17 Burst results for "Dr Davidson"

Radio Boston
"dr davidson" Discussed on Radio Boston
"Ninth counselor campbell. Thanks for joining us. Thank you the pfizer by on tech kobe. Nineteen vaccine is official today. It received full approval from the federal government for people ages sixteen and older. It maintains emergency youth use authorization for youth ages. Twelve to fifteen. The fda announcement puts the to dose vaccine on par with other marketed. Vaccines the first such cove in nineteen vaccine to receive this level of approval. So what does that mean for us going forward. Let's turn to dr davidson hamer infectious disease physician at boston medical center a professor of infectious diseases and medicine at boston university school of medicine and a regular contributor with us to ask the doctor dr hamer welcome back to the show. Thank you very much. It's a pleasure to be back. So i really want to kind of dig in dr hamer to what this means. So pfizer's been administered widely already in the us under emergency use authorization. More than two hundred million doses. What does this change mean this change in status and how big of a deal is it. I think honestly it in some ways. It's not that it's very important because there are a lot of people that want to be reassured that the fda has gone through a full formal review process but honestly and that's that's really been happening since the beginning emergency use authorization. There is a very careful detailed review of the face. Three clinical trial data showing how well the vaccine work and and and and safety and then since then we now have literally i think in at least two hundred million doses administered in the united states and then hundreds of millions more worldwide. So a lot of data have been accumulating on both the safety but also the the effectiveness vaccine so but this this is real final official stamp of approval from the fda. And i think that that will be reassuring to to some people that felt uncomfortable with the concept of ood. -mergency use authorization. So why though what is it about making it from authorized for emergency use to officially approved. What is the threshold. And why should that make or or doesn't matter right. Why should that make people who have been reticent because it was quickly developed and wasn't fully approved by the fda why should it make them more comfortable it it means. The fda has gone through a very rigorous review of all available data from immune response to safety to efficacy and and that probably includes data. That have accumulated since the eu a was was originally issued last december and. I think that that that that knowledge that the fda has done this really careful scrutiny. Of of of the vaccine maybe reassuring. The some reality..

Radio Boston
"dr davidson" Discussed on Radio Boston
"To fifteen. The fda announcement puts the to dose vaccine on par with other marketed. Vaccines the first such cove in nineteen vaccine to receive this level of approval. So what does that mean for us going forward. Let's turn to dr davidson hamer infectious disease physician at boston medical center a professor of infectious diseases in medicine at boston university school of medicine and a regular contributor with us to ask the doctor dr hamer welcome back to the show. Thank you very much. It's a pleasure to be back. So i really want to kind of dig in dr hamer to what this means. So pfizer's bend administered widely already in the us under emergency use authorization. More than two hundred million doses. What does this change mean this change in status and how big of a deal is it. I think honestly it in some ways. It's not that it's very important because there are a lot of people that want to be reassured that the fda has gone through a full formal review process but honestly and that's that's really been happening since the beginning emergency use authorization. There is a very careful detailed review of the face. Three trial data showing how well the vaccine worked an and safety and then since then we now have literally i think at least two hundred million doses administered in the united states and then hundreds of millions more worldwide. So a lot of data have been accumulating on both the safety but also the effectiveness the vaccine so But this this is a real final official stamp of approval from the fda. And i think that that will be reassuring to to some people that that felt uncomfortable with the concept of emergency use authorization. So why what is it about. Making it from authorized for emergency use to officially approved. What is the threshold. And why should that make or or doesn't matter right. Why should that make people who have been reticent because it was quickly developed and wasn't fully approved by the fda why should it make them more comfortable. I mean i think it it. Means the fda has gone through a very rigorous review of all available data from immune response to safety to efficacy and and that probably includes data. That have accumulated since the eu a was was originally issued last december. And i think that that that that knowledge that the fda has done this really careful scrutiny of of of the vaccine. Now maybe reassuring. Some reality. i. I've i think many of us have felt very comfortable with that Since last year and they process that pfizer went through no within biotech to have. This approved was a standard series of steps. That are that are done to approve a vaccine and went very quickly partly because there was an urgent public health need but but in addition Because there's a lot of disease circulating their ability to show that it word was Accelerated because it was just there's just so many cases of covert nineteen happening. It was faster to be able to demonstrate how well it worked. So i understand that you are a doctor and not a lawyer and we have done pandemic law on this show in the past but i do want to ask you to prognosticate a little bit now..

Radio Boston
"dr davidson" Discussed on Radio Boston
"They have fought <Speech_Telephony_Male> it off <SpeakerChange> in <Speech_Telephony_Male> a number of days. <Speech_Male> Let's throw that question <Speech_Male> to the ducks bobby <Speech_Male> bobbio. What do you guys think. Vitamin <Speech_Male> c does that offer <Speech_Male> any protection and <Speech_Male> are there any other immunity <Speech_Male> boosting <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> Tips <Speech_Male> you get the folks. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I'll take <Speech_Male> a crack at that. Because i <Speech_Male> do work on micronutrients <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> You know i think <Speech_Male> that you know. Vitamin cs is important. <Speech_Male> For sort of <Speech_Male> a normal <Speech_Male> binney <Speech_Male> normal bodily functions <Speech_Male> it's less <Speech_Male> integral to <Speech_Male> immune function <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> there. There are <Speech_Male> really no <Speech_Male> solid data. <Speech_Male> That i've seen that that <Speech_Male> vitamin c. <Speech_Male> Helps improve <Speech_Male> immune response to <Speech_Male> cove in nineteen. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> And i think <Speech_Male> there's no harm in doing <Speech_Male> it It <Speech_Male> it's water. Soluble vitamin <Speech_Male> excreted. <Speech_Male> Pretty quickly doesn't <Speech_Male> accumulate <Speech_Male> The <Speech_Male> there have <Speech_Male> been studies looking at <Speech_Male> vitamin d. <Speech_Male> And vitamin <Speech_Male> d <Speech_Male> status. You know <Speech_Male> if you're deficient <Speech_Male> vitamin deep. <Speech_Male> That is important <Speech_Male> because it's important <Speech_Male> for normal immune <Speech_Male> function and <Speech_Male> It's <Speech_Male> not clear that that <Speech_Male> it supplementing <Speech_Male> with vitamin <Speech_Male> d improves <Speech_Male> outcomes from the disease. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> But again i think <Speech_Male> having adequate vitamin <Speech_Male> d status is <Speech_Male> important. <Speech_Male> Zinc is another micronutrient <Speech_Male> for which <Speech_Male> there are. <Speech_Male> There's a lot of <Speech_Male> interests because zinc is also <Speech_Male> involved in normal immune <Speech_Male> function and and <Speech_Male> people may become <Speech_Male> zinc deficient if they don't <Speech_Male> have a good diet <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> But again <Speech_Male> studies of that. There <Speech_Male> are some that are ongoing <Speech_Male> and so far <Speech_Male> i'd say <Speech_Male> there's no solid <Speech_Male> evidence that sink <Speech_Male> supplements improve <Speech_Male> outcomes <Speech_Male> but certainly <Speech_Male> you know being <Speech_Male> having a good <Speech_Male> healthy diet. <Speech_Male> Adequate amounts <Speech_Male> of of these. <Speech_Male> Different micronutrients <Speech_Male> is very important <Speech_Male> for normal health <Speech_Male> as well <Speech_Male> immune <Speech_Male> health. That's <Speech_Male> all really great info. <Speech_Male> I do wanna point <Speech_Male> out. Also there's a <Speech_Male> post up on the <Speech_Male> wbz dot org <Speech_Male> homepage <Speech_Male> tips to keep your <Speech_Male> your kids safe from <Speech_Male> the delta varian <Speech_Male> <hes> specifically <Speech_Male> I want to <Speech_Male> ask you before. We go <Speech_Male> about booster <Speech_Male> shots. We're hearing <Speech_Male> kind of this increasing <Speech_Male> rumble. That maybe folks <Speech_Male> will need <Speech_Male> booster shots. <Speech_Male> What are you hearing. do you expect <Speech_Male> that. And <Speech_Male> why would that be <Speech_Male> an important <SpeakerChange> tool. <Silence> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> I want to <Speech_Female> say that <Speech_Female> when it <Speech_Female> comes to giving <Speech_Female> immuno-compromised <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> people <Speech_Female> third shots. <Speech_Female> I don't like to call <Speech_Female> that when a booster shot <Speech_Female> for me. <Speech_Female> That's really the question of <Speech_Female> whether a three <Speech_Female> shot series <Speech_Female> would be beneficial <Speech_Female> to sell them <Speech_Female> with profoundly suppressed <Speech_Female> immune system. I think <Speech_Female> that's a separate question <Speech_Female> which might <Speech_Female> have a different answer <Speech_Female> and an a <Speech_Female> a <Speech_Female> quicker solution here <Speech_Female> When <Speech_Female> it comes to kind of <Speech_Female> the rest of us <Speech_Female> and the possibility <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> that our immunity <Speech_Female> from vaccination <Speech_Female> is waiting <Speech_Female> of course. I'm very <Speech_Female> interested. Because i <Speech_Female> got my first shop. <Speech_Female> The moment vaccine <Speech_Female> arrived in <Speech_Female> massachusetts <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> I have not seen <Speech_Female> any convincing evidence <Speech_Female> to say that we need them <Speech_Female> yet or that will need them <Speech_Female> soon. <hes> <Speech_Female> it that <Speech_Female> decision should not <Speech_Female> be based <Speech_Female> on antibody <Speech_Female> levels that decisions <Speech_Female> should be based <Speech_Female> on whether we're <Speech_Female> seeing severe <Speech_Female> disease in <Speech_Female> people who were vaccinated <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> however <SpeakerChange> many <Speech_Male> months ago <Speech_Male> all right incredibly <Speech_Male> useful information as always <Speech_Male> dr shira <Speech_Male> garrone infectious <Speech_Male> disease physician <Speech_Male> and hospital epidemiologists <Speech_Male> at tufts medical <Speech_Male> center <Speech_Male> and dr davidson <Speech_Male> hamer infectious <Speech_Male> diseases physician <Speech_Male> at boston medical center <Speech_Male> and a professor of <Speech_Male> infectious diseases in <Speech_Male> medicine at the boston <Speech_Male> university school of <Speech_Male> medicine dr <Speech_Male> hamer doctors around. <Speech_Male> Thanks <Speech_Male> so much for the time really appreciate it. Yeah my pleasure. Thank you take care.

