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ChickaDeeDeeDee

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Posts posted by ChickaDeeDeeDee

  1. 1 minute ago, KSera said:

    Can you give a summary of what this is or what point your video is making? I make a point of being as careful as I can about what I'm willing to click on on YouTube and who is making money off monetized clicks, so I don't click on most things like this.

    Anthony Fauci speaking about asymptomatic spread of respiratory viruses.  Do you know if there is a way to tell if a YouTube video is monetized?  

  2. 2 hours ago, Syllieann said:

    Are you aware that most people with covid are infectious before they become symptomatic?

    1 hour ago, regentrude said:

    The problem is that none of us know if we carry the virus and just happen to be a- or pre-symptomatic. That's one reason the spread is so difficult to control. Most of the infections happen in the pre-symptomatic phase.

     

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  3. 59 minutes ago, Spy Car said:

    Your actions put lives at risk.

    That's not "respectful" and you deserve to be shamed.

    Bill

     

     

    No Bill, you are wrong. You are insinuating that I am a diseased person who is going out and spreading it .  Your perception that I am spreading disease if I am not wearing a mask is just flat out wrong.  When I go out into public sick you are welcome to shame me.   Until then, I find this type of statement an attempt to be emotionally manipulative so that people will behave the way that you perceive is superior.   

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  4. 7 minutes ago, PeterPan said:

    I'll look into it. We're pretty sensitive to stuff in our house. Just getting ds off chamomile (which affects GABA) was wicked. I think we tried GABA once here and it was rough. But like you say I can think through it and read. 

     

    From reading some of your other posts I figured GABA and surrounding issues would be something you have some familiarity with.  It is definitely a potentially double edged supplement.  And, as it sounds like you know, part of some seriously sophisticated biochemical systems in the body.   Possibly looking into ways to decrease blood brain barrier (BBB) permeability would help too (maybe for you?, but esp. for kiddo with a rough reaction to GABA - but you're probably on top of that too).   

    *If* the tinnitus was glutamate related, well...  glutamate can increase BBB permeability.  And once the BBB is more permeable there will be more excitatory activity from the glutamate.  It's a really viscous cycle and I don't really know if there is anyone out there with awesome answers about what to do about it.  

     

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  5. 23 minutes ago, Syllieann said:

    It sounds like you're not worried about anyone feeling resentful though if you're glad they didn't come.  I need to leave now because you basically accused me of being a sissy for pointing out a fact of community health.  This will go nowhere.

    I didn't say I was glad that some people didn't come.  I also didn't accuse you of being a sissy.  Don't try to make me responsible for whatever feelings you have about other people choosing to live their lives in a way that isn't right for you.  

  6. 8 minutes ago, Not_a_Number said:

    Well, that's very harsh. It's RATIONAL to be scared of COVID if you're older and unvaccinated (or even if you're older and 7 months out from the vaccine.) 

    Agree that it is rational for some people to be more concerned,  but I trust that those people can make decisions about their own risk and what it is okay or not for them to participate in.   We had a different event where the organizer is a kidney transplant recipient and requested that everyone wear a mask.  So guess what, everyone did and if they didn't want to they stayed home.  So, *gasp* some people may have been excluded...   but I never would have described it that way or complained that he wasn't accommodating my preferences.  

     

    5 minutes ago, Not_a_Number said:

    I think conversations about this stuff have hardened so much along political lines that they are pointless. So you're right to bow out. 

    Maybe your Covid views are political (don't know) but mine are not.  Why anyone would trust a politician for medical advice is beyond me!   

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  7. 1 minute ago, Syllieann said:

    There were probably people who would have attended if there was source control, but once masks became optional, opted to skip it.  It's hard to say how many people are being effectively pushed aside or put out since they don't show up.

    Well, the event sold out so.....   guess it's good they didn't want to go anyway. 

    I keep hearing people whine about feeling excluded but they're welcome to wear a KN95 to protect themselves - and it is supposed to be super effective if they wear it correctly.    I think it is just that they're scared but want to complain that others don't carry their same level of fear.  Just want to try to shame others for being willing to go about life.  

