The Tendieman (Full Version) – YouTube

A man who has a passion for Chicken Tenders (Tendies), usually lives in his Mom’s basement, and is known for placing risky bets on Robinhood using his stimulus checks. Single handedly, he is nothing. But, collectively, Tendiemen kneecapped the richest of the rich in the modern global financial system
The Tendieman hopes he’ll make huge gains of GME. In the meantime – “MOM WHERE ARE MY TENDIES!!!?!!?!”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9oI_8YG6Vs&feature=emb_logo

We spend $800 BILLION on defense, but our Capitol was sacked in 10 minutes by a guy in a deerskin bikini

The Tendieman (Full Version) – YouTube

Tendieman
A man who has a passion for Chicken Tenders (Tendies), usually lives in his Mom’s basement, and is known for placing risky bets on Robinhood using his stimulus checks. Single handedly, he is nothing. But, collectively, Tendiemen kneecapped the richest of the rich in the modern global financial system
The Tendieman hopes he’ll make huge gains of GME. In the meantime – “MOM WHERE ARE MY TENDIES!!!?!!?!”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9oI_8YG6Vs&feature=emb_logo

You still need to take precautions, even if you have been vaccinated

You still need to take precautions, even if you have been vaccinated
One dose doesn’t confer full protection, and you can still spread covid-19. (New Scientist $)
+ That includes wearing masks and distancing. (Medium)
+ In fact, you might want to start “double-masking,” given the risk of the new variants. (Slate)
+ Vaccinated people are going to hug each other. (The Atlantic)
+ The UK is going to study the effect of the vaccines on covid-19 transmission. (FT $)
+ The EU’s vaccination woes have snowballed into a full-blown crisis. (NYT $)
VIA MIT NEWSLETTER

Osterholm – Covid Catastrophe -Pumping the Brakes After The Car’s Wrapped Around The Tree 20210128

“Now is not the time to ease up [on Covid-19 restrictions] because again, we will be pumping the brakes after the car is wrapped around the tree if we do that,” Michael Osterholm says, adding that the benchmark for action seems to be when hospitals are overrun.
on New Day TV Thursday Jan. 28th 2021

Home Burial

HOME BURIAL… Emilio Degrazia

Whenever I was a bad enough boy to make my Old Country mother almost cry, she would say this to me: “Don’t come to my funeral.” Funerals were big deals.

The pandemic has brought acute confusion home to many of us. We are dimly aware that hundreds of thousands have died, but for most of us the number seems facelessly abstract. Many who have endured an individual loss have done so without hospital visits or traditional burial rites. If this new way of dying seems odd, it also seems that we’re already used to it.

What I find calming—call it also one way to think of church—are those little societies of gravestones huddled next to a country church. The dead seem at home there, okay enough. They are interred where they too sometimes went to church, and the silence suggests their community of the dead, even the nasty outliers, have a place to stay. Here, emanating from the small group of silent stones, an agreement to put bickering to rest and to let everyone in seems the rule. A tombstone here or there decorated with a flag or military symbol makes even a distant war seem more like a community affair.

It usually is not, as the uniformed battalions of Fort Snelling tombstones make clear. The ancient Greeks established some precedents for distanced and anonymous burials. Most “classic” Greek warriors were unheroic peasants who eked out their livings in small villages before being required by “heroes” to devote years to the slaughter, pillage and rape of the citizens in distant places like Troy. Meanwhile, most continued to believe it was unnatural, even blasphemous, to be buried away from home. Local deities and the women left behind required proper burial to be a home town event. These ancients, with their local gods and home town rites, believed that their dead still had presence in their families and communities, a resting place that was also a home. Anyone not buried in a local space in accord with proper rites was doomed to become a miserable wandering ghost, lost to the world even in death, and able to haunt those who permitted their exile to occur.

Home burial as a sacred rite became embattled when people massed themselves into city-states, and when nations collectivized armies eager to wage wars away from home. Village boys drafted into these armies often never came back, many ditched into mass graves, their bodies burned or left to rot. Over the centuries, as armies and weaponry became more lethal, a strategic rule evolved: Export wars to someone else’s turf, with long-distance bombing preferred. Win away from home, then return for the parades and enjoyment of the spoils. And as populations and war technologies have increased and multiplied, so have mass graves full of invaders, defenders and innocents alike.

As Americans we try desperately to be proud of our wars, and we are proud of a mobility we like to equate with freedom. Though our Civil War left behind thousands of women and children and whole generations of virtually homeless African/Americans, the foreign wars that are our major and most expensive exports do not live happily ever after. Climate change is making migrants of millions. Here in the U.S. our jobs also require many of us to live away from home. There many of our hours, exhausted in cars and planes, are spent on the road. Our children grow up and many move away, some never returning to stay. Columbus, Ohio, Columbus, Wisconsin, and Columbus, Georgia, all seem All-American enough to be everybody’s home town, until the urge comes on to be someplace else. As our children leave us, we also leave them.

So when we die a funeral’s seldom a home burial. It’s a hit and run affair. If mobility—often equated with profitable innovation and senseless change––defines our sense of freedom, it does so at the expense of the redemptive potential of familiarity, family and community. Being on the move makes it easy to make strangers of those who live nearby, easy to let the media outline our sense of them as types, and easier to make disagreeable enemies of them. If home is where the heart is, home burials in real spaces that feature birth places, home towns, and neighborhoods as communities seem to be a minor and shrinking chapter of our history.

What Bernie Knows

What Trees Know

What Trees Know by Degrazias…
Emilio, the Speaker
Dante, the Music

Drought Map for Jan. 21st 2021

Almost a Third of Recovered COVID-19 Patients Return To Hospital In Five Months, One In Eight Die

Almost a Third of Recovered COVID-19 Patients Return To Hospital In Five Months, One In Eight Die

Posted to Slashdot by BeauHD on Tuesday January 19, 2021 @02:00AM from the troubling-findings dept.

According to new research from Leicester University and the Office for National Statistics (NS), almost a third of recovered COVID-19 patients will end up back in the hospital within five months and one in eight will die. Yahoo News reports via The Telegraph: Out of 47,780 people who were discharged from hospital in the first wave, 29.4 per cent were readmitted to hospital within 140 days, and 12.3 per cent of the total died. The current cut-off point for recording Covid deaths is 28 days after a positive test, so it may mean thousands more people should be included in the coronavirus death statistics. Researchers have called for urgent monitoring of people who have been discharged from hospital.

Study author Kamlesh Khunti, professor of primary care diabetes and vascular medicine at Leicester University, said: “This is the largest study of people discharged from hospital after being admitted with Covid. People seem to be going home, getting long-term effects, coming back in and dying. We see nearly 30 per cent have been readmitted, and that’s a lot of people. The numbers are so large. The message here is we really need to prepare for long Covid. It’s a mammoth task to follow up with these patients and the NHS is really pushed at the moment, but some sort of monitoring needs to be arranged.”

The study found that Covid survivors were nearly three and a half times more likely to be readmitted to hospital, and die, in the 140 days timeframe than other hospital outpatients. Prof Khunti said the team had been surprised to find that many people were going back in with a new diagnosis, and many had developed heart, kidney and liver problems, as well as diabetes. “We don’t know if it’s because Covid destroyed the beta cells which make insulin and you get Type 1 diabetes, or whether it causes insulin resistance, and you develop Type 2, but we are seeing these surprising new diagnoses of diabetes,â he added. “We’ve seen studies where survivors have had MRS scans and they’ve cardiac problems and liver problems. These people urgently require follow up and the need to be on things like aspirin and statins.”