MERRY CHRISTMAS
National Geographic has come up with something called the immortal jellyfish that defies death...
"One of the planet’s most extraordinary creatures floats in the Mediterranean Sea. The pale pink disk doesn’t look like much, but this jellyfish, called Turritopsis dohrnii, has a survival skill like none other: When injured or dying, it can return to its juvenile form, becoming young again."
There's more...
"That ability gives Turritopsis dohrnii its nickname: the immortal jellyfish. Scientists are studying these creatures closely, hoping to uncover secrets about human aging. Is it possible that someday we could go on living far into the future?"Venki Ramakrishnan, Nobel laureate and author of the newly released “Why We Die: The New Science of Aging and the Quest for Immortality,” says, "Science is making anti-aging progress. But do we want to live forever?" Here's the scenario...
"Ramakrishnan opened his packed Harvard Science Book Talk last week by noting the vast variabilities of lifespans across the natural world. Death is certain, so far as we know. But there’s no physical or chemical law that says it must happen at a fixed time, which raises other, more philosophical issues."
The next thing that comes to mind, will future generations be born with the ability to plan their lives all the way to their deaths? Kindergarten will provide the introduction to life for children that precedes future grades literally walking them through that life with all the joys one experiences mixed with the hardships they might encounter. After reaching the age of eighteen - an arbitrary choice - you decide how many years you want to live. Your decision would be based on the knowledge of your futuristic upbringing.
And if you still have a hankering to break the 100 mark, or maybe even 200, 400 years, read this article from Salon. Scientists have determined that death is “kind of arbitrary” and they "want to upload the brain so we can live forever." The piece starts with background on the latest quest for immortality, cryonics, that is a process which preserves biological tissues by storing them at extremely cold temperatures in the hope of someday reviving them.
Enter Dr. Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston, a research fellow at Melbourne’s Monash University who makes the case that cryopreservation is possible and should be more widely available. Zeleznikow-Johnston argues a human’s connectome — a high-resolution map of all their brain connections — could be theoretically recorded perfectly before they die. The concept is very complicated and there are many who disagree with Zeleznikow-Johnston. Are talking about brain without body?
My advice is, if you have a very scientific mind, read the article, If you're a layman like me, just take the man's word that someday we will be living longer, maybe considerably longer.
"Nearly a year into the first outbreak of the bird flu among cattle, the virus shows no sign of slowing. The U.S. government failed to eliminate the virus on dairy farms when it was confined to a handful of states, by quickly identifying infected cows and taking measures to keep their infections from spreading. Now at least 845 herds across 16 states have tested positive."
Further...
"Experts say they have lost faith in the government’s ability to contain the outbreak."
Since the virus was first detected nearly three decades ago in China, about 860
people have become infected in 23 countries, including China, Egypt, Vietnam and Turkiye, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Of those, 463 people died from the virus, giving a huge 52 percent death rate.
So, has the U.S. government dropped the ball on bird flu like Donald Trump did on the coronavirus pandemic during his administration? The Guardian says, "US repeating Covid mistakes with bird flu as spread raises alarm, experts say." Gregg Gonsalves, associate professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health believes the failure of this country to learn from past crises or simply a refusal to do so, could lead to another pandemic of bird flu. This is what is wrong with America. Here's the scenario...
"A lack of testing, opaque data, political divides, poor healthcare access and a sense of hubris – all have plagued the Covid response, and now these errors are playing across the bird flu response, Gonsalves said."
There's more...
“We have not really done anything to address what’s happening in terms of the onward spread of bird flu across the US – we’re back to the same old mistakes,” he said. “Right now, the imminent risk is low and we haven’t seen human-to-human transmission. But the point is, we don’t wait for that to happen. Right?”
In other words, we were completely caught off guard from Trump to Biden, and it looks as if the current apathy will continue, at least until Trump re-enters the White House. And then, will the Oval Office lunatic respond as he did before during the covid pandemic?...
“We have it [covid pandemic] totally under control. It’s one person coming in from China. It’s going to be just fine.”
“We pretty much shut it down coming in from China.”
“I think the virus is going to be—it’s going to be fine.”