Radio Boston
"dr davidson" Discussed on Radio Boston
"And i think the one tricky area or cafeterias and different solutions are being considered for that the other aspect because we believe that a lot of transmission is through aerosol is trying to optimize h fax systems. So there's better. Fresh air being instilled into the systems but also high call the filters Being used as well as portable epa filters as the solution to try and limit potential air aerosol spread in addition to that most universities are going to be testing systematically both e symptomatic in course symptomatic faculty students and staff and that will be done even for people who've been vaccinated because of the the potential all although smaller Risk of breakthrough Smaller than than people have not been vaccinated that as so there are a number of strategies. I think they're going to be intensified. And we'll i think all these measures should serve to keep things under control in the months to come. We're talking with dr davidson hamer. Dr shira garrone. I wanna go right back to the phones here. Christine in acton has a question christine. welcome to the show. What's on your mind. Hi how are you doing well. Of course go right up yeah so my Co worker has a six year old son who recently tested positive for cove it it and They were told that they don't. They're vaccinated themselves but obviously the six year old isn't But they were told that they didn't have to quarantine because they're vaccinated. And i guess the question is You know their re exposing themselves day after day after day to a positive case so it's different than they having a close contact outside of the house with someone you don't live with. Why is the guidance The same for those different situations. It's a great question. Dr doron you wanna take on. Yeah sure So the guidance from the cdc was that vaccinated individuals did not need to quarantine after exposure even after household exposure. Now we do know that. Household exposures are the highest risk and some vaccinated individuals even prior to delta variant or contracting infection. Out the time We were seeing consistently relatively consistently that on average people who developed infection spite of vaccination had lower viral loads and more recently we heard based on a couple of studies but specifically the.

Radio Boston
"dr davidson" Discussed on Radio Boston
"And this is dr anthony foul ci on sunday on. Nbc's meet the press. The vaccines do quite well against delta particularly in protecting you from severe disease but if you give the virus a chance to continue to change your leading to a vulnerability that we might get a worse vary and then that will impact not only the unvaccinated that will impact the vaccinated because then varian could invade the protection of the vaccines. So as we just heard. Before the break. The boston teachers unions now calling for mandated vaccines for teachers and staff in all of boston public schools and on top of that because of the high rate of spread here in the commonwealth. The cdc's now suggesting every county in massachusetts except hampshire county should be masking indoors. It's august twenty twenty. One and i can't even believe we're asking this but are we seeing a fourth wave here. And how many more waves are we potentially looking at to help us. Answer those questions and as many of yours as possible. Let's jump right into another edition of ask. The doctors here with us. Dr davidson hammer infectious diseases physician at boston medical center and a professor of infectious diseases and medicine at boston. University school of medicine dr hammer. Welcome back to radio boston. Thank you very much and also with us is dr shera doron infectious disease physician and hospital epidemiologists at tufts medical center. Dr doron welcome back to you as well back. So you both heard Dr chee at the top there We've been talking about the delta variant for weeks but it does feel like we're learning a little bit more each week about how the virus changes and mutates What do we know better now. What do we understand about some of those changes at this point. Dr meltzer with you okay. Thank you So yeah we. We've been learning a lot very quickly about the delta virus. Although i think there's a lot more to be learned You know one one important thing is that it appears to it's causing more infections. Release more severe infections in people that have not been vaccinated at all There are breakthrough infections the risk with people who have been vaccinated the risk for that is much much lower than than not being than someone who's unvaccinated. But one of the worrisome. Things is in those breakthrough infections. The viral load appears you know the concentration of virus that people are shedding appears to be pretty much as high as somebody who's uninfected or who has been unvaccinated and that that means that that Vaccinated person if they become infected is appears to be capable of transmitting the virus. We don't know how long they can transmit it may not be as long as somebody who's never been vaccinated The good news is that the the people who are getting vaccine breakthrough infections by and large are not developing severe disease requiring hospitalization and that's in distinct contrast to the population. That's that's never been vaccinated. Some parts of the country seeing a lot of younger adults being hospitalized and even children in some cases because of infection with adult of art but but those are predominantly and people that have not been vaccinated. One eight hundred four two three eight two.

A Healthy Bite - ThatOrganicMom
"dr davidson" Discussed on A Healthy Bite - ThatOrganicMom
"Another thing that a lot of people overlook is dancing is so much fun and it's a really good form of exercise even ballroom dancing. You'd be surprised how much your heart rate gets up when you're ballroom dancing and not just because you're dancing with a cute guy but because it's it's hard work to make sure you're doing all those steps right so do an exercise that's fun and it will make it easier to get into being habit something that my gym to does. We go to a fitness center. That's inside of the hospital and you know they have an app and you have to sign up twenty four to forty eight hours in advance. There's a window of time. You can't sign up for a class a week in advance. You have to sign up twenty four to forty eight hours before the class in their certain classes with certain instructors that if you don't show up they will charge your account five dollars for being a no show because they can only fit so many people into especially since kobe only so many people can fit in the class. Than if you sign up and don't show up you not somebody else out of the opportunity to go to that class. So if you don't show up five five bucks so that's an incentive to only after awhile that could add up. I wouldn't ask a another question about it. I think you covered this a lot with like the telomeres and the monaco andrea and all of those things. But how do you feel like forming healthy habits relates to longevity as far as building better health and preventing disease. Yeah we'll anything healthy that you do really needs to be integrated into your routine or else you're never going to do it. So i mean also negative things like smoking is obviously a habit needs to be broken. This actually the quickest way according to dr davidson clear to aid yourself so really getting into the habit of getting a good night's sleep moving your body every day eating the right foods for your body and let's taking cold showers all of these really healthy habits. They all affect aging and the consistency of these choices..

