35 Burst results for "Cure Cancer"

Impact Theory with Tom Bilyeu
"cure cancer" Discussed on Impact Theory with Tom Bilyeu
"In the power of this mindset state of being. And again, it could be a moment that you could get out of. One, you lack a meaningful mission. You're not clear on the direction you're heading. And it doesn't mean you need to know how you're going to change the world or cure cancer and you need to know what you're doing for the rest of your life. But you need to know what you're doing right now for this season. If you have no clue what you want to do, at least being clear, I'm going to season of discovery. Okay, cool, then that's your mission. So just being clear of where you're headed, I'm going to season them trying a bunch of stuff. I'm going to see them not trying anything. At least you know what you're doing. And you can get there. So if you lack a meaningful mission, for me, I just think the more clear you can get, the easier it is to get there. So on one sentence, what is that mission for you of this season of life? And we all have seasons and it can change over time. But lacking a meaningful mission, you're going to feel more powerless. You're going to feel stuck. If you're controlled by fear, and if you're crippled by self doubt, you have those things have power over you. So you're more powerless. If you conceal past pains, this is the thing I think was 20,000 books on success and mindset. I don't see a lot of people talking about concealing past pains. And I'm not saying you need to be someone who opens up to the world about the things you've been through. I've done that as an example to try and inspire the men just to do that in their lives. I don't think you need to do that. But if you're with your why do you think it works? Why do you think it works what? Yeah. To stop concealing your past pain. Well, when we conceal our pain, that means we're ashamed of something. We're hiding something. We're afraid that if someone knew this about me, they wouldn't like me except me or love me. And that's one of our biggest fears. So just a weak foundation to build on. Like if someone knew of the shame or pain about me, you know? I'm just curious why. So if somebody's trying to hide that, then I'm not saying you need to do this. You don't have to open up to everyone. But is there shame or pain inside of you? Why to protect ourselves? You know, for me, I didn't talk about being sexual abuse for 25 years because I thought no guy would ever hang out with me. I didn't have friends. I want to be on a sports team. No one would buy a product from me. I thought my life would be over, no girl would be with me. If they knew this about me, it was so much shame and insecurity tied to it. And that caused me to be triggered, defensive, projecting, and working from a wound. As opposed to freedom. And so when I got to the space of being able to talk about a lot of my shames and a lot of my pains and it was a process, it wasn't like all overnight. To my closest friends and family, I felt wow, they actually sent me even knowing the darkest parts of me. Okay, now I can really be myself. I can really be authentic in the world. But if I can't share something, I'm afraid of, then that thing has some type of power over me. That thing is holding me back. It is shrinking me because I'm afraid to speak it into existence of what happened. See me feels it goes back to this idea is it useful or not. So I think people and look, I do battle with my own mind as much as anybody else. But it really is inefficient. And I came up with a rule in my life a long time ago where I would do something wrong and I would feel like I needed to punish myself for it. And what was that useful? No, and that was the thing. And so I made the rule that I will no longer do or believe anything that doesn't move me towards my goal. And the reason that I said that, and it's not me trying to abandon truth or anything, and I can actually define truth in a way that I think people would find useful. I was doing it because as I, I didn't think that I could trust myself to come up with something that made sense, even though I was pursuing truth. So for instance, I would feel like you deserve to be punished for this. And so you ought to punish yourself. And so I would, and it would take all this time and I would feel bad for days, and then I was just like, why I did this? I don't quite understand. This is a me versus me thing. And I get saying, hey, I shouldn't do that anymore because I don't like the way it makes me feel. It's hurting somebody else. Cool. Then stop doing it. But this like days or weeks or endless punishment isn't taking me anywhere. So why am I doing this? Exactly. And so, okay, cool. Kick yourself in the ass as much as you need to make sure you don't do it again, but no more. Yeah, and I think there's a distinction here. It's like, okay, if I commit to doing something 7 days a week and I don't do it for three days in a row, I'm not hurting someone else necessarily if I say I'm going to work out every morning and I miss my workouts. But beating myself up for not doing it is not going to help me either. Especially if it makes me miss my next workout. Exactly. And I was going to make you eat more cookies and candy and be like, ah, I'm a horrible human or whatever it is. That doesn't serve you. But when I'm talking about the past pain stuff is like the stuff that happened in your past, you don't want people to know about you. If you can seal those things, not the things where you beat yourself up, although you could say that too, if that's something you're ashamed of. I'm just trying to figure out if it fits into the same. It seems to me the reason that that is problematic is that it creates emotional suffering in you. Yes. And it puts your mind on busy work, like your mind's just fucking spinning on the saying. Do I go into this business meeting? If they find out, so you've got this exactly. Some amount of your cognitive energy is going into something that doesn't make sense. Wasted. It's

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
What Must Young Boys Be Taught About Manhood? David Azerrad Explains
"Are to write the ship, if we are to restore classic concepts of manhood and masculinity, what do young boys in America in the English speaking world need to be taught? What is on the, what is the non negotiable minimum on the syllabus of what we teach young boys? One thing we have haven't discussed that is a component of manliness is a certain spirit for adventure and risk-taking and daring. So there's the element of duty, but there's a bit of an element of danger. And part of the feminine feminization of society is the safetyism is the risk of this. Yeah, risk averse, the helicopter parents, the snowplow parents. So I think there should be the snow plant parents. No, I heard it is as in America like you clear all the obstacles before the child. So the helicopters you hover or blend them to make sure they're safe. This is no obstacles before them. So I'm embracing that, embracing. So one is, I think there should be more unstructured play and being outdoors and no helmets and scraping your knees and getting lost, then you don't need to call every 5 minutes. But then second, I would have them read stories of adventure. Rollicking adventure. Of explorers. And there is going to be violence in there and, you know, it's fine. I mean, you don't want to raise a brute, it goes without saying, but something that kindles their imagination. You know, when you look at the public square today at the prominent people, one thing that always strikes me is how uninspiring and unmanly the goals they set for themselves are. Like you ask any billionaire, what do you want to do with your money? I want to cure cancer. And look, that's a commendable goal. But it's basically living longer.

The Eric Metaxas Show
Oncologist Stephen Iacoboni Discusses Curing the Uncurable
"Things you just mentioned that I want to I want you to touch on, first of all, you mentioned that going down to Tijuana where you were able to kind of do your own thing, you were able to try things that might work in curing cancer and experiment and so on and so forth. Were you able to bring any of those things that you discovered there back into the states into what you do today? I have been able to. And it's important to understand that as a practicing oncologist, you can't just be like a naturopath and do what you think you want to do. We have different governance. So I had to have data to show that what I was doing was at least non harmful and possibly effective. And so I write in the book several vignettes of patients who had incurable disease who I either put in remission or cured, and only because I believe only because of my protocol. Now, cancer medicine is complicated and you can't just throw things at patients and so I only treat patients in this way in a very select setting where they have failed the standard of care and they want something more. But at least if I were to really do a scientific study, I would need to be at a university where I would have 500 patients to do gather enough data. But my point was that oncology, when the expensive drugs went off patent, they just made more expensive drugs. And oncologists, we walk on thin ice every day. And we give people drugs that could kill them. And so the average oncologist only defense against not going crazy with the job like that is they follow the algorithm. And then no matter what happens, they follow the algorithm. And if you die, you die. Now that sounds very cynical and I don't think oncologists are like that. But the point is, they're very reluctant to deviate from anything. And so yes, I got in a lot of trouble for that. In fact, not what you call serious trouble, but I was ostracized by others who didn't feel that way. And

The Larry Elder Show
Why Does Every Presidential Candidate Promise to Cure Cancer?
"Studio. So here's the deal. June 12th, 2019, headline. Fox News Joe Biden promises to quote cure cancer close quote if elected president. Here's exactly what mister Biden said. That's why I've worked so hard in my career to make sure that I promise you if I'm elected president, you're going to see the single most important thing that changes America, we're going to work on a geo NNA. We're going to cure cancer. June 19, 2019. That's what? A week later. CBS News headline. Trump vows to cure cancer and eradicate aids is he kicks off reelection campaign. Quote, we will push onward with new medical frontiers. We will come up with the cures to many, many problems to many, many diseases, including cancer and others, and we're getting closer all the time. Close quote. January 12, 2016, headline. Obama vows to cure cancer once and for all. Final state of union address. Quote, for the loved ones we've all lost, for the family we can all save. Let's make America the country that cures cancer once and for all end of quote. A lot of you understand that what loss is and when loss occurs, you know that people come up to you and tell you, I understand, if you lose a husband, a wife, a son, a daughter, a family member, and lots of times, if you're like saying, you know, I say, I know how you feel and if they look at them, you know they mean well, but you say you have no idea how I feel. But when it happens to you, you know, that's why I've worked so hard my career to make sure that I promise you, if I'm elect the president, you're going to see the single most important thing that changes in America is we're going to cure cancer. That's another issue. So Trump made the promise, Biden made the promise, Obama made the promise. We could not tell whether or not Hillary Clinton made the promise. It does not appear that she

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Dems Blamed Trump for COVID Deaths but Now Won’t Blame Biden
"I mean we've got now more deaths from kovic. Under joe biden's watched than trump's they wanted to impeach trump over coverted. Isn't it fascinating. Nobody is saying anything about biden's cova death count it's all trump's fault right biden. Said if he got elected president he'd fixed covert we covered would be gone and cure cancer. We'd all be skipping through the field holding hands singing kun-bae by auto each other all would be well. Well all is not well and now we passed a number. I forget what the number is is like three hundred and fifty thousand deaths in twenty twenty one. That's more than the deaths. In twenty twenty from covert glenn greenwald the journalist the kind of rogue journalist or renegade. He tweeted it's fascinating. How trump personally murdered all the people who died of coverted while he was president while biden is held responsible for none of those who died of cova during his presidency to johns hopkins. More americans have died from cove in nineteen this year than from the virus. All twenty twenty. You won't see a single campaign or a a a sandwich board protesting joe biden's cova deaths.

Relevant Podcast
"cure cancer" Discussed on Relevant Podcast
"It's him at a bunch of really wealthy cronies investing in his company that is going to. I don't know pickle them. I i have no idea what we. We talked earlier about. Eco pickled pig. Oh this is gonna work. Listen we talked about the indignities of growing been shape like who wants to be in this body past the expiration date right like. I think there are already falling apart from me. I'm in my mid forties. Like i just feel like me food sleeping from from from sleeping. They hurt in the morning. After inactivity jesse mom eighty bregman. I don't know it it's weird and it's like you hear that he's going to do something in healthcare and it's like oh my gosh. Maybe he's gonna cure cancer or he's going to like give people mental health coverage like no. He's still going to do something do she. He's still just going to do something out of touch and dumb this guy i have. I haven't trusted him since he on ironically wore that oversized indiana jones hat on that space flat on ironically wear. That hat is not trustworthy. Win zones hat really a space cowboy. That's what he was wanting to do. That was very concerning. Look for me. Very concerned has no shame. Like i feel like he should be embarrassed by some of these ideas because it feels like if you gave a ten year old boy like he. A ten year. Old boy won the lottery. And you said what are you gonna do. He would be like. I'm going to go into space. Percents live forever. you know it just. It's so juvenile and embarrassing. I just want one of these rich billionaires to do what the world's really been waiting for too loudly grab the microphone and say today we will find a cure and we will end balmy thumb. I knew for anyone who is suffering from this any literally for your son. One of these billionaires awake epidemic. I jumped genders. I mean it's spreading so prolifically. It's alleged it's this is the delta variants of mommy though man going to the men on this topic though i do want to give a shout out to relevant for doing the ultimate. Jesus you on this one with like. We'll jeff bezos. We already have the gift of eternal life..

