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Viewing 19 posts - 211 through 229 (of 229 total)
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  • in reply to: nittany #37819
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    I’m submitting a FOIA request for the contents of said email to be disclosed.

    The board demands transparency.

    in reply to: The moonshot to cure cancer is doomed to failure #37818
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    BNW, you didn’t upset me. I apologize for not being clear. I just get frustrated when I hear stuff like, for example, Big Pharma is suppressing a cure for profit. If that were the case, then the industry would not have made the strides we have seen with HIV. Now that disease was a cash cow if there ever was one, due to myriad associated diseases it spawns, including various cancers. Cancer is a tough, mean bastard. Just getting new drugs through Phase 1-3 clinical trials can cost a billion and of course may not prove efficacy or have legs to allow a patient to live just a few more months.

    The other thing you mentioned, that cancer can go away by itself, untreated. That’s what’s known as spontaneous remission. This lucky group accounts for two percent of patients and doctors\researchers can’t explain it. If I were to get cancer, and most of us will if we live long enough, I wouldn’t leave it untreated. That’s just suicide. I followed two individuals on FB who decided to forgo SBM for quackery and woo. Like diet, Gerson therapy (juicing fruit and vegetable all day combined with coffee enemas) and holistic\naturopathic “medicine.” One died within the time frame for untreated BC, about 18-24 months is the median. The other is about to have a fungulating (sp) tumor burst from her skin. She’s treating it with black salve, which is like acid.

    The charlatans I mentioned take advantage of patients like these to make a profit themselves (see Natural News for one) and there’s a special place in hell for those fuckers. As my wife’s caregiver and advocate, I did my D&D and was shocked at what is shilled out there (cannabis oil, essential oils, mistletoe, vitamin c IVs, veganism and laetrile, which has been re-branded as Vitamin B-17. To name just a few) to vulnerable, scared people. SBM cancer treatment -conventional- is not easy to endure. My wife did pretty well in her first go round. But she also thought juicing and a vegan diet would prevent recurrence. She read that somewhere. It didn’t.

    Anyway, sorry for the rant. This -is- personal for me. And now, too, for my brother.

    Thanks for the kind words, by the way, gentlemen.

    Very well said, Ozone, and I am very sorry for your loss.

    A lot of woo surrounds the legalization of marijuana right now. Proponents are pointing to its curative powers over diseases including cancer. It’s total BS. Of course, it’s been established that marijuana can make you feel better and can lessen the uncomfortable side effects of chemo, but it will not cure your cancer.

    I’m in favor of the legalization of marijuana (and maybe all drugs FWIW) but making false claims about its healing properties won’t help the cause and can harm a great number of patients who require real evidenced based treatments.

    You’re exactly right. My wife had a medical marijuana card but rarely used it. The drugs medics provide for chemo relief worked well enough for her (the second round hit her like a truck, however-she had oxy for that). As for the medical uses, advocates are using false claims about cannabis as a vehicle for legalization. This is an atrocity and can be lethal when chosen as an alternative to SBM. I say just legalize the shit and tax the hell out of it.

    in reply to: The moonshot to cure cancer is doomed to failure #37817
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    Thanks, WV…Seems like this board is sailing in calm seas. Obviously, I wasn’t in a posting mood for a long time. Long time. Loss changes you- pretty much narrows one’s perspective on things. So I pretty much missed the better part of two seasons. Had to deal with the business side of death, too, which is unpleasant to say the least.

    I’ll be here more often. Lots to talk about.

    Oh, and I became a grandfather of twins last year! Little Rams fans coming down the chute!

    in reply to: The clause #37775
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    Billionaires roll politicians in this country. That’s obvious. Get some country podunk against a ruthless guy like Shaw…game over. As we have seen.

    I wonder if Donald Trump (No, I cannot stand that guy) could roll Vladimir Putin?

    in reply to: The moonshot to cure cancer is doomed to failure #37773
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    My condolences on your loss, Ozone. I lost my sister to cancer last summer, so I have some sense of what this is like. Not much I can say but I genuinely am sorry for your family’s suffering and your losses.

    [/quote]

    And I yours, Zack. Like I said, cancer touches everyone. Prayers for your family.

