Mike needed someone to accompany his elderly father on visits from the nursing home to his favorite pub. He received a slew of responses to his job posting in the local paper offering 7 pounds ($14) per hour, but finally decided on a retired doctor and military man. Mike wants to give his father “some of his old life back.” (Associated Press via MSNBC)
Help Wanted: Pub Companion for Elderly Man, $14 per Hour
The Art of Word Fasting: Today’s Word is ‘Can’t’
Just like we can choose foods that enhance our bodies, we can choose our words more carefully to create the reality we want. A new columnist on GNN-i will join us every Friday to take us on a Word Fasting program. Today’s word — chosen from our menu — is CAN’T. Welcome Jack Barakitis to the first Good News Network Friday Word Fast!
WORD FASTING is a practice in becoming the observer of every word we say and questioning their value and accuracy in describing our experiences and intentions. Once we start focusing on our words, we soon realize that our choice of words shapes our experiences and is the very seed that creates them. In this weekly column each Friday, words that no longer serve us will be honored and discarded, new words will be added to further forge our awareness and purpose in creating the life we choose.
Senate Legislation Protects Consumers From Discrimination Based on Genetic Testing
In a historic move, the Senate on Thursday unanimously passed federal legislation designed to protect consumers against discrimination based on their genetic profiles. The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act now goes to the House, which passed it by a wide margin last year.
Violinist Reunited with $4M Stradivarius Left In Back of NJ Cab
A Newark cabbie was honored yesterday by the mayor with a special medallion for reuniting a touring musician with his $4 million violin after it was mistakenly left in the back seat of a taxi.
When the Stradivari stringed instrument finally was returned to him, Philippe Quint fell to his knees and cried.
NJ.com reported, “It took 18 months for Philippe Quint to persuade a wealthy philanthropist to lend him a 1723 Antonio Stradivari violin valued at upward of $4 million. It took less than a minute for the valuable instrument to disappear after Quint left it in a Newark cab.”
(Read about the humble cabbie and his reward in this inspiring New York Times article)
Tips for Improving Gas Mileage 30% or More
“Gas prices have reached record highs again. Would you like to improve your fuel economy by 30 percent or more without buying a new car? Try slowing down — and installing a dashboard-mounted display that tells how much gas is consumed each time you push your pedal to the floor when the light turns green…” Read the story at Phileadelphia Inquirer and check out www.ecomodder.com, a site dedicated to high fuel efficiency.
Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program Provides One Billionth Liter of Clean Water
The Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program celebrated the creation of its one billionth liter of clean drinking water Tuesday at a rural clinic near Ibadan, Nigeria. Using a packet of water clarification and disinfectant developed by Procter & Gamble, a former company official, John Pepper, helped transform cloudy contaminated water into clear, clean drinking water in a matter of minutes before a crowd of local residents and Nigerian officials.
Somali Forces Rescue Hijacked Aid Ship From Pirates (Video)
Somali forces rescued a hijacked ship carrying food to this desperately poor country, freed hostages and arrested seven for pirating.
Disney Workers Wade Through Trash To Find Missing Rings
A Massachusetts wife wouldn’t speak to her husband after he accidentally threw away a cardboard dish containing her wedding rings while on vacation at Disney World. But Disney employees including executive housekeeper Drew Weaver and seven of his staff were determined to help and waded into the bags of garbage to miraculously find the rings. (story and video at WCBD News-2)
Russia Closes Down Plutonium Reactor
“Russia has shut down a weapons-grade plutonium reactor as part of a deal with the United States to reduce the risk that loose nukes would get into the hands of terrorists. The Siberian plant founded by Soviet leader Josef Stalin, was turned off on Sunday, 45 years after it was started up to create plutonium for Cold-war era bombs.” (Reuters News )
Free Canvas Bags to First 6 Who Post Comment!
[UPDATE: I want to give three more away to US or Canadian viewers, so I’ll honor six winners altogether!] In honor of Earth Day I’m going to send a FREE canvas totebag, with the Good News Network slogan/website on the front, to the first three [SIX] people to post a comment at the bottom of this blog post.
