Saturday, April 26, 2014

Saturday, April 26, 2014

ANYONE WHO CARES ABOUT DEMOGRAPHY SHOULD BE CONCERNED:  There is a movement abroad in the land to create awareness of the very real significance of the effect of the 1965 Immigration Law passed by the Congress under the leadership of Teddy Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson.  Whether they understood the consequences of their legislation is debatable; what is not debatable is the rapidly changing demographics in the country.  Whites, as descendants of Europeans, are rapidly approaching minority status in the US a fact that will result in a permanent change in the culture and future prospect for whites.



NO WONDER OUR LITTLE INVESTMENT IN PISTACHIOS MANY YEARS AGO IS DOING SO WELL:

5 Things You Didn't Know About Pistachios

by Kerry Acker
on 05/09/13 at 11:00 AM
Pistachios-430
Move over, almonds and walnuts, there's a new superstar nut in town! With the California pistachio industry making a big push to turn more Americans on to the wonders of the creamy, buttery, heart-healthy nut (even Snoop Lion is on board, as well as Psy); worldwide consumption of pistachios skyrocketing (with China now the leading importer); and chefsusing pistachios in ever more ambitious ways, it seems this humble tree nut is enjoying its moment in the sun. Here, five things you should know about the pistachio, plus loads of sweet and savory recipes:
--The United States is currently the world leader in pistachio production, having surpassed Iran in 2010. And sales are booming, with exports doubling over the past six years from 100 million pounds to almost 270 million pounds. 
--Clocking in at about 3 to 4 calories per nut, pistachios--a.k.a. "skinny nuts"--have fewer calories than just about any other nut. (Plus, studieshave shown that if you eat pistachios in their shells, you will eat less overall; the act of shelling slows consumption, and the leftover shells serve as a visual cue to the eater to limit intake.)

--Pistachios contain more potassium, which can lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol, than any other nut.
--Eating pistachios may help lower cholesterol and reduce the risk ofcancer. Pistachios are an excellent source of phytosterols, plant compounds that have been found to decrease levels of LDL (bad) cholesterol, and they are packed with cancer-fighting antioxidants (including the carotenoids beta-carotene and lutein, which gives the pistachio kernel its distinct green color).
--Red pistachios don't exist in nature! Pistachio importers used to dye the nuts red--and sometimes green--to hide blemishes resulting from traditional harvesting methods.
Fascinating stuff, right? But, let's face it, the thing we love most about pistachios is, well, their deliciousness. And we've got loads of inventive sweet (beyond baklava) and savory (pestos! salsas! crusts!) recipes that make excellent use of one of our favorite nuts. Here are just a few:
How do you like to eat or cook with pistachios?

deepsouthosiris 
02:31:51 AM on
03/30/14
Oh wow this is an old article and im just now seeing it thanks to a link on mens health. I had a recent scare with my blood pressure and I have been working on incorporating more nuts into my diet. This book has helped a lot with the info it has available. Not great on recipes though lolhttp://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00E716BII/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?qid=1396160628&sr=8-1&pi=SY200_QL40

KerryandTom 
05:28:50 PM on
05/14/13
Hi, Kat15: Candied pistachios over hot cereal sounds delicious. I will give it a go, and thanks for the inspiration!

Kat15 
10:39:45 AM on
05/10/13
Make candied salted pistachios to put over hot cereal, put over your favorite salad, ice cream, or use for just snacking. Candying them makes them crispy which makes a fun texture change. I also love salted pistachios as an addition to my rye bread recipe, just before I make the dough into loaves or rolls.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Thursday, April 24, 2014

LIKE IT OR NOT THERE IS A MOVEMENT CALLED "WHITE NATIONALISM:  This movement is much more advanced in Europe than here in the US, however it does appear to be gaining ground in this country.  What it is is a reaction against the stifling weld of PC and the demogoguery on race matters going on in many schools and in the political world.  Think of the recent Dartmouth uprising by minorities and think of the Black Caucus in the Congress and think of Jesse Jackson andAl Sharpton and their ability to hold hostage corporations and individuals whom they label "racists".