    Jeff

    in reply to: The moonshot to cure cancer is doomed to failure #37763
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    BNW, you didn’t upset me. I apologize for not being clear. I just get frustrated when I hear stuff like, for example, Big Pharma is suppressing a cure for profit. If that were the case, then the industry would not have made the strides we have seen with HIV. Now that disease was a cash cow if there ever was one, due to myriad associated diseases it spawns, including various cancers. Cancer is a tough, mean bastard. Just getting new drugs through Phase 1-3 clinical trials can cost a billion and of course may not prove efficacy or have legs to allow a patient to live just a few more months.

    The other thing you mentioned, that cancer can go away by itself, untreated. That’s what’s known as spontaneous remission. This lucky group accounts for two percent of patients and doctors\researchers can’t explain it. If I were to get cancer, and most of us will if we live long enough, I wouldn’t leave it untreated. That’s just suicide. I followed two individuals on FB who decided to forgo SBM for quackery and woo. Like diet, Gerson therapy (juicing fruit and vegetable all day combined with coffee enemas) and holistic\naturopathic “medicine.” One died within the time frame for untreated BC, about 18-24 months is the median. The other is about to have a fungulating (sp) tumor burst from her skin. She’s treating it with black salve, which is like acid.

    The charlatans I mentioned take advantage of patients like these to make a profit themselves (see Natural News for one) and there’s a special place in hell for those fuckers. As my wife’s caregiver and advocate, I did my D&D and was shocked at what is shilled out there (cannabis oil, essential oils, mistletoe, vitamin c IVs, veganism and laetrile, which has been re-branded as Vitamin B-17. To name just a few) to vulnerable, scared people. SBM cancer treatment -conventional- is not easy to endure. My wife did pretty well in her first go round. But she also thought juicing and a vegan diet would prevent recurrence. She read that somewhere. It didn’t.

    Anyway, sorry for the rant. This -is- personal for me. And now, too, for my brother.

    Thanks for the kind words, by the way, gentlemen.

    in reply to: The moonshot to cure cancer is doomed to failure #37660
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    I read this soon after you posted it and have thought about it a lot. It wouldn’t surprise me to learn that a virus is the cause of most if not all cancer. Doubt the non empowered among us will ever see a cure since treatments are more profitable. Seems as though the cure business has dropped off a cliff the last 30 years.

    This is so over the top wrong, I don’t know where to start. Treatments are unbelievably costly and do not present the profits for those companies that statins and dick pills do. It’s not even close. It’s an argument that’s used by charlatans pushing so-called “natural” cures.

    in reply to: The moonshot to cure cancer is doomed to failure #37659
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    Unfortunately, I know a little about this subject. I lost my wife to breast cancer in September of 2014 and my sister in law is terminal.

    The article and PA have a few things right. We are making advances. Some cancers can be cured, even metastatic- testicular, for example. The problem is, it’s not going to be a one-size-fits-all cure. That’s impossible. Seven billion unique examples of the species is another obstacle. Cancer presents and kills in so many different ways. And each patient is unique. Some can fight stage 4 for years. Others last weeks or even days. My wife died 28 days after her metastases was diagnosed.

    I was happy to hear this news- I hope a “moonshot” approach is carried through to cures. Or at least bring it to the chronic level, just as we have accomplished with HIV\AIDS. I have visceral hatred this disease. For what it has robbed me and my family, as well as just about everyone one else.

    in reply to: board response to the NFL vote…Rams to LA #37185
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    Some thoughts…

    So a greedy owner moved the team to St. Louis solely for money. And another greedy owner corrected that mistake, ironically, solely for money.

    I feel bad for the STL fans…they supported a bad team well for a lot of years. This does not affect me personally, outside of many more 1PM start times, but this whole thing leaves a very bad taste in my mouth. But I can’t help thinking STL had a chance to keep the Rams for a measly $700 million renovation. Just as Anaheim had a chance to keep the Rams but reneged on a parking lot development deal. Fuck greedy owners and the inept politicians they roll.

    Get ready, LA, for $60 parking and $15 dollar beers. I paid $50\$10 at Levi’s.

    Given the demographics, great weather and competition from six other sports teams, not to mention two major college programs, it will be interesting to see how well LA supports this team, especially during down years. I remember the Rams had difficulty selling out (67%, I think it was) in Anaheim. And they were relatively successful on the field during those years.