Behind the Bastards
"dr davidson" Discussed on Behind the Bastards
"Just multilevel marketing for abuse in the same very similar models. Now and one of the most things about the work of those illinois investigators that lake ultimately. You could argue. It helped to the school. Because it brought the militia press and they were able to defend themselves. Journalists went to them for state that we're able to make statements near defense and a lot of people decided. Oh says this tough. Love approach works like it's just some week liberals in the illinois state. Don't want it to going. So they got they got money. Yeah and they got to make statements like this to the press and this is dr davidson speaking corrections magazine in nineteen seventy nine about the illinois investigation. What happened was we got some conventional middle-aged mental health workers who saw certain things they did not understand the other thing was that the governor of illinois at the time was a self righteous guy who was trying to make political hay by bringing all the juvenile's back to the state. They were disrupted. They were disrupting things asking kids. Why do you obey now. In the same interview joe ritchie was asked about the illinois team and he claimed it was a raid from the start. They were very unprofessional. They got drunk at one meal and then came back to work. I didn't like that. Ritchie would also claim accurately that three of the kids removed from along by illinois eventually fled back to the alon school. He claimed this was evidence that the program helped those kids. I didn't it was more evidence that when you abuse someone enough. They can't exist outside of the system of abuse that you built for them which is why so. Many kids went to work there as adults. Because you break people in such a way that they can't exist outside of this weird little society you've built in your yeah would be my argument now. This does however bring us to a very valid question. Is there any evidence. That alonzo program worked that nineteen seventy-nine corrections magazine article notes. That at the time it was written alon had only been doing follow up checks on former residents for two years. They claimed that up the five hundred people who've been admitted to allow at that point three hundred and twenty six had been tracked down of these hundreds of these one hundred ninety graduated the program seventy eight percent of these people had stayed out of trouble with the law on that strength along claim that nearly eighty percent of their graduates were eighty percent success rate basically. Now that's a lie based on their own data because they tracked down three hundred twenty six kids right one ninety graduate and they say seventy eight percent of these people stayed out of trouble with the law that makes it a success but one hundred thirty six of them didn't graduate and only twenty six percent of those kids were arrested or jailed again which means dropouts had an identical success rate to graduates basically so number one that makes it seemed like maybe it. It had nothing whether or not you graduate. The alon school didn't have anything to do about your success but corrections magazine and they're right up gave further reasons to doubt that data alon recidivism figures are so low especially given the fact that many of their referrals from state from state agencies or hardcore delinquents that most researchers would find them suspicious perhaps one explanation is that most of the follow up was done by questionnaire without any attempt to confirm the information the former residence supplied through official records of the twelve states who refers children to alon only four have ever done any follow up and that was limited and informal maryland rhode island oregon and vermont surveyed. A total of seventy one former alon residents found that twelve. Seventeen percent of them were in jail. Seventeen were working or in school and forty-two where in the words of one official living marginal lives that included some petty crime frequent unemployment and overuse of alcohol drugs. So that doesn't sound like a great success rate to me it also again. They basing this whole no trouble with the law. They're basing eighty percent of our students went on to have you know law abiding lives based on self reporting from those students rather than actually confirming anything all of their data's bullshit basically. There's no evidence. The school helped any. There's no evidence. The school helped anyone obviously individuals who say it helped me but there's no evidence that like as a population alon students were less likely to commit crimes. Your have drug abuse problems than any other group of kids in a similar. It's almost like it's a total of sadistic shit. Yeah that was intended to do any money just to child. Abuse factory rhode island sent a team of investigators to alon who were horrified to find. That not only did the business. Lack of board of directors. It lacked any oversight mechanism to review tactics or employee behavior. The investigators talked to dr davidson. And we're shocked to find out that he spent no time at the facility and was unable to provide answers about stuff like the ring. They're worth three. Emma psychologists on staff. But we're recent hires who liked dr davidson. Knew nothing about how the school function on a daily basis and some students will claim that like those people were very key were protected from knowing anything about the school they were brought in to do therapy sessions and like you never got to therapy alone. There would always be a student watching you so if you set anything you would get punished so you would only. Yeah exactly they would do this for every visit. You're talking to your parents on the phone. Someone's listening they'll disconnected. If you say anything bad is going on. We'll talk more about that later. Sixty percent of former residents were found to were later found to have been arrested for criminal violations. They noted that this was likely to be a conservative estimate of failure because criminal records did not reflect child abuse neglect mental health institutionalization or a variety of other factors so rhode island finds sixty percent two former alon residents go on to be arrested for something and that more are probably having some sort of issue. It's just wasn't reflected by the criminal justice system because they were beating their own kids right. That's what the state says. None of these investigations did anything to stop joe. Rich your dr davidson for becoming millionaires. Joe in his wife sherry bought a mansion They got all the status symbols of success. A bunch of fancy cars but the wealthier joe gets and the more expansive the alon school becomes the more abusive and deranged. He gets in his own relationship. I'm going to quote from duck in a raincoat again. Here in his marriage. Richie began employing the techniques used it a if his wife annoyed her angered him. She'd be punished. One punishment was embarrassment and humiliation in the presence of other staff members. According to one former staffer he'd shoot her down in a long term to describe the taking of authority away from someone who had misused it by humiliating her at staff meetings or he'd purposely exclude her from decision making instructing people not to tell her something at first we were led to believe that they had perfect marriage former resident recalled but after a while it was apparent to some of us that it was far from it sometimes ritchie would disappear and when cherry called to find him. He wouldn't speak to her once. She was informed that he'd taken a blonde social worker with him to las vegas. Yeah there's a lot to say about like his kind of sexual relationships it doesn't seem like he mostly wanted to fuck. It was just kind of power thing he wanted. These young women around doing what he was saying. Ritchie would insist on forcing attractive female residents of alon- to ask act as babysitters for his children. If sherry complaint he would call her neurotic one of these nannies later admitted to burning their son with a cigarette when sherry complained ricky ritchie told her that the the staff number had changed or the resident had changed and he wasn't being fair to her by not giving her another chance. Oh my god he's aware. Yeah who will so sherry had a number of nervous breakdowns for what she was hospitalized. In nineteen seventy six while she was in recovery. Joe should up to present her with a diamond and sapphire necklace in full view of the nurses in order to like make the nurses. The nurses wouldn't believe anything she'd say about him being abusive. 'cause looking at this necklace. He's the dream i mean. Yeah this looks like the husband of the year. I mean those are chocolate diamonds by jane seymour. Yeah like we're mostly going to focus on the lawn school here and not ritchie's personal life but he's just a comprehensively abusive person right so you know who isn't it comprehensively abusive person unless it's a cook brothers or i don't know volkswagen kind of gas lit all of us with the.

