True Food Shoppers Guide to Avoiding GE Food APP

Which supermarket foods are genetically engineered? This is probably the most urgent question the public has about these novel foods. Opinion polls show that up to 90 percent of the American public wants GE foods labeled. But despite this overwhelming demand, almost no foods on U.S. grocery shelves reveal their secret, genetically engineered ingredients.

We’ve seen that our government, under pressure from the biotechnology industry, has not required the labeling of GE foods. And the biotech industry does not voluntarily identify them, fearing, probably correctly, that the majority of Americans would avoid GE foods if given a choice. As a result, the U.S. public has been deprived of its right to choose whether to buy and consume these engineered foods. However, this is not the case with most of our major trading partners around the globe who have instituted mandatory labeling of all GE foods and ingredients.

Our True Food Shoppers Guide to Avoiding GE Foods was the first of its kind, first published in October of 2000. In fact, the Shoppers Guide is what launched the True Food Network! The Guide is designed to help reclaim your right to know about the foods you are buying, and help you find and avoid GMO foods and ingredients.

How do you get our free Shoppers Guide to Avoiding GE Foods?

  • Or you can email us at office@centerforfoodsafety.org to order a printed pocket Guide
  • OR GMO APP HERE

Artist Hikaru Cho Creates Visual Illusions That Are Good Enough to Eat

Hikaru Cho is a Tokyo-based artist who creates amazing hyper-realistic paintings that play on optical illusion and the perception of surface. At first glance, it might be hard to figure out what the deception is in these ordinary images, however a closer look reveals a tomato, a banana and an egg that have been perfectly camouflaged to look like an orange a cucumber and an eggplant. The project appropriately titled "It's Not What It Seems" showcases Cho's talent and skills in a playful way. Visual News writes, "In transforming what we see, Cho is helping us re-think everyday objects along with human form and nature."

Via Junk Culture

Why Forgetting the Past Can Be a Good Thing

We are not static, but our tattoos and Facebook posts are.

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What do Facebook, tattoos, and Google Glass have in common? They are all technologies that mark a moment in time in our life. Some leave images on the internet and others on our skin, but all of them are to a large degree permanent. The information is hard, sometimes impossible, to remove. This is the reason that people have lost their jobs due to a seemingly harmless post, or don’t even get the job because of decisions made during an alcohol-fueled late-night trip to a tattoo parlor. 

No person is static. Each of us is in truth many people, over time and across different social scenarios. I am a different person when I am at home with my daughter (more silly), when I am operating on someone’s brain (more serious), and when I am traveling in a foreign country (more reserved). And I am certainly a different person today than who I was in college (no comment).

Who we really are oscillates around some mean or average of behavior. We have all done things we are not proud of—that are outliers of our identity. After some moment of being rude, selfish, or weak, either we are able to put it behind us, or the person who suffered at the result of our imperfection moves on. The reason for this is our ability to forget about it. We forget not because we have an imperfect hippocampus (our brain’s memory organ); it's actually an evolved solution. The ability to lose information allows new information to come in that is more relevant, more pertinent to an ongoing reality. Forgetting allows us to update.

And there lies the rub with impulsive JPEGs and reckless inkings. They stick around. They circumvent and interfere with the brain’s normal ability to take in new information by providing a constant reminder of old news. In doing so, they strongly influence other people’s perspective of us as individuals. We remain almost permanently the person we were at that singular event in the past, instead of who we are now, or who we will be in the future.

This “moment permanence” is only going to become more of an issue in the future. As technology moves forward and we move closer to the realization of a “quantified self,” in which nearly everything about us is documented, our past selves will conflict with and even impede our future selves more and more. It will inevitably lead to more demands for embarrassing explanations and awkward, fruitless job interviews. 

However, we are already witnessing sections of the internet evolve to foster forgetting, through the wider use of intentionally impermanent texting apps like SnapChat and Cyberdust, where content disappears after just 20 seconds. Hopefully, in addition to the web changing to become more like our brains, our attitudes will also evolve. As we each face having more moments of our lives captured, it should force us out of a black-and-white perspective, toward one that is a more forgiving gray.

That one moment you thought that really cutting loose was a good idea may have been an extremely rare outburst for the straight-laced person you typically are. Instead of having that one moment forever mark you as a drunk or a promiscuous person, perhaps an emerging revelation that none of us is perfect every moment will make us more tolerant.

Here is hoping—cheers!

Via Psychology Today

Study: You Really Can Predict ‘the Marrying Type’

Attractive, agreeable, and clean people are more likely to get married. Surprise?

Sometimes, after meeting a friend’s significant other, someone will observe that the man or woman in question is “the marrying type.” Others around will nod wisely and pensively sip their drinks. (I imagine this sort of thing happens in a dimly lit bar, where the friends have convened to imbibe and pass judgment.) What exactly identifies this person as the marrying type is unclear—maybe it’s a certain sparkle in their eye, or maybe they have helpfully tattooed a dotted outline on their left ring finger where a wedding ring might go.

But science is not satisfied with these clues. Science wants answers. What personal traits make someone the marrying type? A new study published in Social Science Research looks at how attractiveness, personality, and grooming influence the likelihood that someone will get married, or cohabitate in a relationship.

