Thursday, August 30, 2018

Eating seaweed

Okay, I eat seaweed.  I started eating it years ago.  Never thought much about eating it because my parents ate it.  I read a book by Alice Walker – right after college I think, can’t remember the title, I’ll ask C.I. if someone needs to know because you know she can remember everything – where Alice talked about eating seaweed for the first time.  That’s when I realized that it wasn’t something most people eat.  (Alice eats it all the time now, per that book.)

 

SO I like it.  For friends, I’ll do sushi bowls and put the seaweed in that. 

 


 



 

 

Seaweed covers the beaches you walk on, it’s dried in your instant miso packets, and researchers in labs all over the world are studying it. Scientists, food companies and environmental advocates want you to eat more of the product ― sometimes more appealingly titled “sea vegetables.” But those who grew up in Western households may not think too highly of seaweed as a food.

Jonathan Kauffman, author of Hippie Food, says that may be in part because of how Westerners were introduced to it ― as a health food eaten by “hippies” in the 1960s. “Seaweed never made much of an impression on the broader public, who mostly lumped it in with other weird health foods they were writing off,” he says.

According to him, other than people who extolled the nutritional virtues of seaweeds, such as those who followed macrobiotic diets, sea vegetables weren’t much of a pantry staple. ”My guess is that the flavors were too oceanic and the texture too gelatinous for eaters who didn’t grow up eating seaweed.” 


BBC's Good Foods explains:

Sea vegetables are full of nutrients. Coming in a multitude of colours, textures, shapes and sizes, all types contain a rich supply of minerals, most prominently calcium, copper, iodine and iron. They are also rich in protein, fibre and vitamins, specifically vitamin K and folic acid, while being low in calories and fat.
Thanks to their impressive nutritional profile, seaweeds are beneficial to health, and are thought to help the body fight illness and disease. The Japanese have one of the highest life expectancies in the world, and one significant, standout dietary habit is their regular consumption of seaweeds. Seaweeds contain a molecule known as fucoidans, which are believed to be responsible for these impressive health benefits, contributing not just to overall life expectancy, but also to immunity and cardiovascular function.
A 2011 review of 100 studies on the benefits of seaweeds, published in the American Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, reported seaweeds may be used to help lower blood pressure and promote heart health.
The quest for umami – or the fifth taste – by chefs and foodies alike has highlighted another key component of seaweeds - their high glutamate content, an amino acid, necessary for normal brain function. Dashi, a traditional Japanese broth, heralded as the ‘mother’ of umami, has seaweed as a core ingredient. Research suggests that it’s the high glutamate content of certain seaweeds that provides the umami flavouring. 





This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"



'Every day we stare at the door, waiting for him to come back.'

Wether their son, husband or sister is , for 1, 10 or 30 years,  wherever in , they share the same unspeakable grief & don't know who to turn to.

Their voices need to be heard.







The "disappeared" were not created in Iraq in 2003.  People were "disappeared" under Saddam Hussein.  But the Iraq War was supposed to 'liberate' Iraq.  And the puppets the US installed continued to 'disappear' Iraqis.  Former prime minister and forever thug Nouri al-Maliki disappeared people throughout his first term but then-US President Barack Obama still gave him a second term (even after the Iraqi voters rejected a second term for Nouri).  That second term saw even more Iraqis disappeared and that was one of the issues that led to the rise of ISIS.

Though Nouri wanted a third term, the havoc he brought to Iraq was such that Barack said no.  Instead, Hayder al-Abadi was installed.  The disappearances have continued under Hayder and one debate on social media is whether they are higher, lower or the same as Nouri's disappearances?  The corporate media has not been too interested in the topic to begin with and, during Hayder's term as prime minister, they've ignored the topic and spent their time insisting that Hayder was a strong representative for Iraq and that he had what was needed for a leader -- you know, the same lies that they spent years spreading about thug Nouri.

Future generations of Americans will have to answer for the disappeared, for the fact that their government installed despots and tyrants who abused the Iraqi people.

