Potato Council Debunks First Lady’s ‘Science’ Claims
May 29, 2014 – 3:13 PM
Today, the National Potato Council praised the House for considering a bill to include the potato in its WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) food nutrition (“food stamp”) program. The Council also debunked First Lady Michelle Obama’s claims that including the potato would “override science” and that Americans are already eating enough of them.
The Potato Council notes that the First Lady’s science is based on old data – not the latest government reports:
“Opponents of adding fresh potatoes to the WIC package are picking and choosing the science. Instead of relying on a 2005 report that looks at data from the mid-1990s, we argue that important federal nutrition programs should be based on the latest available science – in this case, USDA’s own 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans.”
“We appreciate the House and Senate members and staff who reviewed the science and the history of the WIC fruit and vegetable voucher program, and support a path forward that will allow WIC participants access to fresh potatoes.”
“Based on the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans and the most recent CDC consumption data, all Americans, including WIC participants, are under consuming nutritionally rich potatoes.”
https://cnsnews.com/mrctv-blog/craig-bannister/potato-council-debunks-first-ladys-science-claims?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Marketing&utm_term=Facebook&utm_content=socialfow&utm_campaign=b-potato-council
Category: Uncategorized
Piling On: More New Research Shows No Link Between “Polar Vortex” and Global Warming
Piling On: More New Research Shows No Link Between “Polar Vortex” and Global Warming
MAY 29, 2014 1:27PM
By PAUL C. “CHIP” KNAPPENBERGER and PATRICK J. MICHAELS
Global Science Report is a feature from the Center for the Study of Science, where we highlight one or two important new items in the scientific literature or the popular media. For broader and more technical perspectives, consult our monthly “Current Wisdom.”
This is getting embarrassing.
Another scientific paper has just been published that again finds no association between Arctic sea ice loss and extreme cold and wintery conditions across the U.S.—White House Science Advisor John Holdren’s favorite mechanism for tying last winter’s persistent “polar vortex” over the eastern US to anthropogenic global warming (AGW).
We wonder just what it will take for the White House to publicly admit that it was grossly wrong. At the very least, it needs to disavow a widely-disseminated YouTube video featuring Holdren explaining the link between last winter’s polar vortex and human-caused climate change. There is no such link. Of course, this won’t happen, as Holdren was simply engaging in a publicity stunt relying on tenuous science to scare up support for President Obama’s Climate Action Plan. The President is hell-bent on an endless string of executive actions aimed at manipulating the energy market and reducing our energy choices along the way.
As we reported when the video was first released last January, the science linking human-caused climate change to the southward excursions of the polar vortex was a stretch to begin with. It was then dealt a major blow by a study led by Colorado State climate researcher Elizabeth Barnes that was coincidentally published a few days after Holdren’s YouTube video. Barnes’s found that natural variability dominates the observed record, making it impossible to detect any human-caused global warming signal even if one were to exist in the vortex data (which there is no proof of). Shortly after that, a collection of very prominent climate scientists specializing in research into atmospheric circulation patterns wrote a letter to a prominent journal stating that drawing the type of connection that Holdren did was not scientifically advisable
Spurred by all of this, the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) sent apetition to the White House Office of Science & Technology Policy (OSTP) to force Holdren issue a correction under the terms of the Data Quality Act. According to CEI, “OSTP guidelines require the agency to correct any published information that does not meet ‘basic standards of quality, including objectivity, utility, and integrity.’”
Holdren and the White House have been unmoved.
Now comes this: a brand new study, led by Thomas Ballinger of Kent State University, which directly examined the size and magnitude of the 2014 “polar vortex” event and found it to be not particularly unusual. Yes, it was a significant event ushering a lot of really cold air southward over the eastern 2/3rds of the U.S. and bringing with it all sorts of winter misery, but it wasn’t historically unusual. In fact, Ballinger’s team, found, in examining polar vortex behavior across North America since 1948, that the 2014 polar vortex excursion into the lower 48 ranked 6th in southerly extent and 7th in total area. The authors concluded that their analysis “revealed that the spatial features of the January 2014 [polar vortex over the U.S.] were not extreme relative to certain 1948-2013 Januaries.”
