Thursday, April 8, 2010
Why High Fructose Sports Drinks? Medical Alert Service: Philips Lifeline
Which Books Should We Read If We Have Limited Time?
Where by divers sundry old authentic histories and chronicles, it is manifestly declared and expressed that this realm of England is an Empire, and so hath been accepted in the world, governed by one Supreme Head and King having the dignity and royal estate of the imperial Crown of the same, unto whom a body politic compact of all sorts and degrees of people divided in terms and by names of Lords Spiritual and Lords Temporal, be bounden and owe to bear next to God a natural and humble obedience. ...Another non-fiction book I will probably read is the Age of Wonder by Richard Holmes (Pantheon). Many times really good books are on the NY Times Best Seller list for the first one or two weeks, then the readers of good books disappear. Malcolm Gladwell is an exception.The Cleanest Race: How North Koreans See Themselves - And Why It Matters by Matthew CrawfordEmanuel and Eric, I strongly recommend both of you to watch the video at C-Span http://www.booktv.org/Program/11315/The+Cleanest+Race+How+North+Koreans+See+Themselves+And+Why+It+Matters.aspxMyers who lives in South Korea thinks that our approaches from the Right, Left, and Center won't work on North Korea. The Japanese Occupation controlled the elite with propaganda where we are one people. When the Japanese left, these propagandists moved to North Korea and supported the North Korean rulers with a non-typical approach that we are generally familiar with. Of course the non-middle class or poor Koreans who don't read were brutally suppressed.The propagandist in North Korea depended on perceived military might and Mother ruler beliefs to think that Mother will protect the suffering North Korean people. Myers said that it is ridiculous to believe that North Korea will give up their Nuclear Bombs. Having the Chinese negotiate with North Korea is basically futile too. First they hate the Chinese and Chinese have no interest in giving up the economic perks they get the North Korea.Their approach to control is to keep the populace ignorant and the elites heavily propagandized. But word of the outside world is leaking in by satellites providing access to South Korean and Chinese television so it is likely that change will come over time.Just like we did not understand the Japanese during World War II, our American interpreters who thought they knew the Japanese language forgot about the culture of Japanese where they say things indirectly. Since I have lots of experience in this language at home, I had no problem understanding the true meaning of what the Japanese were saying by thinking all the time.Unlike South Koreans, the North Koreans seem to be more favorable towards Japan. My hearing sometimes is bad, but I thought Myers said something about Hikomori in understanding. Only the lower classes have left North Korea or try to, but many also return."Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work."Although very few of my friends believe me, I was going to turn the TV off, but I saw the high intelligence in his eyes and expression so I kept it on luckily before he started to speak. Talking well is genetic and has nothing to do with intelligence. Many dumb salesman are superb talkers. Unfortunately in our society, we base intelligence on how well they talk. I based it later on how well they answer difficult questions. I was right! He can!He is a non-conformist thinker, a rare commodity in our corporate so-called free enterprise hierarchical country. By the way they operate CEO's are basically dictators. That is why CEOs make very poor political leaders with many examples to prove my point including Bush, Cheney, Corzine, those in I am chief in government positions such as Hoover, and possibly Spitzer . But no one seems to express this obvious observation. Whitman, if she is elected in California, would be a disaster. Brown has proven that he is able to govern throughout his career. He is honest and competent. It would be tragic if Californians vote to go from the frying pan to the fire by electing Whitman.Since you are both intellectuals, you might want to read the book by Matthew Crawford "Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work." See below. http://www.booktv.org/Program/11418/2010+Virginia+Festival+of+the+Book+Matthew+Crawford+quotShop+Class+as+Soulcraft+An+Inquiry+Into+the+Value+of+Workquot.aspxHe got his Ph.D. on Political Philosophy at the University of Chicago, mainly on interpreting Plutarch. When he could find no Academic job, he headed a Think Tank, but would not name it. He left because they wanted to start with a conclusion and then find evidence for it. It was most likely one of conservative Think Tanks. Not much on Wikipedia, but does list his publications before he opened a motorcycle repair shop. This book has found lots of interest in academic circles. A strong contact was Alan Blinder of Princeton and as you know, a former Federal Reserve Vice Chairman.The author is a moderate Republican who wants to get rid of Monopolies to get true competition and provide jobs that have face time so it cannot be shipped electronically overseas. It is