Welcome back to Alaska

I've come back into the States for a couple of days. Having driven along the Alaska Highway from Watson Lake up to Beaver Creek my original plan was to backtrack to Whitehorse and then head north up to Dawson City. But the Alaska Highway is a BAD BAD road. To be fair it is built on permafrost so it's to be expected really but the road is rough and full of potholes where the ice has melted

Goodbye to the East Coast

Just a quick update for today our last before we fly to Las Vegas tomorrow afternoon.We had a lovely day walking around the university in Princeton visiting historical Morrisville and fighting the Manhattan traffic to get to our hotel in Queens which is near JFK Airport for tomorrow's flight.Princeton was a really picturesque town with a beautiful university campus. It helped that the sun was sh

vacation all I ever wanted.

Our second annual journey to Phuket has been a wonderful break from the final weeks in Shanghai. We have been all systems go for months really and this week in paradise was everything we'd hoped for and more. I have several key memories that involve trying to recreate great trips or experiences and failing miserably. This attempt however was a success.We returned to the Indigo Pearl an oasis

ShyTown Baby

Well after a pretty raucous final nite in st. louis including a wrestling match swim in a lake and the commandering of a bipedal powered vessal we set off for chicago. We made some good friends there. One in particular threatened to pull a linbergh baby us and kidnapp us off to her house. though a temping offer it was time constraints proved unmelodic. so off we rolled.Now having slept

Nelson

Nelson After getting the ferry over from WellingtonPicton we drove to Nelson where we went horse riding around mountains farmland and little rivers it was very picturesque We managed to find a small pub to watch the first England game a very early morning start 6.30am

Franz Josef Glacier

After Abel Tasman National Park we drove down the west coast stopping off at small towns Westport and Greymouth down to Franz Josef When we got to Franz Josef we did a half day Glacier walk. We walked through the rainforest until we got to the glacier where climbed 1km up through a ice tunnel to a top of a glacier. It was amazing and surprisingly easy to walk on. The glacier was approximately 3

I love the food in Peru

Thursday 17.6.2010 day 246I love the food in PeruSo today I tried to sort out some trips to Machu Picchu and Lake Titicaca as well as getting to our next resort. So many thinks I want to do I do not know how I am going to fit it all in and pay for itOh well had another fantastic lunch in 3 Aus lunch and watched the Mexico v France match and was happy to see Mexico win. I was so full from bfast a

Chama New Mexico Cumbres Toltec Scenic Railroad

Built in 1880 the Cumbres Toltec Scenic Railroad was part of the San Juan extension of the Denver Rio Grande Railroads with tracks running from Denver through the orerich Rocky Mountains to Silverton Colorado and Santa Fe New Mexico. Its path was carved through steep passes and deep gorges and was an engineering feat for the time. In the 1890s the decline of silver mining ended the railr

My New Home

Itrsquos been an interesting few days here in my new home. My guards arrived at my room at 745am and helped me carry all my things down the five long flights of stairs. I think they were amazed by how much stuff I had. I was a bit apologetic but only a little. My school driver from Shenzhen and I left around 830am on Wednesday. We got lost twice but between asking for directions a few ti

Historically Black Medical Schools Rank High for Social Mission – Diverse: Issues in Higher Educatio


Providence Business News
Historically Black Medical Schools Rank High for Social Mission
Diverse: Issues in Higher Educatio
by Diverse Staff and wire reports , June 16, 2010 Graduates of Morehouse, Meharry, and Howard University medical schools, three historically Black ...
UT Southwestern ranked low in 'social mission' study of medical schools some ...Dallas Morning News
Dr. Candice Chen: What do we value in our medical schools?FierceHealthcare
Medical TipBoston Herald
Los Angeles Times (blog) -Huffington Post (blog) -HNN Huntingtonnews.net
all 105 news articles »

Complete Cancer Quackery Resource

One of the recurring themes of Science-based medicine is that we live in the age of misinformation. The internet and social networking have made everyone their own expert – by democratizing information (which I favor, as it has many benefits to society) the field has been leveled for various types and sources of information. But this has the very negative effect of equalizing information in terms of quality as well – so low quality and even outright incorrect or fraudulent information can compete on equal footing with more reliable, vetted, and professionally sourced material. That is exactly why one of the primary goals of SBM is to be a resource for consumers and professionals to help sort through it all.

