A Blessed Thanksgiving

My good friend, Dan Webster, sent me this text of his recent peace talk. Dan moved from Salt Lake to New York City where he works for the National Council of Churches.


Pre-emptive War and False Security

Remarks to the Hudson-Mohawk, N.Y. chapter of the Episcopal Peace Fellowship, November 16, 2006.

by Daniel Webster

“Beware the leader who bangs the drums of war fervour, for patriotism is indeed a double-edged sword. It both emboldens the blood, just as it narrows the mind…. And when the drums of war have reached a fever pitch and the blood boils with hate and the mind has closed, the leader will have no need in seizing the rights of the citizenry. Rather, the citizenry, infused with fear and blinded with patriotism, will offer up all of their rights unto the leader, and gladly so. How do I know? For this is what I have done. And I am Caesar.” 

That quote was attributed William Shakespeare in “Julius Caesar.”  It started to make its way around the internet in December 2001.  For those of certain persuasion it sounded perfect.  Only one problem.  It does not appear in any Shakespearean work nor can you find it in Caesar’s “Gallic Wars” or any other work attributed to Julius Caesar.  Yet many have quoted it and attributed it as I might have.  Even Barbra Streisand used it at a Democratic fundraiser and later acknowledged she had been duped. 

Thus we see the problem with misleading or misguided information.  It can be embarrassing.  It can be mortifying.  Unfortunately, we now know it can be fatal. 

Pre-emptive war is all about information.  It is all about knowing who is going to kill you unless you can kill them first.  In the nuclear age, the consequences are horrific and unimaginable.  Yet that is where we find ourselves.  We are poised at the edge of a new era in international relations.  Or are we? 

Editor’s Note: The Rev. Daniel Webster is  director of media services for the National Council of Churches. Before being ordained an Episcopal priest in 1996 in Salt Lake City, Webster spent 25 years in broadcast journalism. He was with NBC News for 12 years holding various positions, including west coast producer of NBC News Overnight in Burbank and Deputy Bureau Chief in Washington, D.C. He worked at local television stations in Nebraska, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, New York City and California in several positions including news director, anchor, reporter, producer and photographer. Before entering seminary in 1993 he spent three years with The Associated Press, Washington, D.C., creating a television marketing division. Before coming to the NCC, he was director of communication for the Episcopal Diocese of Utah.

Now, I am not a historian of war.  Those experts are a few miles
south of here on the other side of the North River.  But like many Americans of a certain age I have heard the drums of war many times.  I have heard the
rationales from many political and military leaders who have sought
to justify their prosecution of this
or that war. 

How many times have we heard,
“If we don’t fight the terrorists over there we will have to fight them here.”  Is that really new? 
Didn’t we hear that a little over 50 years ago?  “If we don’t fight the communists in Korea we will
fight them here.”  Didn’t we hear
that 40 years ago?  “If we don’t
fight those commies in Vietnam we’ll be fighting them here.” 

Pre-emptive war follows the same logic as capital punishment.  If we kill the terrorists before they strike, there will be no terrorist attack.  If we put the murderer to death, eventually there will be no more murders.  But we know the death penalty has never been a deterrent to murder. 

One could argue that Korea and Vietnam were both pre-emptive wars of a certain kind.  We still had our oceans to protect us in those days.  We know that has changed.  Iraq was by anyone’s definition clearly a war to pre-empt the use of chemical, biological, nuclear weapons against our country.  And now we know there were no such weapons.  The information was flawed.  It was embarrassing, and mortifying, and fatal.  It has ended the lives of nearly 3,000 American service men and women.  It has ruined the future of many more families.  It has damaged or destroyed the future of nearly 20,000 who have returned alive but without body parts or souls missing. 

The fervour for war was there for the taking after the attacks of September 11.  Many young men and women signed up to protect our country.  They took an oath to defend us against enemies, foreign and domestic, and to obey the commander in chief.  While the words erroneously attributed to Shakespeare were likely drafted to address the commander in chief, the following words were spoken in another time, after another war. 

“Of course the people don’t want war. But after all, it’s the leaders of the country who determine the policy, and it’s always a simple matter to drag the people along whether it’s a democracy, a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism, and exposing the country to greater danger.”  

So said Herman Goering at the Nuremberg trials following the defeat of the Third Reich and its National Socialist Party—the Nazis. 

This means our leaders bear and enormous responsibility to our young men and women in uniform.  They must not take advantage of their willingness to fight and to die for this country and its ideals. 

What of our country’s ideals?  Where are we, in today’s international community of countries?  There are few friends we can truly count on among the community of nations, except for the ones we have been buying. 

