Thursday, April 30, 2015

Forever young.

You guys are so lucky you with be able to take a pill that keep you young...


http://time.com/3841620/scientists-discover-the-secret-to-keeping-cells-young/

Health Longevity

Scientists Discover the Secret to Keeping Cells Young

Nude mature woman with grey hair, back view. Getty Images

Researchers say it may be possible to slow and even reverse aging by keeping DNA more stably packed together in our cells

In a breakthrough discovery, scientists report that they have found the key to keeping cells young. In a study published Thursday in Science, an international team, led by Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte at the Salk Institute, studied the gene responsible for an accelerated aging disease known as Werner syndrome, or adult progeria, in which patients show signs of osteoporosis, grey hair and heart disease in very early adulthood.
Read more...http://time.com/3841620/scientists-discover-the-secret-to-keeping-cells-young/
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Good Luck Baltimore.


Tinker
Dear Baltimore Maryland please elect yourselves a different mayor, because the one you have doesn't have your best interest at heart. No! She is trying to please the Show that is now popular on the TV Medias Networks. The media sensational story causing people excitement is not what you want.

Just remember that the media are thrill freaks looking for the next best addicting TV Show, do not allow yourself to be used like that. You want to elect someone with substance who will help you to rebuild you Neighborhoods and City. In a more practical way that you want done, Jobs, better Schools, better City Services. No! Throw the bums out and replace them with the right people. Good luck.

Sheriff: ‘I Was Sick To My Stomach’ After Being Told To Stand Down

April 30, 2015 9:30 AM


BALTIMORE (CBS BALTIMORE) — A Maryland sheriff who traveled to Baltimore to help law enforcement stop Monday’s riots told 105.7 The Fan that he was stunned when officers alerted him of the orders to stand down.

Michael Lewis is the Sheriff in Wicomico County, and was also a Sergeant with the Maryland State Police. He joined Ed Norris and Steve Davis on Thursday to talk about the alleged controversial orders the police were given during the riots.

Lewis said it wasn’t his intention to come to Baltimore, a drive of about two hours, but he felt it was his duty to help.

“I hadn’t planned to go to Baltimore at all. I watched the events unfold Saturday night like we all did, and was very concerned about what I saw, and the the lack of response Saturday night,” he said. “I immediately rallied up the troops. We made sure our MRAP was prepared and ready. … We were assigned to assigned to protect Baltimore City Police headquarters, all of E. Fayette Street up to City Hall, to include City Hall. There wasn’t a whole lot of activity taking place at all. We could smell that putrid smell of burning tires and a city on fire when as we came into the city. Had lots of concerns like everyone else. We maintained our post all night long until we were relieved.”
But what shocked him the most, he said, was when city police told him not to confront and accost the rioters.

“I was sick to my stomach like everybody else. … This was urban warfare, no question about it. They were coming in absolutely beaten down. The [city officers] got out of their vehicles, thanked us profusely for being there, apologized to us for having to be there. They said we could have handled this, we were very capable of handling this, but we were told to stand down, repeatedly told to stand down,” he said. “I had never heard that order come from anyone — we went right out to our posts as soon as we got there, so I never heard the mayor say that. But repeatedly these guys, and there were many high-ranking officials from the Baltimore City Police Department … and these guys told me they were essentially neutered from the start. They were spayed from the start. They were told to stand down, you will not take any action, let them destroy property. I couldn’t believe it, I’m a 31-year veteran of law enforcement. … I had never heard anything like this before in my life and these guys obviously aren’t gonna speak out and the more I thought about this … I had to say a few things. I apologize if I’ve upset people, but I believe in saying it like it is.”

Lewis said though he didn’t hear the order to stand down come from the mayor, he did hear it from police officials.

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"The valiant taste of death but once."

Tinker

Remember how our American leaders let down our soldiers losing the war in Vietnam because they quit on them. Our solders had the war won, but the fool peace nicks who were running away from fighting for justice in Vietnam quit on the men and women who were brave enough to keep carrying the mantle of American freedom and social justice.