Ballinger and colleagues took their analysis one step further and examined the historical record to see if they could find a link between the loss of Arctic sea ice and an increase in polar vortex excursions into the U.S.—Holdren’s favored explanation for tying human actions into their own winter suffering. Here is what they wrote:
While this [polar vortex] study solely examines January, a regional domain, and uses different data to quantify atmospheric circulation, the results presented here are not congruent with the large-scale flow changes suggested in those latter papers [linking Arctic sea ice loss to polar vortex behavior].
Sorry, John.
So with a large and growing body of scientists and scientific evidence aligning against Holdren’s explanation of things, it is high time for a recognition of this by the White House. But since they are no doubt too focused on pushing their new carbon dioxide emissions regulations to find the time to insure that their justification for the regulations are based in fact, we thought we’d help them out and draft a public announcement for them. Here is what we have come up with:
From the White House:
We’d like to take this opportunity to correct something that we put forward regarding human-caused climate change and the polar vortex from this past winter. In actuality, and as a collection of new science has shown, that linkage is much more tenuous that we stated, if it even exists at all.
Our purpose for releasing that video and associated press material was to take advantage of an extreme weather event that was inconveniencing a large number of Americans. We wanted to use the opportunity to try to scare you into supporting our executive actions aimed at restricting carbon dioxide emissions in an effort to mitigate future climate change. Admittedly, the science is much weaker than federal pronouncements like these make it out to be. But if we were forthcoming with all the data and the complete story that it told, there would be even less support for the Climate Action Plan than currently exists. And since we’re coming clean about things, we’ll go ahead and admit that we realize the regulations forwarded under the Climate Action Plan, most notably the soon-to-be-announced sweeping carbon dioxide emissions restrictions on existing power plants, will have no measureable impact on the very thing that they aim to achieve—mitigating climate change—unless, by eliminating coal-fired electricity generation, there is a technological miracle that no one can anticipate or forecast. While waiting, you’ll just have to live with more expensive electricity.
We really aren’t very concerned about this because one of the confident predictions from government scientists is that winters should warm preferentially to summers. So you won’t need as much electricity to heat your house. If we were right about the polar vortex and very cold temperatures in the East, that would be too bad, but we were wrong.
So, next time you hear a federal pronouncement about climate change and extreme weather (likely coming sometime this summer when it gets hot), note that we are largely making it up and that the larger body of science, economics, and statistics, generally doesn’t support our wild assertions.
We’ll let you know when our phone rings.
References:
Ballinger, T., M.J. Allen, and R.V. Rohli, 2014. Spatiotemporal analysis of the January Northern Hemisphere circumpolar vortex over the contiguous United States. Geophysical Research Letters,doi:10.1002/2014GL060285.
Barnes, E., et al., 2014. Exploring recent trends in Northern Hemisphere blocking. Geophysical Research Letters, doi:10.1002/2013GL058745.
GDP Report Confirms We Now Have a $2 Trillion Obama Growth Deficit
GDP Report Confirms We Now Have a $2 Trillion Obama Growth Deficit
Stephen Moore
May 29, 2014 at 1:15 pm
This morning’s depressing revised calculation of the growth of the economy in the first quarter of 2014 (-1.0 percent) makes it official: The Obama expansion is now $2 trillion short of where we would be if growth in this recovery had matched the Reagan recovery that started in 1982.
That is to say the average family would have about $5,000 more income each year to spend if it were not for this slow recovery. The Census Bureau reports that median household income is down by $1,800 since this so-called recovery began
Worse, investment plummeted in the first quarter of 2014 by 11.7 percent from the same period in 2013. That was the biggest decline since the recession ended in 2009. Without investment, businesses can’t grow and wages won’t rise. Capital investment by businesses is a strong leading indicator of future prosperity.