Behind the Bastards
"dr davidson" Discussed on Behind the Bastards
"To quote duck in a raincoat again. They lived on the top floor of the rustic building in naples with residents on the second floor everybody shared the ground level. They seldom had any private time. Never went out to eat or to the movies. Every activities centered around the therapeutic community and making lots of money sheree center husband would often lie awake in bed thinking aloud about how we're going to make their first hundred thousand dollars. Becoming rich was definitely an obsession that seemed to drive. Joe recalled an early staff member at lawn. Money was extremely important to him and when when he was earning ten thousand dollars a year driving an oldsmobile and represented the power to be somebody important who would be accepted by everyone around him and that meant a lot so from beginning his motivation here is to get rich off this not necessarily to determine any new method of actually helping people right right and even if it wasn't toxic at first it seems like he probably felt some kind of momentum beginning with his ability to clifton manipulate. Yeah and when. I knew that it was toxic at first because we don't have a lot of details or early times of the school now from the at the beginning. Most of the money that they made was put right back into the business but it gradually started to make a major profit Because they started drawing in and joe would actually go out and like recruit people to join the facility particularly troubled teens from wealthy families. So they would like joe and dr davidson would go out and talk to rich parents whose kids had light. We're in legal. Trouble had like serious problems with addiction. Like because davidson is a psychiatrist. He knows which rich parents have are able to pay for serious over their kids. And joe will go out and like because joe's good at convincing people of things will convince them to send their kid over to alon and pay twelve hundred dollars a month for treatment in nineteen seventies money. You know that's how So the naples facility relocated to the former potter academy landmark in the town of sabato and another secondary site was site was established in waterford maine so they expand very quickly because going after rich. Kids is good business throughout the mid. One thousand nine hundred seventy s year. Richie expanded his methods from you. Know he started off just kind of ripping off the day top school in senate on to to building something new and this happens gradually. We don't know the exact timeframe in which this occurs but it happens you know in the early years of the facility so initially all the therapy of these group talk sessions based off the game you have. Various forms of labour people are asked like do physical labor outdoors as part of like. They're they're kind of like a punishment and a lot of cases and richie designed lawns culture around a series of work. Crews each members started as a worker was assigned a job in the kitchen. The business office the communications office or on the grounds based on what was considered to be their weakest area. So you get a job doing grunt level labor and what everything your worst at in one thousand nine hundred seventy nine article for corrections magazine. Dr davidson claimed this was quote to teach them to function under adversity. Learn to accept failure now from worker which everyone starts as a worker. You move to ramrod or foreman Which is like full in charge of a small group of workers after that you move up to department head and then up to coordinator. Joe felt that structure and communal living. We're both necessary in order to treat addicts but while he was experimenting with new ways to council drug addiction. He was also experimenting with insurance fraud. So in january of nineteen seventy four. A fire destroyed his academy at tobago. Thankfully no one was there. At the time davidson ritchie were in chicago. Recruiting residents the building's owner told the press that he didn't have much insurance. But richie bragged that the alon school itself was quote adequately ensured due to the extensive remodelling. His residence had done to the building. Now there was no evidence that has residents had remodeled anything because the building had burned down but he was able to successfully argued that this increase the insurance value of the property and he makes a lot of money off of Yes gets conveniently burn. Don't worry about that. i don't worry about the no insurance. You know. Because i'm looking at about probably four six hundred thousand dollars. The remodel work insurance insurance coverage. That's no problem so sherry would later claim that the fire was a turning point for richie and the alon school. They purchased a new permanent location in poland spring maine with seven large buildings. That would each act as separate communities within the increasingly complex society. Joe ricci was building now at this point. I haven't given a lot of detail about what happened at a lawn. Because we don't really know about the early seventies all that much. It seems fair to say that early on there was little to differentiate alon from other programs based off of sin and on day top. They practice the game which tended to be regularly scheduled. Therapy sessions and the idea like so. It seems like they're kind of doing the same thing. Seventy one seventy two seventy three at some point though it starts to change and it changes in part because the lawn is very centralized from the beginning. There's the strict hierarchy these different jobs. Everybody has and you move up or down. If your behavior is bad. That seems to be kind of everything else is spawned from this idea. So one of the first things that joe develops. That's different from. What other facilities has done is he takes the game and he tr- changes in this something different so the game two or three times a week in these other communities everyone sits down to play the game right and that's the way the game works joe. Replaces it with something called general meeting rather than being a regular scheduled part of the week. A general meeting was unpredictable. Instead of being everyone does together. It's often an unpleasant thing that everyone does it together. A general meaning is something. That's done to you. If your behavior is bad. Joe or one of the other supervisors will call the general fucking meeting against you and it's usually done because like joe or a supervisor decides. This person has done something bad so in the game every individual pretty much is going to get called out for some sort of bad behavior right you go around the circle and everybody spend some time getting the shit talk. Basically a general meeting isn't like that only one person is getting yelled at and they're getting yelled at by everybody So just like all right feeding frenzy. Here we go. Yeah the frame. The term that we use for this was get your feelings off right so everyone's called. I was like get your feelings off on him. Like how is he hurt. You basically how is his behavior. His he fucked up at this thing like. How did it affect you negatively. And obviously you can't not say something. I found one recording of audio that is purported to have been recorded secretly during the late. Nineteen nineties of general meeting at lawn. School in the lawn graduates have said some people argue that maybe this was staged but either way they say this is accurate it sounds so here is a general meeting at the alon school. Sadler jake guys who god but.

Behind the Bastards
"dr davidson" Discussed on Behind the Bastards
"Of stocks that sherry had inherited from her grandma so she becomes a partner because of money that his wife has right now the early years earlier. This business are hard. The ritchie's were very poor and by all accounts. Joe was obsessed with getting rich from the beginning. The alon school as they came to call it was about helping people. It was about making joe ritchie a fortune. Still it does seem to have started as i dunno somewhat genuine. It doesn't seem initially been horribly toxic at least within the standards of the industry. And i'm going to quote duck in a raincoat again. They lived on the top floor of the rustic building in naples with residents on the second floor everybody shared the ground level. They seldom had any private time. Never went out to eat or to the movies. Every activities centered around the therapeutic community and making lots of money sheree center husband would often lie awake in bed thinking aloud about how we're going to make their first hundred thousand dollars. Becoming rich was definitely an obsession that seemed to drive. Joe recalled an early staff member at lawn. Money was extremely important to him and when when he was earning ten thousand dollars a year driving an oldsmobile and represented the power to be somebody important who would be accepted by everyone around him and that meant a lot so from beginning his motivation here is to get rich off this not necessarily to determine any new method of actually helping people right right and even if it wasn't toxic at first it seems like he probably felt some kind of momentum beginning with his ability to clifton manipulate. Yeah and when. I knew that it was toxic at first because we don't have a lot of details or early times of the school now from the at the beginning. Most of the money that they made was put right back into the business but it gradually started to make a major profit Because they started drawing in and joe would actually go out and like recruit people to join the facility particularly troubled teens from wealthy families. So they would like joe and dr davidson would go out and talk to rich parents whose kids had light. We're in legal. Trouble had like serious problems with addiction. Like because davidson is a psychiatrist. He knows which rich parents have are able to pay for serious over their kids. And joe will go out and like because joe's good at convincing people of things will convince them to send their kid over to alon and pay twelve hundred dollars a month for treatment in nineteen seventies money. You know that's how So the naples facility relocated to the former potter academy landmark in the town of sabato and another secondary site was site was established in waterford maine so they expand very quickly because going after rich. Kids is good business throughout the mid. One thousand nine hundred seventy s year. Richie expanded his methods from you. Know he started off just kind of ripping off the day top school in senate on to to building something new and this happens gradually. We don't know the exact timeframe in which this occurs but it happens you know in the early years of the facility so initially all the therapy of these group talk sessions based off the game you have. Various forms of labour people are asked like do physical labor outdoors as part of like. They're they're kind of like a punishment and a lot of cases and richie designed lawns culture around a series of work. Crews each members started as a worker was assigned a job in the kitchen. The business office the communications office or on the grounds based on what was considered to be their weakest area. So you get a job doing grunt level labor and what everything your worst at in one thousand nine hundred seventy nine article for corrections magazine. Dr davidson claimed this was quote to teach them to function under adversity. Learn to accept failure now from worker which everyone starts as a worker. You move to ramrod or foreman Which is like full in charge of a small group of workers after that you move up to department head and then up to coordinator. Joe felt that structure and communal living. We're both necessary in order to treat addicts but while he was experimenting with new ways to council drug addiction. He was also experimenting with insurance fraud. So in january of nineteen seventy four. A fire destroyed his academy at tobago. Thankfully no one was there. At the time davidson ritchie were in chicago. Recruiting residents the building's owner told the press that he didn't have much insurance. But richie bragged that the alon school itself was quote adequately ensured due to the extensive remodelling. His residence had done to the building. Now there was no evidence that has residents had remodeled anything because the building had burned down but he was able to successfully argued that this increase the insurance value of the property and he makes a lot of money off of Yes gets conveniently burn. Don't worry about that. i don't worry about the no insurance. You know. Because i'm looking at about probably four six hundred thousand dollars. The remodel work insurance insurance coverage. That's no problem so sherry would later claim that the fire was a turning point for richie and the alon school. They purchased a new permanent location in poland spring maine with seven large buildings. That would each act as separate communities within the increasingly complex society. Joe ricci was building now at this point. I haven't given a lot of detail about what happened at a lawn. Because we don't really know about the early seventies all that much. It seems fair to say that early on there was little to differentiate alon from other programs based off of sin and on day top. They practice the game which tended to be regularly scheduled. Therapy sessions and the idea like so. It seems like they're kind of doing the same thing. Seventy one seventy two seventy three at some point though it starts to change and it changes in part because the lawn is very centralized from the beginning. There's the strict hierarchy these different jobs. Everybody has and you move up or down. If your behavior is bad. That seems to be kind of everything else is spawned from this idea. So one of the first things that joe develops. That's different from. What other facilities has done is he takes the game and he tr- changes in this something different so the game two or three times a week in these other communities everyone sits down to play the game right and that's the way the game works joe. Replaces it with something called general meeting rather than being a regular scheduled part of the week. A general meeting was unpredictable. Instead of being everyone does together. It's often an unpleasant thing that everyone does it together. A general meaning is something. That's done to you. If your behavior is bad. Joe or one of the other supervisors will call the general fucking meeting against you and it's usually done because like joe or a supervisor decides. This person has done something bad so in the game every individual pretty much is going to get called out for some sort of bad behavior right you go around the circle and everybody spend some time getting the shit talk. Basically a general meeting isn't like that only one person is getting yelled at and they're getting yelled at by everybody So just like all right feeding frenzy. Here we go. Yeah the frame. The term that we use for this was get your feelings off right so everyone's called. I was like get your feelings off on him. Like how is he hurt. You basically how is his behavior. His he fucked up at this thing like. How did it affect you negatively. And obviously you can't not say something. I found one recording of audio that is purported to have been recorded secretly during the late. Nineteen nineties of general meeting at lawn. School in the lawn graduates have said some people argue that maybe this was staged but either way they say this is accurate it sounds so here is a general meeting at the alon school. Sadler jake guys who god but.

