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Messages - Die_Hard

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151
Football / Re: Soca Warriors want meeting with Warner.
« on: December 30, 2010, 11:25:11 PM »
Interesting thread, triggering some conflicting feelings. One messenger (RF) may be controversial but the blunt message is true. I guess it's too painful for some to accept, that a li'l Jakan is condescendingly giving advice to little vulnerable, suffering Trins.

1. RF tends to be jealous and polarizing: True
2. Disturbingly too many spineless Trinis exist, especially as it relates to dealings with the TTFF: True
3: Rodent, Scamps and Jackula have been extremely dishonest with the footballers: True.

 :beermug:



Stupid talk!

Are the persons in the other Caribbean islands spineless as they continously allow him to ascend to the CFU Presidency unchallenged?

Jamaicans there on that CFU council too.
Are te people of North Korea spineless as they have a dictator in charge and so many are starving becasue of his policies?

The fact is Jack has manipul;ated the system that he cannot be moved.

How may revolutions has Jamaica seen?

we had attempted coups twice, dad people in the streets.

Spinelss?  Nah.

Apathy?  Hell yes.

A oruupt system that is defended by FIFA..try to intervene for what purpose?

Reggaefan is a troll, plain and simple.


152
Six of One, Half a dozen of the Other... (For Political Supporters Only)
Listening to the PNM activists and supporters tell it, the country is now frightfully exposed to abuse under the People's Partnership and the country needs to pay close attention or we stand to lose a lot.


Sounding altruistic and patriotic in their motives, they are standing guard and calling out the UNC on every perceived slight of hand and looking on one would be hard pressed to recognize these same supporters, so mute and silent were they when their side was in power looting the treasury under UDECOTT, CHOGM, the Sport Company, and all the other bandit constructs with nary a dissenter, save and except for Rowley and the rest of Emile's boys.


Now the UNC is in power and their supporters get to play the role of silent bystander, their 'people' get to loot and the cycle of abuse and pillaging resumes in ernest, same play, different players.


Barely seven months in Office all the signs are there that this version of the UNC is no different to its last incarnation under Basdeo Panday, and certain key individuals in the Government are rumoured to be renegotiating the kick back deals with all who would be national suppliers and who originally had deals with the former Administration.


Certain State Board and other appointments would have embarrassed people who had shame, but local politicians have no such handicap and the people are either too divided or too lazy to stand against the obvious.


For all the sophisticated sounding drivel about serving the people and delivering, their intentions appear to be no different to those they replaced and all the supporters and activists who attacked Manning and crew have settled in for their own piece of the pie.


To quote my Syrian 'pardner', it was never about change, just exchange.


This is the real history of Trinidad & Tobago and it needs to be part of any political discussion if that discussion is not to be a lie; Party activists and supporters make it possible for corrupt public officials to cheat and steal because they conspire, deflect, conceal and partake in the abuse.


They are conspirators either before or after the fact, are complicit in crimes against this country and ought to be charged for their involvement.


This is in no way new, started by the PNM under Eric Williams and were world famous for their ability to cheat, steal and plunder banana republic style, matched only in recent history by Panday's UNC, starring Ish, Brian, Steve, Carlos and the boys.


So crafty was this bunch,  it was said they could literally steal milk and sugar out of coffee and make you believe you ordered it black in the first place.


Were it not for Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj and a political horn the PNM may never had seen power again, but thanks to Panday's hubris his Government collapsed, paving the way for our Lord, Saviour and Father of the Nation, Pastor Patrick Manning.


NAPA, private jets, million dollar scholarships, the Summit of the Americas, Waterfront fiascos, PM"s Palace, the soucouyant church, two million dollar flags later all beg the question of those supporters who are so vociferous now, where were you then?


Were you complaining about yellow laptops when the laptop supplier to CHOGM and the Summit made himself millions in four days?


Were you riding State Boards and running CEPEP Gangs, supplying thirty thousand dollar screws to T&TEC?


Where were you when the Project Manager Prime Minister was syphoning State funds for his church in the bush?


Both sides are equally disgusting when in power and someone needs to tell ALL their supporters to shut the hell up; They are part of if not the root of the problem and their piety and newly re-discovered love of country sounds hollow now.


Where the rubber meets the road is this; until the electorate, the people of this country develop something like self respect and love of country and stand against this base tribal voting we will never end this cycle of corruption and abuse.


