hearings Contempt of Congress? that will get you 6 months in jail. Probably Dr. Schuchat has the same sort of 'truth exemption' status as did the Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, who apparently lied under oath to Congress, or former CIA director Michael Hayden, [3] who apparently lied about torture. How come there seems to be a double standard of law and ethics within federal agencies?

Furthermore, numerous times vaccine-associated-autism HAS BEEN DOCUMENTED SCIENTIFICALLY, but collusion occurred to keep it from healthcare consumers.


Causal links between vaccines have been identified in the past by CDC epidemiologists and researchers, viz.: the Simpsonwood Meeting in June of 2000—a clandestine meeting to figure out what to do with the Verstraeten study that showed the link between Thimerosal (ethylmercury) in vaccines and autism.


Then, as recently as 2014, William Thompson, PhD, blew the whistle on how he fudged vaccine study papers regarding the link between vaccines and autism.


Additionally, on page 5 of the HHS Health Resources and Service Administration National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program Statistics Report, we find for the MMR vaccine there were 890 injuries/adverse events and 57 deaths reported with only 367 compensated claims and 502 that were dismissed without compensation for damages, proving vaccines are not safe!


In other countries such as Italy, vaccine-damaged vaccinees have much more equitable recourses at law than those who are damaged by vaccines in the United States. Congress needs to change that 1986 law, since vaccines really do cause autism, as the Italian court adjudicated and the U.S. Vaccine Court knows and paid claims for.


And lastly, readers and members of Congress ought to know that "Bill Gates Faces Trial in India For Illegally Testing Tribal Children With Vaccines"




Vaccine crimes everywhere, especially at the CDC and FDA, must stop—and Congress must do a thorough and independent investigation of an apparent agenda between Big Pharma's pseudoscience cappers they are permitted pull off and the terrible damage being done to human health.

Reference


[1]naturalnews.com

[2] wikipedia.org

[3]nationaljournal.com



About the author


Catherine J Frompovich (website) is a retired natural nutritionist who earned advanced degrees in Nutrition and Holistic Health Sciences, Certification in Orthomolecular Theory and Practice plus Paralegal Studies. Her work has been published in national and airline magazines since the early 1980s. Catherine authored numerous books on health issues along with co-authoring papers and monographs with physicians, nurses, and holistic healthcare professionals. She has been a consumer healthcare researcher 35 years and counting.


Catherine's latest book, published October 4, 2013, is Vaccination Voodoo, What YOU Don't Know About Vaccines


Massachusetts animal shelters report large numbers of suffering wildlife due to record cold weather


© John Tlumacki/Globe Staff

A screech owl sat on a perch mending a fractured wing at the New England Wildlife Center in Weymouth.



The casualty list is wide ranging: possums with frostbite, a turtle frozen in a block of ice, a swan hit by a plow, a fox hit by a car.

If this month's record cold and snowfall have taken a toll on human residents in Massachusetts, they have also wreaked havoc on the animal population, particularly wildlife. Animal shelters are beyond capacity with weather-related injuries.


"This is the worst winter that we've seen in terms of straight-up starving animals coming in," said veterinarian Maureen Murray, who practices and teaches at the Tufts University Wildlife Clinic in North Grafton. "With this historic amount of snow and extremely low temperatures, animals need more energy to stay warm, but they're not able to find food sources for that energy, so it's a really big strain on them."


Although it's difficult to determine whether wildlife populations have suffered permanent damage, local experts say it's clear the animals are under extreme stress.


In response, animal shelters are working overtime. At New England Wildlife Center in Weymouth, the staff is tending to creatures they rarely see, including ocean birds blown off course by the recent storms and brought into the shelter emaciated and battered.


The Cape Wildlife Center in Barnstable, one of the largest in the Northeast, has more than 90 patients in care now, nearly triple the average number for this time of year, said director Deborah Millman.



© John Tlumacki/Globe Staff

At the New England Wildlife Center, Dr. Greg Mertz cared for a malnourished mallard duck that was rescued in the snow.



"I cannot think of a wild species that is not at risk in this weather," said Dr. Greg Mertz, chief executive and "odd pet vet" at the New England center, whose staff has been working around the clock to feed them and mend broken wings and legs. "They're part of the same environment we live in, and the things that affect us are also affecting them."