Recently David Gorski sent around a link to an e-book, Natural Cancer Treatments, that epitomizes the dark underbelly of health misinformation on the internet.

The book opens up with the standard disclaimer that ostensibly is to protect the public but in reality is simply legal cover for the purveyors of misinformation – it says to seek the advice of your physician and that this book is not meant to discourage anyone from seeking standard therapy for cancer. This is boiler plate CYA for quacks. It is also utter hypocrisy as it is placed immediately below two quotations that set the tone for the book:

“It should be forbidden and severely punished to remove cancer by cutting, burning, cautery, and other fiendish tortures. It is from nature that the disease comes, and from nature comes the cure, not from physicians.”
Paracelsus, (1493-1541 AD)

“…. never take defeat. When all is lost, try something new. Life is too precious to let it slip away from lack of initiative or plain inertia.”
Hulda Regehr Clark, Ph.D.,N.D. “The Cure for All Advanced Cancers”

The Paracelsus quote essentially says to forgo standard therapy, and don’t trust your doctor – in direct contradiction to the disclaimer. I would also point out that, while Paracelsus was an interesting figure in the history of medicine, he did practice in an essentially pre-scientific era. He fought with the establishment medicine of his time, but this was a fight between two pre-scientific systems. He was criticizing Galenic medicine – which bears no resemblance to modern medicine. The medicine of his time was largely worse than doing nothing, and so the often magical interventions of Paracelsus (he was first and foremost an alchemist) were an improvement. He is also an ironic person to quote, as he focused his attention on using toxic minerals to treat disease. The “natural” cures he was talking about were horrible toxins long out of favor as part of medicine.  For example he favored the use of mercury to treat syphilis.

The second quote essentially encourages acting out of desperation. There is, of course, a kernel of reasonable advice in the notion of not giving up. But it must be tempered by reality – whereas Hulda Clark and other cancer quacks take these words of encouragement to their absurd extreme – try anything, especially the implausible treatment that they are trying to sell. Clark, who recently died of cancer, believed that all cancer, and in fact all disease, is caused by a liver fluke.

The introduction is far worse, in which the authors state:

The consensus of the majority of alternative cancer therapists is that, the chance of full recovery using alternative therapies is almost 100%. with a newly diagnosed condition of early cancer, before any traumatic or toxic treatments have been received. Unfortunately, by the time most patients consider alternative treatments, they have already undergone other treatments.

The consensus of practitioners of X is that X works. Well that’s comforting. The notion that “alternative” treatments are almost 100% effective for cancer is a great example of telling a lie so great that people will tend to believe it – because no one could be that bold and outrageous a liar. No evidence, of course, is presented to back up this absurd claim. But further, this claim directly contradicts their disclaimer – essentially they are saying that you need to consult an alternative practitioner before you subject yourself to standard (i.e. evidence-based) treatment. This is also another attempt at preemptively blaming the patient for treatment failures. If your goal were to kill and harm as many cancer sufferers as possible, you could give no more effective advice than what is found in this book.

The book itself, while selling itself as a source of “natural cancer cures that work” – is really a collection of cancer cures that do not work. The term “natural” is there purely for marketing, as the book contains disproved and implausible treatments of every type, to the point that the vague concept of “natural” loses all meaning.

You can go to just about any page on the book and find gems like this one, under the entry for colloidal silver:

“Naturopathic Medicine regards Cancer as a viral and fungal [candida septicemia] process. Microorganisms depend on a specific enzyme to breathe. Colloidal Silver is a
catalyst that disables these enzymes, and as a result they die. To this day, there has been no recorded case of adverse effects from it when it is properly prepared. There also has been no recorded case of drug interaction with any other medication. Unlike pharmaceutical antibiotics which destroy beneficial enzymes, Colloidal Silver leaves the tissue-cell enzymes intact.”

