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    Bring4th Bring4th Community Art, Media, & Entertainment The Positive News Thread

    Thread: The Positive News Thread


    Cyan Away

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    #1,171
    12-04-2018, 11:42 AM
    (12-04-2018, 03:53 AM)Juan Wrote: Never ever underestimate the intelligence of Mother Nature.

    A strange thing has been observed among the young female elephants of Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park: About a third of them never developed tusks.

    While tusklessness is not unheard of in female African elephants, normally it would only happen in about two to four percent of them. The tuskless crew in question here are amongst the first generation born after the end of Mozambique’s 15-year-long civil war, a war in which much was financed through the slaughter of elephants for ivory. Ninety percent of the area’s elephants were killed, yet those without tusks survived. And now they’ve passed the trait on to their daughters. https://www.treehugger.com/animals/plot-...chers.html

    Evolution is incredibly fast on a scale like this, makes me hopeful that humanity would survive well against an alien war.

      •
    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,172
    12-04-2018, 05:41 PM
    The rise of local chocolate production is good not only for communities’ economy, but also for the environment. Francisco explains that cocoa farming, when well managed, helps to preserve the original vegetation and biodiversity.

    “Cocoa grows under the shades of the trees, so there is a symbiosis between plantation and forest,” he said.

    Pesticides are also not necessary for the plantation in Filha do Combu’s case, since cocoa is native to the region.

    “We use sustainable techniques to have better lighting over the cocoa trees, but there is no need to control plagues as there is a natural balance,” said owner Izete Costa. https://news.mongabay.com/2018/11/smallh...in-brazil/
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      • Nía
    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,173
    12-04-2018, 05:43 PM
    Since the Colombian government and the Marxist-led Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) reached a peace agreement in 2016, after a 52-year war that left 200,000 dead and 5 million displaced, the challenge has been building lasting, sustainable peace. Rotary District 5420 (Utah, United States) and District 5040 (British Colombia, Canada) are taking action to help build this peace, investing in a global grant funding a Positive Peace Workshop for Colombian youth. https://rotaryserviceblog.org/2018/11/30...-colombia/

      •
    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,174
    12-04-2018, 05:45 PM
    Planet Indonesia, an NGO that works in the Mount Niut area, is putting the participatory conservation principle to the test. Instead of focusing on putting poachers and traders behind bars, the group is creating incentives for them to stop — a unique approach in Indonesia, where conservation efforts have tended to focus on calls for tighter law enforcement and more rigorous punishment. https://news.mongabay.com/2018/12/group-...-business/
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    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,175
    12-04-2018, 05:46 PM (This post was last modified: 12-04-2018, 06:04 PM by Juan.)
    By 2008 the decimation of the forests, along with a series of intense storms walloping the province, prompted British Columbia to take action on climate change. The provincial government introduced a carbon tax, putting a price on fossil fuel emissions. And, crucially, all the money raised was returned to the people in tax cuts.
    “It was groundbreaking,” said Karen Tam Wu of the Pembina Institute, an environmental thinktank. “It was the first one in the world that was revenue neutral.”
    “Are we willing to do something to try to stop [climate change] from taking place, to slow it down?” he said. “Even for people who say: ‘It wouldn’t matter, Canada could have all of the emissions in the world and it wouldn’t make any difference.’ That’s not the point. We should do our bit.” https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/d...the-people
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    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,176
    12-04-2018, 06:14 PM
    (12-04-2018, 11:42 AM)Cyan Wrote:
    (12-04-2018, 03:53 AM)Juan Wrote: Never ever underestimate the intelligence of Mother Nature.

    A strange thing has been observed among the young female elephants of Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park: About a third of them never developed tusks.

