R

rnatalli

Audioholic Ninja
I noticed an article at yahoo.com yesterday that stated the following:

View attachment 53908

This is of course incorrect. The Supreme Court did not rule that the mandate was unconstitutional, it ruled that Biden had gone beyond the authority granted under the law that had been passed by Congress. I emailed the author of the article and pointed this out. Low and behold, today the article has been revised, and it is now accurate:

View attachment 53909


There's a huge difference between the two. If the law had been ruled to be unconstitutional, congress could do little about it. However, given that in reality the court just said Biden went beyond his authority under the existing law, congress can still pass a law expressly granting him the authority to do so. In theory the new law might be truck down as unconstitutional, but the court has not yet addressed this issue.

As a general matter, public perceptions aside, the Supreme Court is reluctant to strike down laws as unconstitutional because it forever ties the hands of the democratically-elected legislative and executive branches which in theory represent the will of the people.
Could have used you growing up when a grade needed changing :)
 
panteragstk

panteragstk

Audioholic Warlord
I don't even find that appealing at all. A good crispy fry covered in gravy and cheese. Good grief Yuck . MIght as well cover that with chili LOL
You just made everyone in TX angry. Chili cheese fries are...not that great. Oh crap, now they're after me.
 
Mikado463

Mikado463

Audioholic Spartan
Is the Myocarditis concern with respect to COVID / vaccines real or too small a number to really worry about ? As an Afib patient this is my one underlying condition that I keep an eye on.

 
D

Danzilla31

Audioholic Spartan
Is the Myocarditis concern with respect to COVID / vaccines real or too small a number to really worry about ? As an Afib patient this is my one underlying condition that I keep an eye on.

This may give info and links that are helpful hope it helps
 
Swerd

Swerd

Audioholic Warlord
Is the Myocarditis concern with respect to COVID / vaccines real or too small a number to really worry about ? As an Afib patient this is my one underlying condition that I keep an eye on.
Do you see a cardiologist about your Afib? Ask your cardiologist that same question. You'll get a definitive answer.

Have you already received your vaccinations, or are you considering them now? The paper you linked says:
  • Confirmed myocarditis was reported 1,626 times among 192,405,448 persons receiving a total of 354,100,845 mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccinations. That's rare.
  • It occurred 1 to 3 days after vaccination. That's early after the shot.
  • It was reported in young people with a median age of 21 years (IQR 16-31 years). (IQR, interquartile range, is a way to express a distribution range if the distribution is uneven).
  • Males comprised 82% of the myocarditis cases for whom sex was reported.
Do any of those bullet points include you?

I really don't know a specific answer to your question – I'm not an MD and certainly not a cardiologist. As such, I certainly won't give medical advice to anyone, on the internet or in person. If I were an MD, I still would avoid giving medical advice to anyone if they weren't a patient in my care. That's why you should ask your cardiologist or internist.

That video was from a news reporter, not an MD, and certainly not your MD. Furthermore, it was from Faux News. I would question anything Faux says about Covid-19 vaccinations. The information in that video may or may not be correct, but Faux has an unfortunately clear record of severe prejudice against vaccinations. You can trust your life to your MD, but I would not trust my life with 'medical advice' from Faux News.
 
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highfigh

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
Same here; the most common lunch when I was a kid was peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. The allergy is very real so something definitely changed over the past few decades.
I see 'Nut allergy' at least as often as 'Peanut allergy'- the other types usually come from trees- what could have changed in them? Also, Peanuts aren't nuts, they're a Legume. I have seen references to the allergies being due to genetically-modified versions.

This link has some info about this-

 
highfigh

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
I noticed an article at yahoo.com yesterday that stated the following:

View attachment 53908

This is of course incorrect. The Supreme Court did not rule that the mandate was unconstitutional, it ruled that Biden had gone beyond the authority granted under the law that had been passed by Congress. I emailed the author of the article and pointed this out. Low and behold, today the article has been revised, and it is now accurate:

There's a huge difference between the two. If the law had been ruled to be unconstitutional, congress could do little about it. However, given that in reality the court just said Biden went beyond his authority under the existing law, congress can still pass a law expressly granting him the authority to do so. In theory the new law might be struck down as unconstitutional, but the court has not yet addressed this issue.

As a general matter, public perceptions aside, the Supreme Court is reluctant to strike down laws as unconstitutional because it forever ties the hands of the democratically-elected legislative and executive branches which in theory represent the will of the people.
IIRC, Congress could hold a Constitutional Convention, present the arguments for & against an amendment and vote. If it passes by a wide enough margin, it can be signed into law. If SCOTUS strikes that down, it's probably dead.
 
M

Mr._Clark

Audioholic Samurai
I've been seeing news reports stating that 73% of the U.S. is estimated to be immune to omicron (according to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at UW). However, it's it's not entirely clear to me exactly what is meant by "immune to omicron." Perhaps my google skills s*ck, but I haven't been able to find information on how this number was determined (i.e. what "those factoprs and others" in the article actually means). 73% seems a little low to me if it means that the other 27% has absolutely no immunity from vaccines or prior infections.

According to the article, Scientists at John Hopkins estimate that 7% of the population of Virginia is completely unvaxxed and has no immunity from prior infection (i.e. 93% has at least some immunity). 7% seems quite possible, but there doesn't seem to be a reliable way to determine this.

>>>About half of eligible Americans have received booster shots, there have been nearly 80 million confirmed infections overall and many more infections have never been reported. One influential model uses those factors and others to estimate that 73% of Americans are, for now, immune to omicron, the dominant variant, and that could rise to 80% by mid-March. . . . “I am optimistic even if we have a surge in summer, cases will go up, but hospitalizations and deaths will not,” said Mokdad, who works on the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation model, which calculated the 73% figure for The Associated Press. . . .

