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Skeptic News: Owen Paterson confirmed as new Environment Secretary
From: Business insider
Downing Street has confirmed Northern Ireland Secretary Owen Paterson is to replace Caroline Spelman as Environment Secretary, fuelling concerns amongst green groups about the future direction of the government's environment policy.
Paterson will take over from Spelman, who looks set to leave the cabinet after a series of high profile U-turns at the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).
Paterson is widely seen as being on the right of the Conservative Party and green groups were quick to highlight his previous hostility to environmental campaigns.
Most notably, the influential ConservativeHome website reported back in May that Paterson made an intervention in cabinet demanding an end to all energy subsidies, an immediate fast-tracking of shale gas projects, and an urgent review of airport policy with a view to increasing capacity.
His stance on shale gas is particularly significant as Defra is responsible for the Environment Agency, which has been tasked with regulating and policing shale gas projects. It also provides Chancellor George Osborne with another ally in an influential position as he prepares to escalate his battle with the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) to shift the UK's energy policy landscape in favour of gas.
As MP for North Shropshire he has also campaigned against National Grid's plans for pylons that would run through his constituency connecting proposed wind farms in mid-Wales to the midlands, while during his time as Shadow Environment Secretary he supported controversial plans for a badger culling programme.
Owen Pattersons brother in law is Matt Ridley, former chairman of Northen Rock, has expressed strong criticism of the science of climate change and its conclusions. Though Patterson himself is listed on the Public Whip as having voted in favour of policies to stop climate change 77% of the time. It seems likely he will support the expansion of Heathrow but his stance on other environmental issues seems less clear.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Woman accused of witchcraft killed
From: UPI.com
A woman from northwestern Colombia was beaten to death and set on fire after she was accused of being a witch, officials said.
The woman was found dead in her home in a rural area about 10 miles from Medellin, police said.
Investigators said her killers beat her to death, then poured gasoline on her body and set it afire, Colombia Reports said Sunday.
The mayor of a community in the area condemned the killing and spoke out against an "abhorrent intolerance that resembles the days of the inquisition."
Residents said the woman was accused of casting a spell on a local boy, but police said a search of her home Friday found no indication she practiced witchcraft, Colombia Reports said.
The mayor said another woman was killed in the village six years ago after she was accused of being a witch.
While it may seem like something out of the middle ages killings based on accusations of witchcraft are still sadly common around the world.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Heavy Metal Satanists
From: The Sacramento Bee
A heavy metal concert has prompted a police investigation after an Islamist lawyer claimed it was attended by Satanists at a well-known cultural center in Egypt's capital Cairo.
A security official says Muslim Brotherhood lawyer Ismail el-Washahi filed a suit accusing the El-Sawy Culture Wheel of hosting people wearing black t-shirts, carrying Satanists' drawings and accessories while dancing at the concert. The suit claims "Satanist rituals were held."
The center denied the claims, saying some violations of its rules, like smoking, occurred but were dealt with. An investigation began Monday, said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press.
The allegations recall a high-profile case 15 years ago when state security cracked down "Satan worshippers," arresting some 100 heavy metal fans.
The association between heavy metal and Satanism feels... well a little bit 80's to be honest...
Original Article
Skeptic News: Leeds fraudster jailed for ‘call a psychic’ phone scam
From: Yorkshire evening post
A fraudster has been jailed for his part in a phone scam which saw him paid thousands of pounds commission for calls made on premium rate numbers to five psychics who turned out to be completely bogus.
Paul James Jones not only pocketed the commission money from his crimes but left phone companies more than £30,000 out of pocket after failing to pay the bills on the phone accounts he used to make the calls requesting “readings” from the psychics.
Leeds Crown Court heard yesterday he was caught after inquiries were made into the unpaid landline accounts in various names at his home in Leeds and it was discovered he had run up thousands of pounds making calls himself to the five psychics.
The company behind the prime rate numbers would pay a legitimate commission for each contact made to an individual psychic and they had not realised until the inquiry began that money for the five was going to the same accounts and that they were bogus names. The commission was traced to bank accounts used by Jones.
David Dixon, prosecuting, said as a result more than £37,000 in commission was paid into accounts accessed by Jones over the months concerned while he had left two phone companies with unpaid bills totalling £32,000 in the process.
