10 Burst results for "Andrew Hill"

Ironsharpener
"andrew hill" Discussed on Ironsharpener
"Out more about this particular exhibit over 45 pictures to 50 pictures will be shown by great jazz musicians, John Coltrane, smoke, sunny Rollins, several of whom I took care of in my past life and I have a number of autographed pictures personally autographed. I actually have a composition that was recorded by Andrew hill, the pianist that was named for me and will be included in a walkthrough program featuring audio video performances by a number of musicians whose pictures will be shown at this exhibit. I do hope that people will come by and come and enjoy the beautiful music of jazz and the people who produced it. I think it will be something that people will enjoy. It's fun. It's educational and stimulating and inspirational I do. Hope that people will show up. Can you remind us of the dates again at the time? Saturday, march 26th from ten in the morning till two in the afternoon, that's the opening to show. There is a concert featuring a tribute to an individual who gave their piano that day. So it's a bit short from ten to two, and it runs until Saturday May 7th. And that sort of 6 week exhibit called the jazz I saw, which will feature two jazz concerts, a piano trio on April 24th with Armin D'amelio, a Hudson resident, a teacher full bright scholar, and his trio, including che Anderson on the base. Dennis mackerel in the drums. That will be celery. A Sunday, April 24th, at 4 p.m.. There's a charge of $10 for that. In addition, there is suggest part vocalist sample, which will produce a concert on April, the tenth, which is, I think, a Sunday, if I find correct, it is a Sunday, and that will be at 2 o'clock in the afternoon..

Behind the Bastards
"andrew hill" Discussed on Behind the Bastards
"But we don't live in a reasonable world. The nih made this change after dr corey from the fcc and who consultant dr andrew hill presented data to the nih treatments guidelines panel that same month. Dr corey released a study with the f. el-sisi co-founders and several other doctors. That they believed would convince the cdc and fda to approve ivermectin for use against covert. Now by this point. Dr corey had become convinced that ivermectin was a bonafide wonder drug. Is he told the senate but the people. He asked to publish his study. The study that he thought was gonna convince the fda to approve it for covert. We're less convinced. Frontiers is an open access platform for peer reviewed science journalism and they investigated the integrity of the study announced on march. Second that they were rejecting the article. Four quote a series of strong unsupported claims based on studies with insufficient statistical significance and at times without the use of control groups. This guy's going to have to start publishing in highlights magazine. This is so ridiculous now. I'm not a scientist jamie. In fact legally yeah. But i know that control groups are important. You want to know the thing does something you need a group of people who aren't doing the thing search before they can come out much less fuck in pharmaceutical. I'm not so by this point. Vaccines were increasingly available. In mass around the united states in december it had made since ivermectin had been on the nfl ccc's protocol because kind of a desperate time but by march ivermectin is still part of their protocol but none of the vaccines had been added to their recommended preventive protocol. So this is the point where they're very manly shady. Exactly fucking december. People can't get vaccines. There's evidence ivermectin might help it's debatable. Whether or not it's responsible to put it on there still completely. There's there's an argument to make sense to make to attempts to make that argument. Pre march s motherfuckers are walking into their cbs and getting vaccinated and they still have an added that to their protocol but the horse pace again. They're not telling people to take the space they're telling people to get it prescribed. But whatever i'm gonna call it workspace sometimes so dr corey also grew more compact combatative from this point. Forward telling the huffington post quote. When i came out and told the world that corticosteroids were critical to save lives. I got crushed that until the recovery trial came out and it became the standard of care worldwide overnight which is true that corticosteroids that use was criticized and they wind up being helpful. But also wasn't your idea brahim. Quick yeah like what you is that actually his voice or is that just made him ben shapiro. Everyone's been shapiro so to say like what is that. I was like you just want him to sound like a dork. And then i found out that was your bank shapiro. Voice battle all tracks that flow chart. If i take their ben shapiro. That's the way it works again..