    While tusklessness is not unheard of in female African elephants, normally it would only happen in about two to four percent of them. The tuskless crew in question here are amongst the first generation born after the end of Mozambique’s 15-year-long civil war, a war in which much was financed through the slaughter of elephants for ivory. Ninety percent of the area’s elephants were killed, yet those without tusks survived. And now they’ve passed the trait on to their daughters. https://www.treehugger.com/animals/plot-...chers.html

    Evolution is incredibly fast on a scale like this, makes me hopeful that humanity would survive well against an alien war.

    What is so special about us? We are destroying the planet, our home, our habitat and wiping out the other species. I would be happy to know the elephant survives us.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSWwlwMqn5Q
    Why have you come to our planet? Your planet? If the human race dies the earth survives.

      •
    Cyan Away

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    #1,177
    12-05-2018, 01:45 AM


    Malkav hosts a debate between Petro and Putin, never thought I'd see the day a news reporter dares use the name Malkav.

      •
    Cyan Away

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    #1,178
    12-05-2018, 01:55 AM
    (12-04-2018, 06:14 PM)Juan Wrote:
    (12-04-2018, 11:42 AM)Cyan Wrote:
    (12-04-2018, 03:53 AM)Juan Wrote: Never ever underestimate the intelligence of Mother Nature.

    A strange thing has been observed among the young female elephants of Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park: About a third of them never developed tusks.

    While tusklessness is not unheard of in female African elephants, normally it would only happen in about two to four percent of them. The tuskless crew in question here are amongst the first generation born after the end of Mozambique’s 15-year-long civil war, a war in which much was financed through the slaughter of elephants for ivory. Ninety percent of the area’s elephants were killed, yet those without tusks survived. And now they’ve passed the trait on to their daughters. https://www.treehugger.com/animals/plot-...chers.html

    Evolution is incredibly fast on a scale like this, makes me hopeful that humanity would survive well against an alien war.

    What is so special about us? We are destroying the planet, our home, our habitat and wiping out the other species. I would be happy to know the elephant survives us.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSWwlwMqn5Q
    Why have you come to our planet? Your planet? If the human race dies the earth survives.

    Nothing but the starting point of life is often to consider those to us before those far from us, so at least the evolution of empathy on the 3rd density begins. So that being said, I'm hopeful my species survives more than the elephant but I must admit the elephant would be lovely to survive so would every other species including down to bacteria, it would be nice to not cause death around us as a species.

      •
    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,179
    12-05-2018, 04:58 AM (This post was last modified: 12-05-2018, 03:03 PM by Juan.)
    (12-05-2018, 01:55 AM)Cyan Wrote:
    (12-04-2018, 06:14 PM)Juan Wrote:
    (12-04-2018, 11:42 AM)Cyan Wrote:
    (12-04-2018, 03:53 AM)Juan Wrote: Never ever underestimate the intelligence of Mother Nature.

    A strange thing has been observed among the young female elephants of Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park: About a third of them never developed tusks.

    While tusklessness is not unheard of in female African elephants, normally it would only happen in about two to four percent of them. The tuskless crew in question here are amongst the first generation born after the end of Mozambique’s 15-year-long civil war, a war in which much was financed through the slaughter of elephants for ivory. Ninety percent of the area’s elephants were killed, yet those without tusks survived. And now they’ve passed the trait on to their daughters. https://www.treehugger.com/animals/plot-...chers.html

    Evolution is incredibly fast on a scale like this, makes me hopeful that humanity would survive well against an alien war.

    What is so special about us? We are destroying the planet, our home, our habitat and wiping out the other species. I would be happy to know the elephant survives us.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSWwlwMqn5Q
    Why have you come to our planet? Your planet? If the human race dies the earth survives.

    Nothing but the starting point of life is often to consider those to us before those far from us, so at least the evolution of empathy on the 3rd density begins. So that being said, I'm hopeful my species survives more than the elephant but I must admit the elephant would be lovely to survive so would every other species including down to bacteria, it would be nice to not cause death around us as a species.

