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Politics : A Real American President: Donald Trump -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)3/26/2022 7:31:03 PM
From: FJB  Respond to of 455209
 
PRO-FAT ACTIVIST DIES OF OBESITY. LOL...

stuff.co.nz

Massey University academic Cat Pause dies suddenly


Stuff

Dr Cat Pause, pictured here in 2016, was a senior lecturer at Massey University (file photo).

Cat Pause,? an academic whose research explored the impacts of “fat stigma”, has died.

A fat studies researcher, Pause's work focused on the wellbeing of overweight people and “the effects of spoiled identities” on their health.

Labour MP Deborah Russell? shared news of Pause’s death on Saturday via her Twitter account.

“I know very few details except that our darling friend died in her sleep last night. I am so very sad, and I know that many in academic and union circles will be shocked and saddened too,” Russell wrote.

READ MORE:
* Why has #BodyPositivity failed to make us positive about our bodies?
* When is the right time to use the word 'fat'?


Pause spoke to Stuff in January about the discrimination fat people face in their everyday lives, especially in regard to healthcare. Moral panic over obesity levels perpetuate this.

“Everyone has anti-fat attitudes. We find them in kids as young as three. We’re not born hating fat people, we’re not born finding fat people disgusting, or that fat people are lazy or lacking discipline or willpower,” Pause said.

“We learned these attitudes, we can absolutely unlearn them.”



To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)3/26/2022 7:36:20 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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Honey_Bee
pak73
Sr K

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Study — Hidden immune feature helps the Unvaccinated defeat Covid…



interestingengineering.com

A hidden immune feature may have spared unvaccinated people from COVID-19 infections





A team of researchers from the University of Gothenburg has just taken another step toward understanding how the immune system develops resistance against COVID-19.

For six months, the researchers at the University’s Sahlgrenska Academy investigated 156 employees from five primary care health facilities who were recruited during April and May 2020. None of these employees had been vaccinated against COVID-19, and the majority of them had to work with infected patients on a daily basis during the height of the pandemic.

Get more updates on this story and more with The Blueprint, our daily newsletter: Sign up here for free.

They identified IgA (immunoglobulin A) in the respiratory tracts of several of the personnel who didn't catch COVID-19, which could mean they had an antidote in their immune systems all this time.

These antibodies are found naturally in mucous membrane secretions in the airways and gastrointestinal tract, where they protect the body by binding to viruses and other invading organisms.

An antidote in the immune systemCOVID-19, an infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, has claimed the lives of more than 6 million people since the start of the pandemic in early 2020. In fact, some researchers say the true number of lives lost to the COVID-19 by 31 December 2021 was 18.2 million, which is more than three times the official death toll. ( LMAO! JUST THE OPPOSITE. MUCH LESS )

The disease appears to affect some people more severely than others, with some experiencing very minor symptoms and others being hospitalized and requiring aid in breathing. The current study aimed to uncover health factors that appeared to offer COVID-19 protection for the unvaccinated.

“We all have IgA," said Christine Wennerås, Professor of Clinical Bacteriology at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, and senior physician at Sahlgrenska University Hospital, who is part of the research team. "It’s found on the mucous membranes, and COVID-19 is an infection that spreads via those membranes. We thought it was important to investigate what happened when completely healthy people encountered the coronavirus, before vaccines became available."

“Of the participants in our study, none whom contracted COVID-19 required hospitalization," she continued. "A lot of other research has concerned the most seriously ill patients, who have been hospitalized and in need of intensive care.”

Health factors


According to the results of the study published in the European Journal of Immunology, a third of the care workers developed antibodies to COVID-19, and they fell into two distinct groups based on antibody patterns and COVID-19 incidence.

One group that exclusively possessed IgA antibodies never succumbed to COVID-19. Participants in the other group had IgG antibodies as well as T cells and got the sickness.

The participants who did not test positive or were unwell all had IgA antibodies. Other characteristics that seemed to provide protection against infection were being female and having a respiratory allergy.

The data, however, does not support the notion that those who do not have antibodies against COVID-19 have protective T cells, which are a part of the immune system that focuses on specific foreign particles.

It should be noted that the majority of the COVID-19 vaccines are highly effective against severe illness, hospitalization, and death. In fact, as the Omicron subvariant BA.2 replaces its sister version, BA.1, as the dominant form of COVID-19 in many countries, researchers have discovered that two doses of COVID vaccination still appear to reduce the risk of infection caused by the new subvariant.