No Agenda
"andrew hill" Discussed on No Agenda
"Up with merck but they made a mistake of going with astra zeneca. And it's perfect ally of the united kingdom and the european union you idiot. We don't want your vaccine goes through your brexit. You shit heads and your crappy ass vaccine. And i think that's the undertone of this deutsche avella interview with the vice president of the european parliament and we are now joined by bali. She's a member of germany's social democrats and also vice president of the european parliament. Mrs bali. This is just the latest set-back in a whole series of setbacks. Is it time to admit that you use vaccination strategy is failing. Well this is not a new phenomenon. Because there are also countries outside of the european union who are now abandoning at least first time of vaccination in uncovering sample norway or iceland and their countries within the european union. Who don't so it is not certain. Nice deflection something that has been to do with the european union. Although i must admit i would have liked this to be a to have a european approach to really get together also to gather your expertise of the different states. I think there could have been an added european value. But if we look at it why why bother to have this. European medicines agency that actually says to the national governments. Do not stop. Vaccinations and yet the national authorities decide to stop vaccinations. That doesn't make sense. does it well. You have to know that the competences for health policy obliged the the national member states so So there is very little authority that the european union can impose on the states and this is a very emotional topic so if you have one country that says all for us. The risk seems to be too high and and then a well doesn't doesn't use the vaccination anymore. The pressure rises for the other of course because the population is saying while there's danger who could benefit. I wonder what has to happen is the disarm media am five am is so handcuffed by the pharmaceutical companies. Yeah they can't do any thing that tells any story whatsoever this even remotely true about drugs in general and it's not fi just pfizer by all of them because the dig so much of the income of the new york times in the rest ended networks the tv networks in particular most of their income for the nightly news comes from drug companies. So they don't they will not explore any of this. Because oh my god we're gonna loosen because you know they all gang up on this new all take their money away even though there's a lot of different companies but as part of a ball i and it's ruining the information in this country. These these news organizations have got to stop taking this money. A met analysis of clinical trials of ivermectin to treat covid nineteen infection dr andrew hill university of liverpool This was a world health organization sponsored review of ivermectin. Trials indicates eighty-three percent reduction in kobe. Mortality so this is this is out there and this is a problem again. we can't have emergency youth authorization if we we have approved treatments. Australia's only three percent reduction in more. Somebody's got you look at the numbers differently. That's like four hundred thousand. Americans dead supposedly that five hundred five hundred thousand that means we would have saved four hundred thousand lives. If the news media had done its job. The news media is directly responsible for the murder of four hundred thousand innocent americans by their inability to actually report the facts. That's a good point now. We know it's not really four hundred thousand from this but we'll just use their government numbers. Will you know. It's not government numbers. That's johns hopkins numbers just so you know what cnn and cia with austrailia is moving ahead. Just nicely though. They're not taking any chances on variant being story to continue injecting human resources as they know community transmission of coronavirus in victoria but another virus. He's doing the rounds children obeying hit the worst. These brothers were both diagnosed with. Rsv coffee me of boycott wait. He was having an asthma attack. Respiratory since you'll virus or rsv is very common and contagious and causes infections of the respiratory tract doctor-designed as bena spiking. Are they similar. Rhino virus in this common colds. Rsv rhinovirus rsv. Yeah blah like the common cold symptoms are similar to those of coronavirus professionals. Put the recent rise virus and rhinovirus down to wake immune systems doctors side. The lengthy look down combined with mosque wearing protected. Most of this from jim's last year the advice is to get vaccinated against the flu mask. If flu like symptoms are present so the just easing the fluid. Keep wearing your mass. Get another shot. Keep it rolling. We need some ads on tv. Boys nineteen has changed our lives for us to live more freely. We need the added protection of covid. Nineteen vaccines are experts looking carefully clinical trial results along with all the dieter on quality and manufacturing vaccines. We approve x. Fans where we have enough evidence of a work. The abyss role is at the vaccines will be available in batches. So we're making sure they go into where they are needed i to keep up to date visit health. Dot gov dot edu. These train camera sounds like nothing's wrong. Sounds all good. Go get your taxes. Go get your vaccine. The problem is taking place is is the brainwashing where people truly believed that they are given freedom and odds just would just have to wear masks for a little bit just the beginning. It's yeah once everyone's vaccinated. Everybody has to be vaccine. You heard the bbc click host. Oh oh it's the best. The best text message have received and years in maybe three years and i had a little cry. And they're going to be disappointed when they find out is total bull crap or worse but the pressure that is going to be put in society is to real disappointment. The pressure that is being put on people. And how it's being communicated in the workplace is where the real issues are going to come about one of our producers. His wife His wife's company. Ceo did a call and they gladly recorded it for us so we could listen to kind of how the pressure works. And i think this is Saddening really when you hear it. It's the ceo telling everybody you know you. Kinda gotta get shot. I wanna be able to run the company in a way that we're all gold and he eh and we need to so to do that. We need to be less than ain't i kinda beat around the bush. We don't glaze kids all the vaccines chickenpox aaliyah.

