BEWARE...SOME DAYS ARE NOT VERY PRETTY. I GET CRABBY LIKE NORMAL PEOPLE DO. AND I DO SPEAK MY MIND.
DO NOT READ IF YOU ARE SENSITIVE TO TRUE, REAL, EVERYDAY FEELINGS LIKE MINE.(But I think you would enjoy it)
DON'T FORGET...FREEDOM OF SPEECH !
update....9-29...(crissy I would NEVER wish any harm come to you or any of your family. You have been hospitalized with bad bleeding. Stop worrying about the stupid white house and worry about your health. See... THIS is what is important, let the white house take care of itself. You and john are paying too much attention to things that are so childish, please take care of the baby. You have been stressed out about president when you know that he isn't what is important right now. Take care of that baby and your family. We wish you well....stop worrying about things that You will never have control over. take care of your family not the white house.)
John Legend and Chrissy Teigen considered leaving the USA because of Donald Trump
Lottie Lumsden
·3 mins read
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/john-legend-chrissy-teigen-considered-083000890.html
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What the hell has Trump done or could possibly do to effect Crissy and John? Not kidding.... how can Trump effect them? Did he take away their home? Did he stop them from spending time with their family? Did he take away any of their planes, boats, any toys like that? Did he stop them from vacations? Did he stop them from preforming? Did he stop them from posting on social media? Did he stop them from doing anything "important"? Or do you both just want to whine and complain as usual? All they do is complain and make money... A lot more people are laughing at them instead of feeling sorry for them. Trump is not my favorite person but when are these cry babies going to stop blaming everyone else for their own lives?
YOU ARE IN CHARGE OF YOUR OWN LIFE AND FEELINGS.
STOP blaming everyone and change your own life ...cry babies.
A
team of researchers at the University of Minnesota has found traces of
SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, in lake water.
The
virus was detected by a group led by Richard Melvin, an assistant
professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at the University of
Minnesota Medical School, in mid-September. Melvin and his team have
been sampling water from various beaches on Lake Superior since July 4
on a weekly basis as a partnership with Minnesota Sea Grant, an
organization that works to enhance the state’s coastal environment. The
team hadn’t found the virus during weekly tests, but, on Sept. 11, that
changed.
The research team detected SARS-CoV-2 at 100 to 1,000
copies per liter, or 10,000 times lower than levels observed in
wastewater. “I was surprised and not surprised,” Dr. Richard Melvin,
assistant professor at the University of Minnesota Medical School,
Duluth campus, tells Yahoo Life. “We were testing a hypothesis that
beachgoers would bring this on their bodies into the water, but when you
see it on the machine, there’s this sinking feeling.”
The
source — or sources — of the virus are unknown at this point, Melvin
says, but the research team plans to continue to monitor the water, as
well as work with local health experts to try to pinpoint the source of
the virus in the water.
The news sounds scary, but public health experts say people shouldn’t panic.
Dr.
Richard Watkins, an infectious disease physician in Akron, Ohio, and a
professor of internal medicine at the Northeast Ohio Medical University,
tells Yahoo Life that, while research has shown
that SARS-CoV-2 can show up in wastewater, there’s no data to suggest
that the virus is actually transmitted through water. “However, there is
a lot we don’t know about the virus, so nothing can be definitively
ruled out at this point,” he says.
But finding the virus in water
“doesn’t mean that they’re infection particles,” Dr. Thomas Russo,
professor and chief of infectious disease at the University at Buffalo,
tells Yahoo Life. “It’s highly unlikely that SARS-CoV-2 can survive in a
body of water for very long,” he says.
Dr. Valerie Fitzhugh, an
associate professor and interim chair of the Department of Pathology at
the Rutgers New Jersey Medical School and Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson
Medical School, agrees. “Lake water should not be a risk,” she tells
Yahoo Life. “The bigger issue would be crowds at a beach near the lake
than the water itself.”
Even if the virus were infectious in
water, it’s likely to be diluted if it shows up in a larger body of
water, like a lake, Russo says. “It would probably be so diluted that it
wouldn’t be sufficient enough to cause an infection in an individual,”
he says.
But how did the virus get there in the first place? There
are a few different possibilities, Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar
at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, tells Yahoo Life.
“People
excrete the virus in their feces, and people deposit fecal matter in
lakes,” he says. The virus could be shed into water after someone didn’t
wipe well after using the bathroom, or it could actually end up in the
water from someone using the area as a toilet. “People go to the
bathroom in lakes,” Adalja points out.