"Your country said you wanted to bring liberation?  Why would you impose someone who runs secret prisons?"

Questions like that will need to be answered.




The Iraq War continues.  Year after year.  Even when those who started it, like John McCain, die off, the illegal war still drags on.





this fawning obituary of McCain by is an embarrassment. No mention of warmongering. No mention of his lockstep support for Israeli & Saudi war crimes. No mention of the 500K-1M deaths he helped cause in Iraq. Couldve been written by the US State Dept.






Imagine that, Human Rights Watches blows kisses to John McCain.  Hmm.  Where did HRW stand on the human rights of the Iraqi people when the US was going to declare war on them?




There is no mention of Iraq, which is unsurprising given that HRW itself did not oppose the invasion of Iraq:






HRW did nothing to oppose the illegal war.   And now they celebrate John McCain?

McCain was a racist and a war monger.  He was also no friend of veterans.




he also voted against the post-9/11 gi bill, against a bill requiring mandatory downtime for troops between deployments and against pulling ground forces out of iraq.  the Disabled American Veterans scored mccain a 20/100 going into 2008 elections.





The press lies.  It celebrates a John McCain and ignores the people.  That's how the press works.  All over the world.  The Iraqi people have been clear throughout the Iraq War on one point: US troops out.  But their politicians are always tempted by gifts and bribes.  And they betray the Iraqi people.  (US politicians betray the American people.  Politicians are not known for integrity -- throughout the world.)





Iraq's political circles are divided over the recent -led coalition's announcement that its military forces will remain in indefinitely





One reason Moqtada al-Sadr is so popular in Iraq is that he has called out occupying forces.  (Press reports since the May 12th election have includes claims that Moqtada is okay with US troops on Iraqi soil as 'trainers.')  Moqtada is the Shi'ite cleric and movement leader whose bloc came in first in the Iraqi elections.






In Iraqi election news, main election winner Sadr calls for million person demonstration/million person united prayers tomorrow, the weekend before first meeting of new Iraqi Parliament which is expected to announce Iraq's new ruling coalition.






Hamza Mustafa (ASHARQ AL-AWSAT) adds:

Dozens of Iraqis protested near the entrance to the green zone in Baghdad over what they say are US plans to keep Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in his post for a second term.

They said Brett McGurk, the US special envoy for the coalition against ISIS, has been ‘interfering” in the negotiations aimed at forming the biggest parliamentary bloc.

“No to America,” the protesters chanted as they pledged not to remain silent to the US embassy’s “interference” in the Iraqi government formation process.

Addressing his followers in a statement, Sadr urged them to hold a million man march against the corrupt.

“Say no to sectarianism, no to corruption, no to division of shares, no to terrorism and no to occupation,” he said.

“Iraq needs a peaceful day of rage to set the stage for building a new Iraq away from corruption and oppression,” Sadr added.



Protests have been taking place in Iraq since the start of July.  They kicked off in Basra where there are so many issues -- including the lack of safe drinking water.




Today salinity index (EC) was measured in Shat al Arab river by Dr al Hassan. Salt concentration ranges between 33.5 mS/cm - 34.0 mS/cm. Seven years ago it was 7.7 mS/cm. The recommended levels should not exceed 1.5 mS/cm!   Source:
 






Basra health crisis: 17,000 admitted to hospitals for water poisoning








Watch ask Basra Governor if he showers with the same water he delivers to residents of or if he uses filtered bottle water. Governor Asaad al-Edani pretended to not hear the question, but managed to hear everything else.

358 views
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1:04

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Press sources: Dozens of demonstrators have gathered in (Garma Ali) area north of  Basra, to protest against the deterioration of services.







Main Shatt-al-Arab water station was closed today following the discovery of toxic algae, leaving 150 thousand people in without water, relying completely on polluted RO water—purchase price: $12-14 per 264 gallons and require 3 days wait time.





Exactly when does CBS, PBS, et al plan to cover the issue in Basra with regards to the water?

Ever?



The following community sites -- plus Cindy Sheehan and PACIFICA EVENING NEWS -- updated:

















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