“The Coronavirus is very much under control in the USA… the Stock Market starting to look very good to me!”
There is more of trump's drivel you can see here. The question is what will this maniac say when he is in charge of this country and responsible for your life?
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| Elon Musk & Vivek Ramaswamy |
"Rep. Daniel Goldman (D-NY) accused President-elect Donald Trump of being Elon Musk’s “puppet” on Wednesday after Trump followed Musk’s lead in opposing House Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-LA) continuing resolution to keep the government open."
Musk knows that if a bill isn't passed by Friday, the U.S. government will shut down. Yet,
“This bill should not pass,” Musk posted Wednesday morning, responding to a post by Vivek Ramaswamy, the co-leader of President-elect Donald Trump’s advisory group Department of Government Efficiency.'Musk and Ramaswamy have plans, "to slash government spending, including at least $2 trillion in federal programs, a figure experts have called unrealistic." Musk, described as the world’s richest person, is also against a pay increase for members of Congress. In my opinion this Congress does not deserve a raise, rather, they should receive a pay cut for the incompetency they have demonstrated. But with the close margin in the House, it is clear the Republicans will need Democrats to pass any bill.Musk and Ramaswamy, Donald Trump appointed to lead the nongovernmental group called the “Department of Government Efficiency,” DOGE, spent Wednesday posting on social media pushing Republican lawmakers to vote against a bipartisan stopgap funding bill. Folks, we're just days from a government shutdown, which apparently Trump wants since he supports the Bobbsey twins efforts. Here's a similar situation from 1888 that Donald Trump, today, has brought to American politics...
"One Sunday in March 1888, former President Rutherford B. Hayes wrote in his diary, “This is a government of the people, by the people, and for the people no longer. It is a government of corporations, by corporations, and for corporations.”
There's more,,,
"Hayes offered this private admission at the peak of the Gilded Age, when, as the historian Richard White put it, “corruption suffused government and the economy.” Businessmen amassed fortunes never seen before in American history and demanded government officials aid them in expanding those fortunes further."
And nothing has changed in the year 2024...
"For decades, the influence of money in politics has grown alongside the country’s increasing income inequality. Those who warned about this growing influence have been thoroughly vindicated. This year, Trump’s campaign was fueled by roughly $800 million from seven billionaire families. His administration will include more than a dozen billionaires, the wealthiest since President Warren Harding’s corrupt White House.And as long as a misguided U.S. public chooses to follow this charlatan, nothing will change.

Stray Cats
Estimates range from 60 to 80 million stray cats on U.S.streets. They aren't all feral, many have been abandoned by their owner/parents, some 3.3 million each year just in this country. On the human side, there are 653,104 people experiencing homelessness on a single night, and in some cases they curl up with their pets under whatever protection they can find. It is a tragedy and in America, of all the countries in the world, it should not be happening. This piece is about Blackjack who had been on the streets for seven years, 45 in human years.
Blackjack was a black cat who had experienced lots of hard knocks, spending most of his life roaming the streets, until a young woman took him into her home. He thought he had hit the pot of gold, but it turned out to be a hoarding situation. With no help, Blackjack's health worsened and he began to regress. Knowing about the hoarding, volunteers came in and rescued the big black guy, and just in time. Here's the scenario...
"When they found Blackjack, he couldn't open his eyes. He was brought to us in Montreal in poor condition, covered in filth with his nose and eyes blocked due to an infection, Chatons Orphelins Montreal shared. He was treated for an upper respiratory infection and spent most of his time resting and healing."
Still, he wolfed down the food he was given. Somewhat withdrawn, when he did begin to recuperate, his foster family noticed a limp. Back to the vet with this scenario...
"Though he'd recovered from his cold, his eyes remained painful and closed due to entropion, which caused his eyelids to roll inward. Additionally, he had multiple infected teeth that needed to be extracted."With the help of the Montreal community, Blackjack got all the help he needed, but after his years of struggling, he still couldn't trust people. However, the bunch from Chatons Orphelins Montreal wouldn't give up and even with his damaged leg, he began to play with the other cats. Then they discovered Blackjack was deaf, but apparently this didn't affect his lifestyle in the least. The rescue staff says he has come out of his shell and "has blossomed into a stunning house panther with a fluffy coat."This is just one story of what must be millions when it comes to the stray domestic animals in this country. PLEASE support your local animal rescue, and PLEASE give all you can in donations to your favorite animal causes. You'll be glad you did.
