Saturday, 24 November 2012

9 more Iraq, Afghan war veterans joining Congress

FILE This Nov. 6, 2012 file photo shows Iraq war veterans Rep.-elect Tulsi Gabbard in Honolulu. Veterans groups say the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans in Congress is welcome because it comes at a time when the overall number of veterans in Congress is on a steep and steady decline. In the mid-1970s, the vast majority of lawmakers tended to be veterans. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia, File)

FILE This Nov. 6, 2012 file photo shows Iraq war veterans Rep.-elect Tulsi Gabbard in Honolulu. Veterans groups say the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans in Congress is welcome because it comes at a time when the overall number of veterans in Congress is on a steep and steady decline. In the mid-1970s, the vast majority of lawmakers tended to be veterans. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia, File)

FILE - This Nov. 15, 2012 file photo shows Iraq war veteran, Rep.-elect Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., who lost both legs in combat before turning to politics, arriving for a group photo on the East steps of the Capitol in Washington. Veterans groups say the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans in Congress is welcome because it comes at a time when the overall number of veterans in Congress is on a steep and steady decline. In the mid-1970s, the vast majority of lawmakers tended to be veterans. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

(AP) ? As Tammy Duckworth sees it, her path to Congress began when she awoke in the fall of 2004 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. She was missing both of her legs and faced the prospect of losing her right arm.

Months of agonizing therapy lay ahead. As the highest-ranking double amputee in the ward, Maj. Duckworth became the go-to person for soldiers complaining of substandard care and bureaucratic ambivalence.

Soon, she was pleading their cases to federal lawmakers, including her state's two U.S. senators at the time ? Democrats Dick Durbin and Barack Obama of Illinois. Obama arranged for her to testify at congressional hearings. Durbin encouraged her to run for office.

She lost her first election, but six years later gave it another try and now is one of nine veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars who will serve in next year's freshman class in the of House of Representatives.

Veterans' groups say the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is welcome because it comes at a time when the overall number of veterans in Congress is on a steep and steady decline. In the mid-1970s, the vast majority of lawmakers tended to be veterans.

For example, the 95th Congress, which served in 1977-78, had more than 400 veterans among its 535 members, according to the American Legion. The number of veterans next year in Congress will come to just more than 100. Most served during the Vietnam War era. In all, 16 served in Iraq or Afghanistan, not all in a combat role.

"We're losing about a half a million veterans a year in this country," said Tom Tarantino, chief policy officer at Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans for America. "We are not going to be in a world where a significant plurality of people spent some time in the military, so to have 16 men and women who fought in this current Congress is incredibly significant."

Tarantino said he recognizes that the 16 Iraq and Afghanistan vets have wide-ranging political views. But at the end of the day, he said, their shared experiences make it more likely they'll put political differences aside on issues like high unemployment and suicide rates among returning veterans, or in ensuring that veterans get a quality education through the post-9/11 GI bill.

Their election victories also provide a sense of assurance to veterans.

"The biggest fear we have as veterans is that the America people are going to forget us," Tarantino said. "When you have an 11-year sustained war, the fight doesn't end when you pull out."

Duckworth carries the highest profile of the incoming vets. She was co-piloting a Black Hawk helicopter in Iraq when a rocket-propelled grenade landed in her lap, ripping off one leg and crushing the other. At Walter Reed, she worried about what life as a double amputee had in store. But during her recovery, she found a new mission ? taking care of those she describes as her military brothers and sisters. That mission led her to a job as an assistant secretary at the Department of Veterans Affairs during Obama's first term.

"Had I not been in combat, my life would have never taken this path. You take the path that comes in front of you," Duckworth said from a wheelchair last week as she and her fellow freshmen went through orientation at the Capitol. "For me, I try to live every day honoring the men who carried me out of that field because they could have left me behind, and they didn't."

Duckworth is one of two freshmen Democrats who served in Iraq or Afghanistan. The other is Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who served near Baghdad for a year and was a medical operations specialist. Gabbard said she hopes the two of them can be a voice for female veterans and the unique challenges they face.