This mad Party fervor is breaking our democracy a little more with each successive election, and I fear this continuous exchange of bandit politics will not only be our legacy, it will also be our death sentence and our final epitaph.


Something to think about...


Posted by Phillip Edward Alexander at 8:16 PM

153
Football / Re: Soca Warriors want meeting with Warner.
« on: December 30, 2010, 09:35:41 PM »
just cool. all those who agree with him are just blind to his tribal goading.

he is a juvenile ass.

Thats it, straight up.

He just wanted to show how far advanced Jamaicans are over trinis, and how they would not stand for blah, blah blah.

I wonder why they stand for so much ganster shite in Jamdown?

or why they would put their lives on line for a bandit like Dudus/

I am already sick of him, and I am new here!

154
Well, give it some time.  Is heresay admissable in civil cases?  How can any jury not weigh her subjective feelings when determining if she was injured?  And in the absense of witnesses, what else can they rely upon?  She had to have a marriage certificate, signed by both of them, and he waitied until the eleventh hour to say he was backing out, money already spent.

The fact that she planned a lavish reception may be a defense for him, as he can always say he backed out as she was carrying it too far.

I will wait and see how it plays out.  As you said we have one side of the story, that was given out by her lawyer at that.

155
Football / Re: Soca Warriors want meeting with Warner.
« on: December 30, 2010, 11:46:42 AM »
The Jamaican footballers were nearly made millionaires when they got that 7k US when that was converted in Jamaican dollars. 

I bet the first thing they all did was buy some good rubber slippers with their stash.

As for you, I was merely looking for a diversion this am as I had nothing much to do.

I am busy now and I will dispatch you and your nonsnese talk about your superior Jamaican mentality.

I will tell you this though, most Jamaican women are harder than most trini men.

Tel me is the food, drink, or climate that predisposes so many Jamaican women to grow face stubble and transforming their voices from feminine to something you expect from a Star Wars monster?

156
Football / Re: Soca Warriors want meeting with Warner.
« on: December 30, 2010, 09:04:34 AM »
It is funny that Jack Warner is NOT part of the TTFF just a special advisor, yet when there is trouble he is the one Groden says to speak to.  lol

157
Football / Re: Soca Warriors want meeting with Warner.
« on: December 30, 2010, 09:03:47 AM »
::) Soca Warriors and fans of Soca Warriors, take a page form the Reggaeboyz books. Stand up to the federation like men and stop acting like little boyz. All footballers in T&T should unite against the Federation...Like the Jamaicans did agaianst the JFF recently. Note that Jamaica's players each walked away with arounf US$7K for their exploits in the caribbean cup recently...even theough the JFF wanted to reneg on their initial promise.

The JFF responded recently by sending each players contracts to sign by Dec 31...this contract outlines fees, per diems etc for players over the next 4 years. to date None of the players have signed these contracts. the JFF is wise enough not to impose any sort of "black list" on the nations footballers...the fans of the boyz will retaliate if this should happen....and all national team games in teh office would be boycotted.

Are trinis(fans/footballers) in general this week and "sorf" ? Jack and crew will continue to hold the upper hand unless fans and players stand up to the TTFF! No wonder these guys have been in office for the past 20 years...burrell knows that if he screws up he will be kicked out again...Boxhill is lurking.



I am thinking here that you are some form of court jester.  Burrel has been raping your collective behinds for almost as long as Jack and sends you a few loaves from his bakery every so often as compensation.

AFter the so-called boycott, didn't your Boyz apologize and were they not told that they had to sign contracts as they would NEVER be allowed to blackmail and humiliate the JFF like that agin?

You must be a teenager or at the very least have the emotional and cognitive development of a very young teen.

Your pureile attempts at rabble rousing and instigating have been duly noted.  You are dismissed.

158
Well it is reasonable to assume that the would be groom would have been made aware of the location, would have had discussions with her about costs etc.

And according to the report, it appears that she had discussions regarding costs.  So I could see her recouping out of pocket expenses.

Proving intentional infliction of emotional stress and recouping the cost of filing suit is another story.  Unless off course she has hard evidence that he planned to not marry her etc. despite his proposal.

159
I actaul won a court case based on "promissory estoppel" and the judge just forced the breaching party to pay damages versus fulfilling the contract.

