From: Gregory Brown
Sent: Sunday, April 16, 2017 8:22 AM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.. 04/16/2017
DEAR FRIEND
<=div>
Obesity's hefty price tag
America's heaviest city grapples with costs from weight-loss surgery =o extra-wide hospital beds.
<=r>
<=p>
=n a recent article in Politico Magazine by Beth Baker she=describes the operation above of a 30 year-old 330 pound
female patient =E24140, considered "morbidly obese" 40=93 with two gaping hernias holes torn in the abdominal sac
that holds the =ody's major organs, as "The belly wall is not designed to =old this much weight," said by her Baptist
Memphis Hospital, surge=n George Woodman.
By the operation's end, most of the patient*=804>s stomach was trimmed away, leaving a much smaller "gas=ric
sleeve" that will allow her to feel full after eating =nly small amounts of food. Removing a portion of the stomach also
suppress=s the hormones that stimulate hunger. The operation (known as a laparoscopic sleeve gastrectom=) is now
the most common type of weight-loss surgery performed in=the U.S. Woodman has conducted 6,000 gastric sleeve
operations, and =id three more that morning. Memphis is the heaviest metropolitan cit= in the country, with an adult
obesity rate of about 36 percent — =pproaching the rate of more than 40 percent that researchers say we4i=99II reach
by 2030, if current trends continue.
"There is an unlimited number of patients," he sai=.
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Memphis may be the heaviest city in the country, but it isn't mu=h of an outlier. From the trimmest state, Colorado, to
the most obese, Mis=issippi, the entire nation has been on a perilous—and costly*=94upward track when it comes to
extreme weight gain. Severe obesity <=span>(a BMI of 40 or more) — the kind most harmful to individual well-being and
expen=ive to society — is rising at an alarming rate and may affect 11 p=rcent of U.S. adults by 2030.
Dieting and exercise are the prescription fo= most Americans who want to lose weight, but only a minority
succeed.t>=A0 Woodman estimates that just 3 percent of his morbidly obese patients co=ld lose their excess weight on
their own, so for most, bariatric surgery i= a last-resort option. With luck, this patient will lose about 75 percent =f her
excess weight, putting her on track to a healthier future. 0=804fleople say that obesity is self-induced," Woodman
said. 4k=A0"But it doesn't matter. We have to do something about it="
Every five days, Woodman holds a seminar for prospective patient=. On a recent Saturday, 60 people showed up.
Perhaps one-third would=follow through with surgery. For some, Medicare, Medicaid, or private insu=ers will pay,
calculating that the price of the surgery is less than the c=st of a lifetime of chronic disease. At Baptist Memphis, the
operati=n costs $14,000 — the cost is often higher elsewhere, $25,000 or m=re. That may seem expensive, but it could
be a bargain compared with=the estimated $200,000 in excess medical costs obese Americans can rack up=over their
lifetimes.
Memphis has the highest obesity rate among U.S. citi=s, and its appetite for unhealthy food is part of the reason.
<1=>
Pedestrians on Beale Street take in the sights, top,=including the day's menu at B.B. King's famous blues club, left.=C24,
At right, spectators wait for the city's famous Mardi Gras parad= to pass by.
As American waistbands continue t= expand, researchers and policymakers are trying to figure out just what t=e obesity
epidemic is going to cost the nation. There are the direct=medical costs of treating obesity-related diseases including
Type 2 diabet=s, heart disease and stroke, high blood pressure, arthritis, and related c=ncers, among others. And then
there are the indirect costs: lost productiv=ty, more illness, extra infrastructure to handle heavier patients and resi=ents.
These bills are already coming due in Memphis. Last year, extr= health care costs from obesity were $538 million —
more than half=the budget of the city's public school system, according to Gallup=Healthways Well-Being Index. For the
state of Tennessee, the annual =xcess health costs of obesity were $2.29 billion — equivalent to m=re than 6 percent of
the entire state budget. No matter how many sur=eries Woodman conducts, he won't make a dent; many more
Americans =re tipping the scales into the obese range each year.
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Endocrinologist Ja= Cohen, who treats many patients with obesity-caused diabetes, estimates t=at the average diabetic
patient costs the health care system triple what a=healthy person costs. Add in their lost productivity and the price t=g
skyrockets. "It's politically imperative to reduce=the obesity rate," said Cohen. Nationally, "it costs literally tr=llions of
dollars to treat these conditions."
AS COSTLY AS the o=esity problem is now, its set to get worse. The baby boom generation=is the fattest on record, and
they are just reaching the age where health =roblems begin to mount. Federal and state officials are growing
incr=asingly worried about the steep price the country will pay for its weight =roblem.
In West Virginia, one of the most obese states, public health comm=ssioner Rahul Gupta says the preventable direct
medical costs of obesity a=e $1.4 billion to $1.8 billion a year, with an additional $5 billion in in=irect costs, such as lost
productivity. Obese patients submit up to =even times the number of medical claims compared with normal-weight
patien=s, he said. "At the state and federal levels, chronic diseas= burden is among the largest drivers of health care
costs/4k=99 Gupta said, "and among chronic diseases it comes down to the conse=uences of obesity and tobacco."
c=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:17.12px;font-family:georgia,serif"=
And then there are the national co=ts. Zhou Yang, a professor at Emory University who studies the impact of o=esity on
the medical system, found that obese older males spent $190,657 m=re on lifetime health care expenses than their
normal weight peers while o=der obese women spent $223,629 more. A 2016 meta-analysis by Univers=ty of
Washington researchers found that annual medical spending attributed=to obesity nationally was nearly $150 billion —
more than four tim=s the federal budget for foreign aid and nearly enough to fund the entire =.S.
Department of Veterans Affair=.
Other potential costs are harder to quantify but no less worrisome, for =atients, taxpayers and society at large. For
example, researchers ar= discovering that vaccines may not be as effective in those who are obese.=C24> Studies have
found that obese patients do not respond as well to the=HIV vaccine and the flu vaccine, leaving them more vulnerable
to infection=— and to passing those diseases on to others. Over time, it4k=99s possible that a community's "herd
immunity" co=ld suffer, creating the conditions for the return of diseases that were on=e controlled through
immunization—and that could affect us all, ac=ording to an analyst at the Union of Concerned Scientists.
Even the milita=y is affected, as recruiters struggle to find enough soldiers who meet fit=ess requirements. The
percentage of overweight and obese young men doubled=over a 50-year period and tripled for young women.
According to a st=dy by the National Bureau of Economic Research, Navy recruits who were ove=weight were more
likely than their normal-weight peers to fail semiannual =hysical readiness tests. In all, overweight and obese active
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duty mi=itary personnel cost the taxpayer $105 million a year in lost productivity= and $1 billion annually on treating
obesity-related illness —more=than treating military tobacco and alcohol-related illness combined, NBER =stimated.
Transportation costs, too, are rising, and not only for obese pa=sengers who must purchase two seats to fly.
Researchers at the Unive=sity of Illinois estimated that 1 billion additional gallons of gasoline a=e consumed in the U.S.
each year to ferry overweight and obese car passeng=rs from place to place. One study estimated that U.S. airlines
purch=sed 350 million more gallons of jet fuel because of the number of heavier =assengers.
Obesity also affects the bottom line of employers. Obesit= contributes to absenteeism and "presenteeism," whe=
people show up but are less productive. Based on current trends, the cost=of obesity in lost economic productivity by
2030 will be between $390 bill=on and $520 billion annually.
Obese employees may suffer financially as we=l. A 2010 study found that white women had 9 percent lower wag=s
because of obesity, "equivalent in absolute value to the wage ef=ect of roughly 1.5 years of education or three years of
work experience.=E2$4 A study in the Journal of Health Economics found that some =mployers pay lower wages to
obese workers to cover higher insurance costs.=/span>
c=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:17.12pr,font-family:georgia,serif"=Even the cost of dying is higher for obese
people. Companies like Go=iath Caskets specialize in funeral products for the obese — for a =rice. Everything from
wider grave plots to specialized hearses with reinfa=ced chassis and heavy-duty lifting equipment must be used.
Crematories are=widening furnace doors and chambers to accommodate very large bodies.4,=A0 A "supersize" funeral
costs between $800 and $3,=oo more, notes U.S. Funerals Online. "The costs are not just rela=ed to health care," said
Gupta. "There's a cost fo= people who can't reach their full potential in terms of education= employment, mobility,
physical activity and productivity."=/p>
AT BAPTIST MEMPHIS, case m=nagers Bonnie Jeter and Phyllis Lutz see the costly impact of obesity in t=e long-term
acute care hospital, a special wing for critically ill patient=. When Jeter began as a case manager 27 years ago, obesity
was rare.=C2.> Today, some 40 to 50 percent of the patients she sees are obese or =E204>super obese." Before
opening this special win=, the rooms had to be retrofitted with hydraulic ceiling lifts and wider d=orways because of the
large number of obese patients. On a tour of t=e unit, Jeter and Lutz led visitors to the bathing room. They cannot=lift
their most obese patients into the extra-large tub, so these patients=must be given sponge baths. The large toilet is
mounted on the floor= rather than the wall, to hold heavy patients.
