Tuesday, May 8, 2012

More Proof! Re: Austerity Bites. Jesse Jackson Agrees. See Below Compliments of Huffington Post.


Rev. Jesse Jackson

GET UPDATES FROM REV. JESSE JACKSON

Europe's Lesson: No Time for Austerity Measures

Posted: 05/08/2012 9:32 am

The defeat of French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Sunday's French elections provides a clear lesson to America. So does the fall of the conservative Dutch government, the rebuke of the British conservative government in local elections, the defeat of the establishment parties in Greece and the turmoil in Spain. Europeans are using democratic elections and demonstrations to send a message: Austerity is spreading unacceptable human misery.
For months, conservative pundits have criticized President Barack Obama for not forcing more deficit reduction. House Republicans boast that their Mitt Romney-endorsed budget would cut deficits faster by slashing spending -- although they refuse to reveal what they would slash. Deficits are unpopular. They represent out-of-control government spending. Tightening our belts in hard times seems both responsible and inevitable.
For years, Greece's soaring deficits have been the object lesson of the right: Run up deficits and investors won't buy your bonds and you'll face bankruptcy.
But the real lesson of Greece, Spain, France, Ireland and others is that slashing spending in a weak economy serves only to drive the economy back into recession, increase unemployment and spread poverty. And it does little to reduce deficits or to reassure investors who worry about the economy tanking. Austerity is like bleeding a patient who is still recovering from a heart attack.
The U.S. enjoys better growth than Europe because we've done more to stimulate our economy and have been slower to turn to deficit reduction. But states and localities forced to balance budgets because of state constitutional requirements are laying off teachers and police and firefighters. Now the federal budget is being cut, adding to the drag on the economy. And if, no matter who wins this fall, the administration and Congress join in a "grand bargain" that combines spending cuts and tax increases, Americans may well learn the European lesson about austerity directly.
This economy is barely out of the operating room and just beginning to recover. Large companies are sitting on trillions of profits looking for customers. Small businesses won't hire until they see consumers coming in the door. We still have mass unemployment, falling wages and more families losing their homes. Yet Washington seems unable or unwilling to act.
This week, a committee of the Senate and House will consider the only major jobs program before the Congress: the transportation bill, which funds rebuilding roads, bridges and mass transit. The Senate passed a small, two-year authorization with overwhelming bipartisan support. But zealous House Republicans have defeated everything except temporary extensions.
This makes no sense. In fact, we should be doing much more to rebuild America. Interest rates are at near-record lows. The construction industry is idle. There will never be a better opportunity to borrow the money needed to rebuild an infrastructure that is in dangerous disrepair.
Maybe we should pay the legislators to junket in Europe. Let them see the riots, visit with defeated politicians, talk to embarrassed economists now calling for a change in course. The House Republican caucus doesn't seem to worry about the growing poverty in our cities or wonder whether those cities will blow up this summer. Perhaps they might reconsider if they learn from the Europeans that enforcing brutal measures on citizens to pay for the mess caused by banks doesn't just increase poverty and unemployment, it shortens political careers.
Whelp, it's true.  Austerity does in fact bite (so does Reality, but I digress).  If Jesse Jackson says so, then it is true...Anyone feel like protesting Reality?  I just might...cause it bites.  See below.

Uh, Not To Alarm Anyone, But This Is Actually Alarming: Drug-Defying Germs From India Speed Post-Antibiotic Era


Drug-Defying Germs From India Speed Post-Antibiotic Era

Bloomberg Markets Magazine
Lill-Karin Skaret, a 67-year-old grandmother from Namsos, Norway, was traveling to a lakeside vacation villa near India’s port city of Kochi in March 2010 when her car collided with a truck. She was rushed to the Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, her right leg broken and her artificial hip so damaged that replacing it required 12 hours of surgery.
Three weeks later and walking with the aid of crutches, Skaret was relieved to be home. Then her doctor gave her upsetting news. Mutant germs that most antibiotics can’t kill had entered her bladder, probably from a contaminated hospital catheter in India. She risked a life-threatening infection if the bacteria invaded her bloodstream -- a waiting game over which she had limited control, Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its June issue.
Klebsiella pneumoniae, the bacterium in which NDM-1 was first identified. Photograph: CDC
May 8 (Bloomberg) -- India's overuse of antibiotics, coupled with the nation's poor sanitation, has led to a new type of superbug, mutated bacteria that even the most high-powered antibiotics can't kill. Scientists warn this superbug is spreading faster, further and in more alarming ways than any they’ve encountered. Bloomberg's Adi Narayan reports on the story featured in the June issue of Bloomberg Markets magazine. (Source: Bloomberg)
Karthikeyan K. Kumarasamy in Chennai worked with international doctors to identify the NDM-1 gene causing untreatable bacterial infections in India. Photographer: Anay Mann/Bloomberg Markets via Bloomberg
“I got a call from my doctor who told me they found this bug in me and I had to take precautions,” Skaret remembers. “I was very afraid.”
Skaret was lucky. Eventually, her body rid itself of the bacteria, and she escaped harm from a new type of superbug that scientists warn is spreading faster, further and in more alarming ways than any they’ve encountered. Researchers say the epicenter is India, where drugs created to fight disease have taken a perverse turn by making many ailments harder to treat.
India’s $12.4 billion pharmaceutical industry manufactures almost a third of the world’s antibiotics, and people use them so liberally that relatively benign and beneficial bacteria are becoming drug immune in a pool of resistance that thwarts even high-powered antibiotics, the so-called remedies of last resort.

