Apr 282021
 

This is 43 seconds and no, I haven’t lost my mind. Stay to the end and watch the faces. You may need to watch the faces a second time to get the full flavor. And no, there’s no CC, and I don’t want to put a spoiler here, but there’s one here

The Lincoln Project – “McCarthy”

Ring of Fire – more on McCarthy (et al)

The Damage Report – I did see this yesterday, but TC was having nausea, so I held it.

Lawrence O’Donnell – “A moral moment.” Also – “The team is still intact.”

Armageddon Update – from last Friday.but worth seeing just for the domino demonstration at the end. Feel free to skip.

Beau on Qualified Immunity

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Apr 272021
 

Meidas Touch – Depressing – nothing that we didn’t know (or strongly suspect), but now, confirmation.

Really American

The Republican Accountability Project – and here’s the link to the Report Card – https://accountability.gop/report-card/ (Mine got an “F” – no surprise)

The Damage Report – The lying is no surprise, though the apology is

Now This News – Super (Pink) Moon At least this is not depressing. (It also isn’t pink, and the brightness is not due to air pollution.)

Robert Reich – Voting Rights

Beau on Montana’s new law and a Republican “change of heart”

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Apr 262021
 

I honestly didn’t get through all “the usual sources,” and still didn’t feel I had room for everything I wanted to share.    So expect catchup ahead.

Meidas Touch – Roland Martin #3 – nothing we didn;t know, but he has the receipts.  I viewed it at .75 speed and found that an improvement.

Really American – Ron Johnson

CNN – Jim Acosta gets it.

Now This News – “Joints for Jabs”

H/T Freya for “Save the Gerrymanders!”

H/T Lona https://www.democraticunderground.com/emoticons/hattip.gif for the Razzie Award show (featuring Mike Lindell – AND Rudy Giuliani!)

Beau – More (detail) on fire preparedness

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Apr 162021
 

Crooks & Liars has come up with a neologism worth keeping IMO – “Psakisplaiing”

politicsrus

Now This News – if you thought you needed a hanky yesterday …

VoteVets – Longest War

Robert Reich – not the one that disppeared, but very sound.

Armageddon Update – singing my song.

Founders Sing (with ALbert Einstein)

Beau – I don’t want to terrify our California readers, but I do want you to be safe, and you will need to know this.

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Apr 152021
 

The Lincoln Project – Rally Recap

Crooks & Liars – “Socialist” CEO gets last laugh

Really American – Sadly needs to be said.

Frankly, I cannot see John Cornyn having the ability to even find this article. A staffer must have found it. Did the staffer tell him it was satirical? There are multiple scenarios possible here, none of which looks good for Cornyn. (Ms. Clarke has been nominated to head the DOJ Civil Rights Division.)

Now This News (personally, I needed a hanky)

This is your brain on kittens

Beau – I don’ want to spoil it, but you might want a hanky handy.

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Everyday Erinyes #261

 Posted by at 9:59 am  Politics
Apr 102021
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

It would appear to be time for us and the Furies to join the conversation about vaccines. I know some here have been fully vaccinated, and some partially. I have not really even looked yet, because it’s no hardship for me to stay isolated (no family that need hugs, a dependable routine, etc.), it’s still pretty cold (it warms up for a few days and then gets cold again), and I have had other things to think about. I certainly intend to get vaccinated (during out window of warmth) and will pursue it aggressively as soon as that happens. And it will most likely be with an mRNA vaccine, since those are the ones in greatest supply – and I expect everyone here who has been vaccinated has had one of those also. But probably without being aware of how revolutionary they are.
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How do mRNA vaccines work – and why do you need a second dose? 5 essential reads

New mRNA vaccines use genes from the coronavirus to produce immunity.
Andriy Onufriyenko/Moment via Getty Images

Daniel Merino, The Conversation

Tens of millions of people across the U.S. have received a coronavirus vaccine. So far, the majority of doses have been either the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine, both of which use mRNA to generate an immune response. These gene-based vaccines have been in the works for decades, but this is the first time they have been used widely in people.

MRNA vaccines are proving to be more effective than anyone had hoped, but as with any new medical advancement, people have a lot of questions. How do they work? Are they safe? Do I really need two shots? Why do they need to be kept so cold? And will this be the vaccine technology of the future? Below, we highlight five articles from The Conversation that will help answer your questions about mRNA vaccines.

1. A vaccine revolution

“DNA and mRNA vaccines offer huge advantages over traditional types of vaccines, since they use only genetic code from a pathogen – rather than the entire virus or bacteria,” writes Deborah Fuller, a microbiologist at the University of Washington who has been working on gene-based vaccines for decades.

