Climate is a Money Maker

Richard Lindzen testifies at a House Science Committee hearing on global climate change on Nov 17, 2010. Credit: CSPAN

Richard Lindzen, an outspoken climate contrarian and retired Massachusetts Institute
of Technology professor, sent a letter to President Donald Trump urged him to pull the United States out of the United Nations’ climate change regime because global climate action is “not scientifically justified.”

After MIT’s climate researchers and faculty found out,
 they wrote their own open letter to the president, setting the record straight.
“As [Lindzen’s] colleagues at MIT in the Program in Atmospheres, Oceans and Climate,
all of whom are actively involved in understanding climate, we write to make it clear that this is not a view shared by us, or by the overwhelming majority of other scientists who have devoted their professional lives to careful study of climate science,”
said the March 2 letter, signed by 22 current and retired MIT professors.
The MIT staff addressed specific inaccuracies in Lindzen’s letter,

Including his assertion that “carbon dioxide is not a pollutant.”

“The risks to the Earth system associated with increasing levels of carbon dioxide
are almost universally agreed by climate scientists to be real ones,” they wrote.
“These include, but are not limited to, sea level rise, ocean acidification & increases
in extreme flooding and droughts, all with serious consequences for mankind.”
Lindzen has spent years downplaying the significance of man-made climate change through his published research, testimony in lawsuits and appearances before Congress. He has compared “global warming believers” to a “cult,” and called the most recent assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world’s leading climate science body, “a political document.” He served as a meteorology professor from 1983 to 2013. He is now a distinguished senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based conservative think tank.
Lindzen responded to InsideClimate News with a one-page statement that echoed the contrarian points he made in his letter. He also criticized MIT’s climate program.

“Since MIT’s administration has made the climate issue a major focus for the Institute with the Program in Atmospheres, Oceans, and Climate (PAOC) playing a central role,
it is not surprising that the department would object to any de-emphasis of this issue,” Lindzen wrote. “For far too long, one body of men, establishment climate scientists, has been permitted to be judges and parties on what the ‘risks to the Earth system associated with increasing levels of carbon dioxide’ really are,” he said, referencing something James Madison wrote in 1787.
A petition accompanying Lindzen’s letter was signed by 300 other people.
Lindzen described the signatories as “eminent scientists and other qualified individuals”
in his letter. A review of the names by the Guardian, however, revealed few biology, chemistry, climate, earth and physics scientists.

Many are well-known climate contrarians and deniers.
They include Willie Soon, an aerospace engineer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; Steve Goreham of the Heartland Institute, an industry backed organization that denies climate science; and William Briggs, a statistician at Cornell University who questions climate models.
“In stark contrast to Lindzen’s letter, ours was signed only by those who know something about the climate system,” said Kerry Emanuel, an MIT professor of atmospheric sciences who signed the letter opposing Lindzen. The science advocacy group the Union of Concerned Scientist also annotated the letter to point out its errors.

Climate Heretic: Judith Curry Turns on Her Colleagues
Climate Science’s Myth-Buster It’s time to be scientific about global warming, says climatologist Judith Curry. We’ve all come across the images of polar bears drifting on ice floes: emblematic victims of the global warming that’s melting the polar ice caps, symbols of the threat to the earth posed by our ceaseless energy production—above all, the carbon dioxide that factories and automobiles emit.
We hear louder and louder demands to impose limits, to change our wasteful ways, so as to save not only the bears but also the planet and ourselves. If you think climate change is real, just go look at who is backing and funding our lovely Greta Thunberg | Networth.

The Imaginary Climate Crisis (rumble.com)
Greenpeace and WWF, check any one of them then do come back and tell me
how much you trust Royal Dutch Shell, or JPMorgan Morgan chase, how about Rockefeller and black rock Al gore ffs! It’s a massive con that has been decades
in the making: » The Manufacturing of Greta Thunberg – The Political Economy
of the Non-Profit Industrial Complex [ACT I] (theartofannihilation.com)

In political discourse and in the media: 
Major storms and floods typically get presented as signs of impending doom, accompanied by invocations to the environment and calls to respect Mother Nature. Only catastrophes seem to grab our attention, though, and it’s rarely mentioned that warming would bring some benefits, such as expanded production of grains in previously frozen regions of Canada and Russia.
Nor do we hear that people die more often in cold weather than in hot weather.
Isolated voices criticize the alarm over global warming, considering it a pseudoscientific thesis, the true aim of which is to thwart economic modernization and free-market growth and to extend the power of states over individual choices.
Not being a climatologist myself, I’ve always had trouble deciding between these arguments. And then I met Judith Curry at her home in Reno, Nevada. Curry is a true climatologist.
She once headed the department of earth and atmospheric sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology, until she gave up on the academy so that she could express herself independently. “Independence of mind and climatology have become incompatible,” she says. Do you mean that global warming isn’t real? I ask. “There is warming, but we don’t really understand its causes,” she says. “The human factor and carbon dioxide, in particular, contribute to warming, but how much is the subject of intense scientific debate.”
Curry is a scholar, not a pundit. Unlike many political and journalistic oracles, she never opines without proof. And she has data at her command. She tells me, for example, that between 1910 and 1940, the planet warmed during a climatic episode that resembles our own, down to the degree. The warming can’t be blamed on industry, she argues, because back then, most of the carbon-dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels were small.
In fact, Curry says, “almost half of the warming observed in the twentieth century came about in the first half of the century, before carbon-dioxide emissions became large.” 

Natural factors thus had to be the cause. 
None of the climate models used by scientists now working for the United Nations can explain this older trend. Nor can these models explain why the climate suddenly cooled between 1950 and 1970, giving rise to widespread warnings about the onset of a new ice age. I recall magazine covers of the late 1960s or early 1970s depicting the planet in the grip of an annihilating deep freeze. According to a group of scientists, we faced an apocalyptic environmental scenario—but the opposite of the current one.
But aren’t oceans rising today, I counter, eroding shorelines and threatening to flood lower-lying population centers and entire inhabited islands? “Yes,” Curry replies.
“Sea level is rising, but this has been gradually happening since the 1860s; we don’t yet observe any significant acceleration of this process in our time.” Here again, one must consider the possibility that the causes for rising sea levels are partly or mostly natural, which isn’t surprising, says Curry, for “climate change is a complex and poorly understood phenomenon, with so many processes involved.” To blame human-emitted carbon dioxide entirely may not be scientific, she continues, but “some find it reassuring to believe that we have mastered the subject.” She says that “nothing upsets many scientists like uncertainty.”

This brings us to why Curry left the world of the academy and government-funded research. “Climatology has become a political party with totalitarian tendencies,” she charges. “If you don’t support the UN consensus on human-caused global warming, if you express the slightest skepticism, you are a ‘climate-change denier,’ a quasi-fascist who must be banned from the scientific community.” These days, the climatology mainstream accepts only data that reinforce its hypothesis that humanity is behind global warming. 
Those daring to take an interest in possible natural causes of climatic variation—such as solar shifts or the earth’s oscillations—aren’t well regarded in the scientific community, to put it mildly. The rhetoric of the alarmists, it’s worth noting, has increasingly moved from “global warming” to “climate change,” which can mean anything. That shift got its start back in 1992, when the UN widened its range of environmental concern to include every change that human activities might be causing in nature, casting a net so wide that few human actions could escape it.
Scientific research should be based on skepticism, on the constant reconsideration of accepted ideas: at least, this is what I learned from my mentor, the ultimate scientific philosopher of our time, Karl Popper. What could lead climate scientists to betray the
very essence of their calling?
The answer, Curry contends: “politics, money, and fame.” Scientists are human beings, with human motives; nowadays, public funding, scientific awards, and academic promotions go to the environmentally correct. 
Among climatologists, Curry explains, “a person must not like capitalism or industrial development too much and should favor world government, rather than nations”; think differently, and you’ll find yourself ostracized. “Climatology is becoming an increasingly dubious science, serving a political project,” she complains.

In other words, “the policy cart is leading the scientific horse.”
“Nowadays, public funding, scientific awards, and academic promotions go to the environmentally correct.” This has long been true in environmental science, she points out. The global warming controversy began back in 1973, during the Gulf oil embargo, which unleashed fear, especially in the United States, that the supply of petroleum would run out. The nuclear industry, Curry says, took advantage of the situation to make its case for nuclear energy as the best alternative, and it began to subsidize ecological movements hostile to coal and oil, which it has been doing ever since. The warming narrative was born.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration played a role in the propagation of that narrative. Having ended its lunar expeditions, NASA was looking for a new mission, so it built some provisional climate models that focused primarily on carbon dioxide, because this is an easy factor to single out and “because it is subject to human control,” observes Curry. Even though it is just one among many factors that cause climate variations, carbon dioxide increasingly became the villain.
Bureaucratic forces at the UN that promote global governance—by the UN, needless to say—got behind this line of research. Then the scientists were called upon and given incentives to prove that such a political project was scientifically necessary, recalls Curry. The UN founded the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in 1988 to push this agenda, and ever since, climatologists—an increasingly visible and thriving group—have embraced the faith.

‘Uncertain’ Science: Judith Curry’s Take On Climate Change | WRKF
In 2005, I had a conversation with Rajendra Pachauri, an Indian railway engineer, who remade himself into a climatologist and became director of the IPCC, which received the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize under his tenure. Pachauri told me, without embarrassment, that, at the UN, he recruited only climatologists convinced of the carbon-dioxide warming explanation, excluding all others. This extraordinary collusion today allows politicians and commentators to declare that “science says that” carbon dioxide is to blame for global warming, or that a “scientific consensus” exists on warming, implying that no further study is needed—something that makes zero sense on its face, as scientific research is not based on consensus but on contradictory views.
Curry is skeptical about any positive results that might follow from environmental treaties—above all, the 2016 Paris Climate Accord. By the accord’s terms, the signatory nations—not including the United States, which has withdrawn from the pact—have committed themselves to reducing greenhouse-gas emissions in order to stabilize the planet’s temperature at roughly its present level. Yet as Curry elaborates, even if all the states respected this commitment—an unlikely prospect—the temperature reduction in 2100 would be an insignificant two-tenths of a degree. And this assumes that climate-model predictions are correct. If there is less future warming than projected, the temperature reductions from limiting emissions would be even smaller.

Since the Paris Climate Accord was concluded, no government has followed through
with any serious action. The U.S. pullout is hardly the only problem; India is effectively ignoring the agreement, and France “misses its goals of greenhouse-gas reduction every year,” admits Nicolas Hulot, the French environmental activist and former minister for President Emmanuel Macron. The accord is unenforceable and carries no sanctions—a condition insisted upon by many governments that wouldn’t have signed on otherwise.
We continue to live in a contradictory reality: on the one hand, we hear that nothing threatens humanity as much as rising atmospheric carbon dioxide; on the other hand, nothing much happens practically to address this allegedly dire threat. Most economists suggest that the only effective incentive to reduce greenhouse-gas levels would be to impose a global carbon tax. No government seems willing to accept such a levy.
Is there an apocalyptic warming crisis, or not? “We’re always being told that we are reaching a point of no return—that, for instance, the melting of the Arctic ice pack is the beginning of the apocalypse,” Curry says. “But this melting, which started decades ago, is not leading to catastrophe.” Polar bears themselves adapt and move elsewhere and have never been more numerous; they’re less threatened by the melting, she says, than by urbanization and economic development in the polar region.

Over the last year or so, moreover, the planet has started cooling, though “no one knows whether it will last or not, or whether it will put all the global-warming hypotheses in question.” According to Curry, the truly dramatic rupture of the ice pack would come not from global-warming-induced melting but from “volcanic eruptions in the Antarctic region that would break up the ice, and these cannot be predicted.” Climatologists don’t talk about such eruptions because their theoretical models can’t account for the unpredictable.
Does Curry recommend passivity, then? Not at all. In her view, research should be diversified to encompass study of the natural causes of climate change and not focus so obsessively on the human factor. She also believes that, instead of wasting time on futile treaties and in sterile quarrels, we would do better to prepare ourselves for the consequences of climate change, whether it’s warming or something else. Despite outcries about the proliferation of extreme weather incidents, she points out, hurricanes usually do less damage today than in the past because warning systems and evacuation planning have improved. That suggests the right approach.
Curry’s pragmatism may not win acclaim in environmentalist circles or among liberal pundits, though no one effectively contests the validity of her research or rebuts the data that she cites about an exceedingly complex reality. But, neither reality nor complexity mobilizes passions as much as myths do, which is why Judith Curry’s work is so important today. She is a myth-buster.

image.png 
 Climate Misinformation by Source: Judith Curry
Quotes | Articles | Blogs | Search | Links
 
Favorite climate myths by Judith Curry
Below are many of the climate myths used by Judith Curry
plus, how often each myth has been used.

What the Science Says:

“Global warming stopped in 1998, 1995, 2002, 2007, 2010, ????”
1
Global temperature is still rising and 2010 was the hottest recorded.
“Scientists tried to ‘hide the decline’ in global temperature”
The ‘decline’ refers to a decline in northern tree-rings, not global temperature,
and is openly discussed in papers and the IPCC reports.
2
“IPCC is alarmist”
Numerous papers have documented how IPCC predictions are more likely to underestimate the climate response.
3
“There is no consensus”
97% of climate experts agree humans are causing global warming.
4
Back to Climate Misinformation by Source
Top Scientists Slam and Ridicule UN IPCC Climate Report
https://thenewamerican.com/top-scientists-slam-and...

Sep 30, 2013 · Moments after the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN IPCC) released a summary of its latest global-warming report on September 27, top climate scientists and experts were …
Climate “Consensus” Con Game: Desperate Effort … – The New …
https://thenewamerican.com/climate-consensus-con...

May 22, 2013 · The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is in trouble, and climate alarmists are hoping the much-ballyhooed report by Australian activist John Cook, 
The 97% consensus on global warming – Skeptical Science
https://skepticalscience.com/global-warming-scientific-consensus-intermediate.htm

Jan 22, 2012 · Multiple studies find between 90 to 100% of climate scientists agree humans are causing global warming, with multiple studies converging on 97 percent consensus. This position is also endorsed by the Academies of Science from 80 countries plus many scientific organizations that study climate science.
The Great Climate Change Bamboozle Industry – Town Hall
https://townhall.com/columnists/Calvin Beisner/2014/...