Behind the Bastards
"dr davidson" Discussed on Behind the Bastards
"Important to him and when when he was earning ten thousand dollars a year driving an oldsmobile and represented the power to be somebody important who would be accepted by everyone around him and that meant a lot so from beginning his motivation here is to get rich off this not necessarily to determine any new method of actually helping people right right and even if it wasn't toxic at first it seems like he probably felt some kind of momentum beginning with his ability to clifton manipulate. Yeah and when. I knew that it was toxic at first because we don't have a lot of details or early times of the school now from the at the beginning. Most of the money that they made was put right back into the business but it gradually started to make a major profit Because they started drawing in and joe would actually go out and like recruit people to join the facility particularly troubled teens from wealthy families. So they would like joe and dr davidson would go out and talk to rich parents whose kids had light. We're in legal. Trouble had like serious problems with addiction. Like because davidson is a psychiatrist. He knows which rich parents have are able to pay for serious over their kids. And joe will go out and like because joe's good at convincing people of things will convince them to send their kid over to alon and pay twelve hundred dollars a month for treatment in nineteen seventies money. You know that's how So the naples facility relocated to the former potter academy landmark in the town of sabato and another secondary site was site was established in waterford maine so they expand very quickly because going after rich. Kids is good business throughout the mid. One thousand nine hundred seventy s year. Richie expanded his methods from you. Know he started off just kind of ripping off the day top school in senate on to to building something new and this happens gradually. We don't know the exact timeframe in which this occurs but it happens you know in the early years of the facility so initially all the therapy of these group talk sessions based off the game you have. Various forms of labour people are asked like do physical labor outdoors as part of like. They're they're kind of like a punishment and a lot of cases and richie designed lawns culture around a series of work. Crews each members started as a worker was assigned a job in the kitchen. The business office the communications office or on the grounds based on what was considered to be their weakest area. So you get a job doing grunt level labor and what everything your worst at in one thousand nine hundred seventy nine article for corrections magazine. Dr davidson claimed this was quote to teach them to function under adversity. Learn to accept failure now from worker which everyone starts as a worker. You move to ramrod or foreman Which is like full in charge of a small group of workers after that you move up to department head and then up to coordinator. Joe felt that structure and communal living. We're both necessary in order to treat addicts but while he was experimenting with new ways to council drug addiction. He was also experimenting with insurance fraud. So in january of nineteen seventy four. A fire destroyed his academy at tobago. Thankfully no one was there. At the time davidson ritchie were in chicago. Recruiting residents the building's owner told the press that he didn't have much insurance. But richie bragged that the alon school itself was quote adequately ensured due to the extensive remodelling. His residence had done to the building. Now there was no evidence that has residents had remodeled anything because the building had burned down but he was able to successfully argued that this increase the insurance value of the property and he makes a lot of money off of Yes gets conveniently burn. Don't worry about that. i don't worry about the no insurance. You know. Because i'm looking at about probably four six hundred thousand dollars. The remodel work insurance insurance coverage. That's no problem so sherry would later claim that the fire was a turning point for richie and the alon school. They purchased a new permanent location in poland spring maine with seven large buildings. That would each act as separate communities within the increasingly complex society. Joe ricci was building now at this point. I haven't given a lot of detail about what happened at a lawn. Because we don't really know about the early seventies all that much. It seems fair to say that early on there was little to differentiate alon from other programs based off of sin and on day top. They practice the game which tended to be regularly scheduled. Therapy sessions and the idea like so. It seems like they're kind of doing the same thing. Seventy one seventy two seventy three at some point though it starts to change and it changes in part because the lawn is very centralized from the beginning. There's the strict hierarchy these different jobs. Everybody has and you move up or down. If your behavior is bad. That seems to be kind of everything else is spawned from this idea. So one of the first things that joe develops. That's different from. What other facilities has done is he takes the game and he tr- changes in this something different so the game two or three times a week in these other communities everyone sits down to play the game right and that's the way the game works joe. Replaces it with something called general meeting rather than being a regular scheduled part of the week. A general meeting was unpredictable. Instead of being everyone does together. It's often an unpleasant thing that everyone does it together. A general meaning is something. That's done to you. If your behavior is bad. Joe or one of the other supervisors will call the general fucking meeting against you and it's usually done because like joe or a supervisor decides. This person has done something bad so in the game every individual pretty much is going to get called out for some sort of bad behavior right you go around the circle and everybody spend some time getting the shit talk. Basically a general meeting isn't like that only one person is getting yelled at and they're getting yelled at by everybody So just like all right feeding frenzy. Here we go. Yeah the frame. The term that we use for this was get your feelings off right so everyone's called. I was like get your feelings off on him. Like how is he hurt. You basically how is his behavior. His he fucked up at this thing like. How did it affect you negatively. And obviously you can't not say something. I found one recording of audio that is purported to have been recorded secretly during the late. Nineteen nineties of general meeting at lawn. School in the lawn graduates have said some people argue that maybe this was staged but either way they say this is accurate it sounds so here is a general meeting at the alon school. Sadler jake guys who god but.

Behind the Bastards
"dr davidson" Discussed on Behind the Bastards
"Good at raising money. Right right yeah well guy and now at the time like right around when he runs away from day top he starts dating a woman named sherry in new york now sherry was working at a travel agency and she fell for joe in part because she was that her parents were alcoholics and he understood the issue she faced as a child about on the understands abuse or not abuse drug abuse. Really well right. He's just been counseling people. He's actually able to talk with. Obviously that's the thing that would like dry you to someone you have this horrible experience. He understands it makes sense why they why they get together. When richie left data he moves right in with sherry and her roommate and i she says things were great. He cleaned the house. He would bring her litter. Get little gifts. He successfully wooed her so well that she cancelled her plans to move to new york city and train as a stewardess. The two were engaged to be married but early on there were unsettling signs about the man That he might really be quote. And this is from duck in a raincoat. Richie sued sheri's insurance company for injuries. He said he sustained during a minor traffic accident. Sherry had run a stop light and hadn't thought he was more hadn't thought he was even injured but her insurance companies settled the claim ritchie used the money to buy her in engagement rate so he sees her insurance company in order to get money to her. A ring wow this guy yes. This is some forty scumbag shit for sure. This might be a little bit. That's that's a little slimy but hey the rings beautiful i mean it's it's an insurance company right. I wouldn't judge a guy for that necessarily because like yeah whatever thinking involved clearly this i find ways to extract things with little bird and i don't care how underhanded is. Yeah that's what this says about him now. Sharee seems to have been fined about this but this bit of insurance fraud would prove to be the beginning of a fairly long career in insurance fraud. The two were married in december of nineteen. Sixty-nine there were both twenty. Four ritchie needed. A job since his only real life experience was either crimes or manipulating institutions. He decided to get a job working at the kind of place he'd been sent as a kid. He heard about a pilot program being launched for drug addicts and connecticut. It was called dr tek and it was one of the first programs to include both medical professionals in former addicts working side by side to counsel people which seemed like a much better idea than the senate on method of addicts mentally abusing other addicts to keep them. Sober the founder of the program. Dr donald pet higher joe ritchie after a phone interview because he seemed persuasive quote joe at a very unusual way of getting many of the street people to follow him he often got people to rally around him kind of see things his way do his bidding again Some leadership wow the street people. They said yeah. They talked about those people there now. One of the other staff members at dr tek introduced ritchie massachusetts. Psychiatrist named gerald davidson. The two weren't co-workers long before ritchie and cherry moved again to another job at a drug counseling center called survival inc. But joe clearly made an impact on dr davidson one. That was out of step with his actual skill. Intriguing addiction evidence for this is that joe brought three dr staff members with him to survival ink and all three of them were fired soon after because they were caught using drugs while working. This drug abuse counselors. Well he's may not be good at anything but manipulating people in reality now. Joe is the one who fired them. Any made a statement to the press saying their behavior was unacceptable. And it seems like the incident had an impact on him. Not long after that in nineteen seventy one. The couple decided to open a therapeutic community of their own. Joe reached out to dr davidson. Who had worked with briefly and because he was a smooth son of a bitch convinced the older man to their business partner and starting a new facility. Because dr davidson is a psychiatrist. Andy has money you know You gotta love it and you've got a license probably to as got some licenses. There's a lot of reasons. It's good call now miles. You know what's better call than convincing a psychiatrist to fund your child abuse company program that this seminar were given on how to unload catalytic converters on craigslist easing nba else. That's right in pick up. Miles in is new book. The catalytic converter driven life which is all about how stealing verdicts called. Welcome converts colt. This is gonna be support. This podcast tells the story of pilot who using clandestine cell phone from inside a prison in north carolina claims to have worked as an entrepreneur and air logistics coordinator the international trade for some thirty years. I'm that's what i am. My name is john gabler. Journalists based in mexico was approached. To see if i would be interested in looking into this pilot story. Yeah i'm interested. It contacted a number of reporters either met interviewed or reported on this pilot. Tell the truth. Excel the truth and began to piece together. A portrait of a man behind bars obsessed with telling and selling his own story trump activity and exile content studio. This is transport. Easter listen to transport easter on. Iheartradio app apple podcasts. Or wherever you get your podcast. Hi i'm ethan. Nadelmann hosted a new podcast psychoactive. I founded the drug policy alliance which has been at the forefront of the effort to legalize marijuana and ended up broader war on drugs. But what's next. What's the future of drugs and psychoactive. I'll be talking with scientists and politicians celebrities and activists about all things drugs why do we have receptors in their brain. That fit molecules made by poppy plants. You know. I think ecstasy saved my marriage drugs or something. I recommend to long-term couples. We had to adopt this idea that there's this disease called alcoholism no matter how many drugs this particular person was selling. You shouldn't be able to kick someone's door down and then murdered. The psychoactive is out. Now listen to psychoactive on the iheartradio app apple podcasts. Whoever you get your podcasts dramas host of the new podcast. Live as a part of iheartradio's michael up hod cast network. Cubano me from the breakfast club. Or as a radio host or as the host of the recap on tv. join me. Every tuesday and thursday on life as a gringo were attacked gold life from the perspective of someone who's never quite fit in culturally like millions of latinos. Born in the states. I grew up with my authenticity being questioned. Because i didn't speak perfect spanish while also feeling self conscious because my friends back home with me because my house smelled a little different. Or my dad had an accent. Each episode will break down different facets of life from personal growth to mental health the dating and even current events that are affecting our culture. And if you're worried you might get tired of my voice. Listened have no fear. Because i'll bring it on different guests and even giving you a chance to have your voice heard on every show listen to the life as a gringo podcast on the iheartradio app apple podcasts. Or wherever you get your podcast.