The administration was quick to blame the dismal numbers on the cold winter and blizzard conditions in the Midwest and Northeast. But he 2013 growth rate was 1.9 percent, and the rate has been less than 2 percent for more than a year. Under Reagan, the growth rate during the expansion was more than 4 percent.
There are strong signs the economy picked up steam starting in April, but the overall picture of a failed recovery plan is now unmistakable. We spent $830 billion on a stimulus stuffed with make-work government-jobs programs and programs to pay people to buy new cars, borrowed $6 trillion, launched a government-run health-care system that incentivizes businesses not to hire more workers, raised tax rates on the businesses that hire workers and the investors that finance businesses that hire workers, printed $3 trillion of paper money, shut down an entire industry (coal), and tried to regulate and restrain the one industry that actually is booming (oil and gas).
Is it really a surprise the government is underperforming and this is the worst recovery from recession in 75 years.Ideas do have consequences – especially bad ones.
What good that has come from Obamanomics? Hopefully, we all have relearned a painful lesson that government spending, congressional taxing, Treasury borrowing and Fed printing don’t stimulate the economy. The new GDP report reminds us these battle-tested economic strategies don’t work. For tens of millions of Americans, unfortunately, this is a lesson learned the hard way.
— Stephen Moore is chief economist at the Heritage Foundation and co-author of the New York Times bestseller An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of States.
https://blog.heritage.org/2014/05/29/gdp-report-confirms-now-2-trillion-obama-growth-deficit/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social
1 injured when Honda Accord rear ends tractor trailer
Photo credit:Boyd A. Lovin
1 injured when Honda Accord rear ends tractor trailer
May 31,2014
Boyd A. Loving
10:34 AM
Ridgewood NJ, A Honda Accord sustained heavy front end damage after its female driver rear ended a tractor trailer at the intersection of East Glen Avenue and Quackenbush Place in Ridgewood on Saturday morning. The driver complained of minor shoulder pain following the crash and an ambulance was dispatched to evaluate her condition. The car was removed by flatbed tow truck. Ridgewood PD, FD, and EMS responded.
Who’s afraid of GMOs? Let’s serve up science without scare stories and eat without fear
Who’s afraid of GMOs? Let’s serve up science without scare stories and eat without fear
By John Stossel
Published May 28, 2014
FoxNews.com
It’s easy to scare people about what’s in their food, but the danger is almost never real. And the fear itself kills.
Take the panic over genetically modified organisms, or GMOs. Ninety percent of all corn grown in America is genetically modified now. That means it grew from a seed that scientists altered by playing with its genes. The new genes may make corn grow faster, or they may make it less appetizing to bugs so farmers can use fewer pesticides.
We didn’t even know what genes were when we first created new strains of plants and animals. There’s no reason to believe modern methods of altering genes are any more dangerous.
This upsets some people. GMOs are “unnatural,” they say. A scene from the movie “Seeds of Death” warns that eating GMOs “causes holes in the GI tract” and “causes multiple organ system failure.”
The restaurant chain Chipotle, which prides itself on using organic ingredients, produces videos suggesting that industrial agriculture is evil, including a comedic Web series called “Farmed and Dangerous” about an evil agricultural feed company that threatens to kill its opponents and whose products cause cows to explode.
Michael Hansen of Consumer Reports sounds almost as frightening when he talks about GMOs. On my Fox Business show, “Stossel,” he says, “It’s called insertional mutagenesis … you can’t control where you’re inserting that genetic information; it can have different effects depending on the location.”
Jon Entine of the Genetic Literacy Project responds: “We’ve eaten about 7 trillion meals in the 18 years since GMOs first came on the market. There’s not one documented instance of someone getting so much as a sniffle.”
Given all the fear from media and activists, you might be surprised to learn that most serious scientists agree with him. “There have been about 2,000 studies,” says Entine, and “there is no evidence of human harm in a major peer-reviewed journal.”