We have heard talk of a “coalition of the willing” coming together to fight our war in Iraq.  In most cases, it was the coalition of the bribed.  Recent news reports indicate billions of dollars of U.S. made weapons have been sold to countries—countries we previously would not have sold weapons to—because they have helped us in the so-called, “war on terror.” 

Countries like Pakistan, India and Indonesia, used to be barred from such weapons purchases.  No longer.  We are expanding what Dwight Eisenhower warned us about:  the military industrial complex. 

We know the Iraq war was never linked to terrorists in reality—only in the minds of those who convinced and scared Americans into going to war.   Terrorism is a heinous crime.  But it has to be fought with great intelligence—the information kind—not with F-18s or Bradley fighting vehicles and certainly not by military units trained to fight a wholly different kind of war. 

My friend, Patrick Shea from Utah, served on the Gore Commission on Aviation Safety and Security.  I suspect most of us don’t know of this group’s work.  In 1996 and 1997 they were addressing the whole question of terrorists using airplanes in committing their acts of murder and mayhem.   

Patrick has watched this war unfold, as many Americans have, in stunned disbelief.  We have seen at least tens of thousands of Iraqis die.  Collateral damage, we are told.  We have seen joy and glee among leaders when an Al Qaeda leader is killed.  We have heard the cries of “Get Osama!”  For Patrick, and others who have studied terrorism, it takes “judiciously supervised law enforcement, both on a national and international scale” to combat the terrorists. 

The recent British action that thwarted another wave of airplane terrorism was done by the police, not by the army.  It was done with intelligence and surveillance.  It was smart, precise and lightning fast.  It is law enforcement–not the military–that will win our future battles with terrorists. 

The military has also become our latest muscle in western hemisphere diplomacy.  Instead of engaging governments in Latin America that some in our country consider “leftist,” our government recently—and quietly—lifted the ban on the U.S. training militaries from eleven Latin American and Caribbean nations. 

Our government is addicted to power, not peace.  It is addicted to arrogance, not humility.  It is interested in power over, never power with.  The personality of our government and our image abroad is not helping us achieve the credibility we need to restore if we are to be a true global citizen among nations. 

Now I don’t have time here to get into what truly motivates these terrorists.  I will address shortly one of the surface issues.  But our nation, if it is to survive, must address the needs of human beings around the world.  If our foreign policy does not bring hope to working, starving and needy people across the globe, then recruits for suicide missions will always be easy to find. 

But what about the religious zealots, you may ask.  I suspect the last words spoken in the cockpits of those hijacked planes on 9/11, were “Allah hu Akbar,” God is great.  I suspect that is not much different than battle cries we have heard in the past; for God and King, for God and Country.  Yes, there is a reality that some are using religion to their own ends.  They are using selected passages from the Holy Bible and the Holy Koran to justify their crimes against God’s creation.  Yes, the religious zealots are on both sides.   

The terrorists are now being called “Islamic fascists.”  Connecting these extremists to the evils of fascism from a war—World War II–that most say was justified is good political strategy.  The truth is radical fundamentalists are not limited to Islam.  We have our own share in this country and they are not necessarily Islamic.  They are fundamentalists who Jimmy Carter says live by “rigidity, domination, and exclusion.”   

This fundamentalism can also be described, as the late Christian theologian Dorothy Soelle wrote, as a new “Christofascism.”  Former Roman Catholic and now Episcopal priest, Matthew Fox, warned about the dangerous blend of government and religion in article in “Tikkun” magazine.   

Fox wrote, “Fascism seems to need religion, wrapping itself in religious piety to foster feelings of pious sentiment and self-righteousness.  Its God is a God of Authoritarianism.” 

Fox quoted a study by Dr. Lawrence Britt in which he found 14 characteristics of fascism.  He studied the regimes of Hitler, Mussolini, Franco, Suharto and Pinochet.  Fox points out that four of these men were Roman Catholics who were never excommunicated by their church. 

But here’s what Dr. Britt found common to each of those totalitarian governments: 

  1. Powerful and continuing nationalism employing constant use of patriotic slogans, symbols, songs and flags.
  2. Disdain for the recognition of human rights because security needs outweigh human rights.
  3. Using enemies as scapegoats for a unifying cause.
  4. Supremacy of the military.
  5. Rampant sexism including more rigid gender roles and anti-gay legislation.
  6. Controlled mass media.
  7. Obsession with national security driven by a politics of fear.
  8. Religion and government are intertwined, especially in rhetoric employed by its leaders.
  9. Corporate power is protected.  Industrial and business aristocracies put government leaders into power and keep them there, creating a mutually beneficial business/government relationship and power elite.
  10. Labor power, which represents one of the few threats to fascism, is suppressed.
  11. Disdain for intellectuals and the arts and hostility to higher education, along with censorship of arts or refusal to support the arts.
  12. Obsession with crime and punishment.
  13. Rampant cronyism and corruption.
  14. Fraudulent elections.