Dec 22, 2014 · Since 1988 the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has said “climate sensitivity” (warming from doubled CO 2 after all feedback) is 2–4.5°C with a best estimate of 3°C …
John Coleman’s Blog – Global Warming/Climate Change is not a …
https://colemanscornerdotcomdotbr.wordpress.com

The new report says that climate change is driven almost entirely by human action, warns of a worst-case scenario where seas could rise as high as eight feet by the year 2100, and details climate-related damage across the United States as a result of 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit of global warming.

6 Claims Made by Climate Change Skeptics—and How to Respond | Rainforest Alliance (rainforest-alliance.org)
Climatologist Dr. Judith Curry: ‘The climate is going to change independent of what we do with emissions’ – 
‘Thinking that we can control the climate is misguided hubris’ | Climate Depot
It’s Over 120 Degrees in Death Valley, America’s Hottest Place; Here’s A Brief History of Its Legendary
Extreme Heat | The Weather Channel – Articles from The Weather Channel | weather.com
Environmental group urges Biden to wean nation’s biofuel program off liquid fuels.
In Green Deal, Climate Committee, Dems Hit Climate on Two Fronts (ecosystemmarketplace.com)
When Trump’s EPA needed a climate scientist, they called on Alabama’s John Christy – al.com
Michael Mann House Testimony on Climate Change: Embarrassing, Rude | National Review
Climatologist Dr Judith Curry testifies that the man-made climate change theory is a hoax
The IPCC May Have Outlived its Usefulness – An Interview with Judith Curry | OilPrice.com
Leaked Email Reveals Who’s Who List of Climate Denialists – Inside Climate News
Climate Change without Catastrophe: Interview with Anthony Watts | OilPrice.com
Obama admin scientist says climate ’emergency’ is based on fallacy (nypost.com)
New Detailed Global Climate Change Projections from NASA (scitechdaily.com)
Record gas prices have nearly doubled since Biden took office (msn.com)
The 10 Most-Respected Global Warming Skeptics (businessinsider.com)
Sky high: Carbon dioxide levels in air spike past milestone (msn.com)
Anti-global warming documentary “Climate Hustle,” – Bing video
Climate Hustle (2016) – Bing video

Seven Victims of the Climate Witch Hunt (townhall.com)
1976. The Incredible Heatwave. – Search (bing.com)
The Great Yellowstone Fire (1988) – Bing video 
The Imaginary Climate Crisis (rumble.com)
Climatologist Dr. Judith Curry – Bing video

Here’s an extreme analysis between one of the coldest summers of the last 50 years, 1972 and the hottest summer on record, 1976. Summer 1972 had a CET of 14.2, whilst Summer 1976 had a CET of 17.8

Plymouth
Summer 1972 Mean Max: 17.3C (-1.4)
Summer 1976 Mean Max: 21.8C (+3.1)

Belfast
Summer 1972 Mean Max: 16.8C (-1.3)
Summer 1976 Mean Max: 20.5C (+2.4)

Glasgow
Summer 1972 Mean Max: 17.4C (-1.3)
Summer 1976 Mean Max: 20.7C (+2.0)

Dyce
Summer 1972 Mean Max: 16.8C (-0.6)
Summer 1976 Mean Max: 20.2C (+2.6)

Elmdon
Summer 1972 Mean Max: 17.8C (-1.9)
Summer 1976 Mean Max: 23.2C (+3.5)

Durham
Summer 1972 Mean Max: 17.7C (-1.3)
Summer 1976 Mean Max: 21.4C (+2.4)

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Sending love and strength

Dora Mendoza (R), the grandmother of Amerie Jo Garza, who died in the mass shooting, mourns at a makeshift memorial outside Uvalde County Courthouse in Uvalde, Texas, on May 26, 2022. Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images.

Parents of school shooting victims to Uvalde: 
‘You don’t think that you’re going to survive, but you do survive’

Uvalde has brought back painful memories for parents who have lost kids in school shootings. Four such parents spoke to Insider about the heartache they felt in the Texas shooting’s aftermath. “It was like reliving Sandy Hook again for me,” one father said. 
Several parents whose children were killed in past school shootings offered solace and guidance to grieving Uvalde parents as they reflected on the agonizing journey that
awaits the families impacted by last week’s mass shooting.
“There are no words,” said Patricia Oliver, whose 18-year-old son Joaquin was
killed at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in 2018.
 
“There’s no situation that can give you that peace, that person that you lost back.”
Last week, an 18-year-old gunman opened fire at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texaskilling 21 people, including 19 children and two teachers, all of whom were in the same fourth-grade classroom. The massacre is the latest in an ever-growing list of school shootings that have exposed more than 300,000 American school children to gun violence in the past two decades. 
The impacted Uvalde families now join a terrible but increasingly
populous club of parents who have lost children in school shootings.
Four parents whose children were killed in the 2018 Parkland shooting and the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary massacre spoke to Insider in the aftermath of Uvalde, sharing their outrage and heartache at the all-too-familiar scene unfolding in Texas. 
 
Stirring painful memories
It’s been nearly ten years since Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis’ 6-year-old son Jesse Lewis was murdered in his 1st grade classroom at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Connecticut. But watching the Uvalde tragedy unfold brought the painful memories instantly flooding back. “I can’t help but think, what I went through,” Heslin told Insider.
“It was like reliving Sandy Hook again for me.” Heslin is all too aware of the impossible tasks that await the Uvalde families: planning funerals, battling political agendas, and laying their small children to rest.  
“It’s a long, long process and you never get over it,” he said. 
The wounds are still fresh for Lori Alhadeff, who lost her 14-year-old daughter Alyssa Alhadeff at Parkland in 2018.
“It really brings back all the emotions from four years ago,” Alhadeff said. 
Oliver, whose son was also a victim of the Florida shooting, said the Uvalde attack made her feel like her son’s murder had just happened that morning. 
Once a family is unwittingly forced to join this awful club, it’s important that they realize that their healing journey will be lifelong and non-linear, the parents said. 
“It’s like a roller coaster. You know, one moment you could be fine,” Alhadeff said.
“The next moment you’re walking in a grocery store and they could be playing music on the radio and it just emotionally breaks you down.”  
Each person will cope differently, too, Oliver said. 
“Everything is valid. You know, if you want to go out and dance, it’s valid.
If you want to get drunk, go on, do it,” she said. “But you have to…be you and
drain that pain that is gonna be with you, sadly, for the rest of your life.”

A man mourns at a makeshift memorial for the Robb Elementary School shooting victims outside the Uvalde County Courthouse in Texas on May 27, 2022. Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images
A man mourns at a makeshift memorial for the Robb Elementary School shooting victims outside the Uvalde County Courthouse in Texas on May 27, 2022. Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty © 

The small town of Uvalde — like Parkland and Newtown before it — has been descended upon by authorities, journalists, and do-gooders in the aftermath of last week’s shooting.
But the media circus will eventually die down and the country will move on to the next inevitable catastrophe, leaving the families alone with their grief, the parents told Insider.
“When the world leaves and when the friends and family leave, that is when the real healing work begins,” Lewis said. 
Lewis, who started the Jesse Lewis Choose Love Movement following her son’s death,
said she found comfort in knowing that the country and the world mourned with her.
“Not only adults, but mostly children sending notes and offers of condolences and prayers,” she said. “That helped tremendously.” 
Alhadeff encouraged Uvalde parents to take care of themselves and surround themselves with loving and supporting people as they grieve.
“Your friends, family, the community loves you, supports you and will help you move forward,” she told Insider. 
Oliver, who knows these parents’ pain, said she was sending Uvalde “love” and “strength.” 
“You don’t think that you’re going to survive, but you do survive,” Lewis said. 

Exclusive: Surviving student in Uvalde elementary school shooting details what she saw.

Mom who ran into school during Uvalde, Texas shooting discusses moments inside.

image.png
Multiple people injured in shooting at Wisconsin cemetery
during the funeral.  David K. Li and Suzanne Ciechalski

CHICAGO (CBS) — Police in Racine, Wisconsin, are investigating after several shots were fired at Graceland Cemetery, reportedly during a funeral for a man who was shot
and killed by police last month.
Racine Police have confirmed that, shortly before 2:30 p.m., multiple shots were fired at the cemetery. CBS 58 in Milwaukee reports there were “multiple victims,” but police could not immediately provide further details on how many people had been shot.
Police have urged people to avoid the area due to a “critical incident.”
CBS 58 in Milwaukee reports the Racine County Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed they have not been called to the scene. Ascension All Saints Hospital, located about a half mile from the cemetery, is on lockdown. 

Just before 2:30 p.m., multiple shots were fired at the cemetery, Racine police said
in a tweet. “There are victims but unknown how many at this time,” police said.
“The scene is still active and being investigated.”
Racine police asked people to avoid the area around the Graceland Cemetery,
along the 3600 block of Osborne Boulevard. Several streets were blocked.
Ascension All Saints Hospital, adjacent to the cemetery, went on lockdown.

According to the Racine Journal Times, residents reported hearing 20 to 30 shots.
It was not immediately clear how many people were shot or the extent of their injuries. 
A Racine Fire Department official directed a reporter to the police department for information.
An interment for Da’Shontay L. King Sr., the man fatally shot by Racine police May 20,
was taking place at the cemetery Thursday afternoon, according to his obituary.
WTMJ-TV reported that an official at the Draeger-Langendorf Funeral Home and
Crematory confirmed that the shooting occurred at King’s internment.
This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: 
Multiple shots fired, unknown number of victims at Racine’s Graceland Cemetery

NBC, WaPo, CNN drop damning reports on WH turmoil, suggest issues plaguing Biden weren’t caused by his admin (msn.com)
Oil prices reverse higher as US inventories dive while energy giant says OPEC + output boost isn’t enough (msn.com)
‘Just do something’: Biden urges Congress to pass bans on assault weapons, high-capacity magazines (msn.com)
Gas Station Starts Selling Gas for a Whopping $8 per Gallon: ‘I Just Find That Absolutely Insane’ (msn.com)
Economics professor rips Biden’s inflation response: President ‘wrong that he can’t do anything’ (msn.com)
Biden said he was going to lower gas prices. Less than a month later, they’re at an all-time high (msn.com)
Cramer-says-president-biden-needs-to-change-his-relationship-with-the-oil-industry – Search (bing.com)
U.S. car sales at ‘recessionary levels,’ as inflation, rising interest rate concerns increase, RBC says (msn.com)
Tucker Carlson: Biden just spoke about the need to disarm the population (msn.com)
Gas taxes vary bigtime from state to state. How much do you pay — and is relief in sight?
Biden’s inflation plan leaves the Federal Reserve in ‘terrible’ position, says Holtz-Eakin.
Jesse Watters: Biden doesn’t care about mass shootings in America’s inner cities
Biden Finally Admits He Has No Real Solution to Lowering Gas and Food Prices
Republicans’ Chances of Beating Democrats for Control of Senate in Midterms
Climate change could spell the end form Midwestern corn, study finds (msn.com)
Biden is going to make inflation ‘worse,’ says Heritage Foundation president
Ford CEO Thinks Automotive Industry Is Headed For “A Shakeout” (msn.com)
What the new congressional maps tell us about the 2022 election (msn.com)
“Outrageous”: Gas prices reach new record high in California, U.S. (msn.com)
Nancy Pelosi’s trip to Ukraine was a cover-up for partisan failure (msn.com)
OPEC and allies to raise production by additional 216,000 barrels per day.
Tactical Unit, Not Off-Duty Officer, Killed Uvalde Gunman (msn.com)
Pump Patrol: AAA says drivers are running out of gas (msn.com)
Gas prices on the road to $5 nationwide very soon (msn.com)
Who do you believe, Joe Biden or your lying wallet? (msn.com)
Gas prices on the road to $5 nationwide very soon (msn.com)
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Details by Britt McHenry

At the end of February, I found out I had a brain tumor.
It was in my left frontal lobe—and it was very large.


Britt McHenry Bares Midriff in Pic Celebrating 2 Years Cancer-Free (survivornet.com)
“If you would have told me two and a 1/4 year ago, when I was diagnosed with brain cancer, I’d be standing back on the sidelines covering football … I’m not sure I’d believe you,” she writes. “It felt so natural. My love and passion will always be sports media.
I’ve worn different hats, covered politics and news, but this … it’s where I thrive.”
“Let this be a reminder: No matter what adversity you face or obstacles you overcome … you’re stronger than what you’re facing. Love y’all. 

Thankfully (because of COVID-19), I was able to have surgery just 8 days after discovering the tumor. Britt McHenry shares photo from post brain surgery on March 04, 2020 (larrybrownsports.com)

brittmchenry Verified: At the end of February, I found out I had a brain tumor.
It was in my left frontal lobe—and it was very large. Thankfully (because of COVID-19),
I was able to have surgery just 8 days after discovering the tumor.
I struggled a bit emotionally with that quick turn of events later.
The headaches I had attributed to stress from hard stuff I was experiencing were actually brain tumor symptoms. It had grown so large; it was near my eyes and the headaches involved vomiting. In fact, one time landing at LaGuardia,
I had to sprint to a trash can and throw up (in front of the entire terminal…not fun).
The headaches would get so bad, I’d have to wake up in the middle of the night and
put ice packs on my head.
As soon as we get out of #corona quarantine, I promise to dedicate my time to helping brain tumor patients, especially young patients like myself, as much as I can.

Brain Tumor Surgery | Johns Hopkins Medicine
A chiropractor suggested I get an MRI. I will always be grateful to him. 
It brought tears to my eyes to read your messages of support.
My family, friends and boyfriend and all of you got me through a difficult time.
Thank you @johnshopkinssph @hopkinsmedicine for saving my life.
And thank you to those still fighting the same battle. My next MRI is in early May.
I’m back to work (from home) on TV. Medicine and prayer are both amazing things.
I Will be eternally thankful to the world class surgeon and the medical team.
These pictures include the before surgery, after (face was swollen) and now
(Minus some serious recovery and quarantine roots, feel me ladies)?
We’re all stronger than the adversity we face. #braintumorawareness #braintumor

Keeping Your Cancer Battle Private.
More than a year after announcing her brain cancer diagnosis, former Fox Nation host Britt McHenry is back on the field — where she “thrives.” On Sept. 19, she posted to Instagram for the first time in more than a year with an update about how she’s doing post-cancer diagnosis, and everything seems to be going well for her. Battling cancer is
an extremely personal experience, and so is choosing who to tell about your diagnosis.
Hope After Brain Cancer

” Britt McHenry’s Cancer Diagnosis.”
McHenry was originally trying to keep her diagnosis under wraps, which many in the SurvivorNet community can certainly understand. But when news of her health leaked online in February 2020, she decided to take control of the narrative.
She shared with her supporters that a tumor was found on her brain; she added that
she would be having surgery. She said that her doctors believe the tumor was cancerous,
but it was unknown at the time.

