Sustainable Seafood
Thursday, August 9th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina
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An estimated 90% of all large, predatory fish are already gone from the world’s oceans.
It is so important that we conserve what remains in the oceans, and harvest and consume seafood in a sustainable manner.
To help consumers and restaurants make more informed choices when selecting the seafood they consume or serve, the Vancouver, British Columbia Aquarium has developed programs to help identify sustainable seafood choices.
What does sustainable seafood mean?
1) A species that is abundant and resilient to fishing pressures
Popularity: 41% [?]
Green Living and Sustainablity - Leaking Electricity
Monday, August 6th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina
When electronic devices are left plugged in, electricity can continue to be drawn from the power supply. Anything with an adapter, clock, timer, memory, or remote control continues to use electricity even when the device is turned off. For example, a TV leaks about 6 watts all the time. Referred to as “leaking electricity” or “phantom load”, this wasteful consumption of electricity is rising worldwide as the number of gadgets increase in peoples’ homes. An average home leaks about 450 kilowatt-hours each year or approximately 5% of the annual hydro bill.
How can you minimize your leaks?
**Connect your devices to a power bar and switch the bar off every night. Any user settings (except for the clock of course) previously entered should be automatically saved.
**Unplug other devices that are used infrequently such as your cell phone/ipod chargers or that extra fridge or other device in the basement that sits unused most of the time.
Popularity: 25% [?]
Green Living - Reycling Old Electronics
Thursday, August 2nd, 2007 by Michelle Trantina
Want a responsible solution for getting rid of old, no longer used televisions, computers, monitors and printers?
Find an organization in your area that accepts computers, computer monitors, printers, fax machines, and televisions for recycling. These programs are being designed in many cities by not-for-profit organizations comprised of industry and retailers, in cooperation with individual program managers.
What are your options?
Popularity: 26% [?]
Sustainable Living - Socially Responsible Investing
Wednesday, July 25th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina
Your savings and investments can help create a better world. Put your dollars to work to build healthy communities, promote economic equity, and foster a clean environment.
SRI Strategies:
Popularity: 48% [?]
Join Our Yoga Health And Wellness Community At My Yoga Online
Monday, July 9th, 2007 by Jason Jacobson
At My Yoga Online we strive to create a resource community for not only Yoga and Pilates but for health and wellness, green living, nutrition, and pretty much everything related to helping better our lives and environment.
If you have a BLOG or WEBSITE that you feel can help contribute to our healthy living community we would love to share and link our resources with yours.
Feel free to add a link to our blog on your blog or website with the following code…
Once you have added us to your website, email us at blog@myyogaonline.com and we will create a reciprocal link to your site.
Also feel free to add our sample videos and/or yoga images to your sites, but again, please link back to us in return with the following link to our home page…
You can grab our free yoga and Pilates sample videos from Youtube at…
My Yoga Online Free Youtube Videos
You can also check out our yoga images at…
This work by
My Yoga Online is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
Based on a work at
www.myyogaonline.com.We look forward to sharing our yoga and health and wellness resource community with you.
Namaste.
Popularity: 72% [?]
Health Care Parasites: Michael Moore’s Sicko
Friday, June 29th, 2007 by Jason Jacobson
I went to the Naturopath recently and promptly submitted the invoice to my health care provider - Manulife Financial. I pay the extra bucks on a monthly basis so that every year I can receive up to $750 combined toward paramedical specialists, which specifically includes Naturopaths, yet yesterday I received an invoice in the mail saying that they do not cover my Naturopath visit because I was not recommended by an MD.
After reviewing my plan, no where in it does it say that I need to be referred by an MD. In fact, Naturopath’s are commonly replacing MD’s for diagnosis as people find alternative methods to treatment rather than traditional and often masking methods through prescribed drugs used by doctors.
To doctors’ credit, they are often under pressure themselves from big pharma to peddle their wares and health care companies so they don’t prescribe expensive treatments. And as a patient, if you want alternative treatment, it is actually very difficult to find a traditional MD that will refer you to a Naturopath. It’s like a Hummer dealer referring you to a Prius dealer.