As Fox wrote, “one does not have to be paranoid to see these elements alive and well in the United States.”   

Another Episcopal priest and author by the name of Barbara Brown Taylor, puts it this way:  “Jesus was not killed by atheism and anarchy, he was brought down by law and order allied with religion, which is a deadly mix.  Beware of those who claim to know the mind of God and who are prepared to use force if necessary to make others conform.  Beware of those who cannot tell the difference between God’s will and their own.” 

Now if we were to look at this from a mathematical perspective, I could tell you that virtually all the major religions spoke out against the Iraq war.  From Pope John Paul II, to recent statements by Catholic bishops, to a majority of America’s Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican leaders, all spoke out against this war as either unjust or immoral or both. 

Only the Southern Baptist Convention pronounced this war as just.  And I find it interesting that in the latest issue of Southern Baptist Times, a photo appears of the president in the Oval Office with Baptist leaders.  You will not find any such photo with Protestant, Catholic or Orthodox leaders because they have never been invited into the Oval Office to share their views about the war or any other issue facing our country. 

There’s a history that this current administration may not want to get too close to.  In 1930, all of the world’s Anglican Bishops adopted a statement that has been re-adopted and reaffirmed every ten years since. That statement says, “War as a method of settling international disputes is incompatible with the teaching and the life and the example of Jesus Christ.” 

And in 1952, the General Convention of the Episcopal Church of the United States adopted a resolution that says, “Believers in a God of justice and love as revealed in Christ cannot concede that war is inevitable. Voices are occasionally raised suggesting that a preventive war would afford a shortcut through our present dilemma. If this advice were accepted the United States would be placed in an indefensible moral position before the world as well as violate the fundamental teachings of Christ. Therefore, we are unalterably opposed to the idea of so-called preventive war.” 

So why has America gotten to this point?  Part of it is organization and part of it is media.  When I say organization I mean the ability for a strong, committed minority to exercise disproportionate power in the government and society because they are extremely well organized.  They know how to get out the vote.  They know how to influence public opinion.  And above all, they know how to influence the media. 

Over the past several years, we have entered into an era of what I call, “judgmental journalism.”  It is a time where opinion passes for fact and the more radical the opinion the more air time or print space it seems to get. 

News editors across the land routinely ignore statements and news releases from mainstream religious leaders because editors think “that’s what they’re supposed to say.”  They say we United Methodists, Evangelical Lutherans, American Baptists, Greek Orthodox, Episcopalians and Presbyterians are predictable and that’s not news.   

But let one outrageous leader rally his Christian Zionist followers into a frenzy and the media just swarms the story.  Editors and producers love outrageous.  I know.  I used to be one. 

The Wall Street Journal’s edition of July 27 gave 67 column inches, beginning on the front page mind you, to an event the previous week held by Pastor John Hagee.  The San Antonio televangelist organized a pro-Israel rally in Washington, D.C., that attracted 3,500 people.  He has since predicted millions will die in this coming war and that it happily marks the beginning of the end of the world because Jesus is coming back — in the midst of the carnage on all sides.  Several other news organizations covered the event. 

Most respected biblical scholars can cite you numerous examples of misinterpretation of the Scriptures around the so-called “end times.”  Many biblical scholars will tell you the Book of Revelation is not about the end of the world but about the occupying Roman Empire at the time the biblical text was written. 

For people of faith today, it is critical to recall the words of Dr. King:  “The church must be reminded that it is not the master or the servant of the state but rather the conscience of the state.  It must be the guide and the critic of the state, and never its tool.  If the church does not recapture its prophetic zeal, it will become an irrelevant social club without moral or spiritual authority.” 

Okay, so what can we do?  We are just individuals with very little real power to address what I have outlined here tonight, right?  Yes and no. 

First, get into a community that works for the common good.  Look at what’s going on at the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the Episcopal Peace Fellowship or other religious based peace organizations, or the Friends of Sabeel, the Center for American Progress or the National Council of Churches advocacy website FaithfulAmerica.org.  People working together can do much more than people working alone. 

Secondly, get to know the issue.  If some of what you have heard tonight is new to you, find out more.  Become conversant on the issue.  Know your facts.  It is hard to argue against the facts though people are making a living shouting down or talking over those bearing the facts.  But keep at it. 