“I had good & bad news today,” she posted.
Britt McHenry shared an update about her health in April 2020, just after she had surgery for her brain cancer. She disclosed that a tumor was found in her left frontal lobe, and it was “very large.” “I struggled a bit emotionally with that quick turn of events later,” she posted on Instagram about the surgery. “The headaches I had attributed to stress from hard stuff I was experiencing were actually brain tumor symptoms.
It had grown so large; it was near my eyes and the headaches involved vomiting.
” She also shared that a chiropractor suggested she get an MRI, which caught her cancer.
“I will always be grateful to him,” she says.

“I’m back to work (from home) on TV. Medicine and prayer are both amazing things.
Will be eternally thankful to the world class surgeon and the medical team.
” McHenry was a commentator on Fox Nation and hosted Un-PC, a show on the streaming service. However, she parted ways with Fox over the summer after settling a lawsuit with the television network over a sexual harassment claim she filed in December 2019. In the lawsuit, she claimed that Tyrus, her former co-host, engaged in inappropriate behavior. That behavior included what’s been described as sexually charged text messages.
McHenry is now a host for WTTG/FOX 5 News in Washington, D.C. 
Before her time with Fox Nation, she was at ESPN for four years.

Keeping Your Cancer Battle Private: McHenry’s Decision
While she’s since shared a lot of details about her diagnosis, the stage and type of cancer
McHenry has is unknown as she never released that information to the public. This was most likely done in an effort to keep as much of her diagnosis as possible private, considering she didn’t even want to share that she was sick in the first place.
She ended up disclosing most of her cancer journey on social media, but it’s unclear if she would’ve shared if she wasn’t forced to correct the narrative caused by the rumors about her health that were circulating last year. Battling cancer is an extremely personal experience, and so is choosing to whom you want to disclose your diagnosis.

Former Fox Nation Host Britt McHenry, 35, is Back on the Football Field Sidelines
One Year After Brain Cancer Diagnosis: ‘Where I Thrive’ | SurvivorNet 
For some people, it’s a no-brainer to share their struggle and absorb as much support as possible, while for others, sharing the news doesn’t come so easily. Dr. Marianna Strongin, a licensed clinical psychologist and founder of Strong In Therapy Psychology, tells Survivor Net that whether someone shares this heavy news is their personal preference.

Related: ‘It’s a Person’s Preference’: Why Some People Share Their Cancer Battles, and Why Others Keep It Quiet | Survivor Net “I recommend sharing, I’m a therapist,” Strongin says with a laugh, “but to whom and how many people is up to the person (with cancer). ”From a psychological stance, “the more that we share, the less likely we are to feel shame, and shame is quite toxic; it makes us feel alone and it makes us feel like there’s something wrong with us,” she says.

“In that instance, it’s better to share; sharing is more connecting.
”Regardless of what you decide, “everyone should focus on what makes them feel good,” Strongin says.Finding Your Support System: Heidi Kugler’s Survivor Story Not All Brain Tumors Are Cancerous Naturally, a lot of people think “cancer” when they hear the word tumor. However, most brain tumors aren’t actually cancerous. Less than one third (about 32%) of brain tumors are considered malignant (cancerous), according to the American Brain Tumor Association. If a tumor is made up of normal-looking cells, then the tumor is benign. But these tumors may still require treatment, such as surgery.

Because of this, they are often referred to as “non-malignant,” since the word benign can be misleading. The most common type of non-malignant brain tumors are meningiomas, however, there are 120 different types of brain and central nervous system tumors, according to ABTA.
Oftentimes after an MRI, a biopsy will be performed on a brain tumor to determine
its type. Sometimes, the results of imaging tests show that a tumor is likely to be non-malignant, and a biopsy is not necessary. Britt McHenry didn’t disclose whether or not
she had a biopsy, simply stating that her tumor would be removed with surgery.
Contributing: Laura Gesualdi-Gilmore

As I was wheeled into the operating room at Johns Hopkins on March 4, 2020, for an eight-hour craniotomy, for just a second, I thought, “I didn’t know if I’m going to wake up from this.” Gratefully, I DID wake up, after my amazing team successfully removed a grade 2 astrocytoma the size of two golf balls from my left frontal lobe.

The first thing I asked for was A cup of coffee.
I listened to Rupert Holmes – Escape (The Piña Colada Song) on repeat to cheer
myself up. I was in the ICU after all, bright lights all around me, wearing what looked
like a helmet of gauze on my head. I even joked that I should put the NFL logo on it.
When my medical team eventually took my “helmet” of gauze off, the swelling
moved from my head to my face.  With my career in broadcast news and sports, 
I was nervous to eventually go back on camera. “Would my face still look bloated?”
I wondered. “Am I going to be seen as damaged goods?”
The physical and emotional trauma after diagnosis and surgery — along with Covid-19 lockdown less than two weeks later — were the most challenging times of my life.

I felt like I lost a part of me, because physically, I did.  
All told, I’m an extroverted, confident person. But for the first three weeks after surgery,
I experienced intense mood changes. I’d get impatient and angry. 
Then, I’d have bouts of depression. The fear of fatality would hit me.
I felt half-dead. I would only learn later that decreased motivation, mood swings and even drastic changes in personality are symptoms of frontal lobe trauma.
My expert neurosurgeon, Dr. Henry Brem, essentially said to me, “You’re going to feel this in a month. It will take you, and it’s OK to feel that. It’s not normal to have your head cut open.”

He was right. Acceptance was hard. My confidence only came back about six months ago.
What have I learned from all this?
Those little things we get bogged down by, they just don’t matter.
Early in my career, I was very competitive. At one point, I had two jobs, traveling between New York and Washington D.C. All I cared about was job and career advancement.

When I started having next-level migraines,
like most Americans, I told myself,
“It’s just stress, I have to push through it.”

But after trying self-care, massage and acupuncture for six to eight months,
I decided to see a chiropractor.
When I shared my symptoms, he immediately scheduled an MRI.
Soon after the MRI, the lead radiologist called me into his office.
As I walked down the cold, sterile hallway, I began to cry. I knew something was wrong. 
When I walked in, I could see on an array of monitors, there was my tumor, clear as day.
It was massive. 
When I heard the word, “brain lesion,” I thought I was going to die.
But I did not die from my brain tumor, and I am here to tell you now
that YOU ARE NOT ALONE.
Whether you are a survivor like me, or a caregiver, or a friend or co-worker of a brain tumor survivor, during Brain Tumor Awareness Month, I encourage you to share your story. 
I want the general public to have a little more understanding.
Having a brain tumor is a life-enduring medical issue.
The more we can share, the more we can heal.

Britt McHenry is a former ESPN Reporter and Fox News Contributor.
Check out her new podcast, Pump the Brakes, wherever you find your favorite podcasts.
Britt McHenry podcast, Pump the Brakes, – Search (bing.com)

The Highest Paid Female News Anchors (thedaddest.com)
Britt McHenry beach photos – Search (bing.com)
Britt McHenry beach photos – Search (bing.com)
Britt McHenry brain tumor – Search (bing.com)
Britt McHenry Beach Photos – Bing images
Britt McHenry – Search (bing.com)

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<—>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Cheryl Broyles: Managing GBM for 22 years — Glioblastoma: Alternative Treatments
(Gbm alternative treatments.org)

Glioblastoma Brain Tumor Survivor – Home | Facebook
After my mom’s diagnosis, I remembered interviewing Megan at the Woodstock Fruit Festival in 2013 and had to share this inspiring video. I hope Megan’s story motivates
you to improve your health and wellbeing by eating more raw fruits and vegetables.
Be sure to educate yourself by watching The Truth About Cancer Live Symposium

TEEN BEATS BRAIN CANCER ON RAW FOOD DIET
Rawsynergytv. interviewing Megan at the Woodstock Fruit Festival in 2013
Brain Cancer Healed with a Raw Vegan Diet (Megan Sherow) – Cancer Compass an Alternate Route (Cancer compass alternate route.com)

Megan Sherow cancer story: Teenager overcomes terminal brain cancer with raw foods (fruit-powered.com)

Overcoming Brain Cancer with the Raw Food Diet » the nerve blog | Blog Archive | Boston University (bu.edu)

Cure Brain Cancer | Brain Tumor | Cancer Survivor | Raw Food Diet | Fruit Diet | Megan Sherow – YouTube

Blog 3 — Glioblastoma: Alternative Treatments (Gbm alternative treatments.org)

Megan Sherow: Raw Food Diet – Search (bing.com)

Megan Sherow: – Search (bing.com)

Medical Edge: Cancer survivor east whole food diet.
CINCINNATI (Liz Bonis) — A local woman who survived cancer said a change in
her diet made all the difference. A young cancer survivor said she had new hope
after not just traditional treatment but also a big change in her diet.
She was part of a team who said people should WATCH Plant Pure Nation documentary
It shares details on the importance of a diet based on whole foods.
Laura Wilson who was diagnosed with brain cancer said, about 14 months ago.
Wilson was grateful to many of the people who not only provided traditional treatment
for glioblastoma multiforme, but an aggressive high grade brain tumor also; they followed
it up by introducing her to a diet that is now growing in popularity across the country.

WATCH: Medical Edge: Cancer survivor east whole food diet – YouTube

That’s thanks in part to a documentary now showing in many parts of the country called PlantPure Nation. The movie suggested people all could benefit from a vegan diet which cuts out food from animals such as meat and adds in more fruits, vegetables and whole or unprocessed foods. Doctor Rekha Chaudhary was Wilson’s cancer specialist. She said in just the time Wilson has been on this type of diet, Her MRI’s have been looking really good. Wilson however said there was something else about it that was really healing,
It was something that we could do to give me a better chance and it gave us hope, which is something we didn’t have in a lot of other avenues to pursue. Whether or not people want to go completely vegan, there are a lot of reasons to eat more plants in the diet.

Restaurants like Rooted, which are vegan allow people to have more options when they
eat out. Really what it comes down to is a what they call a shift of the plate, rather than just covering the plate with meat and potatoes people may actually want to put more plants on the plate.

Dr. T. Colin Campbell, a nutrition professor, said, Really, it’s amazing; you start eating this way and the next thing you know you start craving a salad. The idea was that the earlier people start eating this way the more they give their body what it needs each day to stay well. Doctor Chaudhary said people need more science based studies to support the idea.

Here’s a sample of some of what’s at Rooted: Plant Pure Nation Trailer – YouTube
Follow 12/WKRC-TV (@Local12) / Twitter and LIKE us on Facebook for updates!
Follow Liz Bonis (@lbonis1) / Twitter, and LIKE her on Facebook.

RESEARCH: Dr. Van Merkle- Science Based Nutrition
5795 Far Hills Ave, Dayton, OH 45429 ·
(937) 433-3140

Surviving the cancer cure | Scott Hamilton | TEDxKC – Bing video
Scott Hamilton Proton Therapy Center – Search (bing.com)

24-Year-Old Brain Cancer Survivor Who Lost His Eyesight Has Vision Restored and Can See Girlfriend For The First Time. – Search (bing.com)

Florida Salesman Survives Brain Cancer Twice, and Bone Cancer with Baseball-Sized Tumor: ‘When It Matters, My Default Is Positivity and Optimism’ | Survivor Net

Tori Svenson,
 overcame childhood brain cancer, was crowned Miss Columbus
State University 2022, to qualify for the Miss Georgia scholarship competition.
New Miss CSU ready to tackle childhood cancer research – Columbus State University
Stage 4 Cancer Survivor – Annie’s Story | The Essential Health Blog (essense-of-life.com)
How I survived a stage 4 GBM and had a healthy baby after 2 years of Chemo
My dad has a glioblastoma (brain cancer) | Cancer Quick Facts (solitarius.org)
Cancer Survival Stories – 4 People That Healed Cancer with Natural Remedies
Heidi Kugler’s Survivor Story Not All Brain Tumors Are Cancerous Naturally,
Brain cancer now deadliest for U.S. children: study | Reuters   
Susan Hilburger, brain cancer survivor – Search (bing.com)
Brain Tumor Survivor Stories (virtualtrials.org.)

Satan, The Jews, and The Afterlife – YouTube

Source: YouTube

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America’s Population Density

Collectively, to this extent, all of the red areas add up to more than the sum of the area
covered by the Gray Area on this map. 

With this in mind, it’s quite obvious that Americans will almost always favor the coasts!

image.png
Map Shows How Many European Countries Can Fit Into the Continental US (matadornetwork.com)

The United States is huge, and this map depicts all of the countries that could fit inside 
it in terms of area, with some room to spare. As you can see, there’s a lot.

image.png
A few more fun facts: if it were its own country.

Texas would be the 39th largest country in the world (out of 197)
 You could fit all of the UK inside Texas 2.8 times. Even more amazingly,
you could fit 10 European countries inside Texas at once, with room to spare.

image.png

🔒 How the Great Lakes were formed – Simply put, the Great Lakes
were created by glaciers. So much for the human race causing Climate Change 🙂

The Very Cold Case of the Glacier – The New York Times (nytimes.com)
Well, during what is called the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) or about 21,000 years ago, North America was covered by an ice sheet called the Laurentide Ice Sheet that was approximately four kilometers (about 2.5 miles) thick and 13 million sq kilometers wide (5 million sq miles). About 18,000 years ago, As the glacier melted, it slowly moved toward Canada and left behind a series of large depressions that filled with water.
These formed the basic shape of the Great Lakes, How do glaciers shape the landscape? Animation from geog.1 Kerboodle. – YouTube

image.png 
DEA’s Map of Cartel Influence in The United States

The U.S. DEA released its annual National Drug Threat Assessment, which shows which states have been infiltrated by Mexican drug cartels. According to the report, various cartels wield significant power in most US states, with the Sinaloa Cartel and Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion having the most clout. The Sinaloa Cartel, Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación, Cartel del Golfo, Organización de Beltrán-Leyva, and Los Rojos are all represented on this map, in Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Chicago, New York, Florida, Kansas, Colorado, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico.

image.png

This map illustrates which regions of the United States have the lightest pollution, so if you consider yourself a stargazing hobbyist, it may be prudent to avoid the East Coast –
or, for that matter, the entire eastern half of the United States.

image.png
The eastern half of the United States appears to be not only brighter but also noisier.
The moral of the story is to avoid — the eastern half of the country and large cities in
general if you despise people.

image.png
… Indeed, it is our solar system’s largest volcano, Mons Olympus.

