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A place to talk about whatever you want

31.1k Topics 276.2k Posts
  • The Geezers' Lunch

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    George KG

    IMG_3936.jpeg

    Clockwise from bottom right: gas passer, general surgeon, ENT surgeon, heart surgeon, urologist.

  • An Expensive Meal

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    George KG

    Duck blood and squid. THey'd have to pay me to eat that....

  • 10 Posts
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    Doctor PhibesD

    @Jolly said in Warner Bros Cancels $10 Million Project Starring ‘Woke’ Robert De Niro:

    Perhaps it's false, but life don't begin and end with Twitter, mush as the sun doesn't rise and set in the NYT.

    I don't think there's much of a perhaps about it.

    Apart from anything else, when was the last time they made a De Niro movie for $10 million?

  • Is it time to drop the "i"?

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    AxtremusA

    Maybe change it to j.

  • The Twilight Zone.

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    LuFins DadL

    @Jolly said in The Twilight Zone.:

    Handlers?

    The handlers would be leading him to be more liberal, not less.

  • Rachel, get your gun.

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    JollyJ

    They ain't all in a lump.

    I'd rather have a Glock and four loaded mags against two or three terrorists, than a sharp stick.

  • 2 Posts
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    89th8

    Was that written by a confused AI robot?

  • HR workaround

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    MikM

    Chappelle said it best … “ My question is how much do I have to participate in your self-image?”

  • Why we should defend democrcy

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  • Meanwhile - at CAIR HQ

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    taiwan_girlT

    Maybe this post should also be in the "foul reactions" post

  • 4th GOP Debate

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    HoraceH

    Chris Christie: A+

    Since all great speeches should have a title, I’m naming it “Chris Christie’s Retribution Speech.”

    To make a memorable argument in a debate, you need at least three things. First, the issue being debated has to be salient. Second, you need to lock down your position with good examples and evidence. Finally, your delivery is crucial. But even that’s not enough. For an argument to stand out in a debate, it must contain all three of those elements — and it must be a position not yet heard by the debating audience.

    The “Chris Christie Retribution Speech” met all the criteria.

    First: was the topic salient? Indeed it was, and the former governor of New Jersey knew it. Here’s part of his answer when asked what he thought of former President Donald Trump’s comments this week, that if elected again he would be a dictator only on “day one.”

    “Completely predictable,” said Christie. “This is an angry, bitter man, who now wants to be back as president because he wants to exact retribution on anyone who has disagreed with him, anyone who has tried to hold him to account for his own conduct…. Do I think he was kidding when he said he was a dictator? All you have to do is look at the history…”

    The history where Trump was overtly subverted and contained, to the extent a book was written about it by an anonymous white house insider? That history of dictatorship?

    Second: Christie’s reasoning was solid, and his explanation of Trump’s popularity was smart debating. He took a weakness (Trump is polling way higher than Christie) and turned it into an attack on his debate opponents. Christie continued, “You want to know why those poll numbers are where they are? Because folks like these three guys on stage make it seem like his conduct is acceptable.”

    A populist figurehead would be less popular if more elites hated him? Interesting theory. Dumb, but interesting.

    Third: You really need to watch his delivery. It’s a 2-minute speech, and it’s glorious. Watch Christie’s nonverbal movement and listen to his cadence. Hear the phrases and where Christie places the emphasis. One line stands out: Trump’s phrase of “I am your retribution,” when quoted by Christie, was chilling.

    Christie might have just given the single most important speech in presidential debating history. It was certainly the finest.

    This is what TDS looks like, and the value judgments extruded when such a mind is in full sway of the disorder. Finest speech in the history of presidential debates indeed. I imagine any given Orange Man Bad meme would give this person a big belly laugh. Finest humor ever.

  • American Thinker du jour - Hamas Edition

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    taiwan_girlT

    Would not be a surprise to me if the Hamas people are stealing the food aid that is supposed to go to the civilians.

  • An end to breast cancer?

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    George KG

    @bachophile said in An end to breast cancer?:

    Oh jeez, the company’s PR ad man hyperbole is probably making him a big hero among the investors, but that is so far from reality.

    All they show in their press release is that their vaccine generated an immune response. No connection or mention of disease response or any clinical parameter.

    It’s ridiculous hyperbole, timed to the San Antonio breast cancer symposium, a conf which I have gone to regularly but can’t this year because no surgeons are allowed to get time off from the hospital, (so no Texas barbecue for me this year) to attract investors.

    Not to say that immune oncology is not important but this particular study is so preliminary that it’s not even really been shown to affect cancer.

    anyway…some people ( copy writers) really have no shame

    Thank you.

  • An Interesting Case

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    George KG

    Also, the article cites an NYT analysis:

    Earleir this year, a new analysis by the New York Times has found that some of the most common prenatal screening tests are not as reliable as parents often are led to believe and many healthy unborn babies may be being aborted as a result of false positives.

    Examining five non-invasive prenatal tests, which involve drawing blood in the first trimester, the Times found an average false positive rate of 85 percent.

    To conduct its research, the newspaper examined multiple studies and interviewed researchers about five of the most common microdeletion (chromosomal disorder) tests performed on pregnant mothers: tests for DiGeorge syndrome, 1p36 deletion, Cri-du-chat syndrome, Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome, Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes.

    Those false positives could include Cox’s baby.

    "Could"...but they don't. The fetus has trisomy 18 - "Edwards Syndrome."

    The NYT article, which they quote (!) says:

    the screenings for Down syndrome (“trisomy 21”) and Edwards syndrome (“trisomy 18”) work well, according to experts.

  • 5 Posts
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    taiwan_girlT

    @Jolly said in U.S. Senator’s son indicted for killing a cop:

    Does it matter that this was a Senator's son?

    Nuts is nuts.

    That is what made it news.

    Hunter Biden having sex with a stripper and then denying it was his kid. News because of who is father is. As you said, nuts is nuts.

  • High drug prices? Mark Cuban to the rescue

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    AxtremusA

    @LuFins-Dad said in High drug prices? Mark Cuban to the rescue:

    That’s how the system is supposed to work and often will if you keep it transparent and keep the government out of it.

    No, you need the force of the government to achieve transparency. Nutrition labels, ingredient/material listing, allergen listing, tons of disclosures by various companies ... all these "transparency" you take for granted today would not be here if not for government regulations. We still have a long way to go to achieve transparency for healthcare and drug pricing.

  • Suing Zuck

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  • From what river to what sea?

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    JollyJ

    @Renauda said in From what river to what sea?:

    @Copper

    Right you are, anyone’s son or daughter will do.

    We shall beat to quarters!

    Dunno. I do think the U.S. would benefit greatly from something akin to the Israeli model. Conscription where everybody goes and receives some very basic military training, then a very short period of active service followed by a couple of years in the reserves. Those who like military life could apply to enlist for a full-time hitch.

    To sweeten the pot, I think the young people on active duty and in the reserves should have access to helping complete their GED, some of their freshman college courses(fully transferable) or some specialised training in a civilian world skill.

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    George KG

    Gawd, Hitchens was something, wasn't he?

  • Google’s Gemini

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    taiwan_girlT

    https://www.cnbc.com/2023/12/07/google-shares-pop-after-company-announces-gemini-ai-model.html

    Shares of Google closed up 5% Thursday, a day after the company announced its latest artificial intelligence model called Gemini that will compete with products from OpenAI, Microsoft and Meta
    .