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leh-nerd skin-erd

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Everything posted by leh-nerd skin-erd

  1. Well now, they call me the breeze I keep blowin' down the road Well now, they call me the breeze I keep blowin' down the road I ain't got me nobody I don't carry me no load Ooh, Mr. Breeze
  2. It’s critical to tell a good story, establish a good narrative, and get some sympathetic people to listen to you. The upper echelon of the FBI certainly appeared to target him, and as they say, if there’s nothing to worry or be ashamed of, nothing to see here.
  3. I’m not sure that accountability is coming, but there’s always hope. But, if General Flynn and his team can get some eyes on some of the corruption he claims to have been victimized by, good for him.
  4. I checked this book out on Amazon after reading your post. The summary appeals to me, as I tend to think of the works/business moving in cycles anyways. Question for you—do the author(s) offer practical solutions for consideration as to how to manage the various cycles? I recognize it’s a nearly 30 year old work, but part of the challenge for me is reading a book like this with no actionable plan to consider. Bottom line…it’s great to consider all these things, but if the end game is I ride the wave one way or the other, I’d just as soon skip the anxiety that comes with it. Thanks for the reference though.
  5. People can reinvent themselves, and if C. Cuomo can suppress his urge to throwing detractors down a set of stairs, his willingness to target and destroy accusers, and find humility he was surely lacking, maybe he can be that voice. Still, the model he has historically operated in doesn’t suited to straight down the line reporting.
  6. Little known fact—-Shakespeare’s famous work “The Tempest” was originally penned as “Two Tempests, the Missing Petticoats and a Pillow Fight” when he was 17 years old. He changed it later because people said the title was too long. I’d think it’s from that one.
  7. Uh, yeah. Love her voice too.
  8. Sorry to hear about your m-I-l, my amazing, wonderful, sweet, crazy and delightfully loyal mother-in-law is dealing with dementia and that’s been no picnic with the medical professionals. At some points it seems you have to walk on egg shells to get a favorable result. She ran out of meds at one point (lots going on in the hh, confusion between caregivers and her hubby/children) and my wife called to beg for a new supply. After a couple “she’s gotta come in, see you in 90 days” and surly staff members, she was able to get a short term supply and an earlier appointment. Again, to be fair, others have been great. With your mother-in-law, though, was it incompetence or just pure bad luck the cancer was missed?
  9. Oh now you’re posting great music? What’s your game, man?
  10. When he’s not mumbling incoherently, he’s creepy af. This whole nurse thing he’s fixated on is weird.
  11. Interesting, though we’ve been through some challenging times recently. A loved one was admitted to a hospital due to internal bleeding. The doc ordered a colonoscopy, prep was completed including an awful lot of cajoling to drink the large volume of swill required for prep. Appointment time for early the next day comes and goes, and goes until ultimately it’s discovered the appointment was never scheduled. It makes you wonder…if you’ve got internal bleeding (passed out in his Internist’s office), and a colonoscopy gets f’d up, what about all the little things missed collectively in a large hospital? Flip side, to be fair, a leaking aortic aneurysm was discovered and some amazing medical personnel saved his life a few years back.
  12. I think insolvency for the average American is real, for most businesses it real, for the federal/state government it’s business as usual. I agree on the standard of care though.
  13. I think ultimately smoke, mirrors and political maneuvering provide a short term fix. Long term? Debt, hand-wringing, fair share, etc. Nothing really changes.
  14. It’s more complicated than that imo. Health insurance companies are part of the problem to be sure. Personally, I’d prefer Teladoc for many interactions, though I’m generally pretty healthy and that shapes my opinion on things. However, legislation has perpetually been an issue as well. Prior to ACA, each state had its own fiefdom, rules and regulations that contributed to cost and benefit decisions. While the care associated with one’s health is an emotional and personal issue, the costs associated with delivery is a financial one. At the regulation level, it’s generally treated as a political issue, and that complicates things greatly. Many doctors operate on a for-profit model, where $$ are an integral part of the system. That can result in a mill-type process of health care. When it comes right down to it, people frequently prioritize other things in life over their health and health care. A person who has no concerns about perpetually upgrading their iPhone, or dropping $7 a day on specialty coffee, or $482 a month to lease a car, balk at the notion of out of pocket costs, co-pays and high deductible health plans that might actually save their lives one day. As for Medicare, sobering financial reality is it’s solvent through 2026 according to this recent projection from trustees. The argument is that resources directed to private health care would recaptured. Of course, that would lead to the potential for government to do government things, blowing up cost and leading to declarations like “….projected to be solvent through 2029.”. Also, let’s not forget that Medicare operates on a fee schedule approach not all that different than insurance companies use, but typically at a much lower rate. That begs the question, would Medicare for all be a popular option for the for-profit medical profession? https://www.aha.org/news/headline/2021-09-01-medicare-trustees-project-trust-fund-solvent-until-2026
  15. I wasn’t telling you anything, RiddlerGoose, I was just commenting on the message sent in the election. Agree, disagree, it’s largely irrelevant. Crime seems to have been top of mind for lots of voters, including some I know, but maybe it’s that she liked thin crust pizza.
  16. The mayor broke one cardinal rule of successful liberal mayoring—-she let the crime brush up against the liberals—-personally, by extension, or by incursion into their neighborhoods. With that, she gotta go.
  17. I didn’t capitalize Google. That will haunt me for all my remaining days on this earth.
  18. A simple google search reveals a virtually unlimited menu of government/IC failures and misdeeds, alleged or otherwise. Be that as it may, the entire post-Trump election dem narrative was based on conspiracy theories that victimized the liberal base when all that happened was that their candidate lost. There’s also the Chuck Schumer declaration that the IC has “six ways from Sunday” to get someone if they so desire. It’s a fascinating take by @redtail hawk, I’ll give him that.
  19. The appropriate stance in my opinion is to do what the law allows regardless of feelings on the program. It would appear the trend favors forgiveness, so doing it over, I’d suggest a mix of personally paid with an eye toward taken advantage of the max amount of forgiven debt.
  20. “Trouble” seems a stretch to me. Additions were made to the defensive coaching staff over the past few weeks, and coupled with the expiring contract, seems more like a professional organization and professional people doing professional things. With luck, we rebrand a good defense into a great defense.
  21. Of course they can. Why follow standards when things can be made up on the fly?
  22. This is an interesting opinion piece on the current state of western medicine. I think there may be application here. Physician, heal thyself? https://americanmind.org/salvo/the-profession-formerly-known-as-medicine/
  23. https://nypost.com/2023/02/28/fauci-says-we-may-never-know-origin-of-covid-despite-report/ The Fauc sounds very, very mostly probably not at all unconfident that the virus may or may not have been the result of a lab leak. He used the scientific “shiny object” standard with his peers.
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