It was the Halls of the Ivy League, Media, and the cowards dodging the draft who used the weak American politicians, that lost the war in Vietnam.
And has been so justly recorded in the history book of our human history.

"Cowards die many times before their death, but the valiant taste of death but once."
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  • South Vietnamese troops, one with a bugle strapped to his pack, line up to board CH-21 “Flying Banana” helicopters, March 1963.
  • Buddhist monk Thich Quang Duc is doused with gasoline during a protest demonstration in Saigon, June 11, 1963. The monk then struck a match, set fire to his gas-soaked garments and died, in protest of alleged government persecutions of Buddhists.
  • Flying at dawn, just over the jungle foliage, U.S. C-123 aircraft spray concentrated defoliant along power lines running between Saigon and Dalat in South Vietnam, early in August 1963. The planes were flying about 130 miles per hour over steep, hilly terrain, much of it believed infiltrated by the Viet Cong.
  • A contingent of the Royal Australian Air Force arrives at Tan Son Nhut Airport, Saigon, to work with the South Vietnamese and U.S. Air Forces in transporting soldiers and supplies to combat areas in South Vietnam. August 10, 1964. | Location: Tan Son Nhut Airport, Saigon, South Vietnam.
  • The sun breaks through the dense jungle foliage around the embattled town of Binh Gia, 40 miles east of Saigon, in early January 1965, as South Vietnamese troops, apparently joined by U.S. advisers, rest after a cold, damp and tense night of waiting in an ambush position for a Viet Cong attack that didn't come. One hour later, as the possibility of an overnight attack by the Viet Cong disappeared, the troops moved out for another long, hot day hunting the elusive communist guerrillas in the jungles.
  • Hovering U.S. Army helicopters pour machine gun fire into the tree line to cover the advance of South Vietnamese ground troops in an attack on a Viet Cong camp 18 miles north of Tay Ninh, northwest of Saigon near the Cambodian border, in March 1965 during the Vietnam War.
  • An unidentified U.S. Army personnel wears a hand lettered "War Is Hell" slogan on his helmet, June 18, 1965, during the Vietnam War. He was with the 173rd Airborne Brigade Battalion on defense duty at Phouc Vinh airstrip in South Vietnam.
  • 9/13/1965- Qui Nhon, South Vietnam - Guitar slung over his shoulder, a trooper of the United States 1st Calvalry walks ashore from a landing craft. More than 2,500 Cavalrymen arrived here 9/13, bringing the total of the Army's First Airmobile Division up to 16,000 men.
  • Paratroopers of the U.S. 2nd Battalion, 173rd Airborne Brigade hold their automatic weapons above water as they cross a river in the rain during a search for Viet Cong positions in the jungle area of Ben Cat, South Vietnam, Sept. 25, 1965. The paratroopers had been searching the area for 12 days with no enemy contact.
  • Associated Press photographer Huynh Thanh My covers a Vietnamese battalion pinned down in a Mekong Delta rice paddy about a month before he was killed in combat on Oct. 10, 1965.
  • Berkeley-Oakland City, Calif., demonstrators march against the war in Vietnam, December 1965.
  • U.S. soldiers hold a memorial service for seven men of the U.S. 101st Airborne Brigade in a clearing near a former French rubber plantation in Lai Khe, Vietnam, December 17, 1965.  The deceased men's boots, helmets and M16 rifles are set up with a field altar.  The seven paratroopers were killed in action during a search-and-destroy mission against the Viet Cong in the jungles and plantation areas of Lai Khe, about 40 miles north of Saigon, during the Vietnam War.
  • Actress Carroll Baker snaps her fingers at sailors cheering from bridge of aircraft carrier USS Ticonderoga as Bob Hope leads her across stage set up on flight deck.  More than 2,500 sailors saw the Hope troupe's show on the carrier off the coast of Vietnam December 27, 1965.
  • Two South Vietnamese children gaze at an American paratrooper holding an M79 grenade launcher as they cling to their mothers who huddle against a canal bank for protection from Viet Cong sniper fire in the Bao Trai area, 20 miles west of Saigon, Jan. 1, 1966.  The 173rd Airborne brigade was making a sweep in Bao Trai area to round up Viet Cong suspects.  The farmers and their families were rounded up by combined Vietnamese, American and Australian battalions in area long held by Viet Cong.