As illustrated above, it is so large that it would not fit inside the state of Arizona
and is twice the height of Mount Everest. Can you even fathom the devastation
that would result if this thing erupted? Or perhaps we don’t want to know…

image.png

image.png
Middle America’s Population

As previously stated, it is no secret that Americans gravitate toward the coasts, but this map puts it into perspective. The orange sections correspond to a population equal to that of the red section in its entirety. So, if you also enjoy nature and solitude, the red section (known as the flyover states or middle America) may be for you!

image.png
Route to all of the Springfields

The United States has a LOT of Springfields – 33 to be exact, with five in
Wisconsin alone! And that does not include the townships (in which case, there are 36). 
If you’ve ever wished you could visit all of them in a single trip, this is the map for you! 
It indicates the shortest route.

image.png
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXH2rfDmpEs
This Land Is Your Land (Lee Greenwood with Lyrics, Contemporary)
One moment in time / – YouTube
Song: One Moment In Time (Live)
Artist: Dana Winner
Album: One Moment In Time
Writers: Albert Hammond
The best 👏👏

image.png
Places Johnny Cash Has Been in ‘I’ve Been Everywhere.’ – video

The song “I’ve Been Everywhere” by Johnny Cash depicts his claims of
having traveled worldwide, along with all of the places shown on this map.

Interesting Maps That Will Change Your Perspective | Tiparents

Biden Administration Was Wrong About Inflation, Janet Yellen Says, Amid Grim Polls

A woman was gored and tossed by a bison after approaching the animal in Yellowstone.
Park officials are reminding visitors to keep back more than 25 yards from large animals such as bison, elk, bighorn sheep, deer, moose and coyotes – and at least 100 yards away from bears and wolves.

Natural gas export boom threatens US Gulf Coast. – Search (bing.com)Biden’s fantastical claim of $500 in annual utility savings (msn.com)
Biden Is ‘Frustrated’ with Myriad of Issues Tanking Approval Ratings, from Inflation to Gun Violence: Report (msn.com)
Uvalde elementary school shooting: Photo shows hero Border Patrol agent with borrowed shotgun (msn.com)
Biden admin ‘directly responsible’ for gas prices, inflation and they’ll pay for it in midterms: Rep. Emmer (msn.com)
Could This Be the Reason Why Police Reportedly Didn’t Enter Texas School to Confront the Shooter? (townhall.com)
Treasury Sec. Janet Yellen blasted on Twitter after admitting ‘I was wrong’ on inflation: ‘Resign’ (msn.com)
German leader says Russian economy is collapsing; Putin fires 5 more generals: Live Ukraine updates
“More than 80% of workers concerned about recession, says CNBC’s All-America Workforce Survey”
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen admits she was WRONG to say inflation would only be ‘transitory’
Harris unveils White House plan to tackle water scarcity as national security priority (msn.com)
Inflation is already in the pipeline, very little can be done today, says Wharton’s Jeremy Siegel.

“Treasury Sec. Janet Yellen: Inflation is way too high, a big burden on American households”
High gas prices complicate Democrats’ hopes of picking up US House seats in California
Why US gas prices are at a record, and why they’ll stay high for a long time (msn.com)
Jamie Dimon warns of an economic ‘hurricane’ coming: ‘Brace yourself’ (msn.com)
Europe’s Russian Oil Ban Could Mean a New World Order for Energy (msn.com)
Why Biden’s inflation blitz is falling flat after a major miscalculation (msn.com)
Texas school shooting survivor, 10, recalls best friend’s last words (msn.com)
Biden says he heard late about baby formula shortage (msn.com)
Rising Gas Prices: The True Cost of Going Electric (msn.com)
FDA audited over baby formula crisis (msn.com)

I survived the Columbine massacre 23 years ago. Now my kids have to fear the next one.
Mother who ran into Texas school during shooting discusses moments inside – YouTube
Gas prices are skyrocketing. Here’s why people haven’t cut back on spending – yet
Biden keeps repeating false Second Amendment claim, despite repeated fact checks
Climate expert on ‘problems’ with Biden administration’s renewable energy push
U.S. COVID Cases Are 5 Times Higher Now Than Last Memorial Day Weekend
Experts Warn of Summer Energy Blackouts during Biden’s Green Transition
Used Car Bubble Likely To Burst In 2022, Chip Shortage Crisis To End Soon
“It is striking to compare the United States to other members of its wealthy, 
Biden to push new economic agenda, migration plan at Americas summit
Italy Has a Gun Culture but No Mass Shootings—Here’s Why (msn.com)
Harris unveils plan to ‘elevate’ water security in foreign policy (msn.com)
What other countries could teach Ted Cruz about solving a gun crisis. 
Biden cannot admit the truth about his inflation problem (msn.com)
Smiles, unicorns, softball: Young shooting victims recalled (msn.com)
Even after shootings, experts warn against cellphones in schools
English-speaking cohort,” says Chris Hayes – Search (bing.com)
Joe Biden Keeps Getting His Gun Facts Wrong (msn.com)
White House denies Biden is at fault for inflation (msn.com)

‘I am a 53-year-old single man with very little savings’:
I want to take out a 30-year mortgage, but pay it off in 7 years. Is that possible?
The-fed-needs-to-get-inflation-under-control-quickly-says-mohamed-el-erian
US will see higher gas prices if oil production is not increased: Former energy secretary
What The Latest USDA Predictions Say About Food Inflation In The US? (msn.com)
This-ventriloquist-surprised-the-judges-on-America-s-Got-Talent – Search (bing.com)
US gas prices hit a new record high as more states pay $5 or more per gallon
Biden’s ex daughter-in-law opens up about marriage to Hunter (msn.com)

Suze Orman Says Today’s Economic Climate Is Worse Than Before the Pandemic
Lumber prices plunge 12% to new 2022 lows as wood inventories start to pile up
States Whose Economies Are Failing vs. States Whose Economies Are Thriving
When it comes to heat, summer of 1988 was worse (patriotledger.com)
Rising cost of living hurts U.S. consumer confidence; house prices soar
Oil prices surge, gas hits new high after E.U. cracks down on Russia
Gas prices soar past $8 per gallon at California gas station (msn.com)
Inflation drives Americans’ gloom about the economy (msn.com)
President Biden’s 3-Part Plan for Cooling Inflation (msn.com)
In shift, White House starts to talk up economy (msn.com)
Gas prices make another painful jump. – Search (bing.com)
What Biden is really saying about the economy (msn.com)
Which president did the best job with inflation?(msn.com)
Biden’s plan to make inflation worse (msn.com)
Biden’s pathetic inflation plan (msn.com)

18 – Search (bing.com)

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[FINAL COUNTDOWN] ⏳

Scientists Figure Out Why Some Lifelong Smokers Never Develop Cancer.

SMOKERS FACE THE BIGGEST RISK OF DEVELOPING LUNG CANCER, EVEN IF IT DOESN’T RESULT IN EVERY LONG-TERM SMOKER DEVELOPING THE DISEASE.

A NEW STUDY SHOWS WHY.
Researchers have identified a set of genetic markers that help even smokers live longer and protect them from deadly diseases such as cancer. “We identified a set of genetic markers that together seem to promote longevity,” said corresponding author of the
study Morgan Levine from University of California-Los Angeles.
The study identified a network of single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs
(a DNA sequence variation occurring commonly within a population) that allow
certain individuals to better withstand environmental damage (like smoking)
and mitigate damage.

There is evidence that these genes may facilitate lifespan extension by increasing cellular maintenance and repair,” Levine noted. Therefore, even though some individuals are exposed to high levels of biological stressors, like those found in cigarette smoke, their bodies may be better set up to cope with and repair the damage,” Levine pointed out.
Smoking has been shown to have drastic consequences for lifespan and disease progression, and it has been suggested that cigarette exposure may impact the risk of death and disease via its acceleration of the aging process.
The new findings suggest that longevity, rather than being entirely determined by environmental factors, may be under the regulation of complex genetic networks which influence stress resistance and genomic stability. Genomic instability also happens to be one of the hallmarks of cancer pathogenesis, and so the same genes that may promote survival among smokers may also be important for cancer prevention.

Scientists have developed a better understanding of lifelong smokers and their relationship to lung cancer.
While lung cancer’s largest risk is smoking on a regular basis, the majority of smokers don’t develop lung cancer.
Turns out, people’s genes play an important role, in particular the cells that line their lungs. Researchers spotted this benefit in the lungs of regular smokers, finding cells that are less likely to mutate with the passage of time.

A small study, published in Nature and made by researchers from Albert Einstein College of Medicine, made this discovery. Researchers have long speculated that smoking triggers people’s DNA to mutate, something that was proved in this study, which looked into the lungs of 14 non-smokers and 19 light, moderate and heavy smokers, comparing and contrasting their results.

Study Says Smoking Cigarettes Makes People Look Uglier

Their findings on heavy smokers suggest that some people’s DNAS are more likely to repair itself over time, protecting them from cancers that could arise due to exposing
their lungs to harmful agents in smoke.
“Our data suggest that these individuals may have survived for so long in spite of their heavy smoking because they managed to suppress further mutation accumulation. This leveling off of mutations could stem from these people having very proficient systems for repairing DNA damage or detoxifying cigarette smoke,” said pulmonologist Simon Spivack from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

This finding could explain why 80% to 90% of lifelong smokers never develop lung cancer.
Other factors like people’s diets, physical activity, and lifestyle could have an impact on their odds of developing cancers, including that of the lungs. Aside from understanding the disease further, the study’s results could lead to better disease prevention and could help physicists spot the disease earlier on, something pivotal in the disease’s prognosis.
“This may prove to be an important step toward the prevention and early detection of lung cancer risk and away from the current herculean efforts needed to battle late-stage disease, where the majority of health expenditures and misery occur,” said Spivack.

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Maria Loreto – The Fresh Toast

RELATED: Is It Smoking Weed Or Just Smoking That’s Bad For Your Heart?

Why some smokers get cancer and others don’t: Scientists discover genes that ‘lower the risk of early death’. Researchers wanted to know why some smokers survive to an old age and found that long-living smokers have specific genes that promote longevity!!!
They help the body’s cells protect themselves from the damage of smoking
‘Longevity’ genes were also linked with an 11% lower incidence of cancer.

By MADLEN DAVIES FOR MAILONLINE

Every smoker is aware their habit puts them at risk of disease and early death –
yet many still live to a ripe old age.

Now, US scientists have discovered it may be down to their genes.
Smokers who live for a long time may have specific genes promoting a lengthy lifespan, their study found.
And these ‘longevity’ genes were also linked with an 11 per cent lower incidence of cancer.
Scientists say the genes help the body’s cells maintain and repair themselves, protecting the person from ageing, and environmental damage like smoking. Tobacco kills up to half of its users, figures from the World Health Organization show. It says the tobacco epidemic is ‘one of the biggest public health threats the world has ever faced’, killing around 6 million people a year.

According to the American Cancer Society, tobacco use accounts for at least 30 percent of all cancer deaths, causing 87 percent of lung cancer deaths in men, and 70 percent of lung cancer deaths in women. 
And a body of previous research has suggested that smoking accelerates the aging process and causes disease and an early death.
But not all smokers die early, and a small proportion survive to old age, researchers noted.
To investigate why, they studied smokers who lived for a long time.
They identified these people as having a variant of a gene that allowed them to better withstand environmental damage, like the chemicals from cigarettes.

This gene was strongly linked with a high survival rate.
The study’s author, Morgan Levine, of UCLA, said: ‘We identified a set of genetic markers that together seem to promote longevity. ‘What’s more, many of these markers are in pathways that were discovered to be important for aging and lifespan.’

They may extend a person’s lifespan by helping their cells repair themselves, she added.
The same ‘longevity’ genes might also be important to prevent cancer, researchers said. The study found they were associated with nearly an 11 per cent lower incidence of the disease.
Ms. Levine continued: ‘Therefore, even though some individuals are exposed to high levels of biological stressors, like those found in cigarette smoke, their bodies may be better set up to cope with and repair the damage.’
And the same genes might also be important to prevent cancer, the researchers said.

The study found they were associated with a nearly 11 per cent lower incidence of the disease. The research was published in The Journals of Gerontology, Series A:
Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences. 

  what smoking does to your appearance – Bing video

             what smoking does to your lungs – Bing video

 what smoking does to your face – Bing video

             what smoking does to your eyes – Bing video

 what smoking does to your lips – Search (bing.com)
             what smoking does to your skin – Bing video

              what smoking does to your throat – Search (bing.com)

Britain's oldest smoker died aged 102, after puffing her way through 170,000 cigarettes (file photo)
Britain’s oldest smoker died aged 102.

The oldest smoker in Britain died aged 102, after puffing her way through 170,000 cigarettes. Winnie Langley took up the habit only days after World War I broke out in
June 1914 when she was just seven years old.

Winnie Langley RIP – dead because of credit issues
No matter how you spin the story, the article makes it quite clear that Winnie had succumbed because she quit smoking. Only, if you believe the lede, A pensioner, Winnie Langley, who smoked for more than 95 years and only gave up because she could no longer see the end of a match, has died a month short of her 103rd birthday.
Winnie quit because of her poor eyesight. Winnie Langley had already cut down from her five-a-day habit to just one cigarette last year because of the credit crunch. Yeah… and of course, the British health authorities didn’t see it fitting to provide Winnie in her hour of need with the measly five ciggies per day.


Winnie had a good run:

Throughout her life it is thought the defiant OAP, who outlived her husband, son and all of her 10 stepchildren. She even celebrated her 100th birthday by lighting up her 170,000th cigarette from a candle on her birthday cake.

