Thursday, July 25, 2013
The Property Rights Newsletter July 26, 2013 - Issue #723 "My advice is to give up stevia, aspartame, sucralose, sugar alcohols like xylitol and malitol, and all of the other heavily-used and marketed sweeteners unless you want to slow down your metabolism, gain weight, and become an addict."- Mark Hyman |
![]() FDA invites public input on menthol in cigarettes. The agency is issuing the ANPRM to obtain additional information related to potential regulatory options it might consider, such as establishing tobacco product standards, among others. The ANPRM will be available for public comment for 60 days. The FDA will consider all comments, data, research, and other information submitted to the docket to determine what, if any, regulatory action with respect to menthol in cigarettes is appropriate. FDA Regulator to act on e-cigarettes. THE FOOD and Drug Administration (FDA) will resolve in a month whether to regulate or ban electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) after medical groups raised health concerns on its use. Dr. Kenneth Y. Hartigan-Go, director-general of the FDA, said inputs presented in a public hearing yesterday as well as position papers of various stakeholders on e-cigarettes will be considered in the decision. "The regulators will study these and come back to you in a period of one month's time with a clear position of what we need to do as far as this item is concerned," Mr. Go said. ![]() NY: 14 cig havens still smoking 10 years after Bloomberg's ban. Here's smoke in your eye, Nanny Bloomberg! "It's our right!" declared Vietnam vet Richard Velez, 63, at the Bay Ridge American Legion hall in Brooklyn. "Who the hell is this one individual to come in and micromanage my life?" Netherlands: Finance ministry breaks WHO treaty. Vrij Nederland also reports that employers' organisation VNO-NCW lobbies at the highest government levels in The Hague and in Brussels to soften the anti-smoking policy. VNO-NCW director Niek van Kesteren told the magazine the Netherlands government needs tobacco taxes to balance its budget. Russia: What DO they support? Lies that enrich pharmaceutical companies? The whole purpose of the anti-smoking policy is to force people to quit, increasing the profits made out of smoking cessation drugs. And what should be done with the art that already exisist? Must we burn all books or paintings where smoking is present for the sake of political correctness? Scotland: Freedom-2-Choose: Three smoking wardens fail to manage the problem. - Plain packs fallout. - Lancet blames tobacco for everything, others more realistic. - Dangers to life and the public health lobby: adverse drug reactions kill more than smoking. UK: Smoking, democracy, plain packaging and the Soviets. Even if plain packaging were a successful intervention and decreased the number of cigarettes smoked, it is a Soviet era-style restriction that does not sit well in a liberal democracy. An assault on personal freedoms in the name of health is still an assault on democracy. Isn't it? World: Smokers Blogs. Watch instant postings to your favorite blogs. ![]() ![]() More: Articles about sugar, sugar tax, and the sugar police. |
![]() |
Thursday, July 18, 2013
The Property Rights Newsletter July 19, 2013 - Issue #722 "A recent police study found that you're muchmore likely to get shot by a fat cop if you run." - Dennis Miller | |
![]() Indonesia: City targets pot-bellied police. Overweight policemen in an Indonesian city have been ordered to join an exercise programme as many of them are currently too slow to catch fleeing criminals. "The pot-bellied police run too slow," Wahyu Widada, police chief of Tangerang, near the capital Jakarta, told AFP. Around 130 officers deemed excessively overweight out of the 1,473-strong force will undertake compulsory physical exercise three times a week for a total of four-and-a-half hours. Malaysia: State to whip pot-bellied cops into shape. Fat police officers in Malaysia's central state of Pahang will soon be forced to attend daily exercise sessions in response to criticisms that many in the force were out of shape, a newspaper reported Wednesday. "I am aware that there are personnel in the force who are pot-bellied and overweight," said state police chief Sharifuddin Abdul Ghani. Pakistan: Warns Pot-bellied Cops To Diet or Quit. A Pakistan police commander has ordered tens of thousands of pot-bellied officers to diet or quit frontline duties, officials said Monday in what one newspaper dubbed the "battle of the bulge." Habibur Rehman, police chief in Pakistan's most populous province Punjab, has ordered 175,000 personnel not to allow their waistlines to exceed 38 inches (96 cm), spokeswoman Nabila Ghazanfar told AFP. At least 50 percent of Punjab police are overweight, Ghazanfar said. Thailand: Potbellied police told to lose weight as 60 overweight Thai officers are sent to 12-day boot camp. Five most common concerns among officers were obesity, high cholesterol, liver problems, high blood pressure and diabetes. It includes dawn-to-dusk exercise and lectures on healthy eating at a police training centre in Bangkok. The officers wear T-shirts with the slogan "Get rid of the belly" and start their days with pre-dawn jogs, yoga, aerobic dance classes and lessons from nutritionists. They also do tai chi to reduce stress and improve the body's blood flow. Vietnam: Paunchy traffic policemen not allowed working on the road. Hanoi's traffic police officers who have a pot-belly, undersized and speak improperly will be arranged to do paperwork, not having contact with people. The traffic police teams in Hanoi are reviewing their members to make the list of police officers, even the young ones, who have big