Showing posts with label flu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flu. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

NY Times Article-Water


Saving U.S. Water and Sewer Systems Would Be Costly
A cold snap had ruptured a major pipe installed the same year the light bulb was invented. Homes near the fashionable Dupont Circle neighborhood were quickly going dry, and Mr. Hawkins, who had recently taken over the District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority despite having no experience running a major utility, was responsible for fixing the problem.
As city employees searched for underground valves, a growing crowd started asking angry questions. Pipes were breaking across town, and fire hydrants weren’t working, they complained. Why couldn’t the city deliver water, one man yelled at Mr. Hawkins.
Such questions are becoming common across the nation as water and sewer systems break down. Today, a significant water line bursts on average every two minutes somewhere in the country, according to a New York Times analysis of Environmental Protection Agency data.
In Washington alone there is a pipe break every day, on average, and this weekend’s intense rains overwhelmed the city’s system, causing untreated sewage to flow into the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers.
State and federal studies indicate that thousands of water and sewer systems may be too old to function properly.
For decades, these systems — some built around the time of the Civil War — have been ignored by politicians and residents accustomed to paying almost nothing for water delivery and sewage removal. And so each year, hundreds of thousands of ruptures damage streets and homes and cause dangerous pollutants to seep into drinking water supplies.
Mr. Hawkins’s answer to such problems will not please a lot of citizens. Like many of his counterparts in cities like Detroit, Cincinnati, Atlanta and elsewhere, his job is partly to persuade the public to accept higher water rates, so that the utility can replace more antiquated pipes.
“People pay more for their cellphones and cable television than for water,” said Mr. Hawkins, who before taking over Washington’s water system ran environmental groups and attended Princeton and Harvard, where he never thought he would end up running a sewer system.
“You can go a day without a phone or TV,” he added. “You can’t go a day without water.”
But in many cities, residents have protested loudly when asked to pay more for water and sewer services. In Los Angeles, Indianapolis, Sacramento — and before Mr. Hawkins arrived, Washington — proposed rate increases have been scaled back or canceled after virulent ratepayer dissent.
So when Mr. Hawkins confronted the upset crowd near Dupont Circle, he sensed an opportunity to explain why things needed to change. It was a snowy day, and while water from the broken pipe mixed with slush, he began cheerily explaining that the rupture was a symptom of a nationwide disease, according to people present.
Mr. Hawkins — who at 49 has the bubbling energy of a toddler and the physique of an aging professor — told the crowd that the average age of the city’s water pipes was 76, nearly four times that of the oldest city bus. With a smile, he described how old pipes have spilled untreated sewage into rivers near homes.
“I don’t care why these pipes aren’t working!” one of the residents yelled. “I pay $60 a month for water! I just want my toilet to flush! Why do I need to know how it works?”
Mr. Hawkins smiled, quit the lecture, and retreated back to watching his crew.
On Capitol Hill, the plight of Mr. Hawkins and other utility managers has become a hot topic. In the last year, federal lawmakers have allocated more than $10 billion for water infrastructure programs, one of the largest such commitments in history.
But Mr. Hawkins and others say that even those outlays are almost insignificant compared with the problems they are supposed to fix. An E.P.A. study last year estimated that $335 billion would be needed simply to maintain the nation’s tap water systems in coming decades. In states like New York, officials estimate that $36 billion is needed in the next 20 years just for municipal wastewater systems.
As these discussions unfold, particular attention is being paid to Mr. Hawkins. Washington’s water and sewer system serves the White House, many members of Congress, and two million other residents, and so it surprised some when Mr. Hawkins was hired to head the agency last September, since he did not have an engineering background or the résumé of a utility chief.
In fact, after he had graduated from Harvard Law School in 1987, he spent a few years helping companies apply for permits to pollute rivers and lakes. (At night — without his firm’s knowledge — he had a second career as a professional break dancer. He met his wife, a nurse, when he fell off a platform at a dance club and landed on his head.)
But he quickly became disenchanted with corporate law. He moved to the E.P.A., where he fought polluters, and then the White House, and eventually relocated his family to a farm in New Jersey where they shoveled the manure of 35 sheep and kept watch over 175 chickens, and Mr. Hawkins began running a series of environmental groups.
The mayor of Washington, Adrian M. Fenty, asked Mr. Hawkins to move to the city in 2007 to lead the Department of the Environment. He quickly became a prominent figure, admired for his ability to communicate with residents and lawmakers. When the Water and Sewer Authority needed a new leader, board members wanted someone familiar with public relations campaigns. Mr. Hawkins’s mandate was to persuade residents to pay for updating the city’s antiquated pipes.
At a meeting with board members last month, Mr. Hawkins pitched his radical solution. Clad in an agency uniform — his name on the breast and creases indicating it had been recently unfolded for the first time — Mr. Hawkins suggested raising water rates for the average resident by almost 17 percent, to about $60 a month per household. Over the coming six years, that rate would rise above $100.
With that additional money, Mr. Hawkins argued, the city could replace all of its pipes in 100 years. The previous budget would have replaced them in three centuries.
The board questioned him for hours. Others have attacked him for playing on false fears.
“This rate hike is outrageous,” said Jim Graham, a member of the city council. “Subway systems need repairs, and so do roads, but you don’t see fares or tolls skyrocketing. Providing inexpensive, reliable water is a fundamental obligation of government. If they can’t do that, they need to reform themselves, instead of just charging more.”
Similar battles have occurred around the nation. In Philadelphia, officials are set to start collecting $1.6 billion for programs to prevent rain water from overwhelming the sewer system, amid loud complaints. Communities surrounding Cleveland threatened to sue when the regional utility proposed charging homeowners for the water pollution running off their property. In central Florida, a $1.8 billion proposal to build a network of drinking water pipes has drawn organized protests.
“We’re relying on water systems built by our great-grandparents, and no one wants to pay for the decades we’ve spent ignoring them,” said Jeffrey K. Griffiths, a professor at Tufts University and a member of the E.P.A.’s National Drinking Water Advisory Council.
“There’s a lot of evidence that people are getting sick,” he added. “But because everything is out of sight, no one really understands how bad things have become.”
To bring those lapses into the light, Mr. Hawkins has become a cheerleader for rate increases. He has begun a media assault highlighting the city’s water woes. He has created a blog and a Facebook page that explain why pipes break. He regularly appears on newscasts and radio shows, and has filled a personal Web site with video clips of his appearances.
It’s an all-consuming job. Mr. Hawkins tries to show up at every major pipe break, no matter the hour. He often works late into the night, and for three years he has not lived with his wife and two teenage children, who remained in New Jersey.
“The kids really miss their father,” said his wife, Tamara. “When we take him to the train station after a visit, my daughter in particular will sometimes cry. He’s missing out on his kids’ childhoods.”
And even if Mr. Hawkins succeeds, the public might not realize it, or particularly care. Last month, the utility’s board approved Mr. Hawkins’s budget and started the process for raising rates. But even if the bigger budget reduces the frequency of water pipe breaks by half — a major accomplishment — many residents probably won’t notice. People tend to pay attention to water and sewer systems only when things go wrong.
“But this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” Mr. Hawkins said recently, in between a meeting with local environmentalists and rushing home to do paperwork in his small, spartan apartment, near a place where he was once mugged at gunpoint.
“This is the fight of our lifetimes,” he added. “Water is tied into everything we should care about. Someday, people are going to talk about our sewers with a real sense of pride.”
A version of this article appeared in print on March 15, 2010, on page A1 of the New York edition.

