Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Ebola New York at Jacob Javits Center

Mass meeting today, or was it a mass beating??? at the Jacob Javits Center on mobilizing hospital workers to deal with the Ebola virus, and Ebola infected patients in NYC -- if it comes to that.  There were at least 5000 workers there and they had lots of questions.

Fortunately there were some www.larouchepac.com people there to tell them about the budget-cutting lies of Obama and company.  This sht could get us all killed.  Already 22 million in West Africa in the 3 nations of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone are on the line.  Will you act????

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Airborne Ebola from Harlem to LA

Hey Harlem, the LA Times says don't accept the lies, the airborne Ebola may already be hear....   panic now. Part of the hospital business and the business of staying alive.

In an article entitled Some Ebola Experts Worry Virus May Spread More Easily Than Assumed, the Los Angeles Times exposes the fact that several experts have questioned the lies being spread by official agencies on Ebola’s transmission.
Dr. C.J. Peters, who battled a 1989 outbreak of the virus among research monkeys housed in Reston, Virginia and who later led the CDC’s most far-reaching study of Ebola’s transmissibility in humans, said he would not rule out the possibility that it spreads through the air in tight quarters. “We just don’t have the data to exclude it,” said Peters, who continues to research viral diseases at the University of Texas in Galveston.
Dr. Philip K. Russell, a virologist who oversaw Ebola research while heading the U.S. Army’s Medical Research and Development Command, and who later led the government’s massive stockpiling of smallpox vaccine after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, also said much was still to be learned. “Being dogmatic is, I think, ill-advised, because there are too many unknowns here.”
The Los Angeles Times article says that the researchers it reached in recent days for this article cited grounds to question U.S. officials’ assumptions in three categories.
One issue is whether airport screenings of prospective travelers to the U.S. from West Africa can reliably detect those who might have Ebola. Individuals who have flown recently from one or more of the affected countries suggested that travelers could easily subvert the screening procedures and might have incentive to do so: Compared with the depleted medical resources in the West African countries of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, the prospect of hospital care in the U.S. may offer an Ebola-exposed person the only chance to survive.
A person could pass body temperature checks performed at the airports by taking ibuprofen or any similar common anti-pyretic analgesic. And prospective passengers have much to fear from identifying themselves as sick, said Kim Beer, a resident of Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, who is working to get medical supplies into the country to cope with Ebola.
“It is highly unlikely that someone would acknowledge having a fever, or simply feeling unwell,” Beer said via email. “Not only will they probably not get on the flight -- they may even be taken to/required to go to a ‘holding facility’ where they would have to stay for days until it is confirmed that it is not caused by Ebola. That is just about the last place one would want to go.”
Moreover, said some public health specialists, there is no proof that a person infected, but who lacks symptoms, could not spread the virus to others. “It’s really unclear,” said Michael Osterholm, a public health scientist at the University of Minnesota who recently served on the U.S. government’s National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity. “None of us knows.”
Russell, who oversaw the Army’s research on Ebola, said he found the epidemiological data unconvincing. “The definition of ‘symptomatic’ is a little difficult to deal with,” he said. “It may be generally true that patients aren’t excreting very much virus until they become ill, but to say that we know the course of [the virus’ entry into the bloodstream] and the course of when a virus appears in the various secretions, I think, is premature.”

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Harlem Asks Will Ebola Hit the Caribbean?

Caribbean could be Achilles Heel for Ebola virus spread in the Western Hemisphere.  They could even acquire a natural reservoir like bats.

