Sunday, February 24, 2013

New Cancer Killer ?


Sodium Bicarbonate Cancer Killer


According to the American Cancer Society, sodium bicarbonate is being promoted as an alternative treatment to cancer by an Italian oncologist, Dr. Tullio Simoncini. He believes that cancer is caused by a yeast infection, and sodium bicarbonate has the capacity to kill the yeast. (See Reference 1.) Dr. Simoncini published his research thesis, entitled "Cancer is Fungus," presenting fungal infection as the main cause of cancer .

However, no scientific evidence is available to support that cancer is due to yeast infection and that sodium bicarbonate can directly cure cancers, although studies have been conducted regarding the ability of sodium carbonate to influence the pH levels of cancer cells.

Significance

    • S

      odium bicarbonate is a mainstream treatment for acidosis. Oncologists use it to neutralize the acid properties of most cancer agents in chemotherapy. The Arizona Cancer Center of the University of Arizona, the Department of Pharmacology of Wayne State University in Michigan, and H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute in Florida are conducting a study that indicates the capacity of sodium bicarbonate to alter the pH of tumor cells that could inhibit its spread and progression. (See Reference 2.)

    • T

      he acid environment  of tumor cells is responsible for allowing them to thrive and spread. Making the tumor cells more alkaline increases the ability of other anti-carcinogenic drugs to become more effective in preventing tumor activities. (See Reference 3.) Tumors are more acidic than other normal cells and tissues. An acidic environment is low in oxygen, and changing the pH to alkaline allows an increase of oxygen supply to the cell. This controls the abnormal function of the tumor and prevents it from metastasizing. (See Resource


    • 1.)

Benefits

    • S

      ome chemotherapy agents have a heavy acidic nature that can pose a danger to a patient. Oncologists use the complementary benefit of sodium bicarbonate to neutralize the acid property in anti-carcinogen agents. (See Reference 3.) It also helps in bringing alkalinity to the cellular environment of tumors. Because cancer cells cannot survive in an environment that has high oxygen level, an alkaline environment prevents them from growing and spreading.

Considerations

    • Although there is lack of substantial evidence to prove that sodium bicarbonate can directly treat cancer, the researches conducted with animal tests provide some therapeutic benefits from the use of sodium bicarbonate for cancer treatment .

ARIZ. U. CLINICAL TRIAL of SODIUM BICARBONATE TUMOR KILLER




Saturday, February 16, 2013

MI AFL, UTW File Suit to Block Right to Work Less Law


Michigan AFL-CIO files federal lawsuit seeking to stop right-to-work law

Jonathan Oosting | joosting@mlive.comBy Jonathan Oosting | joosting@mlive.com 
on February 11, 2013 at 4:24 PM, updated February 11, 2013 at 10:13 PM
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Unions protest right to work at Michigan Capitol
EnlargeUnion members and supporters protest expected right-to-work legislation at the Michigan Capitol on Dec. 6, 2012. (Jonathan Oosting | MLive.com)Unions protest right to work at Michigan Capitol gallery(29 photos)
LANSING, MI -- The Michigan AFL-CIO and union partners are seeking to block the state's controversial new right-to-work law, arguing that it conflicts with federal labor statutes in violation of the U.S. Constitution.
Attorneys for the AFL-CIO filed a federal lawsuit today in Detroit, seeking a declaratory judgement that PA 348 of 2012 is unlawful and requesting a permanent enjoinder barring state officials from enforcing it.
The 8-count complaint alleges that Michigan's right-to-work law violates the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution by allowing the state to levy civil and criminal penalties for behaviors regulated by the federal National Labor Relations Act and by purporting to apply to areas under federal jurisdiction, such as dock-yards and forts.
"In its haste to enact a right-to-work law, the legislature overreached and went into an area that is controlled specifically by federal law," said AFL-CIO attorney Andy Nickelhoff, "and that violates the constitution."
The Michigan State Building and Construction Trades Council joined the AFL-CIO in the suit, along with Change to Win, a volunteer labor federation that includes the Teamsters and SEIU. (And our Longshore brothers and sisters in the proud ILWU)

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, along with several other state officials, is named as a defendant in the complaint. His office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Today's suit is the latest in a series of challenges to Michigan's new right-to-work law, which prohibits employers from collecting union dues a condition of employment. But this case, filed with U.S. District Court Judge Stephen J. Murphy III, is the first at the federal level.
Gov. Rick Snyder, anticipating legal challenges that he said could delay upcoming contract negotiations, last month asked the Michigan Supreme Court to issue an advisory opinion on the new law and whether it violates the state or U.S. constitution.
Days later, the ACLU of Michigan filed suit on behalf of the AFL-CIO and other unions, asking a judge to invalidate the law because it was passed and signed on the same day that state police blocked access to the Capitol during a protest that drew 12,000 people to Lansing.
Jonathan Oosting is a Capitol reporter for MLive Media Group. Email him at joosting@mlive.com or follow attwitter.com/jonathanoosting.