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  8. Our family has been done with masking for a long time.  We only wear masks if it is worth doing the thing it is required to do.  We do all the things that we would normally do to have strong immune systems and have good hygiene. 

    The under 18 year olds here are mostly having mild symptoms here when they get covid.  We live in a university town so there are lots of people under 50 years old and our county has had zero under 50 covid deaths.   Interestingly,  the older and more at risk population here largely took one of two routes -  some have been done with masks for a long time and others are using KN95.  I don't see a lot of older people using cloth masks.  

    Last weekend my son competed in an indoor event that changed from masks required to masks optional and a lot of people chose to ditch the mask.   It was a mix of adults and kids.  A few people who wanted the protection wore KN95 masks.  Everyone just respected everyone else's decision.  No ridicule, animosity, etc. in either direction. 

     

     

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  9. No personal experience with tinnitus, but, have you tried or thought about trying GABA?  

    I know that some people have improvement using it for tinnitus and there are papers out there about increased glutamate and tinnitus so it makes sense that balancing that out with GABA could be helpful.  GABA supplementation can end up increasing glutamate rather than reducing it for some people though so that has to be considered.   GABA also regulates the release of inflammatory cytokines and may help inhibit tnf alpha.   GABA might help with the pain too.  Looking into other ways to decrease glutamate might be a research path as well.  

    There is evidence of increased glutamate levels with COVID (https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.02.24.432759v1) so maybe with the shot too.  The article I linked talks about monocytes being the key to altered immune response in COVID but of course they're involved when you get the shot too.  Bruce Patterson and team has a paper about this being the case in long haul Covid and I think they've seen it in immunized people as well (but I don't know if they've published that data).  Here's their explanation of what is happening: https://youtu.be/IvWPT3YA5uY?t=51 .  I don't know much about how they're treating the inflammation, if it is sound, or how well it is working for patients - so no comment from me on the treatment that group is offering.  But,  it definitely seems like getting those monocytes that are trying to move waste out (spike protein is what covid and the shot have in common) would be a big priority in feeling better.  

    So, no answers from me but hopefully this will give some additional research paths to look at.  Hope it gets better soon.  

     

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  10. I really wanted my kids to be interested in a lot of the Story of the World activities, but they just weren't.  We read the series together once and my kids each read each of the books on their own a second time and they really liked it.   We've read some of the other books mentioned here as well as The World in Ancient Times books - which my kids loved!  Right  now they're a little over half way through the A History of US series and it's the first time we're doing anything extra (just maps and timeline).  Something they really like is going to historical places using Google Maps - it's like a mini virtual field trip.   

  11. On 4/17/2021 at 10:29 AM, Not_a_Number said:

    Aaaaand this comes back to what I always say about mental models and teaching math 😉 . Guess how many years most people have spent manipulating fractions? MANY. But they never got any kind of mental model... 

    I know a person who is brilliant at carpentry math that involves fractions but struggles with using fractions in other domains.  It seems odd on the surface, but I suspect that something is missing in their mental model of fractions.  

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  12.  

    On 3/27/2021 at 1:36 PM, Macjl02 said:

    My daughter has been with IMacs since 4th grade in their Math Enrichment and Computer programming classes.  She also enjoyed their logic and electronics classes before transitioning into EMF in 7th grade, while also completing Algebra 1 Honors through FLVS and beginning IMacs UCS1 course.  I can say unequivocally she would not be where she is today without IMacs.  She loves her courses- feels challenged by them and fights hard for each grade. She could have done the EMF and tried to enter high school at higher level of math than she will- but she wants to spend the time investing in her math foundations so she can make A’s in her high school math courses and do well in College Math.  She has a tutor on occasion for some of the Algebra and Geometry concepts she has been learning and he is a retired university professor/ he gave her the best advice which is not to rush through but really learn it bc so many students rush through these courses and end off in college having to change their majors bc they can’t do the math!  So choose wisely and keep your long term goals in sight.  

    It really sounds like your daughter is going to have an awesome math/logic/cs foundation for her future.  My husband, an engineer, and I have been talking about how we wish we'd had access to resources like iMacs offers as kids.  IIRC, about a quarter of my freshman year Intro to Computer Science class dropped the class and many changed their major after the class. The class used scheme, like UCS1, and my alma mater is still, more than 2 decades later, using scheme in the intro course. So many of my classmates weren't used to working on more challenging problems that they couldn't just apply an algorithm to.  