Thirdly, get organized.  Write letters to the editor of newspapers.  Call radio talk shows.  Get your opinion in the public arena.  If you are part of the majority of Americans who disagree with the war, or torture, or the Patriot Act, your opinion needs to be expressed.  And if you get really organized, you will set up duty rosters for those who will call radio talk shows on Monday and Wednesday, and those who will call on Tuesday and Thursday, an so on. 

For the newspapers, rotate who will write letters.  Most newspapers won’t use letters from the same person more than once a month or once a quarter.  So organize your duty roster on a rolling schedule to get more of your opinions published. 

And everyone should write their elected representatives regularly.  Let them know your opinion.  Tell them what Archbishop Desmond Tutu said.  “Peace never comes from the barrel of a gun.” 

What you will be doing is active peacemaking.  It is following in the footsteps of Jesus, Gandhi and Dr. King.  That’s not bad company.   

In your own personal life, may I recommend a thorough self-examination of the words we use and state of our souls.  Stopping the name-calling in our private and public conversations is a start. If we do that, then extend that to the public arena, we will go a long way to raising the level of civility in our society. We will recover a level of respect for each other that seems to have gone missing. The words we use to demean, dismiss and disregard our fellow human beings need to be pulled from our lexicon.  If we can marginalize someone with a different opinion to make us feel justified in our beliefs or our actions, we can feel a sense of victory. Then we have won. That’s true for those whose goal is supremacy.

Victory for the peacemaker is finding the place where everyone is honored for their humanity, for the seed of the truth carried in each one of us. 

If you are in a personal state of anxiety or rage about the state of the country, find some spiritual practice that will allow you to channel the energy you have in more constructive ways.  I can tell you I never felt the power to speak up until I was a practitioner of centering prayer.  It is a meditative practice that its primary teacher, Father Thomas Keating, says will help us to better hear the cry of the poor. 

And take comfort in the words of those who have gone before…such as St. Seraphim of Sarov, an 18th century monk in Russia who said:  “Have peace within yourself and thousands around you will find salvation.” 

Become an agent of peace.  Be a force for good in your home, in your community and in your country.   

I leave you with the words of a Poet Laureate from India…Rabindranath Tagore.  I heard this poem read by Martin Sheen last year at the Nevada Nuclear Test Site protest. 

Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high
Where knowledge is free
Where the world has not been broken up into fragments
By narrow domestic walls
Where words come out from the depth of truth
Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection
Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way
Into the dreary desert sand of dead habit
Where the mind is led forward by thee
Into ever-widening thought and action
Into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake 

Thank you.  And may God bless the whole world…not exceptions.

Airbags

Last night was intense as I learned early in the evening that my 17 year old daughter had been in a bad car accident (driving, by herself) during rush hour on a busy freeway, resutling in her being transported by ambulance to the emergency room. 

Since she is so short, she has to sit very close to the steering wheel for her legs to reach the pedals.  Upon the impact of her vechicle, the airbag was released, crushing her.  She also had a reaction to the chemicals in the airbag, causing her to not be able to breathe.  Her seatbelt also crushed her abdomen, severely bruising it.  Her right leg was crushed under the steering column.  The good news is that she miraculoulsy did not incur any fractures or breaks.  The bad news is that she is down for about a week with severely sprained leg and wrist and some pretty significant internal bruising all over her body, and particulrly around her abdomen where the seatbelt strangled that part of her body upon impact, also leaving a huge mark across her tummy.

My daughter told me about “dust” coming out of the airbag, causing her to not be able to breathe.  (Fortunately a passing motorist got out and helped her out of the car and carried her to where the ambulance personnel could treat her when they arrived.)  She had to be given oxygen as a result.    She ingested the dust, which is alarming to me now, given this information:

Air bags are small canister of sodium azide that releases nitrogen gas and sodium hydroxide dust. This product is both flammable and toxic. Nitrogen, which comprises 78 percent of the air we breathe, is the gas that inflates air bags. The solid chemical, sodium azide, generates the nitrogen gas by combustion. Sodium azide is in the same class of chemicals as insecticides and is toxic if ingested, but car occupants won’t come into contact with the chemical. This chemical reaction causes the air bag to inflate with over 1000 pounds of pressure. During this inflation, the canister heats up to about 300 degrees of temperature. To aid in a smooth release, the air bag is coated with either talc or cornstarch. Once the sensors are tripped, the air bag is triggered in about .05 of a second. The air bag then takes only another .1 of a second more to fully inflate. The next half-second is spent deflating the air bag. The bag is  slightly larger around than your steering wheel, and will extend back about nine inches to a foot. If your hands are on the steering wheel when it deploys they will probably be knocked off. Consider what may be between you and your air bag, like a cup of hot coffee, your hands, or your glasses. This will be smashed into your body and/or your face.