The Breakthrough: Immunotherapy and the Race to Cure Cancer | eBay

Energy experts sound alarm about US electric grid: ‘Not designed to withstand the impacts of climate change’
Man who teaches teens how to properly shoot rifles names the ‘one gun law we should change right away’
US will see higher gas prices if oil production is not increased: Former energy secretary
U.S. COVID Cases Are 5 Times Higher Now Than Last Memorial Day Weekend (msn.com)
US inflation won’t slow for ‘another 18 months,’ economist Steve Moore says (msn.com)
40-year-high inflation ‘elephant in the room’ for American families | Fox News Video
Larry Kudlow: Why Biden’s inflation plan will not work (msn.com)
Inflation drives Americans’ gloom about the economy (msn.com)
What Biden is really saying about the economy (msn.com)
Crime Prevention Research Center (crimeresearch.org)
Five takeaways from Biden’s inflation plan | The Hill
Biden’s Economic Plan – Search (bing.com)

AAA Gas Prices

Start your session! (msn.com)

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The Fed’s ‘cure’ for inflation

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk 

Blame the government and the Fed for inflation.

In Musk’s words, “The obvious reason for inflation is that the government printed a
zillion more dollars than it has. This is not super complicated.”  They and other luminaries subscribe to the inflation sophism: “too much money chasing too few goods.”  

Yes, we’ve had “too few goods,” due to a pandemic perfect storm — depressed U.S. oil production and manufacturing output, severe supply chain disruptions and war-like labor shortages — but that won’t endure. It was exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has radically reduced global purchases of Russian oil, grain and fertilizer and drastically diminished Ukrainian grain exports.
Meanwhile, our economy rebounded much faster than expected (due largely to the dollars pumped-in by the government and Fed), reviving demand that couldn’t be readily met. 
It’s true that when our economy was blindsided by COVID, the government borrowed trillions to send stimulus money to most Americans, and — as it had after the financial crash — the Fed electronically “printed money” to buy nearly $5 trillion of government debt and mortgage securities. 

But according to a Washington Post analysis, most of those dollars can’t possibly have stoked inflation — because the financial institutions the Fed paid parked over $2 trillion 
in their accounts at the Fed, and American households saved a big chunk of their stimulus, banking about $3 trillion. The Post quotes a former Treasury Department official: “The money supply went up, but… they’re not spending it.” In fact, money is moving through our economy more slowly than at almost any time in 65 years.
Clearly, what impelled inflation was the unprecedented confluence of supply and demand incongruities as a result of the pandemic and war in Ukraine, not “too much money.”
So it’s understandable Fed Chairman Jerome Powell recently said, “Now, we think more of just the imbalances between supply and demand in the real economy rather than monetary aggregates” (our total money stock, referred to as M2, is the paramount monetary aggregate). A refrigerator and pantry stuffed with food won’t make you fat unless you overeat; likewise, even an economy awash with dollars doesn’t inevitably induce lending and spending.

President Biden — despite stellar growth and employment stats — is unfairly maligned for stoking inflation. Historic money metrics further undermine the Bezos/Musk fallacy.
Since 2020, M2 has expanded about 50 percent; total inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), has been less than 15 percent. From 2010-2020, with the Fed still ladling lucre onto our economy to resuscitate it from the Great Recession, M2 almost doubled — but CPI increased only 19 percent.

Annual inflation lingered below the Fed’s 2-percent target.
There’s been a similar non-proportionality between M2 and CPI and between annual M2 growth and CPI increases for 52 years. M2 is over 22-times larger than in 1970, but the CPI is only seven-times higher — a 3:1 ratio of M2 growth to inflation.
This disconnect — and the fact that additional money in the economy isn’t automatically lent and spent — is related to another rarely-mentioned reality: Added dollars fuel not only consumption but investment — which stimulates increased productive capacity, business formation and expansion, R&D that spurs innovation and which can draw more people into the workforce. These counteract inflation by adding to output, lowering prices and curbing compensation hikes.

Related video: The jump in mortgage rates is likely to slow the U.S. housing market.
Amazon and Tesla epitomize how this works. Bezos and Musk built their behemoths when Fed policy was accommodative; investors slung cash at startups. Now Amazon restrains inflation more than any company in history. Tesla collapsed electric vehicle costs, making EVs affordable to a large swath of Americans. SpaceX has astoundingly lowered the cost of space travel.
Yet the Fed and a lot of smart people cling to the canard that Fed tightening is necessary to tame inflation — even if it results in a recession.
Indeed, with one exception, the Fed has brought on recessions with every tightening cycle that continued for over a year — the more prolonged and pronounced the Fed funds rate increases, the longer and deeper the recession. The lone exception was in the middle of the raging 1990s tech boom, which the Fed eventually did kill by more than doubling the Fed funds rate from its 1994 trough.
Many liken today’s inflation to the late 1970s — but that was brought on by the sudden ascendence of OPEC as U.S. oil production was imploding and President Nixon’s wage price controls, a cynical ploy to forestall Fed tightening and unemployment during his 1972 campaign. Nixon’s scheme fomented horrific distortions across our economy that ended up supercharging the inflation spiral. Unemployment eventually soared alongside inflation, a cataclysmic combination that never occurred before or since.

Most economists erroneously extol Paul Volcker, the imperious Carter-appointed Fed chairman, for ending that inflation. The horrendous 1982 Volcker recession inflicted untold misery. Unemployment peaked at almost 11 percent — nearly a full point higher than during the Great Recession. In truth, that inflation was conquered by Reagan’s lower tax rates and big investment tax incentives, which substantially boosted productive capacity, as well as his deregulation of energy prices, which promoted domestic production, and his indexing income tax rates to the CPI.
How do we know it wasn’t the Fed that “saved” us from this inflation? Because it almost evaporated after Volcker, amid one of our greatest peacetime booms, with declining Fed rates, Reagan’s massive military buildup and a ballooning budget deficit — all traditionally thought to be inflationary. Over the next 37 yearsthe CPI increased little more than it had over just the preceding 12 years. During the 1990s tech boom, our longest peacetime expansion, inflation actually dropped to its lowest level since the mid-1960s.

White House Advisor Brian Deese on Inflation.
The Fed and haughty experts ignore that while higher prices are certainly painful,
they’re far preferable to the trauma of losing a job — and at least somewhat neutralized
by compensation increases. Social Security is indexed to the CPI, significantly insulating
nearly 50 million retired seniors.

Fed tightening also swells the value of our already overvalued dollar,
making U.S. exports more expensive and imports cheaper, another blow to our middle-class workers — and abjectly antithetical to the crucial goal of Americanizing our supply chain. 
The “conventional wisdom” that the Fed must choke the economy to contain inflation
is an orthodoxy that should go the way of the ancient medical practice of bloodletting.
What’s more, these momentous money tightening decisions are made by an unelected seven-member board of governors, often bulldozed by the Fed chairman. That a group smaller than a jury arrogates the power to dictate the availability of dollars for our entire $24 trillion economy would be considered un-American had it not been normalized by
the elites. It’s akin to the government empowering a tiny, unelected council to constrict the food supply for our whole population to overcome obesity.
 
While the Fed is ineffectual at achieving “soft landings,” it’s proven quite adroit at ameliorating financial crises and severe slumps. The Fed headed-off catastrophes following the 2008 financial crash and at the pandemic’s onset. So, the Fed’s freedom to combat contractions should be unfettered.
But the Fed’s unchecked power to tighten the money supply must be rescinded.
The Fed funds rate should be permanently set at half GDP growth — or much lower, as it is now, during and after pandemic-level emergencies. And the Fed’s authority to take other contractionary actions should be strictly limited. The current Fed tightening spree should be stopped.
Oddly, many free-market champions are terrified at the prospect of monetary prerogatives being devolved from the Fed star chamber to private lenders (under a regime of sound practices). Obviously, even if they had a zero cost of funds, lenders would want their loans repaid. They’ll maintain ample lending discipline based on borrower creditworthiness and business conditions, which, being closer to the ground, they’re far more qualified to assess than the Fed.
Many who laud the Fed’s current tightening crusade — which, based on history, may well lead to a recession — are in cushy financial situations. Perhaps if they were subject to being laid-off, having their hours cut or losing tip income, they wouldn’t so blithely endorse such a destructive policy.

Lee Spieckerman is a political strategy and policy consultant and frequent network television and radio commentator. He was an advisor to Newt Gingrich during his
2012 presidential campaign and to Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush during
his successful 2018 re-election campaign. Previously, he was a longtime media industry executive and consultant. Follow him on Twitter @spieckerman

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.
President Biden raised eyebrows on Monday when he spoke about what he considers sensible restrictions on “high-caliber weapons” also in the wake of the horrific mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, last week.  

The president recalled visiting a trauma hospital in New York, where he explained doctors showed him X-rays of gunshot wounds that were caused by different firearms. 
“They said a .22-caliber bullet will lodge in the lung, and we can probably get it out —
may be able to get it and save the life,” Biden told reporters outside of the White House.
“A 9mm bullet blows the lung out of the body.”
He went on to claim “there’s simply no rational basis for [high-caliber weapons] in terms of thinking about self-protection, hunting.”

So while most Democrats have targeted what they call “assault weapons”
in the wake of the mass shooting, Biden appears to be setting his sights on handguns, too, which isn’t the first time he’s singled out one of the most popular firearms in America.
He also repeated a false claim about the Second Amendment and cannons. 
“The Constitution, the Second Amendment was never absolute. You couldn’t buy a cannon when the Second Amendment was passed,” Biden said. “I think things have gotten so bad that everybody is getting more rational about it.”

The Washington Post has previously given him four Pinocchio’s for this claim, noting
that no federal law existed about which types of weapons private citizens could own.
“Moreover, Biden has already been fact-checked on this claim — and it’s been deemed false,” fact checker Glenn Kessler continued. “We have no idea where he conjured up this notion about a ban on cannon ownership in the early days of the Republic, but he needs to stop making this claim.
Florida is already a gun-friendly state. Floridians don’t need another law to make it even easier to put deadly weapons in the wrong hands. 
It shouldn’t be hard to defeat constitutional carry in a state where the very words, “Parkland” and “Pulse” are synonymous with gun violence. 
Poll after poll after poll shows a majority of Americans favor some forms of gun restriction. Ban on military-style, assault weapons? Check. Implement universal background checks? Yes. Restrict the sale of high-capacity ammunition magazines? Sure. Allow family members and/or law enforcement to petition a judge to temporarily remove guns from persons seen as risks to themselves or others? Of course.

Good luck getting any of that enacted, though.
DeSantis, as well as Republicans in Congress, particularly in the U.S. Senate, have stood firm in opposition. Backed — some might say “paid for” — by the gun lobby, these officials have offered thoughts and prayers, talked up the need to address mental health and rein-in social media, while standing firm against measures to address gun proliferation. 
Columbine High School, Sandy Hook Elementary, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and now Robb Elementary — after so much carnage, you’d think this time the response would be different.
It’s not shaping up that way. Congress remains divided on what steps to take to address school shootings, meaning, most likely, nothing gets done. For more than 30 years, the National Rifle Association has been pushing constitutional carry, with Georgia being the 25th state to approve a law the association believes allows law-abiding individuals to carry weapons without a government-issued permit. Florida is clearly in the NRA’s sights. 
That momentum continues even amid the anguishing details coming out of Uvalde, Texas, where Salvador Ramos used an AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle to kill 19 children and two teachers at the Robb Elementary. According to authorities, shortly after his 18th birthday this month, Ramos legally purchased the rifle used in the shooting and another one.
He had no criminal or mental health history and in Texas you can’t buy a Budweiser
at 18 but you’re welcome to build an armory of AR-15s.

Similar Stories to ‘It’s A Sickening Feeling’: Parkland Survivors Mourn After School Shooting in Uvalde on Bing News
Florida has a gun reform advantage over Texas. After the Parkland shooting in 2018,
state lawmakers gave police the ability to seize firearms from anyone deemed a danger to themselves or others. The bill also raised the age requirement to buy a gun from 18 to 21,
a provision the NRA still maintains is unconstitutional. 
But even as children’s blood has barely dried, after another tragedy that has left so many grieving, gun rights advocates say this is not the time to politicize the issue. Someone should tell that to Gov. DeSantis.

 Bonus:  Why restrict ‘good’ gun owners, resident asks President Obama at town hall.
Steve Forbes reveals how President Biden made a “confession” that reveals that he wants higher gas prices. What’s Ahead featuring Steve Forbes…  
Read Full Article >> ‘Biden Let The Cat Out Of The Bag’: Steve Forbes Calls Out POTUS’ ‘Confession’ | What’s Ahead | Steve Forbes on Biden Economy – Search

Anneka Treon: We’re starting to see inflation expectations rolling over – Bing video
Energy crisis causing inflation problem for Americans, national security threat:
Mitch Roschelle (msn.com)
“Tensions boil over as Jewish nationalists march through Palestinian district of Jerusalem’s Old City”.
US Economy: Experts fear the United States could enter a recession if spending
continues to slow.
‘What in the Neoliberal Hell Is This?’ Biden Suggests ‘Rational’ GOP Senators
Will Act on Guns
China threatens to downgrade ties with Israel after newspaper publishes
Taiwan interview.

As California Switches to Electric Cars, Thousands of Mechanics Will Lose Jobs.
Average age of mechanics in the United States – Search (bing.com)
Fed’s Waller: If inflation doesn’t go away, we need to raise rates a lot higher.
CNN expert admits ‘very little’ Biden can do to lower gas prices.
U.S. policymakers misjudged inflation threat until it was too late.
How does your gas get so expensive – Search (bing.com)
Inflation genie is well and truly out of the bottle.
Freest Countries in the World

As summer begins, US COVID-19 cases six times
higher than last year (msn.com)
States Where COVID-19 Cases are Climbing Fastest.

ALSO >> Obama’s Cloward-Pivens Socialist Manifesto.
Cloward-Pivens socialist manifesto.

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The Day Electricity Dies.

The Day the Electricity Died.

Editor’s NoteThis column was written by Frank Lasee. 
Imagine one of your kids freezing to death in your home. Eleven-year-old Cristian Pineda’s mother found her son dead during the Texas blackout in February 2021.
Or you have a power outage for three days, losing a couple of hundred dollars’ worth
of food because your refrigerator didn’t work, as Michelle Jones did last summer.
The food she had just bought to feed herself, her daughter, and her granddaughter spoiled without electricity.