Addition by Dr. Morris
Every American should read the above, something happening in the Capitol of the Nation as well as their own city. Here in this historic port city, we have one sewage break after another, spilling millions of gallons of sewage into the sensitive estuary's surrounding the ocean. I have written so many letters about the situation here and other places that none of the supposed (power brokers) and “civil masters” and public health do nothing, individuals refused to even answer anymore.
Here, the problem has been turned over to a water and sewer authority. These authorities, airport, transportation, etc. are nothing but “cash cows” for appointed “good ol' boy” politicians to put money in their pockets. Nothing improves because unless you understand the disease you cannot understand the symptoms. As long as the tap is turned and water comes out, as long as you can flush the toilet, you will not think there is a problem.
I live ½ block from the Cape Fear River. Like most of the great rivers of the world, it was once a wonderful and clean source of water life and recreation. The stupidity of cities above us...Raleigh, Fayetteville etc. dumping their treated sewage into the river and then cities towards the ocean taking their water out of the river, supposedly treated and then used for public consumption is beyond belief. The chemist who understands the water molecule knows that like the water taken from the ocean, changed in the atmosphere, the molecule is complex. The water sanitized in water treatment facilities is mostly treated in plants by two poisons...fluoride and chlorine...I would not think of drinking water from a faucet in this city without it being boiled.
The immune system has been so compromised by the deadly bacteria seeping into the ancient pipes and from the sewage dumped into the water sources, that one can well understand why we have so many viruses and other illnesses. There was no news at all about the epidemic which swept eastern Europe this year...a hemorrhagic type flu which shredded the lungs of an estimated 3 million people. It is believed that much of the “mystery flu” came from sewer infections.
It was announced yesterday that it would take 11 billion dollars to restore Port-au Prince Haiti infrastructure. You know from where this money will come. The head of the Palestinians was in Washington wanting 4 billion to keep Palestine going after 61 years of US largess. Already, this authority here will increase our water bill by 14%. This is what happens when you put “unlearned” politicians on boards and authorities...people who just want to enlarge their resume. When this Army Medical Officer, Veteran, totally blind, 100% disabled service connected, returned to this city, he volunteered for membership on public health and library. The county manager came to his house and told him he would not be appointed to any thing because of his blindness. How much care are you getting from these sited politicians, federal, state, and local?