Initially he had arranged four landlines using false names with Phone Co-op at his home, running up £5,000 in calls in the first two months. He subsequently arranged 12 modem phone accounts with TalkTalk from his address in Leeds and another in Blackpool.
Jones, 31, of Compton Place, Harehills, Leeds was jailed for 28 months after he admitted three charges of fraud.
An odd case of the psychics being wholly invented as opposed to their psychic powers.
Original Article
Skeptic News: UK health minister supports homeopathy
From: Telegraph
The man put in charge of the nation's health policy is on record as supporting spending public money on magic water to cure disease. Here's the text of an Early Day Motion he signed in 2007:
That this House welcomes the positive contribution made to the health of the nation by the NHS homeopathic hospitals; notes that some six million people use complementary treatments each year; believes that complementary medicine has the potential to offer clinically-effective and cost-effective solutions to common health problems faced by NHS patients, including chronic difficult to treat conditions such as musculoskeletal and other chronic pain, eczema, depression, anxiety and insomnia, allergy, chronic fatigue and irritable bowel syndrome; expresses concern that NHS cuts are threatening the future of these hospitals; and calls on the Government actively to support these valuable national assets.
And here's the letter Mr Hunt sent to a concerned constituent who pointed out that homeopathy doesn't work:
Dear Mr Ellis,
Thank you very much for your letter regarding EDM 1240 in support of Homeopathic Hospitals. I appreciate that you are disappointed that I added my name to this motion, and read your comments on this issue with interest.
I understand that it is your view that homeopathy is not effective, and therefore that people should not be encouraged to use it as a treatment. However I am afraid that I have to disagree with you on this issue. Homeopathic care is enormously valued by thousands of people and in an NHS that the Government repeatedly tells us is "patient-led" it ought to be available where a doctor and patient believe that a homeopathic treatment may be of benefit to the patient.
I am grateful to you for taking the time to write with your concerns. I realise that my answer will be a disappointing one for you, but I hope that the letter helps to clarify my view.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed)
Jeremy Hunt Member of Parliament South West Surrey
The only possible worst choice for health minister would perhaps have been hDavid Tredinnick!
Original Article
Skeptic News: Organic food no better for you
From: The Guardian
Organic produce and meat typically is no better for you than conventional food when it comes to vitamin and nutrient content, although it does generally reduce exposure to pesticides and antibiotic-resistant bacteria, according to a US study.
Crystal Smith-Spangler, who led a team of researchers from Stanford University and Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care, reviewed more than 200 studies that compared either the health of people who ate organic or conventional foods or, more commonly, nutrient and contaminant levels in the foods themselves.
The foods included organic and non-organic fruits, vegetables, grains, meat, poultry eggs and milk.
According to US department of agriculture standards, organic farms have to avoid the use of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers, hormones and antibiotics. Organic livestock must also have access to pastures during grazing season.
However, many of the studies used did not specify their standards for what constituted "organic" food, which can cost as much as twice as conventional food, the researchers wrote in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Smith-Spangler and her colleagues found there was no difference in the amount of vitamins in plant or animal products produced organically and conventionally – and the only nutrient difference was slightly more phosphorous in the organic products.
Given that studies suggest organic produce may also be harmful to the environment we wonder if the justifications for this dietary choice hold up to scrutiny.
The paper can be found here.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Robbie Williams to turn Californian island into UFO spotting base
From: NME
Robbie Williams is reportedly set to buy White Rock Island, California, with plans to turn it into a base for spotting UFOs.
The former Take That singer is apparently planning to build a luxury private resort on the 1.3 acre island – which is currently owned by Hollywood movie director Michael Caffrey – so he and his wife Ayda can stay there and spot UFOs, reports Examiner.com.
Williams first visited White Rock Island last year and found it to be a perfect location for UFO spotting, with minimal light pollution and a clear, unobstructed view of the night sky.
The singer has said that he has seen UFOs before, and is reportedly willing to pay $659,000 (£414,778) for White Rock Island.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Haunting threats to extort money from elderly
From: ABC News
Police say they are searching for three Mandarin-speaking women who are using stories about "evil spirits" to defraud members of Sydney's Chinese community. In the latest incident, a 60-year-old woman handed over jewellery and cash in central Cabramatta last Thursday. The con artists have told their victims that evil spirits will bring bad luck to their family unless they hand over money and other items.
