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Very Hot Topic (More than 100 Replies) Interesting News Article Thread (Read 880134 times)
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #810 - Oct 10th, 2007 at 11:42am
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A sheriff's deputy who killed six young people at a house party in Crandon, Wisconsin, apparently died after shooting himself three times in the head with a .40-caliber pistol, the state attorney general said.

1 of 3  Initial reports that 20-year-old Tyler Peterson was killed by a police sniper's bullet were apparently incorrect, though it appears the sniper may have shot Peterson in the arm, Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen said.

Although the final forensic determination could take several weeks, the attorney general said that Peterson had his personal .40-caliber Glock when police found him. The three gunshots to the head came from a .40-caliber.

"The three gunshot wounds to the head included two nonfatal rounds with entry points below the chin, and one fatal shot that entered Peterson through the right side of the head," Van Hollen said.

"Each of the three head shots were fired while the gun was in contact with his skin, or extremely close to the skin," he said. "These three head wounds are consistent with self-inflicted wounds, and not consistent with long-range rifle fire."


Shooting yourself in the head once is the pansy emo way to go, three is the way men do it!
  
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #811 - Oct 10th, 2007 at 11:47am
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Wow, his last few seconds must've sucked.

-b0b
(...thinks that guy should have played Russian Roulette for a living.)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #812 - Oct 10th, 2007 at 12:01pm
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(...thinks they guy should have played Russian Roulette for a living.)


learn grammarz newb!
  
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #813 - Oct 10th, 2007 at 3:04pm
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Sorry, I was distracted by the risqué pictures of your mom that I keep in my desk drawer.

-b0b
(...thinks about posting them on the company intranet.)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #814 - Oct 11th, 2007 at 2:09pm
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PHOENIX - It sounds like science fiction but it's true: A killer amoeba living in lakes enters the body through the nose and attacks the brain where it feeds until you die.

Even though encounters with the microscopic bug are extraordinarily rare, it's killed six boys and young men this year. The spike in cases has health officials concerned, and they are predicting more cases in the future.


Quote:
The amoeba destroys tissue as it makes its way up into the brain, where it continues the damage, "basically feeding on the brain cells," Beach said.

People who are infected tend to complain of a stiff neck, headaches and fevers. In the later stages, they'll show signs of brain damage such as hallucinations and behavioral changes, he said.


Zombies!

If you want to read the whole thing: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070929/ap_on_he_me/killer_amoeba
  
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #815 - Oct 11th, 2007 at 2:13pm
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I read that article (or one on the same subject, anyway) last week.  You're slower than Star Jones on a treadmill.

-b0b
(...thinks Spanky should rename himself Chimpy McFlightsuit the Retarded Flying Monkeyboy.)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #816 - Oct 11th, 2007 at 3:30pm
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You in no way posted this in any forum I care about therefore you cannot call firsties.
  
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #817 - Oct 11th, 2007 at 7:02pm
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Yeah, well, I did it anyway.  So there.

-b0b
(...bah!)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #818 - Oct 23rd, 2007 at 8:27am
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Ecuador wants military base in Miami
Reuters
Oct 23, 2007
Phil Stewart
http://uk.reuters.com/article/reutersEdge/idUKADD25267520071022? sp=true
NAPLES (Reuters) - Ecuador's leftist President Rafael Correa said Washington must let him open a military base in Miami if the United States wants to keep using an air base on Ecuador's Pacific coast.

Correa has refused to renew Washington's lease on the Manta air base, set to expire in 2009. U.S. officials say it is vital for counter-narcotics surveillance operations on Pacific drug-running routes.

"We'll renew the base on one condition: that they let us put a base in Miami -- an Ecuadorean base," Correa said in an interview during a trip to Italy.

"If there's no problem having foreign soldiers on a country's soil, surely they'll let us have an Ecuadorean base in the United States."

The U.S. embassy to Ecuador says on its Web site that anti-narcotics flights from Manta gathered information behind more than 60 percent of illegal drug seizures on the high seas of the Eastern Pacific last year.

It offers a fact-sheet on the base at: http://ecuador.usembassy.gov/topics_of_interest/manta-fol.html

Correa, a popular leftist economist, had promised to cut off his arm before extending the lease that ends in 2009 and has called U.S. President George W. Bush a "dimwit".

But Correa, an ally of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, told Reuters he believed relations with the United States were "excellent" despite the base closing.

He rejected the idea that the episode reflected on U.S. ties at all.

"This is the only North American military base in South America," he said.