There is also a risk of
sewage contamination seeping into lakes, Adalja says. And, since
SARS-CoV-2 has already been detected in sewage, it could end up in a
lake that way. “This is not surprising to me,” Adalja says. Worth
noting: Melvin says that the virus is “not likely” to come from local
wastewater treatment plants. “They do a perfectly effective job of
eliminating the virus,” he says. “However, it could be coming from sewer
lines or septic tanks.”
Because of all this, Adalja says, SARS-CoV-2 is likely to also be found in other bodies of water elsewhere.
But,
again, people shouldn’t panic. “I don’t think it’s a major mode of
transmission,” Adalja says. “SARS-CoV-2 was just found in water — it’s
not necessarily living in water. Any virus that gets excreted fecally
can be found in water.” Melvin agrees, noting that the virus “rapidly
degrades” in water. “In my research, I’ve never found a case of anyone
recording an infection due to water,” he says.
Ultimately, Melvin
says, his findings are more a signal of what’s happening around the
lake. “It’s just an indication that the infection level is high in the
city,” he says. “Anytime something like that happens on a high level, it
spills into the environment in some way.”
Everyone that "I" have talked to said that they afraid of people boycotting them so they are making sure they have a balance of ethnic workers. Hope they are the best person possible for the job.
(and there isn't one single adult to stop them. You are all weak a_s holes.
And the jerk throwing gas is a freaking ANIMAL ! And if the motorbike was not doing anything wrong, why the hell were they running? They were running for a reason so don't make the excuse that they were scared. Oh bull crap.)
Crowd shouted 'light them up' as eight police officers doused in petrol after motorbike chase
A crowd shouted “light them up” after eight police officers were doused in petrol following a motorbike chase.
The officers were covered in fuel as they made an arrest on the Ward Close estate in Basildon, Essex, last May.
They recalled the horrifying incident for BBC One documentary Critical Incident, which was broadcast on Monday evening.
Officers had been in pursuit of a motorbike which was being ridden dangerously in nearby Canvey Island.
After
following the rider for eight miles, accompanied by a police
helicopter, they attempted to make an arrest in Basildon which attracted
a large crowd.
One woman threatened officers with a hammer before a man threw petrol over them.
The officers said they heard people in the crowd shout, “Who’s got matches?” and “light them up”. Read more: Coronavirus deaths top 1 million - the 10 worst-hit countries
Two
of the officers were hospitalised after ingesting fuel in the incident
and firefighters had to wash petrol out of their eyes.
A total of 90 officers arrived at the scene to aid their colleagues.
PC
Andrew Bird said: “Out of the corner of my eye I saw a gentleman appear
from down one of the alleyways. He was just sprinting full speed
towards where we were.”
After intercepting the man, the pair fell to the floor.
"I
was pretty much at the bottom of the pile," said PC Bird. "You've got
officers trying to get him off of me, he had his arms wrapped round my
legs trying to keep hold of me.
"It was as I was trying to control
this gentleman who had run out of the middle of nowhere that this other
chap has appeared with a watering can.”
PC Matthew Cutts said he didn’t know what was in the watering can but suspected it could be acid.
"I
could smell petrol so I sort of fumbled around to get my baton out but
once I've got it I've put it behind my head and just struck him in line
with my training,” he said.
"It's not a random act of violence, it's a controlled measure that we are taught to use to get people away from us."
PC Cutts said he felt his skin stinging and tingling on the front of his body where he had been doused in petrol. Read more: New gadget lets scientists ‘plant ideas’ in people’s dreams
Chief
Inspector Jonathan Baldwin said: "One match, one lighter, one spark
could result in us going up in flames and being disfigured for life or
possibly even dead.
"I was hearing them shout 'light them up'.
"I don't know how we didn't just cut and run but then that's not the way we're wired - we all stuck together.
"There's something running in the core of us that says you don't run away from the danger, you run towards it."
Residents helped rinse the petrol off the officers with water until the fire service arrived and hosed them down.
Justin Jackson, 28, from Ward Close, who threw the petrol over the officers, was jailed for three years and nine months.
A 17-year-old from Basildon was disqualified from driving for 12 months and fined for driving a motor vehicle dangerously.
Janine
Justin, 47, from Basildon, was found guilty of possession of an
offensive weapon and sentenced to nine months in prison, suspended for
18 months.
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that lady is a loudmouth and she makes the man look like an assistant. she is so loud and pushy and now the man is hardly ever heard. Yep time to change the channel, abc is only getting worse.
All of our tvs at work ( 8) have also been changed. We watch the news for the "news" not her personal "slang" opinion on every story. BYE BYE Abc !