Here is some other information on sodium azide that I found:

Facts About Sodium Azide

What sodium azide is

  • Sodium azide is a rapidly acting, potentially deadly chemical that exists as an odorless white solid.
  • When it is mixed with water or an acid, sodium azide changes rapidly to a toxic gas with a pungent (sharp) odor. It also changes into a toxic gas when it comes in contact with solid metals (for example, when it is poured into a drain pipe containing lead or copper).
  • The odor of the gas may not be sharp enough, however, to give people sufficient warning of the danger.

Where sodium azide is found and how it is used

  • Sodium azide is best known as the chemical found in automobile airbags. An electrical charge triggered by automobile impact causes sodium azide to explode and release nitrogen gas inside the airbag.
  • Sodium azide is used as a chemical preservative in hospitals and laboratories. Accidents have occurred in these settings. In one case, sodium azide was poured into a drain, where it exploded and the toxic gas was inhaled (breathed in).
  • Sodium azide is used in agriculture (farming) for pest control.
  • Sodium azide is also used in detonators and other explosives.

How you could be exposed to sodium azide

  • Following release of sodium azide into water, you could be exposed to sodium azide by drinking the contaminated water.
  • Following contamination of food with sodium azide, you could be exposed to sodium azide by eating the contaminated food.
  • Following release of sodium azide into the air, you could be exposed by breathing in the dust or the gas that is formed.
  • Sodium azide can also enter the body and cause symptoms through skin contact.
  • An explosion involving sodium azide may cause burn injury as well as expose people to the toxic gas, hydrozoic acid.
  • CDC has received no reports of sodium azide exposure following automobile airbag deployment.

How sodium azide works

  • The seriousness of poisoning caused by sodium azide depends on the amount, route, and length of time of exposure, as well as the age and preexisting medical condition of the person exposed.
  • Breathing the gas that is formed from sodium azide causes the most harm, but ingesting (swallowing) sodium azide can be toxic as well.
  • The gas formed from sodium azide is most dangerous in enclosed places where the gas will be trapped. The toxic gas quickly disperses in open spaces, making it less harmful outdoors.
  • The gas formed from sodium azide is less dense (lighter) than air, so it will rise.
  • Sodium azide prevents the cells of the body from using oxygen. When this happens, the cells die.
  • Sodium azide is more harmful to the heart and the brain than to other organs, because the heart and the brain use a lot of oxygen.

Immediate signs and symptoms of sodium azide exposure

  • People exposed to a small amount of sodium azide by breathing it, absorbing it through their skin, or eating foods that contain it may have some or all of the following symptoms within minutes:
    • Rapid breathing
    • Restlessness
    • Dizziness
    • Weakness
    • Headache
    • Nausea and vomiting
    • Rapid heart rate
    • Red eyes (gas or dust exposure)
    • Clear drainage from the nose (gas or dust exposure)
    • Cough (gas or dust exposure)
    • Skin burns and blisters (explosion or direct skin contact)
  • Exposure to a large amount of sodium azide by any route may cause these other health effects as well:
    • Convulsions
    • Low blood pressure
    • Slow heart rate
    • Loss of consciousness
    • Lung injury
    • Respiratory failure leading to death
  • Showing these signs and symptoms does not necessarily mean that a person has been exposed to sodium azide.

What the long-term health effects may be

Survivors of serious sodium azide poisoning may have heart and brain damage.

How people can protect themselves and what they should do if they are exposed to sodium azide

