In a study commissioned by the White House, the National Academy of Sciences has concluded that global warming ?is real and particularly strong within the past 20 years? and said a leading cause is emissions of carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels. The panel of 11 scientists produced its 24 page report in less than a month.

This is after Bush stated that he wasn?t sure that global warming was real during his Presidential campaign and enraged Europe by reversing a campaign promise to limit CO2 emissions from power plants.
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Clifford Carnicom has posted new information about possible military programs that may result in the appearance of the persistent and tainted jet contrails known as chemtrails.

Mr. Carnicom is a leading chemtrails researcher and, like Will Thomas, is noted for his persistence in attempting to uncover these programs.

Mr. Carnicom’s latest report identifies four military projects that affect the atmosphere across the U.S. The first, unnamed project, is based on a proposal by Dr. Edward Teller to reduce the amount of sunlight reaching the earth by ejecting aerosols of reflective particles into the upper atmosphere.
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About one in 5 chickens and one in 10 eggs in Britain contain traces of drugs that may cause cancer, birth defects or heart attacks, according to The Soil Association, a group that promotes organic farming.

Richard Young, coordinator of the association?s campaign against the overuse of antibiotics in intensive farming, said that drugs used to control intestinal parasites in poultry posed the most serious threat. ?Despite repeated assertions by regulators that nearly all poultry products are free from detectable residues, figures clearly show that about 20 percent of chicken meat and 10 percent of the eggs tested contain residues of drugs deemed too dangerous for use in human medicine,? he says.
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Most U.S. dollar bills are bacteria farms, according to a recent study in Ohio. Paper money could be one of the mediums that transports antibiotic-resistant bacteria from one person to another.

Peter Ender, chief of infectious diseases at the Wright-Patterson Medical Center near Dayton, along with his fellow researchers, collected 68 dollar bills from a grocery store and a gym. They soaked the bills in a nutrient broth and left them for 24 hours. Next, they smeared samples of the broth onto glass slides for analysis.
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