Chief Inspector Arthur Aleksandrowicz says detectives are looking at similar incidents elsewhere in Sydney. "Police believe that the scam has been developed to take advantage of the superstitious element within the Chinese community and particularly targeting the elderly," he said.
"Police are looking also at two similar incidents at Chatswood and Haymarket and they believe there are also likely to be other victims across Sydney who have not yet come forward."
Although there may be many individuals who believe in evil spirits and hauntings sincerely it seems there is no shortage of those who would use this belief to their own advanta
Original Article
Skeptic News: Jedward Power Bracelets
UPDATE: The price of the bands was previously erroneously reported as £37.40 this has now been corrected. It is also worth noting that Jedward offer this disclaimer on their website.
Despite this the company who manufacturers the bands still promotes unproven claims and these claims are reproduced in a .pdf available from the Jedward site.
The infamous Irish pop duo, Jedward, are branching out and selling JedPower Bracelets from their online store.
Available for the small sum of 11 euros the bracelets come in an array of colours (one for each day and a multicoloured "everyday" bracelet).
On jedwards Just a Sec website no claims of any benefits to wearing the bands are made on the page they are for sale. However the site also hosts a document from "negative ions performance technology" which makes all manner of health claims related to wearing the Jedpower bracelets.
Among these are at the bands can help improve asthma, depression, stress and stimulate the bodies "natural healing process". No evidence for this is presented in the document.
The bands themselves are somewhat notorious in Skeptical circles and have been roundly debunked.
These claims were the topic of a 2003 injunction by the American Federal Trade Commission and later a high-profile court ruling in 2006. A major factor in these rulings was a November 2002 study by Mayo Clinic that demonstrated no significant effect by the Q-Ray bracelet on muscle pain relative to the placebo effect.
The court was unable to find any basis for QT Inc.'s claims related to traditional Chinese medicine, concluding that it was "part of a scheme devised by [QT Inc.] to defraud [its] consumers".
These bracelets are supposed to "work" in the same way as those studied by the Mayo clinic. Using a secret ionisation process rather than being ionised themselves.
While it may seem appropriate, on some levels, to see Jedward promoting and selling what is essentially just plastic tat. It is disheartening to think by doing so they are helping to fund quackery.
Original Article
Please help save Siccar Point!
Geologists and scientists in Scotland and further afield: We are calling on you to help save a site of significant scientific interest from development. It's one of the most geologically important sites in the world and someone wants to damage it beyond repair for the sake of some dirty water - and making more profit.
Siccar Point is famous in the history of geology as a result of a boat trip in 1788 in which James Hutton, with James Hall and John Playfair, observed the angular unconformity which Hutton regarded as conclusive proof of his uniformitarian theory of geological development.
Drysdales is a company that prepare and package a number of different varieties of vegetables for delivery to supermarkets. They process the newly harvested vegetables, clean them by washing all the earth from them, trim them, and then pre-package them for supermarket shelves.
The earth that is washed off these vegetables and their trimmings create a lot of waste, and this waste has to go somewhere. Their plan is to dig a trench across a scientifically sensitive and important area, fill it with concrete, and dump their untreated agricultural waste straight into the sea
The pipe (see attached image) will run directly down an unstable slope (soil over Old red Sandstone) and then over the vertical greywacke on which it lies unconformably, immediately (about 100 m) south of the point, crossing a vista that was a major part of my appreciation and understanding when I visited the site this July. Intolerable. While geologists have a particular interest here, I believe that all those who value science and the beauty of Nature will want to resist this irreversible act of vandaism. PLEASE SHARE THIS INFORMATION
YOU HAVE THREE WEEKS LEFT TO LODGE OBJECTIONS, which you can do on line. See link.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Hundreds of Women said to be Confined to Ghana’s Witch Camps
From: Voice of America
More than 800 women are living in various “witch camps” in Ghana, after being accused of practicing witchcraft. ActionAid Ghana country director Adwoa Kwateng-Kluvitse said the charges are made usually with no proof or trial. Her group is working to make life in the camps better for the women with the hope of changing attitudes, so the women can return safely to their home villages.
“We started working with these women on empowering them as seeing themselves as people who have rights and people who can demand rights,” said Kwateng-Kluvitse. Now the group has turned to capacity building to help the women reach out to their communities and “enable these women to be able to go home safely.”