Isn't that pretty much what this jilted lady and her lawyer Ms. Alred as asking for?

Without knowing more details it sounds like that case was iincorrectly decided.  Promissory estoppel has four elements which must be proven in order to prevail:

-Defendant made a promise
-that was reasonably relied upon by plaintiff
-resulting in legal detriment to the plaintiff; and
-justice requires enforcement of the promise

By definition you're not asking for damages; you're asking for enforcement of the promise.  Now the judge may have looked beyond the "promissory estoppel" theory being argued and just decided the case on other merits and awarded damages.  But to arrive at such a decision based on promissory estoppel clearly has no basis in law.
It is funny that you should say what you did as the defendant's lawyers tried to make that self same argument and the judge said that "The available remedy is usually limited to only that which is necessary to avoid injustice."

So in the case of the jilted woman,  the judge would not make them get married but would make the intended groom pay for breaking what was a reasonable promise to marry????

Anyway that is why God created lawyers.

160
Well it does appear that based on the theory of promissory estoppel, she may just have a superb case.

Not really... promissory estoppel forces the breaching party to follow thru on the promise and keep their end of the bargain.  In other words, would force him to marry her.  Simpler contract concepts might work in her favor, but contract theory, though applicable, isn't a perfect solution for resolving these types of claims.

She lawyer slick though... he trying any and everything, including tort claims (the "emotional distress") part.  Even if Illinois law allowed that she woulda have a devil of a time making out a case for it.  The ABA board had a lot of fun with this one last month, including many unflattering takes on her name.

I actaul won a court case based on "promissory estoppel" and the judge just forced the breaching party to pay damages versus fulfilling the contract.

Isn't that pretty much what this jilted lady and her lawyer Ms. Alred as asking for?

161
Well it does appear that based on the theory of promissory estoppel, she may just have a superb case.

162
General Discussion / Re: One more damaging image of Trinidad and Tobago
« on: December 28, 2010, 06:45:07 PM »
Ministry of Justice said it will comensate the couple..(all victims should now approach the Ministry  I am saying this ok, not the Ministry.) 

Says the couple had filed an application for compensation, although London says he is distancing himself from that as he made no such promises!

What nonsense is this?

163
Football / Re: Stoke boss tells Kenwyne:Time to start scoring again.
« on: December 28, 2010, 04:01:30 PM »
Kenwyne is certainly not a Stern John!!!

Really?

164
Football / Re: Mario Balotelli
« on: December 28, 2010, 04:01:08 PM »
balotelli is toots


all smoke and no fire when he reach the EPL all fine and dandy in Italia
That toots scored a hat trick today.  I hope he continues to shit down the EPL!

That most over rated of leagues!

He score TWO penalty so he must be a selfish toots.  Who is he to be takin' penalty ahead of all the senior players?!  ::)

Black and selfish and a shit hound.

How de man color reach in this?  Leh we not go there boss.

Have you been living under a rock?  The man has been called all kinds of names and had bananas thrown at him....WAIT!   or I see,,,,sarcasm is not your strong suit.

165
General Discussion / Re: One more damaging image of Trinidad and Tobago
« on: December 28, 2010, 03:59:24 PM »
I thought so!  They are aggreived rightly so, but they cannot blackmail our country.

166
General Discussion / Re: One more damaging image of Trinidad and Tobago
« on: December 28, 2010, 12:19:13 PM »
why should they be compensated?  What makes them any different from say a local?

168
Jokes / Re: fall in de river
« on: December 28, 2010, 11:04:41 AM »
hahahaha I like this groaner  lol

169
Football / Re: Mario Balotelli
« on: December 28, 2010, 11:03:51 AM »
balotelli is toots


all smoke and no fire when he reach the EPL all fine and dandy in Italia
That toots scored a hat trick today.  I hope he continues to shit down the EPL!

That most over rated of leagues!

He score TWO penalty so he must be a selfish toots.  Who is he to be takin' penalty ahead of all the senior players?!  ::)

Black and selfish and a shit hound.

170
Football / Re: Mario Balotelli
« on: December 28, 2010, 10:54:44 AM »
balotelli is toots


all smoke and no fire when he reach the EPL all fine and dandy in Italia
That toots scored a hat trick today.  I hope he continues to shit down the EPL!

That most over rated of leagues!