"So, then the other South American countries don't have good relations with the United States because they don't have military bases? That doesn't make any sense."


Fine, screw 'em!  We'll get our forces out of that base, then destroy the base to make sure they can't use it.  Of course, we'll be taking all of our US dollars with us, including all of our foreign aid to Ecuador and our lease payments on the base.

I wonder how many Ecuadoreans we have put through the School of the Americas on our dime?

This shouldn't come as a big surprise.  The base is used for anti-narcotic operations, and everybody knows that the president of Ecuador is bought and paid for by the cocaine kingpins.

-b0b
(...hopes the .gov gives Ecuador the finger on the way out.)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #819 - Oct 23rd, 2007 at 11:50am
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and everybody knows that the president of Ecuador is bought and paid for by the cocaine kingpins.


Along with every other country below Mexico and above S. America.  Which is ironic considering the kingpins report to the CIA and their handlers!

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #820 - Nov 1st, 2007 at 9:24am
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www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8SKE1OO1&show_article=1


BALTIMORE (AP) - A grieving father won a $2.9 million verdict Wednesday against a fundamentalist Kansas church that pickets military funerals out of a belief that the war in Iraq is a punishment for the nation's tolerance of homosexuality.

Albert Snyder of York, Pa., sued the Westboro Baptist Church for unspecified damages after members staged a demonstration at the March 2006 funeral of his son, Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder, who was killed in Iraq.

Church members routinely picket funerals of military personnel killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, carrying signs such as "Thank God for dead soldiers" and "God hates fags."

A number of states have passed laws regarding funeral protests, and Congress has passed a law prohibiting such protests at federal cemeteries. But the Maryland lawsuit is believed to be the first filed by the family of a fallen serviceman.


I'm really not sure what to think of this.  On the one hand, I have absolutely no problem with the idea of "Westboro Baptist Church" burning to the ground along with all of its parishioners.  On the other hand, the judgment in the article seems to run head-on with the first amendment.

-b0b
(...is torn.)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #821 - Nov 1st, 2007 at 9:57am
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I'm in complete agreement with you there, bob.  Yes, these people are morons and they get waaaaay too much ink but are they that different from neo-Nazi groups and/or the KKK?  Yet, we afford these two groups of people enough 1st Amendment rights as anyone.  If I were them...after castrating myself with a red hot poker that is...I would appeal the decision on an 8th Amendment violation of cruel and unusual punishment.  That number is a bit high don't you think for a simple violation of a misdemeanor?  I know this was a civil case but I would go after jury nullification here.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #822 - Nov 1st, 2007 at 12:42pm
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I think they need to go to iraq and protest there...

I am all for just calling everyone back and stringing up bush, hell he doesn't have much time left anyway, but what these people are doing is downright wrong.  I would not hold it against any parent of a persons funeral they protested if they locked them all in their so called church and burned it to the ground.

Tell them it is God punishing them for being assholes.
  
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #823 - Nov 1st, 2007 at 12:51pm
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spanky wrote on Nov 1st, 2007 at 12:42pm:
Tell them it is God punishing them for being assholes.


Now that will be interesting...

-b0b
(...brings the barbeque sauce.)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #824 - Nov 5th, 2007 at 4:47pm
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Beyond Those Health Care Numbers
By N. GREGORY MANKIW
Published: November 4, 2007

WITH the health care system at the center of the political debate, a lot of scary claims are being thrown around. The dangerous ones are not those that are false; watchdogs in the news media are quick to debunk them. Rather, the dangerous ones are those that are true but don’t mean what people think they mean.

Here are three of the true but misleading statements about health care that politicians and pundits love to use to frighten the public:



STATEMENT 1 The United States has lower life expectancy and higher infant mortality than Canada, which has national health insurance.

The differences between the neighbors are indeed significant. Life expectancy at birth is 2.6 years greater for Canadian men than for American men, and 2.3 years greater for Canadian women than American women. Infant mortality in the United States is 6.8 per 1,000 live births, versus 5.3 in Canada.

These facts are often taken as evidence for the inadequacy of the American health system. But a recent study by June and Dave O’Neill, economists at Baruch College, from which these numbers come, shows that the difference in health outcomes has more to do with broader social forces.

For example, Americans are more likely than Canadians to die by accident or by homicide. For men in their 20s, mortality rates are more than 50 percent higher in the United States than in Canada, but the O’Neills show that accidents and homicides account for most of that gap. Maybe these differences have lessons for traffic laws and gun control, but they teach us nothing about our system of health care.