According to Kwateng-Kluvitse, most of the women in the camps fled their homes in fear after being accused of witchcraft, although some were physically abused.
“I suppose one of the stories that affected me the most was a very old vulnerable woman who said to me that she was accused of having murdered a relative and her brother used the side of a machete to slap her,” she said.
Kwatengt-Kluvitse said the women who are accused of witchcraft are often older and widowed making them socially, politically and economically vulnerable.
ActionAid Ghana first started working in the camps nearly eight years ago, when they focused on improving basic living conditions.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Leopard spotted in Croydon?
From: This is Croydon
Leading big cat expert Neil Arnold this week revealed to the Advertiser that he received regular reports of sightings of large black felines in green areas of the borough.
And earlier this month – on the evening of August 19 – a dog trainer driving past Croydon Airport reported seeing what she thought was a cougar or black leopard lurking in the undergrowth.
Mr Arnold said the viability of the recent sighting was very possible.
He explained: "Many cats' primary hunting time is dusk, and so black leopards, cougars and pumas which are out there in the wild would have more potential to be spotted in the early evening, when the Croydon Airport cougar was sighted."
The woman who spotted the beast, whose identity Mr Arnold agreed to keep anonymous, said the animal was most definitely not a dog and was bigger than a labrador.
Unfortunately, investigations trawled up nothing and the sighting could neither be confirmed nor dismissed.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Cult leader Sun Myung Moon dies at 92
From: The Canadian Press
The Rev. Sun Myung Moon was a self-proclaimed messiah who built a global business empire.
He called both North Korean leaders and American presidents his friends, but spent time in prisons in both countries.
His followers around the world cherished him, while his detractors accused him of brainwashing recruits and extracting money from worshippers.
These contradictions did nothing to stop the founder of the Unification Church from turning his religious vision into a worldwide movement and a multibillion-dollar corporation stretching from the Korean Peninsula to the United States.
Moon died Monday at a church-owned hospital near his home in Gapyeong, northeast of Seoul, two weeks after being hospitalized with pneumonia, Unification Church spokesman Ahn Ho-yeul told The Associated Press.
Moon's wife and children were at his side, Ahn said. He was 92.
Church officials planned to meet later Monday to discuss mourning and funeral arrangements.
Moon founded his Bible-based religion in Seoul in 1954, a year after the Korean War ended, saying Jesus Christ personally called on him to complete his work.
The church gained fame, and notoriety, by marrying thousands of followers in mass ceremonies presided over by Moon himself.
The couples often came from different countries and had never met, but were matched up by Moon in a bid to build a multicultural religious world.
Today, the Unification Church claims 3 million followers worldwide, including 100,000 members in the U.S., Ahn said. But ex-members and critics say the figure is actually no more than 100,000 worldwide.
The church's holdings included the Washington Times newspaper; Connecticut's Bridgeport University; the New Yorker Hotel, a midtown Manhattan art deco landmark, and a seafood distribution firm that supplies sushi to Japanese restaurants across the U.S.
It acquired a ski resort, a professional football team and other businesses in South Korea. It also operates a foreign-owned luxury hotel in North Korea and jointly operates a fledgling North Korean automaker.
The church has been accused of using devious recruitment tactics and duping followers out of money.
Parents of followers in the United States and elsewhere have expressed worries that their children were brainwashed into joining. The church has pointed out that many new religious movements faced similar accusations in their early years. Moon's followers were often called "Moonies," a term many found pejorative.
Original Article
Skeptic News: New Zealand Warning against alternative therapies
From: Newstalk NZ
There's a clear warning for patients to be diagnosed by conventional treatment instead of alternative therapies.
It comes after an iridologist treated a woman with a lesion on her head for 18 months, despite knowing from the start the situation was beyond her ability to treat. New Zealand Medical Association Chairman Paul Ockleford says accurate diagnosis is vital.
"Valuable time was lost that could have resulted in getting a diagnosis and getting the right treatment."
He says the natural health practitioner should have referred the patient for a proper biopsy.
"The natural health practitioner in this case was not only out of her depth, but appeared to make the situation worse by playing on the apparent fear the patient had for conventional medicine."
The Health and Disability Commission has investigated, and will refer the practitioner to a Human Rights Review Tribunal.
