Skip to content

General Discussion

A place to talk about whatever you want

38.7k Topics 351.3k Posts
  • If you don’t call your daughter your son, you may face charges

    10
    10 Posts
    71 Views
    JollyJ
    @Copper said in If you don’t call your daughter your son, you may face charges: @Horace said in If you don’t call your daughter your son, you may face charges: "civil war" is used. Here we go Jolly It's time Don't look at me. I lost all my weapons in a boating accident...
  • Happy Birthday, Sidney!

    12
    4
    12 Posts
    411 Views
    taiwan_girlT
    Thats awesome. Seems like he has been a good companion.
  • Luna loves us

    7
    7 Posts
    80 Views
    MikM
    Our other one is Stella. Moon and stars.
  • Should I offer my services?

    3
    1
    3 Posts
    47 Views
    George KG
    I just found the juxtaposition of "shaman" and Dr. House to be hysterical. Can you imagine House talking about a shaman? [image: ?u=https%3A%2F%2Fmedia1.tenor.com%2Fimages%2F255ab45776199030b0eddb41bd68c587%2Ftenor.gif%3Fitemid%3D6118919&f=1&nofb=1&ipt=8af0aed6d1c5edf9b8663a28e80ce322b66317b57073dff9ca6d117dd0720512&ipo=images]
  • White women are evil

    5
    5 Posts
    75 Views
    HoraceH
    The crazies on the left are mainstream, the crazies on the right are marginalized parts of an already marginalized larger group. Both sides are equal though.
  • Iranian “breakthrough quantum processor”….not

    5
    5 Posts
    59 Views
    MikM
    apparently not. he wasn't even charged. From Wiki: On 25 June 2003, British newspaper the Daily Mirror reported that al-Sahhaf had been captured by coalition troops at a roadblock in Baghdad.[4] The report was not confirmed by military authorities and was denied by al-Sahhaf's family through Abu Dhabi TV. The next day, al-Sahhaf recorded an interview for Dubai-based news channel al-Arabiya.[10] He was reportedly paid as much as US$200,000 for the television interview, during which he appeared very withdrawn, in contrast with the bombastic persona he projected during the war. Many of his answers consisted of a simple "yes" or "no". He refused to speculate on the causes of the downfall of the Iraqi government and answered only "history will tell" when asked if video clips purporting to prove that Saddam Hussein was alive were genuine, amid speculation at that time that Hussein had been killed during the war. His fame quickly evaporated as the war continued into the insurgency phase; from the middle of 2003 onward, he faded from the public spotlight, and was no longer a figure in the war. Al-Sahhaf said that he had surrendered to United States forces, had been interrogated by them and then released.[11][12] He was not charged for his role in Saddam Hussein's government.[12] In March 2008, it was reported by The Times that al-Sahhaf was living in the United Arab Emirates.
  • Tucker goes there...

    15
    15 Posts
    125 Views
    Doctor PhibesD
    @Jolly said in Tucker goes there...: Doesn't seem to bother Jon or Phibes. Are they now officially geezers? I never post about that stuff. Doesn’t mean I agree with it. The fact that I think TuCa is a walking colostomy bag doesn’t mean I agree with everything he dislikes either.
  • Experts troubled by Canada’s euthanasia laws

    4
    4 Posts
    49 Views
    RenaudaR
    I wonder if the family would have preferred that he just hanged himself in the garage or basement for one of them to find a few days later? As for the author, Nicole Winfield, there is nothing short of outlawing euthanasia that she would support. It’s a matter of faith on her part: https://berkleycenter.georgetown.edu/people/nicole-winfield I at least respect and understand her point of view. I just do not agree with it entirely. FYI the law is under review at the moment.
  • Yo, Rachel!