Medical Tourism

Poor hygiene has spread resistant germs into India’s drains, sewers and drinking water, putting millions at risk of drug-defying infections. Antibiotic residues from drug manufacturing, livestock treatment and medical waste have entered water and sanitation systems, exacerbating the problem.
As the superbacteria take up residence in hospitals, they’re compromising patient care and tarnishing India’s image as a medical tourism destination.
“There isn’t anything you could take with you traveling that would be useful against these superbugs,” says Robert Moellering Jr., a professor of medical research at Harvard Medical School in Boston.
The germs -- and the gene that confers their heightened powers -- are jumping beyond India. More than 40 countries have discovered the genetically altered superbugs in blood, urine and other patient specimens. CanadaFranceItalyKosovo and South Africa have found them in people with no travel links, suggesting the bugs have taken hold there.

Post-Antibiotic Era

Drug resistance of all sorts is bringing the planet closer to what the World Health Organizationcalls a post-antibiotic era.
“Things as common as strep throat or a child’s scratched knee could once again kill,” WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said at a March medical meeting in Copenhagen. “Hip replacements, organ transplants, cancer chemotherapy and care of preterm infants would become far more difficult or even too dangerous to undertake.”
Already, current varieties of resistant bacteria kill more than 25,000 people in Europe annually, the WHO said in March. The toll means at least 1.5 billion euros ($2 billion) in extra medical costs and productivity losses each year.
“If this latest bug becomes entrenched in our hospitals, there is really nothing we can turn to,” says Donald E. Low, head of Ontario’s public health lab in Toronto. “Its potential is to be probably greater than any other organism.”
Are we all doomed?  Or is this another swine flu "epidemic"?  But I'm not taking any precautions.  Things to avoid: India, antibiotics, hospitals.  Check check check.  Dammit, I refuse to avoid France tho.  Will take my chances with superbugs there...

Dear New Jersey, We will NOT let the Devils Destroy our Spirit. We Are Street Fighting Men. Love, Philly XOXO

Dear Philly, You Deserve GREAT THINGS (like winning against the Devils).  You See?  So let's not screw it up.
We will NOT let them destroy our Spirit!  Philadelphia will Overcome & REBUILD (Tonight)

Cause we are street fighting men.  Just like Keith & Mick.
  Much unlike THIS guy.  He's a baby.

OMG This Just In: THE SMURFS Are Flyers Fans Now TOO! Lalalalala Things Are Looking Up!


  Knock Knock....

Things are REALLY looking up for Flyers Fans today as the Smurfs have now converted to ORANGE (the new Blue).  So...guess what Jersey?  The Smurfs like US not you...We don't like you because Philly doesn't like anyone.  New York City still doesn't like you either, not really anyway.  There's a BIG Lovefest going on right now, and New Jersey is never invited.  Cause you smell.  Just saying...
 +    = Lovefest 2012 (sans Newark & Trenton, which smell, EW)

There, that outta do it.  Covered our bases for tonight's game.  Smurfs now like to shoot things too, LIKE US, woo!  You see?

Shot it.  Philly Style. Problem solved.  Nobody solves problems better than Philadelphia sports fans.  Can't compete in THAT category.  No sir-ee.  Like us NOW?  Not really?  Why does that NOT surprise me?

PS. PITT, youz better hope we don't lose, cause we'll have nothing better to do than make fun of YOUZ.



Dear Greece, Please Go Away And DON'T Come Back Another Day. MmmKay? Otherwise, I'm Telling Mom.


Look!  Greece!  We can play this instead!

Dear Greece,

We don't want to play this game anymore, so please cease and desist.  We're pretty much over the whole, let's see who can spook the world financial systems into a meltdown with an economy half the size of Arkansas potentially going bankrupt.  We get it, you simply LOVE to display political unrest and protests (apparently we do too on Mayday, 2012).
A FUN GAME

Doesn't this look like more fun?
But that's over now and we'd like stability in our markets, both stocks and bonds.  So QUIT screwing it up already.  MmKay?  Cause that was sooooo 2011.  I know, I know, we started it back in 2008 but WE are going to finish it too.  And if you don't listen, I'm telling Mom.

Look how much fun everyone's having!  Woo!
So I hereby declare we play a NEW game that doesn't involve disrupting developed and developing economies because some Greeks are throwing a hissy fit.  So the new game I propose is Twister (fun for ALL ages).  You in?  I hope so, for the love of god, cause hissy fits are pretty much "Greek to Me".

Hissy Fits = 2011 Twister = 2012

Sincerely,

The United States of America (and the World)

XOXOXO

Getting Into the Swim of Things in New York City

  There, you see?  Only took a few days away to fall back in love with this city (as opposed to wanting to kick someone's shins for getting in my way when am running to meetings).  Feeling much better now.  New Hope saves the day...You happy now?  Yesssss.


"If I always appear prepared, it is because before entering an undertaking, I have meditated long and forseen what might occur.  It is not genius that reveals to me suddenly and secretly what I should do in circumstances unexpected by others; it is thought and preparation." Napolean Bonaparte

A wise man, indeed, that Napolean.  Short, but also wise.

Getting into swim at the moment.  Surf's up!  Beach Boys style...


Words with Friends, Volume 3,913. Teenage Wasteland.


    


Teenage wasteland.  Except we're not teenagers anymore...


Who's Bad?

 Bikers.  In New Hope, PA.
  And Michael Jackson.  He's Bad too.  You know it.