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Dr Obama





As always, last night, I was listening to the BBC radio shortwave, as I do every night when the announcement of the death of Senator Kennedy was made. The third longest serving Senator, served for 47 years and was recognized as the most powerful senator of the 20th century. His father, a bootlegger, womanizer, bought his son JFK, the presidency, and his youngest son, a senatorial office. Joseph Kennedy was such an embarrassment to FDR with his Nazi dealings that he was called home from the Court of St. James. (Eleanor Roosevelt, still alive when JFK was inaugurated, would not attend his inaugurations because she so despised Joseph Kennedy.) Senator Kennedy saw two brothers assassinated and participated himself in a Chappaquiddick killing in 1969, which limited his presidential aspirations in1980.


Nearby, at Martha's Vineyard, the eastern gathering place for the Eugenics and elitist liberals, Cindy Sheehan, known for her Bush protestations and Amy Goodman, leader of women liberals are protesting Obama's ceasing to end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Obamas, living high on a 27 acre estate, are basking in Obama-Opulence. Senator Kennedy who, if power and money could have cured him, would still be alive. Kennedy, always, a product of wealth and power, next to Obama, the most liberal democrat senator could afford any type health care, (Duke, etc.) but, the limousine socialists here as in every communist country, want the Exception-Care for themselves and the peasant social order for everyone else.


As with homeless veterans who entered the military in good health, forced vaccinations have put many on the streets in a unstable homeless condition. The Amish, the Muslims, the Christian Science church, are not subjected to vaccinations. Autism and scleroderma and at least 50 other diseases are called auto immune, compromising and complicating the immune system.


