The Weekly Report Cornerstone

   WEEK 49 Nov 20th to 26th 2000

   NUMBER OF DEFORMITIES INCREASED THREEFOLD

   The number of children born with deformities in the Grenland area in the county of Telemark, Norway, is twice as high compared to the rest of Norway the last ten years a survey from the national medical register is showing. The number is rising all over the country, but in the cities of Skien, Bamble and Porsgrunn the increase is three times higher than the last ten-year period, the local newspaper Telemarksavisen is writing.
   The Grenland area has a lot of heavy industry and polluting factories, as it has had for decades.

   related news: DIOXIN FAR MORE DANGEROUS THAN PREVIOUSLY EXPECTED

   The environmental poison Dioxin, a prominent by-product of industrial production, is far more dangerous than previously assessed, according to American scientists. Dioxin, a so-called environmental estrogen, is changing and disrupting the hormone-balance in organisms. The American research is stating categorically that it is a relation between exposure to Dioxin and several forms of diseases, among them cancer. The Grenland area in question has among the highest concentrations of Dioxin releases to air in Norway.

   related news: ISN'T ALLOWED TO RESEARCH DEFORMITIES

   Lack of funding, 15 million Norwegian Kroner (about 1 million British pounds) for a start, is preventing the Norwegian national bureau of public health (Folkehelsa) from doing research on the connection between industrial releases, and lack of health. The bureau wants to make 100000 pregnant women part of their investigation and to follow them and their children in three years.
   The major spike in the number of deformities in the Grenland area is also almost as bad in other areas with heavy industry, like in Mo I Rana, a small industrial "village" further north.

  

  

   "UNCONTROLLABLE" ANIMALS MUST GO

   The group of influential people in Norway, who want to exterminate all predators and "bothersome" animals, is about to gain the upper hand. After an announced survey designed to support official politics, every individual of two packs of wolves, frequenting the Osterdalen valley, will be shot. Commercial interests and supporters have long sought to complete the genocide of the Norwegian/Swedish wolf.
   Pelt farming is continuing and is enjoying financial support from public funds, in spite of the obvious ongoing torture. Foxes "live" their entire life in tiny cages, "running" miles a day on net, running their paws raw. As all animals in current society they're treated as commodities, not living beings, though even a bit worse than most others. A recent court ruling says that even if pelt farming is "morally questionable" it's not illegal.
   Another publicly selected board has concluded that all cats should be either castrated or sterilized within a five- year limit. Wild cats should be something confined to the murky past. The board states that the public increasing irritation "with the problems caused by ownerless cats should be addressed immediately". Owners will also be required to mark the ear of their cats, "to ensure and apply blame when a cat is causing irritation and unrest". Politicians and public servants would certainly claim that Norway is in the forefront among the world's nations in dealing with bothersome animals, and they would doubtlessly be correct.
   The only place animals seem to be allowed is as polite, groomed, well-behaved pets or meat supply… or in laboratories, where they under various pretences, are held captive and tortured, "to benefit humanity as a whole". Of course one might want to question whether such acts are really a benefit to humanity, whether they're not really exposing our disregard for nature, our disregard for life in general, whether it's human or animal.
   But not many seem to ask those important questions.
   Multibillion-dollar enterprises like medical companies and developers of fragrances and perfume all over the world are increasing the use of test-animals annually. Current human society has changed over 50 percent of the world to something unrecognizable by natural standards. The world oceans contain major "dead" areas, where there is little or no life. We're surrounded by industrial chemicals. Some would claim that we've made ourselves lab rats. Perhaps not so strange then that we're treating all life as something to be filed away in textbooks and history lessons.

  

  

   NUCLEAR SUBMARINE MERELY MOMENTS FROM DISASTER

   The nuclear reactor onboard the British submarine "Tireless" was very close to meltdown on May 18th, the British newspaper Sunday Times reports. The disaster was closer than most people like to believe. The British navy has, to this point claimed that it was all "a minor incident". It was instead caused by a fault in the cooling system that could have had far reaching consequences. The truth was revealed last month when an inspection revealed a crack threatening the integrity of the system.

  

  

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Entered 2000-11-25