    3
    3 Posts
    35 Views
    George KG
    @Jolly said in Yo, Rachel!: Come on down... https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/elon-musk-is-asking-big-name-liberal-tv-hosts-like-rachel-maddow-to-move-their-shows-to-twitter-to-balance-out-tucker-carlson/ar-AA1ckLaA?ocid=msedgntp&pc=W129&cvid=0d5ce8b1059f41d880dece6ac185c3cd&ei=18 Trying to think of reasons she wouldn't. She hates Musk She hates Musk She hates Musk She hates Tucker She doesn't want to succumb to "community notes" She still believes in RUSSIA, RUSSIA, RUSSIA (see #5) She hates Musk
  • Meanwhile, on Wall Street...

    1
    1 Posts
    20 Views
    No one has replied
  • The Censored Video

    3
    3 Posts
    46 Views
    JollyJ
    Which is why you shoot the guy with the knife once he passes the 15 foot mark. That's also why you must have situational awareness. If a guy is within 20 feet of you, knife in hand and you have to suddenly react, you're getting stabbed. Repeatedly. Even if you have a concealed handgun.
  • A Miracle of Stupidity

    1
    1 Posts
    22 Views
    No one has replied
  • Satisfying

    3
    3 Posts
    41 Views
    taiwan_girlT
    I remember reading an article about a guy designed these "one off" machines. He actually made quite a good living doing it.
  • Hay Cats! Your "At the pet groomers" post of the day.

    2
    2 Posts
    19 Views
    Catseye3C
    Great. just absolutely great!
  • A Talk With Dawk

    3
    3 Posts
    30 Views
    HoraceH
    Considering most of the least truthful ideas of the left originated and are supported within academia, I would submit that our new priests are our academics, specifically the progressive ones, which is almost all of them, at least in the humanities. The respect we've always paid to top-tier educated people, is perfectly analogous to the respect religious people have for their clergy. Clergy are bound by the books they teach from, but our new priests are bound by fuck all, other than the leftist proto-marxist whims of the day. And our new priests are neither legitimately intelligent, nor legitimately educated. They are what has floated up in the muck of low academic standards, and adolescent politics that they never grow out of.
  • Ten Facts

    1
    1 Posts
    18 Views
    No one has replied
  • Ivermectin - yet again

    2
    2
    2 Posts
    26 Views
    HoraceH
    I’m starting to wonder whether Ivermectin works very well.
  • Eliminating Wrongthink

    1
    1 Posts
    17 Views
    No one has replied
  • The Banned Pride Letter

    2
    2 Posts
    24 Views
    George KG
    And, it was scrubbed from Internet archives and the wayback machine. Move along, citizen. Nothing to see here.
  • The Gaspasser Did It