In statements to Associated Press Oct. 13, during the XI Conference of Defense Ministers of the Americas, in Arequipa, Peru, Kelly reported that Ebola was a topic of intense discussion during the conference, as military leaders feel that the armed forces' ability to mobilize is a key component of any defense.
Several defense ministers addressed the issue directly in their speeches.
Gen. Kelly underscored the sense of alarm among Caribbean and Central American leaders, in particular, since many of these smaller nations, whose populations are highly vulnerable, have little ability to deal with an Ebola outbreak. Haiti, whose devastating cholera epidemic is still considered an "emergency" by the United Nations, has little defense capability, he noted. As the tourist season begins in the Caribbean, leaders fear that vacationers coming in and out of the region—some on cruise ships—and not subject to any screening procedures, pose a threat of transmission.
Gen. Kelly reported that he has sent a military planner and medical expert to Germany to work with Africa Command officials, to better prepare the Southern Command should an Ebola threat emerge. SouthCom is also conducting simulations on the issue, to make sure the military is prepared if a country begins to see Ebola cases. He has asked for modeling data on how the virus might spread. "There is no fear-mongering here," Gen. Kelly emphasized."It's part of my job to anticipate that kind of thing. A lot of countries don't have really capable preventive medicine... it's not that they don't have any medical capabilities; it's that they don't have a lot."
Reflecting the level of alarm, in their speeches at the recent UN General Assembly meeting in New York, several Caribbean leaders warned that their nations do not have the ability to withstand an Ebola outbreak, and demanded urgent action to confront what they perceive as a global—not regional—threat. Ebola is "a public health emergency of international concern and a threat to global security," warned Barbados's Foreign Minister Sen. Maxine McLean. Belize's Foreign Minister Wilfred P. Erlington asked why international health agencies "did not respond more vigorously to the Ebola outbreak many months ago."

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

KR3ts performance at El Museo del Barrio

See the Kr3ts dance and fundraising performance.  It's Friday Nov. 7 for a performance at El Museo Del Barrio at 8 pm.  El Museo is located at 1230 Fifth Avenue, at East 105th St., near Central Park on the East side.  Also a Saturday Nov 8 dinner at Terence  Cardinal Cooke Health Care center at 1249 Fifth Avenue, and later back to dancing at El Museo.  What a weekend....  could get a little wild, but bring the kids.... In East Harlem.

Harlem NY to Global Warming Jive

Harlem NY to Global warming, you are nothing but jive and an excuse to shut down everything.