This is likely to become all too common in the future.

Why?

My years as a Wisconsin state senator and in Gov. Scott Walker’s administration gave me some insights. My senate district included a coal plant, a natural gas plant, two nuclear plants, a biogas plant, biodigesters, wind towers, and many miles of Lake Michigan shoreline—and since then it has added a solar plant. Here are some lessons I’ve learned.

First, we need to understand a little bit about how electric grids work. They cannot store electricity without a battery. Batteries are scarce and expensive. Electric demand must be met with electricity generation, always. If supply cannot keep up with demand, the utility will shut down electricity for some or many.

For nearly a week, Texas utilities were unable to meet demand. They shut down the electric grid. Five million people lost power, and from 250 to 700 died. If an electric
grid breaks, all the people it serves will be without electricity for weeks or months.

Nonetheless, Progressives favor energy policies that will make grid failures more frequent, widespread, and prolonged. They want to close coal plants without enough full-time power ready to take their place. They seem unconcerned about reliability. They want coal plants torn down even if we have to keep paying them—like selling your car to get a newer one while you still owe lots on the first.

The people of the upper Midwest will pay the price this summer.
Their multi-state grid operator, MISO, has warned that it will be 5 GWs short of electricity this summer. California also could be up to 5 GWs short, enough to power 1.3 million homes. Texas warned that there might not be enough electricity for last week’s unexpected 90° weather, or for hotter days coming this summer. 

What do they all have in common? 
Increasing their reliance on solar and wind and closing coal plants. A dirty green secret is that coal is full-time power and wind and solar are not. Electric grids must have full-time, on-demand power all the time—plus some—or blackouts are guaranteed.

Another dirty secret:
Wind and solar produce little or no energy 70% of the time. This means that to replace 1,000 MW of coal, it will take 3,500 MW of wind turbines’ “nameplate capacity,” or 5,000 MW of Solar’s. That’s about 1,200 3 MW wind turbines or 13 million solar panels, in either case occupying nearly 40 square miles.
About 240 coal plants in the United States deliver about 22% of our electricity. 
About 71,000 wind towers produce about 9% of our electricity on a part-time, when-the-wind-blows, basis. We are adding about 3,000 wind turbines a year, in the whole country. If wind didn’t have the part-time problem, those 3,000 could replace 2.5 coal plants a year. At that rate, it would take 96 years to replace them all.

Progressives have been demanding that we close coal plants faster than 2.5 a year.
If we want our electric grid to serve us full time, we need to reject this policy. We also need to stop everything they do to make coal and natural gas more expensive because that will raise our electric rates even faster.

Solar installations have slowed dramatically 
Because of a law recently passed by Congress that solar panels built by slave labor cannot be used in the United States. The Communist Chinese make 80% of the world’s solar panels using coal electricity, slave labor, and non-existent environmental protection laws. They also control, process, or manufacture 80% of the earth’s rare metals and polysilicon needed for solar panels, wind turbines, and batteries.

             is solar electricity cost effective – Bing video

is solar electricity worth it – Bing video

is solar electricity renewable – Search (bing.com) 
         is solar electricity cheaper – Search (bing.com)

is solar electricity expensive – Search (bing.com)

Mothers who want to make sure their babies live and their grandmothers don’t lose groceries when the electricity stops need to engage this issue. The Progressives’ craze
to close coal plants now, before replacement power is built, is a bad idea.

To top it off,
Progressives seem not to care that communist China, India, and many other countries are building hundreds of coal plants right now, or that worldwide coal usage is up by 9% over the last year and growing. Coal is a low-cost, reliable, full-time form of electricity. Only nuclear and coal can store fuel on site—which makes them the only energy sources that can keep on generating despite a prolonged extreme cold snap like the one that crippled Texas last year.
Closing coal plants before replacement electricity is ready puts our economy, our national security, and our lives at risk. We need grown-ups who live in the real-world making decisions.

The lowdown? 

             is wind turbines expensive – Search (bing.com)

is wind turbines renewable or nonrenewable – Bing video

is wind turbines good for the environment – Search (bing.com)
             How do you anchor wind turbines in the ocean – Bing video

How does wind turbines work – Bing video

Don’t embrace large-scale wind and solar unless you’re happy to suffer increasingly frequent, widespread, and prolonged power outages—and the deaths and other losses
they cost.

Frank Lasee served as a Wisconsin state senator and in the administration
of Gov. Scott Walker. He is the president of Truth in Energy and Climate and
wrote this column for The Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation.

             electric cars versus gas cars – Search (bing.com)

electric cars versus home electric systems – Search (bing.com)

             electric cars versus hydrogen fuel cell – Search (bing.com)

             electric cars versus diesel and petrol – Search (bing.com)

electric cars versus gasoline cars – Search (bing.com)

electric cars versus ice cars – Search (bing.com) 

electric cars versus hybrid – Search (bing.com) 
 
What is electric produced from – Search (bing.com)
Global automakers face electric shock in China (msn.com)
Owning an EV is mostly cheaper over time than a gas car, study shows.
Government adviser calls for taxation on EV tires due to dangerous particles
What GM’s idea for an EV with two charging ports says about the car market,

As more electric vehicle drivers hit the road, largest Tesla charging station in
U.S. set to open between Los Angeles and Las Vegas (msn.com)
Emissions Analytics finds pollution from tire wear can be 1,000x worse
than exhaust emissions – Green Car Congress

History is never as simple as it was taught in high school!!!
1830 Louisiana Free Blacks Owned Black Slaves – Search (bing.com)
Scientist finally has figured out if dinosaurs are warm or cold blooded.
Opinions | When a teenager wants a semiautomatic rifle,
that’s enough of a red flag.

What is Monkeypox and how dangerous is it? Cases are rising globally (cnbc.com)

Also, someone ask me,

If I am right about the Sheriff having the power to set Washington D.C. Straight… This is very important, considering that most peace officers are “sworn officers”, who take oaths to support the state and U.S. Constitutions.

The oath being sworn by the sheriff when constitutionally elected to office is significant in the fact that he or she is the first line of defense in preserving the Constitutional rights of a citizen. When we look at the Office of the Sheriff, combined with the historical powers held by that office, he stands as the upholder, defender, protector and servant to the liberties of the people within the county.

In addition to upholding the law, the sheriff is also charged with upholding the supreme law, the Constitution. The law enforcement powers held by the sheriff supersede those of any agent, officer, elected official or employee from any level of government when in the jurisdiction of the county.  

The vertical separation of powers in the Constitution makes it clear

the power of the sheriff even supersedes the powers of the President.  

Furthermore, it is this responsibility that grants a Sheriff the Constitutional authority to check and balance all levels of government within the jurisdiction of the County.

And other peace officers, including police officers and others with arrest powers, join with the Sheriff and deputies, as Constitutional Guards, with one and the same mission:  to protect life, liberty and property.

The Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association brings together We The People of the United States with peace officers and sheriffs, educating all in an effort to restore America peacefully for our posterity. 

 About – Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association (cspoa.org)

Bonus: Sugar-Studded Protein Linked to Alzheimer’s Disease

Your personality might be linked to the risk of developing dementia, a study reveals.

Cars are going to stay expensive for one reason: Dealers and automakers are loving it.

The average age of a car in the US is up to 12.2 years, a new record. How old is yours?
The Human Heart Can Repair Itself, And We Now Know Which Cells Are Crucial for It.
Physicists predict Earth will become a chaotic world, with dire consequences.

Man on a mission to interview World War II veterans and share their stories.
Another nuclear plant closes: Get ready for electricity shortages.

Tesla Model Y Owner Outlines Regrets After 9,000 Miles

How one cheap part can kill off the combustion engine.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The End of America

Doctorate in Victorian Poetry. Co-Founder/ CEO, Daily Clout.

Predicted this whole s—storm in THE END OF AMERICA – ten steps to tyranny.
Proud wife of a veteran. Two days before The Bodies of Others, my new book about
Big Tech making war on us humans, comes out… please order a copy before it’s
burned by the Thought Police…  

I also just finished reading @drnaomirwolf ‘s End of America–an outstanding book– and was surprised by how far we have come down the path of tyranny since @drnaomirwolf warned us, back in 2008! That is what forcing an experimental jab does. They didn’t care what chemicals they forced into us or what side effects could occur, they want compliance. Every government military official, business, school or person who mandated this poison should be charged with Nuremberg violations. Especially schools that forced children. They are not Dr’s, yet they forced a medical procedure they knew nothing about,
risked not only, the health, but also, lives of perfectly healthy people.
  
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List Of U.S. States And Number of Counties In Each – The Fact File

Alaska (boroughs) and Louisiana (parishes) are the only states 
that do not call their first-order administrative subdivisions counties.
  
Joe Biden’s Stolen Amerika.  United States – Counties | MapChart

Travel Hell: 3,300 Flights Canceled ~
So Far Over Memorial Day Weekend
There’s currently a shortage of pilots.
The US needs to fill 1,200 pilot positions.
Should’ve kept those unvaxxed pilots they fired ~
Because the vaxxed flight crews are fading fast.

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AstraZeneca uses a virus that normally infects chimpanzees in their COVID19 vaccine. There is an emergence of Monkeypox virus in wild chimpanzees. See the connection?

Is Monkeypox a Cover for VAIDS? “Something Really Stinks About How All This Is Lining Up” – Dr. McCullough [VIDEO INTERVIEW] (redvoicemedia.com)   Also, per Dr. Malone, the FDA was aware early on that the COVID vaccines could spur viral reactivation of diseases like the varicella-zoster virus (chickenpox & shingles) in some people but chose not to disclose it. Here’s that proof from NIH

Varicella Zoster Virus Reactivation Following COVID-19 Vaccination: A Systematic Review of Case Reports – PubMed (nih.gov)   “The newly developed COVID-19 vaccines have established a safe profile, yet some individuals experience a wide range of adverse events. Recently, reactivation of varicella zoster virus has been observed after administration of different COVID-19 vaccines, although causality remains a matter of debate.”

Experts insist Covid infected people without symptoms were TWO-THIRDS less likely to pass virus on | Daily Mail Online Dr. Thomas Binder, MD @Thomas_Binder May 26

Replying to @thomas_binder
“It is my duty as a doctor to treat my patients to the best of my knowledge. This includes informing them about their disease in a way that lay people can understand and make informed decisions about what to do. In February / March 2020 I realised that it is my duty as a doctor to educate the public about this disease of the whole society, in a way that lay people can understand and make informed decisions about what to do. I am still doing this, no more but also no less, and nobody and nothing will stop me from continuing to do so.“

The Prevailing Corona Nonsense Narrative – Global Research Global Research –
Centre for Research on Globalization DrNaomiRWolf @DrNaomiRWolf May 27

@akamerica we need to do a video about the hives caused by the PEG in the MRNA vaccines, which the WarRoom/Dailyclout volunteers confirmed. @Canadainmom1997 ·May 27

It’s all making sense now isn’t it. These damned Covid injections are creating this stuff
a.k.a. MonkeyPox @Drmalonemd@DrNaomiRWolf@DrZevZelenko@P_McCulloughMD
@joerogan@DrEddyMD@reinerfuellmich@CoronaCommittee

Global Covid Summit Declares Pandemic a Fraud, demands indictment of Big Pharma 
by Miles Mathis – Search (bing.com)

“Your tax-funded Intel agencies like CIA, FBI, ICE, FEMA, ATF, and the military literally have nothing better to do than to run these terror events against you. You are paying the salaries of all these people to fuck with you 24/7.” http://mileswmathis.com/vax8.pdf  

One-Size-Fits-All Medicine: It’s No Less Absurd Than Mandating Nuts in Every Meal – Maajid Nawaz – Bing video   “… all of our bodies are different. We all react differently to medicine. Some of you, heck, react differently to peanuts! Something as safe as eating nuts, and some of you die from it, which is why we put allergy information on everything … And yet, here we are, nobody’s taking any responsibility for imposing vaccine mandates when we know, just like peanuts, that people’s bodies react differently. And some people have died from this thing…” 

How Did Bill Gates, Neither Doctor nor Scientist,
Become the Prophetic Visionary for Public Health?

“What if a bioterrorist brought Ebola, Malaria or smallpox to 10 airports?

How would the world respond to that?”
How many teenage athletes die of cardiac arrest due to the vaccine?  

7 year olds dying of heart attacks, teenagers with heart issues, athletes of all ages and disciplines collapsing while engaged in their sport, previously healthy 30 somethings/40 somethings/50 somethings with heart issues and/or collapsing/dying in their sleep. Pretty much any demographic you can think of … inexplicably succumbing in a way THAT SIMPLY NEVER USED TO HAPPEN.  paxbonum33 @paxbonum33 May 28

Replying to @drnaomirwolf
My 82 year old mother who had never been to the hospital or even took any medication had a stroke 6 months after second dose. Thankfully because of her good health she recovered fast. I’m the only one in my family who didn’t take the jab; warned them all. NOW, no one is getting boosted.Sad that so many trusted the institutions; can’t blame them…we should be able to but not these evil m-fers!!

Clip from the Highwire:  DR. MCCULLOUGH ON MONKEYPOX (rumble.com)

Amazing New Discoveries for Treating the Vaccine-Injured: Dr. Kory & Dr. Marik Break Down Their Findings [VIDEO INTERVIEW] (redvoicemedia.com)  

The Vigilant Fox @VigilantFox ~ May 28
Expecting Mothers Weren’t Told: Pfizer’s Claim That the Jab Was Safe for Pregnant Women Was Based On a Biased French Rat Study Naomi Wolf: “The doctors who ran the study were shareholders or employees of Pfizer and BioNTech.” Now – DOD data reports
an 80% rise in fetal congenital malformations. Full Video: The FDA Knew The Jab Was Dangerous and a Failure: The Pfizer Documents With Dr. Naomi Wolf [VIDEO INTERVIEW] (redvoicemedia.com)

Did US Biotechnology Help to Create COVID-19? by Neil L. Harrison & Jeffrey D. Sachs – Project Syndicate (project-syndicate.org) MariannePatriot  @MariannePatriot May 28

Update on a customer of mine who had a severe stroke after her booster. Mind you she was perfectly fit and healthy until the shots. While in rehab, her husband had to sell their home and buy another that had better wheelchair access and first floor bedroom. She was released from rehab a couple of days ago and is not adjusting well. Her left side most likely will never come back. She has 24 hour care and suffers now from severe nerve pain. Pain medications aren’t helping either. These monsters not only damaged and killed our citizens.