You're Welcome! With Chael Sonnen
"dr davidson" Discussed on You're Welcome! With Chael Sonnen
"Connors post by poor reaction and response. I don't mean in the ring. I don't mean right. They're caught in that moment. You could bring that in. I'll take anything after the fight but it's still going on to this day right messages that are put out there and then messages have been deleted. Most recently today was two different things. First off refusing to admit that he lost the fight he lost the fight because it was a doctor stoppage not that he was losing that round not that he was dominated. Not that herbon will stop the fight to different times and then adding in also today that he entered that fight hurt. You can ask anyone. You can ask dana. you can ask dr davidson. I stress factors going into that fight. I'm just saying how. Do we interpret that congress. Not wrong for doing any of these things. This is very in line. With what fighter say after they lose a fight and they get embarrassed. It's very very. It's just not in line with the way. Connor has done it before. Connors been very gracious. Always even if you go back to the second fight. Conor got cleaned up. Says i gotta make some adjustments. That guy's got a hell of a weapon. I wasn't familiar with that calf kick. I gotta change some stuff on my history. Says that i've pretty good it make adjustments. Let's do it a third time. But he was a real gentleman. I could say that about every connor defeats hat. I could even say about a couple of victories right. In the moment he still marketing. He grabs that microphone. He'd lines up. What's next tinos the deal. But i think of the night that he beat pouring aerial goes into the locker room interviews him and connor right. You remember. I don't mean poor. Yeah i mean Cowboy but you guys remember that fight with cowboy a real pr tour. He did what he needed to do. Right in the moment right after the fight when everybody's watching but he goes in the back he's a little calmer it's gonna dot com. It's gonna pop up a few hours later. He knew his market and he was a real gentleman again. So how do we juxtaposed that. Connor with this connor. And do we need to be judged. And that's where. I get a hard time guys. I'm a bit of a connor defender. In this first off he was broken in half. That's a totally different loss than anything. I can relate to in few things that i've ever even seen. I've only seen that injury four times. I could name them. Corey hill anderson silva chris wiedeman conor mcgregor. I remember those nights that they happen though because they hurt me they hurt. I saw it hurt. It hurt me physically to see that in a demon happened to me one of those things. Just a weird reaction. But i remember them all very well. Connor was the only one of those four that was spoken to in that moment. Whatever comes out of his mouth for me as a human. This is the human talk not the fight fan. He's gonna get a pass could batter indifferent he gets a pass. That's not normal. Him comes out after the fact he puts out some things on twitter when we have every reason to believe that. he's on a assortment of painkillers. More likely than not morphine. Who let him have his phone in his hand in. The first place is a great much greater question that we should all be looking at pointing the finger to then what connor tweeted out and pushed a button that then got the sense in deleted. Come on am only asking you in this moment. How do we take these. Two polar opposites. Because there's a very opposite thing happening here we're seeing opposite. Preparations that admittedly is through rumor. We never knew how he was training back when things were going well. We don't fully know how he's training out when things aren't but the rumors in the reports are different very very different. The performances are very very different. It looks like a different guy in there. Some of the speed is gone. Some of the ability to withstand gone ikea. Keep pointing those things apple. Why i'm not looking to kick a guy just sharing its opposite. It's different for this specific. Fight the lead up particularly forty eight hours before the lid came off right. Connor was doing no media. He lifted a live on that same eight hours before bell time. Do we chalk that up to. Let's squeeze every last dollar we can get out of it. Pay per view identity. I thought that was connor. Trying to put himself in a position that old car used to be in. It's a very real thing we've done that. As athletes i when i grew up and got out of the nest certified myself some big opportunities. I used to go back to my childhood club now. I don't think there was a whole lot in fairness that i could gain working out with nine fourteen seventeen year old kids but it was a mindset. Is trying to take yourself back trying to remember some of that hunger. Gotcha there in the first place. So i just thought i recognized. Connor was doing. I thought i recognized what connor started going at a little harder than usual that he was trying to get that brash. Hungry self back. That's what i saw. How do we interpret what he's doing now by running things back because he's not lying. Did he have stress factors shore. Maybe did maybe let's just say he did. I got stress factors right now. I haven't traded x. Amount of time share with you. Connor did not have any stress fractures. That pouria did it have the fact that he admitted it and used as an excuse very in line with what other fighters do just unique for mcgregor. He's never done that before right. He's never made himself look weak. He's always sold power. He'd has none. he's never had power but he's given the perception he does and he sold that very well. He's now doing the opposite. We're not used to it. He's not wrong. I've heard people come down and talk about what a poor is. Connor is doing right now. Trying to explain a way in embarrassing loss is perfectly in line. With how every other fighters ever acted he just hasn't done it. I think that part of the story should be told. He's not doing anything. That's that's people giving him a hard time right now like he's being some kind of a jerk okay. Grant within that goes for everybody else. That's ever got a loss ever. They all do that. Same thing all of them he never heard so and so doesn't have a boys believe me. He did do it in his small circle of ten people want to hear from him. Connor just happens to have ten billion people that want to hear from them right. It's it's a different thing. It's the same message. I'm sharing with you even as i'm attempting to defend connor. I'm sharing with you. I've never seen him sell weakness or appear. We asked dr davidson. Ask dana. you know there was times in my life that i had to bring a note from my mother if i was sick one day. Miss school then. I got to college. I was a grown ass man. All i had to do is show up. Ask you know. Ask dr davidson day. It was one of these things. You can also get a stress fracture. How would you know a stress fracture. It's a little bit of them right now. I don't share that with you in belly who it's nothing to. Connor had some kind of a pain and he went to a doctor and the doctor. X ray them. I mean this whippy stuff. This is whippy stuff to the highest degree. That is also very normal. Anyone else that had a pain go ask daca dachshunds extra. There's nothing out of line here. Just very out of line for connor. I'm never seen him. Try to look weak. I've never seen him not very conscious. Oh looking powerful. As opposed to looking. Week i'm surprised by it. I don't know how to interpret it. Charles olivera came out today and said that he believes connors. Going to be out for six weeks. And i'm sure when he returns he will buy fight. Dustin pori now charles was trying to be very nice charles even in that same statement said we should give connor a standing ovation. I don't like the way he promotes fights. I don't like that brashness. But he's done a great job for himself and that's who is first obligations to. I tip my hat to charles was. It was very beautiful with charles. Had to say charles.