No Agenda
"andrew hill" Discussed on No Agenda
"You very much. Total horsecrap and. I thought you weren't supposed to say where it comes from. That's racist or xenophobic one variant thirty three. So i realized as i was going through the stories of the astra zeneca. There's an obvious connection to this being banned everywhere that we overlooked And you know this. I started in norway where they stopped. stop vaccination with the astrazeneca vaccine of They thought it was blood. Clots in fact. I have here. Norwegian researchers the astrazeneca vaccine was the cause of the blood. Clots and many more countries have stopped using us and then all of a sudden it hit me. Oh hello of course. We had to get rid of this. Of course it's not. Just the astra zeneca astrazeneca fact. Let me read from the wikipedia page. This is the oxford astrazeneca vaccine and it was our very own. Bill gates. Dr bill Who had said early on. Hey you know oxford if you really want to be on the stage with us then you gotta find a big partner and dr bill. It's even. The wikipedia wanted oxford to team up with merck but they made a mistake of going with astra zeneca and it's perfect ally of the united kingdom and the european union. You idiot we don't want your vaccine goes through your brexit. You shit heads and your crappy ass vaccine. And i think that's the undertone of this deutsche avella interview with the vice president of the european parliament and we are now joined by bali. She's a member of germany's social democrats and also vice president of the european parliament. Mrs bali. This is just the latest set-back in a whole series of setbacks. Is it time to admit that you use vaccination strategy is failing. Well this is not a new phenomenon. Because there are also countries outside of the european union who are now abandoning at least first time of vaccination in uncovering sample norway or iceland and their countries within the european union. Who don't so it is not certain. Nice deflection something that has been to do with the european union. Although i must admit i would have liked this to be a to have a european approach to really get together also to gather your expertise of the different states. I think there could have been an added european value. If we look at it why why bother to have this european medicines agency that actually says to the national governments. Do not stop. Vaccinations and yet the national authorities decide to stop vaccinations. That doesn't make sense. does it. Well you have to know that the competences for health policy obliged the the national member states so So there is very little authority that the european union can impose on the states and this is a very emotional topic so if you have one country that says all for us. The risk seems to be too high and then a well doesn't doesn't use the vaccination anymore. The pressure rises for the other. Of course because the population is saying while there's danger who could benefit. I wonder what has to happen is the disarm media am five am is so handcuffed by the pharmaceutical companies. Yeah they can't do any thing that tells any story whatsoever this even remotely true about drugs in general and it's not fi just pfizer by all of them because the dig so much of the income of the new york times in the rest ended networks the tv networks in particular most of their income for the nightly news comes from drug companies. So they don't they will not explore any of this. Because oh my god we're gonna loosen because you know they all gang up on this new all take their money away even though there's a lot of different companies but as part of a ball i and it's ruining the information in this country. These these news organizations have got to stop taking this money. A meta analysis of clinical trials of ivermectin to treat covid nineteen infection dr andrew hill university of liverpool This was a world health organization sponsored review of ivermectin. Trials indicates eighty-three percent reduction in kobe. Mortality so this is this is out there and this is a problem again. we can't have emergency youth authorization if we we have approved treatments. Australia's only three percent reduction in more. Somebody's got you look at the numbers differently. That's like four hundred thousand. Americans dead supposedly that five hundred five hundred thousand that means we would have saved four hundred thousand lives. If the news media had done its job. The news media is directly responsible for the murder of four hundred thousand innocent americans by their inability to actually report the facts. That's a good point now. We know it's not really four hundred thousand from this but we'll just use their government numbers. Will you know. It's not government numbers. That's johns hopkins numbers just so you know what cnn and cia with austrailia is moving ahead. Just nicely though. They're not taking any chances on variant being story to continue injecting human resources as they know community transmission of coronavirus in victoria but another virus. He's doing the rounds. Children obeying hit the worst. These brothers were both diagnosed with. Rsv date coffee reminded me of boycott. Wait he was having an asthma attack. Respiratory since you'll virus or rsv is very common and contagious and causes infections of the respiratory tract. Doctor-designed is bena spiking. Are they similar. Rhino virus in this common colds. Rsv rhinovirus rsv coming cold. Yeah blah like the common cold symptoms are similar to those of coronavirus professionals put the recent rise virus and rhinovirus immune systems doctors side. The lengthy look down combined with mosque wearing protected. Most of this from jim's last year the advice is to get vaccinated against the flu. Wear a mask if flu like symptoms are present so the easing the fluid. Keep wearing your mass. Get another shot. Keep it rolling..