  13. 4 minutes ago, regentrude said:

    Nobody is going to require by law that you be vaccinated. The US hasn't had a law enforcing any vaccine. But any business or organization is free to set parameters for the participation of vaccinated and unvaccinated folks in their activity, with the goal of protecting people. The "vaccine passport" does nothing but create secure documentation that allows a business or organization to obtain this information so they can set rules for participation. 

    This is a really HUGE topic that I'm not going to be able to fully engage in, but let's say that I had to show proof of vaccination to go to the DMV because the CDC/local health agency said so under public health.  Even if I wasn't required by law to get a vaccine, life would be....   really hard.   If that were to come to pass, perfectly healthy people without a communicable disease could be limited.   

    I think that the "nudge" philosophy of making it hard for people to do things so that they'll comply is antithetical to living in a free, liberal, world.  

     

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  14. 4 minutes ago, kand said:

    I have an issue with people who could get the vaccine, but choose not to, yet are counting on the current acute phase of the pandemic being ended by everyone else getting the vaccine. 

    I can understand that and it hits on a major issue - not everyone agrees on whether or not covid-19 warrants our current response.    Hard to agree on solutions when people don't agree on what the problem is.... 

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  15. 3 minutes ago, regentrude said:

    Why? 

    I should be more specific - I have a beef with anyone who would require it by law using the justification that we have to force people to protect others.  If a "vaccine passport" wasn't on the table I would be content with people going about believing whatever they want and acting in ways they choose w/ regard to covid.   

    For those who would not require by law, I'm only annoyed with those that would claim others are "selfish" for not choosing to do something that they think protects them/others.  

    For people who get the vaccine because they want it, and they others to get it, and it makes them feel like life is safer, I feel no animosity.  Seems very golden-rule-ish to me.  

     

     

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  16. 45 minutes ago, Moonhawk said:

    I recommend you do as your doctor says for you, obviously. We are not saying that *everyone* should have the vaccine, but *everyone that can*. It seems you are in the *exceptions that shouldn't for medical reasons*. Everyone else getting the vaccine is doing so in part to protect you; their actions make it safer for you as well, it does directly affect you. Your advice is *specific* advice, not general; if you don't have specific advice to the contrary then the general applies: people aren't trying to "push it on you".

     

    If people choose, even in part, to get a vaccine because they think it protects other people that is up to them.  I would not and will not ask them to do that .   This might be subtle, but people who want others to get the vaccine because they want to be protected by other people is where I have a beef.  

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  17. 21 minutes ago, kand said:

    Can you share where you were looking at this today? Given the near-absence of a flu season this year, this surprises me very much. 
     

    And related, the precautions for young people are to reduce the spread so we can get people vaccinated and not increase the number of new variants that could escape the vaccine. For my own young people, I don’t want to risk long term effects of Covid in them. At this point, that known risk far outweighs a hypothetical vaccine risk that hasn’t shown to be an issue to this point. 

    https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/covid-19.htm

  18. 29 minutes ago, ktgrok said:

    But....the ones that don't? I mean, half a million americans just so far, did not. Family and friends of mine do not have normal immune systems and they likely will not be able to fight it off. 

    And he's flat out wrong about immunity to new strains - infection with the original strain confers no immunity to at least one of the new strains. But the vaccine does. 

    And we vaccinate for flu. 

    I don't have a "normal" immune system either.  I would never ask you to be responsible in any way for my health.  My Dr. suggested an immune boosting vitamin protocol  and to skip the vaccine.  She helped me put Hashimoto's Thyroiditis into remission and I trust her.  As in, I no longer even need thyroid replacement hormones.   Working with her advice works for me - and I won't try to push it on you or your family and friends with immune problems.   

    Hmmm...  so what you're saying is that the experts that you believe are right and any others are wrong?  What makes you qualified to decide *for other people* (I trust that you can do you)?  There's a lot of opinions and research out there and it's not easy to sort through everything.  My reaction at the beginning of covid was *extreme* caution/precaution.  We used masks while they were on the news telling people not to use masks, LOL.   With time and new information my concern level has changed.  