waists. World: Signs Of A Broken Society Part Two: Inmate Sterilization and Eugenics - California still grapples with an ugly past - Packed lunches: pupils face ban in new school food plans - Man Has Home Ransacked by Police for Paying Cash - Tricking the public to 'promote' health - and more! World: Smokers Blogs. Watch instant postings to your favorite blogs. ![]() Electronic Cigarette: Electronic cigarettes could rekindle battles over smoking in public. The e-cigarette industry is promoting vaping as a hip, healthier alternative to smoking — and as a way to quit. But while health experts largely agree that the vapor from e-cigarettes poses less of a threat to public health than tobacco cigarettes, some worry that welcoming the so-called "clean nicotine" could erode smoking bans, encourage smokers to trade one addiction for another and hook nonsmokers. Electronic Cigarette: Research & Commentary: The Emergence of E-Cigarettes. Electronic cigarettes, or "e-cigarettes," have quickly become one of the most popular nicotine replacement products. The Wall Street Journal reports sales of e-cigarettes doubled in the United States over the past five years, moving from $250 million to $500 million in total sales. Some industry experts predict sales of e-cigarettes could reach $1 billion this year, doubling sales from 2012. | |
![]() | |
Thursday, July 11, 2013
The Property Rights Newsletter July 12, 2013 - Issue #721 "If you judge people, you have no time to love them."- Mother Teresa |
![]() ![]() ![]() MO: City-imposed smoking ban appears dead in St. Charles. City leaders here have backed off efforts to pass a limited smoking ban and now want to only require businesses to post signs saying whether they allow customers to light up. Mayor Sally Faith and Council President Dave Beckering announced plans for the sign ordinance at a City Council meeting Tuesday night. USA: New York school drops Michelle Obama lunch standards: Kids too hungry. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake school district has become the latest casualty in first lady Michelle Obama's preferred lunch plan, dropping the menu after too many students complained of hunger. The district lost about $100,000 trying out the federal menu, which offered such meals as "part" of a chicken patty on a minicroissant. USA: A Label Calls Attention to Obesity. This distorted view may change now that the American Medical Association has finally labeled obesity a disease, not just a risk factor for other disorders. The A.M.A. has said in effect that it is medicine's responsibility to provide the knowledge and tools needed to curb this runaway epidemic. UK: Children's caffeine intake "should be controlled." The European Food Safety Agency suggested more than two-thirds of the UK's 10 to 18-year-olds have drunk high-caffeine energy drinks. Caffeine is defined as a drug because it stimulates the central nervous system. In both children and adults, too much caffeine can cause difficulty concentrating and sleeping and increased heart rate. UK: Imperial Tobacco has launched Smoke Spots in the UK, a new website to support adult smokers and promote smoker-friendly venues. Smoke Spots is already live in Germany and Austria and now it has been extended into the UK, with London being the flagship city. World: Smokers Blogs. Watch instant postings to your favorite blogs. |
![]() Please help. |
Wednesday, July 03, 2013
720
The Property Rights Newsletter July 5, 2013 - Issue #720 "Force is the vital principle and immediate parent of despotism." - Thomas Jefferson | |
![]() Georgia - Douglas and Gwinnett County: Fox 5 News I-Team Investigation Video. In some Georgia counties, as well as all over the USA, drivers are getting their blood forcibly stolen from them. As shown in this video, every driver who refuses to give the police a blow, even for misdemeanor offenses, is strapped to a table, put into a headlock by a police officer, and their blood forcibly taken. ![]() ![]() ![]() Thailand: Tobacco companies to sue Thai government over health warnings. Their target is the Kingdom's health department and its new regulations for bigger health warnings on cigarette packaging, making them the world's largest. USA: Happy Fourth of July! Pick up your card for facts, jokes, and music. Electronic Cigarette: Dalli, The Bahamas, And Millions Of Mysterious Euros. To recap, he was sacked personally by EU President Barroso after the anti-corruption body Olaf found what they called "unambiguous circumstantial evidence" that he - through intermediaries - had solicited EU60m in bribes from snus manufacturer Swedish Match. Electronic Cigarette: Looking at the helpfulness of e-cigarettes. "If you're trying to quit or just looking for something to use when you don't have a cigarette at the time, it works," Walston said. "The electronic cigarettes have really taken off. There might be only e-cigarettes in 10 years." Electronic Cigarette: FDA: Second-hand smoke from e-cigarettes may be harmful to your health. Because of this, the FDA reiterated its appeal to the public, especially the youth, "NOT to start smoking at all and to stop using cigarettes, cigars, or e-cigarettes." Electronic Cigarette: Taking the pleasure out of e-cigarettes. By Christopher Snowdon. The authorities' attempt to classify e-ciggies as medicinal effaces the real reason people smoke - they enjoy it. No one denies that e-cigarettes should meet basic standards of safety and quality, but there are enough consumer-protection laws in place already without forcing this patently non-medical product down the pharmaceutical route. Electronic Cigarette: Read more articles at The Property Rights Newsletter. | |
![]() World Smokers Blogs: Watch instant postings to your favorite blogs. | |