Author Archives: SupremePundit

NASA Climate Scientist

“Opinions vary about the hiatus, as some view it as evidence that man-made global warming is a myth,” NASA said in a press release. Hiatus, Climategate, fraud, incompetence, carbon tax, destruction of the middle class, fiefdom, enslavement. Get a fucking clue. Global cooling is coming per the Landscheidt Cycles ….. NASA Climate Scientist Explains 15-Year… Read More »

GEN | News Highlights:Gut Microbiome Serves as Colorectal Cancer Screening Tool

Scientists from the University of Michigan report that an analysis of the gut microbiome more successfully distinguished healthy individuals from those with precancerous adenomatous polyps and those with invasive colorectal cancer compared with assessment of clinical risk factors and fecal occult blood testing. They reported the results of their study (“The Human Gut Microbiome as… Read More »

Global Warming? Death Valley Shatters Cool Temperature Record | Heartlander Magazine

James M. Taylor James M. Taylor is managing editor of Environment & Climate News, a national monthly… (read full bio) EMAIL Share on linkedin Print Email Global warming – er, that is, global climate disruption – claimed another victim Sunday as Death Valley shattered its all-time record for coolest August 3 high temperature in history.… Read More »

Rare Gene Mutation PALB2 Increases Breast Cancer Risk

0 comments Text Size – + Print E-mail Kathleen Lees k.lees@scienceworldreport.com First Posted: Aug 06, 2014 06:09 PM EDT Breast Cancer As breast cancer remains the most common cancer in women worldwide, according to the World Health Organization, it’s estimated that 508,000 women died from it in 2011, alone . (Photo : Flickr) via Rare… Read More »

Feds Stop Public Disclosure of Many Hospital Errors : News : Headlines & Global News

The federal government this month has silently stopped publicly reporting incidents such as hospitals leaving foreign objects in patients’ bodies, and other life-threatening mistakes, USA Today reports. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) denied it was making the change last year. Share This Story CMS removed the data on eight avoidable “hospital acquired… Read More »

Vitamin D and Dementia: A Very Close Tie

Older patients with very low levels of vitamin D have about a 122% increased risk for dementia compared with those with higher levels, according to a large, prospective, population-based study. The study provides “robust evidence” of the link between vitamin D and cognition and adds important new information to the association, said study author David… Read More »

Pros Outweigh Cons for Regular Aspirin

The cardiovascular, cancer, and survival benefits of regular aspirin use outweigh the harms for average-risk adults, according to a comprehensive review. The relative risk reduction was between 7% for women and 9% for men for myocardial infarction, stroke, and cancer combined over a 10-year period. Long-term, regular aspirin use was associated with a 4% reduction… Read More »

Nine West’s Marketing Campaign Sells ‘STARTER Husband Hunting’ Shoes “Come Fuck Me Pumps”

  “Starter Husband Hunting” comes complete with mini-pep talk and related imagery. For “Starter Husband Hunting,” the well-shoed model is posing in front of a bullseye with some arrows (Cupid’s bow?) and the accompanying text says: Go get ‘em, tiger. Whether you’re looking for Mr. Right or Mr. Right Now… we got a shoe for… Read More »

Japanese MILF’s pubic hair removal

Different cultures have different norms regarding the acceptability of body hair. For example, in many countries of the world, women are largely expected to shave their legs and underarm hair when going out in public. But what about that other, far less public patch of hair? The latest edition of Shogakukan’s News Post Seven teamed up… Read More »

Banks Face Hit on $30 Billion in Overdraft Fees From CFPB Rules – Businessweek

The $30 billion banks collect in overdraft fees each year may shrink as the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau imposes rules aimed at shielding customers from harm. The agency is weighing regulations to improve consumer awareness of overdraft costs and restrict how banks can debit transactions and impose fees, according to a senior agency official.… Read More »

FDA plans to regulate lab tests | TheHill

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) notified top lawmakers Thursday of its plan to begin regulating laboratory tests used to diagnose dangerous diseases. The announcement comes almost a month after Senate Democrats pushed the Office of Management and Budget to release FDA guidance that had been held up for years. The agency attached the proposed… Read More »

No TV or obesity, but ancient people still had heart disease – FOX 29 News Philadelphia | WTXF-TV

By Amy Norton HealthDay Reporter THURSDAY, July 31, 2014 (HealthDay News) — They may not have had fast food, TVs or cigarettes, but people of ancient times commonly developed clogged heart arteries — and a new research review speculates on some reasons why. Using CT scans of mummified remains from ancient Egypt, Peru, the Aleutian… Read More »

THE end of DOCTORS: HealthTap’s Video Chatting Doctors Want to End Your WebMD Meltdowns | Business | WIRED