about time we start making the Blue Collar Skill profession prestigious as so called scholarly professions.I normally skipped over this in pre-recording it, but I watched Rebecca Skloot who I really liked in her short 30 minute interview just before his. The c-span.org hosts seem to ask many really good questions! The same holds for the audience at the Virginia Book Festival. She was at the Virginia Book Festival, one of my favorite science writers. The books they select are of higher quality than other ones. She is a very good Free Lance Book Critic of Science Books.Just before a Federal District Judge invalidated many Gene Patents, she talked about her book where in 1950 cell lines from Henrietta Lacks were taken without her knowledge and then she died at age 30. John Hopkins finally found a cancer cell line which was truly Immortal. Skloot indirectly said that genes should not be patented. In 1950 life could not be patented as it should be including seeds which Monsanto did by going through our public seed bank! The want to eliminate any alternatives to genetically modified food crops so they can sell their Weed killer. Round Up Resistant crops have already been discovered.That is how Evolution in terms of mutation and selection works! Evolution occurs much faster than we have been taught to believe. Epigenetic turning off or on of genes due to environmental or psychological effects as we see in the Scots-Irish Republicans. Unless the families move away from this environment, they will always be unusually paranoid with fear that change will hurt them. Why don't the smart ones know this. Oh yes, they do not believe in Evolution. God predetermines everything!Don't they know that some crazy forget Jesus Norwegian brought his religion to our country in the 19th century during the Robber Baron times? The same can be said of the many new religions now.Jim Kawakami, April 8, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Jon Stewart's CNN Crossfire Comment: Stop Helping Politicians and Corporations!
Can CNN Be Saved?
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/05/opinion/05douthat.html?bl
Listening to Jon Stewart helped destroy CNN. Now imitating him might be the network’s only hope of salvation. ...
Correction:
An earlier version of this column stated incorrectly that conservative guests were invited to appear on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show” only when they had anti-Republican views to express. Ms. Maddow has stated that invitations to guests on her show are not limited in this way and that invitations to conservative guests are often refused. The columnist has addressed the error in a blog post. -----“Stop, stop, stop, stop hurting America,” he told the hosts, Paul Begala and Tucker Carlson. He called them “political hacks.” He accused them of “helping the politicians and the corporations.” He compared their show to a professional wrestling match. “You’re doing theater,” he said, “when you should be doing debate.” ...
Monday, April 5, 2010
The Truth About Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do About It
Before its patent ran out, for example, the price of Schering-Plough's top-selling allergy pill, Claritin, was raised thirteen times over five years, for a cumulative increase of more than 50 percent—over four times the rate of general inflation.[2] As a spokeswoman for one company explained, "Price increases are not uncommon in the industry and this allows us to be able to invest in R&D."[3] In 2002, the average price of the fifty drugs most used by senior citizens was nearly $1,500 for a year's supply. (Pricing varies greatly, but this refers to what the companies call the average wholesale price, which is usually pretty close to what an individual without insurance pays at the pharmacy.)
Paying for prescription drugs is no longer a problem just for poor people. As the economy continues to struggle, health insurance is shrinking. Employers are requiring workers to pay more of the costs themselves, and many businesses are dropping health benefits altogether. Since prescription drug costs are rising so fast, payers are particularly eager to get out from under them by shifting costs to individuals. The result is that more people have to pay a greater fraction of their drug bills out of pocket. And that packs a wallop.
Many of them simply can't do it. They trade off drugs against home heating or food. Some people try to string out their drugs by taking them less often than prescribed, or sharing them with a spouse. Others, too embarrassed to admit that they can't afford to pay for drugs, leave their doctors' offices with prescriptions in hand but don't have them filled. Not only do these patients go without needed treatment but their doctors sometimes wrongly conclude that the drugs they prescribed haven't worked and prescribe yet others—thus compounding the problem.
The people hurting most are the elderly. When Medicare was enacted in 1965, people took far fewer prescription drugs and they were cheap. For that reason, no one thought it necessary to include an outpatient prescription drug benefit in the program. In those days, senior citizens could generally afford to buy whatever drugs they needed out of pocket.