Friday, February 15, 2013

ILWU and ILA Under Corp Attacks


Aggressive Employers Challenge Longshore Workers on Both Coasts

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Automation, like the remotely-operated yard cranes in Norfolk, Virginia, is a growing concern for longshore workers on both coasts. Photo: APM Terminal.
With their pivotal position in the global supply chain, dockworkers are often considered the standard-bearers of on-the-job power. But on both coasts, this union stronghold is under stepped-up employer pressure.
Terminal operators and shippers are pushing leaner staffing, challenging longstanding work rules, and introducing job-displacing technology. They are also driving a wedge between standards for longshore workers handling containerized cargo and for those who do everything else on the docks.
The union response has been uneven, after the widespread disruptions and civil disobedience workers used during a heated battle in Longview, Washington, in 2011-2012.
Port clerks in Southern California have just voted to reject the settlement that sent them back to work in December after an eight-day strike. East Coast longshore workers, who narrowly avoided a strike in the final days of 2012, are weighing whether to accept a controversial deal reached earlier this month. And West Coast grain handlers also opted not to strike in late December, even though employers declared impasse and imposed a contract workers had roundly rejected.

Clerks Strike

The steady drip of outsourcing drove 600 clerical workers, members of Longshore Union Local 63’s Office Clerical Unit (ILWU), out on an eight-day strike in the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach November 27.
After more than two years working under an expired contract, their strike provoked the biggest disruption in West Coast container traffic since the employers’ 2002 coastwide lockout.
Picket lines quickly spread across both ports, eventually idling close to 10,000 additional longshore workers at 10 of the 14 terminals. Over $400 billion worth of container shipments—nearly a third of all such shipments into the U.S.—pass through the two ports each year on their way from far-flung factories to retail shelves.
At its peak the strike had 13 ships anchored offshore, waiting to discharge cargo, while another 18 were re-routed to other ports.
The clerical workers handle invoicing and billing records and schedule on-site customs inspections. Outsourcing has moved 50 of their bargaining unit jobs to non-union office workers away from the ports, from Colorado to Costa Rica.
After eight days of high-stakes negotiations, including federal mediation and an eleventh-hour intervention by Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, strikers returned to work December 5 with new limits on outsourcing.
But clerical workers have reportedly rejected the agreement. No one from the union could be reached for comment, but there is speculation that details of final contract language, settled after the return to work, fed the “no” vote.

Back East

Meanwhile, the East Coast Longshore union (ILA) announced a six-year agreement with port operators February 2. The deal capped tense negotiations marked by two contract extensions, federal mediation, and a narrowly averted strike in late December.
A 200-person committee will convene March 12-14 to review the proposal and either recommend it to members or send negotiators back to the table.
Reports indicate the six-year deal includes backloaded raises—no raises in the first half of the agreement, then one dollar each year for the final three years.
The deal also restores a controversial cap on the “container royalty,” an annual productivity dividend paid to longshore workers based on tonnage moving through containerized ports. The dividend was established with the introduction of containerized shipping in the 1960s to compensate for the huge loss of longshore jobs. ILA members won removal of the cap in their 2009 negotiations. Now it’s back.
“People are upset,” noted Mark Bass, president of ILA Local 1410 in Mobile, Alabama. “There were certain things the ILA promised to stand on, to bring everybody up.”
According to Bass, workers are also concerned the modest increase in the employers’ contribution to benefit funds—a extra $1 per hour worked over the life of the agreement—isn’t nearly enough to shore up local pension, holiday, and vacation funds, which are in poor shape after the financial collapse and continued recession.
Ken Riley, president of Local 1422 in Charleston, South Carolina, and national vice president, shares this concern. “In our local we always say you’re only one accident, or one diagnosis, away from a pension.” he said. “That’s why we’ve done a lot of education, particularly with younger members, so folks understand that improving pension benefits is not just for folks about to leave the industry.”
But Riley also pointed to some advances in the current agreement, including a faster progression to top pay—from nine years down to six—and a first-ever coastwide agreement on automation.