The patients at the center, the only wildlife hospital in Greater Boston, include an Eastern screech owl brought in by an Abington family who noticed that it was up to its neck in snow. "His body was frozen. We put him in ICU in an oxygen tank, and on top of a heating pad," said executive director Katrina Bergman. Treated for hypothermia, malnutrition, and a broken wing, he is doing well, she said.


Similarly, a turtle found frozen in a snowbank by a Boston family is recovering. "They don't have a car, so they rented a Zipcar and brought it in," said Bergman.


It is not easy treating wildlife under even the best of circumstances. "Domestic animals want to be taken care of, but wildlife want no part of this at all," said Mertz. "These animals are not used to being around people at all."


The MSPCA reports that two starving roosters with frostbitten combs were found abandoned in Shrewsbury, and a Pekin duck was plucked out of a snowbank by the Marblehead animal control officer. "She was probably someone's pet," said MSPCA spokesman Rob Halpin. "She had a little blue ribbon tied around her leg."


Among the most common animals being seen at the shelters are ailing sea birds. The worst of the recent storms have been nor'easters, where the wind rotates onto land from the northeast, driving ocean birds toward shore and onto ice floes or snowbanks, according to the wildlife center.



© John Tlumacki/Globe Staff

Mertz held a red-tailed hawk in a towel.



The birds include thick-billed murres, Bufflehead ducks, and horned grebes. Malnourished, too weak to fly, and hundreds of miles from their habitats, they've been treated for broken wings and legs, and fed constantly. Mertz had two black ducks in ICU that had to be tube-fed, so frail were they after being blown from their ocean lair onto land.

"These guys are almost always offshore, and people never come in contact with them," Mertz said.


Beyond the ones he has treated at his clinic, Mertz said he is also concerned about those animals he's not seeing. Take, for instance, chipmunks, groundhogs, squirrels, shrews, mice, and moles. "They're not at risk now because they're buried in hibernation, but when all this snow melts, that changes the story. You worry about the flooding that will affect the hibernating."


Many other animals normally would burrow through the snow to eat buds and seeds, but most are doubtless having trouble both digging through the deep drifts and finding anything to eat these days, he said.


Like the wildlife center, the MSPCA is concerned about those animals that can't reach either the ground or seeds. "It's at this time when backyard bird feeders are most appreciated by animals who otherwise might starve, and we'd ask for everyone who is able to do so to please keep their seed feeders filled until spring comes," said Halpin.



© John Tlumacki/Globe Staff

A Canada goose who was brought in malnourished and weak is tube fed.



Mertz said he worries that larger animals, like deer, may be frustrated in their attempts to secure food, finding it too difficult to forage. The only animal tracks he has seen in the woodlands are from fisher cats.

"I think that's because they're light enough not to be sinking deep into the snow, but I'm not sure they're getting enough to eat."


Domestic animals are less at risk from the weather. Those who work with them report that the vast majority of pet owners are able to keep their animals safe and comfortable. It's the economy — not the weather — that most affects pet security.


Still, the shelters for domestic animals are facing their own difficulties. At Greyhound Friends Inc. in Hopkinton, two volunteers, Jon Servello and Mickayla Shepard, "ride out the storms overnight with the dogs" to make sure the 30 hounds are safe and sound. "Greyhounds have no fat, no insulation; they're short-haired," said Louise Coleman, who founded the nonprofit in 1983. "We're very careful with this kind of weather."


The fenced-in area for the dogs to roam and relieve themselves is blanked in snowdrifts. "Greyhounds don't like being anything but comfortable," Servello said. "Trying to get them outside when there's disagreeable weather is difficult."


That's where their two-legged friends come in.


Symbolism? Battling Bald eagles crash down onto tree in Tuckerton, New Jersey


© Ben Wurst

Two bald eagles interlocked, injured and hanging from a tree in Tuckerton, NJ.



