Archive for the “Education” Category

PNW Liberty Convention Begins Tomorrow: Adams Center, Missoula MT

Please plan to attend Pacific Northwest, Celebrating Conservatism Convention, and standing firm with others in Liberty.  Tickets at the door!

Questions:  notraceability@hotmail.com, Kelly

Celebrating Conservatism

Liberty Convention 2010

Learn your role.

We all can do something to keep our liberty & Freedom

Learn How today.

Liberty Convention Flyer Convention Schedule

Friday May 21, 2010 10am-6:00pm Registration at The Adams Center 12pm-5:30pm Booths open* 2-4pm Rally Caras Park Missoula 3-5:30pm Tailgate Party – details soon 6-7:00pm Opening Ceremonies – Mona Docteur 7-8:30pm Main Speaker: Chuck Baldwin 8:30-10:00pm Dance- Kyle Shobe Band *Booths will not be open during main events
Saturday May 22, 2010 8am doors open and registration 9am-1:00pm Red Beckman, Sheriff Richard Mack and Gary Marbut 1-1:45pm Lunch break 1-5:45pm Booths open* 1:45-4pm Workshops -Learn how to start your own “Celebrating Conservatism” model group -Learn how to implement “Liberty Bell” system 4-6:00pm Dinner break 6-7:00pm Band – The Lifers 7-10:00pm Schaeffer Cox and Kitty Werthmann Closing ceremonies Mona Docteur *Booths won’t be open during main events Times subject to changes.

US National Park System Joins One Health

National Park Service Office of Public Health, Wildlife Health, Integrated Pest management, and Risk Management.

OneHealthbrochure v3[1]

Unbelievable!

From the trenches,

Celeste

April 28, 2010 Posted Under Education, Health, Money Talks, One World, UN

Life-Threatening: The ‘One Health’ Manual

Human-Animal Medicine – Clinical Approaches to Zoonoses and Other Shared Health Risks

By Peter M. Rabinowitz, MD, MPH and Lisa A. Conti, DVM, MPH, DACVPM, CEHP

http://www.us.elsevierhealth.com/product.jsp?isbn=9781416068372

Approx. 528 pages

Trim size 8 3/4 X 11 1/16 in

Copyright 2010

List Price: $99.95, Hardcover, Reference

You Tube: Coast to Coast Interviews No-NAIS Activists

February 2006 was not exactly a tranquil month.  Emails and forums were blazing with communication and revelation on the National Animal Identification System known as NAIS.  Farmers were just beginning to collect information of the NAIS program.  NAIS activism was in its infancy with only a few farming journals such as Countryside exposing the sinister NAIS plan.   Walter Jeffries was just putting up his NoNAIS.org blog when Celeste Bishop called him with the news that the largest alternative media venue, Coast to Coast with George Noory, was going to cover the hot topic of NAIS.  Walter and Celeste teamed up for 48 hours to get the blog ready for the first NoNAIS activists to go live on the international air-waves.  Much appreciation is extended to Dr. Katherine Albrecht who helped get the media ball rolling on NAIS.

Aired: 2006-03-1-2006

Katherine Albrecht, Pat Showalter and Celeste Bishop talk with George Noory and expose the rise of the High Tech Control Grid….

Everyone in farming community was furious about the program that would require:

Premises Identification:  All property that has potential to make $1000 qualifies whether you have animals or not.  Your property would be issued a 7 digit number that would cloud the your private property title and would run with your land instead of through ownership.

Electronic Animal Identification:  Livestock would need to be electronically identified in case of a “dreadful foreign animal disease”.  What the fear-mongering Department of Agriculture did not tell people was that truckloads of diseased and undocumented animals were flooding across the borders straight for your dinner table.  The USDA and state Departments of Agriculture also did not reveal the incremental implementation of a master UN plan called the Terrestrial Animal Health Code that would regulate all life on the planet earth.  It has come to light that the electronic identification may or may not be the dreaded grain size RFID that is inserted into flesh via a very large needle.  Other RFID technology is available these days including Somark, which uses an embedded RFID ink and then tattoos its victims with an invisible ink.

