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  1. Re:No, that's not the problem on Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? · · Score: 1

    What he said.

    (and the other guy)

  2. Re: The President... on Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? · · Score: 2

    Somebody on Fox is *asking* for Fema camps now.

    I am not making this up.

  3. Re:Who, you ask? on Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? · · Score: 1

    No. It's a virus so old it predate all dinosaurs. It mutated to encode for a molecule that messes up humans in fairly recent times, sometimes in the past million or two years in a certain place for a certain reason. It's old old old.

    You don't need to weaponize Ebola, nature did that for you.

  4. Re:Who, you ask? on Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? · · Score: 1

    Nailed it.

  5. Re:No the constitution is fine.. on Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? · · Score: 1

    70% is optimistic, the CDC knows it's higher. That's a sanitized WHO number. That ends with a zero? Unlikely.

    In some parts of Africa it's 98%.

    That's more than 3X the rate of the Spanish flu of 1918 that killed... a third of the western world or some damn thing.

  6. Re:Hear Hear on Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? · · Score: 1

    16 people outside of Africa, every continent except antarctica. at least 2 are unreported as well as of monday midnight.

  7. Re:Obvious on Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? · · Score: 2

    Guns will spray the virus everywhere. In all directions. Guns are suicide now.

  8. Re:Dr. ANgela Hwelett, calls Ebola "highly infecti on Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? · · Score: 1

    The R-naught of two only applies in the terra typica where roads don't exist. We knoe know it's on the skin and can live for hours on say, a touch screen. Like apartment buildings have. Like the one I'm in. Where health care workers live. Across the road from a suspect Ebola Zaise case in Ontario whowalked in from Sierre Leone and DID NOT BRING ME A KILLIFISH.

    I'm gonna pretend I"m in charges cause I think I figured this out. Do you lke puzzles? Let's find out:

    http://www.documentation.ird.f...

    What do fruit bats and man have in common? It says right in the paper, bone up, there'll be a quiz.

  9. Re:please no on Past Measurements May Have Missed Massive Ocean Warming · · Score: 0

    "we've known this for a while"

    How do you tell the difference between that and "we made it up when our models fell to bits".

    I'd guess a reference in archive.org to this idea prevous to 1998 would prove it. Do you have that by chance?

    Climate guys learn so much. In 2010 they learned CO2 is consumed by plants and now they're learning hydrology 101. AND IT EXPLAINS EVERYTHING. Oh help.

    At this rate they'll be able to make an accurate prediction by about 2637.

  10. The clearest picture yet of global warming on Antarctic Ice Loss Big Enough To Cause Measurable Shift In Earth's Gravity · · Score: 1

    Because this is clearly inferior. Play with it a bit. Play spot the warming.

    https://www.climate.gov/news-f...

    Note:

    1) 1998 - 2015
    2) 1880 - 2015
    3) 1978 - 1998
    4) 1947 - 1957 - this is when all that sea ice grew.[1]

    Odd is was so cold at a time of peak smog.[2]

    [1]"In the early 1920s and 1930s, temperatures were high, similar to that of the present, and this affected the glacial melt. At the time many glaciers underwent a melt similar or even higher than what we have seen in the last ten years. When it became colder again in the 1950s and 1960s, glaciers actually started growing," says Dr. Kurt H. Kjær - in http://www.nature.com/ngeo/jou...

    [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G...

  11. That's silly. on Elon Musk: We Must Put a Million People On Mars To Safeguard Humanity · · Score: 1

    It was done in one trip.

  12. Re:~/.cshrc on Apple Yet To Push Patch For "Shellshock" Bug · · Score: 1

    Has anyone confirmed sh and csh (et al) don't have this problem? In all versions?

    Am I crazy in thinking that a CGI program, say, written in C, that gets environment variables from Apache should not have any local environment variables tossed to any program it wants to run. Those are in appropriate and are from a CLI context and do not apply here. They should be nulled as soon as the program realizes its running in a web context and not from a CLI.

    Actually even better would be to replace system() with a function that blew up that workstation to weed out the lazy programmers.

  13. Re:Are we really that confused? on How Did the 'Berlin Patient' Rid Himself of HIV? · · Score: 1

    No.

    Again, when the virus stips your cells to make more of its own offspring - this is normal viral activity - it does something other viruses don't do, it also strips out selenium.

    So they tried supplementing with just selenium and that helped but did not reverse the disease.

    So they looked at what other essential (the body can't make them) molecules it took from the body and ignored non-essential (the body can make more of those molecules and doesn't have to ingest them) molecules the virus stripped from the host cells.