Andrew Pekosz, a virus researcher at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, is concerned that people — particularly unvaccinated omicron survivors — may have a false sense of security. “In an ideal world, unvaccinated individuals infected with omicron would be lining up for a vaccine shot,” he said.

Also, estimating protection is far from an exact science. It’s a moving target, as immunity wanes and new variants circulate. Protection varies widely from person to person. And it’s impossible to know for sure how many people are protected at all. The IHME model estimates a wide range — from 63% to 81% of Americans.<<< (emphasis added)

 
Mikado463

Mikado463

Audioholic Spartan
Do you see a cardiologist about your Afib? Ask your cardiologist that same question. You'll get a definitive answer.
I'm beyond a cardiologist now, rather and electrophysiologist and yes we have had the conversation


Have you already received your vaccinations, or are you considering them now?
yep, all three, booster back in Nov

The paper you linked says:
  • Confirmed myocarditis was reported 1,626 times among 192,405,448 persons receiving a total of 354,100,845 mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccinations. That's rare.
  • It occurred 1 to 3 days after vaccination. That's early after the shot.
  • It was reported in young people with a median age of 21 years (IQR 16-31 years). (IQR, interquartile range, is a way to express a distribution range if the distribution is uneven).
  • Males comprised 82% of the myocarditis cases for whom sex was reported.
Do any of those bullet points include you?
only the 'male' component, but well beyond the median age group ! Just another FYI point that did make me pause a bit but regardless I do feel the risk / reward data is in my favor.
 
M

Mr._Clark

Audioholic Samurai
IIRC, Congress could hold a Constitutional Convention, present the arguments for & against an amendment and vote. If it passes by a wide enough margin, it can be signed into law. If SCOTUS strikes that down, it's probably dead.
I'm not sure I follow. It is true that the constitution can be amended, but once an amendment is in place the Supreme Court can't strike it down substantively (i.e. it can't rule that the constitution itself is unconstitutional). I believe that at least in theory the Supreme Court could rule on a procedural issue related to how an amendment was ratified, but I'm not aware of that ever happening.

Nevertheless, there is a huge difference between ruling on a constitutional issue vs interpreting a statute. To the extent my wording ("forever") overstated it, I will defer to the wording ("virtually final") on the Supreme Court website:

>>>When the Supreme Court rules on a constitutional issue, that judgment is virtually final; its decisions can be altered only by the rarely used procedure of constitutional amendment or by a new ruling of the Court. However, when the Court interprets a statute, new legislative action can be taken.<<<

https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/constitutional.aspx

The link below has a pretty decent summary of what congress can do if it disagrees with court decisions. According to this, there have been a total of five constitutional amendments that were at least in part in response to a court decision:

>>>Constitutional Decisions. Constitutional decisions by the courts limiting legislative powers are reversible, strictly speaking, only through amending the Constitution, a difficult and time-consuming process. Yet, that result has been achieved in the eleventh amendment,7the first sentence of the fourteenth amendment, the sixteenth amendment, the nineteenth amendment, and the twenty-sixth amendment.11 However, the usual result of efforts to overturn constitutional decisions by amending the Constitution has been failure. One need only think of recent movements, such as the drive to amend the Constitution to authorize legislation that would penalize desecration of the United States flag, in response to Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397 (1989), and United States v. Eichman, 496 U.S. 310 (1990). Earlier initiatives dealt with school prayer, legislative apportionment, and abortion. Only sustained and energetic work in Congress and in the States, complemented with vigorous public support, is capable of changing the Constitution.<<<

 
M

Mr._Clark

Audioholic Samurai
The risk levels map at globalpandemics.org is rapidly shifting to orange and yellow (lower new infection rates), and there are even some green areas starting to pop up. If nothing else, this is a lot better than red everywhere just a few weeks ago.

The blasted virus has fooled me in the past, but I'm cautiously optimistic that the worst of it is finally behind us.

1645646972096.png
 
Swerd

Swerd

Audioholic Warlord
Thanks for posting that.

I've been saying for many months that most of the reports of waning immunity to SARS-CoV-2 had focused only on antibodies circulating in the blood, while ignoring the T-cell arm of the immune system. Analyzing T-cell based immunity is much more difficult and slower than measuring the concentration of antibodies in patient blood. It also requires research labs that specialize in T-cell work, where almost any medical lab can do the antibody work.

I'm very glad to see the New York Times saying that. It's a good example of the popular press finally recognizing that there is much more to immunity than circulating antibodies and the B-cells that make them. In the past, I knew the NY Times was one of the few newspapers in the USA or anywhere else that had a science editor who actually understood science. It seems like they still do.
 
Swerd

Swerd

Audioholic Warlord
I'm very glad to see the New York Times saying that. It's a good example of the popular press finally recognizing that there is much more to immunity than circulating antibodies and the B-cells that make them. In the past, I knew the NY Times was one of the few newspapers in the USA or anywhere else that had a science editor who actually understood science. It seems like they still do.
A follow-up… The previous article I linked is in the NY Times. It requires a subscription to open the link and read the article.

Yesterday, I noticed this article, published online by The Conversation. It says essentially the same thing as the NYT article. It also serves as a basic level primer for what medical science now understands about how the very complex immune system works.
 
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cpp

cpp

Audioholic Ninja
Totally back to normal in Fla. Everywhere you go, NO mask, massive gatherings .
 

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