The third pillar of NAIS is the 24/7 surveillance (tracking or tracing-whatever you want to call it) where commingling and reporting of ‘animal’ movement would need to be reported to the government in an IRS type electronic format.

The NoNAIS journey for most of us has been one of pounding down and deciphering documents, learning to appreciate each others diverse talents, learning a *new-to-you* redefined language, leaving the farm to work with policy makers, law suits, media coverage, and communication skills.  Through the highs and the lows of NoNAIS activism we have made new friends and lost friends.  We have had abounding hard work and sacrificed many hours, dollars, and family time.

Do farmers think that the NoNAIS battle is worth it?  Absolutely!  Freedom to preserve farm-freedom so that we may all eat pure food is precious.  Unpolluted food from local small farmers is a valuable commodity to you the consumer.  The days of famine are rapidly approaching when your local farmer will not be able to farm and you will be stuck with polluted food!  If we, farmer and consumer, sit back and let someone else fight the “food-fight” we will get exactly what we put in, something that looks like food, but is not.

Will Coast to Coast cover an update on the current famine threat created by over regulation of traditional and small agriculture?  So far this You Tube has had 500+ hits.  We the People can drive that number much higher and show that folks are concerned about uncontaminated local foods.

Tyrannical food regulation is creeping into your front porch.  What are you going to do about it?

10 Minute Citizen: Go to Coast to Coast Covers NoNAIS & RFID

Share the link with your family and friends and ask them to view it.  Together we can drive the NoNAIS issue back up into international media venues where we have the best opportunity to educate and impact folks on this critical issue.  Let’s not relegate NAIS media coverage to the pages of history.

From the trenches…..

PNWER: Tracking and Surveillance of Protesters

In an ongoing engagement against the regionalisation of the Pacific Northwest we have been presenting protest opportunities and information gleaned from the recent PNWER conferences.  Our coverage of PNWER events has been very troubling to the powers-that-be regarding the adoption and implementation of the UN mandated regionalisation agenda.

In an effort to track trouble-makers, such as the www.nonaiswa.org site, PNWER has adopted the following policies:

PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit is committed to protecting your privacy and developing technology that gives you the most powerful and safe online experience. This Statement of Privacy applies to the PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit Web site and governs data collection and usage. By using the PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit website, you consent to the data practices described in this statement.

(You consent by coercion and default. A “safe” online experience is having your private information remain private).

Collection of your Personal Information

PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit collects personally identifiable information, such as your e-mail address, name, home or work address or telephone number. PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit also collects anonymous demographic information, which is not unique to you, such as your ZIP code, age, gender, preferences, interests and favorites.

There is also information about your computer hardware and software that is automatically collected by PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit. This information can include: your IP address, browser type, domain names, access times and referring Web site addresses. This information is used by PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit for the operation of the service, to maintain quality of the service, and to provide general statistics regarding use of the PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit Web site.

Please keep in mind that if you directly disclose personally identifiable information or personally sensitive data through PNWER 2009 19th Annual Summit public message boards, this information may be collected and used by others.

Protest Opportunity: Pro-NAIS CSU Open House

Hate the National Animal Identification System?

Here is your opportunity to protest a major driver of the NAIS program!

Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital Hosts 30th Annual Open House

Bring:

* Cardboard, fabric, or plastic protest signs,

* Mega-phone if you enjoy sharing your ideas with the “other side” of the fence,

* A smiling face ready to educate those who are clueless about the dangerous program.

* Be ready to ASK and ANSWER questions about NAIS

Be creative!

* Print up some flyers

* Wear NoNAIS T shirts or other attire

* Wear a costume (scratch the USDA vulture costumes because I checked a few years ago and to rent it was $3000, yes, $3000-with inflation, deflation, or Depression the cost probably has sky-rocketed.)

* Print and hand out NoNAIS logo stickers for the kids (I have had great response with those at the fairs)

* Do a Farm Sit-In in a pet carrier or cage representing what quasi-law/reg is doing to American farmers

* Set up a card table and put a nice meal with black streamers over it, saying No FOOD, FAMINE, STARVATION in the name of SCIENCE and Disease prevention

* Bring examples of what your farm products (not animals because they might get sucked into CSU)

* Please make sure that you are courteous and respectful, firm but polite. Dress appropriately. We want our NoNAIS Movement to be remembered in a positive light. Stay in public areas and be ready to stand your ground, if challenged.

* You may want to bring a video or tape recorder for “documentation” purposes.

Let’s brain-storm, other protest opportunities are coming up so please SHARE ideas J

Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital Hosts 30th Annual Open House

FORT COLLINS – A chance for insight into the fast-paced, high-tech world of cutting-edge veterinary medicine is available at the Colorado State University’s James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital’s annual Open House. The event will be from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. on Friday, April 3 and Saturday, April 4 at the hospital at 300 West Drake Road.

The day will feature tours of the hospital, about 15 displays put together by students about animals and animal health, a petting zoo, activities for children, and demonstrations and lectures from leading veterinarians at the university and animal professionals. Most of the booths offer fun, hands on activities for children including anatomy, exotic animals to look at and touch, balloon animals, and medical equipment used on animals available for them to touch and examine.

Adults can pick up information about pet care and animal behavior.

This is the 30th year of the open house, which attracts about 3,000 people each year.

Tours, student exhibits and animal information exhibits, the petting zoo and mock surgery for children to dress as veterinary surgeons and perform operations on stuffed animals will be available during all hours of the open house. The last tour starts each day at 3:15 p.m.

A schedule of events follows:

Friday, April 3
- 9 a.m. “Equine wound care,” lecture by Dr. Dean Hendrickson, director of the Veterinary Teaching Hospital and an equine veterinary medicine expert
- 10 a.m. Demonstration by Larimer County Search and Rescue Dogs
- 11 a.m. “Aquatic medicine: Veterinarians treat fish too,” lecture by Dr. Terry Campbell, exotics veterinarian at CSU
- 1 p.m. “Weird and wacky: Exotic animal medicine,” lecture by Dr. Matthew Johnston, exotics veterinarian at CSU
- 2 p.m. “So you want to be a veterinarian,” Sherry Stewart, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, assistant dean for Admissions and Student Affairs in the College of Clinical Sciences
- 2 p.m. “Hands for Horses” demonstration by Polly Webb, equine sports massage therapist, CSU equine hospital

Saturday, April 4
- 9 a.m. “Comparative orthopedic research: How sheep are helping people,” lecture by Dr. Simon Turner, orthopedic veterinarian at CSU
- 10 a.m. “Basic Hoof Knowledge: What you need to know about your horse’s feet!” demonstration by Dr. Shawn Olson, equine veterinarian at CSU
- 11 a.m. “Common diseases of wildlife in Colorado,” Dr. Laurie Baeten, veterinary resident at CSU
- 1 p.m. “Cancer in Pets,” Dr. Deanna Worley, veterinary surgical oncologist at CSU
- 2 p.m. “The Bird Experience” demonstration of free flying birds from all around the world, presented by the Northern Colorado Bird Center

Public Disclosure Docs: WSDA-WSU-Cooperative Extension Agreements & E Mails 2006

wsda-wsu-cooperative-extension-animal-and-premise-id-system-edu-proposal-sept2006

wsda-wsu-cooperative-extension-interagency-agreement-repeat-oct-2006

wsda-wsu-cooperative-extension-cooperative-agreement-not-signed-july-2006

wsda-wsu-cooperative-extension-e-mails-2006

January 8, 2009 Posted Under Education, USDA, WSDA