    Animals whales etc have empathy. Plants have heartbeat, pulse with life. Mushrooms are massive living organisms and all is aware of each other. Do not think you are superior, that we have any preferential right to exist more than the other creatures. We depend on them for our habitat but it is us who is redundant here. No other creature depends on us and as far as I can see it, most would be better off without humans around now at all.

    I recall the oldest gorilla in a cage. He could sign to communicate. Before he died he signed that mankind was stupid. So our specialness is most probably our lost sense of the life we are living in, the lost sense of the fact we are part of life not apart from it. It does not matter if we all perish. All is well nothing is lost. There is no real failure, but really what we do here now, the way we live is so well expressed by that gorilla. I truly feel sad about this. I agree with the silverback gorilla. We are stupid in the sense there is no heart based reality, this is what the gorilla and the other creatures know. . I am not meaning to criticize you. I am sorry we face this predicament. We have created it. The world wants to be loved. We have been poor stewards of our planet. I wish you well Cyan. I am taking a break from this for now.
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      • flofrog, Nía
    smiLie (Offline)

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    #1,180
    12-19-2018, 05:13 PM
    (11-19-2018, 04:07 PM)Juan Wrote: Iridium—the world’s second densest metal—can kill cancer cells by filling them with a deadly version of oxygen, while leaving healthy tissue unharmed.
    https://www.geologyin.com/2017/12/heavy-...kills.html

    Wow Smile

    Your immune system - while not the world's second of first densest metal - is killing, on average, between 100 and 1000 cancer cells daily.

    All you need to know if how to keep your immune system healthy. Preventive care, basically.

    Satanists are trying to get as many billions from the cancer business as they can.

      •
    smiLie (Offline)

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    #1,181
    12-19-2018, 05:17 PM
    (11-25-2018, 04:27 PM)Juan Wrote: Amazing news! Ireland's landmark Fossil Fuel Divestment Bill has passed. They are on track to become the first country in the world to divest from fossil fuel-related funds
    https://www.ecowatch.com/ireland-fossil-...93680.html

    Wow so awesome. Of course , they were scammed.

    Did you know that it is not FOSSIL fuel?

    It is hydrocarbons . Hydrocarbons are MADE by the planet.

    Sorry, not from dinosaurs or whatever the latest fake factory BS type of propaganda they are coming up with.

    SO, naturally, being made by the planet, hydrocarbons are renewable. And yes, oil wells are renewing themselves. EVERYWHERE AROUND THE WORLD.

    Now, all you , literally, need , is to keep greedy capitalists from pumping too much of it too quickly. Basically, cap it at certain percentage, depending on the well.

    And voila, you are going to get nearly non-depletable resource that is going to last hundreds of years, if not forever.

      •
    smiLie (Offline)

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    #1,182
    12-19-2018, 05:30 PM
    (10-21-2018, 10:43 PM)Stranger Wrote: Tech workers at Google, MS, Amazon are protesting their companies' involvement in the US war effort.

    https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cro...h-workers/

    Wow it's amazing..

    Isn't Google is basically collecting everything on everyone for the last 10 years?
    Isn't Google Maps nothing but CIA's In-q-tel company?

    Didn't Amazon just get 600 million dollar budget to host military data in its cloud?

    Isn't Amazon Alexa nothing but spy technology in every american's home?

    Wow, Microsoft...don't know where to start. Did not Microsoft just get $450 million contract to develop virtual reality glasses for the military industrial complex?

    I mean , seriously? You have to be pretty naive to think these 3 defense contractors are "protesters".

      •
    smiLie (Offline)

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    #1,183
    12-19-2018, 05:41 PM (This post was last modified: 12-19-2018, 05:46 PM by smiLie.)
    (11-29-2018, 05:22 PM)Nía Wrote: Wyoming billionaire plans to purchase around 15% of the planet, doubling the amount of protected lands and waters on Earth

    How's that "great news"? Some corporate monopolist is purchasing 15% of the planet?