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2014/05/28/who-afraid-gmos-let-serve-up-science-without-scare-stories-and-eat-without-fear/
Ridgewood ranked as best place to retire
Ridgewood ranked as best place to retire
MAY 23, 2014 LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, MAY 23, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER
s Ridgewood the best place to retire in New Jersey? That’s what a blog for real estate agents is suggesting, having recently named Ridgewood the best municipality in New Jersey to retire in.
Though the announcement was meant to tout the benefits of living in the village, the list has been the subject of some immediate criticism for one of its preferred measures: a high cost of living, “higher being better, since you’ve saved for it.”
“Get your head out of the rarified air! Ridgewood is a great place to retire – if your idea of ‘affordable’ starts with a base of $15,000 worth of real estate taxes,” noted one commenter underneath the ranking on the Movoto Real Estate blog, which was posted last month.
But Chad Stiffley, a public relations associate for Movoto, noted that the ranking is composed of “simply the best places to enjoy your retirement years, whether that means moving or remaining there after you retire.” Places with a higher cost of living, he added, got better rankings, “because they generally are viewed by people as nicer places compared to those that have a low cost of living.”
“It should be great news for the Ridgewood community,” he said.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/is-village-best-place-to-retire-1.1022342#sthash.9eu0HoY1.dpuf
World Bank sounds alarm on rising global food prices
World Bank sounds alarm on rising global food prices
World food prices rose in the first quarter of the year for the first time since their all-time high in August 2012, driven by rising demand in China, drought in the United States and unrest in Ukraine.
According to the World Bank, internationally traded food prices increased by a sharp 4.0 percent. The leap was led by wheat and maize, up 18 percent and 12 percent, respectively.
As a result, international food prices in April were only 2.0 percent lower than a year ago and 16 percent below their record level in August 2012, the bank’s quarterly food price report said.
“Increasing weather concerns and import demand — and, arguably, to a lesser extent, uncertainty associated with the Ukraine situation — explain most of the price increases,” the report said.
World Bank economists said prices increased despite bumper crops in 2013 and continued projections of record grain harvests and stronger stocks expected for 2014.
Persistently dry conditions in the United States and strong global demand, particularly from China, partly explained the price rises.
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/world-bank-sounds-alarm-rising-202850180.html#an6iKZy
New federal database will track Americans’ credit ratings, other financial information
New federal database will track Americans’ credit ratings, other financial information
BY RICHARD POLLOCK | MAY 30, 2014 | 6:00 AM
As many as 227 million Americans may be compelled to disclose intimate details of their families and financial lives — including theirSocial Security numbers — in a new national database being assembled by two federal agencies.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau posted an April 16 Federal Register notice of an expansion of their joint National Mortgage Database Program to include personally identifiable information that reveals actual users, a reversal of previously stated policy.
FHFA will manage the database and share it with CFPB. A CFPB internal planning document for 2013-17 describes the bureau as monitoring 95 percent of all mortgage transactions.
FHFA officials claim the database is essential to conducting a monthly mortgage survey required by the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 and to help it prepare an annual report forCongress.
Critics, however, question the need for such a “vast database” for simple reporting purposes.
https://washingtonexaminer.com/new-federal-database-will-track-americans-credit-ratings-other-financial-information/article/2549064
Space X gets ready for lift off with Dragon V2 spacecraft
Space X gets ready for lift off with Dragon V2 spacecraft
Space X has taken another step towards its goal of space travel by launching (not literally) its Dragon V2 craft to the world from its design and manufacturing facility in Hawthorne, California.
Compared to the rockets of old, and the shuttles of yesteryear, the Dragon V2 could be described most flatteringly as ‘stocky’, but it’s this craft that is a key factor to the next generation of space exploration.
