Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

Monday, July 6, 2009

Your Health Record, the CIA, Google and Sarah Palin


Imagine if your 'health record' is held by a private company which allegedly has links to the CIA.

Imagine if your health record is held by an internet company which allegedly allows certain types of pornography on its sites.

(porn UPSKIRT xxx AMAZING ASS ....Pre Teen Girls Stripping)

Imagine if your health record is held by a company which allegedly discriminates against those who criticise Israel and the Pentagon.

In the UK, if there is a Conservative government led by David Cameron, health records could be transferred to Google.

Medical records via Google?



Steve Hilton is one of David Cameron’s closest advisers.

Hilton is married to Rachel Whetstone, Google's vicepresident of global communications and public affairs.

Cameron, who claims to be a Zionist, flew to San Francisco to address the Google Zeitgeist conference in 2007 at the company’s expense.

Five months ago, it was revealed that Eric Schmidt, Google’s chief executive, was joining a UK Conservative business forum to advise on economic policy. (Medical records via Google?)

Google?

"Google has changed Google Image Search to make it just a bit faster and easier to find adult or pornographic content with the search engine." (Google Makes It Faster To Find Pornography)

(Google does not allow adverts on our blogs and it has been known to delete our videos.)

Google R&D centre, Haifa, in ISRAEL - by David Shay

Meanwhile, "the feds have formally declared that they have begun an inquiry into whether Google's Book Search deal violates the Sherman Antitrust Act...

"Meanwhile, Google's dynamic new operating system Android has just run into a rare stumbling block... a Nokia representative told the press that the company had no plans at all for an Android phone...

"Disney has finally begun posting movies and television shows on Hulu, adding to the repertoire of content you can't watch on YouTube." - Google's Dark Day





Meanwhile: "Last week, users of Google App Engine - Google's application hosting platform - discovered a new feature in the product: downtime.

"App Engine was offline for roughly six hours, and for much of that time, even the status page which tells users about downtime was unavailable. Now that's a strong way to send a message...

"Watching Google's response to the App Engine downtime reminded me of the cruel 2008 US Vice Presidential debates, where everyone watching just wanted to pull Sarah Palin aside and say 'Sweetie, this is a grown-up event. You need to use your big-girl words now...'

"Google's introverted population certainly knows that it's easier and cheaper to legalese your way out of a customer's problem than it is to hire a person to pick up the phone."

Meanwhile, as Twitter and Facebook prosper, Google's YouTube seems to have adopted the worst design that anyone can imagine.

YouTube is the new General Motors.

Ex-Agent: CIA Seed Money Helped Launch Google

CIA enlists Google's help for spy work - Times Online

Google and the CIA

~~

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Quick Hits

Nigerians are a conquered people.-Sahara Reporters'They Came in the Name of Helping'A canny chameleon-Blaise CompaoréThe Longevity Project,Ghana.Black Economic Empowerment failed-Moeletsi MbekiCarnegie's gospel of wealth

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Reducing Car accidents-Amend

From the Amend website:Road traffic injuries are the number one cause of death and disability for children between the ages of 5 and 21 in the developing world — in areas where little, if any, emergency and pre-hospital medical care is available.Remember the adage “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure”? It’s true. The most effective way to improve this reality is to stop the incidents

Monday, December 1, 2008

Take the Lead - Help Stop HIV and AIDS

For 20 years, people around the globe have observed Dec. 1 as World AIDS Day. It's a time to remember those we have lost, to thank the people who give of their time to care for those infected and affected by the disease, and to rededicate ourselves to finding a cure. AIDS has not gone away -- not by a long shot. Therapies have improved, and many HIV-positive people are living longer and healthier lives, but many challenges lie ahead.

According to the World AIDS campaign web site, 8,000 people die from HIV disease every day, and there are millions of new infections each year -- despite increased commitments from government leaders and health-care institutions. This means we need even more leadership, more ideas, deeper commitments, and increases in funding.

Many people lacking insurance and health care simply do without necessary treatment -- and if they don't know that they are infected with HIV, they unknowingly put themselves and others at risk. With the global economic meltdown, there are likely to be more of them, especially among groups of people who already have little access to HIV education. Too many people don't get tested and some do not discover their HIV status until after they have progressed to full-blown AIDS.

As daunting as these challenges will be, we all have some reason to cheer on this Dec. 1. In the past year alone, reasearch has told us that people undergoing HIV therapies have similar survival rates as those of uninfected people. Newly discovered and approved treatment options make medication regimens safer and simpler to follow. Numerous states are making big headway in permitting routine HIV testing within everyday health care settings. This is all great news, and with renewed focus by government, research institutions, and health care administrators, hopefully we will see even more news to celebrate by this time next year.

In the meantime, health educators need new ideas for delivering potentially lifesaving information on HIV and AIDS to populations still not getting the word: young people, non-English speakers, disadvantaged communities in the US and overseas. There must be a renewed commitment to collaboration between health-care providers, researchers, and government officials so that they can bring necessary changes in diagnosis,a decrease in the number of new infections, and increased access to care and treatment -- especially during an economic crisis that will leave more people uninsured and under-insured.

HIV/AIDS organizations throughout the US hope the new Obama administration will bring needed change in prevention, access to care, civil rights, and research within its first 100 days. They call for a bigger federal investment in domestic HIV/AIDS programs, including research and prevention efforts, and in care and services for those with HIV/AIDS through the Ryan White CARE Act. They also urge the president-elect to get to work promptly on a national HIV/AIDS strategy that deals realistically with the HIV epidemic, which, despite the efforts of thousands over the past two decades, continues to grow.

HIV is everyone's problem -- that is most clear on this, the 20th World AIDS Day. We all must take some sort of leadership role to stop infections, to care for the sick, and to halt the dying. Since 1981, I have lost more than 100 loved ones to the disease, so ending this scourge is a very personal matter to me. Every person infected by HIV creates a group of people also affected by the disease. That adds up to a whole lot of misery -- and it must be stopped. With stronger leadership, fresh ideas, and renewed commitment, we can end the HIV/AIDS epidemic. I know we can. But we need you to do your part: Write to lawmakers and political leaders and remind them of the urgency. Volunteer at your local AIDS service provider -- you can serve as a caregiving buddy or deliver meals to homebound patients or visit people in hospitals or in a host of roles. Talk about the importance of testing, abstinence, and safer sex in your schools and within your community, your church, your home. If you can't give time, donate. Just do something.

On this World AIDS Day, I ask you to take time to inform yourself and to think: What will you do to make a difference before Dec. 1, 2009? Once you have found your answer, get busy. There are lives to save.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Let's Feel Up Our Own Boobies - Here's the Technique

Hey Blog Sisters,

Last night I attended a Breast Cancer Awareness event at the Hue Man Bookstore in Harlem, NY thrown by The Lit Leaders Rosalind Mclymont, Linda A. Duggins, Esther Armah and Renee Daniel Flagler. I learned so much and was completely inspired to come home and feel up my boobs on camera just for you. There's a song and everything.

Whoo Hoo! I am willing to completely embarrass myself to save your life. Oh, and for post menopausal women, disregard the period part of the technique.

xo,
Abiola Abrams