We learned long ago that sunshine and fresh air are the best treatments of any disease including flu. The old sanatoriums when I was a child, used fresh air and sunshine for the treatment of Tuberculosis. It is a known fact outside the academic community where the paper tigers have never dealt with patients or real life, that country children are not as sick as urban dwellers. I worked at the UNC-CH medical school. (It was a 2 year school when I was student there.) Miss Pickard, the medical librarian, an old maid, would take her beautiful dog and me to her small farm outside Chapel Hill, and we would work at various chores. Dr. W. C. George, professor of anatomy in medical school, owned a farm next door. We were talking about my being reared on a farm. He said, “You poor thing. You will probably live a long life. All that sunshine, fresh air, fresh food... And, I know you ate berries from bushes in the woods and on bushes on ditch banks, the most healthy lifestyle a person can have. I remembered this many times when dealing with patients and old doctors. One old doctor, Dr. Woodard of Goldsboro, NC, a retired naval medical officer, told me he never put a chemical in his body, nor prescribed one, unless absolutely life and death. He ran for congress in the third NC district when he was 100 years of age. A national magazine showed him working on his farm, which he attributed to his good health. He was so opposed to chlorine and fluoride in municipal drinking water. Dr. Cooper Person, of Eureka, NC, used food almost entirely in treatment. He particularly promoted apple cider. Every time I put apple cider in my drinking water, I think of him and the many patients who lived in good health because of him.


Only people who go to the doctor keep going. My father always pointed out one of his good friends, a wealthy land owner who married a school teacher in midlife. They had one son and they kept the road hot, trotting to the doctor. All around their farms, black tenants who lived in houses that you could through a cat through most anywhere, were healthy and had never seen a doctor. Dangerous behavior outside of marriage is the reason that 50 % of all girls have STD's. One gay with AIDS, told me when you get a vaccination, I will be the first one in line. I said, “Do you want to die quicker.” I was in Goma, Congo, a city at the head of the Congo River, where it is believed that AIDS got it's start by people eating and “messing around” with monkeys. Sex is a gift. Your immune system is a gift. Fornicate, male or female, at your own risk. I know that people do not want to hear the truth. The foreign missionaries know that people do not want the truth. But they are concerned with their souls. BE OBNOXIOUS! I do what I do because I believe what I believe. There is no reason why people should enjoy poor health and just make the health and drug industry that much richer. Read Dr. Mayer Eisenstein's book, Don't Vaccinate Before you Educate. In this season of town hall debates, when Obama and Sebelius, Peolosi and other health care experts are squeezing a bankrupt economy to force you into an inept socialized government pay system, which may make the inept VA system look good. Consider prevention, the poisons in your drinking water (Both chlorine and fluoride are poisons.) You're staying inside with the television and computer instead of staying in the sun, God's greatest remedy. Do not put on sunscreen. In your food use oregano, much black pepper and other herbs such as rosemary, as did our much healthier ancestors.


Anyone who has studied epidemiology knows that the more you scare people about an epidemic, more people get sick. You can see the brain washing going on now, in regards to H1N1. As more people go for care exposing themselves to the disease already in the hospital or doctor's office, more get sick. (Think, you go in the doctor's office because you are scared and not feeling well. You sit in a chair in reception where a sick flu patient just sat. The greatest breathing organ of your body is your skin. Of course you put your hands and arms on the chair arms. You touch the doorknobs behind the sick patients, and you will probably go home sick now if not before.) Vaccinations for pregnant women are always contraindicated, yet in this flu scare, flu shots for pregnant women and children are advised.


If the Judeo-Christian community were as interested in prevention, eating Kosher, sunshine and exercise as are the Islamists who, under Sharia law, have a very exacting diet, do not smoke, do not drink alcohol, are not vaccinated and, believe it or not, do not abort their babies, the non Islamic population would be much healthier. One of my heroes, Cassius Clay, who converting to Islam, became Mohammad Ali, is now touring England raising money for a charity. When he fought Henry Cooper in 1962, he was hit on the head and was hit on the head many times after that, leading to his present illness. But he attributes his health to the strict diet of the Muslims.


Don't be delusional. You cannot just eat anything, just drink anything, never exercise, stay inside out of sunlight, completely frustrate your immune system with chemicals whether prescribed, illegal or in your water system and stay healthy. Maintaining good health in this (fast food) world, requires spiritual and physical stewardship. It is like taking cheese out of a set mousetrap without tripping the thing, and getting your fingers smashed.