    I’m betting the Rams get at least three prime time games next season, not including London.

    Sometimes the NFL gets it right- ethically. See Cleveland. So with the city of Oakland apathetic, to put it mildly, about accommodating the Raiders…Yeah, that’s nuts.

    Nuts like that crazy dude Grits back in the day…Speaking of that giant, I emailed him this morning. I know he’s mocking us all now.

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 4 months ago by Ozoneranger.
    in reply to: Greetings, Comrades! #36737
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    I thought I would drop in to say hello. I hope this finds you all well and on your way to an epic 2016.

    ————————-

    Comrad Ozone. It has a nice ring to it :)

    What do you have to say about this
    last season. How would you sum it all up?

    w
    v

    Yes, I suppose it does. Going on the Bernster wagon! Ha…Haha!

    How would I sum it up?

    Where’s the Quarterback and a OC who didn’t run Army’s offense in 1898.

    I do think they beat Navy that year.

    Seriously, this team was frustrating to watch on the offensive and defensive sides of the ball. Baltimore, Minnesota were killers, and I was at Levi’s for the Niner game. Gregg Williams will always be overated in my mind after his D was torched by the five career win Blaine Gabbert.

    My girlfriend, who supported me all season long, turned coat on me and taunted me from the time we woke up till the time she left for home.

    Never date a 49er fan. That’s what I learned from this year.

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 4 months ago by Ozoneranger.
    in reply to: Greetings, Comrades! #36736
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    Hello. We;re doing fine here in the little corner pub. Well, except for the heated ongoing argument about whether the Rams should draft Marino or draft Fouts this year. (Me, I say Kenny Stabler, but no one listens.)

    Hope you are well.

    Well, after a long, slow slog through hell in 2014 and early 2015, I’m moving forward. Thanks for the kind words.

    Draft- I pick Stabler. I think he has a Title in his future. Marino and Fouts will be mediocre at best.

    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    “you’re better off walking from N. 1st and 87.”

    Not a chance. My dad is 82. Backup plan is the golf course.

    It’s good that the game isn’t until November. I’m sure all the parking\access kinks will be worked out by then.

    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    I’m taking a tour of the stadium on Sept 20th and I scored tix for the RAM/SF game this year in Santa Clara, i’ll let you folks know my thoughts on the place, I know the area very well, I grew up in SC ……………

    some of my friends that have taken tours have been disappointed … they’re not overly impressed with Levi Stadium.

    BTW, A buddy of mine attended the Earthquakes game this weekend and he also took a tour of the stadium earlier this month….. he bought PSLs for the 49ers and he’s disappointed with the stadium…… it took him 1 hour to finally board the light rail to get home from the soccer game……he’s considering to bike to football games….. He also told me that the food sucked and there’s very little reference to the 49er’s historic past…. no comparison to SF Giant’s baseball park AT$T, …………I know what my buddy means about AT&T…. Giants baseball stadium is very very very cool, last week I took my kids to see the Pirates vs Giants…. game sucked for us Giants fans, they lost 5-0, but the place is so enjoyable, that the outcome didn’t bother me as much, we stuck around until they kicked us out because AT&T is such nice place to visit…

    anyway, seems Business Week seems to agree about Levi…..

    http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-08-04/the-san-francisco-49ers-new-stadium-is-a-dud

    Levi’s Stadium during an MLS Soccer game between the Seattle Sounders FC and San Jose Earthquakes on Aug. 2 in Santa Clara, California

    On Saturday night, 48,000 people showed up for a soccer game between the San Jose Earthquakes and the Seattle Sounders at the brand new Levi’s Stadium located in Silicon Valley. The soccer fans were serving as guinea pigs, helping to work out the stadium’s kinks before the really important San Francisco 49ers football fans arrive in a few weeks. For me, the big takeaway was that the Levi’s Stadium staff has plenty of work to do, and the stadium does not live up to its billing as a technological marvel at all.

    For the past few months, 49ers executives have been telling anyone who would listen about all the bells and whistles that $1.3 billion buys. Levi’s Stadium has solar panels, a green roof, and Wi-Fi; people order food right to their seat via smartphone; and that’s pretty much it. Yes, Wi-Fi and cell signals often fall over in crowded places, such as stadiums, and making sure these services stay up and running through clever engineering is nice. But billing Wi-Fi as a testament to Silicon Valley’s technological mettle is embarrassing. And that green roof? It’s a tiny patch of shrubs on top of suites that I never even noticed while at the Earthquakes game.

