Monday, September 21, 2009

Belatedly, Egypt Spots Flaws in Wiping Out Pigs

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/20/world/africa/20cairo.html?pagewanted=1

September 20, 2009

Belatedly, Egypt Spots Flaws in Wiping Out Pigs

CAIRO — It is unlikely anyone has ever come to this city and commented on how clean the streets are. But this litter-strewn metropolis is now wrestling with a garbage problem so severe it has managed to incite its weary residents and command the attention of the president.

“The problem is clear in the streets,” said Haitham Kamal, a spokesman for the Ministry of State for Environmental Affairs. “There is a strict and intensive effort now from the state to address this issue.”

But the crisis should not have come as a surprise.

When the government killed all the pigs in Egypt this spring — in what public health experts said was a misguided attempt to combat swine flu — it was warned the city would be overwhelmed with trash.

The pigs used to eat tons of organic waste. Now the pigs are gone and the rotting food piles up on the streets of middle-class neighborhoods like Heliopolis and in the poor streets of communities like Imbaba.

Ramadan Hediya, 35, who makes deliveries for a supermarket, lives in Madinat el Salam, a low-income community on the outskirts of Cairo.

“The whole area is trash,” Mr. Hediya said. “All the pathways are full of trash. When you open up your window to breathe, you find garbage heaps on the ground.”

What started out as an impulsive response to the swine flu threat has turned into a social, environmental and political problem for the Arab world’s most populous nation.

It has exposed the failings of a government where the power is concentrated at the top, where decisions are often carried out with little consideration for their consequences and where follow-up is often nonexistent, according to social commentators and government officials.

“The main problem in Egypt is follow-up,” said Sabir Abdel Aziz Galal, chief of the infectious disease department at the Ministry of Agriculture. “A decision is taken, there is follow-up for a period of time, but after that, they get busy with something else and forget about it. This is the case with everything.”

Speaking broadly, there are two systems for receiving services in Egypt: The government system and the do-it-yourself system. Instead of following the channels of bureaucracy, most people rely on an informal system of personal contacts and bribes to get a building permit, pass an inspection, get a driver’s license — or make a living.

“The straight and narrow path is just too bureaucratic and burdensome for the rich person, and for the poor, the formal system does not provide him with survival, it does not give him safety, security or meet his needs,” said Laila Iskandar Kamel, chairwoman of a community development organization in Cairo.

Cairo’s garbage collection belonged to the informal sector. The government hired multinational companies to collect the trash, and the companies decided to place bins around the city.

But they failed to understand the ethos of the community. People do not take their garbage out. They are accustomed to seeing someone collecting it from the door.

For more than half a century, those collectors were the zabaleen, a community of Egyptian Christians who live on the cliffs on the eastern edge of the city. They collected the trash, sold the recyclables and fed the organic waste to their pigs — which they then slaughtered and ate.

Killing all the pigs, all at once, “was the stupidest thing they ever did,” Ms. Kamel said, adding, “This is just one more example of poorly informed decision makers.”

When the swine flu fear first emerged, long before even one case was reported in Egypt, President Hosni Mubarak ordered that all the pigs be killed in order to prevent the spread of the disease.

When health officials worldwide said that the virus was not being passed by pigs, the Egyptian government said that the cull was no longer about the flu, but was about cleaning up the zabaleen’s crowded, filthy, neighborhood.

That was in May.

Today the streets of the zabaleen community are as packed with stinking trash and as clouded with flies as ever before. But the zabaleen have done exactly what they said they would do: they stopped taking care of most of the organic waste.

Instead they dump it wherever they can or, at best, pile it beside trash bins scattered around the city by the international companies that have struggled in vain to keep up with the trash.

“They killed the pigs, let them clean the city,” said Moussa Rateb, a former garbage collector and pig owner who lives in the community of the zabaleen. “Everything used to go to the pigs, now there are no pigs, so it goes to the administration.”

The recent trash problem was compounded when employees of one of the multinational companies — men and women in green uniforms with crude brooms dispatched around the city — stopped working in a dispute with the city.

