Saturday, January 21, 2012

Time to re-write the history books: Pyramid discovered in Bosnia-Herzegovina is older and bigger than Egypt’s Great Pyramid

Pyramid discovered in Bosnia

I think this is pretty exciting stuff. I’m very interested in ancient aliens mingling with our earliest civilizations.

It’s a fascinating subject and if you’d like to read more about it check out:

Chariot of the Gods” by author Erich von Däniken or go here for History Channel episodes.

“A pyramid has been discovered in Bosnia-Herzegovina that is larger, older and more perfectly oriented than Egypt’s Great Pyramid of Giza. Located near the city of Visoko, not only is it the first pyramid to be discovered in Europe, but it is also the largest valley of pyramids in the world.

Its discoverer, Dr. Semir Osmanagich, has also identified pyramids in Asia, Africa, North America and even islands such as Mauritius and Tahiti. He believes these man-made structures are so similar that they prove there was communication during ancient times over vast distances. “Our history books must be re-written,” he said.

The pyramid in Bosnia-Herzegovina has been dated at over 12,000 years old, and it also features the largest complex of underground tunnels ever discovered.

Dr. “Sam” Osmanagich has been admitted as a Foreign Member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences in Moscow. He established the Bosnian Pyramid of the Sun Archaeological Park, a non-profit organization to excavate and study the pyramid site further. He also is the author of Pyramids Around the World, Civilizations Before the Official History and The World of the Maya. Now a resident of Houston, Texas, Dr. Osmanagich is in the process of scheduling lectures in the U.S. for later this year.

Dr. Osmanagich will be one of the featured speakers at the third International Scientific Conference on Bosnian Valley of the Pyramids, being held September 4-14, 2012. Admission to this special program is now available from Body Mind Spirit Journeys.” Bosnian Pyramids Conference and Tour

Good News for Coffee Addicts: a Lower Risk of Type 2 Diabetes

                      Good Day Humboldt County!

 While slurping my morning cup of Joe I ran across the following article about coffee drinkers having a lower risk of type 2 diabetes. It’s news to me,  but apparently old hat to some in medical circles. Now scientists say they know why that is.

 What I do know about coffee is that I have to have it in the morning or I’m a zombie for the rest of the day. Coffee drinkers are very dedicated folks and we’ll drink coffee anywhere in any position (see photo left).

I’m just glad they didn’t find out coffee drinkers get some horrible disease after drinking it for enough years. Drink up caffeine lovers, it’s okay!

                                     Coffee helps prevent diabetes, now scientists learn why

Scientists have long known that coffee drinkers have a lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes, but researchers out of China may have figured out why.

Researchers Ling Zheng, of Wuhan University, and Kun Huang, of Huazhong University of Science and Technology, have found that compounds in coffee inhibit hIAPP (human islet amyloid polypeptide), a substance linked to diabetes. Their study appeared in a recent issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.

Prior global epidemiological studies have shown that those who drink four or more cups of coffee a day have a 50 percent lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes, the most prevalent type of diabetes accounting for 95 percent of all cases. Every additional cup reduces the risk by an additional 7 percent.

Scientists looking for ways to prevent diabetes have been investigating ways to block hIAPP, which is present in high levels in the pancreases of those with the disease. Zheng and Huang decided to study whether coffee was doing that.

They analyzed the effects of the major active compounds in coffee, including caffeic acid and caffeine, on hIAPP, and found it inhibited hIAPP significantly. "These findings suggest that the beneficial effects of coffee consumption on type 2 diabetes may be partly due to the ability of major coffee components to inhibit the toxic aggression of hIAPP," the authors concluded.

"A beneficial effect may thus be expected in regular coffee drinkers," they said.”

By Marni Jameson, Orlando Sentinel

Friday, January 20, 2012

There’s some things I’ll never understand…for example…

If I shot a nail into my head I think I would feel it. Hell no! I know I would feel it!

What is it with these people who shoot and stick themselves in the skull with sharp things and don’t know how they did it?

I see stories like this all the time. Usually accompanied with a nice X-ray like this one.

There are some among us who are different…aliens perhaps…that feel no normal pain. Here’s one guy’s story:

Gail Glaenzer still can't believe that her fiance unknowingly shot a nail into his skull, let alone that he posted a picture of the X-ray on Facebook during his ambulance ride between hospitals for surgery. Autullo was in his workshop using the nail gun. Tuesday when it recoiled near his head, Glaenzer said.

He felt what he thought was the point of the gun hit his head. But what really happened was that when the gun came in contact with his head, the sensor recognized a flat surface and fired, she said. "I looked at it when he got home, and it just looked like (his head) was cut open," she said.

With nothing to indicate that a nail had not simply "whizzed by his ear," as Autullo explained to her, she cleaned it with peroxide. Neither thought much about it, and Autullo went on with his day, even plowing a bit of snow. But the next day when he awoke from a nap, feeling nauseated, Glaenzer sensed something was wrong and suggested they go to the hospital.

At first Autullo refused, but he relented after the two picked up their son at school Wednesday evening.A couple hours later an X-ray was taken, and there in the middle of his brain was a nail. Doctors told Autullo and Glaenzer that the nail came within millimeters of the part of the brain that controls motor function.