Disruptive Adventism
"dr davidson" Discussed on Disruptive Adventism
"Correct is that okay. Got that right and get. Get the facts straight and then you know after study and after your personal story and convictions you decided to remove yourself from that position essentially or well you know the powers that may be made it happen as well Now that you have written a book on it you have a claim if i recall correctly on the website on kickstarter that affirming theology is the most biblical stance right Now a lot of people may be confused about that because of the official rhetoric from the church we get. We have a couple of books i would say maybe two or three that addressed the topic from our scholars from the seminary right wand was a One that was a compost project by all of the scholars. Then you have the flame of ya. Which i don't even think the has still been published by or it was published by Dr davidson which is of unisex swaziland. In all these things. And i think the yet worrying tation Right right it's not extensive is not extensive A treatment you're correct in that. And i believe the only other book from our guest as the the husband out there from mosque. Elastic perspective is old testament law for christians from their gain. He addresses a say a couple of pages Kind of repeat some of the different and similar arguments are in all of the other books and things of that nature. What would you say was your moment right. You know you have been formed in conservative. The theology as adventists even though we like to compare and contrast the ideas from the western adventists in california to the eastern adventists or mid western michigan. Right like you know the most conservative conferences. Some some people say by and large all adventists are conservative theologically. We do not make you know. We do not concede for example on the virgin birth of christ. You know we accept. He was senlis right when he was an earth we have doctrines soundly conservative. So my question essentially is how. What was that a ha moment that you saw the during your study you have written a book now about it. They you say affirming theology. Is you know the only way or it's at least the way that is compatible that i think that's your main claim that still compatible affirming the earliest still compatible with what the bible says it reads cultural historical contexts all of that good good stuff from seminary right but what was that a ha moment when you discovered from the scriptures or anything else that helped you in that journey. I don't know Say there was a single moment that was like an aha moment But i think over time it became clear to me that There was something there is a there was a fundamental misunderstanding of who. Lgbtq people are today and what what really the modern question. That's debt lgbtq. People are asking particularly adventists. You know asking for support in our marriages and support in gender identity And who else you be q..

Maureen From Quarantine
"dr davidson" Discussed on Maureen From Quarantine
"The listener. They're bigger than the movement and To the moon bat and and she goes what were those sounds. And i said i felt by sock colors. I've never seen on this planet and that happened with this woman every time away did these sounds. I never got c. Sounds just kind of come on. I want to see him. I can see. Let me see those colors. Finding twenty years later. I did see shoe stock however there was about a year after that so i started i dropped all of my techniques and on the different modalities or massage and everything they did. I started call sam massage. Oh how full is that. So i make sounds and teach people to use your voice. Steel yourself and go dr davidson. Those twenty seven taken an aspirin since twenty the only time into dockyard remain even handed needed a put back in your meditators well. Yoga teacher training. That was all. Yeah youtube. I also also found every form of meditation for me. Yeah my my devices spent about Coming up with my own way. Someone else's taken. Yes only a little while. yes a little. When i was my own which is a sounded. I felt like a rock and when it was painful and i went to myself anywhere and i went in fell in love for a woman. Just broken up with you. Because i don't wanna be with me. I was all love energy. So i just said the person's name close is and i love you caroline. Her name's and i century i actually in my closed eyes. I don't see visually in kim state field. This wave go out and it came back and figuring in weight came back this energy. Can you end up through may head. And it wasn't iraq. In more liquid. And i did it again. Came back when it came back just like somebody else and i heard the name in my head but it sounded like an voice of mine. I hadn't heard new then again at that moment. My mind said you can't do that. People think you're nuts stupid blah blah blah. But this feeling too sane for ninety minutes and i went with the fee and my life changed and little. Did i know. I was going to make up. A word. may waive all edgy. And that's what. I call my work now. And it took me lifers. Everything learned out writing. Waves complies on land. The same turn support. I love that allies. He's wave has been justify can take a moment to gratitude. Firm queen lighting way has been such an amazing teacher and mentor for me in so many ways but specifically me the energy works like as a surfer as a yoga teacher as human as a woman as a student as a human in general like when people say awful you stuff but really just understanding the way the energy works like there's a reason people say like surfing teaches. You everything you need to know about. Life is because understanding surfing's understanding energy and like since i started surveying and really starting trying to understand it in to get on the wave of serving. You know like i don't say i never say trying to get better. I don't think there's a good or a bad surfer. I think that everybody's just trying to learn the ways. The also tape it to the point of i say to people do surf and ono. I go even without a surfboard. A wave then. You're a surfer. I asked play guitar sounded side i really judgment. Kills all creativity and dreams and that. That's actually really interesting this morning. Kind of they're interviewing some old oji surfer dudes from who in this book David knew about how the how they asked the question of. Do you think of competitive. Surfing has changed. The shape of has changed the way. Boards are shaped. And they were they got into technicalities of board shaping and stuff and how the actual words of change they have this really interesting section about how they talk about where the people who are running surf competitions and i think this goes for really any kind of competition that deals with waves in general whether it's music or surf or You know dance or you know. Any of these kinds of competitions do forms creative waves you know like wave wavelengths and energy marching waves. Like how can you how you plays a judgment on something that is so inherently primal and created out of pure life force energy and they were talking about how the people who are in charge of these surf competitions in shame to the name of long boarding. They're trying to push out things like long boarding better such a culture in such an art in such a style and so much about experimentation and like the world's best along borders know that the wave never stops. They know that the learning short boarding culture. It's about how much can i tear this way. How many turns. Can i do how many it's about being the best leasing rather than just like not having this end goal of ending on top of the mountain rather than being like. I wonder what i can see in create and feel on the way up. You know beautiful mentioned ending up wherever you end up the process not the destination and you know what's what's that was beautifully brilliantly said thank you and you know what to to add to that when we're in the ocean it's like we're bathing in those. There's those negative ions that also are uplifting put for the sea salt lamps the Little sort of like orange lamps. Have you seen them and they admit you have one. Aren't they live coolest. They emit those negative ions suddenly. We're smiling or we're feeling uplifted. We're feeling that energy by you. Don't have heavy when you spend a day on the ocean year just.

