Friday, November 19, 2021

Numbers ..

 


Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder, said at a conference in Singapore  that he believes the number of cases and those dying from COVID-19 will be dropping "pretty dramatically" as more people get vaccinated and new treatments become available.

The billionaire was interviewed during the Bloomberg New Economy Forum and said both death and infections could reach seasonal flu levels by the middle of 2022, unless there’s a new variant, according to Bloomberg. 
Gates pointed to several reasons why he thinks the number of transmissions and deaths will drop. He said more and more people will develop natural immunity, there will be more vaccine distribution and new antiviral pills will become available. 
That is a great. Just a "Hopeful" thought.

Warp...

 

Before the Covid-19 pandemic, Big Pharma had been easing out of the vaccine business for decades. By 2019, the major vaccine makers supplying America had dwindled to a handful of large companies—Merck, Sanofi, Pfizer, and Johnson & Johnson. Because vaccines are only used once or twice as opposed to daily medicines, they are not profitable. 
The White House needed a whopping amount of money to coax companies to research and test and then produce hundreds of millions of doses. Ultimately, Operation Warp Speed (OWS) the U.S. government’s Covid-19 relief program would dole out $22 billion to Big Pharma.
The amounts of money were the kinds of sums normally seen in the smaller defense budget line items, but were massive for a public health project, $2.5 billion to Moderna, $1.2 billion to AstraZeneca, half a billion dollars to Johnson & Johnson, and $1.6 billion to a small company called Novavax. 
 The price per double shot about forty dollars is comparable to the price per shot of the flu vaccine.  The government had ordered three hundred million doses from Moderna.
So a cost of few billion dollars, saves trillions. Is Alzheimer's next?

Japanese...

 



International comparison of recent mortality statistics among G7 countries, Japan had the longest average life expectancy, primarily due to remarkably low mortality rates from ischemic heart disease and cancer (particularly breast and prostate), observes Shoichiro Tsugane of the Center for Public Health Sciences, Tokyo.
In the report that appeared in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition and Nature.com, researchers said that Japanese life expectancy has only increased over the years. 
The low mortality rates from ischemic heart disease and cancer are thought to reflect the low prevalence of obesity in Japan; low intake of red meat, specifically saturated fatty acids; and high intakes of fish, specifically n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, plant foods such as soybeans, and non-sugar-sweetened beverages such as green tea. 

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Crisis...

 


While, yes, the Garden State has had more governors step down, only one of them was as a result of a scandal or personal misconduct. 

The most recent one for New Jersey was when Gov. Jim McGreevey resigned in 2004 after admitting he had an extramarital affair with an Israeli man who was a gubernatorial appointee.

So which state has had the most governors resign due to misconduct? Sorry, New York, that's still you. Its three resignations for personal misconduct are more than any other state. 

Most other states have only had one or two, and some haven't had any at all (Florida, Hawaii and Washington have never had a governor resign, for any reason).

The issue is that the Media makes heroes of some governors who are violating the laws, not following the Democratic process, and not serving the people's well. With that which is clear to the Media, they create a hero of nothing just to show their own power..

That is the American Crisis. An elected Governor for many terms, later found out a real dictator or bad sexual habits.  

That is American Crises. Just a thought.

The Lie...

 


Rescind...



 Members of New York’s ethics commission voted overwhelmingly to rescind approval of former Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s $5.1 million book deal Tuesday.
The committee’s vote comes over a year since the October 2020 publication of Cuomo’s book “American Crisis: Leadership Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic,” which largely recounts the governor’s once-daily press conferences last spring.
The former governor, who resigned in August amid findings he sexually harassed at least 11 women, is also facing scrutiny over the book deal from state Attorney General Letitia James, federal prosecutors and the state Assembly’s Judiciary Committee, which is expected to soon release findings from a wide-ranging investigation of Cuomo’s alleged abuses of power.
 Cuomo has acknowledged that state employees helped with tasks including editing the manuscript. He’s claimed that those employees were “volunteering.”
That revelation led to members of the ethics commission voting 12-1  to rescind because of Mogul’s misstatements about Cuomo’s book deal, as the overwhelming majority agreed on a resolution that Cuomo violated the terms of their agreement.  Just a thought.

Crazy...

 


Neutral...

 

This cartoon represent what many of the politicians doing today. More paved spaces, more building of skyscrapers, more condensed area regardless and at the end of the day cry Climate Change. 

 Just a thought.

Earlier...

 



Dropping a political bombshell, New Jersey Gov. James McGreevey [Democrats] announced his resignation after revealing that he is gay and that he had an adulterous affair with a man.

With his wife standing by his side, McGreevey -- a father of two -- spoke in calm tones as he described his struggle with his sexuality, "a certain sense that separated me from others." It was something that he said began as a child.

"At a point in every person's life, one has to look deeply into the mirror of one's soul and decide one's unique truth in the world, not as we may want to see it or hope to see it, but as it is," McGreevey said.

McGreevey's surprise resignation came as Golan Cipel, a former security aide to the governor, had readied a sexual harassment lawsuit against the governor, two Democratic sources told CNN. Cipel resigned his post in 2002.

A third Democratic source, who had spoken throughout the day with a top aide to the governor, told CNN it is unclear whether Cipel will proceed with the lawsuit now that McGreevey has announced his resignation.

Speaking at a packed news conference in the Statehouse in Trenton, New Jersey, McGreevey admitted to an affair with a man and asked for his family's forgiveness.

 August 13, 2004