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Everything posted by Park Life
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Man made Global warming dominoes continue to fall.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Think that might have changed non? -
Man made Global warming dominoes continue to fall.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
It's about consumption. Do your research. The pop myth is to hide the criminal consumption of the west. They want to continue as they are. That is the problem. -
Man made Global warming dominoes continue to fall.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Do a bit of research on consumption. On over population the trend is downward since 1965. I know shocking innit. -
Man made Global warming dominoes continue to fall.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Btw numpties over consumption is the issue not overpopulation. Birth rates are falling planet wide. In Europe it isn't even at sustaining level. -
Random stuff you used to get up to when a bairn
Park Life replied to Howmanheyman's topic in General Chat
Scandlous accusation. Did shoot tiger in Bengal using me dads old 303 though. -
Random stuff you used to get up to when a bairn
Park Life replied to Howmanheyman's topic in General Chat
Aye true, wouldn't dream of it now. That said, the volume of hedgerows/woodland was considerably higher when I was a laddo, most of the places we used to go have houses on them now. I doubt we had much of an effect on the wild bird population tbh, unlike bloody cats. Bird pop has been badly affected by pesticides. -
Man made Global warming dominoes continue to fall.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Gosh some of you in here are propa genocide merchants, albeit part-timers. Not to worry the conspiracy community is rife that it's on the way. Man made airbourne virus is the current favourite. Sadly for you and me it will be rather indiscriminate. -
Grant has revealed to close friends the extent of his disillusionment during a season that ended in relegation and says he wishes he had never taken the Upton Park job. Grant was sacked on Sunday, immediately after the team went down. "Avram points to January when Martin O'Neill was offered his job [when Grant was reportedly going to be sacked whatever the result against Arsenal on 15 January]," said a close friend. "He says six managers were asked by the club to take over, including Steve McClaren and Sam Allardyce, but they would not do it because they knew the situation there."
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He'll be pillaging pensions. Nowhere else to go if ceiling isn't lifted.
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David Evans is a scientist. He has also worked in the heart of the AGW machine. He consulted full-time for the Australian Greenhouse Office (now the Department of Climate Change) from 1999 to 2005, and part-time 2008 to 2010, modeling Australia’s carbon in plants, debris, mulch, soils, and forestry and agricultural products. He has six university degrees, including a PhD in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University. The other day he said: "The debate about global warming has reached ridiculous proportions and is full of micro-thin half-truths and misunderstandings. I am a scientist who was on the carbon gravy train, understands the evidence, was once an alarmist, but am now a skeptic." And with that he begins a demolition of the theories, premises and methods by which the AGW scare has been foisted on the public. The politics: "The whole idea that carbon dioxide is the main cause of the recent global warming is based on a guess that was proved false by empirical evidence during the 1990s. But the gravy train was too big, with too many jobs, industries, trading profits, political careers, and the possibility of world government and total control riding on the outcome. So rather than admit they were wrong, the governments, and their tame climate scientists, now outrageously maintain the fiction that carbon dioxide is a dangerous pollutant." Read more: http://nation.foxnews.com/global-warming/2...7#ixzz1Mgx1Sg27 100 points Cheznois??
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Aye. It was too early to tell when this thread was started too HF. +2 points for me I reckon. If you say so. If you're getting 2 points for predicting 14th 3 games into the season, I reckon my prediction of 12th (with most of the teams we'd be above spot on) must be worth +10. Yeah and 6 for me.
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Oh I expect some finds coming in on the cheap from Europe (mainly France) as we've been scouting heavily there.
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We wll sign Yaya Sonogo. No idea about net spend as not sure who will be sold. If we are inc the Carroll fee than after the summer win the club will still be in profit imho. Guessing Ricky will leave and we will get a french left back. Tiote to stay. Wouldn't be bothered if Guti went. I'm guarded about the summer window. The usual mix of excitement trawling the interweb for rumours tempered by remembering who is running the club. Might be ONE BIG SIGNING if we are lucky. Went for 10-15m cause I'm an eejit.
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Obama lying like hell at the start of this...
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Babies to be given anti-obesity drugs in womb..
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
I think the main point of it is to reduce the number of difficult births rather than using it to stop the litle ones growing up to be chubby funsters. 'Dr Andrew Weeks, said: "It is about trying to improve outcomes in pregnancy for women who are overweight.' As for it being overkill, difficult births can be damaging for both parties. If it was something that reduced the chances of your baby being born with an illness that it was particularly susceptible you'd gladly accept. Same principle. It won't be made available if it isn't (99.999999%) safe. Yeah, you're right, I only scanned this article, but when it was discussed on the radio yesterday the author said the primary objective was to reduce the chances of the baby being overwieght in later life, which I found exceptionally odd. Regarding drugs in pregnancy, you're correct that metformin is very likely to be safe and definitely isn't teratogenic. However, the general rule of thumb is never to use drugs in pregnant women unless they are absolutely necessary. My question to the ethics committee would be can anti-diabetic drugs be justified in this context? Wouldn't it be better to get the mother to eat a healthy diet and exercise? I just don't think pharmaceuticals are the answer to this particular problem. Totally agree. People should be taught to take responsability for their actions not given quick fixes, that way lies danger. -
Historically they do a lot of the rough fighting for us.