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"It can take three =eople to turn a super obese patient," said Lutz. Patients mu=t be turned every two hours to prevent
pressure ulcers, in addition to bei=g moved for wound care, bed baths, and other needs. To make matters =orse, "We
don't have any more staff [to handle obese patients]," sh= said.
These patients face numerous complex medical problems. Q=9CThey take longer to get better," said Jeter. "Ther= are
a lot of complications—diabetes, renal failure, terrible skin=wounds, circulatory issues, cellulitis, breathing difficulties."
=C240Providing care is not incrementally more difficult, she said, 4>=9Cles a quantum leap." Not surprisingly, pati=nts
often grow depressed and unmotivated. 'They're d=ing younger and younger," said Jeter. "It's horrif=c."
To accommodate the many obese patients, Baptist Memphis Hospit=l has had to install extra-wide hospital doors.
Bariatric surgeon Ge=rge Woodman, right, talks with patient Dana Brown one day after she receiv=d gastric sleeve
surgery to shrink the size of her stomach. Then the=e's the discharge planning for patients ready for release.
Nursing=homes and dialysis clinics can be hard to find. "Some [clinics] have a 350-po=nd size limit," said Jeter. She and
Lutz must plan far ahead=to locate places to send the patients.
=br>
Usually, hospitals must eat the cos= for expensive bariatric equipment. A mechanical lift that can hold up to =00 pounds
costs $6,000 — a bariatric lift, for up to 1,000 pounds,=$13,000. A standard hospital bed runs $8,000 compared with a
large b=d for $45,000. Everything from larger blood pressure cuffs to wheelchairs,=stretchers, waiting room chairs and
patient gowns must be on hand. Y=t health care providers cannot charge insurers for these costs.
=p class="MsoNormal">
4>=804,Obesity is one of the most urgent public health problems in our natio= today," said Jay Bhatt, chief medical
officer of the American Hos=ital Association. In addition to equipment costs, he said, hospitals=pay for special safety
training for workers. Nurse's aides r=nk 4th nationally in job injuries, behind police officers, jailers and fir=fighters, in
part due to lifting heavy patients.
Nursing homes face many o= the same challenges, said Cheryl Phillips, senior vice president for Publ=c Policy and Health
Services for Leading Age, the trade association of non=rofit nursing homes. "We are arguing for better reimbursemen=
that is risk-adjusted," said Phillips. "Medicaid do=sn't even meet the costs for much of the care —obesity is b=t one
example." According to research by Yang, overweight an= obese baby boomers will spend 1.3 billion more days in long-
term care tha= previous generations, costing Medicaid at least $68 billion.
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At the end of a workday, she an= pediatrician-in-chief Jon McCullers sit in his office to reflect on the o=esity epidemic.
McCullers was an infectious disease researcher until=five years ago, when he was recruited to Le Bonheur. "It
was=obvious that my research wasn't what they needed," he said= High poverty levels in Memphis led to a host of
urgent problems...A0 Topping the list was obesity. With an infusion of state and hospi=al funding, he launched the
obesity program, which combines research, comm=nity outreach and a Healthy Lifestyle clinic. Most of the
program*=8040s $3.5 million annual budget is not covered by patient insurance.
Wha= is the goal? "Not to be the worst in the country," McCull=rs said wryly.
The clinic has served 650 high-risk kids since opening in =ctober 2014, the majority African-American girls. For these
children= a healthy lifestyle can be a new concept. Through surveys, Han.=8040s team found that two-thirds of the
families they serve are considere= "food insecure," despite their obesity. "So=it's the types of foods they're eating —
high in f=t, high in sugar," she said. As for exercise, Han, whose own=children go to Memphis public schools said gym
class is held in the hallwa=s, if at all.
Despite the immensity of the problem, Han and McCullers tr= to be hopeful. Nationally, the prevalence of obesity has
remained s=able for children and teens, and the rate decreased significantly among pr=schoolers in 2013.2014,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and P=evention. "We know we can make the obesity rate plateau4=804>
said Han. "Now we need to make it reverse." Th= challenge is finding creative ways to connect with people where they
live= "Most hospitals look at who is inside their walls,"=said McCullers. "You have to look outside your walls, and
be=engaged with local and state governments and community groups."
Ul=imately, they said, its clear obesity has stopped being a problem for only=those affected and is now a national crisis.
The country literally c=nnot afford the impending costs. Shifting investments toward encoura=ing healthy environments
and behaviors rather than paying for expensive, l=fe-threatening chronic disease is the only affordable — and
humane=— response. "Obesity costs everybody,Q=9D said Yang. "Nobody can escape. Someone has to pa= the bill."
=/p>
So True
The Reality of an American being Killed by an Illegal Immigrant
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So Why are so many People T=rrified of Illegal Immigrants?
Beca=se of Fear spread by Our Leaders
Web Link: https://www.facebook.com/marnita.schroedl/posts/1021169359211=912
<https:=/www.facebook.com/marnita.schroedl/posts/10211693592115912>
aspan>
Please see the video via the above web link
Stupid Money
=p class="MsoNormal" align="center">Throwing more money at the military won't make it stronger</=pan>
<=r>
I called this piece stupid money aft=r reading reports that President Trump is proposing a $54 billion increase=for the
Defense Department, which he then claimed would be offset by large=cuts in the State Department, foreign aid and
other civilian agencies.Q=A0 Trump says he wants to do this so that "nobody will dare questi=n our military might
again." But no one does. The U.S. milit=ry remains in a league of its o None of the difficulties the United States=has
faced over the past 25 years has been in any way because its military =as too small or weak. As then-Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates note= in a 2007 lecture, "One of the most important lessons of the wars=in Iraq and Afghanistan
is that military success is not sufficient to win.=E244 To achieve "long-term success," he e=plained, requires
"economic development, institution-building ...E2440. [and] good governance." =herefore, he called for "a dramatic
increas= in spending on the civilian instruments of national security," in=luding "diplomacy" and "foreign
assistan=e."win. The U.S. defense budget in 2015 was nine times the siz= of Russia's and three times that of China's.
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More =mportantly President Trump is proposing dramatically increasing our nuclea= arsenal, as if this will somehow
dissuade ISIS and other terrorist. =Also Trump is stuck in the 20th Century advocating large m=litary programs like
aircraft carriers who are useless against a group of =ad guys with a dirty bomb or an adversary intent to poison our
water suppl= or hack into banking system or election. But then that has already =appened with the President claiming
that it was nothing to do with nothing=
4,=A0
Currently the United States spends almost $600 b=llion yearly on its military which is almost 40% of all of the money
spent=globally, more than the next eight countries and 54% of all of the discret=onary spending in the country. And to
give you more prospective, the=$54 billion that President Trump is proposing is almost as much as the ent=re military
budget in China. Yet we are no safer than Indonesia, Bra=il, Spain, Australia or South Africa which are not in the top 10
of milita=y expenditures.
Just to understand the wastefulness of wars you only have =o look at what US military in Iraq, Just in 2011 after our
politicians had=declared victory and the media have largely moved on because it didni>=99t mean we wasn't going to
spend almost $50 billion on thos= "non-combat troops" which remain, however. What else could we d= with that kind of
scratch if we just brought them home? NPP tells us it w=uld buy:
• 4,0=A0 24.3 million children rece=ving low-income health care for one year, OR
aspan>726,044 elementary school teachers for one year, OR
=C2.829,946 firefighters for one year, OR
=C2$6.2 million Head Start slots for children for one yea=, OR
* Q=A0 10.7 million households with ren=wable electricity -- solar photovoltaic for one year, OR
=C*28.6 million households with renewable electricity-wi=d power for one year, OR
=C2* =C* 6.1 milli=n military veterans receiving VA medical care for one year, OR
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class="m_4977142885636407934m_-8127405716069441209m_-656486635394792824=_-
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m_734764=540094762350gmail-m_-7200549396638611718gmail-m_-5728695526232697474m_-
127=894677891184586gmail-m_-754538969383427232m_9164956893038593270m_221097336=126603280gmail-
m_2918525785759295066m_7253808749210003129gmail-MsoUstPararraphCxSpMiddle" style="margin-left:lin">•
=C2* 9.8 million people receiving low-income health =are for one year, OR
*=B7 4>=A0 718,208 police=or sheriff's patrol officers for one year, OR
6.0 million scholarships for university students for one year,=OR
* =C24> 8.5 million students receiving Pell=grants of $5,550
It's a tragic iron= that so much of the discussion surrounding the public debt centers on 40=8040entitlements" like Social
Security (which hasn't a=ded a penny to the national debt) when we're still paying for Korea an= Vietnam and Grenada
and Panama and the first Gulf War and Somalia and the=Balkans and on and on. Estimates of just how much of our
national de=t payments are from past military spending vary wildly. In 2007, economist=Robert Higgs calculated it like
this:
I added up all past deficits (minus surpluses) since 1916 (whe= the debt was nearly zero), prorated according to each
year's ratio of=narrowly defined national security spending--military, veterans, and inter=ational affairs--to total federal
spending, expressing everything in dolla=s of constant purchasing power. This sum is equal to 91.2 percent of the v=Iue
of the national debt held by the public at the end of 2006. Therefore,=l attribute that same percentage of the
government's net interest outl=ys in that year to past debt-financed defense spending.