  • First, get fresh air by leaving the area where the sodium azide was released. Moving to an area with fresh air is a good way to reduce the possibility of death from exposure to sodium azide.
    • If the sodium azide release was outside, move away from the area where the sodium azide was released.
    • If the sodium azide release was indoors, get out of the building.
    • If leaving the area that was exposed to sodium azide is not an option, stay as low to the ground as possible, because sodium azide fumes rise.
    • If you are near a release of sodium azide, emergency coordinators may tell you to either evacuate the area or to “shelter in place” inside a building to avoid being exposed to the chemical. For more information on evacuation during a chemical emergency, see “Facts About Evacuation”. For more information on sheltering in place during a chemical emergency, see “Facts About Sheltering in Place”.
    • If you think you may have been exposed to sodium azide, you should remove your clothing, rapidly wash your entire body with soap and water, and get medical care as quickly as possible.
  • Removing your clothing:
    • Quickly take off clothing that may have sodium azide on it. Any clothing that has to be pulled over the head should be cut off the body instead of pulled over the head.
    • If you are helping other people remove their clothing, try to avoid touching any contaminated areas, and remove the clothing as quickly as possible.
  • Washing yourself:
    • As quickly as possible, wash any sodium azide from your skin with large amounts of soap and water. Washing with soap and water will help protect people from any chemicals on their bodies.
    • If your eyes are burning or your vision is blurred, rinse your eyes with plain water for 10 to 15 minutes. If you wear contacts, remove them and put them with the contaminated clothing. Do not put the contacts back in your eyes (even if they are not disposable contacts). If you wear eyeglasses, wash them with soap and water. You can put your eyeglasses back on after you wash them.
  • Disposing of your clothes:
    • After you have washed yourself, place your clothing inside a plastic bag. Avoid touching contaminated areas of the clothing. If you can’t avoid touching contaminated areas, or you aren’t sure where the contaminated areas are, wear rubber gloves or put the clothing in the bag using tongs, tool handles, sticks, or similar objects. Anything that touches the contaminated clothing should also be placed in the bag. If you wear contacts, put them in the plastic bag, too.
    • Seal the bag, and then seal that bag inside another plastic bag. Disposing of your clothing in this way will help protect you and other people from any chemicals that might be on your clothes.
    • When the local or state health department or emergency personnel arrive, tell them what you did with your clothes. The health department or emergency personnel will arrange for further disposal. Do not handle the plastic bags yourself.
    • For more information about cleaning your body and disposing of your clothes after a chemical release, see “Chemical Agents: Facts About Personal Cleaning and Disposal of Contaminated Clothing”.
    • If someone has ingested sodium azide, do not induce vomiting or give fluids to drink. Also, if you are sure the person has ingested sodium azide, do not attempt CPR. Performing CPR on someone who has ingested sodium azide could expose you to the chemical.
    • When sodium azide is ingested, it mixes with stomach acid and forms the toxic gas, hydrozoic acid. If a person who has ingested sodium azide is vomiting, isolate and stay away from the stomach contents (vomit) to avoid exposure to the toxic gas.
    • Do not pour substances containing sodium azide (such as food, water, or vomit) in the drain, because the drain can explode and cause serious harm.
  • Seek medical attention right away. Dial 911 and explain what has happened.

How sodium azide poisoning is treated

Sodium azide poisoning is treated with supportive medical care in a hospital setting. No specific antidote exists for sodium azide poisoning. The most important thing is for victims to seek medical treatment as soon as possible.

How you can get more information about sodium azide

You can contact one of the following:

  • Regional poison control center: 1-800-222-1222
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    • Public Response Hotline (CDC)
      • 800-CDC-INFO
      • 888-232-6348 (TTY)
    • E-mail inquiries: cdcinfo@cdc.gov

This fact sheet is based on CDC’s best current information. It may be updated as new information becomes available.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) protects people’s health and safety by preventing and controlling diseases and injuries; enhances health decisions by providing credible information on critical health issues; and promotes healthy living through strong partnerships with local, national, and international organizations.

I  am grateful that my daughter did not incur more serious injuries.  She told me she thought she was going to die.  I’ve always had reservations about air bags and now I am going to conduct more research to become more educated on them – more than I already am.  I never thought about the chemicals in them – only the crushing nature of them.

Last minute Thanksgiving tips

Organic Bytes from the Organic Consumers Association


TreeHugger 100-Mile Thanksgiving Challenge: Time to Vote

TreeHugger 100-Mile Thanksgiving Challenge: Time to Vote

It is time to vote for your favorite entry in TreeHugger’s 100-Mile Thanksgiving Challenge. Go here to check out each of the five finalist’s recipes and then vote below for the one that is the most creative, tasty and/or appealing. The reader-voted winner will recieve a year’s worth of organic milk from contest sponsor Organic Valley. The winner will be selected after midnight tomorrow (11/23), so be sure to vote right away!

                     

Holly Mullen has an interesting piece in today’s Salt Lake Tribune on the newly named Delta Center in Salt Lake City (now the Energy Solutions Arena).

There is a poll on her page for folks to vote on a nickname for the arena.  People  have been having lots of fun with this.

I received my copy of the Fall 2006 The Green Pages  the national newspaper of theGreen Party of the United States.

I and others are  highlighted in the feature article, “The party gatehrs at Tucson:  Delegates report increased unity at national annual conference”, by Dave McCorquodale of the Green Party of Delaware.