Vox's The Weeds
"cure cancer" Discussed on Vox's The Weeds
"Like that that we could be pulling but we really aren't now like that's not a. That's not a live topic. The three point five trillion dollar reconciliation. Bill is like not can make everybody eat more vegetables and yet i mean i think we know that those things have a big impact on people's life expectancy and it's one reason why the trends have become i think so class stratified is that upscale people like not me personally but most of the people i know do a better job i think of taking care of themselves than a lot of people in the united states do now that lake basic exercise is no longer a thing you get from working in the fields but a thing that you have to like have leisure time and disposable income for in many that like makes a certain amount of blunt materials ends way. But i mean also we've had a i mean i. I don't know it's like i guess it was like marjorie taylor. Graham were saying well instead of making ready get covered vaccines. We should have a body lose weight. But that wasn't like a policy initiative on her part she's just like she's across it enthusiast. Personally which actually is like the most probably blue coated thing about her right like her. Constituents are probably much more overweight than the liberal elites that she's against because you know it's like urban areas where people are getting into bike fitness fads and things like that but so we have basically not a policy conversation about something that when you put it that way. It's like everybody's dying like that's sounds really bad but like does anybody the. Does anybody want to open that. Can of worms one thing. I found striking about. This is during the early days of the covert pandemic one of the common response as you heard interlock carrying about kobe. Kobe desk still weren't very high. Is well look at how many people die from heart attacks and cancer each each year and the undertone to that was. We shouldn't care about kobe because so many other people are dying of these other things but like we also don't really seem to care that much about these other things that are killing people even as they were killing hundreds of thousands. And i thought. I've just. I've always found that. Really tell him because. I think we should take cancer and heart attack as extremely seriously and like do something about that from a public health perspective. And i'm not saying we don't do anything at all about that but it's just not like a big public dialogue about public health in general in the same sense that that we do get about like these emergency issues in joe biden cure cancer or something. He did to his moonshot but unfortunately did not cure cancer. So i think we stop some work to do there. I mean i think that the i was actually going to think about that in a different direction. Herman which is where we are now with the kovic pandemic because we're hitting point and this is happening at the same time that a large percentage of vaccinated people are beginning to get really frustrated with the continued duration. And there's a lot of you know moralize anger being taken out on people who aren't vaccinated and one of the kind of tropes that we're seeing coming out of. This is the idea of people who are who need emergency medical care for non cova related things for like emergency surgery for brain tumors or you know they are. They have heart attacks and they need to get you know. They need to get to somewhere with a defibrillator and they are going to need to stay and be monitored for awhile and there. Just aren't the icu. Beds for them. And so that's really triggering. The idea that it's not just about the kind of flatten the curve. Issue that we were talking about early. Twenty twenty where. The idea was unnecessary. Covert infections. that could lead to hospitalization. Should be minimized so that we don't overwhelm hospitals with covert infections. But in fact if we have too many covert infections in hospitals noncovic issues are not going to be dealt properly like that is opening up a much bigger idea that there is no such thing as an individual health decision on a certain level. Because if we're at the point of healthcare rationing any decision than individual makes. That makes them more likely to end up in a hospital bed is going to make it less likely for someone else to get the medical care that they need. Obviously that's like super you know radical over-simplistic way to frame it but we are beginning to see that acknowledgement among people who have been thinking about the cove pandemic in terms of public health last year and a half now that like they're really ease inevitably spillover effect to other people of health choices. That are usually framed as individual. And it's going to be interesting to see how that goes. And i think that one of the other lessons coming out of covert and we're learning right now is that it's kind of hard to do public health policy in a low trust political environment. Like the reason that you know we have all these mandates coming out in this way is partially because like persuasion campaign was impossible at this point when it comes to vaccinations like there's been the persuasion campaign part of that was billions of people dying that was part of the persuasion campaign and yet we still had a lot of people unwilling to take vaccines. And you know we have this mandate and i think it's going to induce a lot of people to decide to go get vaccinated but you also when you when you have things like A mandate for a vaccine killing a lot of people. That's like one thing but with other types of health mandates that you would want to do. Whether it's you know with post neonatal care where want to make sure that parents and their newborn kids are coming in for a checkup or there have some sort of access to information that they're supposed training or whatever it is to introduce post. Neonatal deaths in that kind of thing is much harder to both. Get the money to Require people to do and also to induce people say like this isn't enough an emergency at the government can mandate it. So i think like you know. Even if there's this massive success that we see with the current vaccine mandate it's gonna be really hard to kind of take the sort of energy and other spaces where it feels like less an emergency because even this one it was wildly controversial to say that maybe people should be not in public if they are refusing to get vaccinated or tested once-a-week. Let's take a break. And i want to put it another on the table. Accessible affordable broadband internet helps communities reach their dreams for students like susanna. Chevette means pushing against the constraints of poverty becoming valedictorian of international. High school at langley park. Thanks to access from. At and t. Dreams like these can become a reality. That's right.

ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast
"cure cancer" Discussed on ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast
"I don't think you would have to, either. I mean, I got a lot of money. There's surpluses from places. We could rob a couple a couple narco barons or whatever money. There you go. Any other, I mean, once somebody goes eclectic like that, how are we going to is anybody going to be like celebrated Batman day? Yeah, I can't talk about butts, now. Thank you so much. You're welcome. I mean, I think that's everybody would have went there, though. Yeah, yeah. You know? I would have said, like, cure cancer, too, but I mean, you can't just say. Yeah, exactly. Make it. Exactly. I know a lot of people think you can, you can't. You know, it's nobody's trying. Yeah, it's not like people aren't losing family anymore. Everybody likes to pretend scientists don't exist to have lost family members of the most horrible shit. Half of the scientists who are out there trying to fix it are ones who've lost a family member to something. They don't just magically are like, all right, man, let's do everybody over. I do want to read Zachary says great show guys. Glad to see you back on YouTube. I hated trying to watch you guys on Twitch. Thank you for showing us we weren't worth clicking a link. Just joking. What else do we got? Any other questions? Yeah. This question from Michelle saw this question online and thought adhere, my favorite podcast members answer this. What is your biggest video game lie? Was there a boss you told everyone you beat first time or a level or something darker?.

Golf Gambling Podcast
"cure cancer" Discussed on Golf Gambling Podcast
"Got a gto dj Minus one thirty and zander over answer. I got plus money plus one fifteen. Okay all right. I'll hate that. So so this a preview for a conversation later nails. I might disagree with you. That this thing is really is wide open. But as far as the termine matchups go i think. The books completely overreacted to a bunch of these like there's a lot of plus money guys against guys who. I don't really have a lot of faith to this golf course this week. That are only big favorites over the other guy because they're just starting to head and listen. It's only a handful of strokes between these guys. Were four around. That is deeply so you can overcome. So i said earlier. Like i don't really like can't lay under media the golf courses. You want to go a step further on that it three-term championships or tour championships. He hasn't been better than even par for the tournament. In any of those for real for real. I think his high finishes t twenty and that's without scoring and everything so i don't think he's going to do anything this week. And so i get tony now. Who listen he's not as great as good bermuda meeting either but at least seem do well at he's like before i got an a plus one ninety over can't lay. That's only a two shot deficit. Jon rahm even over can't late too. I think roms gonna run down. pass them. I think of all those guys at the top. I think can't as the one is probably going to sink so i got very plus one zero five over speed. I don't have as much concerned about worry as you to do. But i got a concerns about speed. I think he's gonna pass them. He's only down to beat the start. That's nothing and then i got zander. Plus one thirty five over cam smith. I mean i worry about kansas performance off the tees anders down three to him for the term. It you know how great he is here. I think he can run down pretty. So yeah. that's those my four terminal place. Do they have any goofy ones. Where you could bet like daniel. Berger patrick kelly and can't up and shot loss on a hundred. I mean i'm sure i can fuck it. I mean i that is play. If you don't. I haven't seen anything like that that that would be cool something fun and so. This is finishing position like so the match ups that i said like it's including starting score. Finishing position burns is an underdog about plus one. What is the book snow that we don't fuck it for real. That's right thought too. Because you know me. I'm always like something fishy. They're gonna take my money. Like more calico the chiropractor or something. Did he go to germany. Get his cell spot. He went to what's his name. Brady's guy Alex saw guerrero. If i could fix them right up there you go perfect. Selling his fake cussin' water invoking green juices cure cancer. Great fucking great. Pick the person tire start to brady. All right Ala positional play. The market for position was pretty bad this week..

Black Girl Nerds
"cure cancer" Discussed on Black Girl Nerds
"To be right exactly and you know speaking of good shoes because i think these these kids. They'll good job of this. You guys you got to watch the kids. Because you never know. I'm gonna go. I'm gonna go to trae. I what do we. What are we continue to learn and not too much about him. But he's kind of like he's he's kind of the kid that That i can identify what a little because he can. You know he's right on that line a little bit where he's like. The parents are like okay. He's here and he's doing his homework. He's in school. He's doing this but Trey got another sizable 'cause he hid it from his parents right right and so trey is the firstborn trae is the very reason that ultimate disruptors retired from super villainy. Right she found out she was pregnant. And it's just symbolic to real life go os who have planned right. We wanna do. I wanna travel when by house but you know they get pregnant so plans after put aside. is a very quiet Very quiet very shy. Very strong will on both of his parents And so obviously due to his powers and abilities he's not allowed to fight. He's not allowed. We thought we we spoke on earlier about passions in following our dreams. Train has the ability to heal very fast So obviously Out of fear of them you know their identities being reveal. He's he was taken out of fighting early on. You can't fight. You can't fight in the real leagues can't buy the big leads. And that's what he dreams doing. So he is forced to fight underground and this underground illegal Superhuman fighting league and that kind of has resent each that kind of draws resentment from his parents. He resents his parents for for what he is right. And what i cannot do. And he's twenty one years. He's a grown man. He can't even figure out what he wants to do because his parents have him on this leash on so once he finds out whose parents really used to be. I think that's going to open up another can of problems and then to we're going to move to The but younger son. Who is a super genius. After like who was about to like they definitely gotta have him on a superhero team when you're out Because he's over here inviting suites where you don't have to worry about sugar and diabetes. All this kind of stuff. i was like. That's pretty cool. Yeah touch it will. Touch is eight years old. He is a super genius as a superpower super intelligence he has a combined. I q with a newton einstein and so many others Todd is one of the characters that i'm very afraid of Because i know his And i know what he is What his again. What he's capable of and what he will do He is a lot like his mother Which is very dangerous. He's a lot like his mom And opinionated He's very arrogant. magic being eight. And you know you're the smartest person One of the smartest people on the planet. And you definitely know that the smartest person in the room so there's again there's a chip on his shoulder. His genius is being limited. This is a guy this is. Somebody cure cancer when he was four years old. He can't he can't release that to the public again. It's going to reveal their identities and so that's his resentment towards his ear. It said he can't realize genius can't be actually fully realized. Yeah just how it just so cool like this so imagine like somebody that has accomplished all this and he's like look on already yawn. I ran for and we were we. Were you read a issue if you haven't done done so already. You won't be ready for it. He he's got what he reveals So easy wall is amazon. Right i was gonna say you all again but on the will ever see you. Look at me all over the place here. S all right then. Okay so we're gonna talk about the door here in the in the Family what now. She looks like she just wants to live her best. Cheerleader dan life. But i think there's something else going on here you know you're you're absolutely right like eliya doesn't want she doesn't want these powers she doesn't want to be so secret like this is a girl who's living teenager social media age. She wants to be seen. She wants to be loved. She wants to have normal life. She's out she likes money she likes is she wants to be out here like you said living her best light and she again. She can't do that because they're such shackles on who they are. The kids only know that they have superpowers. Know their parents have powers. they know they have superpowers. And this is in this world alone Power that's not. that's not a secret. The secret is that their parents used to be the villains and so they don't know these things you know they just think they have a strict debt and a strict mom So a leah is one of my favorite. She is a party girl And she is someone who is really She's like her father a lot. Very strong willed But she also has resentment towards her parents because she feels that they won't let her be great And so when the family has to deal all these outside attacks right real threat you know. The real threat is going to be You know coming from within but make no mistake. This is a very strong lack family And so What you won't see is disbandment or divorce or that kind of stuff. They'll work their issues that we all must but at the end of the day the stand strong and the evans job is to protect the levels. Well listen we're not ready for the. I'm just gonna say right now. We're not ready for the eagles. Speaking a witch we gotta talk about Well first of all let me talk about issues three. I wanna go to that first because the cover is dope there's micromax behind the family. They're already looks like a tv show to me. So i'm just like. I love these covers by the way can't wait for issue for can i saw that That a title reveal as well. But i wanna talk to you about The kind of segue here a little bit about a filmmaker noelle Branam let me know if i'm pronouncing wrong you. You're now saying actually right all right so talk about that connection and entering that world because i cannot. I'm like such a fair right now than i wanna remorse and i cannot wait to with. This will look like onscreen. Yes so early on. I knew i've written a lot of comic books. Obviously everybody who writes their comic books would love to see their comic books adapted into the big city. The silver screen. I mean that goes without saying But i knew early on when creating this..