When Higgs did tha= analysis four years later, he came up with a figure of $206.7 billion jus= in interest payments on our
past military adventures. And most peop=e see this number as extremely conservative.
Fareed Zakaria tells a story =hat he was surprise by the answer that General David Petraeus told him dur=ng the early
days of the Iraq War and things were not going well. Wh=n asked whether he wished he had more troops. Petraeus
was too polit=cally savvy to criticize the Donald Rumsfeld "light footprint*=8* strategy, so he deflected the question,
answering it a different way= "I wish we had more Foreign Service officers, aid professionals a=d other kinds of non-
military specialists," he said. The heart of =he problem the United States was facing in Iraq, he noted presciently, was=a
deep sectarian divide between Shiite and Sunni, Arab and Kurd. "=e need help on those issues. Otherwise, we're relying
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on 22-year-o=d sergeants to handle them. Now, they are great kids, but they really don=E2Q4H know the history, the
language, the politics."
I understand the need fo= a strong national defense but when you are already spending more than the=combined
military budgets of the next largest countries, it is difficult t= believe that our military spending is bloated and more
importantly full w=th wasteful boondoggles that suck the resources that we better use non-mil=tary specialists, foreign
aid and diplomacy. As I use to say during =he Vietnam War, "if we had given the Viet Cong televisions instead=of
dropping bombs the war would have ended years earlier." A= such throwing more money in an already bloated military
is not only waste=ul it is dereliction to the fiduciary responsibility that our government o=es its citizens.
Someone Has Got To Be Kidding?
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
It is often =aid that Wall Street (the=financial markets) is a casino, but after this week I would label it the ultimate Ponzi
Scheme (named after Charles Ponzi who=e company, Securities Exchange Company, in 1919 promised returns of 50% in
45 days or =00% in 90 days out of monies from newer investors) — after hearin= that Tesla Corporation surpassed Ford
Motor Company in value. But how can =his be possible? One company is an automotive titan that has built more that
350 million vehicles over the past 115 years with 201,000 employees, sales of 6.6 million vehicles, annual revenues $152
billion and profits of $10.4 billion last year. And the other is only 15 years old, with 30,000 employees, sales of 76,000
vehicles, revenues of $7 billion, pre-tax loss of $746 million and has neve= made a profit. Yet the 15 year-old Tesla is
now valued more than Ford.
=br>
Someone is crazy. =/font>
Even if one were=to believe that Tesla has a more promising future, numbers don't lie. And yet a 7% surge in the value
of shares in electric car firm Tesla a week ago Monday s=w it zoom ahead of Ford Motor Company, in terms of its stock
market value..=A0 As Wall Street closed for the day, Tesla, led by 45-year-old tycoon and futurist Elon Musk, was
worth $49bn (E38bn), compared with a pal=ry $46bn for the empire built by Henry Ford. This astonishing overtaking
maneuver says as much about the nature of stock mark=ts as it does about these two very different carmakers. The old
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clichl>=A9 among stock market investors is that you should "buy on the rumor, sell on the fact" — the idea that
investment is more ab=ut what you expect to happen in the future than the current state of play — obviously =his is the
case with Tesla.
While Tesla's investors believe that it is th= standard-bearer of a battery-powered future — and Ford is the archetypal
mass-produ=tion legacy car business. That is the myth that CEO Elon Musk carefully crafted for thirty-something year
old Wall Street analysists who can afford to buy a $100,000 car. But as someone who j=st leased a Chevy Bolt, I did so
because it was half the price of an entry level Tesla, even though=it is fully loaded and gets the same mileage. And I
leased because in three years every major automaker from Mercedes to Renault will be offering electric vehicles that
get more than 250 miles =ith a single charge, so who knows what is going to be my next car. =nd in spite the setback of
a fatal crash last year, when a Tesla on autopilot failed to tell the difference between =he side of a white lorry and a
bright sky, the company continues to make strid=s towards a fully driverless car but so is Uber, Google and the other big
aut=makers.
I understand that Tesla also has a potentially lucrat=ve sideline in storage batteries for the home. The Powerwall is
intended=to allow homes to store solar power, and Tesla is also due to start installing its first sola= roof tiles this year. I
appreciate that Tesla's has set a goal of building 500,000 cars in 2018 and Musk ha= even raised the prospect of
doubling that to lm by 2020— except that th=se production targets are unprecedented in the automotive industry and
as Sams=ng last year's debacle with its Galaxy Note 7 cellphone catching fire =E2.4) pushing production delivery prior
an exhausted testing has shown that a single defe=tive part from a supplier can kill sales and stock prices faster than
E.coli at Chipotle. And just like McDonald's, Burger King, KFC which also had E.coli outbreaks but fared better than thei=
smaller fast-food rival, should both Ford and Tesla suffer a similar misfor=une, I would bet on Ford coming through
quicker.
Yes, Tesla's new Model 3 is slated to start p=oduction this year and is intended to offer a more affordable version of
previous models,=with a price tag around $35,000. If successful, the Model 3 could supercharge Tesla's growth by
musclin= in on the territory of mass market rivals. But Tesla's model X crossover, while although sexy is currently not
burning down the ho=se with sales. It's important to remember that despite the massive hype surrounding Tesla, the
gigafactory currently nearing construction in Nevada will only allow the company to make 500,000 =nits a year by 2020.
That would be fine if Tesla only wanted to sell cars to rich people, but CEO Elon Musk has been c=ear that the company's
mission is to bring sustainable electric transport t= the mass market. To do that, an automaker needs scale. And to get
scale, =esla will need to sell millions of vehicles a year and to increase production from its current lev=l to 1million cars
is truly wishful thinking.
Therefore to sell more vehicles and more batteries fo= its storage business called Tesla Energy, Tesla needs more
gigafactories. =Gigafactories currently go for about $5 billion. Elon got supplier partners to pay for about 60% of this
one, but w= can't assume that will always be true. Tesla has incredible growth potential with vehicles and energy
storage, but peopl= forget that this growth isn't free. On the positive side, if Tesla can continue to reduce its battery
costs, it ha= the potential for a cost advantage that could never be overcome by internal-combustion manufacturers.
Except again, like with vehicles, there are many other people here and abroad trying to come up with the next
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generation of battery technology Q=80Q ask Motorola which pioneered the cell phone, revolutionized again with its
flip-phone an= today is no longer in the business.
T=day Tesla gross margin profit is more than $20,000 per vehicle but when you add up R&D and oth=r things it actually
loses $19,000 for every car sold, while Ford made more t=an $1500 on each vehicle it sold. With the cost of expansion,
which is going to be in the many billions of dollars, Te=la is years away from making money. I know that this doesn't
mean much in the rarefied air in Silicon Valley a=d Wall Street, as Amazon didn't generate profits for its first two
decades=and today has a $440 billion market cap, $906 share price with less than $5 billion i= net revenues. But
somewhere on Wall Street there has to be other people saying something is wrong when the company tha= loss $746
million is worth more than a company in the same business made $1=.2 billion. If this doesn't sound fishy, I have a great
deal on a bridge for you in the middle of the Sahara Desert.</=pan>
What Was Accomplished?
Like many I was not surprised when I heard a week ago Thursda= evening that the US military launched 59 tomahawk
missiles against a Syrian airfield to punish Syria's President Bashar Assad for allegedly usi=g chemical weapons to attack
his own citizens. This act was a dramatic reversal from Trump's pledges to limit U.S. invo=vement in Syria and to focus
on America First, leaving Syria's neighbors and =he Europeans to sort out the mess. For years President Obama had
resisted growing calls to intervene militarily against the Assad regime. President Barack Obama's decision to refrain
from engagement in 2013 was crit=cized as feckless at the time and is cited now as one of the reasons that Trump was
forced to act.