They have created a medical nightmare that we’re not going to be able to cope with.

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– The Ministry of Truth was put on pause, and the crazy singing lady,
Nina Jankowicz, resigned from her position.

Dr. Robert Malone: “Sunlight is the best disinfectant. Do it. Speak out.” 

THE TRUTH IS OUT: Dr. Malone On The Critical Info The CDC Withheld;
Pfizer’s Published Side Effects – Bing video   

The Best Disinfectant Is Sunlight – Wonder  
I cannot fathom the psychic powers of individuals who proclaim such things that are unpredictable and without precedent. BUT their Job is to manage and control the future. They are driving the consequences of actions put in place and that will yield the results they wish to attain. And we know what they are. I just paid 8.00 for 2 chicken breasts at Kroger. AND The ritz cracker sleeve is HALF the size it was just 2 months ago. While cheese is through the roof. Those are staples.

Now it’s spreading … we cannot be lulled into a false sense of security but so far , so good ,,,  International Opposition Grows To Biden Granting WHO Pandemic Powers | ZeroHedgeWarRoom Posse you did this — you had the backs of James Rugowsky, Michelle Bachmann , Dr. Peter Breggin and so many more that plunged headlong into this ceding of American Sovereignty…

Shared history is so incredibly important. It reminds us who we are and where we came from. Our public educational system here in our country is failing our children. It is up to each and everyone of us as parents to pass on our history, and the greatness of America. Land of the free and home of the brave. We are a shining light on a hill. The world looks to us for what hope is. Don’t let that die. Keep it alive. That falls to us to pass it on! This Memorial Day let’s tell the story and honor our heroes!

Preventable Deaths and D3. The Ugly History of Vitamin D3 and Fauci’s pro-Vaccine Bias!!! Preventable Deaths and D3. – by Robert W Malone MD, MS (substack.com)  “…when Vitamin D3 is given prophylactically at sufficient doses.
There is clear and compelling evidence that Vitamin D blood levels of around 50 ng/ml will substantially reduce symptomatic infection, severe disease and mortality.”

Treating Children Who Have COVID-19 With Antibodies (webmd.com)

RELATED: Covid Mythbuster! Dr. Todd Wolynn Takes on Anti-Vaxxers
with Science, Singing and a Dose of Silly (yahoo.com)

Sugar-Studded Protein Linked to Alzheimer’s Disease (msn.com)

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EXCLUSIVE: ‘Minister Of Truth’ Nina Jankowicz’s Firm is Still Receiving Federal Funds
To Fight ‘Disinformation’.

@DrNaomiRWolf @craigklein @stevebannon @tuckercarlson “When the government fears the people, there is #liberty.
When the people fear the government, there is #tyranny.” ~Thomas #Jefferson

Always Listening: China’s Dystopian Surveillance State
Dr. Paul Thomas: “I interviewed a pilot and stewardess for my show,  and they were in Shanghai, and their guide … said something, and, all of a sudden, her name was on a billboard and it said, ‘You’ve lost so many social points.’ They’re listening; they’re surveilling everything. You can get shut out on your finances because you’ve got currency that’s only digital. “

So all of a sudden, you have no money? You’re finished in that society.”

Full Video: Monkeypox, Vaccine Safety, and the Fight Against Tyranny:
Dr. Paul Thomas Joins Laura-Lynn [VIDEO INTERVIEW] (redvoicemedia.com)https://www.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qy7a88FUHXI&t=6s

Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order by Ray Dalio

PureGreen24 | Non-toxic hard surface antimicrobial EPA registered disinfectant

Cops TASER Father Trying To Save His Daughter During Texas Tragedy, (rumble.com)
Uvalde victims included 11 current or recent Little League players (msn.com)

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Hero teacher Speaks Out About the terror at Robb Elementary

Texas mayor calls Biden’s border crisis as a ‘calamity’
YouTube · 11,000+ views · 3/30/2021 · by Fox Business
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nno1RlxJhK8

img
GOD BLESS Jacob Albarado – Search (bing.com)
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

An Overview of Breast Cancer

Breast Cancer Stages | New Health Guide

By Jaime R. Herndon, MS, MPH 
Updated on February 15, 2022

 Medically reviewed by Oliver Eng, MD  
 
Stage 3 breast cancer is considered to be advanced breast cancer; however, it is not metastatic. This means that cancer has not spread from the breast to other
organs or distant sites in the body.

In stage 3, the tumor has reached a certain size and has spread to a number of lymph nodes above or below the clavicle (bone connecting the breastplate to the shoulder) or near the breastbone. Inflammatory breast cancer is also considered stage 3. There are several substages within stage 3 breast cancer, and it’s important to understand the differences since diagnosis helps to guide treatment and prognosis.

Read on to find out more about stage 3 breast cancer, its treatment options,
and living with breast cancer.

Characteristics
Stage 3 breast tumors can vary in size, but there are also types in which no tumor is found in breast tissue, as with inflammatory breast cancer.1 Therefore, this stage of cancer is not strictly defined only by tumor size but also by the degree of the cancer’s invasiveness.

At stage 3, cancer may have spread to the chest wall or the skin of the breast,
but it has not reached other organs of the body other than nearby lymph nodes.
Stage 3 is further classified by three substages: 3A, 3B, and 3C.
These substages describe the number of axillary (underarm) lymph nodes affected
and whether lymph nodes in the breastbone or collarbone are involved.

They also factor in tumor size and more.

These substages can be further broken down by other characteristics outlined
in the TNM classification of malignant tumors (also known as the TNM system).

TNM Staging
Since both your treatment and prognosis can be impacted by substage classifications, careful staging is needed.

Although the TNM system may seem confusing at first, the rationale is pretty straightforward. The TNM system stages cancer based on three characteristics
represented by its acronym:2

T: Tumor size
N: Lymph nodes
M: Metastases

The letters are followed by numbers that further describe the size and extent of
the malignancy. Further information can be added to the diagnosis of stage three
breast cancer by reviewing its TNM score.

 TNM Staging Letters and Numbers

Stage 3A Breast Cancer
TNM Score
Definition
T0, N2, M0
No tumor has been found in breast tissue, but cancer cells have been found in the lymph nodes of your underarm or breast.
T1, N2, M0
The tumor is 2 centimeters in size or smaller and/or has extended beyond the perimeter
of breast tissue. Cancer may have also spread to lymph nodes in your underarm or breast.
T2, N2, M0
The tumor is over 2 centimeters but under 5 centimeters in size. Cancer has also been found in the lymph nodes in your underarm or breast.
T3, N1, M0
The tumor is bigger than 5 centimeters but has not yet invaded breast skin or the chest wall. There will be cancer in the lymph nodes under your arm.
T3, N2, M0
The tumor is bigger than 5 centimeters but has still not affected breast skin or the chest wall. Cancer has been found in either the underarm lymph nodes or those of your breast.

Stage 3B Breast Cancer
TNM Score
Definition
T4, N0, M0 
The tumor may be of any size and has affected breast skin or has grown into your chest wall (without involving the pectoralis muscle connecting the front of the chest to the upper-arm and shoulder bones). This tumor may also be a rare type known as inflammatory breast cancer.
T4, N1, M0
The tumor may be of any size. It will have spread to breast skin or the chest wall, or it may be inflammatory breast cancer. Cancer will also be found in underarm lymph nodes near the affected breast.
T4, N2, M0
The tumor may be of any size. It will have spread to breast skin or the chest wall, or it may be inflammatory breast cancer. Cancer will also be found in underarm lymph nodes or nodes within the breast.

Stage 3C Breast Cancer
TNM Score
Definition
T(any), N3, M0
The tumor may be of any size but will be contained within breast tissue only. Your chest wall and breast skin would be unaffected. The lymph node status can vary. Cancer may be found in the nodes of your armpit, within your breast, over your collarbone, beneath your collarbone, or in several locations at once.

Your actual outcome can vary based on the substage and other factors, including a woman’s age and HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 ) status.
(HER2 is a gene that makes protein that helps breast cancer cells to grow quickly.
Your doctor will talk to you about your individual prognosis based on various factors.
These can include your general health, age, and your cancer’s hormone status. 

 Treatment
If you are diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer, your treatment plan would likely include surgery, chemotherapy, and, in most cases, radiation.3

The selection of drugs will depend on your cancer type. For example, if your tumor is HER2-positive, you will also be given Herceptin (trastuzumab). If it is hormone-sensitive (meaning that estrogen and/or progesterone can influence a tumor’s growth), hormonal therapies will likely be prescribed for at least five years after primary treatment ends. Hormone Therapy for Breast Cancer  

Breast Cancer Treatment Options

Surgery
Smaller tumors that have not infiltrated skin or muscle may be removed with a lumpectomy (surgical removal of the tumor). A sentinel node biopsy will be
needed to find out if cancer cells have traveled beyond your breast.3

Larger tumors, including those that have invaded the chest wall, will require a mastectomy (surgical removal of the breast) along with a lymph node biopsy. 
Breast reconstruction may be offered, but delayed due to radiation therapy.

Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is typically used in stage 3 to eliminate any stray cancer cells following surgery, reducing the likelihood of recurrence. Chemo can also be given before surgery
to shrink a tumor, making it easier to remove as much of the cancer as possible.3

Chemotherapy given after surgery is referred to as adjuvant chemotherapy.
When given before surgery, it is called neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

If breast cancer involves the skin, it may be inflammatory breast cancer.
The breast will often look swollen and red. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is usually the first course of treatment for this less common and aggressive type of cancer. Not only can it help shrink the tumor, but it will also kill cancer cells around the margins, making it easier to remove and reducing the need for repeat surgery.

Inflammatory breast cancer almost always requires a mastectomy and 
axillary lymph node removal (dissection).

Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy uses medications to help a person’s immune system better recognize and destroy cancer cells in the body.4 These drugs usually work on certain proteins in the immune system to boost the immune response.

In breast cancer, these drugs target proteins that need to be “turned on or turned off.” Breast cancer cells use these proteins to avoid detection by the immune system.4  Immunotherapy drugs interfere with this and allow the immune system to respond
to the cancer cells.

CAR T – Cell Therapy and Breast Cancer – Bing video

Targeted therapies attack the proteins on cancer cells that control how the cells grow, divide, and spread. This may involve testing your tumor to see if it has targets that can
be addressed with these drugs. Targeted therapy drugs help treat cancer by:5

Helping the immune system kill cancer cells
Stopping cancer cells from growing
Preventing blood vessels from forming, thus “starving” tumors
Causing cancer cell death
Blocking hormones that fuel the cancer
How Cancer Spreads and Recurs

Survival Rate
Survival rate can vary based on the substage and other factors,
including a woman’s age and HER2 status.

Survival rates are often grouped into categories depending if the cancer is localized, regional, or distant. Stage 3 breast cancer is considered regional disease, which means it has spread to regional lymph nodes.6

The relative five-year survival rate for regional breast cancer, which means the percentage of those diagnosed with the disease who are alive five years after diagnosis, is 85.8%. It is important to remember that the statistics used to estimate survival are just that, statistics. Each person is different, and statistics simply give a larger overall picture.6

Your doctor will talk with you about your individual prognosis based on various factors. These can include your general health, age, and your cancer’s hormone status.

Furthermore, as newer and more effective therapies are being released each year, the survival rate may be very different five years from now compared to the rate today.

Keep in Mind
A five-year survival rate is the percentage of people who will live for at least five years
after diagnosis. It does not mean you will only live for five years. Many women with
stage 3 breast cancer will live for years and even decades more.

Follow-Up Care
Follow-up care will depend largely on your hormone and HER2 status. Once primary treatments are complete, you will have regular checkups with your oncologist for at least the next five years.

During this time, you will continue to have regular mammograms and perform regular self-exams if breast tissue is still remaining.

Women often assume that all of their breast tissue has been removed following a mastectomy. This is not necessarily the case.
Speak with your oncologist (doctor specializing in diagnosing and treating cancer) to understand the extent of the surgery and your need for regular breast exams.
Your healthcare provider may also recommend periodic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of your other breast if it was not removed. An MRI offers 10 to 100 times greater resolution than a conventional mammogram and may be more appropriate for high-risk cases.

You may also be advised to maintain a healthy diet and regular exercise or physical therapy program to rebuild your stamina, strength, and well-being.

Coping
Living with cancer can be challenging, not just physically, but emotionally as well. Finding a support group or therapist can be helpful. Many hospitals or cancer centers have disease-specific support groups available; talk with your treatment team to see if your treatment center has one. If not, ask your provider for resources.

Even finding support online can be helpful. Connecting with people going through similar things can be validating and reduce any feelings of isolation you may be experiencing. They can also provide tips and tricks for dealing with treatment and post-treatment life.

Summary
Stage 3 breast cancer is breast cancer that is advanced but not metastatic, and it is still treatable. Depending on the tumor’s characteristics, It can be treated with a variety of options including surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, hormone therapy, or a combination of these. The survival rate for breast cancers with regional spread is around 86%, but remember that survival statistics may not take into account newer and more effective therapies.

Nutrition During Cancer Treatment Cookbook
Cancer treatment nutrition guide and cookbook
12 Famous Breast Cancer Survivors – Biography

Home – We help – The 3E-Program – Lothar Hirneise
The 3E-Program Lothar Hirneise – Bing video

Nutrition before cancer treatment – Bing video
Nutrition during cancer treatment pdf – Search.
Nutrition after cancer treatment – Bing video

Does stress cause cancer to spread?
Relaxing Music: With Nature Sounds, Soothing Relaxing Waterfall Music, Study, Meditation, Sleep Music We Zen Music share exclusive music videos of Sleep Music, Relaxing Music, Study Music, Meditation Music, Binaural Beat, DNA Repair Frequency, Healing Theta Meditation, Chakra Cleansing, Healing Music, Reiki Music, Zen Music,
Spa & Massage Music and Yoga Music.
Whether it is music for the spa or just instrumental relief that you need, we provide it the way you wish to hear it. So now for all those who wish to have peace and relaxation in life Zen Music Channel is the place to be in. So just enjoy, relax and achieve ultimate Nirvana through our channel.