I like that – “Naturopathic Medicine regards.”  What does that mean, exactly – that they just made it up?  It’s a clever way to make a claim without making a claim – no appeal to scientific evidence, plausibility, or basic science. Naturopaths just choose to believe that cancer is really a viral or fungal infection – despite the overwhelming scientific evidence that cancer is a category of disease caused by various mutations that cause cells to grow unrestrained by the usual mechanisms that limit cell growth. Some viral infections may increase the risk of developing certain cancers (like HPV and cervical cancer), but the cancer itself is not an infection. So of course, treating it like an infection is useless.

Further, colloidal silver is not a safe or effective treatment for infections. Silver can be used as a bacteriostatic compound to prevent contamination of equipment, but it is not safe and effective when used internally. It is also highly misleading to say that there are no recorded adverse effects “when it is properly prepared.” This is a lie – there are numerous case reports of argyria, a permanent skin disease resulting from use of colloidal silver. Developing argyria also has nothing to do with how the colloidal silver is prepared – it is a matter of dose. But what they are trying to do is dismiss adverse effects as being due to improper use. This is like saying that there are no adverse effects to any surgical procedure properly performed, because all adverse effects from surgery were due to improper technique. It’s a semantic game meant to mislead.

Finally the quote takes a swipe at standard antibiotics (again betraying the lie that the authors do not intend to discourage standard therapy). Antibiotics are designed to affect bacterial enzymes, proteins, or structures without affecting Eukaryotic cells – they do not disrupt “beneficial enzymes”.

We could spend a year and write an encyclopedia examining every claim collected in the book, but let me just give one more example. I literally flipped to a random page and found:

In Japan, Dr. Hasumi claims outstanding success in curing cancer with a vaccine made from the patient’s own urine; however, it works only if the immune system is still
sufficiently strong.

Here we see the common strategy of preparing an excuse for failure – if the treatment does not work, it is the patient’s fault because their immune system was not strong enough. Dr. Hasumi’s treatment is over 50 years old. He is a typical guru running his own clinic, claiming that science is behind his genius. The book also offers this quote from Dr. Hasumi’s website:

“To date, more than 130,000 people have been treated with the Hasumi Vaccine and today approximately 16,000 people in Japan and 6,000 people overseas are continuing treatment with the vaccine. The therapeutic advantage of the Hasumi Vaccine has been demonstrated to prevent recurrence after cancer surgery.”

What does that mean? Did the other 108,000 patients die? Are the 22,000 people still being treated cured or improved in any way by the treatment? Those figures are entirely unhelpful, except, perhaps to potential investors. The book provides only one reference to back up the claim that the treatment prevents recurrence – Hasumi’s website from which the claim was taken, and which itself contains no reference.

Hasumi has only two publications, in 2003 and 2008. The first one is simply an examination of T-cell function, and has nothing to do with any intervention. The second only demonstrates that T-cell activity is increased in response to “anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 coated beads.” Essentially, if you stimulate the immune system, the immune system is stimulated. This is typical quack cancer pseudoscience – trump up some sciencey sounding results by looking at some marker of immune function, which always seem to be elevated in response to any intervention. These results say absolutely nothing about the plausibility of the Hasumi vaccine and of course they do not provide any clinical data to show that the vaccine is safe and effective for anything. These types of studies are for marketing – to provide a patina of science to bamboozle the innocent and desperate.

Conclusion

The people at Natural Health International who published this e-book have, at least, provided a resource by putting just about every form of cancer quackery in one place. They just need to change the title of their book to “Dangerous Cancer Quackery to Avoid.”


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Ending the Oil Dependency of Small People

As everyone heard in the President’s speech last night (see post below) and probably knew before that speech, we have to end our dependence on foreign oil.  There was  a well-timed event on Monday announcing a new proposal  to get us off gasoline use in our cars,  with a massive EV deployment.  Now all we need is Oprah to give away the cars to everyone, because electric cars will not be affordable for most people without big tax incentives, rebates, or some type of program like “Cash for Clunkers”.   I’m all for that.  See the presentation video at the Center for American Progress website.