Why would Manulife say they cover this treatment up to $750 per year and yet deny paying the claim without a referral?
It’s interesting that Michael Moore’s film, Sicko, arrives in theater’s today, because this is exactly what his film is about. About the health care companies not paying claims, even if a patient qualifies - they often find loopholes to their defense - because paying claims cuts into profits. Since health care is a private industry in the United States, these companies have shareholders to answer to, bottom lines, and as a result it is not about the patient as much as it is about cutting corners and making money.
On Monday, I am going to write Manulife and I am going to fight this claim as I have had to fight claims in the past, as legitimate as they may have been, because they don’t like giving over money. But it’s such a frustration to time and time again have to deal with this crap when I qualify for their coverage.
What I am asking everyone that reads this that has ever been refused a claim is to not just accept it as many do because companies like Manulife make their money off of people that don’t fight for their rights. These health care companies make billions of dollars off of innocent people. In fact, thousand have gone bankrupt because of claims they should have been covered for but were refused.
It’s sad that you have to fight for what is rightfully yours especially when it comes to your health but at this point in time this is what we need to do to prevail over these parasites. This time it was a Naturopath but I’d hate to have to go through this if something tragic were to happen and they were not there to cover my back.
Popularity: 41% [?]
Sharkwater - Savaging Our Oceans
Saturday, June 16th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina
Why do human beings deplete things the way we do? Is there some deep, underlying insecurity in the human psyche that we feel we never have enough? That we need to divide, conquer, take, and keep taking, even when it is clear we are destroying the very ground we stand on and the air that we breathe?
It seems each time we blink an eye we are the cause of a new species on the verge of extinction. Sharks may be next. A documentary film ‘SHARKWATER’ was a definite eye-opener. This great doc is by Rob Stewart, a young Canadian with a passion for sharks. He travels the world studying and capturing incredible underwater footage in their natural habitat. He stumbles upon a huge underground (or should I day underwater) shark fin trade, that almost gets him thrown into jail.
Shark fin soup is a status symbol in Asia, hugely in demand, and the fins are an extremely profitable commodity. A huge massacre of sharks is underway, their fins sliced off one by one and the rest of their bodies dumped back into the ocean where they sink and die.
Sharks are being depleted at a feverish pace. Only two regions with a substantial population remain: The Galapagos Islands and an Island off the West Coast of Costa Rica.
Sharks are at the top of the food chain. With so many slaughtered and in such a short time, a huge shift in an ancient eco-system is inevitable. Other species (shark prey) can thrive out of control, consuming too much of the plankton in the sea.
Plankton is the biggest source of oxygen on our planet. Combine this with our greenhouse gas emissions and the fact that we’re cutting down most of the trees, and things are not looking so good. As a species we do need to breathe. And oxygen is a rather important part of that equation.
Hence, the birth of a new “Green” business. Ocean fertilization, the spawning of ocean-based algae, is underway. Iron shavings are deposited into the ocean, causing a bloom of fast growing plankton that will, hopefully, soak up mass quantities of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
A great and novel idea, if executed perfectly. Negative side effects are certain if not done exactly right, and if too many companies dive in in search of some of this green (which would not be surprising), the whole process could be overdone, making the situation worse and throwing things even farther off balance. But such technological advances may be necessary in order to compensate for our changing environment.
Isn’t greed the reason the oceans have became so depleted and off balance like this in the first place? We deplete our water, our air, our soil, our food, our central nervous systems….
And for what? So that some of us can live a life flush with modern conveniences and a few trendy indulgences. And so that a very few of us can rake in some very big cash.
Yet another example of the human need to leech everything we can out of every available natural phenomenon. This may sound mellow dramatic, but sadly, it seems to be true. Maybe this is just a phase before the next stage of human evolution. Like the teenage years. Let’s hope so. And that’s presuming we make it that far.
Popularity: 37% [?]