Like our Page http://bit.ly/ZenMusicFB 
G+ Page google.com/+ZenMusics 
Follow us http://bit.ly/ZenMusicTwitter 
Subscribe our Channel http://bit.ly/SubscribeZenMusic ♫♫♫ Calm, Soothing & Peace Music – Calm, soothing and peaceful music is a way of making things easy and convenient for the masses. We provide this form of music, which is the solution to all problems in life. Calm, soothing and peaceful music is a way of making life an easier pitch to play on. 
Enjoy this relaxing music and bring back peace in your life. ♫♫♫ Reiki and Zen Music – Music these days is the best form of relaxation and gives an individual a reason to be happy forever. Reiki and Zen Music provides one with ways of relaxing as well as rejuvenating with a reason to make life a perfect journey of rhythm and happiness. Listen to Reiki Music and bring back lost energy with renewed vigor. Bring in the power of Zen Music and reinforce the power of tuned existence. ♫♫♫ Nature Music – Nature offers is indeed a beautiful form of natural creation and Nature Music is indeed a unique musical trend. 

The music is indeed a powerful way of helping Man to understand the meaning beyond the realms of reality. ♫♫♫ Sleep Music – Sleep is an essential part of life which provides rest and relaxation. Sleep Music is a way of endorsing one’s needs with the soul within and a method of providing complete rest to the body. ♫♫♫ Spa And Massage Music – Massage is a unique way of managing the everyday stress in a person’s life. Music with spa relaxation techniques when combined produces a unique combination which is indeed rejuvenating. Spa and Massage Music enables one to get focused, and provides an enlightening experience that is eternal.

Enjoy music and spend the best time with our spa and massage techniques. ♫♫♫ Spiritual Music – Spiritual Music is a unique way of blending the real and the imaginary and brings in a way of enjoying life in a different way. Spirituality is a way of understanding one’s inner self and we combine this with music and offer you a special way of experiencing the various facets of life. Enjoy this music and enliven your spirits taking it to a heightened level. ♫♫♫ Study & Focus Music – Have you ever thought of how wonderful it would be when one combines music with education? 

This is the concept of study and focus music.
It provides one with a way of relaxing one’s mind after the stress it goes through while dealing with academics. It is believed that music relaxes the muscles and nerves so enjoy this music and completely surrender to the world of music. ♫♫♫ Yoga Music – Yoga Music is a strong way of endorsing techniques that make life an easy journey. Enjoy the power of being united with the inner voice and move with the waves of musical existence. Yoga teaches one to attain ultimate enlightenment through simple means and regular everyday routine. We help you to achieve this easily. Start your session! (msn.com)

ALSO: Yoga for stress and anxiety with Adrienne

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:

What are the types of breast cancer?

There are many different types of breast cancer, but these represent some of the main types.
Invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) is the most common type of breast cancer, representing 70%–80% of all cases. It begins in the cells lining a milk duct and spreads to other breast tissues.
Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is the earliest stage of ductal cancer. Cancer cells have not yet spread to other nearby areas, making it noninvasive or preinvasive.
Invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC) starts in lobules, or the breast glands that make milk.
Triple-negative breast cancer means that cancer cells lack estrogen or progesterone receptors, and create little or none of the protein HER2.
Inflammatory breast cancer: Lymph vessels are blocked by cancer cells, causing the breast to appear inflamed.
Paget’s disease of the breast: Cancer cells appear on the nipple and the areola.7

How many stages of breast cancer are there?
There are five main stages of breast cancer that start from stage 0 (noninvasive breast cancer) and end at stage 4 (invasive cancer that has spread to other areas of the body). However, each breast cancer stage above 0 also has subcategories. For example, stage 3 breast cancer has three subcategories, which are referred to as 3A, 3B, and 3C.8

Is Stage 3 breast cancer curable?
In general, Stage 3 breast cancer is considered curable.
However, the success of treatment depends on the extent of spread,
grade of the cancer, hormone receptor status, and response to treatment.

 How to Advocate for Yourself If You Have Cancer
Originally written by Pam Stephan

Related Articles:

How Breast Cancer Is Treated
Is Stage 0 Breast Cancer Actually Cancer?
Stage 1 Breast Cancer: What You Need to Know
Stage 2 Breast Cancer: What to Expect
What Is Stage 3 Breast Cancer: Advance Tumors
What to Know About Stage 4 Breast Cancer?
Does Stage 4 Cancer Mean That It Is Terminal?
Understanding Breast Cancer Surgery Options
Understanding Your Breast Tumor Size and Stage
Breast Cancer Staging: What You Need To Know
An Overview of Inflammatory Breast Cancer

Is Cervical Cancer Curable?
What is Stage 3 Lymphoma?
Dr Robert Martin Pancreatic Cancer.
What Is Stage 3 Lung Cancer Life Expectancy?
Your Guide to Stage 0, 1, and 2 Melanoma Treatment
What You Should Know About the Stages of Melanoma

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Lyme + Autophagy:

Search Results for Lyme Disease | Cancer Quick Facts (solitarius.org)

Lyme + Autophagy: A New Way Forward for Those with Chronic Symptoms? 
 by Dr. Bill Rawls – Bing video

Note: The topics addressed in this article present a glimpse into the broader scope
of my work and insights from my forthcoming book on cellular wellness.
Are you interested in learning more? Visit cellularwellness.com for information.

The human body is a complex, interconnected collection of cells. Depending on your age, your body contains anywhere from 20 to 40 trillion cells. All of your tissues and organs
are made of cells. Absolutely everything that happens inside your body results from the actions of cells.
Whether it’s your heart beating or brain impulses firing, it’s done by individual
cells working in synchrony with other cells. But when microbes like Lyme disease-causing borrelia enter the picture, these actions can get derailed, and a range
of symptoms emerge.

Borrelia infection in the blood. Borrelia bacteria cause borreliose, transmitted by ticks and by lice.

Although Lyme disease is mostly thought of in terms of the physical and mental misery
it causes, technically, Lyme disease is an assault on the cells of the body. When the Lyme spirochetes enter the bloodstream by way of the tick’s saliva, they have only one goal —
to get to the cells that make up the tissues of the body. The bloodstream is the highway that takes them there.
They course through the bloodstream, and when they arrive at tissues of the body,
they invade cells — all types of cells — heart cells, brain cells, joint cells, intestinal cells, and many others. And you might be wondering, why?
To borrelia, cells offer a bountiful source of nutrients and resources. It causes harm by invading and destroying cells of the body to gain the nutrients that cells are made of. Borrelia and coinfections like bartonellababesia, and mycoplasma invade and replicate inside cells and are called intracellular bacteria. Existing inside cells shields them from antibiotics and the immune system.

The types of cells the bacteria invade are one factor that defines the symptoms of the illness. For example, invasion of heart muscle cells causes cardiac symptoms.
Invasion of joint cells and tissues causes joint symptoms. Invasion of cells that make up brain and nerve tissues cause neurological symptoms. More general symptoms, such as fatigue and malaise, are from cells throughout the body being weakened by invading bacteria. Of course, the body doesn’t take the assault nonchalantly.

The Immune System’s Response to Infection
The job of the immune system is to eliminate the bacteria before they get to tissues.
The very instant that bacteria invade the bloodstream, white blood cells of the immune system jump into action. They engulf the bacteria and destroy them with potent acid and enzymes.

3d rendered medically accurate illustration of too many white blood cells
In most cases, the vast majority of the bacteria are eliminated before they get to tissues.

If some bacteria make it to tissues of the body, however, the infection can become chronic. The degree of symptoms associated with the initial infection and whether symptoms become chronic can be influenced by several factors:
The load of bacteria at the initial infection: Multiple tick bites simultaneously or prolonged attachment increases the bacterial concentration in the bloodstream, which increases their chances of reaching tissues of the body.
Whether or not antibiotics are taken: During the initial stage of infection, when bacteria are coursing through the bloodstream, antibiotics can reduce the concentration of bacteria. Taking antibiotics, however, doesn’t guarantee that all bacteria are eliminated. Once the bacteria invade the cells of the body, antibiotics have little effect.
The presence of coinfections with other microbes: All ticks carry a variety of bacteria, and coinfections with multiple bacteria are well documented in Lyme disease. Infections with multiple bacteria at once may influence the severity of symptoms and the possibility of chronic infection.

The strength of the immune system: 
An immune system overtaxed or weakened by poor health habits is less able to fend off or control any type of infection. The health of cells of the body: As it turns out, cells of the body aren’t defenseless. Using a process called autophagy, cells can expel or destroy intracellular microbes. It means that healthy cells are less vulnerable to invasion by bacteria.

Autophagy and Cellular Defenses Against Lyme
Autophagy is the process by which cells perform internal housekeeping. Cells continually gather misfolded proteins, burned-out mitochondria, damaged DNA, and other worn-out parts and wall them off into contained areas within the cell, called vacuoles. Within the vacuole, worn-out parts are broken down into component organic molecules (such as amino acids) that can be recycled into new proteins and cell parts.

In this way, cells stay lean and strong.

cellular autophagy diagram, microbes enter cell, from vacuole, recycled materials into cell, enzymatic breakdown
Cells of the body use this same process to destroy or expel many types of intracellular microbes.

And although pathogens have mechanisms to attempt to circumvent autophagy, healthy cells can overcome it and purge themselves of infections with bacteria, viruses, protozoa, and fungi. The ability of cells to expel microbes is a key part of the healing process for combatting any type of infection.

Impaired Autophagy and Lyme Disease
When cells of the body are chronically stressed from various factors, they must work harder and use more energy. Harder work and increased energy demands overtax mitochondria and accelerate wear-and-tear inside cells. If the capacity for autophagy and internal cleanup is exceeded, worn-out parts and damaged proteins accumulate inside the cell, compromising its ability to function properly. It also impairs the ability of cells to expel or repel bacteria and other microbes.

Woman sick in the bed, flu and virus infections, allergy, seasonal health issues.

This is what happens when Lyme disease becomes chronic.
Most people identifying with chronic Lyme disease don’t become sick around the time of a tick bite. If a person is healthy — in other words, if cells of the person’s body are healthy — then symptoms at the initial infection are often mild or nonexistent. That’s true with or without antibiotics. However, the Lyme bacteria and any other co-infections can stay dormant inside cells of the body without causing chronic symptoms.
The onset of chronic symptoms is typically associated with other predisposing stress factors. That can be chronic exposure to a toxic substance such as mold, unrelenting mental stress, years of poor dietary habits, prolonged physical stress or trauma, or a new infection, such as COVID-19. Typically, however, it’s a combination of multiple stress factors coming together in a perfect storm.

Chronic cellular stress overwhelms the mechanics of autophagy and compromises
cellular functions. That makes cells vulnerable to invasion by intracellular bacteria. Microbes emerge and infect vulnerable cells, increasing cellular stress and creating a vicious cycle of widespread cellular distress. Because cells are affected throughout the body, a wide range of chronic symptoms occur.
In this respect, the obvious solution to overcoming chronic Lyme disease is reducing cellular stress and normalizing autophagy. While reducing bacterial load is a part of that process, there’s more to it than just killing bacteria.

Normalizing Cellular Autophagy
Healing from chronic Lyme disease requires minimizing cellular stress such that cellular mechanisms of autophagy can rebuild the ability of cells to function normally. Minimizing cellular stress requires creating an ideal internal environment for cellular wellness.
That includes:

Optimal cellular nutrition
Clean environment
Low mental stress and adequate sleep
Low-intensity physical activity
Suppressing intracellular bacteria
But good health practices alone aren’t sufficient to achieve the escape velocity
necessary to normalize autophagy, expel the invading microbes, and regain wellness.
This is where herbal therapy can give you the extra edge you need. Herbs not only
suppress microbes but also reduce cellular stress at every level.

Herbal Therapy to Support Autophagy


image broken into sections, showing japanese knotweed, cats claw, andrographis, garlic, cryptolepis, reishi mushroom, cordyceps
Research suggests that many herbal phytochemicals — beneficial plant compounds — positively affect autophagy in a variety of ways. And many of the phytochemicals are from herbs that are well recognized for suppressing borrelia and coinfections.
Some of those herbs include:

Japanese knotweed
Cat’s claw
Andrographis
Garlic
Cryptolepis
Reishi
Cordyceps

To overcome chronic Lyme disease, taking herbs should be at the top of your list.
The great advantage of using herbs over antibiotics is that the herbs suppress the pathogens associated with Lyme disease but don’t disrupt the balance of normal flora in the gut and on the skin. However, herbs do a lot more than just suppress or kill microbes; herbs counteract all cellular oxidative stress factors. 
Also Reduced stress optimizes cellular autophagy and restores cellular functions —
and this is what healing is all about!

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New Lyme Disease Forecast Map Targets Rising Tide of Ticks (infectioncontroltoday.com)

As the rate of Lyme disease grows rapidly across the United States, new research offers 
veterinarians a forecasting map that tells them which parts of the country are most at risk of Lyme disease infections in dogs, which could help track Lyme disease in people.

Read the Story »
How to Avoid Tick Bites + the Most Effective Tick Repellents for Lyme Season
Treating Chronic Inflammation in Lyme Patients – Search (bing.com)

Webinar Shorts: Is It Better to Use Herbs and Antibiotics Together?
Is It Better to Use Herbs and Antibiotics Together?
Proper Method to Remove a Tick – Search (bing.com)

Dr. Rawls is a physician who overcame Lyme disease through natural herbal therapy. You can learn more about Lyme disease in Dr. Rawls’ new best selling book, Unlocking Lyme.

You can also learn about Dr. Rawls’ personal journey in overcoming Lyme disease and fibromyalgia in his popular blog post, My Chronic Lyme Journey.

Learn About Dr. Rawls’ Herbal Protocol »
 
REFERENCES:

1. Bianconi E, Piovesan A, Facchin F, et al. An estimation of the number of cells in the human body. Ann Hum Biol. 2013;40(6):463-471.

2. Buffen K, Oosting M, Mennens S, et al. Autophagy modulates Borrelia burgdorferi-induced production of interleukin-1β (IL-1β). J Biol Chem. 2013;288(12):8658-8666.

3. Buffen K, Oosting M, Li Y, Kanneganti TD, Netea MG, Joosten LA. Autophagy suppresses host adaptive immune responses toward Borrelia burgdorferi. J Leukoc Biol. 2016;100(3):589-598.

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