    7
    7 Posts
    56 Views
    George KG
    Perhaps more details than the original article. This is from a medical publication. Suspected Fungal Meningitis Outbreak Associated With Procedures Performed Under Epidural Anesthesia The CDC is looking for almost 200 U.S. patients who might be at risk for meningitis after receiving surgeries at the River Side Surgical Center or Clinica K-3, in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico. The surgeries took place between Jan. 1 and May 13. Both ambulatory surgery centers were closed on May 13 after an outbreak of suspected fungal meningitis occurred among four patients in Mexico, who had surgical procedures at the clinics that involved epidural anesthesia. The CDC and the Mexican Ministry of Health are investigating the cause of the outbreak, and the CDC is working with 24 U.S. state and local health departments to trace the Americans who might be at risk. The CDC advised at-risk patients to seek urgent medical care immediately—even if they do not have symptoms—for diagnostic testing for fungal meningitis, which includes MRI scanning and a lumbar puncture. Public health officials have not yet determined the cause the outbreak, but a fungal infection is suspected based on elevated cerebrospinal fluid and serum levels of the fungal biomarker (1,3)-beta-D-glucan in several patients. The spinal taps of the four Mexican patients tested positive for Fusarium solani. “Per the CDC announcement, the investigation of the current outbreak is presently ongoing but isolation of Fusarium solani has been identified in some cases. CDC and partners are investigating to determine how people were exposed to the infectious organisms during the procedures, and their source,” said Thomas M. File Jr., MD, MSc, MACP, FIDSA, FCCP, the chair of the Infectious Disease Division and the co-director of the antimicrobial stewardship program at Summa Health, in Akron, Ohio. Dr. File is not involved in the outbreak investigation but was asked to comment. “My initial thought regarding this outbreak is to remember the multistate fungal meningitis outbreak in the U.S. back in 2012, during which 753 patients were infected leading to 64 deaths. This outbreak was traced to contaminated methylprednisolone used in epidural injections and which were prepared by a compounding pharmacy,” Dr. File said. Philip S. Barie, MD, a professor emeritus of surgery at Weill Cornell Medical College, said he was reminded of a bacterial outbreak about 10 years ago in an ambulatory surgery center in the Midwest that was related to a contaminated single-use vial of propofol used for multiple procedures. “That's a leading suspicion here, although we're dealing with a fungal infection, not a bacterial infection,” Dr. Barie said. “The reason why I am suspicious of that [contamination of a vial] is because recently in the state next door in Mexico, Durango, there was an episode of infections related to multiple uses of single-use bupivacaine also in an ambulatory setting, and bupivacaine is, of course, a workhorse local anesthetic that’s used,” he told Infectious Disease Special Edition. Trying to find the source is important and might take some time, according to Dr. Barie, who is also not involved in the investigation. There are several possibilities, according to both physicians: a break in sterile practices either in infection control or cleaning; contamination of the medication itself by the clinic staff; or contamination that occurred during manufacturing. “It’s bad manufacturing practices, bad clinical practices or bad infection control practices. They're basically the three things that need to be elucidated here,” said Dr. Barie, who is also the executive director of the Surgical Infection Society Foundation for Research and Education. “This certainly signals a need to be aware of anyone who had spinal injections at the specified clinics in Matamoros, Mexico, and is an illustration of the potential risks of medical tourism,” said Dr. File, who is also a member of the Infectious Disease Special Edition editorial advisory board. Although this area in Mexico is popular for medical tourism, both physicians warned against the practice. “While there may be advantages of significant reduced costs when seeking care outside the U.S., patients need to be aware of potential consequences of harm. Currently the CDC is advising all members of the public to cancel any elective procedures that involve an epidural injection in Matamoros, Mexico, until there is evidence that there is no longer a risk at these clinics,” said Dr. File, who is also a professor of internal medicine and the chair of the Infectious Disease Section at Northeast Ohio Medical University, in Rootstown. “As [doctors] in the U.S., we never, ever, recommend that people should go out of the country for medical care. My personal advice would be, ‘Don't do it. The risks are high,’” Dr. Barie added. The CDC recommended that medical tourists cancel any elective procedure that involves an epidural injection of an anesthetic in Matamoros—and any travel associated with such a procedure—until there is no longer a risk for infection. Ongoing Investigation The agencies are investigating to determine how people were exposed to the organism during the procedures, as well as whether any other clinics are involved. The Mexican Ministry of Health shared a list of 221 U.S. patients who might be at risk for meningitis based on their recorded surgical procedures at either clinic, but the agency was able to eliminate six because they did not receive epidural anesthesia. However, public health officials also identified five additional patients with potential exposure who were not on the original list. With these findings, an overall total of 220 people in the United States are known to have potential exposure. Of the U.S. cases so far, 14 people have symptoms consistent with meningitis, but spinal tap results are pending or unknown; 11 people are probable cases whose spinal tap results suggest meningitis, but a fungus was not isolated. No cases have been confirmed and there have been two deaths, which the CDC has called “probable” cases. Symptoms of fungal meningitis include fever, headache, stiff neck, nausea, vomiting, sensitivity to light, and confusion. It can take weeks for symptoms to develop, and they may be very mild or absent at first. However, once symptoms start, they can quickly become severe and life-threatening. Early testing and diagnosis greatly improve outcomes, according to the CDC. Interim recommendations for diagnosis and management of cases of suspected fungal meningitis associated with epidural anesthesia administered in Matamoros, Mexico, are available here.