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| Guns on the street |
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| Luigi Mangione |
"There have been at least 83 school shootings in the United States so far this year, as of December 16. Twenty-seven were on college campuses, and 56 were on K-12 school grounds. The incidents left 38 people dead and at least 115 other victims injured..."
The Brady report says Americans are 25 times more likely to be shot and killed than others in high income countries. Every day 327 people are shot in the U.S.; 117 will die. Every day 23 minors are shot in the U.S. There is much more in this Brady report that I suggest you look at and understand gun violence won't go away until something permanent and emphatic is done about it. From Luigi Mangione to Madison, WI, there is a message to the American public. In reality it is both guns and people who kill. Let's stop it today!
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| Andrew Witty |
"attempted to deflect his insurance network’s responsibility in the growing inequity in America’s health care system, vaguely pointing to a 'patchwork' of failures decades in the making while swearing that his corporate network—which reported $22 billion in profits in 2023 alone, nearly three times the figure reported by CVS, the second-most-profitable health insurance company that year—was consistently fighting to 'deliver high-quality care and lower costs.'"
In reference to Witty's point, "was consistently fighting to 'deliver high-quality care and lower costs," I pointed out in yesterday's blog that UnitedHealthcare has a 32% denial rate compared to an industry average of 16%. And, as an example, UnitedHealthcare's rates in Massachusetts are $251 monthly compared to Blue Cross $212. These facts are hardly in the best interest of Witty's company's policyholders. There were 2500 comments in hours temporarily shutting down the comments section. Here's the scenario...
"Users shared their own horrible experiences [in the comments] with the health insurance industry, deriding Witty’s vapid analysis as a “self-serving essay” that did nothing to address UnitedHealthcare’s role in a system that prioritizes shareholder profits over successful medical outcomes for its clients."
ProPublica, one of the leaders in investigative journalism reports that, " UnitedHealth Is Strategically Limiting Access to Critical
Treatment for Kids With Autism." There's more...
"Leaked internal documents show that the insurance giant is culling providers of applied behavior analysis from its network and scrutinizing the medical necessity of therapy. Advocates say the company’s strategy may be illegal."
This "is the story about Sharelle Menard and her son, Benji, from Louisiana, who was diagnosed with severe autism at age three. Benji, who is now 10, requires 33 hours of weekly therapy to prevent the "screaming, and screaming, and screaming," prevalent before the medication, according to his mother. UnitedHealthcare, has begun denying him the hours he requires to maintain his progress. ProPublica says,,,
AOC claims denied healthcare
is an act of violence
Inside the insurance conglomerate, the nation’s largest and most profitable, the slashing of care to children like Benji does have a reason, though it has little to do with their needs. It is part of a secret internal cost-cutting campaign that targets a growing financial burden for the company: the treatment of thousands of children with autism across the country."
The company has acknowledged "that the therapy, called applied behavior analysis, is the 'evidence-based gold standard treatment for those with medically necessary needs.'" The problem, however, is cost and now UnitedHealthcare is “'pursuing market-specific action plans' to limit children’s access to the treatment. "ProPublica reports...
Although the company expects to spend about $290 million for ABA therapy within its Medicaid plans this year, even after earnings of $22 billion in net profits last year, they are investing heavily in a plan to save millions by limiting access to such care.NPR thinks Americans have had it with their country's healthcare. In a recent article, they say, "The fury over the state of U.S. health care isn't going away." Commenting how the U.S, has the most expensive healthcare in the world, the piece goes on to say, UnitedHealthcare has been widely criticized for making health care more expensive and more difficult to access. All of which is the reason for the negative response against Brian Thompson and his company.Luigi Mangione has been arrested for Thompson's murder, but so far his supporters have raised over $65,000 for his defense. Me thinks we have a problem here and it needs fixing...NOW!
I have followed Wm. Kristol for years and it wasn’t very long ago that I considered him an ultra conservative that would never chastise the...