171
General Discussion / Re: Louis Lee Sing's To Do List...
« on: December 28, 2010, 09:37:46 AM »
Die-Harry, Merry Xmas.

Although your make of the  mayor's to do list is funny as hell, some of the of it is quite serious for POS and Sando. People who are down on their luck from whatever part on the country tend to flock to the urban areas for that last line of support. I can bet you most of the vagrants are not from POS or Sando proper. How can a country claiming to be a tourist destination not make an effort to see about its OWN. We spend millions to advertise for foreigners to come here and then they seeing vagrants ..... some peeing and deficating. We don't really care.  It appears we only about pleasing the foreigners. But neglecting the vagrancy issue defeats the whole purpose of inviting foreigners to our shore.

The drinking at the pub needs to looked at. A lot of them drinkers can't hold their liquor plain and simple. The residents right to complain about the drinkers behaviour.  Rowdiness, blocking driveways and peeing on wall eh serious enough?

The one about Aboud is indeed funny. But you must remember who are the PNM financier's. A lot of things that are wrong or right about POS and TT had a lot to do with the POS business elite.

ALl that you are saying....is why I did my piece.

172
General Discussion / Mewey Cwismas, Trinis
« on: December 28, 2010, 12:39:29 AM »
This man has to be a die hard PNM  ;)

Mewey Cwismas, Trinis
By Raffique Shah

Story Created: Dec 26, 2010 at 12:33 AM ECT

(Story Updated: Dec 26, 2010 at 12:33 AM ECT )

I WAS reluctant writing this column on the eve of Christmas, knowing it will appear in print on Boxing Day, that it would probably upset some people. Then it occurred to me that a significant number of adults would crawl out of their beds or wherever they may have slept last night, feeling like faecal matter of one kind or other. So, if anything, my thoughts would blend nicely with whatever brand of antacid they pour down their hatches in preparation for another day of overindulgence. Mewey Cwismas, people!

First, the bad news: I am alive, not quite kicking butts, but enjoying the spirit, if not the substances, of the holiday season. Let me rephrase that: I hope I am alive when you read this. Given the state of crime in the country, and the deadly swath the hurricane of lifestyle diseases is cutting through the world, I may not live to read my own column! If I have fallen victim to any of these Grim Reapers, make merry on my corpse.

Over the past few weeks, several people I know well, some of them much younger than me, have exited the departure lounge of life and gone to realms unknown. Since I don't believe in heaven and hell (I swear these fantasy islands must be Tobago and Trinidad!), I can only hope that my friends who have passed on during the course of the year are frolicking on some secluded beach on the North Coast, far from the madding mob. Except for the "21 virgins" that are pledged only to suicide bombers, if we believe the CIA handbook on Islamic terrorists, what more can any mortal hope for in the afterlife?

But I stray from the focus of today's main course—maybe it's the sorrel I indulged in, damn potent stuff. Seriously, though, I got around to reflecting on the year that's about to come to an end, on what good things we have enjoyed and the bad things we have endured. I wondered who or what had the biggest influence on our lives, on the state of the nation, negative or positive.


Politicians always come to mind first. Because their actions, or inaction, impact most on the population, we tend to turn in their direction as we seek to evaluate what kind of year we have been through. In this regard, ex-prime minister Patrick Manning is the runaway winner... or loser. Any incumbent PM who calls early elections, knowing he would lose, must be a special person.

If losing the elections by a landslide was good enough to earn him the title "Dumbo of the Year", his insistence on remaining stubbornly seated in the political departure lounge underscores that dubious title. Flight after flight is called, some of his colleagues have boarded and left for destinations unknown, but not Manning. He sits there in silence, as if waiting for a special flight. With him, you never know. Given his flights of fancy, maybe he awaits the Jesus Jet that will take him straight to heaven... or wherever. Did I hear someone say purgatory?

Nipping at Manning's heels, but not quite taking that title, is one Basdeo Panday. "Basdeo who?" many may ask. I'm actually doing Bas a favour by mentioning him in this column. Except for when my journalist colleagues are starved for stories or guests on their talk-shows, the man who sees himself as the reincarnation of Lord Rama is all but forgotten. Many of those who once prostrated themselves at his feet now brand him Rawan.

