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Saturday, 30 May 2015

Do our bodies safely break down BPA? Fat chance, study suggests

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© Tony Alter/flickr
Industry has long contended bisphenol-A breaks down harmlessly in our bodies. New research suggests that we transform it into a compound linked to obesity.

    
A new study suggests the long-held industry assumption that bisphenol-A breaks down safely in the human body is incorrect. Instead, researchers say, the body transforms the ubiquitous chemical additive into a compound that might spur obesity.

The study is the first to find that people's bodies metabolize bisphenol-A (BPA) — a chemical found in most people and used in polycarbonate plastic, food cans and paper receipts — into something that impacts our cells and may make us fat.

The research, from Health Canada, challenges an untested assumption that our liver metabolizes BPA into a form that doesn't impact our health.

"This shows we can't just say things like 'because it's a metabolite, it means it's not active'," said Laura Vandenberg, an assistant professor of environmental health at the University of Massachusetts Amherst who was not involved in the study. "You have to do a study."

People are exposed to BPA throughout the day, mostly through diet, as it can leach from canned goods and plastic storage containers into food, but also through dust and water.

Within about 6 hours of exposure, our liver metabolizes about half the concentration. Most of that — about 80 to 90 percent — is converted into a metabolite called BPA-Glucuronide, which is eventually excreted.

The Health Canada researchers treated both mouse and human cells with BPA-Glucuronide. The treated cells had a "significant increase in lipid accumulation," according to the study results. BPA-Glucuronide is "not an inactive metabolite as previously believed but is in fact biologically active," the Health Canada authors wrote in thestudy published this week in Environmental Health Perspectives.

Not all cells will accumulate lipids, said Thomas Zoeller, a University of Massachusetts Amherst professor who was not involved in the study. Testing whether or not cells accumulate lipids is "a very simple way of demonstrating that cells are becoming fat cells," he said.

"Hopefully this [study] stops us from making assumptions about endocrine disrupting chemicals in general," he said.

The liver is our body's filter, but it doesn't always neutralize harmful compounds. "Metabolism's purpose isn't necessarily a cleaning process. The liver just takes nasty things and turns them into a form we can get out of our body," Vandenberg said.

BPA already has been linked to obesity in both human and animal studies. The associations are especially prevalent for children exposed while they're developing.

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© USDA
People are consistently exposed to BPA, mostly through diet, where the chemical leaches out of products such as canned goods.

    
Researchers believe BPA does so by mimicking estrogen hormones, but its metabolite doesn't appear to do so. In figuring out why metabolized BPA appears to spur fat cells, Zoeller said, it's possible that BPA-Glucuronide is "hitting certain receptors in cells".

Health Canada researchers were only looking at this one possible health outcome. "There could be other [health] impacts," Zoeller said.

In recent studies BPA-Glucuronide has been found in human blood and urine at higher concentration than just plain BPA.

Industry representatives, however, argue the doses used were much higher than what would be found in people.

Steve Hentges, a spokesperson for the American Chemistry Council, which represents chemical manufacturers, said the concentrations used in which the researchers saw increased fat cells were "thousands of times higher than the concentrations of BPA-Glucuronide that could be present in human blood from consumer exposure to BPA.

"There were no statistically significant observations at lower BPA-G concentrations, all of which are higher than human blood concentrations," he said in the emailed response.


Zoeller agreed the dose was high but said "the concentration is much less important than the fact that here is a group testing an assumption that's uniformly been made." Vandenberg said the range is not that far off from what has been found in some people's blood.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is reviewing the Health Canada study but couldn't comment before Environmental Health News' deadline, said spokesperson Marianna Naum in an email.

The agency continues to study BPA and states on its website that federal research models "showed that BPA is rapidly metabolized and eliminated through feces and urine."

Health Canada, which was not able to provide interviews for this article, has maintained a similar stance to the U.S. FDA, stating on its website that it "has concluded that the current dietary exposure to BPA through food packaging uses is not expected to pose a health risk to the general population, including newborns and infants."