About 8 percent of veterans are women. They tend to be younger on average. Nearly one in five seen by the Department of Veterans Affairs responds yes when screened for military sexual trauma.

Seven Republicans served in Iraq or Afghanistan. Most had backing from tea party supporters who share their views that the size and scope of the federal government should be curtailed.

?Ron DeSantis of Florida was a judge advocate officer in the Navy who deployed to Iraq as a legal adviser during the 2007 troop surge.

?Brad Wenstrup of Ohio was as a combat surgeon in Iraq.

?Kerry Bentivolio of Michigan served in an administrative capacity with an artillery unit in Iraq and retired after suffering a neck injury. He also served as an infantry rifleman in Vietnam.

?Jim Bridenstine of Oklahoma was a combat pilot in Iraq and Afghanistan.

?Scott Perry of Pennsylvania commanded an aviation battalion in Iraq in 2009 and 2010.

?Doug Collins of Georgia was a chaplain in Iraq.

?Tom Cotton of Arkansas, a Harvard Law School graduate, was an infantry platoon leader in Iraq and then was on a reconstruction team in Afghanistan. In between, he was a platoon leader at Arlington National Cemetery.

Cotton said the reason he ran for Congress is the same one that led him to enter the Army after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"I felt we had been attacked for who we are ? the home of freedom," Cotton said. "And I worry now our liberty is threatened at home by the debt crisis we face, which in the long term will mean less prosperity and less opportunity, and therefore less liberty."

Cotton said he could easily see himself working with Duckworth and Gabbard on veteran's issues. "They've carried a heavy load and we owe them a great debt," he said.

At the same time, it's clear the freshmen veterans have clear differences of opinion over policy matters. For example, Gabbard is a strong critic of the war in Afghanistan. She says the United States needs to get out as quickly and safely as possible. Cotton opposes setting timetables for withdrawal.

"We're trying to win a counter-insurgency war where we can put a friendly, allied, stable government in place," Cotton said. "It's certainly been a long and somewhat winding road, but on the whole, America and our interests in the world are much better off for having waged the war in Afghanistan."

There also will be differences over spending priorities. Cotton is reluctant to trim spending on defense as a way to deal with the deficit.

Duckworth said certain programs need close examination, particularly in the area of government contracts. She said she "can actually stand up and talk about defense spending in a way that will be realistic without being attacked for lack of patriotism or not being strong on defense."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-11-23-Congress-Veterans/id-4a41c7c1bf98491fb6abbf378ae29a48

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Debt Management Ideas ? Where to Find Affordable Debt - Bnr.Co

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Source: http://www.bnr.co/finance-2/credit-tips/debt-management-ideas-where-to-find-affordable-debt-management-applications/

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How cancer feeds on sugar (and other big reasons to avoid refined ...

(NaturalNews) Not only is sugar the primary source of excess calories in the United States, but the latest research also shows that cancer cells lap up high-fructose corn syrup, adding yet another reason to avoid it.

A couple of years ago, researchers from the University of California-Los Angeles found that pancreatic tumor cells use fructose to divide and reproduce, debunking earlier assumptions that all sugars were the same.

Tumor cells that were fed glucose and fructose used those sugars in two different ways, the research team said.

'Major significance for cancer patients'

Their findings, which were published in the journal Cancer Research, could help explain earlier studies that have linked ingestion of fructose with pancreatic cancer, one of the deadliest forms of the disease.

"These findings show that cancer cells can readily metabolize fructose to increase proliferation," Dr. Anthony Heaney of UCLA's Jonsson Cancer Center and colleagues wrote in 2010.

"They have major significance for cancer patients given dietary refined fructose consumption, and indicate that efforts to reduce refined fructose intake or inhibit fructose-mediated actions may disrupt cancer growth," he said.

Americans, much more than people in most other industrialized nations, consume an incredible amount of fructose, mainly high fructose corn syrup, which is a mix of fructose and glucose used largely in sodas, bread and a host of other processed foods.

Incredibly, there is still no consensus among politicians, industry experts and some healthcare specialists over whether high fructose corn syrup and other sugary ingredients increase the nation's collective belt line (though Natural News readers and most reasonable people who don't grow corn for a living already know the answer to that "debate"). That's likely why there hasn't been more public education about the consequences of consuming fructose-heavy, processed foods.