The article is about delegtes’ perspectives on the Tucson meeting and higlights quotes from a number of delegates.  My quote is a highlighted boxed quote in the middle of the article:
As alwasy I walk away from the annual event invigorated, educated and excited about being part of hte Green Party.

The article briefly touches on the various activities of the national meeting, inlcuding reports of the various committees.

Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange

This is our 1st Annual Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange. This year we have
several community co-sponsors.

As a positive, community-affirming event on this day, we are asking people to reflect on the effects of consumerism to our communities and our planet. At the same time, we are asking people to donate a winter coat they no longer need to the Coat Exchange so that it can be given to someone who needs one.

It’s not whether or not you go out for some groceries or some Christmas presents. We want people and governments to truly focus on taking care of each other and the earth, but life goes on. We do not expect to have an economic impact this year or any time soon, but we want people to think
about whether the frenzy of consumption actually helps people live better lives or take better care of their communities.

The developed countries, with 20% of the world’s population are consuming over 80% of the earth’s natural resources. Countries have always been willing to go to war for valuable resources, and the 21st century is no exception, which is why the developed countries are able to access 80% of
the world’s resources while a billion people go hungry every day and natural disasters turn into cultural disasters. The effects of over- consumption are widely apparent: global warming, deforestation, poverty, crime, despair, soil erosion, polluted water, sprawl and war.

The Holidays are more than simply consuming more and more goods and feeling we have to buy expensive presents. People want to have an enjoyable, satisfying, secure, comfortable life How many of us can honestly say we look forward to the holiday pressures awaiting us at each
year’s end. By mutual consent we trap ourselves in materialistic interpretations of holidays that are sacred.

It makes little sense to increase consumption, destroy the planet, or go to war when all it is upholding is an economy based on keeping wages as low as possible and inequality as high as possible. Surely there has to be a better way. Buy Nothing Day is about that. So if it pleases you, buy nothing for one day. As a substitute give something away to someone else who needs it more than you do. Clean out your closet and join the celebration of life on Earth. We believe you will feel better. Then please continue to think about what you buy, why you buy it, and the effects of its production on the world and the people who live here, throughout your life. Continue reading

“Energy Solutions Arena”

The Delta Center has a new name: Energy Solutions Arena.
EnergySolutions Arena — Former Envirocare provides new name for Delta Center
Arena’s new name a winner, Miller says:Critics have no shortage of nicknames

This came to my desk from HEAL Utah:

EnergySolutions is no longer just an eyesore in the West Desert. As of this afternoon, the sports arena you’ve known for 15 years as the Delta Center will be known as the “EnergySolutions Arena.”

Now every time you take your kids to a Jazz game, see a concert, or simply drive through downtown Salt Lake, you can be reminded that your state is home to the largest commercial nuclear waste dump in the nation. Dan Patrick on ESPN sports radio is already calling the renamed arena “The Dump.”

In its latest attempt at rebranding, EnergySolutions has branded Utah, for the world to see, as the nation’s nuclear waste dump.

EnergySolutions can spend how it wants the untold millions it makes off dumping the nation’s unwanted waste in Utah, but this is a slap in the face to Utahns who are uneasy about their state being known as the nation’s dumping ground. And Larry Miller, who admitted he was in “nuclear kindergarten” before being educated by EnergySolutions, could certainly have sold out to a company with a better image for the state of Utah.

But don’t be uneasy, Larry Miller says, because his company and EnergySolutions share a lot of the same ideals. And EnergySolutions’ president Steve Creamer is only looking forward to the day when his company’s name is on the lips of every fourth grader in Utah. Continue reading

School District Gets Rid of Jr. ROTC – Elected Official Upset

I received this from fellow green Pat Elder, of the Center on Conscience & War in Washington. I met Pat this summer at the National Green Party Convention and then again at Camp Democracy.

House Armed Services Committee Chairman, Duncan Hunter (R-CA) is apparently upset by the San Francisco Board of Education’s decision last week to toss out JROTC. Will Ike Skelton’s leadership be any different? We’ll soon find out.

If you get a chance, call Pelosi’s office and urge her to stand strong! 2371 Rayburn HOB – Washington, DC 20515 – (202) 225-4965.

U.S. House Armed Services Committee Chairman Duncan Hunter (R-CA) today sent the attached letter to Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) urging her to renounce the San Francisco Board of Education’s recent decision to severe ties with the Junior Reserve Officers Training Program.

According to an Associated Press news article, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom called the decision a “bad idea” since it penalized students without having a practical effect on Pentagon policies.