What a thing! Gone yesterday, forgotten today. And beaten like a "bobolee" by a woman! Still, much like Manning, he clings to whatever is on offer, hoping that someday the masses he once claimed as his serfs would relent and restore him to the limelight. To further this elusive goal, Bas has set up some foundation that purports to pursue justice for former sugar workers. When he was in power, he failed to act decisively on behalf of these wretched-of-the-fields. He chose instead to rub shoulders with the parasitic oligarchy.

Oh, how the mighty have crash-landed! Take win, Bas, in the "Mamapoule of the Year" stakes.

In the main contest, Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar easily takes the title "Politician of the Year". Sitting at the feet of Guru Bas for years, she has mastered the art of politicking. Her People's Partnership rode to power on a plethora of promises to right all the wrongs the Manning government had inflicted on the population—and the electorate believed her.


She knew all along that politics and governance are different games. She played the former well. But the latter? Well, you judge. Her platform signalled it would curtail crime in short order. Has she delivered? She and Winston Dookeran vowed they would bring the economy back on track, instil investor and consumer confidence. Have they? They claimed there would be equitable distribution of jobs: the few make-work programmes are now People's Partnership-laden, just as they were PNM-laden before the elections. They have reneged on the $3,000-a-month pensions for everyone over age 65, an unrealistic goal I had warned the People's Partnership to avoid.

Kamla's governance thus far can be best described as "hampers-driven, compensation-ridden". Add a touch of glamour, lots of talk, hampers everywhere and continuing nepotism, and you have the People's Partnership's recipe for "looking good".

For taking us all on a merry-go-round, Kamla wins "Politician of the Year" by a canter.


173
General Discussion / Louis Lee Sing's To Do List...
« on: December 27, 2010, 10:52:59 PM »
Louis Lee Sing's To Do List...
December 2010




Jail the homeless
Ban spitting
Rough up downtown vendors
Steal candy from a baby
Cancel Christmas
Trip guy on crutches
Close down St. James Market
Bring back polio
Close down Mas Camps
Make daily showers illegal
Close bars and pubs at midnight
Bicycle riders must get 'Rider's permit'
Pick up Mrs. Aboud's dry cleaning
Remember to exit room backward bowing as I go
Let down Rowley's tyres
Poor people in town have to walk with a bell and a sign
Wash Gregory Aboud's car







January 2011


Make all 'Up' streets down
Make all 'Down' streets up
Men must wear hats in public, women must carry 'brollies
All wheel chairs with four wheels MUST have license plates
Cursing in public punishable by death
Wash Gregory Aboud's car


February 2011


Ban music on the road for Carnival
No costumes above the knees and below the neck allowed
All calypsos must include the word Louis, Lee and Sing in them
Make the savannah one way, the other way for a change
Wash Gregory Aboud's car




March 2011


Pending...
Wash Gregory Aboud's car

174
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/40661756

By Bob Dotson
TODAYshow.com contributor TODAYshow.com contributor
updated 12/27/2010 7:04:54 AM ET 2010-12-27T12:04:54
Share Print Font: +-

Rushville, Ill., is the kind of place where backyards have gardens instead of grass, and sunflowers wave in the wind. A tiny town, just 4,300 people, named for a doctor and settled by the men who marched back from the War of 1812. Rushville was built on government land, halfway between St. Louis and Chicago, as a gift to veterans. Those who did not come back got a statue on the courthouse square and were called heroes.

But there is another sort of hero in Rushville today — one the town treasures, and can also touch. Dr. Russell Dohner has been looking after his neighbors for 55 years, charging them about what we pay for a fancy cup of coffee: five bucks a visit. 

“In a mercenary world,” a waiting patient told me, “this place is an oasis.” 


More American Stories with Bob Dotson Wal-Mart greeter is last of eight World War II-vet brothers
Carl Grossman, 90, is the last of eight brothers who fought in World War II simultaneously. Bob Dotson’s profile of him won an Emmy.
..
Making a difference
Doc Dohner doesn’t believe in tossing things away, and that keeps costs down. The only thing modern in his office is medicine.

Most of his nurses have been with him nearly as long as his furniture. They’re paid well because Doc works around the clock. He will go anywhere, at any time, to help those in need, often arriving before emergency crews. He once saved a small boy from smothering to death in a corncrib, once climbed down into a coal mine to help rescue four men. 

Dohner broke his own back a few years ago and has had a heart attack — the only times he’s ever closed his clinic. He took time off until patients started coming to his house seeking medical care.

