Higgenbotham wrote: ↑Thu Dec 08, 2022 10:47 amBut another conclusion could be that natural killers survive and spread their genes after the war and that's why killing never stops.
He had 13 kids. Ugh.
Higgenbotham wrote: ↑Thu Dec 08, 2022 10:47 amBut another conclusion could be that natural killers survive and spread their genes after the war and that's why killing never stops.
Higgenbotham wrote: ↑Sun Jul 21, 2019 7:14 pmA Dark Age (which the world is now irreversibly entering into)...
Front and center to this day care company's stated philosophy was that bullying and misbehavior would not be tolerated. But as I related earlier, due to the "tripledemic" and earlier covid, the school was not filled, so that presented a problem and I think they were letting some of these goals slip so that they could at least break even. I'm sympathetic to that.Higgenbotham wrote: ↑Tue Dec 06, 2022 5:05 pmI'll discuss the aspects of day care that don't relate to this later.
https://www.berkeleyside.org/2019/11/21 ... ol-carpetsNew worry for parents: Study by Berkeley science institute finds toxic substances in preschool carpets
The director of Step One Preschool replaced rugs after a study by the Green Science Policy Institute found worrisome chemicals in the carpets of that school and 17 others.
By Brett Simpson
Nov. 21, 2019, 2:03 p.m.
Sue Britson, the executive director of Step One Preschool, has replaced the rugs that were found to have PFAS.
As director of Step One Preschool on Spruce Street in Berkeley, Sue Britson tries to track all the toxics and pollutants to which her three to five-year-old charges might be exposed.
She keeps close tabs on the cleaning products the school uses to scour tables, floors, and chairs and to wash dishes and pans. She looks for the least-toxic paints and glues. Pesticides? Not used in the garden. Snacks? Preferably organic.
For up to $2,800 a month, families with children at Step One expect the best.
But in recent months, Britson has become aware of a new unexpected danger — in carpets.
A study that examined 18 preschools in the Bay Area found traces of per- and poly-flouroalkyl substances, or PFAS, in almost all of the preschools’ carpets. While 18 preschools participated in the study, Step One was the only school willing to make its participation public.
“Read a list of top ten questions to ask a preschool, and you’ll never see ‘what’s in the carpets?’” said Britson. “It wasn’t on any of our radars.”
PFAS are a class of manmade chemical compounds first developed in the 1950s by DuPont as the non-stick in Teflon pans. Today, they’re used in countless industrial and consumer products for their stain-resistant, grease-resistant, and flame-retardant properties. But research shows that long-term exposure to high levels of PFAS can be toxic, and still-developing children are especially at risk. This year, the state of California is tightening restrictions on PFAS in drinking water and considering a measure to ban sales of PFAS-treated carpets. But absent state or federal regulation, the sources of PFAS exposure are difficult to track, and not widely understood.
“The health risks for PFAS exposure are clear,” said Tom Bruton, senior scientist at the non-profit Green Science Policy Institute, whose scientists conducted the study along with others at the University of Indiana. “We wanted to contribute to a broader understanding of one source in our homes.”
Hundreds of laboratory studies link PFAS exposure to adverse health outcomes. Laboratory animals exposed to several classes of PFAS are more likely to develop liver, thyroid and pancreatic diseases, as well as changes in hormone levels, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.
Multiple human epidemiological studies appear to corroborate those findings. The largest and most well-known of these followed a 2003 class-action lawsuit against the chemical manufacturer DuPont. After a West Virginia community faced decades of PFAS exposure in their drinking water from a DuPont plant, they received a multimillion-dollar settlement that they used to fund a health study on themselves.
The resulting 2013 C8 Study, carried out by researchers at Emory University, Brown University, and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, collected blood samples from over 69,000 residents living in the area around the plant over the course of eight years. Their findings linked PFAS exposure to diseases like pregnancy-induced hypertension, high cholesterol, ulcerative colitis, and testicular and kidney cancer.
The FBI had warned of reports of threats to electricity infrastructure by people espousing racially or ethnically motivated extremist ideology “to create civil disorder and inspire further violence,” the agency said in a November 22 bulletin sent to private industry.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/08/us/power ... index.htmlAnti-government groups in the past two years began using online forums to urge followers to attack critical infrastructure, including the power grid. They have posted documents and even instructions outlining vulnerabilities and suggesting the use of high-powered rifles.
One 14-page guide obtained by CNN cited as an example the 2013 sniper attack on a high voltage substation at the edge of Silicon Valley that destroyed 17 transformers and cost Pacific Gas and Electric $15 million in repairs.
The caliber of the bullets in that California incident is different from those used in North Carolina, a law enforcement source told CNN.
But whoever attacked the North Carolina substations “knew exactly what they were doing,” Moore County Sheriff Ronnie Fields has said.
Higgenbotham wrote: ↑Thu Dec 08, 2022 10:47 amNow as far as what I was able to check from this guy. He said he survived the Battle of Osan (Korea) where he was one of seven American troops who came out alive. Some years later, he opened up a locked trunk and took out a Certificate of Valor issued by the Army describing the facts as he had told me which of course my inclination was not to believe the story when I heard it.
https://www.koreanwar.org/html/units/21 ... _Looking=4Along with the rest of the outfit composed of 406 infantrymen of the 1st Battalion, 21st Infantry Regiment, Task Force Smith, he landed at Pusan, Korea on 1 July 1950 and they were joined by 134 artillerymen of the 52nd Field Battalion near Pyongtaek on 4 July. Their job? To delay the main body of the enemy driving into South Korea. They faced an estimated 20,000 enemy troops near Osan on 5 July. Before he was rotated out a year later he had been wounded 3 times and decorated many more. A special Certificate of Valor which was awarded in June 1952, to him and the few other survivors, best describes their success when it ways, With ammunition almost spent and its position in imminent danger of being completely surrounded, a hazardous but masterly withdrawal was effected. Rushed forward to effect this massive onslaught alone, the intrepidity and skill of these defenders of the ground can best be gauged by their outstanding success in stemming the enemy advance during this very critical period.
Government at the state level is broken beyond repair and can't be fixed until it completely collapses and is replaced by something else.Cool Breeze wrote: ↑Fri Dec 09, 2022 10:46 amWhen you say state X "entered a dark age in 19--" what do you mean?
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