The government says that the dispute has been resolved, but nothing has been done to repair the damage to the informal system that once had the zabaleen take Cairo’s trash home.

The garbage is only the latest example of the state’s struggling to meet the needs of its citizens, needs as basic as providing water, housing, health care and education.

The government announced last week that schools would not be opened until the first week of October to give the government time to prepare for a potential swine flu outbreak, a decision that could have been made anytime over the past three months, while schools were closed for summer break, critics said.

Officials in the Ministry of Health and other government ministries said they had not made this decision — and that they had counseled against pre-emptive school closings.

It appears to have been ordered by the presidency and carried out by the governors, who also ordered that all private schools, already in class, be shut down as well.

“We did not propose or call for postponing schools, so the reason is not with us,” said an official in the Ministry of Health who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to speak to the news media.

The heads of three large governorates, or states, in Egypt announced Wednesday that their strategy for keeping schoolchildren safe was to take classes, which on average are crowded with more than 60 students, and split them in half and have children attend school only three days a week, another decision that was criticized. There have been more than 800 confirmed cases of H1N1 in Egypt, and two flu-related deaths.

“The state is troubled; as a result the system of decision making is disintegrating,” said Galal Amin, an economist, writer and social critic. “They are ill-considered decisions taken in a bit of a hurry, either because you’re trying to please the president or because you are a weak government that is anxious to please somebody.”

Cairo’s streets have always been busy with children and littered with trash.

Now, with the pigs gone, and the schools closed, they are even more so.

“The Egyptians are really in a mess,” Mr. Amin said.

Mona el-Naggar contributed reporting

Monday, May 18, 2009

U.S. health officials troubled by new flu pattern +++++

Slow news.  People are still going out in public places.  A lack of middle age people and older people getting the flu is interesting.  I still think there may be a connection with the smallpox vaccine which was discontinued for those born after around 1960, or something like that.  The theory that old people haven't been exposed is scotched by the Mexican experience where there is a lot of inter generational contact, especially in the smaller villages and cities.  Older Mexicans did get the smallpox vaccination.

Aldi Foods has had some good clearance sales.  One Aldi  cleared out the canned chicken in barbecue or lemon sauce at fifty cents a can and double sized kipper snacks (one of my favorites) at twenty-five cents a tin.  I bought them out.  My freezers are basically full from Aldi clearance meats and pizzas.  I have two generators, I should really get five or ten gallons of gasoline or at least get the cans out of the garage rafters.  

At Menards, I popped for 24 12 ounce bottles of water for $2.99.  Basically they are nice to keep a few in the car.  I don't mind warm water but if you leave filled bottle water in cars for a few summer days it could be unsafe to drink.  That said, if I remember when I'm driving I bring a freshly filled water bottle with me.  The bottled water pays for itself because I prefer warm bottled water over cold pop if I have to eat on the road.    Menards had a rebate on dry cat food again but it require a $10 non-rebate purchase.  I was just over the limit but $6 cat food rebate so the bottled water seemed a good hedge.

I got a new water heater. Nothing connected to this, just a good "price".   I might "hedge my bets" and keep the old unit in the basement.  Each water heater holds forty gallons that can be used for drinking and cooking in an emergency.  Not too worried here in Minnesota where we don't have earthquakes but if it gets bad I can drain, flush and refill the old hot water tank.

The postponed digital TV conversion is scheduled for mid June.  If the current flu is a "slow snowball" as the story below hints it should have a "head of steam" by mid June when the delayed digital TV switchover is scheduled to occur.  Of course, the "most vulnerable/non adaptors" still won't have adapted.  Something to watch.

That said, the scary story and link is below.





U.S. health officials troubled by new flu pattern

Mon May 18, 2009 4:12pm EDT

By Maggie FoxHealth and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The new influenza strain circulating around most of the United States is putting a worrying number of young adults and children into the hospital and hitting more schools than usual, U.S. health officials said on Monday.