The San Francisco program, one of more than 3,500 units nationwide, provides leadership and civic education to more than 1,600 students.

For more information, please contact the House Armed Services Committee Communications Office at (202) 225-2539 or e-mail Josh Holly at josh.holly@mail.house.gov.

Buying Frenzies – Advice

05This article is in today’s Salt Lake Tribune:

Prescription is to end senseless buying, stop trying to keep up with neighbors

By Arrin Newton Brunson
Special to The Tribune

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LOGAN – Despite its aches and shakes and its sneezing and wheezing, the flu may not be the worst ailment to afflict Americans this winter.
    That distinction instead could go to the so-called VISA virus or the buyer’s bacteria or the spender’s bender.
    Taken together, Juliet Schor calls these maladies competitive consumptionism – and warns that it’s breaking us.
    This desire to amass more and more trappings of the American dream is a full-blown epidemic with global consequences, says Schor, a Harvard professor and author of The Overspent American: Why We Want What We Don’t Need.
    “The vast majority of Americans don’t know where their money goes,” Schor says in a DVD, “Get off the Consumer Escalator.” “If all this were making us deliriously happy, that would be one thing. But, in fact, what we find is that after intense desire to acquire goods, American are discarding them at record rates. Americans are literally drowning in stuff.”
  

Schor’s findings were the topic of a recent discussion at a pair of “Financial Planning for Women” events hosted at Utah State University.
    Jean Lown, a professor in USU’s Family, Consumer and Human Development program, says the topic is timely because the holidays tempt consumers to buy even more.
    Lown says the school’s program targets women because “they so desperately need


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it.”

    Women generally live longer than men, she explains. They work outside the home more sporadically and often at jobs that offer no retirement benefits. And they are socialized to expect that a man is going to care for them financially. Yet statistics show most women are likely to be single at some time.
    “They need to take responsibility for their financial stability,” Lown says, noting that achieving that goal is growing dicier as savings dwindle, mortgages swell and credit-card-debts balloon.
    The past 30 years have brought a rise in the thirst for material goods across all income levels, Schor says. Keeping up with the Joneses is becoming keeping up with the Gateses.
    “The small house with a white picket fence will no longer suffice. Comfort is no longer enough. People want luxury,” she says in the DVD. “Americans across the spectrum have started to emulate the affluent.”
    To satisfy those yearnings, Americans average nine more work weeks a year than their Western counterparts and their lives are out of balance, says Schor, who also wrote The Overworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure.
    Smithfield resident Sabrina Peterson says the work-and-spend cycle ripples throughout the overall economy, affecting individual choices. “You can’t get the job if you’re not willing to work 45 hours a week,” Peterson laments.
    In many cases, Schor notes, the pressure to work more and spend more leads to less – less time with family, less time with friends, less time for community.
    Private consumption is even crowding out public amenities.
    “We’ve had a tax revolt in which people are increasingly unwilling to fund schools, parks, arts and culture and other public goods,” Schor says in her presentation.
    The Harvard professor adds that workaholic parents often compensate for time missed with their children by buying them toys, videos and luxury items.
    “Consumerism becomes a substitute for human connection,” she says. “In today’s world, we work more hours and take on more debt in order to keep up with today’s consumption standard, and we’re really not getting anywhere.”
    So what’s the antidote to the consumer craze?
    Lown recommends a dose of common sense.
    “I sound like a broken record,” she says, urging consumers to avoid malls, toss catalogs and fashion magazines, and click off Internet shopping sites. Most important, she adds, turn off the tube.
    “TV is an advertising-conveyance mechanism,” Lown says. “The programs are secondary to advertising.”
    And her advice to counter the holiday hoopla?
    “I encourage people, before they start planning for the holidays and gift giving, to really think about their values. Set a very specific dollar limit for how much you’re willing to spend and use cash. If they’re already not paying off their credit cards at the end of each month, they better set a very, very low limit.”
    Seminar attendee Kay Hansen, who has worked as a financial counselor, concedes the pressure to work and spend is overwhelming.
    “The only solution is for people to make the decision on their own,” Hansen says. “The answer is pretty simple, but nobody wants to deal with it.”
    abrunson@sltrib.com

Stepping off the consumer escalator
   
    Tips from participants at “Financial Planning for Women” events hosted at Utah State University. For more information, go to http://www.usu.edu./fpw.
    * If you decide to buy something, sleep on it first.
    * Discuss consumer-spending values with family and friends.
    * Use cash, not credit cards and checks.
    * Turn off the TV.
    * Avoid the mall.
    * Toss out the catalogs and fashion magazines.
    * Avoid Web shopping sites.