Hospital spokesman Mike Maggio said the surgery took two hours, and the part of the skull that was removed for surgery was replaced with a titanium mesh. The surgeon didn't want to put that part of the skull back in place, fearing it might have been contaminated by the nail, he said.

"He was joking with me, (after surgery), 'We need to get the Discovery Channel up here to tape this,'" she recalled him saying. "'I'm one of those medical miracles.'"  (article source)

Okay…when was the last time you tried something new?

16          Good Day Humboldt County!

  Have you got a Bucket List? Remember that great comedy with Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman who were supposed to be two terminally ill cancer patients who decide to break out of the hospital and live their last days to the fullest?

  My wife has been checking off her bucket list items at a pretty good clip lately. I, on the other hand, don’t have a bucket list. I’ve lived such a full life that there’s nothing I haven’t done…that I wanted too that is.

Have you got a bucket list? Here’s a couple of wild ideas for your own list:

Ithaa Undersea restaurant sits 16 feet below sea level at the Conrad Maldives Rangali Island, a hotel resort in Hilton's luxury brand that occupies two islands. Maldives is a country of almost 1,200 islands about 300 miles from the southernmost points of India and Sri Lanka.<br>
<br>
Diners eat beneath glass walls at the Ithaa Undersea restaurant. The cuisine is decribed as Maldivian-Western, and the restaurant seats about 12. The restaurant is open for lunch and dinner daily from 11 a.m. to midnight, according to the resort's website.

    Ithaa Undersea restaurant, Maldives

       ( Conrad Maldives Rangali Island )

Ithaa Undersea restaurant sits 16 feet below sea level at the Conrad Maldives Rangali Island, a hotel resort in Hilton's luxury brand that occupies two islands.

Maldives is a country of almost 1,200 islands about 300 miles from the southernmost points of India and Sri Lanka.

The Angola Prison Rodeo is a chance to see serious felons testing their mettle against serious livestock. It's a glimpse into an infamous lockup, bordered on three sides by the Mississippi River, where blues musician Leadbelly once did time. It's an introduction, amid plenty of homegrown food and music, to the peculiarly tangled history of public incarceration and private enterprise in the Tunica Hills of rural Louisiana.<br> <br> The Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, once labeled the bloodiest prison in America, holds about 5,200 inmates and sprawls across 18,000 acres in West Feliciana Parish, 137 miles northwest of New Orleans and about 20 miles northwest of St. Francisville, La.

                     Angola Prison Rodeo, La.

                            ( Frank McMains )

The Angola Prison Rodeo is a chance to see serious felons testing their mettle against serious livestock. It's a glimpse into an infamous lockup, bordered on three sides by the Mississippi River, where blues musician Leadbelly once did time. It's an introduction, amid plenty of homegrown food and music, to the peculiarly tangled history of public incarceration and private enterprise in the Tunica Hills of rural Louisiana. The Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, once labeled the bloodiest prison in America, holds about 5,200 inmates and sprawls across 18,000 acres in West Feliciana Parish, 137 miles northwest of New Orleans and about 20 miles northwest of St. Francisville, La.

Time to walk on down the road…

Thursday, January 19, 2012

My pug, Millie, asked me to share these photos of her pals with you

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Google images

A whole lotta heart: man with two hearts survives double seizures

             Good Day Humboldt County!

  Today’s revelation, at least to me, is that a person can have two hearts. Did you know that?

I’m reminded of Dean R. Koontz’s Frankenstein series where all of his creations have two hearts. It make them stronger in the book, but I doubt it has the same effect on this guy.

Turns out two hearts can be double trouble. I was thinking about some really silly situations like when you fall in love with two hearts it must be a powerful experience, or when someone says, “I don’t have the heart for this,” you could say, “That’s alright. Use the other one!”

I’ve never met someone with two hearts. I’ve met people with no hearts (seemingly) and big hearts. Anyway, I thought you might find this story interesting.  

                                         Man with two hearts survives double-sized attack

“At first there didn’t seem to be anything unusual about the man who, in 2010, reported to a Verona, Italy emergency room. He was short of breath, sweating, and had low blood pressure – cardiovascular trouble, no doubt. E.R. doctors see similar symptoms all the time.

But this man was very different indeed. He had two hearts. “We haven’t ever seen anything similar to this case before,” Dr. Giacomo Mugnai said in an email. It turned out that a few years earlier, the man had undergone a procedure known as a heterotopic heart transplant. Unlike an orthotopic transplant, in which one organ is removed and another put in its place, a heterotopic transplant pairs a new organ with a diseased one.”

Time to walk on down the road…

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

SOPA Controversy: Columnist has point about people stealing his work

I was reading Bob Sullivan’s article Stop pirating my stories about SOPA, or I'll have to support it today when something struck me:

People pirate my columns all the time! My most recent column

was picked up by 15 web sites the day it came out.

More have been added since, but you get my point. This happens all the time. About four years ago when I first started noticing websites picking up my columns without asking permission, I contacted them and complained.