I’m so glad BP cares about America enough to ignore safety violations for years and years while trying to maximize their profits as much as possible, even outside the law.   More about this video below.

First, about the proposal to buy everyone an electric car.   Or maybe not.  “The United States could “feasibly” cut its foreign oil imports to zero by 2030, Sen. Jeff Merkley said Monday in presenting a new proposal to solve the nation’s energy crisis.

“Senator Merkley detailed a plan where deployment of electric vehicles and increased fuel efficiency for heavy trucks would eliminate the country’s need to import oil from overseas (all imports except those from Canada and Mexico) by 2030. Nearly 70 percent of American oil imports come from overseas, weakening national security. His plan would also reduce environmental damage from the country’s oil consumption, helping to protect the climate and avoid disasters such as the one currently unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico.”

“During a packed forum (see the video above) at the non-profit Center for American Progress, Merkley (D-Ore.) said the U.S. can get off of overseas oil completely through massive electric vehicle deployment, fuel efficiency measures for trucks, a push toward natural gas- and biofuel-powered cars and a green building boost.

With unprecedented amounts of oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico and mid-term elections around the corner, an optimistic Merkley said his 14-page proposal is “absolutely” politically realistic.

“Show me a member of Congress who would campaign for office saying we need to increase our dependence on Middle East oil … [and] increase our oil addiction? I don’t think you would find very many such candidates who would be successful,” Merkley said.

According to the senator, overseas oil imports are projected to reach about 7 million barrels per day in 20 years. His plan would save the nation 8.3 million barrels each day, with electric vehicles making up nearly 40 percent of that daily impact at 3.2 million barrels.

Read more at SolveClimate and the Center for American Progress. How much do electric cars cost?  More than most people can afford.  So Merkley’s plan will fail unless the government buys everyone an EV,  which isn’t a bad idea.

Obama met with BP executives today and got them to agree [...]

Futurismo Book in German and Italian by G. Lista

FUTURISMO: La rivolta dell’avanguardia / Die revolte der avantgarde
by Giovanni Lista

Silvana Editoriale, 2008
p. 752
ISBN 9788836611034
Italiano/ Tedesco

Primo movimento d’avanguardia del XX secolo, il futurismo viene fondato nel gennaio del 1909, a Milano, dallo scrittore Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. Non si tratta di una scuola di pittura o di letteratura, ma di un movimento rivoluzionario che si prefigge d’instaurare una nuova sensibilità e un nuovo approccio al mondo in generale e all’arte in particolare. Così, nel suo manifesto inaugurale, Marinetti si adopera a definire l’atteggiamento che l’uomo e l’arte devono adottare di fronte alle forze del progresso. Proclamando il rifiuto del passato, Marinetti vuole essere cantore di un avvento incondizionato della modernità, l’apostolo di una fede positiva nel rinnovamento costante dello spazio sociale e delle condizioni esistenziali della sfera umana.

Il futurismo equivale quindi a un progetto antropologico: ripensare l’uomo nel suo raffronto con il mondo delle macchine, della velocità e della tecnologia.

Al movimento futurista è dedicato questo volume della Fondazione VAF, in cui l’autore indaga ogni aspetto ad esso correlato, in numerosi capitoli suddivisi in cinque macrosezioni: “Un’ideologia del rinnovamento”, “un’arte del dinamismo”, “La macchina come modello o gli anni venti”, “Il mito del volo o gli anni trenta”, “L’eredità futurista”.

Il volume, dal ricco apparato iconografico, è completato da una bibliografia.

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Futurist Evening in Bagheria (June 18)

Bagheria verso un polo futurista

June 18, 2010, 6pm
Villa Aragona Cutò (Bagheria – PA)

FEATURING:

- Presentations by scholars Tommaso Romano and Anna Maria Ruta

- Viewing of the  DVD  “Anticonferenza Futurista”

- performance by actor Gigi Borruso

- Raimondo Giammanco, president of Proloco; Civello Maria, daughter of the futurist poet Bagheria Castense Civello and the commissioner Filippo Maria Tripoli will be present

more info

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