However, the fact that Health Canada even conducted such a study is a big deal, Vandenberg said.

"Health Canada is a regulatory body and this is pretty forward thinking science," she said. "Hopefully this is a bell that can ring for scientists working for other regulatory agencies."

China: Silk roads and open seas

© Reuters/Kim Kyung-Hoon

    
Beijing's disclosure earlier this week of its latest military white paper, outlining a new doctrine moving beyond offshore defense to "open seas" defense, predictably rattled every exceptionalist's skull and bone.

Almost simultaneously, in Guangzhou, the annual Stockholm China Forum, hosted by the German Marshall Fund and the Shanghai Institute for International Studies, was mired in deep thought examining the vast Eurasian integration project known in China as "One Road, One Belt".

What is also known as the New Silk Road project - displaying all the romantic connotations of a remix of a golden era - is not only about new roads, high-speed railways, pipelines and fiber optics, but also about a naval network from East Asia all the way to the Middle East and Europe.

So Chinese maritime expansion in the "open seas" - from the South China Sea to the Western Pacific and the Indian Ocean - had to be intimately tied to protection of the Maritime Silk Road.

Got deal, will travel

As the maddeningly complex One Road, One Belt network takes form, not a week passes without China clinching pipeline/power station/fiber optic/ manufacturing plant deals to accelerate Eurasian integration - from Pakistan to the Central Asian "stans", and including everything from a road/railway linking Western China to the Arabian Sea to naval hubs on the way to the Horn of Africa.

The business logic behind this flurry of infrastructure deals is sound: to absorb China's enormous excess industrial capacity. This process is of course enmeshed with Beijing's complex energy strategy, whose main mantra is the famous "escape from Malacca"; to obtain a maximum of oil and gas bypassing waters patrolled by the US.

As Beijing "goes West" - the natural consequence of an official policy launched in 1999, but at the time mostly concerning Xinjiang - it becomes increasingly more open to the world. Just check the array of East and West nations that joined the Chinese-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).

© Reuters/China Daily
Chinese missile destroyers.

    
Close cooperation between BRICS members China and India will be absolutely key for the success of Eurasia integration. It's already happening via the BRICS bank - the New Development Bank - that will be based in Shanghai and headed by an Indian banker. It's not by accident that India is also a founding member of the AIIB.

AIIB's first president will be Jin Liqun, a former deputy finance minister and former vice-president of the Japanese/American-led Asian Development Bank (ADB). Complaints by the usual suspects that AIIB will be a secret Chinese club are nonsense; the board making decisions includes several developed and developing world powers.


Across Eurasia, AIIB is bound to be the place to go. No wonder the Japanese, feeling excluded, were forced to raise the bar, announcing Tokyo is willing to commit a whopping $110 billion to finance infrastructure projects across Asia until 2020. The talk of the town - actually many mega-towns - across Asia is now all about the "infrastructure wars".

Dreaming of going West

It's fascinating to remember that what I called the story of China's expanding its trade/commercial clout actually started back in 1999. The first stage was a wave of factories moving from Guangdong province to the inward provinces. After a few years, in the Guangdong Triangle Area - which is now much wealthier than many an industrialized nation - product life-cycle timeline entrepreneurs embarked on frantic technology acceleration. Within the megalopolis of Shenzhen, the authorities actually push lower tech companies to move out of the downtown core area.

In terms of container ports, of the top 10 largest global ports no less than seven are based in China. That's a graphic indication of China's overwhelming predominance in maritime trade.

In terms of management, the 125 plan - that is, the 12th Chinese 5-year plan - expires in 2015. Few in the West know that most of the goals encompassing the seven technology areas China wanted to be leading have been achieved and in some cases even superseded. That technology leap explains why China can now build infrastructure networks that previously were considered almost impossible.

© Reuters
A CRH (China Railway High-speed) Harmony bullet inspection train.

    
The next five-year plan is bound to be even more ambitious. It will focus, among other items, on Beijing's drive to build a wave of huge new cities, a by-product of China's restructuring of its economic model.