Tumor cells thrive on all sugars

That said, some groups know the truth and have tried to speak it loudly. The American Heart Association, for example, says too much sugar of any kind will not only bust your belt but increase your risk of heart disease and stroke.

And a number of states, including New York and California, have considered levying a tax on sugary sodas to help pay for patients suffering from obesity-related diseases and who are covered under government health insurance programs. But these taxes have been successfully opposed, for the most part, with the help of millions of dollars in lobbying money from interest groups who say sugar is sugar.

Heaney's team found otherwise, Reuters reported. During trials, they grew pancreatic cancer cells and fed them both glucose and fructose.

The tumor cells thrived on both kinds of sugars but proliferated with fructose.

"Importantly, fructose and glucose metabolism are quite different," the team wrote.

"I think this paper has a lot of public health implications. Hopefully, at the federal level there will be some effort to step back on the amount of high fructose corn syrup in our diets," Heaney said in a statement.

Consumption of high fructose grew rapidly in the U.S. - by 1,000 percent - between 1970 and 1990, about the time the obesity epidemic began in earnest.

History of disease linked to sugary diets

High fructose corn syrup has also been linked to other medical conditions and diseases:

-- A diet high in corn syrup causes the body to produce excess uric acid, which worsens gout - a condition caused by high levels of uric acid - according to a study published in the March 2012 Journal of Nutrition.

-- Researchers at the Duke University in North Carolina said high fructose consumption can worsen non-alcoholic fatty liver disease by "depleting their store of critically important molecules called ATP, which provide liver cells (and other body cells) energy for important cellular processes, including metabolism," Science Daily reported.

-- A study published in the Journal of Nephrology found that ingestion of "dietary fructose" worsens kidney disease by inhibiting intestinal calcium absorption and inducing vitamin D deficiency.

Sources:

http://www.reuters.com

http://www.greenmedinfo.com

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/05/120502112705.htm

http://jasn.asnjournals.org/content/21/2/261.long

Have comments on this article? Post them here:

?people have commented on this article.

Source: http://www.naturalnews.com/038071_cancer_sugar_sweets.html

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Friday, 23 November 2012

Congo fires army chief after rebel seizure of Goma

Congolese cross the deserted market as they flee after Congolese soldiers and rebel fighters battled for hours over the eastern Congolese town of Sake, 27 kilometers (17 miles) west of Goma, Thursday Nov. 22, 2012. Thousands fled the M23 controlled town as the militants seeking to overthrow the government vowed to push forward despite mounting international pressure. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Congolese cross the deserted market as they flee after Congolese soldiers and rebel fighters battled for hours over the eastern Congolese town of Sake, 27 kilometers (17 miles) west of Goma, Thursday Nov. 22, 2012. Thousands fled the M23 controlled town as the militants seeking to overthrow the government vowed to push forward despite mounting international pressure. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Congolese flee after Congolese soldiers and rebel fighters battled for hours over the eastern Congolese town of Sake, 27 kilometers (17 miles) west of Goma, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. Thousands fled the M23 controlled town as the militants seeking to overthrow the government vowed to push forward despite mounting international pressure. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Congolese M23 rebel soldiers are seen on the road to Rushuru near Buhumba some 25 kilometers (16 miles) north of Goma, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. Rebel spokesman Lt. Col. Vianney Kazarama vowed Thursday that the fighters would press forward toward seizing the strategic eastern town of Bukavu, which would mark the biggest gain in rebel territory in nearly a decade if it were to fall. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

The body of a Congolese army soldier is seen in a ditch on the road to Rushuru in Buhumba some 25 kilometers (16 miles) north of Goma, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. M23 Rebel spokesman Lt. Col. Vianney Kazarama vowed Thursday that the fighters would press forward toward seizing the strategic eastern town of Bukavu, which would mark the biggest gain in rebel territory in nearly a decade if it were to fall. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Congolese women run after Congolese soldiers and rebel fighters battled for hours over the eastern Congolese town of Sake , 27 kilometers (17 miles) west of Goma, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. The woman in orange only identified as Mamou, said she lost her husband to a fatal wound to the head from incoming mortar round. Thousands fled the M23 controlled town as the militants seeking to overthrow the government vowed to push forward despite mounting international pressure. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

(AP) ? Congo's president has suspended the chief of staff of its army, following the publication of a United Nations Group of Experts report which alleges that Gen. Gabriel Amisi has overseen a criminal network selling arms to rebels in the country's troubled east.