On Tuesday, February 17, 2015 we got a call about a couple injured bald eagles from our colleagues with the Endangered and Nongame Species Program. They were reported hanging from a pine tree off a road in Tuckerton, NJ by some local residents. We didn't know how long they were there, but we knew that we needed to respond quickly if a bird had a chance to survive. We arrived at the scene to find two adults that were indeed, hanging from a tree. Luckily the local residents on the scene knew someone who worked for AC Electric (he also lived on the same road the birds were off of) and had a truck with a cherry picker on it. After the cherry picker arrived I went up to free the two birds.

[embedded content]




One eagle was alive and one had unfortunately died. The two were likely engaged in a territorial dispute and fell to where they hung on that skinny tree branch. Eagles are extremely territorial to their nest sites and even fight over food when it is scarce. Eagles also often lock feet while performing courtship displays, but this was certainly NOT a courtship display. Each had a foot that was totally locked with the other. The dead eagle had its "death grip" on the surviving eagle and if no one saw these birds then both would have died.

After assessing the situation, I realized I needed some kind of a pole or hand saw to cut a branch to slide the dead birds leg off the branch, which would free both birds. I called down to the local residents who gathered below and asked if any had a saw. One did, so I went back down, grabbed the saw and proceeded back up to cut the branch and free the hanging eagles.


After bringing the birds down to the ground, watch as it took three grown men to pry their feet apart.


The survivor was banded (although the federal band was missing) with a green auxiliary band, C/58, and she was ID'd as a female that was produced at a nest near Merrill Creek Reservoir in 2008.


I had no idea how I would carry the surviving bird home. She was wrapped in a blanket to keep her calm. I was considering driving her to my house (10 min away) on my lap or on the floor of my truck (wrapped up). Luckily neither was needed! Another local resident had a large dog crate in his truck so we put the bird in the crate. After talking over options for care of the bird with Kathy Clark, ENSP Zoologist, we decided to transport her to the Mercer County Wildlife Center last night. I met Diane Nickerson, Director of MCWC, who stayed late to help give this bird the urgent care that it most desperately needed. It was alert and feisty, which were both good signs. It was given fluids, medications, and was placed in an incubator to stay warm for the night. We're anxious to hear how the bird is doing today.


Banksy in Gaza: Haunting images among ruins of war

banksy in gaza



Photo from www.banksy.co.uk



The English graffiti artist has taken his politically charged message to the bombed-out neighborhoods of Gaza, where a series of murals amid a backdrop of devastation attempts to give voice to the desperation felt by Palestinians.

The first mural, entitled appears to be inspired by Rodin's famous sculpture In Banksy's version, however, the viewer is struck with the realization that the only possible thing on the mind of the subject is the utter despair and devastation that surrounds him.


Another piece, which was featured in streetartnews, is done in the artist's trademark stark, stenciled imagery. It shows the silhouettes of children riding an amusement park swing that is circling around one of the looming guard stations that punctuate the length of the West Bank barrier, which, upon completion, will be approximately 700 kilometers (430 miles).


banksy in gaza



Photo from www.banksy.co.uk



The artist also provided his personal thoughts on the situation confronting the people of Gaza:

Banksy said in a spray-painted statement.


In another painting, in which a huge white kitten appears to toy with a ball of coiled metal in a field of rubble and debris, the artist is hurling criticism at the popular Internet meme involving felines, which attract so much social-media attention at the expense of more serious issues.


The street artist explained in yet another spray-painted bit of commentary the reaction of a local man to the work, and his response:


banksy in gaza



Photo from www.banksy.co.uk



In another place, Banksy offered some advice on a concrete wall: .

Finally, the street artist provides a poignant statement in a 2-minute video, where he invites the viewers to "discover a new destination" this year, while providing a brief, yet unforgettable stroll through Gaza.


[embedded content]




Banksy, who is widely believed to be Robin Gunningham, an artist from Bristol's underground art scene, has gone from the streets to the top of the art world. His first film, , labeled as , made its debut at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. In 2014, he was awarded Person of the Year at the 2014 Webby Awards.
banksy in gaza



Photo from www.banksy.co.uk



On July 8, 2014, Israel launched a military operation, codenamed Operation Protective Edge in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip. What followed was seven weeks of bombardment, Palestinian rocket attacks, and ground fighting. Over 2,200 people were killed in the conflict, the vast majority of them Gazans.

The stated purpose of the Israeli operation was to stop rocket fire from Gaza into Israeli territory.