The H1N1 swine flu virus killed a vice principal at a New York City school over the weekend and has spread to 48 states. While it appears to be mild, it is affecting a disproportionate number of children, teenagers and young adults.

This includes people needing hospitalization -- now up to 200, said Dr. Anne Schuchat of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"That's very unusual, to have so many people under 20 to require hospitalization, and some of them in (intensive care units)," Schuchat told reporters in a telephone briefing.

"We are now experiencing levels of influenza-like illness that are higher than usual for this time of year," Schuchat added. "We are also seeing outbreaks in schools, which is extremely unusual for this time of year."

New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Thomas Frieden agreed with Schuchat.

"We're seeing increasing numbers of people going to emergency departments saying they have fever and flu, particularly young people in the 5 to 17 age group, " Frieden, who has been named by U.S. President Barack Obama as the new CDC director, told a news conference.

About half of all cases of influenza are being diagnosed as the new H1N1 strain, while the rest are influenza B, or the seasonal H1N1 and H3N2 strains. Flu season in the United States is usually almost over by May.

CDC officials say around 100,000 people are likely infected with the new flu strain in the United States and Schuchat said the 5,123 confirmed and probable cases and six deaths in the United States were "the tip of the iceberg."

MORE ILLNESS OVERALL

"We are seeing more reports of influenza-like illness from outpatient visits that we monitor than is typical for this time of year," Schuchat said.

Because doctors usually treat symptoms and only occasionally give flu tests to patients, the CDC must monitor reports of symptoms such as fever, cough and muscle aches to track flu activity. Some centers are doing actual influenza tests to confirm the patterns that are seen.

Influenza is a factor in 36,000 deaths a year in the United States and 250,000 to 500,000 deaths globally, the CDC says.

"Unlike the seasonal flu, we are seeing relatively few cases or hospitalizations in people over 65," Schuchat said. Usually flu kills the elderly and people with chronic diseases.

There is no evidence that a second, bacterial infection is worsening the H1N1 cases, Schuchat said.

When family members are questioned, it seems clear that children and teens are more prone to infection than older adults, Schuchat said. "People under 18 are more likely to have infections when another person in the family is infected," she said.

"One of our working hypotheses is that older adults may have some pre-existing protection against this virus due to their exposure long ago to some virus that may be distantly related," Schuchat said.

An alternative hypothesis is that it just has not had a chance to make its way into the older population yet.

(Editing by Julie Steenhuysen and Xavier Briand)

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Stores seem pretty well stocked

The Minnesota legislature is talking about increasing the tax on beer! I might need to stock up! An Aldi near me had clearance prices on some of my favorite items. Deluxe kipper (fish) snacks in sauces were marked down from something like $1.69 to twenty-five cents I bought them out, it must be at least fourty. Also they had chunk chicken in barbecue sauce or lemon pepper sauce. Ten ounce cans figure two standard tuna fish can size. Marked down from something like $2.00 to fifty cents. I bought them out, something like sixty cans total. I bought fifty or so cans at a different Aldi when marked down to one dollar a can. The label says a can is 250/300 calories total per can lemon/barbecue with 50/60 calories in each of the five servings in each can. A can is a good "meal foundation" for two people. With cooked pasta it is a bit "different" but not bad. With steamed or even canned potatos it it good and like gravy it works well over bread, an easy main dish.

At Aldi I noticed that the 12 ounce canned Mackerel fish are not selling well so I'm watching that I bought a few cans before and like them. Aldi, also had marked down some specialty pasta and turkey stuffing that didn't sell. Overall, I must have spent $45, mostly on canned goods. For now, look for bargains on canned goods, stock up and "rotate".

So far the "hybrid flu" seems mostly a "dust up". I believe it was a real threat, the "hybrid" is new. I talked someone into not meeting me at a bar that has a lot of Mexican legals and illegals at closing. The Mexicans are nice people, I never had any problems but it gets very crowded at bar closing. Fortunately I have networked broadband Internet in my house. My friend (hint: female) is watching a DVD, surfing the net and calling people in Peurto Rico for free on my majicjack.com phone and drinking my $8.69 a case Mountain Crest Beer That is more cost effective than the bar anyway.