Study Abstract:

The patterns of humoral and cellular responses to SARS-CoV-2 were studied in Swedish primary health care workers (n = 156) for 6 months during the Covid-19 pandemic. Serum IgA and IgG to SARS-CoV-2, T-cell proliferation and cytokine secretion, demographic and clinical data, PCR-verified infection, and self-reported symptoms were monitored. The multivariate method OPLS-DA was used to identify immune response patterns coupled to protection from Covid-19. Contracting Covid-19 was associated with SARS-CoV-2-specific neutralizing serum IgG, T cell, IFN-?, and granzyme B responses to SARS-CoV-2, self-reported typical Covid-19 symptoms, male sex, higher BMI, and hypertension. Not contracting Covid-19 was associated with female sex, IgA-dominated, or no antibody responses to SARS-CoV-2, airborne allergy, and smoking. The IgG-responders had SARS-CoV-2-specific T-cell responses including a cytotoxic CD4+ T-cell population expressing CD25, CD38, CD69, CD194, CD279, CTLA-4, and granzyme B. IgA-responders with no IgG response to SARS-CoV-2 constituted 10% of the study population. The IgA responses were partially neutralizing and only seen in individuals who did not succumb to Covid-19. To conclude, serum IgG-dominated responses correlated with T-cell responses to SARS-CoV-2 and PCR-confirmed Covid-19, whereas IgA-dominated responses correlated with not contracting the infection.




To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)3/26/2022 7:38:01 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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Schnullie

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Conditions in New York City have deteriorated so badly that a large segment of its private-sector workforce is thinking of fleeing rather than returning to the office, a new business survey released Thursday reveals.

Forty percent of employees who reside in Manhattan said they’re thinking of leaving as did 48% — nearly half — of workers who live in the city’s other four boroughs, the online Morning Consult poll of 9,386 employees found. It was commissioned by the Partnership for The City of New York.

nypost.com



To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)3/26/2022 7:42:00 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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pak73

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“You will own nothing, and you will be happy.” - KLAUS SCHWAB

According to Bloomberg:

Apple Inc. is working on a subscription service for the iPhone and other hardware products, a move that could make device ownership similar to paying a monthly app fee, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The service would be Apple’s biggest push yet into automatically recurring sales, allowing users to subscribe to hardware for the first time — rather than just digital services. But the project is still in development, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the initiative hasn’t been announced. […]

Already, the iPhone is Apple’s biggest source of sales, generating nearly $192 billion last year — more than half the company’s revenue. The idea is to make the process of buying an iPhone or iPad on par with paying for iCloud storage or an Apple Music subscription each month. Apple is planning to let customers subscribe to hardware with the same Apple ID and App Store account they use to buy apps and subscribe to services today.

The program would differ from an installment program in that the monthly charge wouldn’t be the price of the device split across 12 or 24 months. Rather, it would be a yet-to-be-determined monthly fee that depends on which device the user chooses.

If you love the news, check out The Liberty Daily's homepage.
The company has discussed allowing users of the program to swap out their devices for new models when fresh hardware comes out. It historically releases new versions of its major devices, including the iPhone, iPad and Apple Watch, once a year.

Apple has been working on the subscription program for several months, but the project was recently put on the back burner in an effort to launch a “buy now, pay later” service more quickly. Nonetheless, the subscription service is still expected to launch at the end of 2022, but could be delayed into 2023 or end up getting canceled, the people said.




To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)3/26/2022 7:45:08 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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pak73

  Respond to of 455209
 
BIDEN MAKES NO DECISIONS AND HAS NO POWER. REPLACING HIM WITH KAMALA WOULD HAVE ZERO EFFECT ON THE PEOPLE MAKING THE POLICIES. THIS IS RETARDED... WHY PRETEND OTHERWISE.

This is why it might be in the country’s best interest for Kamala to resign and be replaced by someone competent before Biden resigns.




To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)3/26/2022 9:09:35 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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pak73

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Trump got a hole in one today golfing according to a speaker at the rally.



To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)3/27/2022 4:45:19 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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Woody_Nickels

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In 25 years of medical practice, I've never heard so many physicians casually mention in conversation how they no longer trust NIH, CDC, or FDA.

If that's not a wake up call, I don't know what is.




To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)4/1/2022 3:22:52 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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Woody_Nickels

  Respond to of 455209
 
ENSLAVEMENT OF HUMANITY THROUGH DIGITAL CASH. YOU WON'T BE ABLE TO DO A SINGLE THING WITHOUT APPROVAL OF GOVERNMENT.

BOMBSHELL VIDEO: Economist at World Government Summit says new financial world order about to shift in dramatic new direction

Dr. Pippa Malmgrem, a top American economist who served as a special adviser to former President George W. Bush, made a statement that confirms everything myself and others have been reporting for quite some time – that a cashless society is looming right around the corner.

Malmgren stated:

“We are on the brink of a dramatic change where we are about to, and I’ll say this boldly, we are about to abandon the traditional system of money and accounting and introduce a new one. And the new one; the new accounting is what we call blockchain… It means digital, it means having an almost perfect record of every single transaction that happens in the economy, which will give us far greater clarity over what’s going on.”




To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)4/1/2022 5:25:10 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Honey_Bee

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WHY WOULD A 1ST GRADE TEACER TALK ABOUT HER PERSONAL LIFE TO SIX YEAR OLDS.

Florida first-grade teacher in tears over the devastating effect the ‘Don’t Say Gay’ law will have on her

Narcissistic Florida 1st grade teacher has breakdown over the thought of not being able to talk about her marriage



To: golfer72 who wrote (342210)4/1/2022 5:28:45 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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Honey_Bee

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THEY ARE ALL MENTALLY ILL.