  • US Marines carry their weapons even to take a bath which is where they are headed near their camp in Chu Lai, Vietnam on Jan. 16, 1966.
  • A napalm strike erupts in a fireball near U.S. troops on patrol in South Vietnam, 1966 during the Vietnam War.
  • Water-filled bomb craters from B-52 strikes against the Viet Cong mark the rice paddies and orchards west of Saigon, Vietnam, 1966.  Most of the area has been abandoned by the peasants who used to farm on the land.
  • American soldiers listening to a radio broadcast in Vietnam during the war in 1966.
  • A peaceful anti-Vietnam War demonstrator holds up a flower to armed soldiers protecting the perimeter of the Pentagon. - photographed: 1968
  • Pfc. Lacey Skinner of Birmingham, Ala., crawls through the mud of a rice paddy against heavy Viet Cong fire near An Thi in South Vietnam, as troops of the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division engaged in a fierce 24-hour battle with the enemy along the central coast, Jan. 28 and Jan. 29, 1966.
  • A helicopter lifts a wounded American soldier on a stretcher during Operation Silver City in Vietnam, March 13, 1966.
  • PFC Richie sniffs at the delicate perfume of a girl far away as he opens a letter April 12, 1966 from his girlfriend in Jay, Oklahoma. Mail call is held daily and letters are a welcome interlude in the daily grind of events in Vietnam.
  • A Vietnamese mother and her children are framed by the legs of a soldier from the U.S. First Cavalry Division in Bong Son, Vietnam, September 28, 1966.
  • A crowd of American soldiers swarm around U.S. President Johnson on Oct. 26, 1966 shortly after his arrival at Cam Rahn Bay in South Vietnam visiting troops during the war.
  • U.S. trooops of the 7th. and 9th. divisions wade through marshland during a joint operation on South Vietnam's Mekong Delta, April 1967.
  • A wounded U.S. soldier of the 1st Infantry Division, 26th Infantry Regiment, 1st Battalion, receives first aid after being rescued from a jungle battlefield south of the Cambodian border in Vietnam's war zone C, April 2, 1967. A reconnaissance platoon ran into enemy bunkers, and their recuers were pinned down for four hours in fighting that left 7 U.S. dead and 42 wounded.
  • Defense Secretary McNamara and Gen. William Westmoreland, commander U.S. Forces in Vietnam, sit with muffler type radio earphones as they ride in helicopter toward the DMZ on McNamara's first field trip during his current visit to Vietnam, July 10, 1967.
  • The address is muddy bunker and the mailman wears a flak vest as CPL. Jesse D. Hittson of Levelland, Texas, reaches out for his mail at the U.S. Marine Con Thien outpost two miles south of the demilitarized zone in South Vietnam on Oct. 4, 1967.
  • A U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division soldier throws a rice basket into flames after a peasant woman retrieved it from the burning house in background.  American troops destroyed everything of value to the enemy after overrunning the village near Tam Ky, 350 miles northeast of Saigon, during the Vietnam War on Oct. 27, 1967.
  • A U.S. air cavalryman lends a helping hand to an aged Vietnamese woman who grew tired as she and her neighbors were being resettled from their village to a refugee camp, Jan. 5, 1968. Other villagers had refused to assist her because, according to custom, they would then have borne responsibility for her for the remainder of her life.
  • ** EDS NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT ** South Vietnamese Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, chief of the National Police, fires his pistol into the head of suspected Viet Cong officer Nguyen Van Lem (also known as Bay Lop) on a Saigon street Feb. 1, 1968, early in the Tet Offensive.
  • As fellow troopers aid wounded comrades, the first sergeant of A Company, 101st Airborne Division, guides a medevac helicopter through the jungle foliage to pick up casualties suffered during a five-day patrol near Hue, April 1968.
  • President Lyndon B. Johnson receives word that North Vietnam is willing to negotiate on April 3, 1968
  • Refugees fleeing their burning homes in Saigon in May 9, 1968
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So leave the Louisiana movie business alone....