Automation

The automation deal formalized future negotiations over the introduction of new technology, and will channel displaced workers into other ILA jobs. Employers also agreed, in principle, that jobs created by new technology will be in the ILA’s jurisdiction.
“It won’t give us 100 percent protection,” Riley noted, “but we did pretty well.” The automation deal is similar to the one struck by West Coast longshore workers and employers after the coastwide lockout in 2002.
Automation has been a growing concern in the ILA since the world’s largest shipping company, AP Moller-Maersk, opened a semi-automated container terminal in Norfolk, Virginia in August 2007. The move introduced remotely operated yard cranes, controlled through a combination of GPS technology, cameras, and computers. The rail-mounted cranes stack the huge containers seven high and eight wide, delivering them to trucks or rail cars. Six cranes can be operated by one operator from a computer booth inside the terminal.
A similar system is being developed in Bayonne, New Jersey, part of the East Coast’s biggest port system, surrounding New York City. And in Jacksonville, Florida, port authorities have already approved construction of a fully automated terminal operated by the shipping giant Hanjin.
The union won protections against the outsourcing of skilled chassis repair and maintenance—a key issue for International President Harold Daggett, whose home local performs this work in the East Coast’s busiest port system, New York and New Jersey.
As bargaining now shifts to local issues in each port, concern remains high over employer proposals for drastic cuts to staffing levels and crew sizes, particularly in New York and New Jersey.

Grain Strain

The West Coast Longshore union and the Pacific Northwest Grain Handlers Association are at a stalemate. The two sides were locked in tense negotiations late last year, with the ILWU trying to maintain longstanding master contract standards for the 3,000 longshore workers who handle grain along the Puget Sound and Columbia River.
Longshore workers in the region move nearly 30 percent of all U.S. grain exports, including half the nation’s wheat shipments.
The conflict came to a head December 18 when employers declared impasse and pushed the four ILWU locals to vote on their “last, best, and final” offer. Grain workers rejected the proposal by 94 percent. But two of the association employers—Columbia Grain and United Grain—imposed the new terms anyway on December 27, hoping to provoke a strike.
“It’s simple: they want to break the union,” said Leal Sundet, the ILWU Coast Committeeman leading grain negotiations. “But we’ve been here 80 years and we’re not going anywhere.”
According to Sundet, these employers have taken full advantage of the high prices—and hefty profit margins—accompanying this year’s low harvest, spending several months, and millions of dollars, preparing for a showdown with the ILWU. Grain operators fortified terminal entrances in anticipation of aggressive picket lines and installed new surveillance technology to limit the effectiveness of work-to-rule strategies.
The companies had out-of-town replacement workers and three non-union tugboats—complete with armed security and additional Coast Guard protection—on hand in case longshore workers walked off the job.
Rather than strike, the ILWU chose to report to work under the newly imposed conditions, and is considering unfair labor practice charges against the two companies while trying to hammer out a better deal separately with TEMCO, a joint venture between global agribusiness companies CHS and Cargill. Terminals for the fourth employer, Louis-Dreyfus Commodities, have been shuttered for construction, but the company continues to participate in negotiations.
The union remains tight-lipped about TEMCO negotiations, but it is unclear how a settlement—even one protecting master contract standards—can be spread to the two hard-line employers.
Last year’s pitched battle in Longview, Washington, over 25 jobs cast a long shadow over bargaining. ILWU members squared off with grain giant EGT after the company announced it would operate its new state-of-the-art terminal with a different, compliant union. The ILWU finally reached an agreement after months of picketing and direct action that included occupation of the grain terminal, a blockaded train shipment, and scores of arrests.
Despite the militancy, the EGT contract loosened work rules and staffing standards compared to the master grain contract. Now employers are pushing to spread these concessions, such as regular 12-hour shifts, bypassing seniority, and greater flexibility to use supervisors for bargaining unit work.
These developments only raise the stakes for the master contract negotiations coming up in 2014, covering 15,000 West Coast longshore workers. For generations these ILWU members have set the bar for militancy, on-the-job organization, and top-notch contracts. Employers clearly are gearing up to loosen labor’s grip on a key chokepoint in their global supply chain. Look for fireworks in June next year.
Mark Brenner is the Director of Labor Notes. He can be reached at mark@labornotes.org

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Debate for Pres. AFL-CIO?

Petitioning Richard Trumka for an AFL-CIO Presidential Debate
http://www.change.org/petitions/petitioning-richard-trumka-for-an-afl-cio-presidential-debate

Petition by CWA's
Harry Kelber for AFL-CIO President 2013

AFL-CIO members need to hear from ALL the presidential candidates, not just the incumbent, Richard Trumka. How can the country's largest labor organization have a presidential election without a true debate?

To:
Richard Trumka, President of the AFL-CIO
rtrumka@aflcio.org

Petitioning Richard Trumka for an AFL-CIO Presidential Debate

Dear President Trumka,
The unions and labor movement are in dire straights. We are losing hundreds of thousands of members and the government is allowing a flagrant violation of our democratic rights. The privatization of public services and education are rapidly expanding, destroying the public commons.

Regardless of who is in charge in Washington, these attacks are continuing. In light of this, we call on you to debate the only other candidate for president of the AFL-CIO, CWA member and journalist Harry Kelber, who has submitted his name in nomination for president of the AFL-CIO. In order to have a democratic trade union movement we must have a democratic process for discussion of the issues facing the members of the AFL-CIO and the entire working people of the United States.