, a new book by Professor General Liu Mingfu - a top military analyst - offers the Big Picture as China's infrastructure drive across Eurasia gathers pace. A clash with the US is all but inevitable.

The Pentagon's non-stop rumblings about the South China Sea are just the tip of the (lethal) iceberg; after all Washington considers it an American lake.

Li, as well as other leading Chinese analysts, would like to think Washington eventually finds a modus vivendi with the emerging superpower - as in relinquishing sovereignty, much as the British Empire did to the United States in the early 20th century.

That's not going to happen. For the foreseeable future, according to the Obama administration's own "pivoting to Asia", announced in 2011 at the Pentagon, it will be hardcore containment. That might work only if BRICS member India is totally on board. And that's quite unlikely.

In the meantime, Washington will continue to be submerged by this type of paranoid analytics, perpetrated by a former strategic adviser to the top US/NATO commander in Afghanistan.

© Reuters/Jason Lee
Buildings are pictured in Beijing's central business district.

    
Check that sphere

The crucial point, already absorbed by the overwhelming majority of the Global South, is that China's One Belt, One Road strategy is all about trade/commerce/"win-win" business; nothing remotely similar to the Empire of Bases, the never-ending "war on terra", "kill lists", and bombing recalcitrant nations (usually secular Arab republics) into "democracy."

The immensely ambitious One Belt, One Road project, coupled with the Chinese Navy protecting its national interests in the "open seas", fit into President Xi Jinping's Chinese Dream in terms of a business master plan. The best way to build a "moderately prosperous society" is by building modern infrastructure internally and by reaching out to the world externally.

Once again, China will be exporting its massive surplus industrial capacity, will keep diversifying its energy sources and will extend its commercial influence from Central Asia all the way to Europe via Iran, Turkey and Greece.

China has the funds to solve one of India's absolutely intractable problems - the rebuilding of its creaky infrastructure. The optimal scenario sees these two BRICS nations involved in deal after (infrastructure) deal, side by side with BRICS member Russia and "rehabilitated by the West" Iran. This means everything revolving around the New Silk Road(s) directly affecting no less than one-third of the world's population. Talk about a "sphere of influence."

There has been many a rumbling in Washington, ruling no one is entitled to a "sphere of influence" - except the US, of course. And yet Beijing's economic, financial, diplomatic and geopolitical drive to unite Eurasia is the ultimate bid for a global sphere of influence. Against it, the usual Western, Roman-based Divide et Impera tactic may finally not work.

Similac advance infant formula to be offered G.M.O.-free

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© Abbott
Abbott said parents asked for baby formula that was free of genetically modified organisms.

    
The maker of Similac Advance, the top commercial baby formula brand in the United States, says it will begin selling the first mainstream baby formula made without genetically altered ingredients by the end of the month at Target.

Similac's maker, the global health care company Abbott, said it would first offer a "non-G.M.O." version of its best-selling Similac Advance, followed by a non-G.M.O. version of Similac Sensitive. Depending on sales, Abbott may offer other formulas free of such ingredients.

Abbott will join a growing number of companies offering popular products without genetically modified organisms. Consumer demand for such products has been growing, despite a concerted and expensive effort by trade groups representing major food manufacturers and the biotech industry to convince them that genetically altered ingredients are not harmful to human health.

"We listen to moms and dads, and they've told us they want a non-G.M.O. option," said Chris Calamari, general manager of Abbott's pediatric nutrition business. "We want to make sure we meet the desires of parents."

A new online study of 1,829 adults selected by Fluent, a consumer marketing and advertising firm, found that nearly one in five of them said they preferred non-G.M.O. products.

"The preference for non-G.M.O. products in particular is more pronounced amongst shoppers with higher household incomes and with shoppers based in the Northeast," said Matt Conlin of Fluent.

Most mainstream baby formula is made from various corn and soy derivatives, and more than 90 percent of those crops in America are grown from genetically altered seeds.

