29
Mrz
2004

Blutiger Kampf um Öl eskaliert

Sarayacu-Gemeinde bittet die Welt um Hilfe

Die Indianer aus Sarayacu im ecuadorianischen Amazonas wurden vor kurzem Opfer eines brutalen Überfalls. Ein Ölkonzern will jetzt mit Hilfe von Soldaten in Sarayacu nach Öl suchen. Neue, blutige Auseinandersetzungen drohen.

Aufgrund dieser Umstände haben die Indianer den Ausnahmezustand ausgerufen und sich mit einem Hilferuf an uns gewandt. Sie brauchen dringend Spenden für Kommunikationsmittel und Transportkosten.

Reinhard Behrend
Vorsitzender Rettet den Regenwald e.V.
http://www.regenwald.org

150 'DEAD ZONES' COUNTED IN OCEANS

U.N. REPORT WARNS OF NITROGEN RUNOFF KILLING FISHERIES
MSNBC
March 29, 2004

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4624359/

The number of oxygen-deprived "dead zones" in the world's oceans has been increasing since the 1970s and is now nearly 150, threatening fisheries as well as humans who depend on fish, the U.N. Environment Program announced Monday in unveiling its first-ever Global Environment Outlook Year Book.

These "dead zones" are caused by an excess of nitrogen from farm fertilizers, sewage and emissions from vehicles and factories. In what experts call a "nitrogen cascade," the chemical flows untreated into oceans and triggers the proliferation of plankton, which in turn depletes oxygen in the water.

While fish might flee this suffocation, slow moving, bottom-dwelling creatures like clams, lobsters and oysters are less able to escape.

"Humankind is engaged in a gigantic, global experiment as a result of the inefficient and often overuse of fertilizers, the discharge of untreated sewage and rising emissions from vehicles and factories," program executive director Klaus Toepfer said in a statement accompanying the report.

From small to vast zones

Toepfer noted that 146 dead zones -- most in Europe and the U.S. East Coast -- range from under a square mile to up to 45,000 square miles. "Unless urgent action is taken to tackle the sources of the problem," he said, "it is likely to escalate rapidly."

The program noted that some of the earliest recorded dead zones were in Chesapeake Bay, the Baltic Sea, Scandinavia's Kattegat Strait, the Black Sea and the northern Adriatic Sea.

The most infamous zone is in the Gulf of Mexico, where the Mississippi River dumps fertilizer runoff from the Midwest.

Others have appeared off South America, China, Japan, southeast Australia and New Zealand, the program said.

Preventive measures

The report was released in Jeju, South Korea, where governments from around the world are sending officials this week for a Global Ministerial Environment Forum.

The program noted preventive steps can be taken, citing these examples:

- European nations along the Rhine agreed to halve discharged nitrogen levels, reducing the discharge into the North Sea.

- Planting new forests and grasslands will help soak up excess nitrogen, keeping it out of waterways.

- Requiring vehicles to reduce nitrogen emissions.

- Fostering alternative energy sources that are not based on burning fossil fuels.

- Better sewage treatment would reduce nutrient discharges to coastal waters.

Global warming warning

But the report also noted new research that indicates global warming could aggravate the problem. Should humans double emissions of carbon dioxide, a key gas that many scientists fear is warming the Earth, that could change rainfall patterns, according to the research.

"In some areas, this in turn could lead to a marked increase in the levels of run-off from rivers into the seas," the U.N. program said. "They calculate that dissolved oxygen levels in the northern Gulf of Mexico, triggered by an increased discharge from the Mississippi River basin of 20 percent and a climb in temperature of up to four degrees Centigrade, could fall by 30 to 60 percent."

The U.N. report is online at:
http://www.unep.org/geo/yearbook


Informant: NHNE

Aufruf zur Demonstration

Mobilfunkmast im Waidesgrund weiter in der Kritik

Petersberg (bg) Die Errichtung einer Mobilfunkanlage im Waidesgrund in Petersberg stößt weiter auf Widerstand: Die Bürgerinitiative Waidesgrund, welche die Errichtung verhindern will, ruft für Dienstag, 30. März, ab 8 Uhr zu einer Demonstration am Parkplatz des Waidesgrundstadions auf.