=span style="font-size:12pt;line-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif"><=span>
But as Neal Gable= wrote this week in Moyers & Company: It is pretty amazing how quickly the media and suck-up
politicians can transform a mendacious, hypocritical, amateurish, ignorant, incoherent, bigoted buffoon who is
way,=way out of his depth into a man of courage, which is what they did to President Trump this past weekend. All it
takes is some saber rattling and launching a few dozen missiles. Granted, the =rump brand is already so tarnished that
he didn't get the bounce or the adulation that the B=shes, pere and fils, got when they began their wars. According to
one poll, only=51 percent of Americans approved of Trump's action, but given that Trump'= favorability rating has
hovered around or even south of 40 percent, this is an improveme=t.
=br>
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Not to be in=elicate here, but atrocities happen in the world all the time (and have happened on an even larger scale
before in Syria). Humans are c=pable of unimaginable cruelty. Sometimes the victims die quickly and are made visible by
media for the wor=d to see. Other times, they die in slow motion, out of sight and out of mind. Sometimes banned
weapons are used; Sometimes conventional weapons; Sometime=, neglect, isolation and starvation. And sometimes it is
just plain old genocide.
And the world in=general, and America in particular, has a way of being wishy-washy about which atrocities deserve
responses and which one= don't. These decisions can be capricious at best and calculated camouflages for ulterior
motives at worst. Indred, the motivations for military action needn't be singular at all, but are often multiple, tucked
one insi=e the other like nesting dolls. Acts of war can themselves be used as political weapons. They can distract
attention, quell acrimony, increase appetite for military spending and give a boost to sagging approval ratings. This
=E2.4>rally--around--the--flag" (or "rally=E2$4.) effect is well documented over the centuries.
And please realize that President =rump's decision to launch the cruise missile strike is being applauded=by the same
foreign policy traditionalist of both parties — the establishment figur=s who gave us the disastrous war in Iraq — as=a
show of U.S. "strength" and "resolve."= This should worry us all. Red lines and symbolic displays of f=rce do not
constitute a plan or a strategy.
First of all, Syria is truly a Major 'Cluster-F@$K'<=i>
Cr>
Web Link: http=://youtu.beilFpanWNgtQY <https://youtu.be/JFpanWNgfQY>
Syria=E2.4>s war is a mess because after six years because the conflict is divided between four sides with each side
with having foreign backers — who don't even agree with each other on who they are =ighting — or who they are fighting
against. And up until this past Friday, the United States was only focused on fighting ISIS= So to understand the
crisscrossing interventions and battle lines in Syria today and how it got that way you h=ve to go back to the beginning
of the conflict and examine how it unfolded.40=A0
=/span>
The first=shots in the war were fired in March 2011 by its President, Bashar Assad, against peaceful Arab Spring
demonstrators. =y July the protesters started shooting back with some Syrian troops defecting from the Syrian army to
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join them and cal=ing themselves The Free Syrian Army — the uprising becomes a civil war =E244 with extremist from
across the region and around the world traveling to Syria to join The Rebels.
Assad actually encourages this by releasing jihadists' prisoners to taint the rebellion with extremism, with the hope of
making it harder for foreign backers to support them. In January 2012 Al Qaeda forms = new branch in Syria calling
themselves — Jabhat al-Nusra. AIs= around that time, Syrian Kurdish groups take up arms and informally secede from
Assad's rule in the North. 4)=A0
=br>
And that sum=er is when Syria became a proxy war with Iran interceding on Assad's behalf, sending daily cargo flights
and hund=eds of ground officers. This causes several oil-rich Arab states in the region to start sending money and
weapons to Th= Rebels, to counter Iran's influence. Please click on the web link above to see why Syria is such a mess
with no easy answers.
What troubles me is how cavalier both Congressional Republicans and Democrats with their accolades, including Senator
Lindsey Graham comparing Trump to the most beloved Republican President in the mode=n era, the one and only
Ronald Reagan. As pundits used the phrases of 4>=9Cstrong message" and "new sheriff in town=E24,40 few asked what
actually was accomplished. Think about it, the US military did not target President Assad's Sarin gas stoc=pile. And since
President Trump warned the Russians an hour in advanced that he was attacking Shayrat air field, one then has t=
believe that they alerted their ally President Assad. Finally, most p=oportionate military responses are really only made
to make the aggressors feel better when they don't have a strategy.
Talal al-Barazi, the governor of Homs province that includ=s the air base, said at least 13 people were killed in the missile
strikes, including five soldiers on the base and eight civilians in areas surroundin= the facility. The figures could not be
independently confirmed, but are said to include several children, which if true will provide another photo opt for both
the Syrian Regime, as well as terrorist around the world showing the innocent civilians killed by America= aggression.
Q=A0
Although the Pentagon's initial assessment was that the strike severely damaged or destroyed Syrian aircraft and
support infrastructure an= equipment at the airfield. But within hours of the missile attack, Syrian warplanes had taken
off from that same =irfield and launched airstrikes against Khan Sheikhoun, the same town where at leas= 86 people had
been killed in the sarin attack and dropped new conventional bom=s. As Comedian/Satirist John Oliver pointed out
during his show on HBO this week, "while it is natural to take some=kind of action in response, it has to come in the
context in a larger strategy or i= is close to worthless. And though the strikes seem to make certain people feel better...
What did the= actually achieve?"
John Oliver Explains Why Trump's Syria Strike Should Make Us All 4>=9CVery, Very Worried."
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<=b>
Web Link: https://youtu.be/Sjb7yvWWII0 <https://youtu.be/Sjb7yvWW=I0> =/b>
As John Oliver asked, what was actually achieved? President Assad=E24>4>s chemical weapons weren't destroyed.
Neither was the airfield. And since he was able to launch an aircraft attack later in the day, obviously whatever aircraft
were destroyed did not really affect the Syrian governmen= from launching future chemical attacks whenever they
want. Finally, w=ether Assad uses chemical weapons or conventional bombs to kill his adversaries and innocent
civilians, does =t really matter? Because a child killed by a cluster bomb or Sarin gas ends with the same result. Ugly and
unnecessary=death.
In recen= days, the administration has offered conflicting statements on key questions, including whether Assad can
remain in power un=er any sort of negotiated peace settlement. "They seem to be cel=brating the strike almost as
accomplishment in itself rather than as a tool to achieve any particular strategy," said Jeffrey Prescott, who served as
director for Iran, =raq, Syria and the Gulf States at the National Security Council under Obama from 2015 =c, 2017. "Even
days later, they are basking in the glow, but we do not=have a clear sense of why this strike and to what particular
end."</=pan>
Furthermore, launching missiles against any natio= that hasn't attacked you is an Act of War, no matter how well
intentioned. And to do so, without being in any danger and not having a clear cut strategy is definitely an unnecessary
Act of War. Even the President's mo=t ardent supporters admit that the President doesn't have a strategy or a plan to
end t=e conflict in Syria. Consequently, we are destine to enter another phase of Mission Creep, with the pointless
killing of more and more people and costing billions mor= of US taxpayers' dollars.
It is estimated =hat this latest tomahawk attack cost US taxpayers' more than $100 million dollars. And the only thing
that was accomplished is that the President's supporters can claim that there is a new sheriff in town, as even the Trump
Administration admits that overthrowing Assad most likely will make matters even worse. Therefore if this is true, then
the only solution has to be a diplomatic one, which starts with negotiation not missiles. To put it briefly, blowing shit up
does not make a President, Mr. President....=C24,
So again, what was accomplished? President Assad4k=99s chemical weapons weren't destroyed. Neither was the
airfield. And since he was able to launch an aircraft attack later in the day, obviously whatever aircraft were destroyed
did not really affect the Syrian governmen= from launching future chemical attacks whenever they want. Finally,
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w=ether Assad uses chemical weapons or conventional bombs to kill his adversaries and innocent civilians, does =t really
matter? Because a child killed by a cluster bomb or Sarin gas ends with the same result. Ugly and unnecessary death.
</=pan>
In recent days, th= administration has offered conflicting statements on key questions, including whether Assad can
remain in power un=er any sort of negotiated peace settlement. "They seem to be cel=brating the strike almost as
accomplishment in itself rather than as a tool to achieve any particular strategy," said Jeffrey Prescott, who served as
director for Iran, =raq, Syria and the Gulf States at the National Security Council under Obama from 2015 =o 2017. "Even
days later, they are basking in the glow, but we do not=have a clear sense of why this strike and to what particular
end."<hpan>
=/p>
Furthermore, lau=ching missiles against any nation that hasn't attacked you is an Act of War, no matter how well
intentioned. And to do so, without being in any danger and not having a clear cut strategy is definitely an unnecessary
Act of War. Even the President's mo=t ardent supporters admit that the President doesn't have a strategy or a plan to
end t=e conflict in Syria. Consequently, we are destine to enter another phase of Mission Creep, with the pointless
killing of more and more people and costing billions mor= of US taxpayers' dollars.
As Charles Blow wrote in the New York Times: It's ea=y to sell the heroism of a humanitarian mission or the fear of
terror or the two in tandem, as Trump attempted in this case. =The temptation to unleash America's massive war
machine is seductive and also addictive. Put that power in the ha=ds of a man like Trump, who operates more on
impulse and intuition than intellect, =nd the world should shiver.
<=span>
As righteous as =e may feel about punishing Assad, Syria is a hornet's nest of forces hostile to America: Assad, Russia,
and Iran=on one flank and ISIS on another. You can't afflict one faction without assisting the other. In this way, Syria i=
a nearly unwinnable state. We've been down this road before. Just over the horizon is a hill: Steep and greased with
=olitical motives, military ambitions, American blood and squandered treasury. =eing weary here isn't a sign of
weakness; to the contrary, it's a display of hard won wisdom.
Neal Gabler again: Many of us during the campaign noted how Trump's reality TV experience a=fected and even defined
that campaign, but far less attention has been paid to how it would affect his presidency. The narcissism, the imperial
demeanor, the preening, the necessity of hyping the drama — these are now the hal=marks of his early administration.
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It makes for good TV and lousy governance. The impulsiveness for which Trump is famous was built into reality TV too,
whic= lurches mindlessly from one scene to another. Indeed, you could accurately describe reality TV as plot without
content, which, not at all incidentally= is also a way to describe the Trump presidency.
So, whether it was the right thing to do to st=ike Assad, it was, by reality show standards, certainly the best thing to do.
It go= a huge audience. It made Trump look like a man of action. It won him plaudits on cable TV, which likes nothing
better than some military action to boost ratings, just as William Randolph Hearst practically starte= the Spanish-
American War to push newspaper circulation. And, not leas= of all, it did what entertainment is practically designed to
do: It provided a distraction from the mess Trum= is making of the country.
You don't usually think of warfare as a distraction; warfar= is what you usually get distracted from. But Trump grasped
that launc=ing missiles would knock everything else off the front pages at a time when he needed it= And in the short
term, he seems to have been right. Talking about Syria means we aren't talking about the Russian hacking of the
election or the fai=ure of health care reform or the Keystone Cops White House staff or the trashing o= regulations or
the myriad of other disasters in this ongoing reality show t=at stars the "Not Ready for Prime Time Players."<=span>
It is precisely because this new interventionism has h=d the desired result that we should all begin to worry. If a few
missiles i= Syria won him hosannas, what about some action against North Korea for the next reality show episod=? And
what other improvised adventures could our new action hero president embark upon to keep us preoccupied and him
winnin= praise? War may be the force that gives us meaning. But it is also the force that keeps us entertained and
di=tracted. With an entertainer-in-chief in the White House, someone fo= whom the presidency is a great vanity, that
should scare us. That should scare=us a lot.
To su=marize: It is estimated that this latest tomahawk attack cost US taxpayers' as much as $100=million dollars, if not
more. And the only thing that was accomplished is that the President's supporters can claim that ther= is a new sheriff
in town, as even the Trump Administration admits that overthrowing Assad most likely will make matters even worse.
Therefore if this is =rue, then the only solution has to be a diplomatic one, which starts with negotiation not missiles. To
put it briefly, blowing shit up does not make a President, Mr. President.... And this i= my rant of the week....
=1span>
<=span>
</=pan>
WEEK's READINGS
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Good News for California.
<= class="MsoNormal" align="center">
California Gov. Jerry Brown=(D) issued an executive order a week ago Friday that ended the drought emergency in most
parts of t=e state. "This drought emergency is over, but the next drought could be around the corner,=/i>" he said in a
statement. "Conservation must remain a way of life." Brown's order maintains many of the conservation practices put
in place in 2015, including mandatory reports on water usage, restrictions on using non-recir=ulated water in fountains
and bans on watering lawns within 48 hours of significan= rainfall. "Increasing long-term water conservation among
Californians, improving water efficiency within the Stat='s communities and agricultural production, and strengthening
local and region=l drought planning are critical to California's resilience to drought=and climate change," the order says.
The drought which has affec=ed California for a decade or so has had a significant impact on groundwater supplies in
Fresno, Kings, Tula=e and Tuolumne counties, and the state of emergency will remain in effect in those areas.
You can read Gov=rnor Brown's full — Executive Order B-40-17 here.
Web Link: =ttps://www.gov.ca.gov/docs/4.7.17_Exec_Order_B-40-17.pdf
Over the past several month= we have had a ton of rain, making it an historic season for California as it finally received a
significant amount of rainfall this winter after five years of extreme drought. T=e reversal was swift: As of this week,
just 1% of the state is still in severe drought, compared to 74 percent of the state one year ago. Lake Oroville, the State's
Water Project principal reservoir, is 101% of=average, Lake Shasta, the Federal Central Valley's largest reservoir is at
1=0% of average and a great majority of California of other reservoirs are above no=mal storage levels.
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</=>
The effects of the drought =re still being felt across the state, however. The dry conditions killed more than 100 million
trees, cost=the state billions of dollars and helped spark or exacerbate hundreds of wildfi=es. It also left many
communities susceptible to mudslides and other disasters during this winter's intense storm=.
=span style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif"><=r>
Still, the good news is tha= on April 7, 2017 Governor J. Edmund G. Brown signed an Executive Order that terminated
the Drought St=te of Emergency for all counties in California except the counties of Fresno, Kings, Tulare and Tuolumne.
The order still maintains that Making Water Conservation a California Way of Life as well as extending a drought
response in the remaining affected counties. With this =aid, I love my state and thank God that he/she loves it too.
Beliefs vs Facts<=span>
There's an intriguing sociological re=son so many Americans are ignoring facts lately
Many of the inaccuracies se=m like they ought to be easy enough to challenge, as data simply don't support the
statements made.=C24> Consider the following charts documenting the violent crime rate and property crime rate in
the U.S. over the last quarte= century (measured by the Bureau of Justice Statistics). The overall trends are
unmistakable: Crime in the U.S. has been declining for a quarter of a century.
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There is more th=n one reason this is happening. But one reason I think the alternati=e-facts industry has been so
effective has to do with a concept social scientists c=ll the "backfire effect."
There is more than one reas=n this is happening. But one reason I think the alternative-facts industry has been so
effective has to do with a concept social scientists c=ll the "backfire effect."
As a rule, misinformed peop=e do not change their minds once they have been presented with facts that challenge their
beliefs. But=beyond simply not changing their minds when they should, research shows that they are likely to become
more attach=d to their mistaken beliefs. The factual information "backfires." When people don't agree=with you,
research suggests that bringing in facts to support your case might actually make th=m believe you less.
<=p>
In other words, fighting th= ill-informed with facts is like fighting a grease fire with water. It seems like it should work,
but it's actually going to make things worse=
To study this, Brendan Nyha= and Jason Reifler (2010)=conducted a series of experiments. They had groups of
participants read newspaper articles that included statements from politici=ns that supported some widespread piece of
misinformation. Some of the participants read articles that included corrective information that immediately followed
the inaccurate statement from the political figure, wh=le others did not read articles containing corrective information
at all.
Afterward, they were asked = series of questions about the article and their personal opinions about the issue. Nyhan
and Reifle= found that how people responded to the factual corrections in the articles they read varied systematically by
how ideologically committed they already were to the beli=fs that such facts supported. Among those who believed the
popular misinformation in the first place, more informatio= and actual facts challenging those beliefs did not cause a
change of opinio= — in fact, it often had the effect of strengthening those ideologically grounded beliefs.
It's a sociological issue we ought to care about a great deal right now. How are we to correct misinformation if the very
act of informing some people causes them to redo=ble their dedication to believing things that are not true?=/p>
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<=>Tristan Bridges — =usiness Insider — Feb. 27, 2017
<=iv style="text-align:left">
10 of America's Deadriest Jobs
<=pan>
There are dirty jobs. There are dangerous jobs. And then there are deadly jobs. Sometimes, they are one in the same.
Sometimes, these positions, despite the inherent element of danger, can be particularl= attractive to some job seekers.
They often tend to pay better than other gi=s, for one. And competition can be low, too.
But the fact remains: If you sign up for a dangerous job, there's a goo= chance you could be horribly injured or killed.
This not only can stymie your ability =o earn a living in the future, but it can put the kibosh on all of your plans=if you do
end up dying on the job.
Even so, the odds you'll be killed at work are relatively small. Even am=ng the most dangerous jobs, fatality rates aren't
frighteningly high. lt4o=99s just that you're far more likely to meet a gruesome end on a dude ranch than you are in a
cubicle.
To figure out which jobs are the most deadly, we dug through data from the Bur=au of Labor Statistics and the
Department of Labor. Annual numbers relating to workplace injuries and fatalities (there were 4,836 in 2015) are
released b= the government. And by using those numbers, we can piece together a list of=the deadliest jobs. Here are
the top 10.
10. Landscaping and law= care
The Bureau of Labor Statistics' Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, =ooking at data from 2015, shows occupations
related to lawn care and landscaping as the 10th deadliest industry in America. The fatal work injury rate, which looks at
the number of fatal accidents per 100,000 workers, is 18.1 for the landscaping industry. Although it seems fairly
innocuous, there are a lot of blades, chemicals, and heavy machinery that can cause disastrous outcomes in this
industry.
9. Linemen
</=>
"Linemen" is a term commonly used to describe utility workers — specifically,=those who work on power lines. The
Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers refer to this occupation as "power-line installe=s and repairers." And these are the
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men and women you see in cherry-pickers working on power lines. It's obvious this job is inherently dangerous when
you're working with heights, heavy machin=ry, and a shocking amount of electricity.
8. Farmers
Th= fatal work injury rate among farmers and ranchers is 22 per 100,000 workers= So, fatal accidents aren't incredibly
common, but the odds are higher than in most occupations. And again, this is = job that puts you into close contact with
all sorts of potentially dangerous things. Large m=chinery, chemicals, and live40=A0animals can all present potential
disasters, for example.
7. Truck drivers
With a fatal work injury rate of 24.3 per 100,000, drivers (including truck driv=rs) are the seventh-deadliest job in
America. There are millions of people who =ake a living through driving. Whether they're delivering goods or giving
people rides, this is an incredi=ly popular profession. And it's one that is evidently very dangerous. And let's not forget
it's one tha= might disappear altogether <http://www.cheatsheet.com/business/5-surprising-co=mercial-applications-
for-artificial-intelligence.htmlh in the near future.
6. Iron and steelworkers
<1=>
Iron and steel workers have a long and storied history in parts of the country. They've also seen their in=ustry decline
with increased globalization. It's a dangerous gig, too, and other count=ies don't have safety standards that are as
stringent as ours. Even so, there*=99s a high rate of deadly accidents among iron and steel workers. The fatal work
injur= rate among these workers is just under 30 per 100,000.
5. Garb=ge collectors
Emilio Estevez made the garbage man job look kind =f fun. Perhap= it is — just imagine all of the fun and fantastic
treasures you could fin=. Regardless of the fun, it's dangerous. Chalk it up t= long hours on the road, dodging cars and
traffic, and dealing with hazardous and toxic refuse. The fa=al work injury rate among these employees is 38.8 per
100,000.
4. Roofers
Roofing is a tough gig. You're out in the elements (usually under a burning= unforgiving sun) all day, and one wrong
move can send you plummeting the ground. You're also dealing with tools and machines, all of which can hack off a
limb. For these reasons, ro=fing is a dangerous and deadly job. The fatal work injury rate among roofers is 39.7 per
100,000.
3. Pilots
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Pilots and flight engineers are high on the list — surprisingly so. Althou=h we all know airplanes crash on occasion, it's
not like there are huge=disasters on a daily basis. Evidently, though, many pilots and engineers are killed w=ile on the
job. The fatal work injury rate among this group of people is 40.4 per 100,000, good enough for a spot amon= the top
three deadliest .
<=pan style="font-size:14pt;font-family:georgia,serif">2. Fisherman
=his one should come as no surprise. There are even TV shows — most notably, Deadliest Catch — that chronicle just
how dangerous and deadly the lives of fishermen can be. And it's no jok=. Folks working in this notoriously tough
industry do die on the job at an alarming=C24,rate. The fatal work injury rate =or those working in fishing and related
industries is 54.8 per 100,000.
1. Logg=rs
Stars of another reality series, Ax Men, work in the nation's deadliest occupation: logging. Loggers are killed on the j=b
more often than any other worker. Falling trees, heavy machinery, exposure to the elements — there's =o lack of
danger in the forest. And the number of workers killed annually is way higher than an= other job on this list. The fatal
work injury rate for loggers is a whoppin= 132.7 per 100,000.
Before OSHA was created 43 years ago, an estimated 14,000 workers were killed on t=e job every year. Although today,
workplaces are much safer and healthier sti=l thousands of U.S. workers die from injuries on the job. In fact, the Bureau
of Labor Statistics' National Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries shows a prel=minary total of 4,383 fatal work injuries
in 2012, down slightly from the final co=nt of 4,693 in 2011.
Forty-one percent of all fatal workplace injuries happened in transportation incident=, which include car accidents,
overturned vehicles and plane crashes. More th=n half (58%) of the 1,789 fatal transportation-related incidents occurred
on highways, and involved motorized land vehicles.
The second-highest cause of worker fatali=ies was assaults and violent acts, which accounted for 18% of deaths. The
preliminary data shows that workplace suicides fell slightly in 2010 to 258 after climbing to a high of 263 the year before.
Violence took the lives of 767 workers last year; with 463 homicides and 225 suicide=. (Work-related suicides declined
by 10% from 2011 totals, but violence accou=ted for about 17% of all fatal work injuries in 2012.) Shootings were the
most frequent manner of death in both.
Slips, falls and trips killed 668 workers in 2012 -- about 15% of all workplace injuries. A total of 509 workers were fatally
injured after being struck by equipment or objects on the job.
There were 142 multiple-fatality incidents -- incidents where more than one worke= was killed--in 2012, in which 341
workers died.
Ninety-two percent, or 4,045 of all on-the-job fatalities were among men, and the remaining 8%, or 338, were women.
This is partly because there are disproportionately more men in dangerous indust=ies like construction and mining. Still,
women face their own dangers. Ab=ut 20% of the women who died on the job were involved in roadway incidents,
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while more than a quarter (29%) were victims of homicides, compared with onl= 9% for male homicides. That is at least
partly because of a concentration of women in workplaces like food and beve=age stores, where a majority of all deaths
are homicides.
Twenty-five percent of all work fatalities occurred among those between ages 45 and 54. Fatal work injuries among
individuals under 16 years of age nearly doubled, rising from 10 in 2011 to 19 in 2012—the highest total since
2005.=C2. However, fatal work injuries among workers 55 years of age and older declined for the second consecutive
year.
The private sector proved more deadly than the public sector, with private indu=try accounting for 90% of fatalities.
Within the private sector, the construction industry and transportation and warehousing saw the largest number deaths,
with 775 and 677, respectively. =C240Not included in this survey were professional athletes -- endurance athletes=/b>
(long-distance runners and cross-country skiers, for example), and power athletes (boxers, wrestlers, weight lifters) and
a mixed group of team athletes (like soccer, ice hockey or basketball players) an= sprinters.
Footbal= for instance —1 in 3 NFL players will suffer from Alzheimer40.99s or dementia at younger ages than their
peers; that they're four times more likely =o die from degenerative brain diseases; that 78 percent will be broke or
nearly so wit=in two years of retiring; that they may be disproportionately inclined to beat their wives; and that they
live, on average, to the age of 55 or 60.=/p>
Researchers have found an 11% increased risk of mortality among athletes from disciplin=s with a high risk of body
collision and with high levels of physical contact= such as boxing, MMA fighters, ice hockey and rugby and this is before
we fa=tor in the inevitable sports injuries sometimes require surgeries and can lead =o lifelong pain for some athletes.
So next time you find yourself complaining about piles of paperwork, obnoxious co-workers and demanding bosses —
remember that your work situation=could be much worse. With this said, if your work day sometimes seems to consist
of nothing but boring meetings, coffee spill=, and computer glitches, consider yourself lucky.
<=>*•****
The Power of Spinach
Find out why this leafy green vegetable is so good for you. Plus, learn more about how much of it you should be eating=
What You're Eating
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Spinach is one of the best sources of the B vitamin folate 4k=93 a cancer fighter — and carotenoids such as lutein, which
help prevent=macular degeneration, the leading cause of blindness in older adults. One thi=g you're not eating: a lot of
iron. The myth that spinach is rich in iron (which made Popeye strong) surfaced back in 1870 when a researcher's
misplaced decimal point in a publication gave spinach an iron content 10 ti=es higher than reality. Reality is that a
serving (1cup) of r=w spinach contains only about 1 mg of iron, which is not well absorbed becaus= it is the plant
(haem)=span style="font-size:12pOine-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif"> =orm of iron. The calcium it contains
also isn't absorbed very well by your body, thanks to high concentrations of oxalic ac=d. But these disadvantages are
heavily outweighed by other nutritional benefits.
Healing Powers
In addition to protecting your eyes from age-related macular degeneration, thanks to its carotenoids, spinach has high
concentrations of vitamin K, which can help maintain bone density and prevent fractures...A0 Spinach is also a
powerful source of potassium and magnesium as well as folate, all of which can keep blood pressure low, reducing the
risk of stroke. Folate also appears to reduce the risk of lung cancer in former smokers, according to s=me studies.
Health Tips
To absorb more of the iron from spinach, eat it along with foods rich in vitamin C, such as red capsicum or orange
segments. How much is enough: 1 cup raw or % cup cooked spinach leaves is one vegetable serving. Have at least five
serves of vegetables every day.
Buying right: Choose crisp, bright green leaves and stems with no sign of yellowing, wilting or bruising..=A0 For mild
flavor and delicate texture, buy baby spinach. Remove sand or dirt by washing spinach in a sink or bowl of water. Opting
for pre-packaged, pre-rinsed spinach eliminates this step, but even =his spinach should be rinsed before using.
By Elaine Russe=l — Reader's — Digest March 31, 2017
As stated above, full of nutrients and delicious taste, spinach is a wonderful superfood. But what's the best way to eat
it= Read the following surprising facts about this leafy green:
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It's wiser to choose tender baby spinach leaves. The larger the leaves, the more mature they are and more likely to
be tough=or stringy. Also, spinach leaves that are placed under direct light in the sto=es have been found to contain
more nutrients than those stored in darkness.
• =C24> Cooking spinach actually increases its health benefitsl Just half a cup of cooked spinach will give you thrice as
much nutrition as one cup of raw spinach. That's because the body cannot=completely break down the nutrients in raw
spinach for its use.
As an exception to the advice above, research studies show that taking spinach in juice form is actually the
healthiest w=y to consume it. Blend spinach with other vegetables or fruits to create a delicious glass of juice, or try a
green smoothie.
<= class="m_4977142885636407934m_-8127405716069441209m_-656486635394792824=_-
796185754344011S0S7gmail-m_2316529243473243556gmail-m_-24096286104043321=6m_-
2898380243958664293gmail-m_8032535085150903781gmail-m_7364578844834348=9m_7214502630609316032m_-
5955632774661111741m_-5561663390226941878gmail-m_=8341751732810530S3gmail-
m_5591870416997806566m_-1350999846084077074m_-9189=60299443654177m_5611129322921874124gmail-m_-
4086174604780320648gmail-m_836=756590749716069m_-6847088887303417562m_2161194578616005294gmail-
m_-7951578=9410294533gmail-m_-5515300791432822094gmail-MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle" st=le="text-
align:left;margin-left:lin">* There's a compound in spinach called oxalic acid, which blocks the absorption of
calcium and iron. An easy way to solve this problem is to pair spinach with a food high in vitamin C. Mandarin oranges
=nd cantaloupes spring to mind here. Another way to reduce the power of oxalic =cid is to boil the spinach leaves for at
least two minutes.=/p>
* *=A0 Freezing spinach diminishes its health benefits. The way to get the best from the leaf is to buy it fresh and eat
it the sam= day.
• 4>=A0 Do place spinach on your 'organic shopping' li=t, because the leaf tends to be sprayed heavily with pesticides
that dont>=99t come off with normal washing.
•=C2Q Everyone talks about the benefits of spinach in nourishing the eyes and building bones. What few know is
that it also very =ood for digestion. Spinach eases constipation and protects the mucus lining of =he stomach, so that
you stay free of ulcers. It also flushes out toxins from the colon.
• Another lesser known benefit of spinach is its role in skin care. The bounty of vitamins and minerals in spinach can
bring=you quick relief from dry, itchy skin and lavish you with a radiant complexion. Regular consumption of fresh,
organic spinach juice has been shown to impro=e skin health dramatically.
THIS WEEK's QUOTE
</=>
<= class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="margin-bottom:0.0001pttext=align:centedine-height:normal">
True wisdom comes to each of us when we realize how little we understand about l=fe, ourselves, and the world around
us.
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=br>
Socrates
Web Link:=C24> https://www.facebook.com/TheRawStory/videos/1=154338097642235/
<https://www.facebook.com/TheRawStory/videos/1015433809764=235/>
apan style="font-size:12.5pt;font-family:georgia,serir>ln the case Ficti=n is funnier than Truth as in this instance they
look like they cound the same.
Enjoy....
THINK ABOUT THIS</=pan>
Hey Americaapan>
Web Link: https://www.facebook.com/jeffrae/posts/10155942122208569</=>
<https://www.facebook.comneffrae/posts/10155942122208569>
Please take a look (via the above web link) at this PSA on prejudice which is as true=as it was when it was created 60
years ago...
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=EST VIDEO OF THE WEEK
From classic his classic 2001 HBO Special, Complaints and Grievances, Carlin once again masterfully attacks the idiocies
of religion.=C20 Th=s was Carlin's 12th HBO Special taped live from the Beacon Theater in New York City, just 10 weeks
after the tragic events of 9/11, on November 17th, 2001.
THIS WEEK's MUSIC
=/span>
Chick Corea
This week =ou have been invited to enjoy the music of one of the most significant jazzmen since the '60s, Chick Corea
(Armando Anthony "Chick" Corea, born June 12, 1941) is an American jazz and =usion pianist, keyboardist, and
composer. As a member of Miles Davis's band in the late 1960s, he participated in the =irth of the electric jazz fusion
movement. In the 1970s he formed Return to Forever. Along with Herbie Hanco=k, McCoy Tyner, and Keith Jarrett, he
has been described as one of the major jazz piano voices =o emerge in the post-John Coltrane era. Corea continued to
pursue other collaborations and to explore various musical styles throughout the 1980s and 1990s. As one of the few
electric keyboardists to be quite individual and recognizable on synthesizers. In addition, he has composed several jazz
standards, including "Spain<=i)," "La Fiesta," and "Windows."0=A0 He is also known for promoting and fundraising for
a number of social issues. As of January 2016, Corea had been nominated for sixty-three Grammy Awar=s, out of which
he has won 22.
Corea was born i= Chelsea, Massachusetts. He is of southern Italian and Spanish descent. His father, a jazz trumpet
player who had led a Dixieland band in Boston in the 1930s and 1940s, introduced him to the piano at the age of four.
Growing up surrounded by jazz music, he was influenced at an early age by bebop and stars such as Dizzy Gillespie,
Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, Hor=ce Silver, and Lester Young. At eight Corea also took up drums, which would later
influence his use of the piano as a percussion instrument. Corea developed his piano skills by exploring music on his
own. A notable influence was con=ert pianist Salvatore Sullo, from whom Corea started taking lessons at age eigh= and
who introduced him to classical music, helping spark his interest in musical composition. He also spent several years as
a performer and soloist for the St. Rose Scarlet Lancers, = drum and bugle corps based in Chelsea.
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Given a black tu=edo by his father, he started playing gigs when in high school. He enjoyed listening to Herb Pomeroy's
band at the time, and had a trio that playe= Horace Silver's music at a local jazz club. He eventually decided to move to
N=w York City, where he studied musical education for one month at Columbia Universi=y and six months at Juilliard.
He quit after finding both disappointing, but liked the atmosphere of New York, and=the music scene became the
starting point for his professional career.
He picked up imp=rtant experience playing with the bands of Mongo Santamaria and Willie Bobo (1962-1963), Blue
Mitchell (1964-1966)= Herbie Mann, and Stan Getz. He made his recording debut as a leader with 1966's Tones for
Joan's Bones, and=his 1968 trio release (with Mirosla= Vitous and Roy Haynes) Now He Sings, Now He Sobs is considered
a classic. After a short stint w=th Sarah Vaughan, Corea joined Miles Davis as Herbie Hancock's gradual replacement,
staying wit= Davis during a very important transitional period (1968-1970). He was persuaded by the trumpeter to start
playing electric piano, and was on =uch significant albums as Filles de Kilimanjaro, In a Silent Way, Bitches Brew, and
Miles Davis at the F=Ilmore. When he left Davis, Corea at first chose to play avant-garde acoustic jazz in Circle, a quartet
with Anthony Braxton, D=ve Holland, and Barry Altschul. But at the end of 1971, he changed directions again.
Leaving Circle, =orea played briefly with Stan Getz and then formed Return to Forever, which started out as a melodic
Brazilian group wi=h Stanley Clarke, Joe Farrell, Airto, and Flora Purim. Within a year, C=rea (with Clarke, Bill Co=nors,
and Lenny White) had changed Return to Forever into a pace-setting and high-powered fusion b=nd; Al DiMeola took
Connors' place in 1974. While the music was rock-oriented, it still retained the improvisations of jazz, =nd Corea
remained quite recognizable, even under the barrage of electronics.=C2* When RTF broke up in the late '70s, Corea
retained the name for some big-band dates with Clarke. During the nex= few years, he generally emphasized his
acoustic playing and appeared in a wide variety of contexts, including separate duet tours with Gary Burton and Herbie
Hancock, a quarte= with Michael Brecker, trios with Miroslav Vitous and Roy Haynes, tributes t= Thelonious Monk, and
even some classical music.