The firing of the general comes after the Congolese military was handed a humiliating defeat this week, when an eight-month-old rebel group seized the major eastern city of Goma, and then pushed onwards to the town of Sake which they took after a four-hour firefight.

On Friday, platoons of rebels were making their way across the hills from Sake to the next major town of Minova, where the Congolese army was believed to be regrouping.

Tens of thousands of civilians could be seen fleeing along the road to Goma, carrying mattresses and cooking pots on their heads, and babies on their backs. On Friday Sake was nearly deserted. A lone father returned to his empty house. He had fled on Thursday when the shooting erupted, but lost track of his four children in the scramble to get out of town. The youngest are just 2 and 4 years old, he said.

"We heard shots from the hills," said Timothe Mashamba. "We fled, but now I have returned. I lost my four children when we fled and haven't found them. I am waiting for them here. I can't leave. They won't know where to find me."

Congo's troubled east has been plagued by decades of violence, and the latest rebellion is a reincarnation of a previous conflict. The rebel group that took Goma dubs itself the M23, a reference to the March 23, 2009 peace deal that paved the way for fighters from a now-defunct rebel group to join the army. Charging that the peace accord was not implemented, soldiers defected from the Congo army in April to form the M23. Both the M23 and the previous rebel group, known as the CNDP, are widely believed to be backed by neighboring Rwanda, which has fought two wars against its much-larger neighbor.

Numerous reports by the United Nations Group of Experts have shown the extent of Rwandan infiltration in the rebel groups based in Congo, as well as in Congo's armed forces, but it wasn't until the release of the most recent findings that Congo took decisive action.

A statement released by the Office of Congo's' President Joseph Kabila said that the U.N. report published on Nov. 21 made clear that Amisi's behavior was contrary to the rules of military behavior. "The President of the Republic has decided to suspend him immediately of all his functions, while an investigation is ongoing," the statement said.

___

Associated Press writer Saleh Mwanamilongo in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-23-Congo-Fighting/id-4b34f6af32ab475bac5cbf0931880c06

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Cape Tattoo Expo 2012 | Ycladmag - A Pop Culture Magazine

Posted by By Editor at 22 November, at 09 : 49 AM Print

Cape Tattoo Expo 2012

Now going into its fifth year, the Cape Tattoo Expo has evolved into the most important lifestyle festival of its kind on the African continent. With a greater range of top international tattoo artists attending and a very exciting arts and concert event schedule, next year`s Cape Tattoo Expo promises to be the best one yet.

The 2013 festival will be held at the iconic Cape Town City Hall. Event organizers Manuela and Allan Gray are thrilled with the new venue: ?We are very excited. The event has grown significantly over the past few years and City Hall is the perfect space for the size and vibe of the expo. For the first time we can host all of the related events: the expo, art exhibition and concerts under one roof.?

About the Cape Tattoo Expo:

It was back in 2009 that renowned tattoo artist Manuela Gray realised a dream of putting together an international tattoo convention on South African soil.

Held at the CTICC, the inaugural event was attended by more than 75 artists, amongst them some of the brightest stars in international skin ink. For the 5 500 members of the public who attended the first event it was a clear sign that tattoos and tattoo culture had outgrown the stigma of being a ?fringe? or ?backstreet? art form and found its place in mainstream society.

Over the following four years, the event attracted scores more top international artists to the Cape shores, to the point where artists from over thirty countries have attended.

In 2013, Southern Ink Xposure will again bring the best in global tattoo culture and lifestyle. Attendees can look forward to thrilling in the artworks of big-name international convention ?regulars? such as Bob Tyrrell (US), Laura Juan (Spain), Randy Englehard (Germany), Robert Hernandez (Sp/Pol), Mark Bester (UK), as well as the very best that South Africa has to offer.