The Moderna and Pfizer vaccines are proof that mRNA vaccines are ready for prime time – and far surpass their predecessors. “The hopes that gene-based vaccines could one day provide a vaccine for malaria or HIV, cure cancer, replace less effective traditional vaccines or be ready to stop the next pandemic before it gets started are no longer far-fetched,” explains Fuller.

2. How does an mRNA vaccine work?

These vaccines are not only effective, they work in a fundamentally different way from traditional vaccines, explains Sanjay Mishra, a staff scientist at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Traditional vaccines use an entire dead virus – or just a piece of one – to generate immunity. “But an mRNA vaccine is different,” writes Mishra, “because rather than having the viral protein injected, a person receives genetic material – mRNA – that encodes the viral protein. When these genetic instructions are injected into the upper arm, the muscle cells translate them to make the viral protein directly in the body.”

A drawing of the coronavirus.
Just as the pandemic hit, mRNA vaccine research had reached a tipping point.
CDC/Alissa Eckert, MSMI; Dan Higgins, MAMS

3. Quick to market, but still safe

“Safety is the first and foremost goal for a vaccine,” says William Petri, a Professor of Medicine at the University of Virginia. A lot of people have expressed safety concerns based on how fast these vaccines were developed, approved and distributed.

According to Petri, the vaccines still went through every normal step – they just did them simultaneously.

“In my opinion, safety is not compromised by the speed of vaccine development and emergency use authorization. The reason that vaccines may be approved so quickly is that the large clinical trials to assess vaccine efficacy and safety are happening at the same time as the large-scale manufacturing preparation, funded by the federal government’s Operation Warp Speed program.”

4. Why it’s important to get your second shot

You got your first vaccine shot. But with shortages and supply problems, getting the second dose might be becoming a hassle. Does it really matter? Yes, explains William Petri in another article.

“The first dose primes the immune system and introduces the body to the germ of interest. This allows the immune system to prepare its defense. The second dose, or booster, provides the opportunity for the immune system to ramp up the quality and quantity of the antibodies used to fight the virus.”

Immunity is a complex process, and “if the booster isn’t given within the appropriate window, lower quantities of antibodies will be produced that may not provide as powerful protection from the virus,” writes Petri. So go get your second shot if you can, even if you have to get it a bit later than expected.

A person getting the coronavirus vaccine.
Both doses are important for full immunity.
AP Photo/Paul Sancya

5. Subzero storage makes distribution a challenge

For all of their amazing attributes, mRNA vaccines do have at least one weakness: “If they get too warm or too cold they spoil. And, just like fish, a spoiled vaccine must be thrown away,” explains Anna Nagurney, Professor of Operations Management at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, who studies medical supply chains.

The mRNA molecule is very fragile, so vaccines need to be kept at extremely cold, very specific temperatures – a challenge for distribution. “The answer is something called the vaccine cold chain – a supply chain that can keep vaccines in tightly controlled temperatures from the moment they are made to the moment that they are administered to a person,” explains Nagurney. This cold supply chain is critical to getting vaccines where they need to go, and without it, no matter how good the vaccines are, they can’t make much of a difference.

Editor’s note: This story is a roundup of articles from The Conversation’s archives.The Conversation

Daniel Merino, Assistant Editor: Science, Health, Environment; Co-Host: The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone as scary as the pandemic has been, and still is, and sadly will continue to be, not through the fault of health care providers exactly, but primarily due to the unwillingness of so many people to get vaccinated (and I grant that, particular for certain groups underserved for decades, some distrust is justified) – as scary as it is, there is hope coming out of it, not only in how to handle this virus, but how to deal with future pandemics better than we did with this one. Of course that will require us to keep electing, and in increasing numbers, intelligent, knowledgeable, and caring leaders. I wish I knew what to do about that being so difficult.

The Furies and I will be back.

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Apr 072021
 

Meidas Touch – Media slant

The Lincoln Project “Matt Gaetz”

Trae on Georgia boycotts

MSNBC – BBMM makes Bernie laugh (OK, it’s actually more of a sardonic grin.)

American Bridge – I try to include something funny that’s not political – but so much today that’s political is funny – in presentation, if not in subject – the new “Karen” can wait a day or two.

Beau talks about Beau, and a story

Keith, from yesterday – straight from Madison Suare Garden.

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Mar 312021
 

Meidas Touch – Of course, this is not evidence….

Really American

Ring of fire – The weirdness never stops with Republicans, does it.

Also Ring of Fire – empty Greene is calling this “The Mark of the Beast” – or, more specifically, “Biden’s Mark of the Beast.”

Rocky Mountain Mike – maybe not his best, but that’s a high bar to have to meet, and it’s very pertinent.

Do Octopuses Dream?

This is 6:25, and if you don’t have time for the whole video, don’t even start. I honestly don’t think his answer is the only answer, but I do think it should be included – broadly and decisively.

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