Tinker

The value of a good movie is also like the invaluable information we receive from our good parents. Would the state legislators and Governor put our good parent out of business because of taxes? Or would you simply respect the work that they do for their children that is so much more important.

I suggest to the Louisiana Governor and legislators that if you like your job lay off of the people doing very artistic work for our entertainment, and enjoyment. Leave the movie business in Louisiana alone so it can go on to thrive and expand into another prideful part of our community.

I don't know of anyone who will vote for someone who would chase the movie business out of Louisiana because of taxes. So leave the Louisiana movie business alone....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kdggcQhysQ
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So here it is...This is the guy who created HB 276. He thinks the film industry is out of control and wants to get rid of the tax credits. He has invited the public to comment on his Facebook page. He wants to know what we think. Now is our chance to kindly but firmly let him know how important this industry is to us.
Click here... https://www.facebook.com/electlanceharris

Louisiana's film tax credits will be talked about by lawmakers today as legislation that would essentially phase out the motion picture benefits is set to be taken up in the House Ways and Means...
wwl.com

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Where is this story today?

Ameed Musleh Not only is Islam a killing Machine Prophet Mohammad was a rapist and Child molester. 
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Jerry Curtis

Shared publicly  -  Apr 28, 2015
 
Why has the National Media never covered this. Why did obama send these 2 Republicans to Egypt to try to free Morsi & the members of the moslem brotherhood. And Most interesting what was the purpose of McCain's private Visit with Khairat al-Shater, who claims to have Evidence that would put obama in prison about??? Where is this story today?
http://www.wnd.com/2013/08/muslim-brotherhood-claim-weve-got-goods-on-obama/

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The value of good parents are invaluable to us.

Thomas Williams Your parents must have been a member of some of the best. And that reminded me in how we can easily see how our wonderful parents are still here close to us, even after their passing. And in how because of the way they felt about us allowed us to adjust in living out our life, and able to just keep learning about everything. All because of their good attitude that they must have learned from their parents, handed down from generation to generation.
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Wednesday, April 29, 2015

The American economy is in serious trouble



Tinker

We are in a world of trouble ladies and Gentlemen because the United States Federal Reserve Bank is as bad as my spelling, and grammar. So as of now we are doomed with nowhere to run, or hide, and no way out.
Fed: All calendar references removed
<p>Today investors weren't wearing bathing suits: Gross</p> <p>Bill Gross, Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund, predicts when he thinks the Fed will raise rates, and shares his view on Ben Bernanke being named a senior advisor at Pimco. </p> 

Following through on indications in March, the Federal Open Market Committee on Wednesday offered no changes to its zero interest rate policy.

Not only did it not hike rates, it also removed all hints for what may lie ahead. Calendar references were deleted completely from the post-meeting statement. 

The FOMC indicated after its March meeting that a rate hike in April was unlikely. The U.S. central bank has kept its key funds rate anchored near zero since late 2008, amid the financial crisis.
Officials have indicated a desire to raise rates at some point this year, with the market now anticipating a September increase. 

The move came amid a struggling U.S. economy that barely registered any growth at all in the first three months of the year—a meager 0.2 percent increase in gross domestic product, thanks to a stubbornly frugal consumer, strengthening dollar and rough winter.

However, many market participants believe the Fed is still on its course of tightening, though the timing remains a question.

Jay Mallin | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The Federal Reserve

"It's the long-term trend that matters to the Fed," said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist for State Street Global Advisors' U.S. intermediary business. "They've been very consistent on the idea of data dependence.:"

Financial markets have come to rely on the Fed's easing policies over the past six and a half years, and stocks were lower ahead of the FOMC statement release. 

The committee noted some progress in the economy, halting though it may be. The statement acknowledged that growth "slowed during the winter months," though calling the factors leading to the slowdown "transitory." 

"Growth in household spending declined; households' real incomes rose strongly, partly reflecting earlier declines in energy prices, and consumer sentiment remains high," the FOMC said.
Read more...http://www.cnbc.com/id/102632303
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