Ticket sales:

A day pass will cost R100 (which, for the first time, includes admission to expo concerts), and an all-access weekend pass R250. Tickets will be available through the Cape Tattoo Expo website and select retail outlets nationwide from 26 November 2013.

Visit www.capetattooconvention.co.za for updates about attending artists, pre-convention concerts, competitions, and info.

Also be sure to join the Southern Ink Xposure and Cape Town International Tattoo Convention facebook and Twitter groups for all the latest news about related events and artist info.

Twitter: @CapeTattExpo

Facebook link.

Events Exhibitions Cape Town, Culture, Expo, ink, lifestyle, tattoo

Source: http://ycladmag.com/entertainment/nights/cape-tattoo-expo-2012

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Thursday, 22 November 2012

The future of campaign finance: A morning-after constitutional? | The ...

IF, AS the saying goes, ?a conservative is a liberal who has been mugged?, then perhaps an advocate of stricter campaign-finance laws is a newly-elected congressman or senator who has weathered months of negative ads funded by third-party groups freed from spending limits or disclosure requirements. That, at least, is the hope of many both inside and outside Congress.

This was the first presidential election since the Supreme Court ruled nearly three years ago, in Citizens United v Federal Election Commission (FEC), that the First Amendment prohibits restrictions on campaign spending by companies, unions and independent groups. (The court had already established, 34 years earlier in Buckley v Valeo, the principle that campaign contributions, that is to say the giving of money, is a protected form of expression.) Before the Citizens United ruling, the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 had barred corporations and unions from funding ?issue ads?, which discuss a candidate?s position on an issue without directly advocating that candidate?s election or defeat. The Supreme Court struck down that ban, and in this cycle such groups, unconnected with any party or candidate, spent more than $1 billion, including more than $600m on the presidential race. Although most of that came from super-PACs, which must disclose both their donors and spending to the FEC, much of it also came from politically active non-profits, which need disclose nothing at all. The total spending exceeded $6 billion?more than in any previous election cycle.

Such spending was expected to benefit Republicans, who oppose stricter campaign-finance laws more than Democrats do. And indeed Mitt Romney received far more help from outside groups than Barack Obama did, while the four most generous individual donors?Sheldon Adelson, Harold Simmons, Bob Perry and Joe Ricketts?collectively showered Republican candidates and super PACs with over $111m?more than four times the amount Democratic candidates got from the four most generous liberal donors.

But Messrs Adelson et al ended up with little to show for all that money. Indeed, outside money generally had a bad election day: the Centre for Responsive Politics (CRP), a non-partisan group that tracks the influence of money on politics, found that the candidate with the outside-money advantage lost in seven of the ten Senate and House races that attracted the most outside spending.

Some Republicans have become worried that such a torrent of outside spending may reduce the influence of political parties. Even before the election John Cornyn, a senator from Texas who heads the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), which is charged with helping elect Republicans to the Senate, advocated ?strengthening the political parties [by] revisiting the federal fund-raising restrictions and co-ordinated limits on both parties? as a way to increase ?transparency and accountability in politics?. That may not sound like much, but this year Senate Republicans filibustered the relatively innocuous DISCLOSE Act, which would have required groups spending more than $10,000 on a campaign to disclose donors who gave more than $10,000. Mr Cornyn?s statement at least provides an opening to discuss new disclosure rules.

The Citizens United ruling does not ban such laws; it actually endorses them. It argues, very sensibly, that disclosure allows ?shareholders [to] determine whether their corporation?s political speech advances the corporation?s interest in making profits, and citizens [to] see whether elected officials are ?in the pocket of so-called moneyed interests?.? Nancy Pelosi, the House minority leader, has promised to push for passage of the DISCLOSE Act again, though with Republicans controlling the House this may be more symbolic than effective. Sherrod Brown, a senator from Ohio who survived a withering barrage of outside-funded negative ads, has suggested laws preventing government contractors and bailout-fund recipients from spending money on elections, as well as laws requiring corporations to get shareholders? permission for such spending.