     For example, Since the news is focusing on the push to vaccinate and control the behavior of young people I was just trying to look at some of the CDC data this morning for U18yrs and it looks like non-covid pneumonia resulted in 3x as many deaths over the last year as covid did.  Covid and the flu were roughly the same.  I don't see how that justifies recommendations I see being pushed.  

     

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  19. 19 minutes ago, Corraleno said:

    The claim that the new variants are no more dangerous than the original strain is simply not supported by data. The P1 and B1351 strains are significantly more infectious and seem to be hitting much younger people, although (so far) the death rate for those strains do not seem higher. The B117 strain is also more infectious and has been found to be at least 30% more deadly, and some estimates are higher. Look at what is happening in Europe and India and parts of the US if you don't believe these new variants are more dangerous.

     

     

    Influenzas also have strains that are more infections, cause more serious complications, result in more deaths.   My perspective is that this new coronavirus is now endemic and that we're going to have to move forward with it being part of the diseases that humans have to deal with.  

  20. 5 minutes ago, ktgrok said:

    Your quote is saying that the new variants are about the same or not worse than the original. Um...the original already killed half a million americans and left who knows how many others ill for months on end. That's not especially comforting news, to hear hey, it's fine, just will continue on like this!

    I happen to find it very comforting that for a very large number of people their natural immunity will provide protection to not only COVID-19, but also variants/mutations/other strains.   

     

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  21. I have no idea about what is driving the behavior of the OP's acquaintance,  but I did want to share this person's perspective.  I haven't 100% decided what I think about this, but it is interesting to think about/consider: 

    Crude and Unethical: Why Boris Johnson was wrong to try and terrify us into submission

    https://www.thedatapsychologist.com/post/crude-and-unethical-why-boris-johnson-was-wrong-to-try-and-terrify-us-into-submission

    Quote

    Fear, as horror author HP Lovecraft once noted (1927), is “the oldest and strongest emotion”. Indeed, a meta-analysis of brain imaging research suggests that fearful stimuli are those most likely to activate the brain’s ‘emotion centre’, the amygdala (Costafreda et al., 2008). Accordingly, it is little surprise that the use of fear in messaging both grabs attention (LoBue & DeLoache, 2008) and motivates behaviour (Witte & Allen, 2000); and likewise, a meta-analysis of 127 papers concluded that fear appeals have a significant impact on attitudes, intentions and behaviours (d=0.29; Tannenbaum et al., 2015). A recent paper found that, even considering perceived risk and political and moral attitudes, the only predictor of behavioural change (e.g., social distancing) was fear of the virus (Harper et al., 2020).

     

  22. 1 hour ago, kokotg said:

    Right; as this article makes clear, it isn't the vaccine that will lead to mutations, it's letting the virus spread unchecked. The vaccine is our best chance to stop or slow mutations. From your link:

     

    You skipped a whole lot of interesting and thought provoking information in that article to try to try to come up with some sort of "gotcha".  

    I happen to agree with Ho - if you stop the virus from replicating....   you stop the virus from mutating.  Isn't that sort of elementary!?  

    But, he also says: 

    Quote

    "Our study and the new clinical trial data show that the virus is traveling in a direction that is causing it to escape from our current vaccines and therapies that are directed against the viral spike,” says Ho

    Sooo....  it's already going in a direction that is causing it to escape from our current vaccines?  

    Well so much for the magic jab!  

    But this perspective offers some hope: 

    https://www.pandata.org/how-broad-is-covid-immunity/

    Quote

    The recent downward trends in cases and in hospitalizations across the globe seem to indicate that the virus has probably not mutated in any way that would make it much more dangerous and that a healthy immune system is very capable of dealing with these new forms of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Indeed, patients have been shown to recover naturally in most instances just like they did from the original form of Covid-19. The paucity of confirmed re-infections with the virus, accompanied by clinical symptoms, despite hundreds of millions of infections over the last year, is consistent with a lack of “immune escape”.  

     

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