Americans are also more likely to be obese, leading to heart disease and other medical problems. Among Americans, 31 percent of men and 33 percent of women have a body mass index of at least 30, a definition of obesity, versus 17 percent of men and 19 percent of women in Canada. Japan, which has the longest life expectancy among major nations, has obesity rates of about 3 percent.

The causes of American obesity are not fully understood, but they involve lifestyle choices we make every day, as well as our system of food delivery. Research by the Harvard economists David Cutler, Ed Glaeser and Jesse Shapiro concludes that America’s growing obesity problem is largely attributable to our economy’s ability to supply high-calorie foods cheaply. Lower prices increase food consumption, sometimes beyond the point of optimal health.

Infant mortality rates also reflect broader social trends, including the prevalence of infants with low birth weight. The health system in the United States gives low birth-weight babies slightly better survival chances than does Canada’s, but the more pronounced difference is the frequency of these cases. In the United States, 7.5 percent of babies are born weighing less than 2,500 grams (about 5.5 pounds), compared with 5.7 percent in Canada. In both nations, these infants have more than 10 times the mortality rate of larger babies. Low birth weights are in turn correlated with teenage motherhood. (One theory is that a teenage mother is still growing and thus competing with the fetus for nutrients.) The rate of teenage motherhood, according to the O’Neill study, is almost three times higher in the United States than it is in Canada.

Whatever its merits, a Canadian-style system of national health insurance is unlikely to change the sexual mores of American youth

The bottom line is that many statistics on health outcomes say little about our system of health care.



STATEMENT 2 Some 47 million Americans do not have health insurance.

This number from the Census Bureau is often cited as evidence that the health system is failing for many American families. Yet by masking tremendous heterogeneity in personal circumstances, the figure exaggerates the magnitude of the problem.

To start with, the 47 million includes about 10 million residents who are not American citizens. Many are illegal immigrants. Even if we had national health insurance, they would probably not be covered.

The number also fails to take full account of Medicaid, the government’s health program for the poor. For instance, it counts millions of the poor who are eligible for Medicaid but have not yet applied. These individuals, who are healthier, on average, than those who are enrolled, could always apply if they ever needed significant medical care. They are uninsured in name only.

The 47 million also includes many who could buy insurance but haven’t. The Census Bureau reports that 18 million of the uninsured have annual household income of more than $50,000, which puts them in the top half of the income distribution. About a quarter of the uninsured have been offered employer-provided insurance but declined coverage.

Of course, millions of Americans have trouble getting health insurance. But they number far less than 47 million, and they make up only a few percent of the population of 300 million.

Any reform should carefully focus on this group to avoid disrupting the vast majority for whom the system is working. We do not nationalize an industry simply because a small percentage of the work force is unemployed. Similarly, we should be wary of sweeping reforms of our health system if they are motivated by the fact that a small percentage of the population is uninsured.



STATEMENT 3 Health costs are eating up an ever increasing share of American incomes.

In 1950, about 5 percent of United States national income was spent on health care, including both private and public health spending. Today the share is about 16 percent. Many pundits regard the increasing cost as evidence that the system is too expensive.

But increasing expenditures could just as well be a symptom of success. The reason that we spend more than our grandparents did is not waste, fraud and abuse, but advances in medical technology and growth in incomes. Science has consistently found new ways to extend and improve our lives. Wonderful as they are, they do not come cheap.

Fortunately, our incomes are growing, and it makes sense to spend this growing prosperity on better health. The rationality of this phenomenon is stressed in a recent article by the economists Charles I. Jones of the University of California, Berkeley, and Robert E. Hall of Stanford. They ask, “As we grow older and richer, which is more valuable: a third car, yet another television, more clothing — or an extra year of life?”

Mr. Hall and Mr. Jones forecast that the share of income devoted to health care will top 30 percent by 2050. But in their model, this is not a problem: It is the modern form of progress.

Even if the rise in health care spending turns out to be less than they forecast, it is important to get reform right. Our health care system is not perfect, but it has been a major source of advances in our standard of living, and it will be a large share of the economy we bequeath to our children.

As we look at reform plans, we should be careful not to be fooled by statistics into thinking that the problems we face are worse than they really are.


Considering how much people are complaining about "the sad state of health care" these days, I think this article is particularly poignant.  I'd like to see super-socialist Hillary Clinton comment on this article.  I bet it'd really take the wind out of her sails!

-b0b
(...but, but, but it's for children!)
  

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