The downside of canned goods is the salt content. Basically, a salt shaker lasts a year for me. It's nice for certain fresh fruits and vegetables but I rarely salt anything.

From http://anti-strib.com I couldn't find a link


Cue The Crickets...

To all of you on the left (and on the right to be fair) who were so bent out of shape about the Patriot Act, I have a question....

What is your thoughts about this? Is there any concern or consternation here??????

Swine Flu 'Pandemic' Martial Law Passes MA Senate

5-4-9

"While Massachusetts residents were sleeping, our Legislature rushed through a bill- in response to the recent "Swine flu" outbreak.

This bill has been on the shelf but (the) state government felt this was the perfect time to slip this bill through.

What is the big deal about the bill- S18? It gives the Governor power to authorize the deployment and use of force to distribute supplies and materials.

It gives local authorities the permission to enter private residences for investigation and to quarantine individuals.

Basically during any "emergency" our state can and will declare martial law; you lose your Constitutional rights.

Emphasis mine.

Now that the "Democrats" are in complete control, we are hearing more and more rumblings about legislation to strip away the rights of the American people. Whether it is the re-emergence of the Fairness Doctrine, revoking the press credentials of media reps that disagree with you, threats of siccing the White House Press Corp on businesses who don't agree with the President's plans, annulling the voting rights of legit voters by engaging in voter fraud or threatening life long government workers with legal action just because they did their job, the "Democratic" Party office holders have done more, in the past 100+ days to remove the civil rights of the American people than the writers of the Patriot Act ever dreamed.....

I'm curious to hear the response, but I won't be at all surprised to hear.....

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Some Wednesday shopping observations.

I went over to the Midway district in St. Paul.  At Menards in I saw several well dressed people checking out the dust masks.  I couldn't find any hand wipes there but an employee says they usually don't have many.  (Paper towels and windshield wiper fluid from a spray bottle or the car system makes a good hand disinfectant.  You might want to save those spare fast food napkins and stock up on windshield washer fluid if you find a good price.  I will be looking for a good price on a perhaps a case of six gallons of washer fluid.  The car as a hand wash liquid "dispenser" is very old but it might catch on.  If it does washer fluid might become scarce.)  

At the Midway Aldi all of the "essentials" were still in good supply.  I picked up a container of 80 "sanitising wipes" for $2.  Looks like they are designed for diaper changes but they will do the trick.  I'm not sure what effect summer heat will have if they are kept in a car trunk.  Something I was just thinking of are those individually packaged alcohol wipes.  I have had some in car glove compartments for years and they seem to stay moist.  I may keep an eye out for a good price on boxes of 100.)  Not a high priority.

In studying this the demographics of Aldi foods vary widely.  It occurred to me that I have never found marked down pork at the Midway store.  That has a lot of Vietnamese and Hmong customers and they like pork.  The Midway Aldi has had marked down beef from time to time.  Go figure!  

At the other extreme the Minneapolis Franklin Avenue Aldi has a large Somali clientele so that is a literal "porkfest" when it comes to markdowns.  I checked the Aldi price for dry milk.  $5 for enough to make two gallons.  They have nonfat milk for $2 per gallon and fresh is definitely better than reconstituted.  The dry milk is more of a stockpile supply.  Mostly, I love "skim milk" so if things go bad milk is something it would be hard to get along without.   From my past experience up to one third dry milk mixed with regular milk works out, especially if you make it a bit "rich" with a bit more milk powder.    Here is something I got off the internet.

"Our Mix'n Drink will keep its nutrition value for up to about two years if kept cool and dry, and the only vitamins that actually decrease over time are the vitamins A and D. These are not shelf-stable vitamins and are sensitive to heat and light. A good rule of thumb to follow is that the vitamins A and D will dissipate at a rate of about 20% every year if stored properly. The less heat and moisture the milk is exposed to, the better the vitamins will keep. A freezer could extend the shelf life, as long as the powder does not get moisture in it. If you had to put a time limit on the Mix'n Drink, for rotation purposes, I would date it at two years after the date of purchase."