This Week in Startups
"cure cancer" Discussed on This Week in Startups
"Dennis is the head of research at synergy. Jia capital synergy capital He said that tether news is less of a market negative because it is an investigation into executives and alleged practices. He said that that's not as concerning as an investigation of what tether is stable going. I don't exactly understand his analysis there but sure whatever it's all bad news i mean if if you're any objective person looking at this from the outside oh my god what an issue. Oh this is turning out to be i. People are going to look back at this moment in time. Weather tether is on the up and up or not or fouquet's your fraud or just loosey-goosey with the rules or maybe bending rules until they break whatever they're doing over there. This is terrible for the industry. It is a just terrible black. I if you're in the crypto space you should be absolutely ashamed to share the crypto space with tether. You should absolutely get off tether as quick as possible. You should not be associated with something with this much heat on it right. This is like somebody involved in a heist who then goes in buys a cadillac and biza for code. You guys ever see goodfellas where everybody shows up. And they've all spent their money from the big ice at jfk or whatever it was like. That's not what you do. You're bringing heat to the entire space tether is bringing so much heat and scrutiny to this space that you don't want tether on your squad if you're in the crypto space cut them loose these. These guys are going to sink the entire space. Get your dollars out of tether and put them into you know. Cash fiat bitcoin by bitcoin. Sell your bitcoin. Whatever it is. I the last place any dollar should sit is in tether at this point until such time as their audited and then they claim they're going to get audited and it's not going to be years it's going to be months who's doing the audit you know. We're going to play this cat and mouse with them. Like we did with elizabeth homes for a year or two where she is going to go to this conference. She's gonna show up the machine's gonna cure cancer. Everybody's going to know you know with a pinprick. Three hundred different measurements of the blood and she just kept stalling and stalling installing until the whole been collapsed. Is that what's happening here. Feels like it. Maybe it's not but it feels like it and if it feels like it and you don't clean it up you're the problem tether your ceo your cfo and in fact your and your cto. Which i don't think actually have ever seen the commercial paper. I'm gonna go out on a limb here and make a crazy prediction. The cto and the g see the general counsel who were on cnbc. I don't think they know what's going on. I think they might be in an information vacuum. That's why they're going on. Cnbc in public. They have plausible deniability. How can they incriminate themselves. If they go yeah. We have chinese paper. The can say. Well i just knew we had international paper. I never saw the paper. That was the cfo's job and the ceo could say. Well i don't know the cfo. I don't know where the show is. I'm i'm on some island somewhere and that's what. A lot of these crypto people are winding up doing. There's a reason why they're moving to weird jurisdictions and getting out of dodge. I think there's a lot of dirty stuff that went on here. And i think the postmortem on the crypto space is gonna be wild promising technology. Tons of drifters tons of scams. And then the promising technology coming out the other side and changing the world but we're in that middle piece right now where it's just filled with scam. Artists charlatans and weirdos and hopefully this all ends and we can all move forward. if you're in the crypto space distance yourself from tether as my best advice if you own any tethers liquidate them immediately. Get bitcoin get cash by disney..

No Agenda
"cure cancer" Discussed on No Agenda
"We nurik crackpot or nutball or a number of things. But you're not a crack. Well the reason wack is a doctor that you know is a bad doctor. Well the reason that that is used is as we've discussed a couple months ago back when the aloe pass came in and medicine was taken over by the rockefellers and there were trying to cure cancer on long after that they were looking to cure cancer. They were cancer cures. Certainly the one that is still operating in mexico and those were branded by big pharma. I'll just put it that way As quacks so they're just rolling out the same script when you're against big pharma not against medicine or against Certain policy then. You're quack he see so. It's the farm industry who wrote this for him. That's the way i'd deconstructed doesn't interpretation. I just think it pointing it out that derbez fulla shit. But it's interesting that they would do this. This is the congress of the united states bitching about a talk show host. That is really low. End wait for it. I'm referring of course to tucker carlson and laura ingraham been spreading. What i consider to be irresponsible information about vaccines across america about the effort of this nation to deal with them. Here's the reality. We have millions who've died across the world by this vaccine. We may never have an accurate. There's just nothing like it. This is the best one i've ever gotten. Did you hear it. no say it again. Paul this is a switcheroo. Here's the reality. We have millions who've died across the world by this vaccine..

No Agenda
"cure cancer" Discussed on No Agenda
"We nurik crackpot or nutball or a number of things. But you're not a crack. Well the reason wack is a doctor that you know is a bad doctor. Well the reason that that is used is as we've discussed a couple months ago back when the aloe pass came in and medicine was taken over by the rockefellers and there were trying to cure cancer on long after that they were looking to cure cancer. They were cancer cures. Certainly the one that is still operating in mexico and those were branded by big pharma. I'll just put it that way As quacks so they're just rolling out the same script when you're against big pharma not against medicine or against Certain policy then. You're quack he see so. It's the farm industry who wrote this for him. That's the way i'd deconstructed doesn't interpretation. I just think it pointing it out that derbez fulla shit. But it's interesting that they would do this. This is the congress of the united states bitching about a talk show host. That is really low. End wait for it. I'm referring of course to tucker carlson and laura ingraham. They have been spreading. What i consider to be irresponsible information about vaccines across america about the effort of this nation to deal with. Here's the reality. We have millions who've died across the world by this vaccine. We may never have an accurate. There's just nothing like it. This is the best one i've ever gotten. Did you hear it. no say it again. Paul this is a switcheroo. Here's the reality. We have millions who've died across the world by this vaccine..

The Wolf's Den
"cure cancer" Discussed on The Wolf's Den
"You know kind of like what we're talking about earlier like i'm constantly throwing new things that caused me crazy anxiety but i'm doing it on purpose. I'm doing it because i really want to grow this. And so i definitely experiencing every single day but from i would say that healthy aspect of a really pushing this. Is it something that happens on a scale. It's like imagine a scale of one to ten right one would be sort of like this very low level background anxiety which probably almost every person added that when they moved through the world daily basis right and then ten would be this debilitating state where you have a panic attack and you can't function and your russia the hospital right and the question is at what point like so. What are you were all. These people is the n. Game here to try to eliminate anxiety or try to like actually re framing. Make your anxiety work for you. Understand it better so what. What's the what are you trying to accomplish it. Yeah definitely just just equipping people equipping people like with with everything you need to get through the day and so i would say like the biggest thing that that really helped me whenever i was having my disabling anxiety. I had agra phobia where. I couldn't even leave the house for a year and i had a brand new truck and but i couldn't even drive it and so you know one that you know growing up. I wanted to be an actor. So i woke up one day and i said you know today. I'm gonna pretend like. I'm in a movie and i'm going to play the role of somebody who does have anxiety. So i'd walk outside waving to the neighbors. Even though i'm having chest pelvis season. I'm completely dying inside but i was just smiling and waving and act totally normal and they weren't looking at me funny so i was like. Oh maybe they think. I'm okay and i was doing this every single day. Started doing this every day just to try to get through the day. But i didn't realize. I was slowly rewiring my brain to where i was actually be coming that person who was suffering from anxiety and so really trying to teach people how to do. It's almost like fake it till you make it. But and that's what i was trying to do in the beginning but you can actually become that person if you doing enough. Is there a point with anxiety when you notice. So what what is there like. Step one right. Is it like admit to yourself that you have anxiety be okay. It's like a have anxiety step two is to recognize what your triggers are like. Are that that certain triggers for people. Like if i go to displace a put myself in this situation. Work like that for drug addiction is very much about people places and things so if you want to not do drugs or stop. Doing drugs will then. Don't go to the places where you were doing drugs. People doing drugs. Don't hang out with him and don't have things around you. That are drug related right. Is it trailer eighty. Yeah absolutely like my best friend you know. He had a wife he was like. My wife has given me concept panic attacks every day. I was like you gotta get rid of your wife. You gotta get any way. That's a panic attacks anymore. So like an open now. We can't get rid of some things that are causing us panic or so. What do you teach people system like. Okay it's like step one. Recognize that up to why you triggers step three. You said you interrupt. The cycle with things like ice breaks pattern breaks diversion tactics. That's the best thing as you know. You break the pattern and then you find out what causes the good feelings in your life you know. Focus on what's on the other side of anxiety. If i can distract you from your anxiety and get you to focus on. What's on the other side. You know through goals and stuff like that because a lot of times people have anxiety through money issues or like. They're just not where they want to be in life like that. So that's what i really focus on is like what's on the other side. Focus on some goals. And and and start. Chipping away at it. So i guess my point is that like i think not regard like anxiety can work for you. It tells you that maybe things aren't okay. Yes right so like what's the point. There's like this this healthy anxiety which could be motivating on your lazy acid my life. I'm anxious that my life is going to be terrible in three years now. Because i'm not doing anything to improve myself. I don't see any way forward financially. I'm in the same dead end job. I hate going to work in the morning. I don't like the person i'm with. So is it almost like it's like okay. Well then you know fucking do something about it right. Is this the idea that it's an alert kind of like you know your service engine light on your car. you know. it's a little warning like. Hey you got to change something right. So i was taught when i started going to see psychiatrists was oh well known. There's always help you with anxiety right. And the common ones they gave our zanex which is sort of in the middle of an attack. You take zanex or was. The one that i was always told was the best one for anxiety but the problem is is you get addicted to xanax. So what do you think about the use of drugs when it comes things. Yeah i'm so anti pills. And i was on fourteen different medications with the veteran affairs. It started with just one but that one medication. 'cause another symptom which you know. I had to get another medicine. What are they still. I love hearing this. What did they started with. What was the first one i. I don't even know it was. I don't even back for me. As it was paxil at one point serotonin reuptake inhibitor. That was sort of like you don't longer like a little bit more subtle than the big heavy guns were resent acces. Lana was wasn't the other one right. We'll have a lot of slide. And max right absolutely now like i. Just take a multivitamin my anxieties the lowest. It's ever been all right now. That brings us to a whole different subject here which is marijuana. Yes so it's seeming that more research that's being done. The more we accept the fact that marijuana's not the devil. We'd right that it has all these different uses whether it's been chomping very effective with kids with epilepsy. It's i think been shown to have a lot of positive. Fetch of nausea and cans all preventable stopping or say cure cancer anything but it but but now the anxiety now. This is weird because in some regards smoking marijuana can cause anxiety but the right type of marijuana on the right dosage kenyans actually.