Vodafone-D2 möchte an dieser Stelle einen Sendemast errichten (unsere Zeitung vom 27. März). Unterstützt werden die Gegner der Anlage vom Kreis- und Stadtelternbeirat und von der Kreistagsfraktion der Grünen.

„Diese Sende- und Empfangsanlage wird den Protest aller Eltern hervorrufen, die erfahren, dass diese Anlage mitten in ein Schulviertel gebaut wird“, schreiben die Elternvertreter Lolita Banik-Reith (Stadt) und Helmut Reinke (Kreis) in einem offenen Brief an die Petersberger Gemeindevertretung und an Bürgermeister Karl-Josef Schwiddessen. Nach Informationen von Banik-Reith würden in den betroffenen Schulen 6500 Kinder unterrichtet. Der Gemeinde Petersberg werfen die Elternvertreter vor, in dieser Angelegenheit nicht zum Wohl der Mitbürger und der Kinder zu handeln.

Auch die Grünen zeigen sich „empört“. Kreistagsfraktionsvorsitzender Helmut Schönberger nennt die Genehmigung der Gemeinde für den Mast „verantwortungslos“. Er ruft dazu auf, „mit der Petersberger Bürgerinitiative in einen konstruktiven Dialog zu treten, um dem Mobilfunkbetreiber einen geeigneteren Standort anzubieten“.

Ein Beitrag aus der Fuldaer Zeitung vom 29. März 2004

http://www.fuldaerzeitung.de/sixcms/detail.php?id=80763

dazu auch:

Bündnis 90/Die Grünen

Mobilfunk: Die Sorgen der Menschen endlich ernst nehmen!

Die erneute Errichtung eines Mobilfunkmastes in einem sensiblen Bereich empört die Kreistagsfraktion von Bündnis 90/Die Grünen: „Im Waidesgrund in Petersberg, in einem Gebiet, was als Spiel- und Freizeitgelände genutzt wird, in dem es in unmittelbarer Nähe ein Schwimmbad, Schulen und Kindergärten gibt, und der Abstand zu den nächsten Wohnhäusern gerade einmal 150 m beträgt, gehört es sich einfach nicht, eine solche Baumaßnahme zuzulassen,“ unterstreicht Fraktionsvorsitzender Helmut Schönberger.

Da die gesundheitliche Gefährdung gerade jüngerer Menschen zumindest nicht auszuschließen sei, halte er das Vorgehen der Petersberger Gemeinde, im Waidesgrund einen Vodafone D 2 Mobilfunkmast zu genehmigen, den betroffenen Kindern, Bürgerinnen und Bürgern gegenüber für verantwortungslos. Auch wenn die gesundheitlichen Risiken umstritten seien, setzten doch gerade die Versicherungsgesellschaften, die den Mobilfunkbetreibern die Deckung für gesundheitliche Schäden verweigerten, deutliche Zeichen. Bei den jetzigen Beschlüssen der Gemeinde werde der gemeindliche Frieden schwer belastet, denn viele betroffene Menschen fühlten sich zurecht von ihren zuständigen Gemeindevertretern im Stich gelassen. Schönberger fordert, mit der Petersberger Bürgerinitiative in einen konstruktiven Dialog einzutreten, um dem Mobilfunkbetreiber einen geeigneteren Standort anzubieten.

http://www.sg-fulda.de/aktiv/redaktion/news-redaktion/2004_03_26_gruenen.shtml


Quelle: http://www.buergerwelle.de/body_newsletter_290304.html

THE AMERICAN TRIBES PREPARE THEIR NATIONAL SHOWCASE

By Francis X. Clines
New York Times
March 28, 2004

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/28/opinion/28SUN4.html?th

WASHINGTON - The word Potomac means "where the goods are brought in" and it dates from the local Indian tribe rudely displaced here centuries ago by colonial whites intent on a New World. The word seems perfect for the whiff of irony and history in the air this month as the last of 800,000 Indian artifacts -- priceless goods, in fact -- were trucked in from New York City to become the bedrock treasure of the new National Museum of the American Indian:

http://www.nmai.si.edu/

Even incomplete, the museum stands as a modernistic cynosure, defiantly staring down its immediate neighbor, the gleaming white Capitol, where so many treaty promises to American Indians were written and broken. The museum marks a grand turning point in that history, a sacred federal site ceded to Indian management and broadcasting a message of hardy survival, not tribal extinction, to throngs of tourists.

The museum -- a 10-story, cantilevered edifice suggesting a mesa with a cascading brook, indigenous landscaping (from corn bed to marshland), and a cladding of desert-toned Kasota limestone -- opens in September and is likely to be the last Smithsonian attraction built on the National Mall. It will offer a kaleidoscopic sampling of stories from hundreds of tribes that were consulted from the Arctic Circle to Tierra del Fuego.

The peerless collection -- from papoose carriers to sacred regalia, from armadas of dugout canoes to armories of bows and arrows -- is the rapacious trove of George Gustav Heye, the heir to an oil fortune who collected Indian treasures by the boxcar loads a century ago. A buccaneer with a Hearst-like obsession for hunting and gathering other peoples' stuff, Heye left a collection that stuns today's Indian leaders for its power to recapitulate so much lost history.

The collection, from towering totems to shimmering beadwork, had been crammed for decades into a 20,000-square-foot storage space in New York that few Americans knew to visit. The new Smithsonian enterprise offers 12 times that museum space, as well as an even larger state-of-the-art preservation center in suburban Maryland. Even then, the collection will have to be rotated across time like a galaxy to be fully sampled here and in its remaining Manhattan outpost, an already-open Customs House museum.

Quite poetically, what Heye collected as artifacts of a fading culture are about to be displayed instead as evidence of tribal resilience across 10,000 years in the Western Hemisphere. There now are about two million Indians in the United States, an eightfold rebound from the low point of tribal decimation after the Indian wars.

Indian leaders see the museum as an opportunity for what one termed "a cleansing and a blessing at the same time" -- a mix of honest history, resurgent pride and a sense of discovery that invites reconciliation. It has inspired tribal chiefs across America intent on tracking down and trying to reclaim other holy objects and human remains purloined in past "scientific" sweeps when "civilization regulations" were part of the federal dictate to force assimilation on the reservation tribes.

With more than five million visitors a year expected, the museum's spirit is decidedly more informational than confrontational. It aims to exude pride devoid of militancy. And it's a hospitable pride -- visitors will be able to sample five regional cuisines at the Mitsitam ("let's eat") Cafe there.

Featured tribes will hold court for tourists in a 100-foot-high "Potomac space," a circular, giant, lodgelike interior topped by a copper dome. The museum is oriented to Indian cosmology, with windows designed to track the sun's course across interior walls. Décor runs from wampum cabinet detailing to "grandfather rocks," prehistoric markers imported from the far ends of the hemisphere to display sacred tribal reference points.

Federal marshals were riding shotgun as the final truckload of artifacts arrived March 16 from Interstate 95: a kayak, a birch-bark canoe, a tule reed boat and a wooden canoe. They represented vessels from the hemisphere's four tribal corners. A welcoming prayer was offered by Emil Her Many Horses, a museum staff member. The Heye treasure, purchased and snatched so providentially from near and far, had finished its transfer intact back to the tribes' care. The museum opens for the autumnal equinox, with tens of thousands of Indians expected to march and dance, sing and pray at their new showcase status in America.


Informant: NHNE

28
Mrz
2004

NASA’s Improved Web-Resource on the World’s Changing Climate

March 1, 2004

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NasaNews/2004/2004030116590.html

Students, scientists, teachers, reporters and the scientifically curious can locate any kind of Earth science data much easier and quicker than ever before, using NASA’s Global Change Master Directory (GCMD). The redesigned website, a directory of Earth science data and services is being re-launched on March 1st to provide easier access to data and services.

Internet users can access the directory at http://globalchange.nasa.gov or http://gcmd.nasa.gov. The re-launched website is easier to navigate, with 9 tabs running atop the home page, including: Home, Data Sets; Data Services; Portals; Authoring; What’s New; Community; Calendar; and Links.

The GCMD, updated daily, provides Earth science data sets and services relevant to global change research. The GCMD’s 13 data set topics, found under the “Data Sets” tab, provide summaries of the data sets and specific information such as data over time and location, a citation for the creator of the database, and direct links to data and services.

Available dataset topics range from tiny airborne particles (aerosols) to the continental-sized ozone hole to global sea surface temperatures. The GCMD topics include: Agriculture, Atmosphere, Biosphere, Climate Indicators, Human Dimensions, Hydrosphere, Land Surface, Oceans, Paleoclimate, Snow and Ice, Solid Earth, Spectral/Engineering and Sun-Earth Interactions.

Users can search over 15,000 data sets and services and link to more than over 76,000 resources within the descriptions The individual data set descriptions were contributed by more than 1,300 data centers, government agencies, universities, research institutions, and private researchers around the world.

For scientists and others who want to add or modify GCMD datasets, they can do so under the “Authoring” tab by using the new “docBUILDER” web-based tools. Under the “Data Services” tab are available services from analysis and visualization tools to education and environmental advisories.

The “Portals” tab is the most important to specific groups of data users. “Perhaps the greatest contribution of the GCMD to the public has been the ability to create customized subsets of the directory that can be displayed, in turn, by special interest groups,” said Lola Olsen, Directory Project Manager at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. “These groups save major development and maintenance costs by re-using the directory capabilities.” For example, member countries of the Joint Committee on Antarctic Data Management (JCADM) contribute directory entries using the GCMD tools and may then, in turn, host individual, customized subsets of the database through “portals” through which they can display their own contribution.

Reporters and others interested in upcoming recent climate change conferences can find up to 1,000 entries under the “Calendar” tab. Under the “What’s New” tab, there are new Earth science and climate change research stories and the latest GCMD data set descriptions.

Students and teachers will also benefit from the “Learning Center” that can be found under the “Community” tab. Clicking on “FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions” at the bottom of the homepage, one can see answers to questions such as “Where can I find information about the ozone hole and ozone depletion?”† Finally, the “Links” tab acts as a web-based search engine for easy access to over 2,500 Earth science web resources.

For those who use the directory often, there is also a search box icon that permits direct access to the directory through a simple download to a user’s website. Users can also subscribe to an email notification on postings of new datasets for “Earth Science Topics” and “Geographic Locations” by clicking on “Subscribe” on the left tool bar.

The directory content is shared and available as part of NASA’s contribution to the Committee on Earth Observation Satellites’ (CEOS) International Directory Network (IDN). The content is also made available to the National Spatial Data Infrastructure’s (NSDI) Federal Geographic Data Committee’s (FDGC) Clearinghouse.

Questions can be directed to Lola Olsen, GCMD Project Manager, Code 902, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 20771 Phone: 301-614-5361 E-mail: olsen@gcmd.nasa.gov

To access the Global Change Master Directory, please visit on the Internet:
http://globalchange.nasa.gov or http://gcmd.nasa.gov

For more information, please visit on the Internet: http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/2004/ 0301gcmd.html


Contacts:
Rob Gutro
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Phone: 301/285-4044


Informant: NHNE

Canada Waging War on Climate Change

By Dennis Bueckert
Canadian Press
Saturday, March 27, 2004

http://tinyurl.com/27lfk

OTTAWA (CP) - The federal government has issued a national call to battle, a battle in which no sacrifice is too small.

It will not be fought on the beaches, but in the kitchens and laundry rooms of the nation; not in the air, but in the attics.

Under the One-Tonne Challenge program, officially launched Friday, Canadians are being urged to take on the enemy of climate change one light bulb at a time.

Ottawa wants everyone to cut by 20 per cent the greenhouse gas emissions caused by their daily activities. That would mean a one tonne reduction per capita.

"Each one of us, every time we go shopping, every time we turn on the lights, we are undoubtedly contributing to the climate-change gases in the atmosphere," Environment Minister David Anderson told a news conference.

If each household replaced a single conventional light with a fluorescent bulb, said Anderson, the country would save $73 million a year in energy costs.

"And we would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by almost 400,000 tonnes which is the same as taking 60,000 cars off the road."

Environmentalists welcome the effort, but say it would help if Ottawa provided incentives for doing the right thing.

Currently, for example, Ontario and British Columbia provide rebates for buying fuel-efficient cars, but the federal government does not.

Some provinces provide rebates for the purchase of energy-efficient appliances, but Ottawa does not.

The David Suzuki Foundation says that voluntary actions by individuals can have only limited impact on national energy consumption patterns.

"It's going to take a lot more than turning down our thermostats to solve the problem of climate change," said the foundation's Morag Carter.

"What the federal government really needs to do is make deep emission cuts and that means targeted regulations for large industry, transportation and the oil and gas sector."

Matthew Bramley of the Pembina Institute said Canada's total greenhouse emissions in 2002 were 720 megatonnes, or 23 tonnes per capita. Out of those 23 tonnes, five tonnes are directly attributable personal activities, he said.

"It's entirely appropriate to have a program focused on those five tonnes, and that's what the One-Tonne Challenge is about, but of course we absolutely have to have some tough policies to address the other 18 tonnes."

The federal government is working on a plan to curb emissions by large emitters, and is negotiating with automakers to improve the fuel efficiency of their vehicles.

Environment Canada http://www.ec.gc.ca/envhome.html has posted other tips on the its website, covering everything from good car maintenance to environmentally friendly gardening.


Informant: NHNE

Unser Geld – ein Schneeballsystem mit Verfallsdatum

Kernthema dieser Zeitschrift ist die Basis unserer Wirtschaft: das Geld – damit es in Zukunft nicht weiter heißt “Geld regiert die Welt”. Doch unser heutiges Geldsystem ist zum Scheitern verurteilt und birgt somit Gefahren für das friedliche Zusammenleben der Menschen. Kaum bekannt ist, dass unser Finanzwesen ein explosives System mit Verfallsdatum darstellt. Auch die Vermögen werden dabei langfristig entwertet.

Wussten Sie, dass beispielsweise die Verschuldung überall auf der Welt viel schneller zunimmt als das Bruttosozialprodukt, die Wertschöpfung? Ein typisches Schneeballsystem. Logische Folge davon ist, dass schon bald die Zinslasten für den Schuldenberg nicht mehr bezahlt werden können und es zu einer schweren Krise kommen muss – ein System mit Verfallsdatum. Auch “Sparen” hilft hier nicht weiter, weil eine Unterbrechung der Kreditaufnahme unmittelbar eine Depression zur Folge hätte.

Ein Crash droht und gefährdet die Zukunft

Die Welt befindet sich im heutigen Wirtschaftsystem in einem Teufelskreis aus Börsenkrach, Bankenkrach, Wirtschaftszusammenbruch und Krieg, der solange andauern wird, wie man nicht aus der Geschichte lernt und den Ursachen nachgeht.

Mit diesem explosiven Zinssystem stehen uns mit Sicherheit turbulente Zeiten bevor. Immer schneller dürften sich die Ereignisse überschlagen, immer mehr werden die Verantwortlichen wahrscheinlich die Kontrolle verlieren. Was uns zur Zeit droht, ist eine Deflation mit sozialen Erschütterungen. Doch könnte die Welt auch ohne einen Crash durch eine stabile Währung zu einer friedlicheren und gerechteren Zukunft finden. Leider sind diese Lösungen noch relativ unbekannt.

Quelle: http://www.humanwirtschaft.org/

Informant: Henner Ritter

Manipulation of Human Nervous System by Technical Means

"In the past the individual could face risks and pressures with preservation of his own identity. His body could be tortured, his thoughts and desires could be challenged by bribes, by emotions, and by public opinion, and his behavior could be influenced by environmental circumstances, but he allways had the privilige of deciding his own fate, of dying for an ideal without changing his mind…New neurological technology, however, has a refined efficiency. The individual is defenseless against dicrect manipulation of the brain…" (Jose Delgado, 1969, neurophysiologist at the Yale University)

"Neuroscience is being increasingly recognized as posing potential threat to human rights".

(from the article on the annual public meeting of the French National Bioethics Committee in magazine Nature, volume 391, January 22, 1998)

On January 1999 the European Parliament passed a resolution where it (in paragraph 27) calls "for an international convention introducing a global ban on all developments and deployments of weapons which might enable any form of manipulation of human beings".

(http://www.europarl.eu.int/home/default_en.htm?redirected=1 click on Plenary sessions, srcoll down to Reports by A4… number - click, choose 1999 and fill in 005 to A4). It is our conviction that this ban can not be implemented without the global pressure of the informed general public on the governmnets. Our major objective is to get across to the general public the real threat which those weapons represent for human rights and democracy and to apply pressure on the governments and parliaments around the world to enact legislature which would prohibit the use of those devices to both government and private organizations as well as individuals.

See further under:
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Campus/2289/webpage.htm

Treibhausgas auf Rekordniveau

NACH DEM NUN DER WIRTSCHAFTSMINISTER MIT BREITEN RÜCKHALT DIE ERSTEN ÖKOLOGISCHEN SCHRITTE WIEDER RÜCKGÄNGIG MACHEN MÖCHTE, SOLLTE UNS BEWUST WERDEN, DASS ES IMMER VORREITER GEBEN MUSS, UM ZU ZEIGEN, DASS EINE ANDERE WELT UND WIRTSCHAFTSWEISE MACHBAR IST!

WIR SOLLTEN DIESE ROLLE WEITER AUSBAUEN!

LASST DIE UMWELTVERSCHMUTZUNG NICHT FÜR DEN PROFIT STEIGEN, UNSERE KINDER WOLLEN AUCH NOCH LUFT ZUM ATMEN HABEN!

ARBEITSLOSIGKEIT HAT ANDERE GRÜNDE!

AUCH DIE OZONSCHICHT IST GEFÄHRDETER ALS LANGE ANGENOMMEN, DIE KLIMAERWÄRMUNG UND DIE DAMIT VERBUNDEN AUSKÜHLUNG IN GEWISSEN ATMOSPHÄRISCHEN SCHICHTEN BAUT UNSER STRAHLENSCHUTZSCHILD VERSTÄRK AB, SO DASS ZUKÜNFTIG NOCH MEHR ENERGIEREICHE STRAHLUNG BIS AUF DIE ERDOBERFLÄCHE STRAHLT.

MACHT JA NIX, ODER?

DAS MAGNETFELD NIMMT AUCH AB, EVTL. AUFGRUND EINER POLWANDERUNG UND SOMIT FÄLLT DANN AUCH DER MAGNETISCHE SCHUTZSCHILD AUS....

ALSO, LASST UNS ÖL VERBRENNEN, LASST UNS UNSER GRAB SCHAUFELN, DIE NATUR ÜBERLEBT´S UND SIE BRAUCHT UNS NICHT!

BERND SCHREINER


27.03.2004 - Klima und Wetter
Der Anteil von Kohlendioxid in der Atmosphäre ist weiter gestiegen.
Link: http://www.natur.de/sixcms/detail.php?id=156352

Treibhausgas auf Rekordniveau
Der Anteil von Kohlendioxid in der Atmosphäre ist weiter gestiegen.

Während Wirtschaftsminister Clement noch gegen den Emmissionshandel mauert, melden amerikanische Forscher, dass die Kohlendioxid-Werte in der Erdatmosphäre auf ein Rekordniveau angestiegen sind. Das Wissenschaftsmagazin New Scientist berichtet über die neuen Daten der US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA. Die Zahlen bestätigen, dass der CO2-Anteil im Jahr 2003 auf 376 ppm gestiegen ist. Vor 50 Jahren lagen sie noch bei 315 ppm.

Die Daten stammen vom NOAA-Observatorium in Hawaii. Der Wert des Kohlendioxids ist demnach von 2002 auf 2003 um 2,5 ppm gestiegen. Dabei handelt es sich nicht um die größte jährliche Steigerungsrate. "Aber das große Bild zeigt, dass die CO2-Werte eben permanent nach oben gehen", so Russell Schnell von NOAA. Die Klimaforscher vermuten einen Zusammenhang zwischen den Werten und der rasanten Entwicklung in China und Indien.

http://www.cmdl.noaa.gov


Viele Grüße aus Westhausen!

Bernd Schreiner



Hallo Herr Schreiner!

Sie liegen falsch. Zu Zeiten höchster CO²Emmissionen in den 50ger, 60ger und 70er Jahren gab es kein Waldsterben.

Schwefeldioxid ist ein ausgezeichneter Dünger, ohne Schwefel produzieren die Bauern so gut wie nichts.

Befragen Sie bitte hierzu einen guten Förster oder den Pflanzenphysiologen und Biologen Peter Augustin.

Richten Sie Ihre Aufmerksamkeit auf die giftige Platinoxidationskatalyse der 3-Wege-Kats und auf die Mikrowellen, Kunstdünger und synthetische Bakterien in allen Kläranlagen.

Größte Fruchtbarkeit findet man immer in der Nähe von Vulkanen, die immense Mengen an CO², Schwefel etc. produzieren..

Düngen Sie Ihren Garten mit Asche aus Kohlekraftwerken, die keinen Müll verbrennen und Sie werden ein grünes Wunder erleben. Ähnliches gilt für den Einsatz von EX1 Keimen von Prof. Higa.

Wir sollten uns nicht weiter veralbern lassen.


Beste Grüße

Gerd Zesar
logo

Omega-News

User Status

Du bist nicht angemeldet.

Suche

 

Archiv

März 2026
Mo
Di
Mi
Do
Fr
Sa
So
 
 
 
 
 
 
 1 
 2 
 3 
 4 
 5 
 6 
 7 
 8 
 9 
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Aktuelle Beiträge

Wenn das Telefon krank...
http://groups.google.com/g roup/mobilfunk_newsletter/ t/6f73cb93cafc5207   htt p://omega.twoday.net/searc h?q=elektromagnetische+Str ahlen http://omega.twoday. net/search?q=Strahlenschut z https://omega.twoday.net/ search?q=elektrosensibel h ttp://omega.twoday.net/sea rch?q=Funkloch https://omeg a.twoday.net/search?q=Alzh eimer http://freepage.twod ay.net/search?q=Alzheimer https://omega.twoday.net/se arch?q=Joachim+Mutter
Starmail - 8. Apr, 08:39
Familie Lange aus Bonn...
http://twitter.com/WILABon n/status/97313783480574361 6
Starmail - 15. Mär, 14:10
Dänische Studie findet...
https://omega.twoday.net/st ories/3035537/ -------- HLV...
Starmail - 12. Mär, 22:48
Schwere Menschenrechtsverletzungen ...
Bitte schenken Sie uns Beachtung: Interessengemeinschaft...
Starmail - 12. Mär, 22:01
Effects of cellular phone...
http://www.buergerwelle.de /pdf/effects_of_cellular_p hone_emissions_on_sperm_mo tility_in_rats.htm [...
Starmail - 27. Nov, 11:08

Status

Online seit 8054 Tagen
Zuletzt aktualisiert: 8. Apr, 08:39

Credits