After you post the comment, you can send me your mailing address (and name) and I will send to you this great Earth-friendly bag.
Welcome to listeners from KXYL in Texas, WJBC in Illinois, and KWNA in Nevada. I was a guest on these stations today sharing my Top 10 Earth Day news!
To post a comment, you need to be registered as a member. It’s free and easy filling out a quick form, here!
Organic Methods Pay Off for Beekeeper In Midst of Colony Collapse Nationwide
Though watching so many beehives nationwide fall to colony collapse disorder, Doug Schulz still has not lost a single bee to the epidemic, probably due to his old-fashioned organic methods. His labor-intensive beekeeping practices produce premium honey in Wisconsin, and carries on the tradition of his octogenarian mentor. (Milwaukee Journal-Sentinal)
EARTH ALERT ’08: Top Ten Good News for the Earth
Happy Earth Day! Here are the top ten good news stories for the environment… Since the first Earth Day in 1970, air quality has improved dramatically, rivers are cleaner, and many endangered species have been rescued from the brink. As every first grader is taught in school, the environment rocks! Let’s look at 10 points of light in the news about our Earth.
#1) We can Breath Easier – The dramatic reduction in air pollution represents one of the greatest success stories in American government. Most Americans believe air pollution has been getting worse, but the truth is just the opposite: Air pollution levels have been dropping for decades. Since the first Earth Day, emissions from the most common air pollutants have decreased by about half, even while gross domestic product increased 195% and people increased their travel in cars by 178%. Los Angeles, for example, had nearly two hundred hazardous days every year for smog in the 1970s but now experiences less than twenty-five heavy-ozone days each year. Lead has been eliminated entirely from the air, thanks to the introduction of unleaded gasoline, while levels of carbon monoxide are down by 70%.
Europe achieved its goal of cutting pollution from coal-burning plants years ahead of schedule, reducing acid rain-causing sulphur dioxide by 65 percent since 1990. China is also surging ahead to curtail its pollution. In the last year it has increased fuel standards, closed ozone-producing checmical factories, invested in renewables, unplugged 253 coal-fired generators, and continued to spend its investment of $175 billion on environmental protection over 5 years. Rounding out the effort, thousands of citizens around the world aided in cleaning the air by planting a billion trees last year for the UN’s Billion Tree campaign.
Bionic Eye ‘Blindness Cure Hope’
“A ‘bionic eye’ may hold the key to returning sight to people left blind by a hereditary disease. Treatment is underway on first patients in the UK as part of a clinical study into the therapy.” (BBC Health News)
‘Youngest Inventor’ Patents Broom
“A boy of five is thought to be the UK’s youngest person to patent an invention after coming up with a labor-saving broom to help his father sweep leaves.” (BBC News)
Carter’s Encouraging Move for Peace in Middle East (Video)
“For some, former US president Jimmy Carter’s recent meeting with Hamas officials was a major mistake. Yet for the pragmatic few, it represents a measured step towards peace and should be taken seriously — the alternative is simply too depressing,” said an OpEd in the Gulf News on Sunday. Meanwhile, Carter said today that Hamas was open to a peace deal that recognizes Israel’s right to exist. (See the video or read text below)
Town Considers Deposit Charges for Bottles
Deposit charges that deliver cash in exchange for the return of used bottles and cans are being considered by the Minister for Waste. She has ordered a feasibility study after a call, by the group Protect Rural England, for a national offensive to clear the highways and byways of litter blight. (The UK Times Online)
Billionaire Texas Oilman Bets Big On Wind
A legendary Texas oil man is turning to wind power with a plan to spend $10 billion to build the world’s biggest wind farm. Next month 2,700 wind turbines will be dispatched to Texas eventually to “generate enough power for about 1 million homes — the equivalent of building two commercial scale nuclear power plants.” Other oil companies, too, are getting into renewable energy on a large scale…
Largest Successful Mind-Over-Matter Experiments in History
The first worldwide double-blind experiments to test the power of intention have produced extraordinary evidence that we can change the physical properties of plants and speed up their growth when we harness the power of ‘group mind’ over matter.