Newt's World
"cure cancer" Discussed on Newt's World
"I'm.

Newt's World
"cure cancer" Discussed on Newt's World
"Triggering. Certain kinds of cancers. It's a great question in it. They're very early field in one that there needs to be much more research being done but it is being studied. It's being studied in organisms have much shorter lifespans. Such as in mice even shorter than that roundworms. It's interesting how related we are to all living organisms on this planet. And we've learned a lot from studying roundworms in the literature. We're now knowing some of the pathways that are inducing aging and some of the molecular pathways one of them is called the insulin like growth factor pathway. And it's got different names in different organisms but it essentially is the insulin. Like growth factor. Pathway that one i think is a predominant one but there are many other pathways as well and the question is what can we do about it. What we really have perfected crisper to go in there and change every cell in our body yet. We can't go do that right now but there might be lifestyle things we can do. That will allow us to age lower. So you're saying that diabetes may be a function of aging. I'd like to flip that. Around and say aging may be a function of diabetes. Because it's very clear that people with uncontrolled sugars also age faster and have a lot of the diseases of aged people much faster and what. High sugars do is also trigger this insulin. Like growth factor which is found to be one of the major pathways of aging in these organisms. And so one thing that can be done and much more research needs to be done. But i think controlling once sugar intake and sugar levels will control your insulin. Like growth factor one levels and that may the aging process. I say may because of course we have to do a lot more research but it is something that i personally do. Myself is very careful with my own sugar intake and i watched my sugar levels very closely. And i've been on a low carbohydrate diet now for eight years to try to lower that insulate growth factor one in the insulin levels and people can find that information on our show page at neutral dot com where we'll have a link to your moffitt cancer center website. I really encourage people to look. Because i think every single year. You're gonna be posting more and more breakthroughs and more and more new therapies. And i really appreciate you the kind of schedule you have to keep and the scale of your institution. I really appreciate you taking the time today to share these ideas but thank you room. Item really honored to be on your today. Thank you to my guests. Dr patrick who you can learn more about new medical writers during cancer and the moffitt cancer center on our show page at neutral dot. Com neutral is produced by gingrich sixty and iheart meeting our executive producer. His debbie meyers. Our producer has garnsey slung and our researcher is rachel peterson. The all work for the show was created by steve and special. Thanks to the team at gingrich. Three sixty if you've been enjoying neutral. I hope you'll go to apple podcasts. And both rated five stars and give us a review so others can learn what is all about right now listeners of newsworld consign up for my three free weekly columns a gingrich. Three sixty dot com slash newsletter..

Newt's World
"cure cancer" Discussed on Newt's World
"Hey it's buck sexton. If you feel like a lot of countries gone mad you got vid. Lockdowns all kinds of crazy marxist tyranny from the democrats. You're not alone in fact you've got reinforcements at the ready. Join me every day to be a part of a common sense conversation or we fight the madness of the left speaker truth and bring together like minded people the buck sexton show. You can listen to the buck sexton. Show podcast every weekday on the iheartradio app apple podcasts. Or wherever you get your podcast. I'm jack armstrong. He's joe. Getty were the armstrong and getty show. Are you tired of gulping. Down the lying filth of the mainstream media. Yeah we are too. We try to tell you the truth every single day. Gulping down lying filth. Wow nobody wants to sound dumb. Our goal is to help you not sound dumb. We'll inform you and it'll be fun at the same time you have to choose. Between entertainment and information combine them both the armstrong and getty show armstrong and getty on demand four episodes available every day via the iheartradio app. Or wherever. you download your podcast chance because many years ago when i stepped down speaker a very close friend of mine who you know well senator. Connie mack came to me and said you know what i you only advisory board and watch what's happening and when my name occasionally to things and i was just fascinated with the energy and the drive and the growth and connie himself is an astonishing. Personally his family has a long and tragic history with cancer and when we were balancing the federal budget which required cutting virtually everything and we're balanced it for four straight years for the only time in your lifetime but connie came and said we don't just want to be stupid about this and you literally let a fight to double the size of the national institute of budget while we were balancing the budget by cutting almost everything else. And i think it was one of the major turning points in terms of the sheer volume of research at a time when the knowledge required is amazing and so that relationship between nih. And senator mac in the moffitt center to me has always been historic. And i've been amazed watching them. Officer grow is a kind of youthful eagerness. People are really excited by the work. They're doing in the lives. They're saving. And i think that your role there is a very key part of that and as part of why i wanted to a podcast. Both about what's happening with cancer but also the way this changes institutions. Because you literally now have so much knowledge potentially available takes a totally different model in order to be able to bring it together. One of the questions. I want to ask. You is for people who may be genetically come out of a high risk of cancer. You what do they need to know. What extra step should they take certainly agree with you senator. Mack has done an incredible job through the years all along with you and others to double that budget because everything emanates from science. And the fact that we're here today with his second year in a row of the death rates decreasing. That's extremely exciting. But it's all from science in science funding of which the national cancer institute is a major source of that funding and that's really led to this revolution of stimulating. The body's immune system against cancer was personalizing the therapies to give the right targeted therapies against cancer as well as many prevention methods as well that are out there so we have a long way to go still. There's some cancers that we still need. Far greater therapies for such as pancreatic cancer glioma blast. Oh my cancer that starts in the brain. We really need to improve those therapies by a large margin. But i have hope i really have hope that focusing on prevention focusing on immunotherapy stimulating the bodies immune system and targeted therapies. That we can get there for all the cancers. It's my belief that people should not naturally die of cancer. That's not a natural cause of death in my opinion that we need to really find therapies for each of these kinds of cancers. Now your question about genetic susceptibility. Is you really good one. There's a whole field of genetic counseling for people who have susceptibilities and depending on the exact gene that is in their lineage their molecular tests that can be done for that. We call it the germline. That's the dna that we inherit from our mother and our father. That's called our germline. Dna in if it's specific genes. There are therapeutics even preventative surgeries. So there are some treatments that we can give but also may be. Tell people to be extremely careful. One way or the other whether lifestyle but also preventative therapies. For example there are some gene types where some patients have elected to get their ovaries removed for example if they have a big susceptibility to ovarian cancer and that has been found to be highly effective for those specific patients for that. Counseling can be done by whole team of geneticists insurgents. Did you learn more and more about how to preempt. If you will serve kind of cancer one of the things i've been fascinated with judah santa's at gingrich three sixty has really been working on is the whole notion health span versus life span looking at. How long can we keep you healthy. Not just keep you alive. Somebody said you know the say somebody seventy five seventy five in a nursing home or seventy five tennis court. I wanna see how you think this clause if it does he. Cancer part of the theory behind a houseman focused. Is it so many of our sort of expensive disease of say. Diabetes who get example are actually diseases that are side effects of aging and to the degree you could develop a health span strategy where people were less likely to age. Not that i wouldn't have died but that they'd be healthy. All toward you. Really dramatically change the propensity to get serious and have the kind of chronic conditions are very expensive. And greg ago team with that also apply to some of the cancers that if an affect we could sidestep aging process we would also sidestepped.

Newt's World
"cure cancer" Discussed on Newt's World
"What is the chromatic celebration in our understanding. Gene editing christopher. How much was that. Also giving a whole new set of tools that are enhancing the ability of people to defect focus on planning cancers. It's really interesting and exciting technology. We have twenty thousand dollars each of ourselves have about twenty thousand genes. Each of those genes encode for different protein and some of them are expressed some art. And that's why our cells are all different. What crisper allows us to do is to cut out any one gene that we would like to cut out and so it allows us to really regulate and change the genes. Now that's largely done in the test tube so we used that mostly in laboratory studies with cell therapy for example for taking out immune cells from a patient and then we can change the genes put car receptors in for example to help them recognize cancers. Still we can also eliminate genes. That will stop their ability to kill the cancer. We can do that with crisper. And then we can put those sales back in the body. That's what we're largely using. Crisper four now. There was just a very recent study. Where company claims to have given the crisper agents intravenously and cut out some jeans in the liver directly. Now that wasn't for cancer use it was for a metabolic disorder. But that's very interesting and exciting. Use in vivo. We say but for the most part what we've done and what we're utilizing is trying to change these immune cells in the test tube in the laboratory and then giving those cells back into the body you look at term office system. How many different new therapies are being developed in parallel inside mafia. There are dozens of trials. Probably over one hundred trials being done at any one time at moffitt cancer center and we have many many ways that we're trying address cancers because each cancer needs to be addressed specifically so there are dozens of trials for each kind of cancer since each one needs to be addressed at different way and they largely focused on several ways. One is targeted therapy. Were we personalized and look at the molecular problems with the cancer and give specific drugs and the other is immunotherapy where we look at the cancer. We designed therapies to stimulate the body's immune system to kill the cancer. So those are the two major therapies that are being developed right now we also have a number of studies to try to prevent cancer because i think the prevention of cancer is gonna be a huge area. Probably the most cost effective area that we can do to help decrease the deaths from cancer in the future to move from cancer to the institution. You now lead. I'm curious new york. Md anderson correctly. This is wrong. But i think it was the largest cancer. Tweeting centered world. Yes just an enormous facilities houston. What was the unique opportunity your mind to go to. Iran medical oncology at end the anderson cancer center which is a wonderful place. I was there for seventeen years. And it was the largest medical oncology practice in the world. what attracted me about mafia. And i have been an adviser from offered for eight years and i knew the science was incredible. I felt that as the only nci designated comprehensive cancer center in florida there is huge potential for moffitt to grow into something much larger than it is now and that excited me. It's already a leader and self therapy's and we can bring it to the next level to help to prevent your cancer's for the future as adviser for eight years. I just felt the science was incredible. That was being done there that we wanted to just build it out so that we can translate that great science into therapeutics which the total footprint of people are choosing geographically et cetera. It's in tampa florida. And there's seventy five hundred employees. We treat a total of seventy five thousand distinct patients a year. There we also have recently purchased seven hundred seventy five additional acres in pasco county. We're going to build a lot of research and technology there as well. So we're very excited about.

Newt's World
"cure cancer" Discussed on Newt's World
"Get a digital answer using ai algorithms than other things to help us with these fastly increasingly complicated therapeutics..