    (11-29-2018, 05:22 PM)Nía Wrote: Patagonia’s CEO is donating company’s entire $10M Trump tax cut to fight climate change

    As I mentioned , they failed with the "Global warming" propaganda meme, as it was proven data is fake.
    So, instead of going back to the real science, they changed the meme (using same fake data) - "climate change".

    Did anyone ever asked - has climate ever was stable on the planet?

    And what does this meme mean? Other than used as propaganda, where it suits some.

    Quote:Extinction Rebellion: I’m an academic embracing direct action to stop climate change

    A Thanksgiving Meditation in the Face of a Changing Climate

    Of course, changing. Always changing. God made this planet so that climate would always change on it.

    Quote:Concerned About Climate Change? Nature Wants to Help

    No, not concerned.

    Quote:A eureka moment for the planet: we’re finally planting trees again
    '
    Wow, greedy capitalists are finally doing something nice for change?

    Quote:'Lesbos deserves better': pioneering aid project unites locals and migrants

    You were posting a bunch of gay, lesbo and near pedophile propaganda here, as "Positive news" .
    Can someone, please , explain how is this anti-family, anti-white, anti-normal propaganda - positive?

    Quote:Vegan Crops Produce 1900% More Protein Than Raising Animals for Beef or Eggs, Study Finds

    This one's actually, pretty good. But did you see where you are linking? It has giant pictures of burgers and sorry, blacks.

    Quote:Americans Voted Overwhelmingly to Protect Wild Places

    No they did not. The propaganda department doesn't want you to be energy-independent.
    Oil is renewable resource, it is HYDROCARBONS, not "fossil fuels" as propaganda leads you to believe.
    When you cap production from oil wells at certain low percent, you can have 100-200 years, or potentially, unlimited production.
    In order to prevent this, "protect wild places" meme is being pushed so that we don't seem to have enough low, slow producing oil wells.

    I am going to stop here.

      •
    flofrog (Offline)

    Unclear if frogs wander
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    #1,184
    12-19-2018, 08:32 PM
    Are you ok smiLie ?
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    smiLie (Offline)

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    #1,185
    12-20-2018, 12:12 PM (This post was last modified: 12-21-2018, 10:24 AM by smiLie.)
    (12-19-2018, 08:32 PM)flofrog Wrote: Are you ok smiLie ?

    I am ok, thanks,  Smile

    I just made you guys a gift. I opened your knowledge and your countries up for the , basically, unlimited energy that we already have.

    1) Hydrocarbons, renewable, if not pillaged like monopolist capitalists do (Ok, here in US, Rockfeller's Standard Oil still monopoly, current name is Exxon/Mobil and a bunch of "sister" companies that pretend to have a competition).

    2) Giant amounts of energy everywhere around us. Aether is 10 to the 35th POWER TIMES (or around) more powerful than gravitation. No wonder oil monopoly men paid Einstein to put it to rest.

    Enjoy.

    I also outlined where propaganda is trying to make you being ...let's put it this way, slightly in the dark. Capitalists like that, poorly educated consumers, that can be easily fooled.

    And when talking about light and enlightenment, I would think it might not be such a great idea to discuss concepts that have been manufactured by dark propaganda forces - such as gay, lesbo, pedophile, anti-male, anti-white, anti-family, anti-education, and other fake memes such as "global warming" and "climate change", etc.

    Just not a good idea to keep dunking yourselves in dirt and then attempting to lift everyone into the light. It won't work, all your attempts to being enlightened will keep getting stained. In the search, it might be a good idea to completely avoid any source of information that has what I outlined above, as corrupted. In fact, it might even help as a good indicator of what's corrupt and what's not so. That is, if you want to learn the truth, of course. Or..at least the next level of the onion.