    Low and behold, Tryptophan, Cysteine and Glutamine.

    If you look up what has glutamine an in what amounts, nothing come close to beef[1] and it also has a fair amount of Tryptophan.

    Cysteine is in cheese, the more aged the better. Parrnasian probabky has more than more other common ones I'd guess.

    Because acidic rains for millions of years leached minerals form the Amazonian clay soils those minerals all ended up someplace an that's where brazil nut trees grow. They have so much selenium, that if you eat a handful a day you'll have selenosis in a week - a, um, disruption in the alimentary canal shall we say.

    From both ends. But they're utterly essential for heart, brain and immune system.

    In fact if you look you'll notice Senegal, like Brazil, has natural deposits of selenium in the soil everywhere and it was this that accounted for the reduced rate of incidence of HIV in Senegal - the HIV rate there is as low as it is in the US despite the fact the Senegalese have the same sub saharan cultural practices (and by that I mean fucking a lot) as the rest of the Sub Saharan Africa that has a 5-10X higher rate of HIV infection . This stands out, as does Finland where they put a lot of selenium in the soil to try to slow down heart diseases - the aids rate is lower than normal there too.

    So "eating a lot of protein" per se won't do it. You'd have to use beef, cheese and a brazil nut or two.

    Note also this works on all selenoviruses - which includes all the Coxsackie viruses which includes Hep C and others.

    Most commercial medical training is strictly for acute care and they're the best in the world. But for chronic conditions they're less than useless an haven't fond anything useful since penicillin.

    I hate t say it but there is literally no money in finding cures, there's only money for developing pills that are patentable that come close to what some other pill does. Some do better, some do worse. But if they're patented, they're funded.

    They has the same problem with vitamin C, too. Jacques Cartier got stuck in Canada in Montreal in the Winter of 1580 (and you KNOW what a bitch that can be) and when his crew was near death the were saved from scurvy with some pine bark tea. When they told the medical profession back home they's fond a cure for scurvy they were told "we have nothing to learn from savages" and took another 300 years to discover vitamin C, an essential nutrient to every living plant and animal and until then scurvy was known to be caused by Foul humors and more people died needlessly.

    So here's what happens when you try to tell people you have a treatment: the guy that discovered this raises money tests this where it's most needed, Uganda, at the Mengo clinic. It goes well and the guy then goes to the next village over and talks to the clinic there and says hey we have this treatment and we can cure your patients now.

    The doctor there is horrified. "We can't cure these people! We get paid by pharmaceutical companies to test antiretrovirals on AIDS patients and if they get better they can't test and the whole clinic shuts down and it's alll the village has and I'm out of a job as there's no money for a doctor here." This is what actually happened.

    So whaddya do? You write a book and move on. Not the first time this happened, there's at least a half dozen similar stories suppressed medicine in the form of biochemical understanding, but without commercial backing that makes treatments actuall

  14. Re:So offer a cost effective replacement on Security Collapse In the HTTPS Market · · Score: 1

    If this is a serious request for a protocol without flaws - didn't Bernstein fail to get any takers to find a flaw in djbdns?

    I realize that's not a flawless protocol per se, but rather is a flawless implementation of an inherently flawed protocol. If you know of a better example I'd like to hear it.

  15. Are we really that confused? on How Did the 'Berlin Patient' Rid Himself of HIV? · · Score: -1

    Check pre and post levels of selenium, glutamine, tryptophan and cysteine. You'll find your answer,

    People who are serious can find Harold Foster's write up of the biochemistry; also this train of thought was first mentioned in sci.med.aids in 1991 leading to hypotheses of a reversal mechanism in 2007 that seems to work. In a nutshell the virus strips the body of those four molecules because of it's unique (to selenovirii) selenoprotein coat. The catch is these fouls are required for the production of an enzyme that makes the molecule that the immune system uses to kill the virus. That's how it broke the human immune system.

    But, these are not uncommon molecules and a cheeseburger and two brazil nuts (they have bear toxic levels of selenium, more than anything else) every day will remediate it according to the BBC interview with the scientist who discovered it although one can obviously be more scientific about it. Point is, some people got HIV and never got AIDS. Why? Blood levels of these three amino acids and one mineral, if sufficiently high, will prevent HIV from progressing into AIDS

    Theor wild assed guess sound like snakes and rattles.

    There's clinical reports too. Seems to work. It's not really patentable so it may take a while to get into commercial medicine.

  16. Let's play on Study Links Pacific Coastal Warming To Changing Winds · · Score: 1

    Spot the scientist that relies on climate grants.

