No need to check your pulse, it’s about pulses, also known as legumes. The UN’s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) has declared 2016 as the Year of the Pulses. That means seeds like peas, beans, lentils and related pulses commonly consumed by mankind (as opposed to those used for animal fodder). 
Indeed, such seeds are grown and consumed in large quantities all over the world and they are nutritious and tasty—by most accounts.
A President’s Palate
President Bush is quoted as saying he didn’t like broccoli. Now, really, everyone is entitled to have his or her preferences in that, last not least the Prez.
Of course, broccoli may not be the most desirable veggie for your palate either. What about peas then? No, they are not your most favorite choice of pulse either? Then, I guess, it must be lentils.




Salt water is great for ocean dwellers but not directly useful for most life on land. Another 2{154653b9ea5f83bbbf00f55de12e21cba2da5b4b158a426ee0e27ae0c1b44117} of Earth’s water is tied up in ice caps, glaciers and permanent snow, leaving just 1{154653b9ea5f83bbbf00f55de12e21cba2da5b4b158a426ee0e27ae0c1b44117} as land-based fresh water.
What he says is basic Biology. Everybody knows that green plants feed on Carbon Dioxide and produce Oxygen as a by-product for us humans to breathe.
Respected scientist, Dr Klaus L E Kaiser writes:

My dearest is excited too: finally, she will no longer have to remind me of my chores, that the (yet to be acquired super-duper) robot with its well-programmed memory and a mind of its own will perform without being asked—and even without any snarky comments on the side.


This Astrophysicist, like a growing number of skeptics, points to how respected textbooks on Thermodynamics are contradicting the hitherto popular notion that carbon dioxide can dangerously warm Earth’s atmosphere.
, carbon dioxide has a much longer half-life in the earth’s atmosphere than previously found.