Newt's World
"cure cancer" Discussed on Newt's World
"Welcome dr who begs him. I really honored to be on your program today. Country let me start and ask you. What do you specifically antone college and focusing on cancer. Well early on. When i was growing up in at the state of west virginia i had a number of friends and family members. Come down with cancer. There's really no place to treat them in west. Virginia they how had to go to the national cancer institute for therapeutics. So i thought it will really need better treatments for cancer that are more accessible until larger population so that really motivated me to go a cancer research. And then when i started the immune system was just so fascinating to me that your own body could kill cancer cells and so. That's why i started over thirty years ago. Studying the immune system in the immune response against cancer. My impression is from trunking to number your colleagues over. The years including indian ocean of course came out of indiana soon on to be head of the national cancer institute and the head of the food and drug administration remind impressions at the amount of progress. We've made the last thirty to forty. Years is just literally almost beyond imagination. You look back to agree that we really have a momentum in finding ways to defeat cancer. That's much greater than one might expect it. It's really exciting right now. A number of years ago all of my patients would pass away just about. I treat advanced melanoma a disease that starts on the skin spread almost anywhere in the body and most of my patients would pass away within six to twelve months at now over. Half of them are living long. Lives essentially cured with durable survivals largely. Because we've learned to do two things one is out. What the molecular nature of the diseases and give the right medications to cut off their circuitry and to stimulate the body's immune system to allow their immune cells to their cancer so all of this progress has been extremely exciting for the field of cancer research in cancer. Therapeutics was to be releasing a revolution. Because we're moving with the kind of therapies you're describing moving to. It's kind of a personal approach to dealing with cancer. the just dramatically different in applying massive amounts of chemotherapy. Can you describe how this new molecular knowledge enables you to sit down with a particular patient and develop a specific therapy that you think i give them a dramatically better chance of survival absolutely so for that second year row are death rates from cancer in this country are starting to decline s largely because of our ability to stimulate the body's immune system but also because of the personalization of therapeutics that you're talking about for example a lung cancer. When i was starting out thirty years ago we treated all patients with advanced lung cancer with the same chemotherapy combination. Now you have to check the genes in the lung cancer and figure out what exact flavor of lung cancer they have and that will then advise you as to how to treat them and treat them with the right combinations of pills and id medications and so it's extremely exciting right now to personalized therapeutics like that. For example. last week. I saw melanoma patient. I really couldn't decide on what her treatment was. Until i got her tumor biopsy and everything sequenced. So i know exactly what kind of melanoma she had so did actually means byun assessment more time per patient understanding both would their diseases but also with the potential. They haven't signed themselves for coping with the disease. Given the right stimulus a masking. That is a total amateur. I think what we have to do now is understand. Exactly the molecular nature of their cancers because cancers are driven by jeans a cancer comes from our own sales and all a cancer cell is is our normal cells that have gone a little bit nuts and are proliferating dividing in an uncontrolled way and it takes over our organs and so that's driven by the genes in the cancer. That are messed up. We had to figure out which genes are having a problem and that sometimes and sometimes not sometimes if we figure it out it will allow us to give the right combinations of pills and medications that will help turn off that cancer and so for some cancer types. It's been extremely dramatic others. Were still struggling with so far. This which is kinda fascinating is. When i was a kid there were sort of cancers and we kind of knew that there was lung cancer. We knew the to was said breast cancer. Could now you're dealing with an amazing array of things who are collectively called cancers but in fact they each have a different kind of personality and there's just this extraordinary multiplication of our understanding. How many unique ways of being threatened armand is that a fair way to put it back a great way to put it in by now why we used to say it was lung. Cancer started in the lung cancer. That starts with our lung. Cells is now dozens of different diseases. And it's changing all the time the way we diagnosed it the way we treat it same thing with breast cancer as many different diseases. Sarcomas are probably over a hundred different kinds of diseases. We really need to understand it in order to treat it the best way. That's why it is important for patients. I think to come to large comprehensive cancer centers such as moffitt cancer center because we have specialists that can keep up with all of the vast and rapid changes that are happening every day. New drugs being discovered for example. I'm very specialized. I tweet only advanced. Melanoma cases and essentially isn't that what's happening the more advanced examples cancer being one of them but a whole range of disease states where you just literally can't keep track one person couldn't possibly keep track and you're inevitably going to be part of some kind of collective knowledge. Were that has to be both a kind of team. Also kind of platform and it kind of structure of information totally different than say thirty years ago absolutely correct. It's becoming so sub specialized and as specific complicated that large centers like moffitt cancer center that have highly specialized people. We have a lung cancer. Medical oncology team for example that only sees lung cancer because they have to keep up with all of the rapidly changing literature lung cancer. I only see vast villanova as i said until we have a different group for each of these kinds of cancer so it's becoming much much more specialized increasingly were also utilizing digital tool. So i think one day that will also help to scale things that if we can get molecular diagnoses and then we'll.

Newt's World
"cure cancer" Discussed on Newt's World
"The stock market has been booming for the last few years. But everyone knows this can't last forever especially now. The joe biden is proving to be the most radical president history with many stocks trading at very high valuations. Many.

WSJ Tech News Briefing
IBM's Watson Illustrates Why Applying A.I. to Healthcare Is So Hard
"About a decade ago. Ibm rolled out watson. One of the earliest artificial intelligence systems out. There watson was a big deal for ibm. You might remember that even went on and absolutely crushed the human competition it was a milestone in how we think about our relationship to computers and ibm wanted to take that technology and apply it to helping doctors diagnosed and cure cancer. But things didn't exactly happen that way and last week we reported that ibm was exploring a sale of its watson health unit. So what happened. And what does this tell us about the challenges of applying ai to healthcare for answers we turn to our digital science editor daniella hernandez hate mail. Thanks for joining me. Thanks for having me. So whereas watson now and what happened well i mean the struggles at ibm with watson. Been around for a little while. We reported in two thousand eighteen that the technology was really not getting the market share and adoption that it needed to make good on all the investments in all the acquisitions that ibm made in order to make watson a leader in the ai in healthcare field and so three years or so later it signals that you know the technology maybe wasn't working as well as they would have hoped. I think more. Broadly points to the fact that you know just having data or collaborations with leading scientists around the country. That just isn't enough and the reason is you know. Healthcare is complicated. So there's a lot of human issues at stake here. You know people do things differently. Like depending on which hospital you're at louisville depending on which doctor you're you're you're seeing but also the data in healthcare is messy for some of those same reasons you know you might input into a medical chart differently than me and for an i i might as well be two completely different things and so just that standardization of the information is really critical but also really hard and so when ibm started making these huge investments in watson they started buying up all these companies that had a lot of seemingly great data and the data might have been perfect but those data were basically styles from each other. They couldn't talk to each other and they never quite figured out how to meld them together. So they were cohesive data set of product. That really could make good on the promise that they that they saw. Fortunately has never materialized. And of course we should note here. That ibm says that watson has had some successes and that they're still believers in that technology we've been talking about. Ibm's new ceo. Arvind krishna on the show and following. He's been trying to of revitalize this legacy company how the sale of watson health fit into his efforts. Well i think one huge thing that has changed since the birth of watson. If you will is that you've had these other huge not legacy players come into the field. You've got google facebook amazon even microsoft right which you might consider a legacy company but they really rebranded themselves to. They weren't as big when watson. I came on the scene. And so now you've got this against storied legacy company competing with these new players. Who when they started making investments in. Ai were a lot more nimble and so they made investments in what at the time seemed like really experimental ai technology and now looking back like deep mind. Google investing hundreds of millions of dollars in that that technology just basically took over the world and ibm didn't really invest in that technology at the time and now is behind because all the talent is has been sucked into google facebook amazon apple And so they're they're behind.

The Affiliate Guy Daily with Matt McWilliams
How to Prep Podcast Interviews and Maximize Your Titles
"Dumbest question ever so. Yeah they don't answer it like any. It's always this is the greatest deal it's like thinking you know what we're going to have for dinner. The one thing. I started with my interviews. I just had one today where somebody contacted me and of course. Let me introduce you to you. Know bruce smith whatever just making up the name Bruce's cured cancer. He invented sliced bread and probably has the cure for covid in his back pocket. But none of that ties to how like none of that is really what my audience wants to hear. And if they if somebody comes across That like one was about Being more productive. And i was like well. That's not really but maybe in january when we're all with our mike how to be more productive and get organized with your podcast. That might be a subject. So i emailed them. I said would you be interested in doing a a quick pre interview like ten fifteen minutes just to see we're going to connect and and just even if we do a pre interview because i've never met you. I reserve the right to not publish are episode. And if you're cool with that i'd be happy to interview you. And that way in the event somebody just doesn't click or whatever. It's like why i told you. I reserve the right not to publish it. Because i picture myself as a goalie and my audience is behind me and everybody and their brother is trying to hand. You know get there they want to like. Hey that guy's got an audience. Let's get in front of it. And i'm like you know not that i I'm i guess. I am kind of super picky. If it's if it doesn't make me excited to hear about it it's not gonna excite my audience and it only takes a few episodes boring than before they go. I'm tired dave. What's next and then they start searching because whatever one point six million podcast shoes from so on their probably subscribed twenty and so two or three in a row or boring now. They just start ignoring the next when it comes through. You know you flip through there and it shows you. And i and i've i've i've been saying you know. Listen i've been reengaging with the book. Atlas shrugged on listening for the second time will the books you know. Eighty four hours long. We'll so it is. I think it's i think four eighty four hours. It's like a thousand twelve hundred pages and yeah well. I haven't listened to a podcast in forty days. Because i'm close to finishing in so when i go there it shows me in all my new episodes. Let's see the last episode that it last time it downloaded or okay so it was the last time. So we're recording us on november twentieth. The last episode. Where actually have things. Through september twenty third. That's how long it's been since. I refer so when i click on and i'm not going to do it. Now when i click on down to refresh you know my podcasts. I will have three hundred. Four hundred podcast to choose from. People will never make the cut again. I will never listen to their episode again. Because their last one or two that i listened to were were not really like i don't know i just didn't get anything out of some would be looking for the ones where it's like. I can look at that title. And i can look at that person go. That's the one. I want to listen to because i've got limited you know i've got three hundred. I can choose from. But i can only listen to about fifteen which fifteen are going to make the cut. It's probably gonna be like now four or five people and now those are the only four or five. Podcast i listen to until the new episode of hardcore history comes out and then i have to listen to that one and you said the magic word. I'm gonna look at that title. I always tell people. I see people absolutely just like their titles on fire. Because like 'cause if you think about it when you start up a tv something starts playing when you start the radio something starts playing you. Fire a podcast app. Nothing's going on. And when i see that it's you know the bruce smith show episode twenty-seven that does not make me want to click on that. But if it's like you know how to get more done save time earn money whatever it is if it's something how i'm gonna benefit or something that makes me go. Wait what's that. And i see. People waste that all the time. They'll put the they'll spell out the word episode episode twenty seven and i'm like and then it's like episode twenty. It's bruce michaud episode twenty-seven interview with plo. And you go. What's who was. Always paul mccartney but that's

Talking Biotech Podcast
Gene Editing and Recovery from Radiation
"Welcome to the talking biotech podcast. Weekly podcast about agriculture medicine with an emphasis on biotechnology and the good things we can do for people and the planet names kevin volta. I'm a professor and a podcast host. Who cares about science communication mostly around the area of biotechnology. So today we wanted to talk about something interesting. Radiation and radiation has many places in biology. Of course our resistance to it. The problems that can be caused from it as well as its use as a therapeutic agent used to induce genetic variability when we do plant breeding but has some deleterious downsides and they've represented barriers both for remediation of radioactive. Waste as well as if there's issues with the side effects of radiation therapies for cancer. So i was excited to learn about some work. That's happening. The innovative genomics institute out at the university of california berkeley. There's work that's gone. Underway under darpa funding to attempt to use gene editing to solve some of the problems associated with radiation exposure. Mostly in acute radiation sickness. and so. today we're going to talk to dr feodor urnov. He's a professor in molecular and cell biology department at the university of california berkeley as well as the director for translation technology at the innovative genomics institute associated with berkeley. So welcome to the podcast. Dr urnov thank you for having. This is really a pleasure. I was really excited to read about this. Because it seems like such a cool project that's long overdue and i can certainly understand arpaio's interest in this. I tried to frame a little bit of the problem ahead of time. But could you give me a better explanation of. What is the problem with acute radiation sickness. And where do we see it across. The bay from the berkeley campus is one of the best if not the best teaching hospital in america. Ucsf in the chair of radiation oncology. Dr mary fung has told me how frustrating it is to have. Her patients succumb to cancer of the abdomen and of the pelvis. Oh things like pancreatic liver you. Try a variant. Despite the fact that she has a powerful weapon to pure those cure is a big word and the weapon is radiation as you pointed out as all technologies radiation has had a positive side in the negative side the negative side. Of course we think about weapons. We think about radiation disasters such as mobile in in the ussr. Where i went grow was born and raised three mile island Shema but then on the positive side radiation is used to determine how our teeth are doing or our lungs are doing which is particularly timely given. What's happening right now. In our nation and has also a really really powerful medicine to cure cancer. The reason it's not more widely available is what's technically known as dose limiting city and in english. That means you cannot give enough of the cure before it side effects overpower its benefits. So in dr funk's practice the physician. So i'm regurgitating. What i learned from her and other had the honor to collaborate with. She has a patient with a with a major cancer of the abdomen. Or or the pelvic area she can irradiate the tumor and eradicated. The patients do not recover because tissues that are inevitably also effective so the gut and the bone. Marrow where are aquatic stem cells live are irreversibly damaged by the radiation itself. So the patients Die off either lethal diarrhea which cannot be stopped using anything

Hammer and Nigel
Joe and Jill Biden to appear on 'New Year’s Rockin’ Eve'
"A lot of people part of their New Year's Eve tradition is watching what used to be a Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin Eve. Now it's Dick Clark's New Year's Rocking Eve with Ryan Seacrest. Like the Lost change Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim just too many names involved there. But this was just announced. I know you're going to really excited for this. Joe and Jill Biden will be making a very special message of hope, Unity and best wishes on that program this year again, I call BS. You don't believe that we've been dealing hair sniffin vote stealing Joe Biden and a Dr Jill. We're gonna have an uplifting message of hope. Unity and best wishes for 2021. If they've got a teleprompter there, Jill, get through it. If it has to be done live and you notice his wife has to be there. He can't do it alone. He's got to have somebody as his chaperone the whole time. Even if there's a teleprompter there, it's like he's squinting his eyes and I mean his mouth is wide open like it's hard for him, even with a prompter. It's almost like when he's reading it. He doesn't believe what he said He's hearing that information for the very first time. When he reads something off of a prompter. Maybe he's going to talk a little bit more about how this is the year that he By himself is going to cure cancer. Get rid of all the racial riots get rid of the Rhona because you know, Donald Trump had no hands and getting the vaccine out there buying orange man back. Yeah, Biden is gonna come in and take credit for everything that Trump has

Asian Enough
Interview With Kamala Harris
"US Senator. Kamla Harris is an open born Howard educated lawyer legislator former district attorney of San Francisco and Attorney General of California in Twenty Twenty Democratic presidential candidate. She is the daughter of immigrants who met during the civil rights era Berkley Hello Bay area shout out Bay area and her mother's from Indian. Her father's from Jamaica so welcome to Asian enough senator. It's great to be with you so I'm going to take. Take the first question, and we're just GONNA. Jump right into it so in your memoir. You talked about how your mother made. Conscious choices about raising you and your sister is black woman, though with strong and unquestionable connections to Indian culture. How did she do that? Tell us more about that. Well, so I mean it's complicated, and and probably a lot deeper more complex than we have time for, but I'll try You know she arrived in the US. When she was nineteen years old. She was the eldest of my grandparents. Children and you know an Asian cultures that. She wanted to become a scientist. She wanted to cure cancer, so she went to her father as the eldest child, and it set up by WANNA. Go and I study in what is considered to be one of the best schools for science. I WANNA go to UC Berkeley, and Mike Grandfather it now. This is his eldest daughter, and this is in the late nineteen fifties. Said okay. Follow your dreams. He was very progressive. So my mother flew this. When transient ENA national flights were really very rare, and she arrived in Berkeley California alone. And began her studies, and because my grandfather was really an advocate for India's independence, he was really a extraordinary person, and really always fighting for democracy. And Justice and so immediately. Then of course, my mother was naturally attracted to the civil rights movement that was blossoming or occurring in the bay area and Met My father, and so instead of going back to India had been the plan to have you know what would have been an arranged marriage? She met my father and had a love marriage, and that through my sister and me and my mother understood you know she was just conscious of race. She understood what these things meant. And she knew that in America that her daughters would be treated as for better and for worse as black women and black. Black children and she raised us with a sense of pride about who we were who we are, but never with a false choice, right? It was never to the exclusion of of always also being very proud and very active in terms of our Indian culture as well, but she and she understood what America was at the time, and who America is, and and the struggles that people face in America, and so that's that's it in a nutshell. But there were never any false choices you know. We grew up in the black community and learned that you can cook Okra with mustard seeds, or with dry shrimp in and spicy sausages. Did you learn any of those recipes you. Did you keep any of those? You know my will, so I mean? My mother was an extraordinary cook, and as was my grandmother, my aunt, my. Is the. It's the name for your. Your mother's younger sister basically means younger mother, and she thankfully still with us. She and she's a great cook. Indian cooking is very complicated. It's like a lot of Asian cooking. There are a lot of different spices and she was such a good cook, and my aunt is such a good cook so I never really had to learn how to make Indian food, but I have been slowly teaching myself how to do that. But my mother was also. She loved good foods, so she would make. Incredible Italian meals. She would make you know I. Remember US making bows and. Tons I. Remember s making you know. She loved to make barbecue. It was just it was a ECLECTIC, but I think it was just was a very universal I in many ways she loved cultures, and and and she loves to cook.

Skimm'd from The Couch
Jennifer Justice, entertainment exec and founder, The Justice Department
"I loved what you said about figuring out what it is about you. That's different regardless of how you grew up or your circumstances. What was that for you? And when did you start to figure that out? You know it takes a while. You're like there's no in there telling you you're great and you deserve to be here and I would see people reacting me in a different way and it took a long time it took. It took some therapy at took an executive coach really to be like you have these patterns in your life and I started seeing that when I talked and advocated for people all. It was different than other people doing it. I was really doing it from a place of I knew it was the right thing to do. And even though there were financial benefits it wasn't just like being an activist. It was really advocating for people who deserved what I was asking for an almost getting a lot of that. Push back on it. I was like okay. I'm really onto something. Because if they're just GONNA capitulate than obviously wasn't asking for an off and so it kind of drove me and I knew that that thing was that I was really good at advocating and really good at marrying art and commerce. When did you start getting into the world of US editions and entertainers? So I mean even when I was in Seattle I was hanging out in the grunge scene. You know we didn't know the whole world was paying attention even though we all these bands have been signed and not albums out. It's small in comparison to New York and so I just identify with most of them from my background. You know and they weren't college educated. Are I WANNA jump into Jay z? just lay some groundwork hair. Where was Jesse his career? How old was he roughly us about what he just recorded? The hard knock life hadn't come out yet and so she was probably what twenty eight twenty nine and he'd really reasonable doubt volume on and he was about to release hockey. It's right before he becomes a superstar. Yeah what was your first meeting with him. Like I had been a fan of reasonable doubt which when I interviewed at Carol Grade on and they're like how do you even know who he is? You know because it's an amazing at that point as many copies as it has now and then we had to go to a meeting. Def Jam which was a tiny company at the time and I'm met him for the first time walking in so only seen a picture of him and I didn't realize how tall he was and hoskin skinny was. Are you like Mr Carter? It's nice to meet you or like Jay Z. No he liked leans over in the introduces himself. And I always like. Oh I'm your day. What does he yeah? I'm Jay now it's like I'm your new attorneys. Oh you're jj you know. And that's what we're not does he call you. J. J. Yeah J. J. my good friend Jay. He's famous for being an incredible businessman. He is known to be Astute at identifying business opportunities optimizing for them and obviously doing really well and making money. How did you get him to trust you? He knew that I was fighting for him. You know that really cared about what his assets were how he should be treated and I just saw really early on. I mean hip hop wasn't even on you. Know live telecast of the grammys. At the time they didn't even have a billboard chart separate for it and he came out breaking all these records you know he just saw how much you know. I fought for him and cared about making sure. He got what he deserved. I'm just fascinated. What was your lifelike at this point? We're you going out with these guys every day all the time all the time. How does that work? When you're the lawyer going out with them at that would make me like very very anxious. Yeah so I mean look. I listened things. You don't get involved in the entertainment attorney right. So there's no company in the ministry that is open before ten. Am there's no reception. Nobody's answering the phone before ten and then a lot of shows are at night so it just is you know what I mean. And it's just the way that the business works the you know. There are a lot of us running around together all the time they were in it and it was a lot of fun. How old are you roughly at this time? Mid Twenties like a young kid. Yeah but you're US superstar lawyer superstar lawyer. How did you ensure that you were respected as a professional while also socializing with your clients and I'm GonNA assume maybe not the most professional settings board room at night? How did you find that balance? Well I didn't to be honest with you. I was just going along because all the guys were to right and I was like well. You know it's fine everybody else's out and then there was a shift actually and I started to realize that one client in particular not any of them that I've mentioned and he's in a little bit of a different genre Saami outlet at night and was like I don't like my lawyer being out late and I was like okay but I was with your male lawyer and you didn't say anything about that that's when I really started to see because again I didn't have any mentorship so I didn't know that women are treated differently in Business. I didn't know there were glass ceilings and then all of a sudden I was like. Oh there's a double standard and what was your reaction to that at first I was like. Oh my God you're right. This is awful and it was like wait a minute. No this is not cool because I'm in the same room with other male attorneys other managers. Other you know accountants. This is the music industry music. Entertainment Law. We're not curing cancer solving world world. Peace here so it was very eye-opening to me when I think about some of the people that you've worked with even early on whether it's Mark Ronson obviously Jay Z. Back in the day and then you know to what he is today and beyond say specifically talking about those people it's a mix of creatives who have strong business intuition. How do you think through when there is a creative idea that super compelling but the business around it just doesn't necessarily make sense thus the thing it's like the creative and the business half to meet and if they don't then you know whoever it is my clients they have to make the decision? Do they want to fund it? Is this a nonprofit that you partner with a museum you have to do the math and give them all the options? What could really be the outcome? Is it you paying for it? Is it finding philanthropists to pay for it or returning in this into a real business? And that's my job is helping them Mary. Art and

Outcomes Rocket
Edmondo Robinson, Associate Professor of Medicine at Sidney Kimmel Medical College
"We are hyper focused. On on value based care and consumerism and healthcare some super excited for a doctor Robinson's perspectives. In addition to to his previous roles he's also an associate professor of medicine at the Thomas Jefferson University Sidney Kimmel Medical College and he's also a practicing physician so It is truly a privilege to have him as not only a health industry leader but also a practicing physician to talk about some of these trends and healthcare with that at Mondo. I WanNa give you a warm welcome. Thanks for joining us being over me. So what is it that got you inspired to do the work that you do that Robinson and had as you said I'm reading my bio a little bit? I had a few different roles and my inspiration has always been consistent. It's I truly want to make a difference. I knew it seems Corny. But you know it's it's one of the drivers I think there's so much opportunity in healthcare to affecting improve people's lives in one of his. Why continue to practice that one on one interaction where you are truly little hospital so literally? Saving someone's life that is inspiring and then even as I think about digital in the opportunity to improve affect people's health across steeled across a large population continues to inspire me. It's it's the the one on one. Interactions the interactions as well as the N. Equals many interactions To me they inspire me in different ways but at the end of the day. We actually truly helping people in that. That's a good reason to get out of bed morning. Totally agree with you and my head and heart are in the same place. I don't think it's Corny. I think it's a great thing to be moved by. And and so I'm curious. Now you know with the work that you're doing there at the cancer center however you guys adding value to the healthcare ecosystem. What's different and better about what you guys are doing is interesting the goals here at MCI designated Comprehensive Cancer Center or nothing less than curing cancer. It's not a ambiguous. Goal is to Jimmy to the provincial tour of cancer. So you know when you when everyone has is is lockstep with that that focus. It's very refreshing right. You know what your goal is my job on the digital side say how do I leverage digital for that same goal right? So what does that look like? And we all have the same goal I bring in digital so you start thinking about those areas like how do I improve outcomes? How do I use things like machine learning and hey I to improve clinical outcomes of those folks that we that we serve? How do I use digital to drive? Cost drive down cost. We can cure cancer cheaper And make it more accessible thinking about robotic process automation. Those kinds of things improving operations. And how do I do all of that? With an even better experience for patients it had delivered digital to skill that improved experience Across the entire population that we serve. So those are those. That's how we how we approach from a digital perspective the opportunity to contribute to the provision cure cancer. I love it and so as as we wrap our heads around this digital theme. How does that translate into? Say The work that you've done in consumerism. And and and you know. How does that translate to the physician level? That's providing care all the way down to the the patients that you guys are taking care of interesting. I like to. It's great great question. I'd like to start with the patients in and go back or go the other way. And actually you mentioned consumer and so there's different ways of defining who we serve honestly even though I've had the title consumer may not be the most comfortable for me but there needs to be some acknowledgement that there are people who are engaging in health and health behaviors and improving their health. They don't see themselves as patients and so we have to figure out. How do we how do we want? How do we engage with them? And then and then what do we call them? So right now the best definition that they have we have the best kind of description that we have is consumer twice until I hear something better than people as a new people so people have said okay. Let's just people which I did but it's a little it's a little loose um so I think I like consumer healthcare to me feels a little bit better than just. Kinda brought people that being said. Now how do you engage with consumers? Well the way everyone else. Every other extreme these consumer digitally right. That's that's the way you engage with them whether it's online or SMS text or or it's mobile APPS and so we're that's how you engage with people it's not complicated conceptually. It's complicated in execution in so anyone disagrees with the idea that you engage with consumers Digitally that's certainly how you skill. Now there's certainly aspects of what we do in healthcare and other industries as well where you need a physical need a physical component to that so now we start talking about the operation talking about the physicians and so forth. So how do you then convert you know? It's almost clicks to bricks. How do you convert those digital interactions into those physical interactions with necessary? And it's not always necessary and you think about things like virtual care and so now he's saying well. How do we optimize our operations so streamline that we can focus on those physical interactions when necessary into a really good job at that and then? How do we bring everyone along? Who's been a traditional healthcare system for decades right? How do we bring those folks along to this digital age? So that's part of that's part of the work that's the work of digital and if you ignore as a digital person as a as a digital innovator ignore the people part of the operations and the clinical piece you will fail Absolutely must focus on those people. Whether it's the frontline staff back the operations and certainly the clinicians physicians nurses pharmacists and so forth that needs to be a high focus. And so you know there's this title of digital in this time of innovation but at the end of the day is it's about people about people and it's about people love it it's a it's a great call out. And and what do you believe makes what you do and what? The Cancer Center does better than what's available today. There are many opportunities to leverage on digital. You think broadly about how do you leverage digital? We've got some really really talented people that are working in the digital realm. And when I when I called JOE FROM FOR MOFFITT IN. Our team includes the entire. It shop Includes Informatics and includes data in here as well as the war to things that people think about digital in terms of you know virtual care and an absence so forth so think about informatics thinking about the opportunity to refine the way that clinicians interact with the electronic medical record. I mean you can have a whole separate broadcasts. I'm a podcast about the electronic medical record the pros and cons and you'll spend more time on the cons by the way and so that's a whole so. Don't just refining right. So you're familiar with his right. I just. We're finding that in Iran finding that interaction and so that you can actually focus on the people Both who are delivering the chairs for the people who are receiving here in receiving those. Those interactions In so there's that piece there's also you know how you leverage data to optimize outcomes whether it's refining your your interaction so you know you have a list of people who potentially could have some kind of intervention. But you're leveraging data big data in this way to say it but it's really this subset of those people who are truly going to benefit can. That's leveraging use use machine learning and in some cases around around that you can do that as well in imaging as well where you actually have a algorithms that are that are looking at your films in supporting the radiologists in optimizing that outcome in you know so. The operations clinical operations. The wins this is interact with the electronic medical record. And then against the way that patients and consumers engage with the system itself whether it's through Piece of portals which I'm not saying by the way so I think I think about the way we engage much more broadly than that you know everyone starts with Dr Google Right. So so what are you doing around that when you're doing an online search what are you doing around our? Seo Sem and all those kinds of concepts as well that entire package right of digital web going from the interactions with a patient and consumers all the way through the clinical operations and operations all the way through to the to the hardcore kind of big data components data. Tighter action is the value that we bring by leveraging digital to improve the ultimately improve outcomes.

All Things Considered
What it's like to work in a restaurant on Valentine's Day
"Candy flowers and a romantic dinner with your significant other you know what we're talking about Valentine's day but the burden of producing that special night often falls to the restaurant servers valentines they say is one of the craziest nights of the year I call it just factory because it's two by two by two by two it it's very very boring how boring or not Jackie Roberts from the pink door a restaurant in Seattle is ready she says the hype of Valentine's day turns up the pressure on wait staff to try and make a guest evening perfect everyone's taking the holiday which is to say they want to perform way too well and there's not as much spontaneity is we usually have an irregular night and the quest for that perfect night sometimes means the customers give the kitchen staff advice on how to prepare the meal you know you get a lot of allergies a lot of modification if people kind of built their own dishes that turned into well I don't like the after gently let them know that they in fact created the dish on her own it's not something that we need to Brian Regan back of the mockingbird in Nashville says not all customers are so difficult in fact some leave their servers a special sort of tip are definitely seeing cables that are clearly on a date when one of the people leave their number of a server which might tell you have a date but not all surprises are as rewarding as that Reagan back recalls one Valentine's date that went horribly wrong for one of his customers this guy came in early he was very excited all dressed up in a suit flower you'd get a proposed to be on say and would she showed up she had a notebook and it was a list of everything that was wrong with him she sat there for an hour and read it to if your working in the hospitality business on Valentine's day Laura Valente from Tilia in Minneapolis says the trick to getting through the craziness is beyond your game it's a hustling diet put on your running shoes try to look nice and let's go go go and give Mullen from the restaurant circa nineteen eighteen in Newport news Virginia has some words of wisdom for even the most harried server I just say to myself Hey we're not curing cancer here you know we're all we're doing is

Todd Schnitt
Drinking bleach will not cure cancer or autism, FDA warns
"You get ready to drink your delicious glass of belief and apparently you consume on the regular at least enough so that the FDA has to issue an actual statement Pacific Klay acting commissioner Ned Sharpless and a press release was issued and EDS to remind consumers the drinking bleach will not cure cancer or autism which by the way is wrong if you drink enough bleach it will install it will in fact stop the cancer but you'd be dead so there's you know it's got side effects you probably have to mention those are specifically what the dudes talking about is variety of products but things like miracle mineral solution and the mass and quarter of chlorine dioxide protocol and just other other things there's that word that are being pushed out there as alternatives which essentially have the chemical composition of bleach you're drinking bleach and that is what they hope to address because enough of you were drinking bleach then it became a concern now I'm gonna go out on a limb here and I hope you don't know your drinking bleach because if they told you that was bleach you knew it was bleach and yes still consume the bleach then keep drinking because the gene pool needs scrubbed that being said if it's you know scam artist in snake oil salesmen out there I should add that so I I guess what they're hoping to

Howie Carr
Donald Trump Says A Cure For AIDS
"Trump remember bein said he was going to cure cancer yeah and nobody blink twice about it like you didn't see it on anywhere scene or whatever and then last night trump said something about an ace they started putting that story at trump says he's going to cure aids and cancer I'm I didn't find promise that like a month ago and no one cared the things we're doing in our country today there's never been anything like it we will be anything don't make shortly in America during childhood cancer very short

The Afternoon News with Kitty O'Neal
Neil Armstrong, Congressman And Armey discussed on The Afternoon News with Kitty O'Neal
"Commander Neil Armstrong and lunar module pilot buzz Aldrin landed the Apollo lunar module eagle on July twentieth nineteen sixty nine an area congressman Armey Vera has a particular interest in the anniversary and share some thoughts on the events so think about it fifty years ago Apollo eleven took off for the for the man now I'm not gonna say I remembered I was four years old that yeah the excitement what that represents and now we're coming up on the the fiftieth anniversary of the moon landing on Sunday something that is probably one of the most remarkable achievement from throughout human history and something that was an American achievement we oughta celebrated and be proud and they're just soak up what that represents and then also learn from it as we move forward you know it's true it was one of those things where was nonpartisan it with everyone pulling together everyone cheering and and dazzled and inspired by the events that transpired it exactly and that's yeah that's reminder I mention that in our subcommittee hearing today that you know it was both democratic and Republican presidents yeah it was a goal that we set as a national goal and your president Kennedy had no idea how we're gonna complex that goal but we set our minds to it and we did it and that is the best of who we are and it wasn't just the American cheap and it was a achievement for all humankind and yeah let's let's learn from that what's that again yeah try to get that candy spirit back and not just America but back in Congress it is a challenging to get everybody behind one thing these days and remembering this perhaps brings bring some inspiration to people that it can be done it really doesn't yeah there's that challenges that we can all agree upon if we take the politics out of it yeah climate change you know changing weather patterns your property even infrastructure yeah those are all things that yeah we as Democrats and Republicans are set down and say what's one big idea that we want to rally around that would be good for the country that would yeah the NASA program and the Apollo program created so many new jobs and so many new bands invention so we have to find out one big idea and say yeah let's go for it you know maybe that's curing cancer that shouldn't be Republican and democratic and it has the ability of yeah creating a whole bunch of new jobs new industries new companies yeah we ought to do that then I hope yeah either this president and that's not this president yeah the next administration challenges us to to be go beyond who we are and you know finally when you think back I mean fifty years ago and how much technology has changed yet it still seems like an a remarkable achievement doesn't it yeah it absolutely does right I mean it it's still give G. M. goose bumps it was it was remarkable let's do it again congressman Armey they're they're six twenty one traffic

Red Eye Radio
Joe Biden promises to 'cure cancer' if elected president
"Alex, what bite you said yesterday have the audio here again to, to, to play his words as reading the hill dot com in the hill dot com has headline that says, Biden says he wants to cure cancer. It's like no, it's not what he said. No, here's what he actually said. I promise you, if I'm elected president, you're going to see the single most important thing that changes, America's we're going to cure cancer. So there you go. Well, even the Huffington Post came out, liberal publication and said, well. The vice president has to understand that cancer is over. Is over a hundred different diseases. Right. And so the fact that there's going to earth, flick shins. And cancer mutations. And so to say that it's going to be cured. It's not gonna happen. I know the campaigns I guarantee the camp, I would be so surprised that the campaign didn't come out today, and unless you double down on it and say, Nope. We're going to do it. Right. But I have a feeling the campaign will come out and say what he really meant was. Yes. What the former vice president was trying to say was that is a mission? And of course, he knows and he's well aware, and we know that everybody is on that same mission and would like the same thing. But has is that Trump doesn't wanna cure cancel? That's, that's it. Right. That's not his goal. So if you wanna go with that, that's fine. But this is what I'll be doing,

Build A Big Podcast - Marketing Podcast For Podcasters
Podcasting Lessons From A Porn Star
"You put something out there it's out there. And that's important as podcast is for us to keep in mind. A mention this at a speaking engagement that I did last week the topic of taking chances taking chances on stage taking chances with our podcast if you want your podcast to be successful. And if you want to be the type of person that somebody wants to listen to you've got to take chances the risk is it you'll go too far. And sometimes you will go too far. Tara said you can't unring that bell. You're going to say something to alienates listeners alienates sponsors, you may lose sponsors over it. You're gonna see something that hurts your reputation hurts relationships. The one interview that I've had on this podcast has been Dave Jackson hall of fame podcast. Dave Jackson, and we talked about how he said some things there -ffected his relationships woman. He's dating time. She heard his podcast. Oops. Sometimes you go too far with what you say. In your podcast is just you in your recording booth at your desk wherever you record your podcast. You don't think about it going out to people yet? It does. I know that certainly happened to me, and it certainly happened to me in person as well. In fact, there's not a speaking engagement that. I do where I don't make somebody mad. This even applies. You're writing it could be Facebook. It could be your book. There's not a book that I've written. It hasn't made somebody mad sometimes it's them the person reading your stuff listening to your stuff. They don't get it. But sometimes I'm only speak for myself. Sometimes I go over the line. If you want your podcast to be big and really connect with people though, you got no choice you've got to take these chances. Sometimes you're going to go over that line. Anything else is lukewarm. That's lukewarm at best. It's ice cold at worst. It's not gonna connect and irony is because it's not connecting. You're making somebody mad feel like they've wasted their time. I got a friend of mine, Scott. And a couple of languages is about at once a said, what's your secret, man? How'd you learn these languages, and he said this? He said you can't be afraid of making mistakes the people that I've seen that get good at second third fourth languages. They speak them. You can't just think it in your head. You can't go down that rabbit trail of this is how it's going to work out. You gotta let it out of your mouth you to see how it works. Sometimes you're gonna make mistakes. The specially in a second or third language, but it's going to happen to you. With your first language. It's going to happen to you in other ways, I decide man on my radio show and Assad man is. That was a guitarist he played with a sabotage artists when they will go out on tour. He was the guy in the band. They hired in is somehow he was successful. Hayes. Don't make out three words. Don't meek out when you go out for Cilla one stage walkout to the front of the stage. Be bold. When you make a mistake lean into it. Most of the time people will know, and that's true in podcasting. When you say something, maybe it is a mistake. Maybe you didn't mean to say it, and maybe it does isolate people, but some people they're going to be attracted to even more that boldness to me. That's good podcasting. In nutshell, you will have more success in podcasting. When you own your words, even if they're the wrong words own your podcast. I got a final clip from Tera Patrick. We're out and open with what we do. I've always said why do you think I wasn't in mainstream? I have my own production. You know, I'm making my own money. I'm doing what I want to do. I don't wanna do mainstream. I like that's what I'm famous for. I didn't cure cancer. You know what? I mean. I I'm famous for being Tara Patrick. I love that. This is a podcast. I love that. It's not major media. I loved it. I don't have the FCC to worry about. I love that. I could say anything that. I want. But I'm choosing to keep a clean because at the beginning of this episode, no, expletive on this podcast. And that's done on purpose, doc because I don't feel like seeing them sometimes. But because that limitation makes me think about the words that I'm saying, I think limitations can be very powerful when they're there by choice our choice. I don't want somebody else putting them mutations on me. But I think it's good that you can choose not to do something just like you can choose to do something. So great taken podcast about Tara Patrick own podcast podcasting. If you want mainstream success go to radio, it's a much bigger audience. But if you really ready to own your stuff, this is the place for you.

Red Eye Radio
A cure for cancer? Despite one company’s claims, many experts uncertain
"Well, yesterday, we told you that story that was out there where the Israeli scientists said that they believed that they have a cure for cancer all cancers, then a year where they would basically take a biopsy, and they would have the treatment specific to you as an individual, and it would be a couple of weeks treatment, and it would be affordable. And of course, we always are, you know, are healthy skeptics here. And we said we'll wait till we see some kind of response from those in the cancer community. New York posted an article Dr Ben Neill, and he was quoted by number of people yesterday from NYU their cancer center told the post had cancer is multiple diseases. And it is highly unlikely that this company is found to cure for cancer anymore that there is a single cure for infections. You said then more likely this claim is yet another in the long line of spurious irresponsible, and ultimately cruel false promises to cancer patients. He had an an Email, of course, carrying cancer is a goal of everyone who comes to work every day at the cancer center. And if this company does in fact, cure cancer, they will have my congratulations. And thanks Dr Len listened field chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society. We wondered we've figured that they probably wondered and figure though at the same time. They would probably be one of the first organizations to comment on it said in a blog Tuesday that it goes without saying that we all share the aspirational hope that they are correct. Unfortunately, we must be aware that this is far from proven as an effective treatment for people with cancer. Let alone a cure. He said the key to the success of the research is apparently the focus of this experimental treatment approach on several abnormalities in cancer cells at the same time. Limiting the ability of the cancer cell to change its genetic pattern and become resistant to typical treatments. Litchfield noted that the Israeli teams research has apparently not been published in the scientific literature where would be subject to peer review, and that was one of our questions if this group is just beginning clinical trials, they may well have some difficult experiments ahead. It is certainly possible that this approach. May work. However as experience has taught us, so many times the gap from successful mouse experiment to effective beneficial application of exciting laboratory concepts to helping cancer patients at the bedside is in fact, a long and treacherous journey filled with unforeseen and anticipated obstacles right there, you go. Yeah. And what they're what you know. I guess what you're getting at least just after the day after was announced is some of the medical community coming out insane. Prove it, and that's it. I mean, that's that's that's where that that. You know, peer review comes in. And that was my first that was the first red flag for me when that story came across. All right. Where was the rest of the medical community? How is it? If we were that if they were that close how was it? The rest of the medical community wasn't aware of that. And there wasn't some kind of chatter about that. Because there would be. That would be all over. And if you would have been it likely would have been much sooner. Would have been you know, maybe even a few years ago if not longer than this. We believe this technique is going to work one day, and we could see this. Five to move into trials five to ten years down the down the road. Well, not twelve months out. Well, the the the the one thing and you brought up the was there knows which was different case than than this. Because even the you've got these medical professionals use cancer specialist saying, okay, we see we think we see where they're going. Was it the same with well there there was they were scrutinizing. It was you know, the Wall Street Journal that really undid the whole theranos thing. They there was it was the same approach though. It was the same response by the medical community, essentially show show us, you know, show us that this was going to work, and of course, when they got into it. The Wall Street Journal was maligned, of course, by the by the company, you had household names. And prominent people sitting on the board of theranos, and at that point, the founder became, you know, a billionaire at some point she was worth nine billion or something like that. But when the Wall Street Journal broke down. Everything started falling apart. Then you're deal with the drug stores and everything else started falling apart. But the medical community was was basically saying the same thing they're saying here. Yeah, you're going to have to show us. And the problem was is that they actually had people that they were doing blood tests on. Which of course, got false results. Well, I mean, the the concern is if you're a private entity that you're always trying to get private investment. And so you give out as much optimism as possible. If you're doing it if you're trying to do both get know legit investors that may get a return on their investment. And at the same time wanna promoted as being credible, which would help you in both. That's where you need peer review. I would think I I would think along the process. Okay. We've got to step one. Here's what we've done you put that up for peer review, people say, okay? That's a great start. You know, where do you go from here? You know, what what what's the next step while we done this? And we believe the next step would be that. And then you get peer review, stating, you know, from many doctors or many of the best cancer specialist. This looks like they're on the right path. And you move it. You just don't go from nothing to we believe we have a cure for cancer, right right with you don't get to that point of saying, we have a cure for cancer without having something or a large body of evidence of your research that has already been put out to peer review. That's how I would think it would it would suppose to would supposed to go. Yeah. I mean, you had the second in command there at the at the theranos that was essentially fired for questioning their methodology and what they were doing. So that kind of some of that came from you know, internally, and that's how it works. They were claiming that you could do this extensive blood tests dot with a small amount of blood. And and you know, that's that would have been a big deal that would have been revolutionary had it been true. But it's not you can't change, those dynamics. At least the technology's not there right now to to change that. And it never was for for theranos. Not even close, and you know, one day, they'll get to a a cancer cure. I believe I don't know if it's going to be in our lifetime. But when a company is claiming twelve months. Sorry instant red flag. Instant red flag. Yeah. I mean, that's. Oh, somebody said, well, a cassock or said, so twelve years. No, let's go twelve months. No, I bet if you said we believe in five years would be able to have it out. But when you throw out something, and that's when you know you and I when we were even talking about an appreciable meeting before we went on the air. We said. This seems to have everything right everything that you would want from a cure. Much more affordable will be ready in a year. And then we thought even reading the article well. Not really even what they're talking about is by the time, you have trials in might be available in some cases, you know, in a few years, but the even the headline stating that would be available in a year. Well, not really, and then we just said, you know, there's so much, you know, when you start talking about cancer and the different types of cancer, and you know, and and the u mutation of the the the the cells, and and and the tremendous amount of research has been done that you would just think that if you thought it was legit and really legit. You would put a ton of research up of what you were doing for peer review. So when you announced it you had legit. You know, totally you had totally legit backing for investors to come in and make this thing ago, right? Well, global big pharma would have been pouring money into this. I mean, they already are pouring money into a ton of things a research and development on on any given treatment. Or or drug is is massive. It's it's extremely expensive. But something like this. If they were that close certainly would have been a huge target for them. It would it would change the world. And I it's going to be interesting to see the response from the Israeli scientists and from this company over the next couple of days, stating that's one thing that I didn't even see in the article we plan to put all this out to peer review, right, right? Or this will be going out. We're going to be putting it in this medical partners that are working with us. And because that's what you would want. An and we we are bringing. We're we're going to bring in the in the different cancers of the American Cancer Society, we want we want the CDC we want major universities to be checking what we're doing here because we think we now unless they're worried about the patent. Is that the experience that they would get? Sure, we don't want somebody stealing our technology. One. Fortunately, you've got to put it up for peer review. Otherwise, it really doesn't mean much. I remember I can still remember when people the whole thing. People going to Mexico going back twenty five years ago for for lateral. And I can still remember because I was beginning to my talk radio career people. Tell me all your part of the establishment will no I wouldn't do it because it's not there's nothing proven y'all. See your against alternative medicine. Oh, yeah. I guess we with the same thing has been set about you know, when we've criticized the fact that public opinion sh- shouldn't be the leader of same. The pot is medicine. That should come from science strictly come from science. And not from public opinion, which had which it has. And now, you see it every day, you see more articles coming up from the medical community stating look at what was the article the other day was of watt. Forgot who had it. It said look pots not medicine. Stop it. It could alleviate some symptoms. But so can a ton of new drugs that have come out in the last five years, and a lot of people that are promoting the, you know, medical marijuana are ignoring the new chemicals that have been up the last and the new medicines throughout the last five years for nausea pain and everything else. I'll even on the the if you're going to do a homeopathic approach than you. You still have other alternatives. But that's far from calling it medicine, even if it helps with certain symptoms. And and leave that up to science leave that up to the scientific community, which maybe they'll get there again. I mean, if increasing the appetite for cancer patient or an aids patient, absolutely great fine. But again, that's that's far from calling it medicine. From it actually being medicine. So it'll be interesting to see what happens over the next week on this because this is something if you're the company Israeli company you'd want to be promoting this every single day right now. Look, we invite the skeptics to look at our research. Well, we're we're we're gonna we're gonna be post we want peer review on the science behind. You know, what what we're doing here? And why we believe it's going to work. We brought these organizations and we brought the American can we want people to see this because this would be one of the biggest breakthroughs in medicine ever. And we think we're on the right path. That's exactly what I thought. You know, you could see in a in a theranos or any other research company if it would have been about the research. Yeah. This is what we believe. We'll get to a point at some point. With this technology that you can walk into a drugstore and get a comprehensive blood test and not have to give a vial or to a blood in order to get it done. I think you would still have investors on board that say, okay, what first of all show us which direction you're you're headed. And why? But it wasn't about that. It was according to authorities. It was it was fraud.