The woman first saw the iridologist, a practitioner who diagnoses patients by looking at their irises, and natural health practitioner about the lesion in 2008. At that time, the patient thought the lesion was a cyst. From the beginning of the treatment, the provider thought the lesion looked cancerous and that it was beyond her ability to treat, a report released today from deputy health and disability commissioner Tania Thomas says.
Treating the lesion involved picking out dead skin, cleaning it, and using topical and oral remedies. It initially appeared to improve, but then became larger, was often infected, bled frequently and smelled unpleasant, according to the HDC report. No records of the woman's treatment were kept during the 18 months she was seeing the natural health practitioner, and she did not see any other health practitioners during that time.
The patient visited a hospital in June 2009 where she was diagnosed with cancer. She had surgery but died a year later.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Circumcision death
From: RDF foundation
Two children are dead, more are injured — yet a group of ultra-Orthodox rabbis say they plan to defy a health order in the name of religious freedom.
Less than a year after a Brooklyn tot died following an ancient circumcision ritual, the rabbis say they will ignore a proposed law that would mandate parental-consent forms before performing the dangerous procedure. Over the past decade, at least one other newborn died after contracting herpes from the rite, in which the rabbi draws blood from the penis with his mouth.
But ultra-Orthodox leaders are lashing out at the city’s “evil plans” ahead of the Board of Health’s vote next week. About 200 rabbis signed a proclamation claiming the Health Department “printed and spread lies . . . in order to justify their evil decree.” “It is clear to us, that there is not even an iota of blame or danger in this ancient and holy custom,” the letter states.
Most modern mohels — men trained to perform religious circumcisions, who are usually rabbis or doctors — remove blood from the baby’s wound using a sterile pipette. But some Orthodox Jewish parents insist on an ancient “suction by mouth” ritual called metzitzah b’peh.
The city’s law would require mohels to distribute consent waivers, detailing the herpes risk, before the ritual.
It is a strange world indeed where the welfare of a newborn is considered below archaic religious traditions. This case is particularly ironic as metzitzah is a Rabbinic injunction meant to protect the health of the baby: As squeezing some blood from the wound was understood to prevent infection. The traditional reason for the metzitzah b'peh, procedure is to minimize the potential for postoperative complications and the tradition is maintained by some ultra-orthodox Jews rejecting the modern safe methods used in most Brit Milah procedures.
Original Article
Skeptic News: Woman says Amish sect leader father-in-law coerced her into sex
From: Reuters
The leader of an Amish splinter group who faces hate crimes charges over accusations he masterminded a series of beard-cutting attacks coerced a daughter-in-law into having sex with him on the pretext she needed "sexual counseling," the woman testified on Thursday.
Samuel Mullet Sr. and 15 other sect members are accused of planning or carrying out attacks on nine Amish men and women last autumn in southeastern Ohio, cutting off their hair and beards in assaults meant to humiliate the victims.
Witnesses have testified the attacks were revenge for a dispute between Mullet and other Amish religious leaders for accepting the daughter-in-law's family and others into their communities after he shunned them. That followed their departure from his group over actions such as those described by the daughter-in-law.
Amish men and women refrain from cutting their hair as a mark of respect for God. Mullet, 66, was not present at any of the assaults by his followers, but is accused of being the ringleader of the attacks. Before her testimony, Judge Dan Polster told the jury Mullet was not charged with any sex crimes and the testimony of the daughter-in-law was to be considered only in relation to the charges he does face. The daughter-in-law testified that the sect leader demanded that she hug him, kiss him and sit on his lap to save her marriage to his son, who was hospitalized for a mental breakdown in 2008. Reuters does not identify the victims of sexual assault.
She also said Mullet had told other women in the sect that having sexual relations with him would "save their marriages" and he had told her she must stay in his home or the devil would get a hold of her. While she was staying in his home, Mullet told her that being intimate with him would help her husband get better, she testified. "I woke up in the middle of the night and a lady said, 'Sam wants you to go down to his bedroom,'" she said of one request she received while staying at his house in 2008. "I did not want to, but I always gave up," she said. "I was afraid not to."
The daughter-in-law, her husband Eli Mullet, and their six children fled the Amish Bergholtz community later that year after Samuel Mullet Sr. complained that he did not understand why she would not obey him "like the other ladies do."
They left with only a few suitcases and their children, she said.
Some former members of the cult fear these events may lead to a mass suicide.
Original Article