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

GOOD FOR HIM:

'WHY MY DAUGHTER DOESN'T RECYCLE': AN ECONOMICS PROFESSOR'S LETTER TO HIS CHILD'S TEACHER


A US economics professor has published the letter he wrote to his daughter's schoolteacher explaining why he doesn't want his girl indoctrinated in the green religion. Steven Landsburg, a professor at Rochester, NY, included it as part of a longer essay in which he calls environmentalism a "coercive ideology" targeted specifically at children. (H/T Bishop Hill)

His stance - such as his abhorrence of recycling: "We do not recycle. We teach our daughter not to recycle. We teach her that people who try to convince her to recycle, or who try to force her to recycle, are intruding on her rights." - may seem extreme, but his economic arguments are sound.
After my daughter progressed from preschool to kindergarten her teachers taught her to conserve resources by rinsing out her paper cup instead of discarding it. I explained to her that time is also a valuable resource and it might be worth sacrificing some cups to save time... 
Dear Rebecca:
When we lived in Colorado, Cayley was the only Jewish child in her class. There were also a few Moslems. Occasionally, and especially around Christmas time, the teachers forgot about this diversity and made remarks that were appropriate only for the Christian children. These remarks came rarely, and were easily counteracted at home with explanations that different people believe different things, so we chose not to say anything at first. We changed our minds when we overheard a teacher telling a group of children that if Santa didn't come to your house, it meant you were a very bad child; this was within earshot of an Islamic child who certainly was not going to get a visit from Santa. At that point, we decided to share our concerns with the teachers. They were genuinely apologetic and there were no more incidents. I have no doubt that the teachers were good and honest people who had no intent to indoctrinate, only a certain naïveté derived from a provincial upbringing.
Perhaps that same sort of honest naïveté is what underlies the problems we've had at the JCC this year. Just as Cayley's teachers in Colorado were honestly oblivious to the fact that there is diversity in religion, it may be that her teachers at the JCC have been honestly oblivious that there is diversity in politics.
Let me then make that diversity clear. We are not environmentalists. We ardently oppose environmentalists. We consider environmentalism a form of mass hysteria akin to Islamic fundamentalism or the War on Drugs. We do not recycle. We teach our daughter not to recycle. We teach her that people who try to convince her to recycle, or who try to force her to recycle, are intruding on her rights.
The preceding paragraph is intended to serve the same purpose as announcing to Cayley's Colorado teachers that we are not Christians. Some of them had never been aware of knowing anybody who was not a Christian, but they adjusted pretty quickly.
Once the Colorado teachers understood that we and a few other families did not subscribe to the beliefs that they were propagating, they instantly apologized and stopped. Nobody asked me what exactly it was about Christianity that I disagreed with; they simply recognized that they were unlikely to change our views on the subject, and certainly had no business inculcating our child with opposite views.
I contrast this with your reaction when I confronted you at the preschool graduation. You wanted to know my specific disagreements with what you had taught my child to say. I reject your right to ask that question. The entire program of environmentalism is as foreign to us as the doctrine of Christianity. I was not about to engage in detailed theological debate with Cayley's Colorado teachers and they would not have had the audacity to ask me to. I simply asked them to lay off the subject completely, they recognized the legitimacy of the request, and the subject was closed.
I view the current situation as far more serious than what we encountered in Colorado for several reasons. First, in Colorado we were dealing with a few isolated remarks here and there, whereas at the JCC we have been dealing with a systematic attempt to inculcate a doctrine and to quite literally put words in children's mouths. Second, I do not sense on your part any acknowledgment that there may be people in the world who do not share your views. Third, I am frankly a lot more worried about my daughter's becoming an environmentalist than about her becoming a Christian. Fourth, we face no current threat of having Christianity imposed on us by petty tyrants; the same can not be said of environmentalism. My county government never tried to send me a New Testament, but it did send me a recycling bin.
Although I have vowed not to get into a discussion on the issues, let me respond to the one question you seemed to think was very important in our discussion: Do I agree that with privilege comes responsibility? The answer is no. I believe that responsibilities arise when one undertakes them voluntarily. I also believe that in the absence of explicit contracts, people who lecture other people on their "responsibilities" are almost always up to no good. I tell my daughter to be wary of such people — even when they are preschool teachers who have otherwise earned a lot of love.
Sincerely,


Steven Landsburg

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

MARXISM, CLASS ENVY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE ARE ALIVE AND WELL, WILL PROBABLY ALWAYS BE WITH US UNTIL ACADEMICS here MAKE AT LEAST AS MUCH AS CORPORATE EXECUTIVES: