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Fukushima Plant Disaster Long Term Effects Still Unknown

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Fukushima Plant Disaster Long Term Effects Still Unknown

Fukushima
By MALCOLM RITTER and MARI YAMAGUCHI

FUKUSHIMA, Japan -- Even if the worst nuclear accident in 25 years leads to many people developing cancer, we may never find out.

Looking back on those early days of radiation horror, that may sound implausible.

But the ordinary rate of cancer is so high, and our understanding of the effects of radiation exposure so limited, that any increase in cases from the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster may be undetectable.

Several experts inside and outside Japan told The Associated Press that cancers caused by the radiation may be too few to show up in large population studies, like the long-term survey just getting under way in Fukushima.

That could mean thousands of cancers under the radar in a study of millions of people, or it could be virtually none. Some of the dozen experts the AP interviewed said they believe radiation doses most Japanese people have gotten fall in a "low-dose" range, where the effect on cancer remains unclear.

The cancer risk may be absent, or just too small to detect, said Dr. Fred Mettler, a radiologist who led an international study of health effects from the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

That's partly because cancer is one of the top killers of people in industrialized nations. Odds are high that if you live long enough, you will die of cancer. The average lifetime cancer risk is about 40 percent.

In any case, the 2 million residents of Fukushima Prefecture, targeted in the new, 30-year survey, probably got too little radiation to have a noticeable effect on cancer rates, said Seiji Yasumura of the state-run Fukushima Medical University. Yasumura is helping run the project.

"I think he's right," as long as authorities limit children's future exposure to the radiation, said Richard Wakeford, a visiting epidemiology professor at the Dalton Nuclear Institute at the University of Manchester in England. Wakeford, who's also editor of the Journal of Radiological Protection, said he's assuming that the encouraging data he's seen on the risk for thyroid cancer is correct.

The idea that Fukushima-related cancers may go undetected gives no comfort to Edwin Lyman, a physicist and senior scientist with the Union of Concerned Scientists, a group that advocates for nuclear safety. He said that even if cancers don't turn up in population studies, that "doesn't mean the cancers aren't there, and it doesn't mean it doesn't matter."

"I think that a prediction of thousands of cancer deaths as a result of the radiation from Fukushima is not out of line," Lyman said. But he stressed that authorities can do a lot to limit the toll by reducing future exposure to the radiation. That could mean expensive decontamination projects, large areas of condemned land and people never returning home, he said. "There's some difficult choices ahead."

Japan's Cabinet this month endorsed a plan to cut contamination levels in half within the next two years. The government recently announced it plans to study the risk from long-term exposure to the low-dose radiation level used as a trigger for evacuations.

The plant was damaged March 11 by a tsunami triggered by a magnitude-9 earthquake. Japanese authorities estimate it leaked about one-sixth as much radiation as the Chernobyl accident. It spewed radioactive materials like iodine-131, cesium-137 and 29 others contaminating the water, soil, forests and crops for miles around. A recent study suggested that emissions of cesium-137, were in fact twice what the government has estimated.

So far, no radiation-linked death or sickness has been reported in either citizens or workers who are shutting down the plant.

And a preliminary survey of 3,373 evacuees from the 10 towns closest to the plant this summer showed their estimated internal exposure doses over the next several decades would be far below levels officials deem harmful.

But while the Fukushima disaster has faded from world headlines, many Japanese remain concerned about their long-term health. And many don't trust reassurances from government scientists like Yasumura, of the Fukushima survey.

Many consumers worry about the safety of food from Fukushima and surrounding prefectures, although produce and fish found to be above government-set limits for contamination have been barred from the market. For example, mushrooms harvested in and around Fukushima are frequently found to be contaminated and barred from market. Controversy has also erupted around the government's choice of a maximum allowed level for internal radiation exposure from food.

Fukushima has distributed radiation monitors to 280,000 children at its elementary and junior high schools. Many children are allowed to play outside only two or three hours a day. Schools have removed topsoil on the playgrounds to reduce the dose, and the Education Ministry provided radiation handbooks for teachers. Thousands of children have been moved out of Fukushima since the March disasters, mainly due to radiation fears.

Many parents and concerned citizens in and around Fukushima, some even as far as Tokyo, carry Geiger counters for daily measurement of radiation levels in their neighborhoods, especially near schools and kindergartens. The devices are probably one of the most popular electronics gadgets across Japan these days. People can rent them at DVD shops or drug stores in Fukushima, while many Internet rental businesses specializing in Geiger counters also have emerged.

Citizens groups are also setting up radiation measuring centers where people can submit vegetables, milk or other foods for tests. Some people are turning to traditional Japanese diet – pickled plum, miso soup and brown rice – based on a belief that it boosts the immune system.

"I try what I believe is the best, because I don't trust the government any more," says Chieko Shiina, who has turned to that diet. The 65-year-old Fukushima farmer had to close a small Japanese-style inn due to the nuclear crisis.

She thinks leaving Fukushima would be safer but says there is nowhere else to go.

"I know we continue to be irradiated, even right at this moment. I know it would be best just to leave Fukushima," she said.

Yuka Saito, a mother of four who lives in a Fukushima neighborhood where the evacuation order was recently lifted, said she and her three youngest children spent the summer in Hokkaido to get away from the radiation. She tells her children, ages 6 to 15, to wear medical masks, long-sleeved shirts and a hat whenever they go out, and not to play outside.

She still avoids drinking tap water and keeps a daily log of her own radiation monitoring around the house, kindergarten and schools her children attend.

"We Fukushima people are exposed to radiation more than anyone else outside the prefecture, but we just have to do our best to cope," she said. "We cannot stay inside the house forever."

Japanese officials say mental health problems caused by excessive fear of radiation are prevalent and posing a bigger problem than actual risk of cancer caused by radiation.

But what kind of cancer risks do the Japanese really face?

Information on actual radiation exposures for individuals is scarce, and some experts say they can't draw any conclusions yet about risk to the population.

But Michiaki Kai, professor of environmental health at Oita University of Nursing and Health Sciences, said that based on tests he's seen on people and their exposure levels, nobody in Fukushima except for some plant workers has been exposed to harmful levels of radiation.

Radiation generally raises cancer risk in proportion to its amount. At low-dose exposures, many experts and `regulators embrace the idea that this still holds true. But other experts say direct evidence for that is lacking, and that it's not clear whether such small doses raise cancer risk at all.

"Nobody knows the answer to that question," says Mettler, an emeritus professor of radiology at the University of New Mexico and the U.S. representative to the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, or UNSCEAR. If such low doses do produce cancers, they'd be too few to be detected against the backdrop of normal cancer rates, he said.

To an individual the question may have little meaning, since it deals with the difference between no risk and small risk. For example, the general population was told to evacuate areas that would expose them to more than 20 millisieverts a year. A millisievert measures radiation dose and 20 mSv is about seven times the average dose of background radiation Americans get in a year. A child exposed to 20 mSv for a year would face a calculated risk of about 1 in 400 of getting cancer someday as a result, says David Brenner of Columbia University. So that would add 0.25 percent onto the typical lifetime cancer risk of about 40 percent, he said.

And the average dose among the 14,385 workers who worked on the plant through July was 8 mSv, according to the Japanese government. The average lifetime risk of cancer to an individual from that dose alone would be calculated at about 0.05 percent, or 1 in 2,000, Brenner said.

Brenner stresses that such calculations are uncertain because scientists know so little about the effects of such small doses of radiation.

But in assessing the Fukushima disaster's effect on populations, the low-dose question leads to another: If a lot of people are each exposed to a low dose, can you basically multiply their individual calculated risks to forecast a number of cancers in the population?

Brenner thinks so, which is why he believes some cancers might even appear in Tokyo although each resident's risk is "pretty minuscule."

But Wolfgang Weiss, who chairs the UNSCEAR radiation committee, said the committee considers it inappropriate to predict a certain number of cancer cases from a low-dose exposure, because low-dose risk isn't proven.

Nuclear accidents can cause cancer of the thyroid gland, which can absorb radioactive iodine and become cancerous. That disease is highly treatable and rarely fatal.

After the Chernobyl disaster, some 6,000 children exposed to radioactive fallout later developed thyroid cancer. Experts blame contaminated milk. But the thyroid threat was apparently reduced in Japan, where authorities closely monitored dairy radiation levels, and children are not big milk drinkers anyway.

Still, the new Fukushima survey will check the thyroids of some 360,000 young people under age 18, with follow-ups planned every five years throughout their lifetimes. It will also track women who were pregnant early in the crisis, do checkups focused on mental health and lifestyle-related illnesses for evacuees and others from around the evacuation zone, and ask residents to fill out a 12-page questionnaire to assess their radiation exposure during the first weeks of the crisis.

But the survey organizers are having trouble getting responses, partly because of address changes. As of mid-October, less than half the residents had responded to the health questionnaire.

Some residents are skeptical about the survey's objectivity because of mistrust toward the government, which repeatedly delayed disclosing key data and which revised evacuation zones and safety standards after the accident. Also, the government's nuclear safety commission recommended use of iodine tablets but none of the residents received them just before or during evacuation, when the preventive medicine would have been most effective.

Some wonder if the study is using them as human guinea pigs to examine the impact of radiation on humans.

Eisuke Matsui, a lung cancer specialist and a former associate professor at Gifu University School of Medicine, criticized the project. He said it appears to largely ignore potential radiation-induced health risks like diabetes, cataracts and heart problems that have been hinted at by some studies of Chernobyl.

"If thyroid cancer is virtually the only abnormality on which they are focusing, I must say there is a big question mark over the reliability of this survey," he said.

He also suggested sampling hair, clipped nails and fallen baby teeth to test for radioactive isotopes such as strontium that are undetectable by the survey's current approach.

"We should check as many potential problems as possible," Matsui said.

Yasumura acknowledges the main purpose of his study is "to relieve radiation fears." But Matsui says he has a problem with that.

"A health survey should be a start," Matsui says, "not a goal."

Tatsuhiko Kodama, head of the Radioisotope Center at the University of Tokyo, urged quick action to determine the cancer risks.

He said big population surveys and analysis will take so long that it would make more sense to run a careful simulation of radiation exposures and do anything possible to reduce the risks.

"Our responsibility is to tell the people now what possible risks may be to their health," he said.

Science Writer Malcolm Ritter reported from New York.

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Bank Lobbying On Track To Reach Record High This Year: Analysis

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Bank Lobbying On Track To Reach Record High This Year: Analysis

Bank Lobbying

Big banks are on track to spend a record amount lobbying lawmakers this year.

The five banks that spend the most on lobbying have boosted their lobbying outlays by 12 percent in the first three quarters of 2011, compared to the same period last year, according to an analysis by the Charlotte Observer. Commercial banks comprising the banking industry have spent close to $47 million on lobbying so far this year, compared to $42 million at this time last year, the report finds.

The report comes as lawmakers and federal agencies continue to write hundreds of rules stemming from the Dodd-Frank financial reform act passed in July 2010. The bill, which lawmakers passed in response to the 2008 financial crisis, includes provisions regulating a variety of commercial banking fees, such as overdraft and debit card charges, in addition to rules on certain types of trading and other types of financial activities.

In its entirety, Wall Street firms have already spent more than $100 million in total this year on lobbying related to Dodd-Frank, according to The New York Times, with some success: Many experts claim that the Volcker rule -- a regulation aimed at curbing proprietary trading -- is so watered down it bears little resemblance to the former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker's original proposal. A handful of Occupy Wall Street protesters recently launched "Occupy the SEC" in direct response to what they perceive as the weakening of the Volcker rule.

And bank lobbyists are fighting back. A notable financial services lobbying firm hatched a plan earlier this week to spend $850,000 on a variety of projects including "opposition research" on the occupy movement in an attempt to undermine it, according to Slate.

But banks may have more to worry about than just the Occupy movement. Cg42, a firm that consults with banks, estimates that big banks will lose $185 billion in deposits over the next year if they don't address consumer concerns. Consumers and lawmakers derided banks earlier this year for proposals to charge for once-free account services such as debit card use.

Before banks such as Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and others pulled the plug on the debit card fees, some banking industry officials defended charges, claiming they were necessary to recoup revenue lost as a result of financial reform legislation.

The fees have pushed some consumers elsewhere. More than 650,000 people opened new accounts at credit unions between September 29 -- the day BofA announced its debit card fee -- and the first week in November, according to the Credit Union National Association. That's more than the 600,000 that joined credit unions in all of 2010.

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VIDEO: Before he was famous- Obama’s 1991 ad for ‘Black History Minute’

By Rachel Rose Hartman | The Ticket



When Barack Obama gave a rousing speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, it catapulted him to political fame and secured his place as one of the country's best-known orators.



But a new viral video of the president shows he wasn't always a natural.



In a 1991 ad for TBS' "Black History Minute," the then-Harvard Law Review editor appears a little less comfortable in front of the camera than he is today, and displays his reliance on the teleprompter. You can check out the video for yourself above.



The video is drawing new national attention after it was posted to YouTube last week by user "Akaczynski1."

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Barack Obama 1991 TBS Black History Minute

A TBS Black History minute from 1991. Featuring future President Barack Obama. Follow me on Twitter at Twitter.com/Akaczynski1 for more political videos.


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US stocks drop as debt talks near collapse

The Dow Jones industrial average is down 312 points, or 2.7 percent, at 1,484 at 11 a.m. Eastern time. The Standard & Poor's 500 index is down 31, or 2.5 percent, at 1,185. The Nasdaq composite index is down 68, or 2.7 percent, at 2,504.

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US stocks drop as debt talks near collapse

DANIEL WAGNER and MATTHEW CRAFT

Traders Richard Cohen, left, and Lewis Vande-Pallen, right, work on the floor of …

Specialists James Denaro, Christopher Culhane, and Glenn Carell, left to right, work …

NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks are plunging after Congress' latest bid to resolve the federal budget gridlock appeared to fail.

The Dow Jones industrial average is down 312 points, or 2.7 percent, at 1,484 at 11 a.m. Eastern time. The Standard & Poor's 500 index is down 31, or 2.5 percent, at 1,185. The Nasdaq composite index is down 68, or 2.7 percent, at 2,504.

A 12-member bipartisan panel was assigned to cut $1.2 trillion from the federal deficit by Wednesday. The panel appeared ready to admit failure on Monday. That could lead to broad, automatic cuts from military and social spending.

Uncertainty about government spending drags on the economy because the private sector is growing so slowly. Traders also fear that Europe's debt crisis might spill over, disrupting the fragile U.S. recovery.

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Disgraced ex-Boston archbishop leaves Rome job

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Disgraced ex-Boston archbishop leaves Rome job


By NICOLE WINFIELD, Associated Press Nicole Winfield, Associated Press

VATICAN CITY – Cardinal Bernard Law, who resigned in disgrace as Boston's archbishop in 2002 after the priest sex abuse scandal exploded in the United States, has retired from his subsequent job as head of a major Roman basilica.

The Vatican said Monday that Pope Benedict XVI had accepted the 80-year-old Law's resignation as archpriest of St. Mary Major basilica and had named as Law's replacement Spanish Monsignor Santos Abril y Castello.

Law's 2004 appointment as the archpriest of one of Rome's most important basilicas had been harshly criticized by victims of priestly sex abuse, who charged that bishops who covered up for pedophile priests should be punished, not rewarded.

Law turned 80 earlier this month. While the pope could have kept him on longer — the dean of the College of Cardinals will be 84 this week, for example — Benedict decided to replace him.

The Vatican announcement made no mention of Law's resignation, though, merely noting in a perfunctory, two-line statement that Benedict had named a new archpriest for the basilica.

Law became the first and so far only U.S. bishop to resign for mishandling cases of priests who sexually abused priests.

The clergy sex abuse crisis erupted in Boston in 2002 after church records were made public showing that church officials had reports of priests molesting children, but kept the complaints secret and shuffled some priests from parish to parish rather than remove them or report them to police.

The crisis spread as similar sexual abuse complaints were uncovered in dioceses across the country. To date, U.S. dioceses have paid out nearly $3 billion in settlements to victims and other costs.

Law himself had been named in hundreds of lawsuits accusing him of failing to protect children from known child molesters. After 18 years leading the nation's fourth-largest archdiocese, Law resigned in 2002, having asked Pope John Paul II twice before receiving permission to step down.

Ten months after he left office, Law's successor, now-Cardinal Sean P. O'Malley helped broker an $85 million settlement with more than 550 victims of pedophile priests.

Law remains a member of a half-dozen important Vatican congregations, including the office that helps the pope select bishops. Such appointments are for renewable five-year terms and it's not clear when each one expires or whether he'll seek to stay on.

While in Rome, Law has been a frequent presence at all major Vatican ceremonial and diplomatic events, a lifestyle that galled many abuse victims who have long insisted that the Vatican crack down on bishops who transfer abusive priests rather than report them to police.

Law's successor at St. Mary Major — one of the four basilicas under the direct jurisdiction of the Vatican — retired earlier this year as the Vatican's ambassador to Slovenia and Macedonia.

Abril y Castello, 76, is also the No. 2 prelate who helps take care of matters dealing with a papal death and runs the Vatican until a new pontiff is elected in a conclave.

Now that he is 80, Law can no longer vote in a conclave, but he remains a cardinal.

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North Dakota Catholic Conference says 'Sunday law' benefits all people

The Mark of the Beast!!!

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North Dakota Catholic Conference says 'Sunday law' benefits all people


Bismarck, N.D., Jul 15, 2011 / 01:04 am (EWTN News)

The North Dakota Catholic Conference has responded to criticism of a law restricting Sunday hours for businesses, saying the regulation benefits the whole of society.

“The purpose of North Dakota’s Sunday closing law is not to impose times of worship. Nor is it to demand adherence to religious doctrine. The purpose of the law is to preserve the common good by ensuring that society is not overtaken by work and profit,” wrote Christopher Dodson, executive director of the North Dakota Catholic Conference, in a July 12 article.

A July 5 editorial in the Fargo-Moorhead Forum criticized “all those North Dakotans who cling to the myth that partial Sunday opening somehow honors a Sabbath day.”

“Let’s get honest: Merchants should be able to open their doors whenever they choose. North Dakotans who don’t want to shop on Sunday – morning or any other time on that day – can stay home or in church,” the editorial said. “Others will want to shop. It should be their choice, not the state’s.”

In his response, Dodson said that the newspaper’s argument showed a “misunderstanding of the law’s purpose,” and of the relationship between government, business, and local community.

“Courts upholding Sunday closing laws have recognized what the Forum does not,” Dodson explained, noting that the laws “serve a secular, not religious purpose.” He said that all people need periods of rest and free time for the sake of their families, social lives and religious activities.

“Only when communities set aside time devoted to these functions can human persons prosper and develop,” he observed.

Economic forces, Dodson noted, can become enslaving for society in the absence of any regulation. He pointed out that individuals, families and communities can experience negative consequences if they do not have common periods of rest.

“Rather than restricting individual freedom,” the conference director said, “closing laws liberate and free people from the antisocial degeneration of human work.” He noted that economic freedom can only grow in healthy societies, not those which put profits above the values of family and community.

Dodson quoted the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, which describes public authorities' duty “to ensure that, for reasons of economic productivity, citizens are not denied time for rest and divine worship.”

“Sunday closing laws are not about honoring the Sabbath day,” Dodson said. “They are about honoring people and families.”

Related news:
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SUNDAY CLOSING LAW

CHAPTER 12.1-30

SUNDAY CLOSING LAW

12.1-30-01. Business or labor on Sunday - Exemptions - Classification of offenses.

1. Except as otherwise provided in sections 12.1-30-02 and 12.1-30-03, it is a class B

misdemeanor for any person between the hours of twelve midnight and twelve noon

on Sunday to do any of the following activities:

a. Engage in or conduct business or labor for profit in the usual manner and

location.

b. Operate a place of business open to the public.

c. Authorize or direct that person's employees or agents to take action prohibited

under this section.

2. The prohibition in subsection 1 does not apply to a person who in good faith

observes a day other than Sunday as the Sabbath, if that person refrains from

engaging in or conducting business or labor for profit and closes the place of

business to the public between the hours of twelve midnight and twelve noon on the

day observed as the Sabbath.

3. The attorney general, a state's attorney, a mayor, a city manager, or a city attorney

may petition a district court, for the district where a violation is occurring, to enjoin a

violation of this section.

12.1-30-02. Items prohibited from sale or rental on Sunday. Except for items sold at

hobby shows, craft shows, fairs, exhibits, occasional rummage sales including garage sales or

other sales for which a sales tax permit is not required, and tourist attractions that derive at least

fifty percent of their annual gross sales from seasonal or tourist customers, the sale or rental of

any of the following items between the hours of twelve midnight and twelve noon on Sunday is

prohibited:

1. Clothing other than work gloves and infant supplies.

2. Clothing accessories.

3. Wearing apparel other than that sold to a transient traveler under emergency

conditions.

4. Footwear.

5. Headwear.

6. Home, business, office, or outdoor furniture.

7. Kitchenware.

8. Kitchen utensils.

9. China.

10. Home appliances.

11. Stoves.

12. Refrigerators.

Page No. 1

13. Air-conditioners.

14. Electric fans.

15. Radios.

16. Television sets.

17. Washing machines.

18. Dryers.

19. Cameras.

20. Hardware other than emergency plumbing, heating, cooling, or electrical repair or

replacement parts and equipment.

21. Tools other than manually driven hand tools.

22. Jewelry.

23. Precious or semiprecious stones.

24. Silverware.

25. Watches.

26. Clocks.

27. Luggage.

28. Motor vehicles other than the daily rental of vehicles by businesses whose sole

activity is automobile rental.

29. Musical instruments.

30. The sale of aural or video recordings, records, or tapes. Rental of these items is

permitted.

31. Toys other than those customarily sold as novelties or souvenirs.

32. Mattresses.

33. Bed coverings.

34. Household linens.

35. Floor coverings.

36. Lamps.

37. Draperies.

38. Blinds.

39. Curtains.

40. Mirrors.

Page No. 2

41. Cloth piece goods.

42. Lawnmowers.

43. Sporting or recreational goods other than those sold or rented on the premises

where sports or recreational activities are conducted.

44. Paint and building and lumber supplies.

12.1-30-03. Businesses allowed to operate on Sunday - Limitations. Subject to the

limitations of this section and section 12.1-30-02, a business specified in this section may

operate in the business's usual manner, location, and for its usual purposes. The businesses

authorized under this section to operate on Sunday include:

1. Restaurants, cafeterias, or other prepared food service organizations.

2. Hotels, motels, and other lodging facilities.

3. Hospitals and nursing homes, including the sale of giftware on the premises.

4. Dispensaries of drugs and medicines.

5. Ambulance and burial services.

6. Generation and distribution of electric power, water, steam, natural gas, oil, or other

fuel used as a necessary utility.

7. Distribution of gas, oil, and other fuels.

8. Telephone, telegraph, and messenger services.

9. Heating, refrigeration, and cooling services.

10. Railroad, bus, trolley, subway, taxi, and limousine services.

11. Water, air, and land transportation services and attendant facilities.

12. Cold storage warehouse.

13. Ice manufacturing and distribution facilities and services.

14. Minimal maintenance of equipment and machinery.

15. Plant and industrial protection services.

16. Industries where continuous processing or manufacturing is required by the very

nature of the process involved.

17. Newspaper publication and distribution.

18. Newsstands.

19. Radio and television broadcasting.

20. Motion picture, theatrical, and musical performances.

21. Motor vehicle service stations that sell motor fuel and motor oil, and that customarily

provide daily repair services or products for any of the following systems or parts of

a motor vehicle:

Page No. 3

a. Air-conditioning system.

b. Batteries.

c. Electrical system.

d. Engine cooling system.

e. Exhaust system.

f. Fuel system.

g. Tires and tubes.

h. Emergency work necessary for the safe and lawful operation of the motor

vehicle.

22. Athletic and sporting events.

23. Parks, beaches, and recreational facilities.

24. Scenic, historic, and tourist attractions.

25. Amusement centers, fairs, zoos, and museums.

26. Libraries.

27. Educational lectures, forums, and exhibits.

28. Service organizations (USO, YMCA, etc.).

29. Coin-operated laundry and drycleaning facilities.

30. Food stores operated by an owner or manager in addition to not more than six

employees working in the store at one time on a Sunday; however, the governing

body of a city or county may, by ordinance, increase the number of employees

allowed to work in a store at one time on a Sunday.

31. Bait shops for the sale of live bait and fishing tackle.

32. Floral nurseries.

33. Christmas tree stands.

34. Hobby shows, craft shows, fairs, and exhibits.

35. Occasional rummage sales, including garage sales or other sales for which a sales

tax permit is not required.

36. Community festivals licensed or authorized by the governing body of a city or the

board of county commissioners.

37. Premises licensed to dispense beer and alcoholic beverages within the limits

prescribed in sections 5-02-05 and 5-02-05.1.

38. Credit approval services, lodging and travel reservation services, and,

notwithstanding section 12.1-30-02, telemarketing of goods and services.

Page No. 4

39. Bingo halls and onsite food concessions between the hours of twelve midnight and

one a.m. and within the hours permitted under section 12.1-30-01.

12.1-30-04. Retail business leases or agreements - Penalty. A retail business may

not be required to be open on Sunday as a part of a lease agreement, franchise agreement, or

any other contractual arrangement. A violation of this section is a class A misdemeanor.

Page No. 5

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U.S. Churches To Read From The Quran On Sunday

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11.06.25 - 50 U.S. Churches To Read From The Quran On Sunday


The three main pillars of the "New World Order" that the global elite want to bring about are a one world economy, a one world government and a one world religion. A lot of attention gets paid to the development of the first two pillars, but the third pillar gets very little attention.

But the truth is that a one world religion is getting closer than ever. "Interfaith" conferences and meetings are being held with increasing frequency all over the globe. Major global religious leaders are urging all of us to focus on our "shared" religious traditions.

The belief that all religions are equally valid paths to the same destination is being taught in houses of worship and at religious institutions all over the globe. This "interfaith movement" is being promoted by NGOs, "charitable foundations" and top politicians and it is being backed by big money all over the planet.


Now some U.S. churches are trying to take things to another level. On June 26th, the National Cathedral in Washington D.C. and approximately 50 other churches in 26 U.S. states will publicly read from the Quran during their Sunday worship services.


This is all part of an interfaith project being promoted by the Interfaith Alliance and Human Rights First. The theme of this Sunday is "Faith Shared: Uniting in Prayer and Understanding", and the goal is apparently to show how much Christian churches in the United States respect Islam.


The following are some of the other prominent U.S. churches that will be doing Quran readings this Sunday....


*Christ Church in New York City


*All Saints Church in Pasadena, California


*Park Hill Congregational in Denver


*Hillview United Methodist in Boise, Idaho


*First United Lutheran in San Francisco


*St. Elizabeth's Episcopal Church in Honolulu


In all, churches in 26 U.S. states will be participating.


But these Quran readings are just supposed to be the beginning of something bigger. The following is from a description of the Quran reading project on the website of Human Rights First....

At its core, this project will bring together Christian, Jewish and Muslim clergy to read from and hear from each other’s sacred texts. In doing so, they will serve as a model for respect and cooperation and create a concrete opportunity to build and strengthen working ties between and among faith communities moving forward.


The truth is that all Americans have the freedom to read the Quran whenever they want. But should Christian churches be reading from it during Sunday worship and should they be seeking to "build and strengthen working ties" with Islamic groups that are seeking to promote the spread of another religion?


Obviously, many Christian leaders are not pleased with this development. Worldview Weekend President Brannon Howse recently made the following comment regarding the reading of the Quran in U.S. churches....

They have denied the exclusivity of Jesus Christ. They have denied the inerrancy of Scripture; they've denied the inspiration of Scripture.

Sadly, this is not a new trend. The truth is that the "interfaith movement" has been building momentum for decades and some of the most prominent religious leaders in the world are involved.


For example, the following excerpt from a CNS article talks about a huge "interfaith event" hosted by the Pope when he visited Washington D.C. in 2008....

When Pope Benedict XVI comes to the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center in Washington for an early-evening interfaith meeting April 17 with Buddhists, Hindus, Jews, Muslims and representatives of other religions, space will be at a premium.


Many top U.S. Christian leaders have been very involved in the "interfaith movement" as well.


For example, Brian McLaren, one of the top leaders of the Emergent Church movement, actually celebrated Ramadan back in 2009.



Rick Warren, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, has been a guest speaker at the national conference of the Islamic Society of North America.


Some time ago, a virtual "who's who" of evangelical Christian leaders that included Rick Warren, Robert Schuller, Brian McLaren, Richard Cizik and Bill Hybels all signed a letter to the Islamic community that was entitled "Loving God And Neighbor Together". This letter made it abundantly clear that these Christians leaders consider Allah and the Christian God to be the same entity.


Let's take a quick look at a couple of quotes from the letter....

Before we “shake your hand” in responding to your letter, we ask forgiveness of the All-Merciful One


In Islam, "the All-Merciful One" is one of the key names for Allah.


So in this letter the Christian leaders were praying to Allah and were asking for his forgiveness and were acknowledging that he is God.



Here is another quote from the letter....

If we fail to make every effort to make peace and come together in harmony you correctly remind us that “our eternal souls” are at stake as well.


Very strangely, in the letter the Christian leaders claim that their "eternal souls" are at stake if they do not make every effort to "come together in harmony" with the Islamic community.


Once again, people in America are free to believe whatever they want, but Christian leaders should not be trying to develop religious ties with Islam.


The truth is that Jesus would not have wanted anything to do with this one world religion that the New World Order is trying to bring in.



In John 14:6, Jesus made the following statement.....



I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.


You would think that would be so clear that no Christian leader would ever be able to misunderstand it.


In fact, the very first two of the Ten Commandments are about how no other gods should ever be worshipped except for the one true God. In Exodus 20:3-6 it says the following....

Thou shalt have no other gods before me. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them: for I the LORD thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me; And shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my commandments.


But today everybody wants to be "politically correct".


That is especially true of religious leaders.


But this is exactly what the global elite want. They want everyone herded into one giant "global religion" that they will be able to take charge of and control.


Of course once the global religion is established, they won't have much use for the real Jesus Christ or for the Bible.


Even if you are not a Christian, you should be deeply troubled by these developments.

This article is from endoftheamericandream.com.

Read more at amazingdiscoveries.org
 

Inception of European Sunday Alliance in Brussels

Amplify’d from amazingdiscoveries.org

11.06.20 - Inception of European Sunday Alliance in Brussels


Brussels/Belgium 20 June 2011/APD - On 20 June 2011 the European Sunday Alliance was formed on the occasion of an expert conference on Sunday Protection at the seat of the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) in Brussels. The European Sunday Alliance is a network of existing national Sunday alliances, trade unions, civil society organizations and religious communities which promotes fair and balanced work conditions and the harmony of a balanced lifestyle comprising work, family and free time to strengthen social cohesion. The alliance further requests for Sundays to be work free in the new working guidelines (2003/88/EG) to be negotiated among EU member states.


According to the alliance the ‘first European Conference on the awareness of a work free Sunday’ in the European Parliament in Brussels on 24 March 2010 was the trigger for the formation of the European Sunday Alliance. The representatives of the various organizations formulated a founding charter which stresses fair, healthy, safe and dignified working conditions as well as the right on a limitation of the maximum working hours, on a daily and weekly rest period and paid annual leave.


“A work free Sunday and appropriate working hours are a well deserved right for all citizens of Europe” states the founding charter of the alliance. All employees have the right for appropriate working hours which in principle exclude “late evenings, nights, public holidays and Sundays” from regular work.


Work on Sunday harms a healthy work life balance


According to a study by Deloitte Consulting commissioned by the European Commission non-regular working hours would harm the social rhythm which would increasingly lead to stress and illness with the employees. Non sustainable working rhythms in conjunction with minimal employment were a substantial source of the increasing phenomena of the ’working poor’ in Europe.


“Sunday work would harm a healthy work life balance” according to the ‘Austrian alliance for a work free Sunday’, one of the leading founding members of the European Sunday Alliance in Brussels. A work free day during the week as a compensation would not alleviate the negative effects. People who work on Sundays or during irregular hours would do this because of financial necessity and not by choice. A common weekly day of rest would provide a common focal point for the time rhythm in state and society which would strengthen the social cohesiveness in all EU member states.


Reactions to the Inception of the European Sunday Alliance


The retired roman catholic bishop of Linz and former professor bishop for social questions at the Austrian bishops conference, Maximilian Aichern, expressed his delight to the inception of the European Sunday Alliance and made the following statement through the communications department of the Linz diocese: “A Sunday free of work is the oldest social law of the Christian-Jewish civilisation rooted in the old testament covenant (3rd of the 10 commandments). The common day of rest, the social contacts which go with it and the praising of the Lord are the most important Christian values and which are indispensible for the human dignity.”



“The fight for a work free Sunday in Europe ought to be fought on national, regional or local levels”, says Hannes Kreller, human resources expert of the catholic employee federation (KAB) in Germany. According to the KAB it is hoped, with the inception of the European Sunday Alliance, to better coordinate the activities between the various alliances as well as to increase the pressure on the EU Parliament and the EU Commission



The Jewish community as well as the Seventh-day Adventist church, an independent evangelical church does not rest on Sunday but recognises the Saturday (Sabbath) as the biblical day of rest. When approached by APD the European Jewish Congress (EJC) had no comments yet on its assessment of the inception of the European Sunday Alliance.



Pastor Raafat Kamal, director for Public Affairs and Religious Liberty of the North European Headquarters of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, in St. Albans, near London, commented on the launching of the European Sunday Alliance as follows:

We support the notion that people need a day of rest to achieve a life/work-balance to maintain the health and safety of workers. This is modelled by God in the biblical creation week where he worked for six days and rested on the seventh. At the same time, we want to be sure that those who don't have Sunday as a designated religious day of rest will be respected and tolerated. I hope that the partners in the European Sunday Alliance network who are trying to raise awareness of the value of synchronised free Sunday for European societies will appreciate the pluralistic dimensions of the European Union countries and the importance of respecting those with different religious beliefs and practices. I also trust that this advocacy campaign for protection of a work-free Sunday will not result in escalation of tension among different groups.

By APD Swiss.
Read more at amazingdiscoveries.org