I was ignored and no one responded. They must have felt it was okay to pirate my stuff. Freedom of the Internet and all. As the years went by, my thinking evolved on the subject, and I came to the conclusion that having my columns picked up by other sources gave me more exposure and opened up new paths to explore.

Granted, I don’t look at each visit to my blog as a revenue source like Bob Sullivan. I blog purely for fun and that’s why you don’t see ads here. It’s how Bob makes his living however, and I understand where he’s coming from. He’s tired of people picking up his stuff without so much as  link to the original and losing money on top of it.

                         Wouldn’t you be?

Related story: Are websites' SOPA blackouts an 'abuse of power'?

I’m opposed to SOPA and will be until my dying breath, but I think more can be done to deal with the offending individuals on the internet. It’s not right to blanket all internet users for the sins of a minority.

As It Stands, there’s no reason to bring a bazooka to a gunfight and take the chance of killing innocent bystanders. 

 

'Blair Witch' star hoping to turn pot-growing story into TV series

Wow! You Grow Girl!

Here’s a new TV series I wouldn’t mind following:

Heather Donahue, who starred in "The Blair Witch Project," is hoping to turn her medical marijuana business into a quirky new TV drama. The actress quit show business to grow marijuana legally in California, and she has written a book, "Grow Girl," about her experiences as a farmer.

The publicity has sparked fresh interest in Donahue, and she's hoping to return to Hollywood as the writer-producer of a new series. She tells BlogTalkRadio.com, "I would very much like to develop 'Grow Girl' into a television series. ... As a matter of fact, it's something that I am working on right now. I will not be in front of the camera, but I'm creating the series. It's a little bit 'Northern Exposure,' a little bit 'Little House on the Prairie,' but naked with hot tubs! It's sexy, a little bit illicit ... and also wholesome. There is such a wonderful set of characters and so many stories to be told."

Donahue feels the time is right for a good mainstream pot-growing series: "My friend, who is a wonderful writer, actually, sold a pot-lady buddy comedy to Natalie Portman's company called 'Best Buds.'"

(news source)

Listen Up People! Avoid fatal distractions while walking…

14

      Good Day Humboldt County!

I wrote a column recently addressing the dangers of MP3 players – Plugged In: What makes people think they won’t go deaf? (see list of my columns on left side of the page) where I looked at the damage headphones/earbuds present to a person’s hearing if overused.

I ran across a national study yesterday that took a look at the dangers associated with pedestrian use of headphones. Losing your hearing is one thing, but your life is a lot more precious. The following study is sobering, but also instructive. Do you know someone that fits the description observed in this study? You might want to share this study with them.

Dr. Richard Lichenstein, director of Pediatric Emergency Medicine Research at the University of Maryland Hospital for Children in Baltimore cited 116 cases in 2010 of pedestrian’s wearing headphones who were killed by vehicles and trains.

The results of the study were published Tuesday in the journal Injury Prevention.

  • The number of deaths of people wearing headphones increased from 16 in 2004-2005 to 47 in 2010-2011.
  • The majority were male (68 percent) and 67 percent were under the age of 30.
  • The majority of vehicles involved were trains (55 percent).
  • 89 percent of cases occurred in urban counties.

Lichenstein and three researchers delved into the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System, the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission, Google News Archives and Westlaw Campus Research Database from Jan. 1, 2004 to June 1, 2011.

As It Stands, the findings were no surprise to me: Wearing headphones while walking on roads can be a fatal distraction. Duh….

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Big Brother tries to bully protestor and then cites ‘Lynching Law’

In the case of Sergio Ballesteros, authorities in California have resorting to an old law that was meant for something else to take away his civil liberties. This is just another reason why people across the nation are demonstrating against the power elite.

It’s enough like 1984 to pass the sniff test…it stinks. Then I see headlines like this: 

and they make me wonder, are we so different? Aren’t we fighting Big Brother too? The answer is the 99 ers who are going to force the damn pols into change…one way or the other. 

“Sergio Ballesteros, 30, has been involved in Occupy LA since the movement had its California launch in October. But this week, his activism took an abrupt turn when he was arrested on a felony charge — lynching.

Under the California penal code, lynching is “taking by means of a riot of any person from the lawful custody of any peace officer," where "riot" is defined as two or more people threatening violence or disturbing the peace. The original purpose of the legal code section 405a was to protect defendants in police custody from vigilante mobs — especially black defendants from racist groups.

Whether its use in this case will be upheld by California’s courts is uncertain. But the felony charge — which carries a potential four-year prison sentence — is the kind of accusation that can change the landscape for would-be demonstrators.”                              (Read more here)

Ballesteros is not the first protester to face this 1933 California law. Occupy Oakland activist Tiffany Tran, 23, was arrested Dec. 30 and charged with "lynching." At an arraignment four days later, prosecutors opted not to file the charges, the San Francisco Bay Guardian reported. They could change their minds until the one-year statute of limitations expires.

Trump's Lowest Grift Ever Saved for Holy Week

This is a story about how the devil's puppet, aka Donald Trump, mocked Christianity by selling a book combining the Bible, the Constitu...