News Radio 920 AM
"dr davidson" Discussed on News Radio 920 AM
"855403 98 46, We're going to continue. With freestyle Friday, but we've got some very important stuff to discuss. Of course, Covert 19 is the primary issue the main issue in the country right now. And speaking of Experts who can help us out to understand, Maura. We have a great one from the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. You may recognize the name from Ah, lot of appearances he makes on a lot of different media. Dr. John Davidson. Good morning, Doctor. Good morning, Jim. Thanks for having me on. Oh, no, It's our pleasure. Thank you for your time, so Dr Davidson. What do we need to know? Right now? And I know that you can help people don't understand when you get the vaccine. What? What the concerns Maybe all of those things. So what do we need to know? Right now? What I think we need to know is that we need to get people is vaccinated as quickly and safely as possible. And I think that will help tremendously already Starting to see your numbers go down quite a bit. And that's not too surprising because of the seasonality that we think this Corona virus is exhibiting. We saw this kind of last year a little bit. So hopefully as the weather starts to get nicer. We're still a long ways away from spring, especially up in the Northeast, where you are, But once the weather starts to get nicer, and we start to get more and more people vaccinated, there's a lot of optimism out there. And, as you know, in the news, we now have a third vaccine that's probably gonna be approved within the next couple weeks. Get the third vaccine. What is it? The Johnson and Johnson one. It's in a one shot vaccine. Yeah, that's the one shot vaccine, and that's gonna be a game changer because we keep hearing all over the news about distribution and supply and how we're having such a hard time getting it out to people. Imagine the you know the intricacies of getting two doses out scheduling for a second dose. Getting people back hard enough getting one dose. So that's one good thing about the Johnson and Johnson. The other good thing about the Johnson and Johnson is It only has to be refrigerated it normal refrigerated temperatures. It doesn't even need to be frozen. So, like any vaccine or any medication, that's all it needs, So it's gonna be easier to roll out and it's a single dose. We're talking with Dr John Davidson from the Cleveland Clinic. Just about covert 19 and what you need to know, the latest now talk to have a question The Johnson and Johnson is not as effective. As the Moderna and the Fizer vaccination. They they have very high numbers. But what does it mean? What it says? Effective. I think people need to understand that it doesn't Necessarily mean it's perfect. You'll never get co vered. Correct. So that yes. So that's a great question. Actually, people should not fixate on that number. Okay? The FDA has already told us that anything over 50% effectiveness would probably get approved. Okay, don't concentrate on that number. The normal flu vaccines can range you know, they come out every year between 40 and 60% effective so don't concentrate on that. I think we're quite a lucky It defies earned. The bitterness came out 94 95% effective what everybody needs to know. And this is really important with this. Johnson and Johnson dose. They've shown that in phase three trials about 14,000 people No, no one who got the vaccine after 28 days were either hospital either hospitalized or actually died from the virus so you might get it. But you might get a mild form. You're not going to be hospitalized, which is key. Yeah, of speaking as someone who was hospitalized for 10 days. It's no picnic, and and it was. It was really convalescent plus plasma. That kind of made the difference for me, But I would have preferred to have a mild case I would have taken that. I mean, you constant of the 66% numbers, you might get covert and you might lose your smell. You might get a cold, but you're not gonna be hospitalized. That's key. This is gonna prevent a lot of illness. Okay. How about in terms of the elderly and those with other health issues? You know, diabetes, I guess being the one that's key. Would it be the same? With them, or should somebody like that say, Oh, wait a minute. I should get the mod Erna, and by the way with the elderly or someone who's in Ah long term care facility, it may be easier to administer two shots. Yeah, I mean, possibly, But I wouldn't think of it that way. Once Johnson and Johnson comes out, I wouldn't pick and choose between vaccines. I would get whatever you can get as quickly as possible. Again. Don't be fixated on that 66% number because even in that 14,000 phase three population that I described there were some people in there that had preexisting conditions as well. So it's still going toe. It's still going to prevent that really serious illnesses, which is what we need. Doctor. Finally, one final question. I know this is going beyond it. But, you know, we've got these other variants sees other strains. And I guess my question is if we get enough people vaccinated Does that start knocking down these variants and God help us if one of the variance, you know, uh, can can work through the vaccine, and the vaccine has no impact on it. Does that begin to knock them down that the herd immunity stop the mutations that could lead to On D even more deadly or vaccine resistant virus. Well, what happens is you're correct. So what happens is you as long as the viruses is around and allowed to replicate at the rate it's going. It's just gonna keep mutating. I mean, we have 68 mutations. Now that number could go up. So it's kind of a race. Now, The sooner we get as many people vaccinate this possible, and especially if we can get to herd immunity, yet I'll knock it off because the virus won't be able to replicate its fast and replication is what causes these mutations and to exist. We see this with the flu vaccine every year, and I think once we reach herd immunity, this thing might get relegated to something like the flu. It's just the fact that this is so new and our bodies never seen it before that, I think eventually we're gonna put this thing to bed because it will become a Meyer. Kind of. It'll always be around but won't be nearly what it is right now. Way. That is good news, Doc. And I guess all of the effort now should really be on getting people vaccinated. Either people themselves saying, all right, I want to get the vaccine and and a distribution that gets it into their arms. Yeah, so there's a huge disinformation campaign out there is we all know about not getting the vaccine and not being safe. I could tell you it is safe and it is effective. Doctor. This has been great. I appreciate it, and we appreciate the time and any other time you want to come back. You're always welcome. John Davidson, Cleveland Clinic. Doctor Davidson. Working folks get some more information from you. Should they go to the Cleveland Clinic site? You have your own son. Actually, he's actually on my Twitter, which is at John Davidson, MD. And I don't have an H in my name, so it's jail and Davidson, MD. All right, Doctor Davidson. Thank you so much for your time and stay safe. Oh, thanks for the opportunity to come on. Take care..

News Radio 920 AM
"dr davidson" Discussed on News Radio 920 AM
"Nothing like the red hot chili Peppers. Um Not a Friday morning leading in this Super Bowl weekend, but we gotta check in with Tommy B. And we'll do that in less than five minutes to talk about. What's the deal with this? Sunday night. Whether you know it started off as well. It's gonna be a big snowstorm them disappeared on some of the models. Where is it now? That allowed that will have a big impact. Also, don't forget our Web poll question. Will you be rooting for Tom Brady? But I mean, I put up a lot of Web poll questions, you know, in a lot of seriously issues, but it seems like one's like Let's get the most response. So go to the website for the station you're listening to right now. On the chimp Alito Show Network News radio ri dot com and Rhode Island. W th e dot com and Central Mass in western mass. Wh y n dot com. Go to the gym, Pulido show page, and there's the Web poll question vote. We'll have the results at the end of the show. But, you know, speaking of football and beer goes a lot with football. Steve, I want to bring you in here before, Tommy because I think You did a good job of listening to Dr Davidson talking about vaccines. And, of course, the new Johnson and Johnson vaccine and you maybe have Maybe having analogy that you could clean up and present to the audience, so they'll understand the difference between the vaccines is that is this the Corvette versus the minivan? Or is this the Uh, the other. I didn't see that I didn't see the Corvette. Uh versus the many. That's that's sort of the clean, radio friendly version of what I have sensitive, but basically, Yeah, well, you could We're you know, we're there were the common people and you know, we we drive sort of the minivan in the Nissan Ultima, which is a great vehicle. That's basically the Johnson and Johnson and the other one is You know, whenever Guineas and Corvettes and those of the ones that need to go to the people who need Lamborghinis and Corvettes, but no, I the one I sent you was about was a little bit. More about alcohol, like basically You know, Visor is a really nice bottle of bourbon and Johnson and Johnson, his Busch light which is fine. Bush get you drunk. However, the next morning could be quite unpleasant. Based on the situation Well, I have a way of being able to convey what you said. And still keep it. Family friendly is that Bush light is kind of like human Dre. No. If you know what I mean. You know you make my heart go, but it was a couple of late night tacos. I mean, I'm just Oh, yeah, throwing too late night taco. Oh, you know when when you have that? Busch light with those tacos. Which light then becomes what we call in in the scientific terms, an accelerant. You know, you know, it's kind of like it's kind of like, uh, you know when, when the state fire marshal's office is investigating, you know, like there was some kind of an accelerant used here and, uh, I found an empty bud. Light camp. Yep. Yep. There it is. I mean, a bush like Yep. There we go. Very good doctor for me, very, very good, very apt description there, But, you know, I thought it was interesting with Dr Davidson said. Don't get hung up on the numbers. Get it. And people who got it. Who got the Johnson and son shot 14,000 people? Uh, none of them ended up in the hospital that Hey, listen. If you would turn around and told me that in early December, hey, we'll give you the shot and you might get it a little bit. You might lose your sense of taste and smell. That's basically what Kathy and the boys had. And then it was me. You got pummeled. So I'll take the Busch light of vaccine. Sarah Steve, I'll take it. Me, too. Hey, I'll take it in a 12 pack of it's on sale to some extra in the in the basement. The fridge. Yeah, yeah. Casey Case. You need a booster, right? Steve Casey, Booster. All right, let's get let's get boosted to the weather and our good friend Tommy be. He's one of the most experienced weather forecasters in New England,.

WMAL 630AM
"dr davidson" Discussed on WMAL 630AM
"The 14th Street bridge inner loop at a college park, the greenbelt creeping because of a crash. At cattle Worth Avenue. Stay left now from garage door repaired. Calm. The W M A hailstorm. Art seven forecasts A cold start here on your Friday but warming nicely with sunshine. Have it. Your starting out in the thirties will get the 45 by noon. Winds Pick up slightly but your windchill temperatures those feel like temperatures low to mid forties. Nothing like your Saturday teens and low twenties what it will feel like the air temperature on Saturday 37 degrees with sunshine Sunday. 39 will be partly sunny to mostly cloudy and get prepared for a wintry mix coming away Monday on ABC seven meteorologist Bronek Johnson in the storm, but seven Weather center 26 clear skies in Chantilly 30. Three and silver Spring clear skies at Reagan National 34 degrees. I'm Barbara Britt on 105.9 FM. Washington Small W M A L. Now Washington mornings on the mall. Good morning to you. 6 37. W m a l where Washington comes to talk Coming up this morning. Christian Daytop will be with us from the Daily card 805 before that, Actually, Dr Davidson joins us. It's 705. So let's say from the top, Okay, but somebody a seven or five Christian Day talk in 805 and his Susan Horatio from The Washington Examiner at 8 35 months later wasn't too confusing. Convince colonies never confusing. The Beverly Hallberg from the independent Women's Forum and the district Media group in.