The studies have involved thousands of “intenders” around the world sending intention to targets under strictly scientifically controlled conditions through the Intention Experiment website and during individual gatherings around the world.
For these initial experiments, Lynne McTaggart, who has become an internationally recognized spokesperson on the science of spirituality as the author of the classic bestseller The Field, and, more recently, The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World, paired up with a team of scientists at the University of Arizona.
They decided to test whether thoughts could make seeds sprout earlier and grow faster. In each instance the Arizona scientists prepared four sets of seeds — one set of seeds, and three controls — to eliminate chance findings. Prior to each study, the lab emailed McTaggart photos of all four sets of seeds.
McTaggart was scheduled to appear before many diverse audiences in a number of countries during the summer of 2007, which afforded her numerous opportunities to test this experiment in a variety of settings. She also successfully carried out this study on the internet, inviting her readers from around the globe to send intention to one of the chosen set of seeds.
Throughout the summer of 2007, the study was also run before audiences in Sydney, Australia, Rhinebeck, New York, and Hilton, Head, South Carolina, who were instructed, in each instance, to direct their thoughts to target seeds in the Tucson, Arizona lab.
In one of the series of experiments, the intention of a group as small as 100 was powerful enough to affect the growth of the seeds, which were nearly 3000 miles away.
The greatest effect of all occurred with the final study, which was conducted among a group of experienced Healing Touch healers. In this case, the seeds sent intention grew nearly twice as large as the controls.
In an earlier study, Lynne, working with the University of Arizona team, demonstrated that group thoughts can alter a basic physical property of geranium leaves: the tiny light — called biophoton emissions — emitted from all living things.
The results of the glowing intention were so strong that they could readily be seen in digital biophoton photographs using powerful CCD cameras.
Most recently, McTaggart, partnered with noted Russian physicist Konstantin Korotkov, carried out a successful Intention Experiment involving thousands of people from 80 countries around the globe, who were instructed to send love to a little vial of water in St. Petersburg, Russia. Sophisticated equipment later showed that this experiment changed it essential properties, specifically its light emissions. This result has vast implications about the power of thought to clean up the world’s polluted water supply.
McTaggart’s ‘global laboratory’ is now moving on to a ‘mini-Gaia’ which will involve constructing a little terrarium and asking readers to attempt to lower its temperature.
“If we find we have a significant effect, the implications of it — that our collective thoughts could tackle global warming — will be extraordinary,” she says.
She is also working with top scientists to design experiments to see if group intention can lower violence in certain hotspots in the world, raise the educational results in the US’s poorest districts and increase the availability of certain biofuels.
“Although the first experiments have ‘worked,’ it’s important to understand that all we have at the moment is an intriguing demonstration of possibility, and not one single definitive statement,” says Lynne. “Each scientific experiment must be replicated many times to be accepted as fact.
“But here is the first evidence that one good thought is all it takes to change the world.”

Lynne McTaggart is the award-winning author of five books. Wayne Dyer called The Field “the most profound and enlightening book I have ever read.” She was also featured in the film What the BLEEP!? Down the Rabbit Hole. Learn more at TheIntentionExperiment.com.
Abandoned Pup Rescued From Remote Island (Video)
A cocker spaniel named Snickers was rescued from a remote island in the Pacific Ocean thanks to efforts by a cruise ship and the humane society of Hawaii after his owners abandoned him when a rescue boat refused to take the dog onboard.
Extinct Javan elephants may have been found again – in Borneo
The Borneo pygmy elephant may not be native to Borneo after all. Instead, the population could be the last survivors of the Javan elephant race – accidentally saved from extinction by the Sultan of Sulu centuries ago, a new publication suggests.
