Advocates of reform could also strive for stricter enforcement of the rule that super-PACs must be independent. The Citizens United ruling defines ?an independent expenditure? as ?political speech presented to the electorate that is not co-ordinated with a candidate?. Priorities USA Action?the super-PAC that backed Mr Obama?is headed by Bill Burton, Mr Obama?s former deputy press secretary. Former aides to Mr Romney ran the super-PAC backing him. Big bankrollers of the super-PACs backing Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum enjoyed access to both candidates far beyond what a small-dollar donor could have expected. Trevor Potter, a former Republican FEC commissioner, contends that the ?only entities entitled to unlimited spending are those that are wholly and truly independent of candidates?, and blames the FEC for failing to regulate properly. Five of the FEC?s six commissioners are holdovers whose terms have expired, and Mr Potter contends that a more robust FEC could do better.

Certain politicians have adopted a more extreme approach to reform, among them Jim McGovern, a liberal congressman from Massachusetts, and Tom Udall, a liberal senator from New Mexico. Both have both introduced resolutions to amend the constitution in order to overturn the Citizens United ruling, as have 11 other senators and congressmen in the past two years. But such an amendment requires a bill to pass both the House and Senate by a two-thirds majority in each, and then be approved by three-quarters of the states. Success is very rare.

Mr McGovern is a realist; he believes that ?if there are any kind of reforms, it will be in the area of disclosure.? Though the Republican leadership has opposed anything further, he also suspects that ?if you did a secret poll among Democrats and Republicans, rank-and-file members, I think overwhelmingly people would say they would love to get money out of politics.? Similarly, Mr Udall hopes that ?after this election [reform advocates] may gain some real momentum? among Republicans. He cites the same fundamental problem implied by Mr Cornyn: outside money has diluted the power of both candidates and parties in campaigns. Threaten politicians? power, and they just might bite back.

(Photo credit: AFP)

Source: http://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2012/11/future-campaign-finance

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Is Thanksgiving a big waste of turkey?

Americans love Thanksgiving, they just don't love turkey. It turns out that more than one-third of the turkey meat we buy each holiday gets thrown in the garbage. Blame it on bad planning, lack of leftover ideas or just a wealthy, slothful society.

"We love to have the big feast at holiday time," said Dana Gunder, food and agriculture scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council. "That results in a lot more extra food. People do leftovers for a day or two, but people are sick by day three. I think it's just basic math."

The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that Americans throw away 35 percent of the turkey they buy, and that does not include bones. That's compared to only 15 percent waste for chicken. What's worse, throwing away turkey isn't just bad manners or a big waste of money ($282 million), it's also bad for the environment, according to Gunder.

PHOTOS: Recipes for Cooking Invasive Species

Growing a pound of turkey meat uses 468 gallons of water and releases 12 pounds of CO2 emissions according to a report by the Environmental Working Group ? equivalent to driving your car 11 miles and taking a 94-minute shower. Gunder says that nationwide, consumers will purchase around 736 million pounds of turkey this Thanksgiving, of which about 581 million pounds will be actual meat. Unless Americans change their ways this Thanksgiving, about 204 million pounds will be tossed, along with about 1 million tons of CO2 and 95 billion gallons of water.

"We can do a lot better," said Dawn Undurraga, nutritionist and registered dietitian at the Environmental Working Group. "Especially when we have doomsday predictions about the future of food."


VIDEO: How To Make Vegetables Healthier

Undurraga noted that each American throws away 253 pounds of food each year. In other parts of the world, such as Asia and Africa, that figure is only 13 pounds per person annually. So how can we waste less and still have a Happy Thanksgiving?

"Buying smaller turkeys is a great start," Gunder said.

The National Turkey Federation has a couple of ideas on how to waste less:

NEWS: Where Does Your Food Come From?

Experts say another idea is to bring some plastic containers or Tupperware with you to a Thanksgiving meal, along with that bottle of wine or extra pumpkin pie. Sharing food with others is a great way to remember the Pilgrims who the meal is supposed to celebrate.

"There is irony here in that we are celebrating how rough it was for the Pilgrims and all of the challenges they had," Gunder said. "And here we are just tossing it."

? 2012 Discovery Channel

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49930129/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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