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Babies to be given anti-obesity drugs in womb..
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Best one to go to I'd have thought. Free claim review within one click, thats the sort of source i go to when i need information Best way to keep an eye on the competition I'd imagine. -
Babies to be given anti-obesity drugs in womb..
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Best one to go to I'd have thought. -
Thought they were all in Parliament now.
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Babies to be given anti-obesity drugs in womb..
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
I think the main point of it is to reduce the number of difficult births rather than using it to stop the litle ones growing up to be chubby funsters. 'Dr Andrew Weeks, said: "It is about trying to improve outcomes in pregnancy for women who are overweight.' As for it being overkill, difficult births can be damaging for both parties. If it was something that reduced the chances of your baby being born with an illness that it was particularly susceptible you'd gladly accept. Same principle. It won't be made available if it isn't (99.999999%) safe. http://www.drugrecalls.com/ On January 14, 2011, the FDA issued a warning after reports that two female patients suffered acute liver failure following their use of Multaq. Doctors were able to connect their liver damage with Multaq, and also found a great deal of cellular death in the liver. The FDA is recommending that patients contact their healthcare professional immediately if they experience signs and symptoms of hepatic injury or toxicity (anorexia, nausea, vomiting, fever, malaise, fatigue, right upper quadrant pain, jaundice, dark urine, or itching) while taking Multaq. In addition, physicians should consider obtaining periodic hepatic serum enzymes, especially during the first 6 months of treatment. Bisphosphonates, such as Actonel, Boniva, and Fosamax (a drug already linked to severe musculoskeletal pain and osteonecrosis – a serious bone-related jaw disease), are a widely prescribed class of drugs used to slow bone loss and prevent fractures associated with osteoporosis. In 2010 alone, an estimated 36.5 million prescriptions were dispensed for these drugs. Unfortunately, new research shows that instead of preventing fractures, use of these drugs may actually increase the risk of severe fractures in the femur. The makers of Propofol have been ordered to pay over $500 million in fines and damages. It is alleged that the companies made the vials larger than necessary to eliminate costs and increase profit. Approximately 100 patients were infected, and 20,000 patients were notified about their possible exposure. In addition 73 lots of Propofol and 85 lots of Liposyn that were distributed between July 2009 and October 2009 were recalled by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) due to contamination by particulates which could impede blood flow, causing stroke, kidney failure, and heart attack. According to WebMD, in a controlled study, among the 2,762 psoriasis patients who received Raptiva at any dose, 31 patients were diagnosed with 37 malignancies. The overall incidence of malignancies of any kind was 1.8 per 100 patient-years for Raptiva-treated patients compared with 1.6 per 100 patient-years for placebo-treated patients. Malignancies observed in the Raptiva-treated patients included non-melanoma skin cancer, non-cutaneous solid tumors, Hodgkin's lymphoma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and malignant melanoma." There's another 50 more but perhaps spare the bandwith...Just saying there is no such thing as a 99.9% safe drug. NB MOST LICESNSED DRUGS ARE SAFE AND A LOT OF CARE GOES INTO THEIR PRODUCTION. -
Blackburn - Wrong Bolton - Wrong Stoke - Wrong West Ham - Debatable Wigan - Debatable Wolverhampton - Wrong Stoke and Bolton have been marginally better but we are still able to finish above both of them if they lose their last games. 3 good players (2 forwards) would make such a difference next term.
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Babies to be given anti-obesity drugs in womb..
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Thanks for clearing that up. -
Babies to be given anti-obesity drugs in womb..
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
"Patients at Liverpool Women's Hospital will be given the drug to reduce the food supply to their unborn babies" You're alright with that are you? Without having looked at the study myself, the IRB must have approved it so, yes, I'll defer to their judgement of the scientific rationale and potential clinical benefit. Has Chez hacked your account? So, sniffer is happy with babies in the womb having their food consumption tampered with. [/braveNewWorld] What, you mean the french bloke? I don't think he has but you can never trust a frog, we all know that. If you read a bit deeper instead of going with the sensational headlines, you'll see that the issue is maybe that the fetus is programmed to be obese because of exposure to excessive sugar because of the mother's insulin levels. Thats what they are attempting to address with metformin. Seems a reasonable theory and one worth evaluating. Bit more complex that just eating fish and chips and a large pizza a day although that doesn't help. Keep searching the headlines, Parky. This one is done. Yeah but the insulin level sensitivity would be due to the mothes body producing more insulin cause she's eating like a hog non? -
Babies to be given anti-obesity drugs in womb..
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Good post. I always thought a lot of it was learn't behaviour and lifestyle.