      •
    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,186
    12-23-2018, 06:42 AM
    GDP scales with energy consumption. 5.9 +/- 0.2 mW per year 2010 USD for 1970 to 2016 and for every trillion dollars of global GDP we add, the concentration of CO2 increases by 1.7 ppmv. To live in harmony with our habitat, we would have to limit growth of energy use, growth of population, scale down on consumption. As well if we can develop more of a heart based relationship to each other and to the world around us then right living will fall into place. Kind Regards
    https://www.earth-syst-dynam.net/3/1/2012/
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    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,187
    12-23-2018, 06:56 AM
    (12-19-2018, 05:13 PM)smiLie Wrote:
    (11-19-2018, 04:07 PM)Juan Wrote: Iridium—the world’s second densest metal—can kill cancer cells by filling them with a deadly version of oxygen, while leaving healthy tissue unharmed.
    https://www.geologyin.com/2017/12/heavy-...kills.html

    Wow Smile

    Your immune system - while not the world's second of first densest metal - is killing, on average, between 100 and 1000 cancer cells daily.

    All you need to know if how to keep your immune system healthy. Preventive care, basically.

    Satanists are trying to get as many billions from the cancer business as they can.

    If someone has cancer then their immune system has failed. It can be due to toxic overload, chronic inflammation, pH balance. Oxygen levels, or any range of things including mental state but the point is that the positive benefit of this treatment is that the researchers created a compound of iridium and organic material, which they can directly target towards cancerous cells, transferring energy to the cells to turn the oxygen (O2) inside them into singlet oxygen, which is poisonous and kills the cell—without harming any healthy tissue. So it seemed a worthy post here on the positive news thread in that it is another option for treatment, maybe alongside CBD for example.
    http://www.geologyin.com/2017/12/heavy-m...0qmrETP.99 Follow us: @GeologyTime on Twitter
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      • Cyan, flofrog, Nía
    Cyan Away

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    #1,188
    12-23-2018, 10:54 AM
    (12-23-2018, 06:56 AM)Juan Wrote:
    (12-19-2018, 05:13 PM)smiLie Wrote:
    (11-19-2018, 04:07 PM)Juan Wrote: Iridium—the world’s second densest metal—can kill cancer cells by filling them with a deadly version of oxygen, while leaving healthy tissue unharmed.
    https://www.geologyin.com/2017/12/heavy-...kills.html

    Wow Smile

    Your immune system - while not the world's second of first densest metal - is killing, on average, between 100 and 1000 cancer cells daily.

    All you need to know if how to keep your immune system healthy. Preventive care, basically.

    Satanists are trying to get as many billions from the cancer business as they can.

    If someone has cancer then their immune system has failed. It can be due to toxic overload, chronic inflammation, pH balance. Oxygen levels,  or any range of things including mental state but the point is that the positive benefit of this treatment is that the researchers created a compound of iridium and organic material, which they can directly target towards cancerous cells, transferring energy to the cells to turn the oxygen (O2) inside them into singlet oxygen, which is poisonous and kills the cell—without harming any healthy tissue. So it seemed a worthy post here on the positive news thread in that it is another option for treatment, maybe alongside CBD for example.
    http://www.geologyin.com/2017/12/heavy-m...0qmrETP.99 Follow us: @GeologyTime on Twitter



    Maybe if we combine our anti cancer knowledge and use these we'll get some results.
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      • flofrog
    AnthroHeart (Offline)

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    #1,189
    12-23-2018, 11:17 AM
    With these better anti-cancer therapies available, why do they still use chemo?
    Chemo doesn't work most of the time, and it makes the patients even sicker than they were with the cancer.

    If they legalized CBD they could charge for that and use it. Or that Iridium method that was mentioned.

    Why do the people in pharmaceutical industry like to see people suffer, even though they could still make money with minimal suffering?
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    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,190
    12-25-2018, 07:31 PM (This post was last modified: 12-25-2018, 07:34 PM by Juan.)
    “All 28 countries within the EU agreed to phase out single-use items like plastic straws and cutlery, as well as polystyrene drink and food containers, by 2021. The 10 items covered in the ban make up 70 percent of Europe’s marine litter, per the EU.” And "producers of tobacco filters containing plastic will have to cover the costs for public collection of cigarette stubs." https://earther.gizmodo.com/european-uni...1831200966
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    #1,191
    12-25-2018, 07:33 PM
    "Today, Taiwan has one of the world’s most-efficient recycling programs — but only 25 years ago it was known as “Garbage Island.”