Over the last few years, consumers have petitioned Abbott and other big makers of infant formula to remove genetically altered ingredients.

That movement, Mr. Calamari said, had nothing to do with the introduction of non-G.M.O. versions of Similac, though. Rather, he said, the company's own research had prompted the decision. "Over one-third of consumers say it would have appeal to them and give them peace of mind," he said.

As consumer interest in improving health through nutrition has grown, Abbott has also begun moving to sell more of its products beyond niche audiences. For instance, the company recently began marketing Pedialyte, an oral electrolyte solution that has long been recommended for sick children by pediatricians, to adults.

"We've known that we always had an underground movement of adults who used it for various purposes," said Lindsy Delco, a spokeswoman for Abbott. "We recently started digging into that and found that since 2012, one-third of our sales" are for adult use.

Abbott already has a G.M.O.-free formula in Similac Organic. (By law, organic products cannot contain genetically altered ingredients.) But the company said its research showed that parents wanted a G.M.O.- free version of the original Similac Advance, which was formulated to be more similar to breast milk than Similac Organic.

In the 52 weeks that ended March 28, sales of all baby formulas totaled just over $4 billion in the United States, according to the market research company Nielsen.

Mark Kastel of the Cornucopia Institute, an organic advocacy and research group, said he was pleased that a major baby formula company would offer a G.M.O. - free product.

"Since formula is really the only thing infants eat for some time," he said, parents are concerned about feeding them "products that are largely made from G.M.O. ingredients."

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SOTT Exclusive: Dead or alive? NATO's Kosovar ISIS militant raised from the grave, assumes new role

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Muhaxheri waves a sword, promises to conquer Rome and Spain

    
A notorious 24-year-old Kosovar ISIS militant beheading people under the name of Lavdrim Muhaxheri has been potentially resurrected from the dead following the release of a video footage where he is allegedly seen killing a Syrian man with a rocket-propelled grenade. It was reported previously that Lavdrim was killed in Syria last year, but it appears that he has now risen from the dead in order to again partake in the US/NATO hollywoodesque ISIS opera.

Before joining al-Baghdadi's crusade against the 'infidels' in the Middle East, Lavdrim was employed by none other than NATO, working at Camp Bondsteel, considered to be the largest American military base in the world outside of the US territory, placed in the US/NATO carved and occupied drug and organ trafficking state of Kosovo currently headed by criminals such as Kosovo's Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, a former KLA (Kosovo Liberation Army) leader. KLA is, of course, another NATO armed and trained terrorist proxy force that was used to break apart Yugoslavia.

After Lavdrim's work at Bondsteel, he was schlepped to Afghanistan to partake in NATO operations there.

In 'Bondsteel', for a certain period he worked as a labor force, until the year 2010, and there he maintained good reports and recommendations from his employer, and through the private company, as many young Kosovars did, he traveled to work in Afghanistan, respectively in NATO's camps. There he worked for nearly two years, says his friends.

Following such a lucrative career working as a NATO puppet, NATO apparently decided Lavdrim should join their proxy force of ISIS/Jabhat al-Nusra/moderates/opposition in Syria attempting to topple the government.

Lavdim Muhaxheri joined the Siria war, as a mujahid, in 2012, and a year later he was returned. Until the half of the Ramadan festival, in 2013, he was in Kosovo, and then he re-joined the fighters in Syria, where he took the position of the leader. Later on he took the leading role in clarifying the internal clashes in the resistance camp against Bashar Al Assad, and he was the first Ablanian who confirmed that there were deep divisions among the revolutionaries.

According to reports, after "he was returned" to Kosovo, he was under the investigation of the Kosovo police, only to leave for Syria again and join ISIS despite the so-called investigation.

He attained his short-lived notoriety after posting a beheading photo on his Facebook page, like every aspiring jihadi does these days. Later it was reported that he was killed fighting the Kurdish defense forces, only to now be brought back to life and according to some, he even received a promotion and is now a 'strategist' for the so-called Islamic state.