The technology in version two of the craft means that it will be able to land vertically on solid land (not simply decelerate and plop into the ocean); will carry 7 passengers and has other heat protective and life-support measures.
https://www.develop3d.com/blog/Space-X-gets-ready-for-lift-off-with-dragon-v2-spacecraft
Alleged Counterfeiting Scheme Shocks New Milford High School
Alleged Counterfeiting Scheme Shocks New Milford High School
May 29, 2014 6:17 PM
NEW MILFORD, N.J.(CBSNewYork) — The arrest of five New Jersey teens for allegedly making counterfeit $20 bills and using them at local businesses has shocked students at their high school.
The bills were first discovered at a Dunkin’ Donuts on River Road in New Milford, police said.
Video from a store surveillance system captured the teens wearing New Milford school attire using the bills, which all had the same serial number, on April 25 and May 8, authorities said.
“When I opened the paper this morning, I was like ‘Oh my God,’” New Milford High School senior Joe Victory told CBS 2′s Andrea Grymes.
As CBS 2’s Andrea Grymes reported, students at the New Milford High School were filled with shock and disbelief upon hearing the allegations.
“When I opened the paper this morning, I was like ‘Oh my God,’” said New Milford High School senior Joe Victory.
https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2014/05/29/alleged-counterfeiting-scheme-shocks-new-milford-high-school/
Yes, Record, It’s Sort of Your Fault!
file photo Boyd Loving
Yes, Record, It’s Sort of Your Fault!
May. 30
By Matt Rooney | The Save Jersey Blog
Have you read the breathlessly-reported news concerning twenty-seven Christie staffers earning significant raises over the past two months, Save Jerseyans?
Lame. I know. And more than a little sensationalized giving everything that’s going on right now.
For starters, I’m always skeptical of these stories because they usually lack context. Back in 2010, the AP embarrassed itself by claiming that Christie had increased staff salaries over Jon Corzine’s administration by $2 million; the actual number was $440,000 which works out to (buried at the bottom of the correction) approximately $4,286 per employee… ($75,726 vs. $71,440).
Oops.
That relatively modest salary uptick (a little less than 6% per staff member) could easily be explained by cost of living adjustments, but the media rushed to judgment in an effort to land an early punch on a newly-minted Republican governor.
What else is new, right?
The reliably liberal Record also never misses an opportunity to tie a negative story about a Republican to some kind of ideological point that’s almost completely unrelated to the instant story line:
“The raises come as Christie is withholding more than $2.4 billion in payments to the state pension fund because of revenue shortfalls. And Christie has delayed a property tax relief program that averages nearly $500 for seniors and some families.”
They’re not alone. NJ.com reported it the same way. Barf.
Where’s the Fourth Estate’s ability to provide perspective? Or have they abandoned the pretense of caring about providing readers with perspective? I hate to be a buzz kill, guys, but how does a few hundred grand (at most) in salary increases for dozens of people compare to the REAL issues – multi-billion dollar issues – driving New Jersey’s fiscal woes? For starters, the Democrat Assembly’s unwillingness to renew an arbitration cap without which we’re looking at BILLIONS of dollars in property tax increases?
It’s also hard to avoid the irony behind the much more interesting process story here: the extent to which Bridgegate (a story for which the Record expected to win a Pulitzer prize) is making it infinitely harder for the Governor to retain staffers than back in January before the story broke and his presidential future seemed brightest.
– See more at: https://savejersey.com/2014/05/christie-staff-salary-media-bergen-record/#sthash.pjRgr5PW.dpuf
As Healthcare Paradigm Shifts, NJ Hospitals Face Uncertain Future
As Healthcare Paradigm Shifts, NJ Hospitals Face Uncertain Future
New Jersey hospitals are in a bind. Some of them may close in the next few years, experts say, unless they find a way to transform themselves into healthcare systems that focus on keeping patients healthy in an outpatient setting, while dealing with the reality that most revenue is still based on in-hospital services they provide.
Hospitals must have cash reserves and an operating margin of at least 3 percent or they may face a financial crisis, according to current and recent hospital executives.
“If you’re not in a system that has that financial foundation, I don’t know how you manage the next three to five years,” said Judith Persichilli, recently retired president of Catholic Health East-Trinity Health, a national hospital system.