In 1985, Chick Corea formed a new fusion group, the E=ektric Band, which eventually featured bassist John Patitucci,
guitarist Frank Gambale, saxophonist Eric Marienthal, and drummer Dave Weckl. To balance ou= his music, he formed
his Akoustic Trio with Patitucci and Weckl a few years later. When Patitucci went out on his own in the early '90s, the
person=el changed, but Corea continued leading stimulating groups (including a quartet with Patitucci and Bob Berg).
During 1996-1997, Corea toured with an all-star quintet (includin= Kenny Garrett and Wallace Roney) that played
modern versions of Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk compositions. He remains an important =orce in modern jazz, and
every phase of his development has been well documented on records.
Solo Piano: Originals -- Corea began the 21st century by releasin= a pair of solo piano records, Solo Piano: Originals and
Solo Piano: Standards, in 2000, followed by Past, Present & Futures in 2001. Rendezvous in New York appeared in 2003,
followed by To the Stars in 2004. The Ultimate Adventure was released in 2006. That same year, Corea released Super
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Trio with drummer Steve Gadd and bassist Christian McBride. In the spring =f 2007, Corea released an unlikely but
ultimately satisfying duet album with banjo master Bela F=eck entitled The Enchantment on Concord, followed by a
Universal Japan-only six-disc box set called Five Trios in 2008=that showcased the pianist in a handful of different trio
settings. The same year, Corea and vibraphonist Gary Burton released their fourth offering together, entitled The New
Crystal Silence.
Five Peace Band: Live — The year 2008 was a busy one for Corea= He and John McLaughlin got together for the first time
since they both played on M=les Davis' seminal Bitches Brew album. They pulled together a =and with saxophonist
Kenny Garrett, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, and bassist Christian McBride for t=e recording Five Peace Band: Live (with
another former Miles collaborator, Herbie Hancock, guesting on "In a Silent Way/It's About That Time&=uot;). Concord
re-released Return to Forever's four albums issued between 1973 and 1976 (with Corea, White, Clarke, and DiMeola) --
Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy, =here Have I Known You Before, No Mystery, and Romantic Warrior -- as a precursor for a
reunion tour. This resulted in both a live album, entitled Returns, and a concert DVD. In 2009, Corea teamed with
Japanese piano sensation Hiromi for Duet, followed by a live trio albu= entitled Forever with Clarke and White, culled
from their "RTF Unplugged" tour. The two-disc set, issued by Concord in 2011, featured guest appearances by Chaka
Khan, original RTF guitarist Connors, and violinist Jean-Luc Ponty.<=span>
Furthe= Explorations — In 2012, Corea was busy from the start.Q=A0 He delivered a trio recording on Concord in January
entitled Further Explorations; his sidemen were Eddie Gomez and Paul Motian (both members of various Evans
ensembles). <=>Corea: The Continents Concerto for Jazz Quintet and Chamber Orchestra was issu=d by Deutsche
Grammophone in February. In September, another duet recording with Burton, Hot House, was releas=d by Concord. In
the summer of 2013, Corea debuted his new electric band with the album The Vigil. Its members included bassist
=hristian McBride (though Hadrien Feraud oft=n plays with the group live), drummer Marcus Gilmore, Tim Garland on
reeds and winds, and guitarist Charles Altura. The expansive three-di=c Trilogy was recorded live at stops all over the
world and, with bassist Christian McBride and drummer Brain Blade, appeared in 2014. In 2015, Corea and Bela Fleck
released the duet album, Two, compiled fr=m over seven years of their live performances.
Described by one bio=rapher as a keyboard virtuoso and prolific explorer of jazz and classical music, Chick Corea has
attained liv=ng legend status after five decades of unparalleled creativity and an artistic=output that is simply
staggering. In response Corea is recognized as both a DownBeat Hall of Famer and NEA Jazz Master and is t=e fourth-
most-nominated artist in the history of the Grammys, with 63 nominations. Additionally he has also earned 3 Latin
Grammy Awards, the most of any artist in the Best Instrument=l Album category.
From straight ahead to avant-garde, bebop =o fusion, children's songs to chamber music, along with some far-reaching
forays =nto symphonic works, Corea has touched an astonishing number of musical bases i= his illustrious career while
maintaining a standard of excellence that is awe-inspiring. A tirelessly creative spirit, Corea continues to forge ahead,
continually reinventing himself in =he process.
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Corea celebrated=his 75th birthday in 2016 by playing with more than 20 different groups during a six-week stand at the
Blue Note Jazz Club in Greenwich Village, New York City. "I pretty wel= ignore the numbers that make up 'age'. It
seems to be the best way to go. I have always just concentrated on having the most fun I can with the adventure of
music." With this, you are again invited to enjoy the music of one of the most innovated music=ans in jazz, the master
pianist on keyboards the incomparable Chick Corea=E244.
Chick Corea 4>=A0— Solo -- https://youtu.be/yUcuiUlQs88 <https://y=utu.be/yUcuiUlQs88>
Chick Corea — La Fiesta -- https://youtu.be/8eVuwsimbtw <https:=/youtu.be/8eVuwsimbtw> <=pan>
Chick Corea & Gary Burton — E=eanor Rigby -- https://youtu.be/bxfi=g_5CiM
Chick Corea & Gary Burton — C=ystal Silence -- https://youtu.be/Vn=APR_ixo4
Chick Corea Elektric Band — Elekt=ic City -- https://youtu.be/sSJYlfHjrTE <https://youtu.b=/s5JYIffijrTE>
Chick Corea Elektric Band — Etern=l Child -- https://youtu.be/fmmVisVAusE <https://youtu.b=/fmmVisVAusE>
Chick Corea & Stefano Bollani — 4>=A0Windows https://youtu.be/QYWS6zcL3Cw <https:=/youtu.be/QYWS6zcL3Cw>
<=span>
Chick Corea & Stanley Clarke — 4>=A0Waltz For Debby -- <= href="https://youtu.be/lSRcb35eWtg"
target="_blank">https://youtu.be/=SRcb35eWtg
Chick Corea with Esperanza Spalding & Jeff Ballar= — Alice In Wonderland -- https://youtu=be/2avN8X9w-rc
<https://youtu.be/2avN8X9w-rc>
Chick Corea & Gary Burton — T=ny Desk Concert -- 40=A0https://youtu=be/15IHNYq6stw
chttps://youtu.be/15IHNYq6stw>
Chick Corea & Stanley Clarke —40=A0 No Mystery -- https://youtu.be/10ib6qtpY7=
Chick Corea & Bobby McFerrin 40=93 Spain -- https://youtu.beLo2RS8WfcbY <https://youtu.b=/_o2RS8WfcbY>
Chick Corea Akoustic Band & Bobby McFerrin =b>— Autumn Leaves -- https://yout=.be/SjiXQmWBXbY
<https://youtu.be/5jiXQmWBXbY>
Chick Corea & Gary Burton — =C240La Fiesta -- =C240https://yo=tu.be/-Uok_WpjCTc <https://youtu.be/-Uok_WpjCTc>
Chick Corea & Stanley Clarke 4>=93 Light as a Feather -- https://youtu.be/u2jxCvNb6dY?list=RDu2jxCvNb6dY
<https://youtu.be/u2jxCvNb6dY?list=RDu2jxCvNb6dY> </=pan>
Return To Forever — The Rom=ntic Warrior -- https=//youtu.be/lObViIGPjHc <https://youtu.be/lObViIGPjHc>
Return To Forever — Medieva= Overture -- https://youtu.be/XjOYscEN6Qc <https://youtu.b=/XjOYscEN6Qc>
Return To Forever — School =ays https://youtu.be/AGNdBA=oupw
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Return To Forever — San Seb=stian https://yout=.be/40JUICHcKg <https://youtu.be/4ellUICHcKg>
Return To Forever — Sorcere=s https://youtu.be/wSksWyHsYw8 <https://youtu.b=/wSksWyHsYw8>
BONUS
Miles Davis live=with Wayne Shorter Chick Corea — Miles Plays The Voodoo Down -- https://youtu.be/lUnr1FTtNEk
I hope that you enjoyed this week's offerings and wish you and=yours a fantastic Easter and a rest of the great week....
Sincerely,
Greg Brown=/span>
Gregory Brown
Chair=an & CEO
GlobalCast Partners, LLC
US:
Tel:
Fax:
Skype:
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