Approximately half to two thirds of the elderly have supplementary insurance that partly covers prescription drugs, but that percentage is dropping as employers and insurers decide it is a losing proposition for them. At the end of 2003, Congress passed a Medicare reform bill that included a prescription drug benefit scheduled to begin in 2006, but as we shall see later, its benefits are inadequate to begin with and will quickly be overtaken by rising prices and administrative costs.
For obvious reasons, the elderly tend to need more prescription drugs than younger people—mainly for chronic conditions like arthritis, diabetes, high blood pressure, and elevated cholesterol. In 2001, nearly one in four seniors reported that they skipped doses or did not fill prescriptions because of the cost. (That fraction is almost certainly higher now.) Sadly, the frailest are the least likely to have supplementary insurance. At an average cost of $1,500 a year for each drug, someone without supplementary insurance who takes six different prescription drugs—and this is not rare—would have to spend $9,000 out of pocket. Not many among the old and frail have such deep pockets.
Furthermore, in one of the more perverse of the pharmaceutical industry's practices, prices are much higher for precisely the people who most need the drugs and can least afford them. The industry charges Medicare recipients without supplementary insurance much more than it does favored customers, such as large HMOs or the Veterans Affairs (VA) system. Because the latter buy in bulk, they can bargain for steep discounts or rebates. People without insurance have no bargaining power; and so they pay the highest prices.
In the past two years, we have started to see, for the first time, the beginnings of public resistance to rapacious pricing and other dubious practices of the pharmaceutical industry. It is mainly because of this resistance that drug companies are now blanketing us with public relations messages. And the magic words, repeated over and over like an incantation, are research, innovation, and American. Research. Innovation. American. It makes a great story.
But while the rhetoric is stirring, it has very little to do with reality. First, research and development (R&D) is a relatively small part of the budgets of the big drug companies—dwarfed by their vast expenditures on marketing and administration, and smaller even than profits. In fact, year after year, for over two decades, this industry has been far and away the most profitable in the United States. ... http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17244
Value of Direct to Consumer Advertising Oversold Study Finds, But Direct to Doctor Much More Effective http://hms.harvard.edu/public/news/ss0808/090108_soumerai.html
The basic question was simple: did use of these drugs increase faster in English-speaking regions after American DTCA campaigns began? ...
Sales for Zelnorm, however, did spike noticeably in English-speaking Canada as soon as the ad campaign began. While prescriptions for this drug increased by over 40 percent, this jump was relatively short-lived, and after a few years, prescription rates in both groups resumed identical patterns. A similar analysis of U.S. Medicaid prescriptions found a slightly higher, but similarly brief, jump in sales.
The researchers hypothesize that DTCA may not be as effective as other types of consumer advertising due to the unique complexity of the marketing/sales trajectory.
With a typical consumer product, an individual sees an ad and then can choose to simply go out and buy the item. “But pharmaceuticals aren’t typical consumer products,” says Soumerai. “A person needs to see an ad, get motivated by that ad, contact their doctor for an appointment, show up at the appointment, communicate both the condition and the drug to the doctor, convince the doctor that this drug is preferable to other alternatives, then actually go out and fill the prescription. This is a chain of events that can break at any point.” ...
One hundred years of marketing experience and recent studies indicate that face-to-face promotion of drugs to doctors by pharmaceutical representatives is far more effective than DTCA. ...
Sunday, April 4, 2010
How to Measure Blood Pressures and We Should Stop Eating Fast Foods
Friday, April 2, 2010
Drugs High Fructose Corn Sugar High Triglycerides Causes Synaptic Alzheimer's Disease
You probably already know that fructose is a sugar, but what you may not realize is that it’s distinctly different from other sugars as it’s metabolized through very specific pathways that differ from those of glucose, for example, and through its distinct metabolic action, uric acid is generated http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/03/13/richard-johnson-interview.aspx .
Uric acid is a normal waste product found in your blood. High levels of uric acid are normally associated with gout, but it has been known for a long time that people with high blood pressure, overweight, and people with kidney disease, often have high uric acid levels as well.
It used to be thought that the uric acid was secondary in these conditions, and not the cause -- but Dr. Johnson’s research indicates that it could be a lead player in the development of these conditions.
And it turns out that one of the most potent ways to raise uric acid is via fructose!