  17. Never mistake consensus for truth on How Scientific Consensus Has Gotten a Bad Reputation · · Score: 1

    "From the article: "Fiction author Michael Crichton probably started the backlash against the idea of consensus in science. Crichton was rather notable for doubting the conclusions of climate scientists—he wrote an entire book in which they were the villains—so it's fair to say he wasn't thrilled when the field reached a consensus."

    It's almost like TFA doesn't know that at best, consensus ~= truth but they're often just nothing to do with each other. Jury is still out on whether Crichton was right, certainly no warming in sixteen years doesn't help the other side.

    Also: "97%+ of geologists agreed the continents were stable. It was Settled Science. Hundreds of research papers supported it. Overwhelming consensus. And wrong. And, oddly (not really, if you think about it a moment), it was not a geologist but a meteorologist, Alfred Wegener, who ultimately showed all the mutually agreeing geologists they had it all wrong; the continents move." - Dr. Michael K. Oliver

  18. Read the paper yourself and make your own mind up. on Survivors' Blood Holds Promise, But Draws Critics, As Ebola Treatment · · Score: 1

    Say you've been told you have Ebola but have read this. What do you do?

    http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/...

    Say, "oh, it sounds too risky, I'll tough it out"? I'm guessing not.

    Any chance this is astroturfing for the company with the Ebola drug? The natural antibodies are a fierce competition to what is now a multi billion dollar market.

  19. Re:Dealth by Ebola or AIDS on Survivors' Blood Holds Promise, But Draws Critics, As Ebola Treatment · · Score: 1

    People live with HIV. Ebola, not so much.

    In 1933 the only psychiatrist to ever win a Nobel prize did so for discovering Malaria cures syphilitic dementia. Malaria is no joy but it's better than your brains turning to soup (three years later antibiotics were discovered).

    You might die of HIV. You will almost certainly die of Ebola.

  20. Re:The diet is unimportant... on Low-Carb Diet Trumps Low-Fat Diet In Major New Study · · Score: 1

    You do understand no two people have the same biochemistry right and that no one diet fits all?

    That's sort of the easiest way to tell is nutritional info is bunk - if they don't know this, ignore them and find somebody that actually knows about the biochemistry of nutrition.

    For one thing, 1/3 of the wold lacks the gene that lets them digest lactose, so no cheese, while 1/3 also lack the gene that lets you digest gluten, so pizza is a deadly choice for a 2/3 the world.

    You're so wrong. Diet is everything. Please do some reading, you really so not know what you're talking about.

  21. Won't work, here's why. on The Passenger Pigeon: A Century of Extinction · · Score: 1

    This has been talked about for ages. The reason it's never done is their habitat is gone. They lived in old growth oak forests and there's none left now.

    We can bring the species back and it might do ok in zoos, but they can't live in the wild any more - their wild is gone. We killed all the trees as well as all the birds.

    All this cloning talk, where's the common sense? Close an extinct born with no food supply or habitat? Right.

    Clone a mastodon? Right. What do you think can gestate a Mastadon? Not an elephant, too small. What's your next choice?

  22. Remember Microsoft Windows? on Facebook Seeks Devs To Make Linux Network Stack As Good As FreeBSD's · · Score: 1

    It used the FreeBSD networking code. This doesn't mean windows is fast and it's sort of specious. BSD has tricks in the Kernel to make I/O faster that pretty much anything else.

  23. Re:Web hosting on Barry Shein Founded the First Dialup ISP (Video) · · Score: 1

    Who else are then supposed to pay now that Karl Denninger packed it in?

  24. Re:Not the first, just the most egotistical. on Barry Shein Founded the First Dialup ISP (Video) · · Score: 1

    Why? The IP network was tiny back then and the uucp network was enormous ans had all the apps. There were no people passing packet back then because nobody wanted to - they didn't need to. You could get everything the network had to offer via uucp.

    Except telnet. But there was nowhere to telnet to. Back then if you needed to telnet you had a line in your house. What else would your boss say "ok, we need you to telnet it. I hear a third ISP opened in the US, so use that."

  25. Re:My contribution... on Barry Shein Founded the First Dialup ISP (Video) · · Score: 1

    "(local for-sale stuff and the like)"

    ie., porn.

    This fueled a lot of the early net. I knew an deign engineer that wanted the engineering groups. They wouldn't spring for a uunet feed from DC to Irvine so buddy got smart and gve his boss a floppy of porn from home. He said you get one of these every week if I get a full feed, Capish? He got a full feed and friday afternoons had to download and pay the porn tax. You did what you to, that connection in Irvine was at the time strategically important to the growth of the network. Now we had LA, San diego and orange county online.