Of those three traits, the only statistically significant interaction was that men with an above average attractive personality were more likely to get married. Taking each of the factors individually, no other significant trends emerged. But those three factors in aggregate (what the researchers called “the personal traits index”) were linked to likelihood of marriage. Someone who scored more highly on the index overall was more likely to walk down the aisle. (The personal traits index did not have a significant relationship with non-marital cohabitation, however.) “Increasing the value of the personal traits index by one standard deviation is associated with a 13.7 percent greater hazard of entering into marriage for men and a 13.2 percent greater hazard of entering into marriage for women,” the study reads. “Though certainly not definitive, these results suggest that individuals may be able to trade-off different personal traits to enhance their competitiveness in generating offers and finding a suitable mate. The results also suggest they may be able to compensate for a deficiency in one desirable trait by enhancing the presence of another. For example, a person lacking in physical attractiveness may choose to invest more in grooming in order to become a more attractive partner.”

This is the “whole is more than the sum of its parts” theory of marriageability, and indeed that Aristotle quote is the epigraph for the study. Perhaps the marrying type does just have a special something—a combination of hotness, agreeability, and, I guess, regular bathing, that gives them a glowing aura that just screams “Marry me.”

Michael T. French, a sociology professor at the University of Miami, and his team looked at longitudinal data of more than 9,000 adolescents as they became young adults—starting in 1994 when participants were in high school and middle school and ending in 2009 when they were aged 24 to 34. Interviewers were asked to rate the participants’ looks, personality, and grooming on a scale of one to five, five being the most attractive. So this study doesn’t get into the nuances of personality, and how one person’s “sarcastic and abrasive” might be another’s “charming and adorable,” but instead just looks at whether someone’s personality is generally “attractive.”

Via The Atlantic

'GET TO KNOW YOUR CAP HILL NEIGHBORS' SOCIAL DINNER

We are proud to announce that The Joodlum Group have teamed up with the highly acclaimed Lavagna Ristorante for our very first social dinner on Thursday March 27th. Three courses including wine and desert for only $25. Come Participate! There is limited seating so act fast! Check out the rest of the info here. http://tinyurl.com/nxczxsr

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Source: https://www.facebook.com/events/5985762202...

The Pissoir

SAN FRANCISCO —

An unusual new place "to go" coming soon to a San Francisco park has no seat and no flush handle, but is raising some questions about practicality from some park-goers.

Bryan Ching happily strolled through Dolores Park on Wednesday enjoying the overcast afternoon.

One thing he didn't enjoy was the line of porta-potties.

"Porta-potties are just kind of gross; just so confined," Ching said. "And people do who knows what in there."

Starting next week, the park will undergo a $12.5 million renovation. San Francisco's Recreation and Parks Department said part of the renovation is to improve the bathrooms.

Thirty-one new bathroom stalls in two buildings will be built, but there will also be one "pissoir" or open-air urinal.

"There's a big issue right now with people urinating on the Muni tracks," said renovation project manager Jake Gilchrist.

He said that with 5,000 people visiting the park every weekend day, the porta-potties were being vandalized and overused.

Gilchrist described the pissoir, or pPod.

"[It] is essentially a 7-foot screen with some plants on it and an area drain that empties into the sewer system," Gilchrist said.

He also said the semi-cylindrical mesh screen will be open in the back and wheelchair-accessible.

Privacy is a concern for park visitor Pedro Martins.

"I don't feel comfortable with that, especially with adults and children. You never know about the predators out there," he said.

Others said the pPod is a better idea compared to a stack of porta-potties. "Pretty sure it’s a little cleaner than what goes on in those porta-potties," Ching said.

The pPod will be installed in the coming months. The entire park renovation is set to be completed by spring 2015.

Spotify's Take Over Plan

 

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Spotify's Genius Plan To One-Up Rivals: Buy A Company They Use

Spotify today announced that it will acquire the industry’s leading music intelligence company, The Echo Nest.  The acquisition supports Spotify’s strategy to grow global music consumption and overall revenue back to the music industry by building the best user experience and music discovery engine for millions of global fans.  

This deal will allow Spotify to leverage The Echo Nest’s in depth musical understanding and tools for curation to drive music discovery for millions of users around the globe.  The addition of The Echo Nest to Spotify will also strengthen Spotify’s ability to help brands and partners build amazing music experiences for their audiences. 

“We’ve been fans of The Echo Nest for a really long time and honoured to have their talented team join Spotify,” said Daniel Ek, Founder and CEO, Spotify. “At Spotify, we want to get people to listen to more music. We are hyper focused on creating the best user experience and it starts with building the best music intelligence platform on the planet. With The Echo Nest joining Spotify, we will make a big leap forward in our quest to play you the best music possible.”

“Since founding The Echo Nest, Brian Whitman and Tristan Jehan have created a company completely and beautifully obsessed with understanding the world of music to help fans discover more music,” said Jim Lucchese, CEO of The Echo Nest.  “Joining forces with Spotify gives us the opportunity to continue doing so as part of the fastest-growing service in the world; we’re thrilled to be part of a team equally as passionate about connecting more people with more music.”

The Echo Nest will continue to operate out of its headquarters in Somerville, MA where it has been a key component of the growing Boston-area tech scene.  The Echo Nest will also continue to operate in San Francisco.  The Echo Nest API will remain free and open to support its robust developer ecosystem.  The developer community is crucial to the success of both Spotify and The Echo Nest and will remain a priority for the combined companies.

Feeling Charitable? Help Out Our Buddy John and His Dog

Our good friend John's dog needs some help. This cute little guy named King Kong was just diagnosed with a King Kong sized brain tumor that is taking up over 40% of his brain. John is a good guy and his dog means the world to him. Just thought we would help out. If you're feeling like helping out as well, visit his page HERE that he started in order to help raise money to save him. Thanks. :)

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Source: http://www.youcaring.com/pet-expenses/help...