Whether Lavdrim Muhaxheri is dead or alive is a moot point, since the "Kosovo police said they are working with international partners to verify the authenticity of the video and the time of its publication," it does appear though that the US/NATO-led scripted operation currently going under the banner of ISIS, always needs a character like Lavdrim or a similar front man to paint a 'human face' to their proxy army and give credence to the false narrative that ISIS isn't a puppet in the hands of certain intelligence agencies but a group run by fanatical cutthroats that somehow sprang from the desert by themselves fully armed, trained, driving Toyota pickups and even pickups of Texas plumbers.

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Ante Sarlija (Profile)

Born and raised in Croatia, Ante joined the SOTT editorial team in 2014 and currently helps run the Croatian SOTT. He is also a part of the Croatian SOTT translation team.

Obama: 'Heaven forbid' a terrorist attack happens after Senate inaction on Patriot Act

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© MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images
President Barack Obama (R) speaks following a meeting with US Attorney General Loretta Lynch in the Oval Office of the White House on May 29, 2015, in Washington, DC.

    
President Barack Obama sounded the alarm about what could happen if there is a delay in renewing the USA Patriot Act.

"I don't want us to be in a situation in which, for a certain period of time, those authorities go away and suddenly we are dark, and heaven forbid, we've got a problem where we could have prevented a terrorist attack or apprehended someone who was engaged in dangerous activity but we didn't do so simply because of inaction in the Senate," Obama told reporters Friday after meeting with Attorney General Loretta Lynch at the White House.

The USA Patriot Act, a post-9/11 law, is set to expire Sunday at midnight. McConnell, the Senate majority leader, tried to get the law renewed, as well as get passage of the USA Freedom Act, intended to address concerns about the National Security Agency bulk data gathering.

However, Paul, speaking for 10 hours on the Senate floor last Friday, blocked either bill from coming to a vote in the Senate.

"So I have indicated to Leader McConnell and other senators, I expect them to take action and take action swiftly," Obama continued. "That's what the American people deserve. This is not an issue in which we have to choose between security and civil liberties. This is an issue in which we in fact have struck the right balance."

Thousands of dead bunker fish found dead at Riverhead, New York

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© Peter Blasl
Dead bunker washed ashore on Simmons Point early in the morning of May 29, about an hour after low tide.

    
Officials are scrambling to avoid a major fish kill in the Peconic Estuary due to exceptionally low oxygen levels in the water.

"We're asking for help from anyone with a haul siene net and permit to get the baitfish out of the water before there's a major fish kill like we had here several years ago," Riverhead Supervisor Sean Walter said this afternoon. "If you've got the net and the permit, please call Riverhead Police to let us know," he said. "Please call 631-727-4500 to let police know you can help."

The town will pay fishermen an as-yet undetermined amount per pound to make the effort economically viable, Walter said, because the market price for baitfish is very low.

"This is an emergency, because if we don't get the fish out of the water right away, while they're alive, we're going to have a major die-off," the supervisor said. "Disposing of massive quantities of dead fish is a huge problem, as town officials learned several years ago," he said. "We want to do whatever we can to avoid that problem again. We need to get them out of the water immediately — like yesterday."

People with nets but no current haul siene permits should call anyway if they can help, the supervisor said. "We will work with the DEC to get the permits."

Dead bunker have already begun washing ashore by the tens of thousands.

The dead bait fish began to appear on the shores of the river and bay shortly after the diamondback terrapin turtle die-off that's currently being investigated by the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

Environmental regulators believe the turtle die-off, which began in late April, may have been caused by high levels of saxitoxin, a biotoxin related to the algal bloom caused by Alexandrium, also known as "red tide."

Dissolved oxygen is essential to marine life.

The supervisor said the state DEC has been out testing the waters of the bay, river and creeks.

"The top three feet of the water has oxygen levels that can barely sustain life," Walter said. "Below three feet, there's not enough oxygen for them to live. We need to get them out while they're still alive."