  Follow Wired Twitter Facebook RSS HealthTap’s Video Chatting Doctors Want to End Your WebMD Meltdowns By Issie Lapowsky 07.30.14  | 9:00 am  | Permalink Share on Facebook 198 inShare16 HealthTap “On the internet,” says Ron Gutman, “every headache becomes a brain tumor in four clicks or less.” For Gutman and his colleagues in the world of health tech,… Read More »

Here’s What Happened After an Ohio Sheriff Sent a Bill to the Mexican President for the Illegals in His Jail | Video | TheBlaze.com

Butler County Sheriff Richard Jones said Friday that he sent a letter to Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, charging him for all the illegals in his jail. What happened next? The Ohio sheriff told Dana Loesch: “The federal government sends me a letter and said I violated a treaty of like, 1790.” When Loesch asked for… Read More »

Chickens Share Backyards and Pests With Dogs, Cats – ABC News

Chickens Share Backyards and Pests With Dogs, Cats LOS ANGELES — Jul 30, 2014, 9:51 AM ET By SUE MANNING Associated Press Associated Press The popular push for locally produced food has spawned flocks of backyard chickens in urban neighborhoods nationwide, but people may not realize that feasting on fresh eggs can mean subjecting their… Read More »

Running 5 minutes a day can extend life, study says

Running for as little as five minutes a day could significantly lower a person’s risk of dying prematurely, according to a large-scale new study of exercise and mortality. The findings suggest that the benefits of even small amounts of vigorous exercise may be much greater than experts had assumed.   In recent years, moderate exercise,… Read More »

Fibromyalgia Breakthrough – Treat The Causes, Not Just The Symptoms

diopathic disease is defined as one that develops without any apparent or known causes. That is the term used for fibromyalgia, autoimmune diseases, including lupus and chronic fatigue syndrome. While many of these diseases have recognizable signs and symptoms, the lack of causality haunts medical schools, doctors, practices and hospitals. The only ones benefiting from… Read More »

You are under the control of Facebook and it will control you and your “friends” Now proven with Its Emotion Manipulation Study

As the Main Stream Media has less influence on some people because they are now addictive to sites like Facebook the level of influence and depth of reach of information control needed to be quantified if the population is to me kept under control.  In an experiment facebook conducted earlier this year, Facebook injected the feeds of… Read More »

The Troubling Connection Between Pesticides and Autism – Pacific Standard: The Science of Society

Children with autism spectral disorders were found to have had a 60 percent greater chance of having had organophosphates sprayed near their mothers’ homes while they were still in the womb. Children with development disorders were nearly 150 percent more likely to have had carbamate pesticides applied near the home during their mothers’ pregnancy. Both of the associations grew… Read More »

Cocoa Extract May Help Treat Alzheimer’s

Here’s the science breakdown: In the brain of a person with Alzheimer’s, a protein called beta-amyloid accumulates in the gaps that exist between nerve cells, which disrupts the flow of signals between them and eventually leads to memory problems and worse. That’s the science breakdown?  WTF But relying upon mice genetically-engineered to mimic Alzheimer’s, researchers found that lavado… Read More »

The open source revolution is coming and it will conquer the 1% – ex CIA spy | Nafeez Ahmed | Environment | theguardian.com

Robert David Steele, former Marine, CIA case officer, and US co-founder of the US Marine Corps intelligence activity, is a man on a mission. But it’s a mission that frightens the US intelligence establishment to its core. With 18 years experience working across the US intelligence community, followed by 20 more years in commercial intelligence… Read More »

Manifesto for Half-Arsed Agile Software Development

Manifesto for Half-Arsed Agile Software Development We have heard about new ways of developing software by paying consultants and reading Gartner reports. Through this we have been told to value: Individuals and interactions over processes and tools and we have mandatory processes and tools to control how those individuals (we prefer the term ‘resources’) interact… Read More »

Nine Families and one Rich Man against the system and the Tenure system lost. A victory for all good teachers and every family and child!

THE ACTUAL DECISION HERE James Ryan, dean of Harvard University’s graduate school of education, said the verdict “will likely cause lawyers in other states to think about bringing similar suits.” But he pointed out that the decision explicitly called on the state Legislature to fix the unconstitutional statues at issue. As a result, there will… Read More »

Here’s What We Know So Far About How Marijuana Affects Health

y Rachael Rettner, Senior Writer Published: 06/05/2014 02:46 PM EDT on LiveScience Many people think that smoking pot is harmless, but there’s good evidence that the drug has at least some negative effects on health, a new review says.   Some people who smoke marijuana can become addicted, and use of the drug in the… Read More »