    How did it achieve this dramatic improvement, and what can the rest of us learn from it?" https://ensia.com/features/taiwan-recycling-upcycling/
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    #1,192
    12-25-2018, 07:35 PM
    " ‘Tsangda’ or ‘Stangda’ means cleanliness in the local Bothi (Ladakhi) language. The project began with the establishment of the region’s first-ever waste segregation centre in Choglamsar town, where garbage from the households and shops are collected and converted into resources rather than dumped into giant landfills that remain an eyesore." https://www.thebetterindia.com/167679/ia...ny-lavasa/
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    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,193
    12-25-2018, 07:37 PM
    Bee Love is growing ... and there's now "a contagious and motivational “human colony” of ideas" happening in Valencia! https://www.citylab.com/environment/2018...ey/578824/

      •
    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,194
    12-25-2018, 07:39 PM
    This couple transformed a barren, dry and dusty swathe of land into a farm full of trees, crops and animals. The inspiring Aanandaa Permaculture Farm in India. https://www.facebook.com/brutnature/vide...032095947/
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    #1,195
    12-25-2018, 07:41 PM
    "Biologist Liliana Jaramillo says growing plants on so-called green roofs can help reduce the threat of flash floods by absorbing excess rain. And, they can improve air quality in the rapidly growing city." https://www.yaleclimateconnections.org/2...-her-city/
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    #1,196
    12-25-2018, 07:43 PM
    Lavender farming, which also creates habitat for bees, is one solution for regenerating desolated mining sites on mountaintops which are left stripped of life and any potential use. The evergreen shrub, which is used industrially for its aromatic fragrance, can survive the barren rocky terrain left behind by mountaintop removal mining. A start-up has taken notice of this so it began farming the plant in the defunct mines of the Appalachian Mountains. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/...s-lavender
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    #1,197
    12-25-2018, 07:44 PM
    Wiping out school lunch debt. One student was told she might not walk at graduation because her family had $300 in school lunch debt. In five days, parents and others raised funds to erase the debt for her and 514 other students in the Stow-Munroe Falls, Ohio, school district. "Every kid should be able to eat lunch," said Heather Walter, one of the organizers. "No kid should be able to feel they’re putting their family into debt by eating a grilled cheese sandwich." https://www.ohio.com/news/20181217/stow-...-five-days
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    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,198
    12-25-2018, 07:45 PM
    "During the past decade, Olney has integrated farm work and food production into every aspect of student life, from the barn to the kitchen to the classroom. In 2015, Olney became the nation’s first USDA-certified organic campus." https://www.yesmagazine.org/people-power...t-20180509
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    Juan (Offline)

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    #1,199
    12-25-2018, 07:46 PM
    A violence intervention program offering mentoring and other free services has led to a dramatic reduction in youth homicides across the United States. The program, called group violence intervention, has been successful in several cities and is now being studied by European countries as well." https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/...re-curbing
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    #1,200
    12-25-2018, 07:48 PM
    Grizzly bears now have a more secure route to cross the Clark Fork River, thanks to the nonprofit organizations Vital Ground and Yellowstone to Yukon. They've "closed a two-year negotiation to buy 52 acres of private riverfront property near the confluence of Ninemile Creek and the Clark Fork River west of Missoula.

    The purchase was critical for the two groups, which have set a 20-year goal of buying enough strategically placed parcels that grizzly bears and other wildlife can safely traverse increasingly populated valleys to reach the safety of national forest lands." https://missoulacurrent.com/outdoors/201...-corridor/
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