    What I did notice was that the parking lots around the stadium were at a standstill and that no one seemed to have thought through the public transportation system at all. The stadium is being fed by a light rail line that travels slowly around Silicon Valley. At the Levi’s Stadium station, thousands of people trying to access four different train lines were all funneled through the same area. Insanely, the path to get on the trains required people to walk across the tracks. As a result, the whole station had to come to a halt every time a new train arrived so that it could be filled up and then sent on its way. It typically takes me 15 minutes to drive from my house in Mountain View to the stadium. It took 90 minutes to get home by train. To get back to San Francisco, fans would then need to catch a larger train from Mountain View and ride another hour home. Things should get really exciting when the whole stadium is opened up for the 49ers and 70,000 people, or about one-third more than on Saturday.

    Story: A $70 Million Rec Center Brings Indoor Surfing, Golf to North Dakota

    As the gripes rolled in Saturday night and into Sunday, stadium and public transit officials admitted their planning had not been up to snuff. They have pledged to come up with some solutions for getting people on the trains more quickly and to smooth out the parking-lot exits. I wonder how much can really be done.

    The stadium itself is not an architectural gem, but it’s also not ugly. The most pleasing thing about it is the airy design that makes use of Silicon Valley’s temperate weather and mountainous surroundings. People will also find it easy to make their way through the large concourses and to find food and drinks at dozens upon dozens of different eateries, serving things that range from curry and BBQ to burgers and porchetta sandwiches. The seats are comfortable, the bathrooms are clean, and the sound system and screen are fine.

    But with Levi’s Stadium, the 49ers had a chance to make a real statement. The team had shifted from the old, decrepit Candlestick Stadium, caught in a no-man’s-land between San Francisco and the monied suburbs of Silicon Valley. The 49ers could have built something as beautiful at AT&T Park—something with character and unique architectural elements. Instead, they built something that is nice, functional, and unspectacular. Wasn’t the whole point of Levi’s Stadium to appeal to the ultrarich who spend their days immersed in technological wonder?

    Story: The NFL Passes Out Crippled Surface Tablets to Quarterbacks

    Maybe in the years ahead we’ll get a direct Hyperloop line from San Francisco to the stadium or some augmented reality overlays for the field. Until then, it’s football inside of a new building, with the biggest “disruption” being the astronomical cost of a beer.

    Hey, Joe-

    I scored two for the Rams game (at FV!). Section 201. Just angled off the east end zone.

    My office is located on North First, just north of HWY 87. I was planning on leaving my car there and jumping on light rail for the last mile or so but after reading the nightmare that was getting out, I’m re-evaluating that strategy. The problem is not so much getting in…70,000 will do so over a few hours. It’s getting out with all those folks leaving at the same time. Think Super Bowl in NYC. I know the area well ; but getting sneaky and using side streets to hit 101 to the north or via Lafayette going south may be doused by how the authorities funnel traffic out of the parking lots. I suspect they’ll do as they did at the Stick- when they forced you to take that back road through Bayview-Hunter’s Point and back into the City to hit 101.

    in reply to: To Ozoneranger #1777
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    Check your messages, counselor. Left one there for you six days ago.

    in reply to: What happened to the Rams Buzz board ? #1050
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    Wow.

    But the most surprising thing about this is, X took the time to reup his avatar.

    in reply to: What happened to the Rams Buzz board ? #934
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    I’ll try and corral him.

    in reply to: Questions about the board and moving #929
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    I did a little checking on the Buzz. If you type http://www.ramsbuzz.com in the URL field, it redirects to Ramsondemand.com- the 404 is history.

    This gets curiouser and curiouser.

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by Ozoneranger.
    • This reply was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by zn.
    • This reply was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by zn.
    in reply to: Ever Wandering Lost-Tribe of Ram fans… #418
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    If Waterfield shows up, I have something for him.

    in reply to: Questions about the board and moving #278
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    So I checked out the Buzz and it’s gone…capooey.

    What’s the long story of its demise?

Viewing 19 posts - 211 through 229 (of 229 total)