The hospitals that survive this transition period will look very different from the hospitals of the recent past. They will have fewer beds, more links with primary-care and medical specialty providers, and more partnerships with other hospitals in which each hospital only provides specific services.
That was the verdict of a panel assembled yesterday by the New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute in Ewing. (Kitchenman/NJSpotlight)
Graydon Pool in Ridgewood opens for season on Saturday
Graydon Pool in Ridgewood opens for season on Saturday
MAY 30, 2014 LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER
With opening day coming up this Saturday, the 2014 season at Graydon Pool promises to offer pool-goers several new attractions.
This year, members will be able to access the pool via a new Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant ramp, which runs alongside an existing stone wall near the pool’s snack stand.
In addition to the ramp, the Parks and Recreation Department is now offering an adaptive aquatics class for children with special needs, through a collaboration with Mayor Paul Aronsohn and the local Community Access Network group representing those with disabilities.
“I think that we’ve just made the facility accessible and available to all residents, including sensitivity to special needs,” said Nancy Bigos, deputy director of the parks department. “I think that Graydon is really an incredible, special place and I think it has a lot to offer our residents just in the sense of community, and socialization and play.”
In addition to the adaptive aquatics class, there will be a new “introduction to diving” class and three new adult classes: an introduction to swimming for adults, an aquatic fitness program and water aerobics.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/swimming-season-starts-saturday-graydon-pool-1.1026259#sthash.kYwzMD7R.dpuf
Ridgewood municipal budget approved
Ridgewood municipal budget approved
MAY 29, 2014 LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, MAY 29, 2014, 4:01 PM
BY BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER
For the second year in a row, there will be no new municipal taxes for the average Ridgewood property owner.
The Village Council approved the 2014 municipal budget and a zero percent tax increase by 3-1 vote Wednesday night. The municipal portion of this year’s tax bills will be $3,959, a figure based on the average residential home assessed at $688,358.
To Mayor Paul Aronsohn, who in the past two years has pushed village finance officers for flat taxes, this year’s $46.2 million spending plan and zero percent increase represents a tax relief for already-burdened residents.
“People aren’t making as much [salary] as they used to or are underemployed. We needed to get away from 7 percent tax increases. We needed to express our commitment and determination to do something about it,” Aronsohn said.
“This is the second year in a row that we will be adopting a budget that does not increase municipal taxes … it sets the way for the future. We can’t do this every year, but when we can we should,” he added.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-municipal-budget-approved-1.1026002#sthash.QRGTV6EN.dpuf
Ridgewood council revises gift ordinance
Ridgewood council revises gift ordinance
MAY 30, 2014 LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER
Financial donations to the municipality will still be subject to scrutiny by appropriate village officials, but a set of recently approved guidelines has modified the process in which contributions are considered.
Ridgewood Council members unanimously adopted a resolution that created a list of checks and balances when donations fall within specific monetary levels. As in the past, the village manager will enforce the rules and procedures, but now, the governing body will have direct input on potential gifts that meet certain criteria.
During a discussion last month, council members briefly reviewed the revisions to Ridgewood ordinance 3273, commonly known as the “gift ordinance.” Four categories of donations have been established: under $500 in value; $500 to $5,000; more than $5,000; and individual contributions when the total annual donation reaches $7,500.
According to the new procedures, all contributions $5,000 and less must be reported to the village manager’s office, which will accept gifts from known and anonymous donors after full vetting. The Ridgewood Council will review all gifts in the event a donor has a permit or application before a municipal board or agency 90 days before or after the contribution was made.
For gifts exceeding the $5,000 threshold, donors will be required to submit the village’s “Contribution Form” and await review and receive approval from the village manager and council members. The manager and council will receive all reports on a contributor whose individual gifts fall below $5,000 but when the “cumulative value exceeds $7,500 in a calendar year.”
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/council-revises-gift-ordinance-1.1026206#sthash.1lLcj0Ue.dpuf
