October 6, 2014
RELEASE 14-272
NASA Study Finds Earth’s Ocean Abyss Has Not Warmed
image shows heat radiating from the Pacific Ocean as imaged by the NASA’s Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System
While the upper part of the world’s oceans continue to absorb heat from global warming, ocean depths have not warmed measurably in the last decade. This image shows heat radiating from the Pacific Ocean as imaged by the NASA’s Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System instrument on the Terra satellite. (Blue regions indicate thick cloud cover.)
Image Credit: 
NASA
Deep sea creatures, like these anemones at a hydrothermal vent
Deep sea creatures, like these anemones at a hydrothermal vent, are not yet feeling the heat from global climate change. Although the top half of the ocean continues to warm, the bottom half has not increased measurably in temperature in the last decade.
Image Credit: 
NERC
The cold waters of Earth’s deep ocean have not warmed measurably since 2005, according to a new NASA study, leaving unsolved the mystery of why global warming appears to have slowed in recent years.
Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, analyzed satellite and direct ocean temperature data from 2005 to 2013 and found the ocean abyss below 1.24 miles (1,995 meters) has not warmed measurably. Study coauthor Josh Willis of JPL said these findings do not throw suspicion on climate change itself.
"The sea level is still rising," Willis noted. "We're just trying to understand the nitty-gritty details."
In the 21st century, greenhouse gases have continued to accumulate in the atmosphere, just as they did in the 20th century, but global average surface air temperatures have stopped rising in tandem with the gases. The temperature of the top half of the world's oceans -- above the 1.24-mile mark -- is still climbing, but not fast enough to account for the stalled air temperatures.
Many processes on land, air and sea have been invoked to explain what is happening to the "missing" heat. One of the most prominent ideas is that the bottom half of the ocean is taking up the slack, but supporting evidence is slim. This latest study is the first to test the idea using satellite observations, as well as direct temperature measurements of the upper ocean. Scientists have been taking the temperature of the top half of the ocean directly since 2005, using a network of 3,000 floating temperature probes called the Argo array.
"The deep parts of the ocean are harder to measure," said JPL's William Llovel, lead author of the study published Sunday in the journal Nature Climate Change. "The combination of satellite and direct temperature data gives us a glimpse of how much sea level rise is due to deep warming. The answer is -- not much."
The study took advantage of the fact that water expands as it gets warmer. The sea level is rising because of this expansion and the water added by glacier and ice sheet melt.
To arrive at their conclusion, the JPL scientists did a straightforward subtraction calculation, using data for 2005-2013 from the Argo buoys, NASA's Jason-1 and Jason-2 satellites, and the agency’s Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites. From the total amount of sea level rise, they subtracted the amount of rise from the expansion in the upper ocean, and the amount of rise that came from added meltwater. The remainder represented the amount of sea level rise caused by warming in the deep ocean.
The remainder was essentially zero. Deep ocean warming contributed virtually nothing to sea level rise during this period.
Coauthor Felix Landerer of JPL noted that during the same period warming in the top half of the ocean continued unabated, an unequivocal sign that our planet is heating up. Some recent studies reporting deep-ocean warming were, in fact, referring to the warming in the upper half of the ocean but below the topmost layer, which ends about 0.4 mile (700 meters) down.
Landerer also is a coauthor of another paper in the same journal issue on 1970-2005 ocean warming in the Southern Hemisphere. Before Argo floats were deployed, temperature measurements in the Southern Ocean were spotty, at best. Using satellite measurements and climate simulations of sea level changes around the world, the new study found the global ocean absorbed far more heat in those 35 years than previously thought -- a whopping 24 to 58 percent more than early estimates.
Both papers result from the work of the newly formed NASA Sea Level Change Team, an interdisciplinary group tasked with using NASA satellite data to improve the accuracy and scale of current and future estimates of sea level change. The Southern Hemisphere paper was led by three scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California.
NASA monitors Earth's vital signs from land, air and space with a fleet of satellites and ambitious airborne and ground-based observation campaigns. NASA develops new ways to observe and study Earth's interconnected natural systems with long-term data records and computer analysis tools to better see how our planet is changing. The agency shares this unique knowledge with the global community and works with institutions in the United States and around the world that contribute to understanding and protecting our home planet.
For more information about NASA's Earth science activities in 2014, visit:
For more information on ocean surface topography from space, visit:
More information on NASA’s GRACE satellites is available at:
For more information on the Argo array, visit:
-end-
Steve Cole
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0918
stephen.e.cole@nasa.gov
Alan Buis

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Oregon and China Investment

China investment is about to hit Oregon in a good way.  This seems like a basic project, but to turn natural gas into methanol, ship it to Dailin China and make olefins, plastics, etc is a real good thing.  Even the bleepin greenies can't object.  Can't find updates on this, latest info is in January 2014.  Impeach Obama and maybe we can have a life in the USA.  Hey Harlem NY, you better pray.

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Foreclosures and your Attorney

If you are facing a foreclosure, call your Attorney.  It may help to at least stall for time.  Otherwise, the crash is on, particularly for you... from geezer land:

Statistics elsewhere in the country are equally dramatic. The Philadelphia Business Journal reported Sept. 11 that foreclosure starts in New Jersey had skyrocketed in August, increasing by 115% year-on-year; scheduled foreclosure auctions increased by 71% compared to a year ago, to the highest level since July 2010. In Maryland, August foreclosures increased by 20% year-on-year. According to RealtyTrac, the state’s August foreclosures were up 71% from July, and at that point, Maryland had experienced two straight years of rising foreclosures.
In Colorado, foreclosure auctions were up by a whopping 160%, and in Oregon, they increased by 117%.
Against this backdrop, a Sept. 9 article in The New York Times is revealing. Under the headline, “Are Subprime Mortgages Coming Back?” author Binyamin Appelbaum suggests that “it might be time for the revival of the subprime-lending industry” by loosening standards on mortgage lending, which he claims are now excessively strict, and hurting the overall economy. After all, he says, long before these risky loans were blamed for helping to usher in the 2008 financial crisis, they were “embraced as a promising antidote to the excessive caution of mainstream lenders.”