No Agenda
"andrew hill" Discussed on No Agenda
"You very much. Total horsecrap and. I thought you weren't supposed to say where it comes from. That's racist miss. Our xenophobic would ever variant thirty three. So i realized as i was going through the stories of the astra zeneca. There's an obvious connection to this being banned everywhere that we overlooked And you know this. I started in norway where they stopped. stop vaccination with the astrazeneca vaccine of They thought it was blood. Clots in fact. I have here. Norwegian researchers the astrazeneca vaccine was the cause of the blood. Clots and many more countries have stopped using us and then all of a sudden it hit me. Oh hello of course. We had to get rid of this. Of course it's not. Just the astra zeneca astrazeneca fact. Let me read from the wikipedia page. This is the oxford astrazeneca vaccine and it was our very own. Bill gates. Dr bill Who had said early on. Hey you know. Oxford be on the stage with us. Then you gotta find a big partner and dr bill. it's even. The wikipedia wanted oxford to team up with merck but they made a mistake of going with astra zeneca and it's perfect ally of the united kingdom and the european union. You idiot. we don't want your vaccine goes through your brexit. You shit heads and your crappy ass vaccine. And i think that's the undertone of this deutsche avella interview with the vice president of the european parliament. And we are now joined by bali. She's a member of germany's social democrats and also vice president of the european parliament. Mrs bali. This is just the latest set-back in a whole series of setbacks. Is it time to admit that you use vaccination strategy is failing. Well this is not a new phenomenon. Because there are also countries outside of the european union who are now abandoning at least first time of vaccination in uncovering sample norway or iceland and their countries within the european union. Who don't so it is not certain. Nice deflection something that has been to do with the european union. Although i must admit i would have liked this to be a to have a european approach to really get together also to gather your expertise of the different states. I think there could have been an added european value. But if we look at it why why bother to have this. European medicines agency that actually says to the national governments. Do not stop. Vaccinations and yet the national authorities decide to stop vaccinations. That doesn't make sense. does it well. You have to know that the competences for health policy obliged the the national member states so So there is very little authority that the european union can impose on the states and this is a very emotional topic so if you have one country that says all for us the risk seems to be too high and then a well doesn't doesn't use the vaccination anymore. The pressure rises for the other of course because the population is saying why. There's a danger who could benefit. I wonder what has to happen is the disarm media am five am is so handcuffed by the pharmaceutical companies. Yeah they can't do any thing that tells any story whatsoever this even remotely true about drugs in general and it's not just fi just pfizer by all of them because the dig so much of the income of the new york times in the rest ended networks the tv networks in particular most of their income for the nightly news comes from drug companies. So they don't they will not explore any of this. Because oh my god we're gonna loosen because you know they all gang up on this new all take their money away even though there's a lot of different companies but as part of a ball i and it's ruining the information in this country. These these news organizations have got to stop taking this money. A meta analysis of clinical trials of ivermectin to treat covid nineteen infection dr andrew hill university of liverpool This was a world health organization sponsored review of ivermectin. Trials indicates eighty-three percent reduction in kobe. Mortality so this is this is out there and this is a problem again. we can't have emergency youth authorization if we we have approved treatments. Australia's only three percent reduction in more. Somebody's got you look at the numbers differently. That's like four hundred thousand. Americans dead supposedly that five hundred five hundred thousand that means we would have saved four hundred thousand lives. If the news media had done its job. The news media is directly responsible for the murder of four hundred thousand innocent americans by their inability to actually report the facts. That's a good point now. We know it's not really four hundred thousand from this but we'll just use their government numbers. Will you know. It's not government numbers. That's johns hopkins numbers just so you know what cnn and cia with austrailia is ahead. Just nicely though. They're not taking any chances on being story to continue injecting human resources as they know community transmission of coronavirus in victoria but another virus. He's doing the rounds. Children obeying hit the worst. These brothers were both diagnosed with. Rsv date coffee reminded me of boycott. Wait he was having an asthma attack. Respiratory since you'll virus or rsv is very common and contagious and causes infections of the respiratory tract. Doctor-designed is bena spiking. Are they similar rhino virus in this common colds. Rsv rhinovirus rsv. Yes coming cold. Yeah blah like the common cold symptoms are similar to those of coronavirus professionals put the recent rise virus and rhinovirus immune systems doctors side. The lengthy look down combined with mosque wearing protected. Most of this from jim's last year the advice is to get vaccinated against the flu. Wear a mask if flu like symptoms are present so the just easing the fluid. Keep wearing your mass. Get another shot. Keep it rolling..

WNYC 93.9 FM
"andrew hill" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"Was it about the book? Maybe this is a large question. But what was it about the book that stuck with you? Well as a parent of twin boys who are 13 now being raised in Harlem, New York City. You know, there's always been for years, a conversation with my boys about what it means to walk on the street. And the awareness one must have. And I don't care where you are. You know whether you're you know, deep in the wild, You know, you have to have an awareness of the environment you live in. You also have to have an awareness of maybe how someone else might be looking at you Whether it's the bear around the corner, whether it's the crab on the rocks by the shore, or there's the policeman at the corner waiting, you know? And sorry, boys, you know, have to figure that out and turn the house. He talks to his son. You know, his son went to the same school. My Children now go to Manhattan Country School. And so China has. He wrote it while his son was attending that school, And he wrote it Also, in a way to say, Wow, my childhood was never this safe, You know, Growing up in Baltimore is we talked about He also knew that his son was experiencing and witnessing something very differently than what kids who grew up in the eighties and nineties saw now is kind of, you know, phones allowed for a kind of documentation of Terror on a daily basis, uploaded around the world to become viral. It's some kind of almost like a commercial. It plays so frequently and so tired as he wants to break that down for his son and So it's the kind of work that you know that that will last beyond generations, because it because it is an open letter. Anything to be asked to put music to them. Well, you know, I got to say, though I've been trained by some of the best musicians in the world from Jackie by our who played with Charles Mingus, Eric Dolphy Andrew Hill, whose groundbreaking records on blue note records really set a standard to being you know my ghost. The father, Thelonious Monk. Oh, Or, you know, move her. Richard Abrams, who starts the ACM, You know in Chicago, these musicians also we're making the music at a time when the country was also at a pivotal breaking point. And what they embedded in the music was always about the struggle as much as it was also about the freedom that the music represented. It was in response to the struggle that existed once they stepped away from the piano out of the studio door back into the quarter, Quote the wild And so the music is always the same space. But the music is always kind of been a folder for folder for a folder for the feelings. You know Nina Simone plants it like that Billie Holiday plants it like the abbey Lincoln. She planted like that and s O. I spend my time in that garden so also feel totally fueled by Kind of activism in the chord structure and activism in the melody and activism for the love of music and all of its complexity that I still think people need to hear whether they understand that or not, but I want you to feel it. Why do you call Thelonious Monk? Your ghost father. Well, you know, I don't know what I was 13. I heard Thelonius Monk and my parents were my parents were listening to the loneliest monk on the record player. And it was like it was more than a light bulb. You know, people talk about like epiphany moments. It was more like it's more like a saw mountain for the first time and thought, Yeah, that's the kind of mountain I just want to lay on this kind of mountain. I want to climb. That mountain was Thelonious Monk, would he represents in black music.

KIRO Radio 97.3 FM
"andrew hill" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM
"Been trying for a long time, and you know, it was very disorganized and nobody seemed of vaccine. So this is wonderful. Similar scenes played out at this vaccination site at six Flags in Maryland could see the vaccine started over there. In Pierce County, Washington, 3500 available vaccine appointments were all taken online within 19 minutes. Former Columbus, Ohio. Police officer Adam Coy accused of fatally shooting Andrew Hill in December appeared in court today accepting your knife feel deeply. I've considered the arguments by both sides. His bond was set at $3 Million How to Blow Zero Temperature Sound. CBS News meteorologist Jeff Farraday, Ellie says it's a reality for parts of the Midwest starting Sunday ranged from around negative 10. In Chicago, too, Maybe 30 below in places like Minneapolis and Northern that we could see a couple of isolated places reach negative. 40, a mother and her two year old daughter are safe after being rescued from New Jersey's Passaic River. They were walking across the frozen ice when they fell through. And Hollywood is remembering an Academy Award winner. There is no doubt Christopher Plummer's most memorable role will always be that of Captain von Trapp. In the sound of music. There would be other roles, though, including beginners, all the money in the world and a beautiful Mind. He won two Emmys to Tony's and one Oscar at the age of 82. Summer, began acting professionally in the 19 fifties and was still working into this year. Just two months ago, Plumber said he would never retire. He never did. Steve Futterman, CBS NEWS, LOS Angeles On Wall Street, the Dow closed up 92 points and NASDAQ up 78. This is CBS News. Presented by Rocket mortgage When you need an expert to help navigate the home loan process, rocket can want to see your loan options. Adjust payments and closing costs online in real time rocket can.

News Talk 1130 WISN
"andrew hill" Discussed on News Talk 1130 WISN
"Dr Pierre Cory from the frontline covert 19 Critical care alliance. Talking about Ivor Mactan. We've talked about this on the program before so now To the ih, the National Institutes for Health, which had previously recommended against doctors using this because of what You've done gathering the data worldwide data multiple countries showing extremely positive results using an old Cheap operative word there. Cheap drug At least. Now. The NIH has updated Their recommendation. So instead of saying they are recommending against the use of Ivor Max in there now, neither recommending for nor against the use. How does this affect doctors? When they see a change? And please tell me it affects them somehow positively? Yes. So I definitely think it does. Although I think it falls short. So, Yeah, Let's review that, Vicky. So you know, when I testified in the Senate, um, you know, asking them to look at the data for ever Mac because it Zraly overwhelming. They were sitting on a recommendation against use outside of a clinical trial and I have to take almost all the doctors We're just not using it. I mean, sir, I certainly know quite quite a number. But that's within my network of doctors who think like me and act like me, but generally across the country doctors. We're not using it hospitals. We're not using it because the N I h had a recommendation against and I just want to point out when I presented to the nth When that panel invited me, myself and Paul Marat to present we gave them a full presentation. Along with the consultant to the World Health Organization is doing similar work is US. I asked them why there was a recommendation against Hiram acting very safe and low cost drug and I'm just going to say the answer was really unsatisfying and incomplete. They did not give me a satisfying answer as to why it was against. So after we present that, as you pointed out last week. Uh, they change the recommendation that no longer recommending against their official recommendation now is that there's insufficient evidence to recommend for or against, so it's a neutral one. And I want to point out to the physicians. Anyone listening that that neutral recommendation is identical to the one for convalescent plasma, which is widely used in almost all academic medical centers in hospital in the country on a neutral recommendation by the NIH, but everybody's using it. As well as monoclonal antibodies, which are also widely used. So I interpret out to say they considered an option, but they're falling short of a full recommendation and I just want to finish by saying Would initial reaction was one of Ah, almost a sense of victory over accomplishment. We were actually quite pleased that the NIH listened and they thought our arguments compelling. But that's that's changed now, but yeah, I actually I will tell you that we are actually quite upset right now. We think that was a historic and tragic, missed opportunity to make a recommendation for a life saving medicine. And and I think I think I think it was tragic. What They did that the fact that they're so cautious and they will not recommend even a week recommendation, given the compelling data that we presented Um, from multiple sources we find somewhat in X, inexplicable and unconscionable. On, but less than I want to say about that is Just just this morning. You know my colleague where we've been collaborating with, so his name is Dr Andrew Hill is from the University of Liverpool, and he's been doing expert consultancy for the World Health Organization and others for for many years, he worked in a valuation of age drugs for the poor developing countries around the world as well as hepatitis C drugs. And he's doing all the work on Ivor Mactan and in his lecture today, which he gave to 1000 people in South Africa word which I also attended. He had the following statement, which he said based on the existing available evidence, which is 18 randomized controlled trials with over 2000 patients. The probability They're finding that impact survival that their conclusion is that it has a significant impact on survival. The probability of that is due to chance is one in 5000 won in 5000. Is the chance that it's not a true statement that it saves lives. Do you understand what I'm saying? I do and I find it's stunning that on less evidence than that we have drug approvals for new drugs that have gone approved drugs that are not nearly as effective and And yet this drug that the likelihood of these positive results being chances next to nothing. Can't get any more than a lukewarm. Well, you know, we'll just not recommend against it. So how long are we gonna wait? We gonna wait for the chance is one in 10,001 in a million, and by the way, what you just said. It's so important Viki we're talking about. They're finding that impacts survival. When you look at some of the other medicines that have been propagated in this pandemic, so rendez, severe Monica antibodies, none of them. Have ever shown a demonstrated impact on survival. It's all about sort of hospital stay or symptoms. They're what we call week end points and so it's really unconscionable. What's going on the cautiousness. It's just unconscious. So you're saying that the other approved or or Lee or neutral? Treatments that are being used are not actually showing improvements in survivability of covert 19. No, nothing, nothing. You sure? But I've perfected does and we're not using it and have been. It pisses me off because we're not using it and it's cheap and I can't actually tell people we're together because I'll get in trouble for doing it. And if you talk about it, you know your your hospital administrators start to get the vapors. You start and start to surround you. You account for everything you do. It's just ridiculous At this point. We're a year into this. So so this is my been my experience. Is that my general recommendation? Is that you take our manuscript. We all several one page summary for doctors who will not read a 20 page manuscript, which summarizes the current data is both on our website, which is www dot f l c c c dot net and I generally recommend that people take it to their doctors and say, Listen this from compelling evidence, and now it's actually even easier because you could say the MH recently changed their recommendation. Two against And with those papers, you can ask your doctor. Would you be willing to prescribe me if you have covert or if you're worried about getting in covert, and I will tell you that up until last week, I would say that's 10% successful. So you have a 10% chance of convincing your doctor very hard commits doctors of stuff that they don't already believe. But that's that's generally my approaches is bring the data to your doctor and have a discussion with them. In her mind for those of you. I know people have done this because I'm a big advocate for you know, having rational conversations with your physician because you know, every now and again. I remember I've got to talk to Dr into Chantix back when I was smoking, and nobody had even heard of the drug. You know, it's so she prescribed it for me. So you know, you never know. Right? So you want to do this? But what is it now? You can say the n I H has backed off its advice against Ivor Mactan. And it is the thing that I think is going on here, and I think that the evidence is now starting to pile up. Is nobody is going to make money on this. I hate to be this cynical, but But I'm cynical enough to think that at this point, it's so obvious. And yet you're still seeing people over the age of 65 with, you know, High numbers of co morbidity is that you know, put them at higher risk. We're not. We're not prophylactically doing anything to help them. Even though here's a cheap drug that won't work that will maybe help your grandmother not get it in the first place. And if she does, it might help your grandma survive till next Christmas. But hell, why? Why would we? You can't make any money. It's like $9 to buy this stuff. Vicky. That's what makes this even more appalling, appalling running out of adjectives, right? The reason. Why is if you look at monoclonal antibodies from that severe on convalescent plasma, the three most commonly used drugs they're all given in the hospital. There's no early at home treatment. There's no early at home treating option. I'm from acting. His aural. It's a pill. It's safe. It's been around since the mid eighties. 3.7 billion doses have been consumed since it was discovered and distributed 3.7 billion doses. It has one of the most unparalleled safety profiles in the.

860AM The Answer
"andrew hill" Discussed on 860AM The Answer
"Hello, my friends. Welcome to the dentist Prager show. Fleming all my time looking up number of deaths in the U. S. 2018 2019 2020. If you put in As the last caller said, and you will deaths us. Well for a year, and you will do it right now. And you will deaths. Us 2019, okay? So the first thing that comes up is fast stats, deaths and mortality. CBC. And I've gotten that like 10 times. It's miss leaving because you put in 2019 and the 2018. Tony He even say annual? He said. Total Okay, fine. I'll put in total. I'm not saying he's wrong. I'm just trying to figure out how to find total deaths. US. 2019 First thing that comes up mortality in the United States 2019. And you have to There's it's not as clear as the previous at all. You have to go. That's an article. It's not about data rather than the data raw, but anyway, it doesn't matter. Finally, I get a number summary in 2019, a total of 2,854,000. Resident deaths were registered in the United States. So one away do next. The obvious the exact same thing. Total deaths us 2020. All right. Let's see what Pat when I get up when I get then Get us a fact. Okay. This is relevant to me. I want to get CBC state. State and national Provisional counts. 2020 12 months. And being number of deaths. That is that inappropriate? No, it doesn't Only go to June. Oh, yeah, well, it only goes to June. Okay, so we don't know that's too It's our case, so I don't get the data fair. Let me get a AP news article anyway, there's there's nothing more that I get from the CBC and least the first page So I'm very obviously I'll be curious to know Also 2018. 2019 was a low here, but I'm not sure. Anyway. Look, if if there were if there were truly 300,000 or so more deaths this year than last year and the year before the year before, and the words that 2019 was not a fluke of love, a low number Then that tells me that cove it has killed a lot of people. I can't think of another reason. Why they would be a lot a lot more. My my bigger question. I have to bigger questions than that. Could we have saved the vast number of lives? Had the medical establishment been honest. Until people About That's the great question. What was the latest study? I'm I've ever met him. Which was reported at the Senate hearings. Yeah, This is the New York Post yesterday. Cheap hair. Lice drug may cut risk of covert 19 deaths by 80%. Study says. Simple treatment for covert 19 could be cheaper than $20. And familiar to most great school nurses. Headlights, Drug headlights drug I've Romek tin Is being explored as a potential treatment for the coronavirus. Following a promising new study that showed an 80% reduction in hospitalized covert 19 patient deaths. Just eight out of 573 patients who received Ivor Mactan passed away. Compared to the 44 individuals out of 510, who died. After being given a placebo. Poor people. Talk about luck in life. Hey, I'll join this test. They give you a placebo? Earlier study of the anti parasitic prescription drug Which cost between 17 and $43 for a course of treatment, according to Good R X. Revealed promising results in April. By removing all viral are any within 48 hours of a single dose. Liverpool University virologist Andrew Hill. Has called the new study transformational. In the search for coronavirus therapy. His findings based on data from over 1400 patients. Were made public in a video posted to YouTube can't believe they allowed it posted. Wonder if it's still up there. In which Hill It's the Liverpool University virologist. Discusses his results in a previously aired live stream. The research currently awaits peer review prior to publishing If we see the same trends observed consistently across more studies. Then this really is going to be a transformational treatments, said Hill. However. Critics have called Hill Study Conclusion premature. Urging further research before declaring Ivor victim of an effective treatment. Now, let me ask you a question. Ladies and gentlemen. Why on God's earth would you not take it? Until there are As you will wait, peer reviewed studies. If you had cancer. And a number of doctors told you We have a drug. And We've tried it, and just eight people died and five times as many died, who took a placebo? Do you take the drug? Do you think your doctor were moron if he said Don't when there were no side effects. I've Romek tin is close to no side effects. As anything other than broccoli. Could give you What doctor would withhold from a covert patient. I've Romek did. Given results that have not yet been peer reviewed, so what? Since it can't hurt? Tell me Tell me what? How does that make sense? Why is my cancer analogy? Not not apt. People are scared and scared and scared. They ruin their Children's lives. They ruin their marriages. They go back on drugs, Some commit suicide, the anxiety levels of skyrocketing but they won't take I ever make them. God, the contempt I have for this decision is it overwhelms me. Then you can't say that's political president never mattered. Never heard the president once mentioned I ever met him. For the left. If the president said, it's good to breathe, they would have something. Would find something flawed and breathing. Critics have called Hill Study Conclusion premature. Urging further research while people die further research don't take it. All we have are observational studies and clinicians, opinion, said University of Sydney professor Andrew MacLachlan. So what do you advise? Professor McLachlan. People not take it if they get coated. What's your advice? Many of the current studies have low numbers of participants week study designs and inconsistent and relatively low I've Romek tin dozing regimes. With. I've remarked infrequently given in combination with other drugs. So what? If it works, it works. I hear the word, professor. I'm so sorry to tell you. I just assume silliness will follow. It's not always the case. Think calm. It's hard for the lay person to know. Well, the words following professor so and so said, or studies say, or, experts say. The rational or.

FT News
John Ruskin's message for our times
"John Ruskin was a towering figure during his lifetime an art critic social reformer and around thinking you had a huge influence on British society the Victorian era after his death he fell out of favor his works went out of print and he was all but forgotten yet much of what he wrote about the nature of work look the importance of protecting the environment is more relevant than ever in the bicentennial year of his birth on joined by Sandra Kemp a curator and director of the Ruskin can. UCLA at Lancaster University we're also joined by Andrew Hill our management editor who has written a book Ruskin Land Looking at John Ruskin legacy today. Sandra Rusty was an extraordinary polymath wasn't he. Could you tell us about the man some of his most notable achievements. Ruskin was one of the leading thinkers of his age. He was an extraordinary talented writer and artist draftsman but he also inspired some of the Great Social Reformers of the twentieth century entry from Gandhi to the the welfare state he was also an early environmentalist and he emphasized on the to protect protect the natural world laying the foundations of the national trust as we know it today recording the built landscape of Venice through photography fee and drawing he was amongst the first to spotlight the ecological danger to the city of Venice and campaign for its protection and perhaps chiefs finally and in my view most importantly of all he was a really compelling educator who connected knowledge to the pulse of everyday life life and the intimacy of personal experience for me. That's what marks ought is. One of the greatest thinkers of all time people seem to know a lot about Rhoskins personal hustle life and had a trouble. I show life Cindy. Is that changing well one of the reasons. I think why people became suspicious. If you like Ruskin was because is an obsession developed almost in the middle of the twentieth century with his personal circumstances he had a failed marriage annulled old incurable impotency with effie gray which came to dominate partly because a number of myths circulated rumor circulated about why the marriage had failed frankly we will never know and he was a very troubled man because of a number of failed emotional relationships including that one and eventually his health broke down he spent the last decade or so more or less reclusively away in the Lake district not speaking or speaking only mono-syllabic -ly to visitors. I think one of the things that's happened in this bicentenary year and which people like Sandra the Ruskin are doing is to bring to the forefront a number of the strikingly modern and relevant ideas that he was producing even through this troubled life and if you like in my view and I'm obviously a fan overall we'll writing the balance and making sure that the best ideas and work of ruskin comes to the fore and is linked very clearly really to some of our very modern preoccupations in a way that he would have recognized as a vital part of what he was doing well. It does sound like you had an awful lot game for him supposed to question as Andrew. Why did he fall out of favor well. He died in one thousand nine hundred and one of the reasons is that he was of two minute some senses of his own success quite a lot of the things that he campaigned for social reform on areas like working hours and conditions education reform even city planning where things that within twenty years of his death had already come about so the campaigning zeal he brought to that had actually had an effect even though towards the end of his life. He was worried that he wasn't being listened to. I think the other key reason why he found out a favor in the early twentieth century was the first World War which clearly leap blasted this chasms through everything that had gone before and lead to a generation that had lost so much that war the younger generation renouncing everything thing that had to do with old victorians which is what he was by the end of his life follow clearly had a much more radical influence so to that extent within within about twenty five years of his death. His influence was beginning to wane and by the nineteen fifties there were even people in Sheffield one of the cities that he we had a vast influence on who didn't know who he was. Let alone what he had actually done