Basically, you rotate stock.  One thing to consider is that I have a basement. I've been told that most houses in the US don't and even some new construction houses in Minnesota don't have basements.   It has a small root cellar room in the Southeast corner with storage shelves.  With the taller house on the south side this gets little sun,  I put a remote thermometer in there last year and even on the hottest summer day it has never reached 50 degrees Fahrenheit.   If I decide to get some milk power I will keep it there.  I will probably seal the unopened box up with a few plastic shopping bags and leave a note "Use in June 2010.".

This is all "preparedness 101" but the "discovery" can be interesting.  The basic idea is to stock up on the less perishable items you will use anyway, especially if you can get them on sale and "rotate" the stock.  It's some effort but it is empowering.  So far. I've only got burned on a two $6 24 packs of snack size cookies.  These got nasty after a year so I threw them out.  I have had few old canned goods that were bad.  If the top is bowed out throw it out and definitely cook thoroughly.  That said rotate and manage.

March and April were the "big spend" where I paid the total $2650 2009 property taxes on  my http://searhouse.com  Also paying winter utility bills real time that definitely "hurt".  The mortgage is paid off on my http://searshouse.com (no government bailout needed ).  I get my "cash flow" recharged Friday so I will do more in-depth stockpiling and chronically it.  More $8.69 a case Mountain Crest beer of course but I'm down to five rolls of toilet paper.  Postage stamps are going up so I have to decide how many hundred "forever stamps" to buy (I'll probably put the stamps into my will).  The Postal Service will be our lifeline in a pandemic.  I fully support them (buying forever stamps now helps them now but with a future cost to the USPS).

I'll chronicle my spending here after the first of the month.  I'm still thinking this out.  The official government source is http://www.ready.gov/  Worth reading but I consider it somewhat "lame".  I was a boy scout.  Our motto was "Be Prepared".

For anyone wondering, I have actually dealt with terrorists who tried to kill cops and have a "well dressed" neighborhood defense network including myself and a lot of law enforcement people on my block who are "hot to trot" and "well dressed".   I might consider having a meeting and giving all the "well dressed" attendees a case of Mountain Crest.   No actual threat but several late night visitors to my house were challenged by off duty police who were "well dressed".  Basically, don't even think about it.  I think we have the total "Dirty Harry VHS/DVD library and we "share".

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

World Health Organisation calls new strain of H1N1 "Mexican flu"


WHOs call new strain of H1N1 "Mexican flu"

Published: Wednesday 29 April 2009 17:32 UTC 
Last updated: Wednesday 29 April 2009 18:04 UTC
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has said that the most recent research on swine flu has shown that the virus is not caused by pigs. The disease is now being referred to as Mexican flu or "2009 H1N1 flu". The WHO has moved the pandemic alert from four to five, the second highest. The first case of what was called swine flu was reported in Mexico and its first fatality was confirmed there two weeks ago. 

The 23-month-old infant who died in the US state of Texas, in the first fatal case from the swine flu outbreak in the United States, was also Mexican. The child came from Mexico to Houston for medical treatment, officials said.

In Europe, new cases of swine flu have been confirmed in five countries. Germany has officially reported three cases, Austria one and Croatia has confirmed some people are infected with the virus. Earlier, Great Britain and Spain had reported cases of swine flu but some new cases have since been officially diagnosed.

There are multiple cases in Mexico and the United States; diagnoses have also been made in Canada, Costa Rica, New Zealand, and Israel. All those found to be suffering from the virus have recently been to Mexico. After further testing, Mexico lowered the official number of those killed by the virus from 20 to seven.

France says it will ask the European Union to ban all flights to Mexico in an attempt to prevent the virus from spreading. Brussels say that the European Commission does not have the authority to implement such a ban. Transport Commissioner Antonie Tajani said the EU should wait for the outcome of the health ministers' meeting in Luxembourg on Thursday before taking action that "would create panic…detrimental to the economy and tourism".