We call on you to agree to have this debate and discussion on the issues facing working people including:

* How to fight privatization and deregulation in education and public services?

* How to put millions of people back to work now? Should the AFL-CIO continue to support labor management partnerships and concession bargaining.

* How to stop the attacks on millions of immigrant workers so they have democratic labor rights?

* How to stop the Trans Pacifica Partnership and rescind anti-labor agreements like NAFTA which have been used to destroy working people around the world?

* Should the AFL-CIO convention be streamed on the web for all AFL-CIO members having the right to see what issues are presented and debated at the AFL-CIO convention?

* How to stop the growing militarization in the US and the wars around the world?

* Why labor does not have a 24 hours labor channel for workers and their unions to have a voice countering the anti-labor propaganda?

* How labor can fight multi-nationals in the US and around the world when they have no borders and operate above the law.

* Why there are no criminal prosecution of corporations and their executives who flagrantly violate labor and health and safety laws with impunity.

* How does the AFL-CIO have be reorganized to stop the loss of members and become relevant to the tens of millions of unorganized workers.

* Should the rank and file members of the AFL-CIO have the right to vote for the leadership of the AFL-CIO and should their salaries by significantly above the average wages of US workers?

* Should the unions in the US begin to investigate the formation of a democratic labor party that will have a program for all working people and not be driven by corporate interests?

We know you want to workers to be educated about these issues and we hope you will agree to participate in a televised debate so the AFL-CIO members of this country can see how you and CWA member Harry Kelber address these issues.

Please let the voices of the rank and file AFL-CIO members be heard in this upcoming AFL-CIO convention on which way forward.
Sincerely,
[Your name]

PIRG: States Should Tax Corp IRS Dodgers


A new report from the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) reveals that state governments lost $39.8 billion in revenues because corporations and wealthy individuals are using offshore tax havens to avoid paying their statutory tax rates. We've seen the devastating effects that offshoring jobs have had on America's workers, and offshoring has long been talked about in terms of lost federal revenue, where $150 billion a year goes unpaid, but little focus has been given to state losses from the practice. Federal and state tax laws allow companies to claim that at least some portion of their profits were earned in other countries, particularly those whose tax rates are low or nonexistent. 
According to PIRG, such offshoring is both damaging to the states and unfair:
Tax haven abusers benefit from our markets, infrastructure, educated workforce and security, but they pay next to nothing for these benefits. Ultimately, taxpayers must pick up the tab, either in the form of higher taxes, cuts to public spending priorities or increased national debt.
While the federal government is gridlocked and has little chance for changing these tax laws right now, PIRG says it is much easier for the states to attempt to recapture this lost revenue and offers up several legislative options that could make state revenue collection more fair:
1. States can “decouple” their tax system from the federal tax system.
2. States can require worldwide combined reporting for multinational corporations.
3. States should urge their federal representatives to reject a “territorial” tax system, which would further erode state revenue.
4. States can require increased disclosure of financial information about corporations’ business presence in other countries and how they price their transfers with their own foreign subsidiaries; as well as to explain why large disparities exist between the profits corporations report to shareholders and tax authorities.
5. States could withhold taxes as part of federal FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliant Act) withholding.

Obama's 15 Institutes for New US Manufacturing



STATE_OF_UNION_14263831.JPGVice President Joe Biden and House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio applaud President Barack Obama as he gives his State of the Union address Tuesday evening. 

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio -- The National Additive Manufacturing Innovative Institute in Youngstown, mentioned by President Barack Obama is his State of the Union address, is called the hub of the nation's "catch-up" efforts to get back into the manufacturing game.

It's the first of 15 "innovative institutes" to be established by Obama's $1-billion National Network for Manufacturing Innovation strategy he introduced last March.

The Institute is focusing on the development of additive manufacturing technology and processes. The goal is to take 3-D printing and other methods for translating digital 
images into parts that you can hold in your hand from laboratories and specialty 
shops into factories.

Most large manufacturers use 3-D printers to create prototypes for parts so they can test them in large machines. But when it comes time to go into production, those companies typically used cheaper methods such as metal stamping for production.

With this technology companies could design parts that cannot be made using traditional manufacturing methods.

The federal defense and energy departments has put $30 million toward the Institute,with NASA, the National Institute of Standards and Technology and National Science Foundation expected to kick in the remaining $15 million over the next four years.

A consortium of other manufacturing firms, universities, community colleges and nonprofit organizations has promised an additional $40 million.

Last August 16, the Institute was named one of the top 10 most innovative economic development initiatives in the country by The Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program and The Rockefeller Foundation.

http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2013/02/the_national_additive_manufact.html