He does have help. Doc brought half the Rushville hospital staff into the world, including the woman who runs the place, Lynn Stambaugh. She used to wash dishes at the hospital. Dohner inspired her to go to nursing school.

I asked her why Doc never burned out.

"Well, I think because every day he makes a difference to at least one person, and if you can do that, you can go on.”

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The morning we first met, back in 1983, Dohner had been to surgery twice, prepped a broken arm, handled two emergency cases, checked on 50 patients and delivered three babies. It was not yet 10:30.

No days off
He has only one hobby: trees. He’s donated 10,000 of them to this prairie town. Now and then he does slip away to go fishing on a Thursday afternoon, but he’s usually in his tie, and always near a phone.

He has not, in 55 years, had a vacation, not even a full day off. What would he do, if he did take a day off?

“I would like to go to Missouri,” Doc says. 

Missouri is only 58 miles west of Rushville.

“Yes, but I have to take care of my patients first.”

The last time Doc left Illinois was during World War II. He was a military policeman in the Army, guarding President Harry Truman. “I was close enough to touch him,” Doc smiles, “but he wouldn’t have liked that.”

Dr. Dohner was born 85 years ago on a nearby farm, one of seven children. He worked to pay his own way through Northwestern University medical school. 

He had his heart set on being a big-city cardiologist, but decided, “Rushville needed a doctor, so I stayed. It’s the way it’s got to be, if I take care of what comes.” 

Russell Dohner has won dozens of awards for the quality of his practice and was runner-up for Country Doctor of the Year. Every morning before the sun peeks over the water tower, dozens of people are crammed into his waiting room.

More from TODAYshow.com  Monster blizzard pounds the East Coast
From the Carolinas to Maine, a massive winter snowstorm has grounded flights, closed highways and forced five major cities to declare states of emergency. TODAY covers the blizzard of 2010.

.Owing $450K, octuplet mom faces eviction
Mysterious road threatens ‘Great Migration’
Updated 100 minutes ago 12/27/2010 4:50:00 PM +00:00 Natalie Portman engaged — and expecting
Celebrity weddings of 2010
..He takes no appointments. Those who are seriously ill use the back door to get immediate attention; others sit for an hour or more to visit a doctor who knows more about them than some of their families do.

Advertisement | ad info
The first baby he delivered now drives her granddaughter 30 miles for an office visit. “When your little girl gets carried to surgery by the doctor instead of one of the nurses, she will learn to trust him, too,” she said.

Doc has no children of his own — unless you count the 3,500 babies he’s delivered. That’s more than the population of Rushville. 

If you would like to contact the subjects of this American Story with Bob Dotson, contact:

Dr. Russell Rowland Dohner
103 West Washington Street
Rushville, Illinois 62681
(217) 322-4363

Doctor Dohner does not have e-mail. The best way to contact him is through:

Luan Phillips
Director of Community Relations
Culbertson Memorial Hospital
238 South Congress Street
Rushville, IL  62681
217-322-4321, ext. 269
lphillips@sdcmh.org
cmhospital.com



175
General Discussion / On the Way to Eden....
« on: December 27, 2010, 10:39:01 AM »
On the Way to Eden....
.by Phillip Edward Alexander on Monday, December 27, 2010 at 12:49am.Our people are dying violently everyday, being thrown against each other in gladiator styled sport with our mothers left wringing their hands and crying inconsolably.

 

The failure of the people to see and act and the failure of the Government to know and to act is contributing nothing to stem the flow of blood and tears, and grief has become the undercurrent of our society.

 

One does not have to go too far out of one's way to touch it.

 

Our frail, elderly, and very young are being torn apart by the most depraved and barbaric acts our collective imagination can throw up as lawlessness abounds; driving has become a means of displaying anger, people are literally colliding with each other in demonstration of frustrated personal power in a land where the expression of self requires the triumph over another in even the most mundane of things.

 

Why?

 

Has our self loathing and frustrated personal power been turned in on itself?

 

The ghetto youth system has become a gang culture almost overnight in retaliation to/against the cruel joke of 'protect and serve,' and we, the custodians of tomorrow are clamoring for success in a misdirected effort long on PR devoid of substance, busy treating symptoms and ignoring root cause while turf war becomes entrenched and more violent daily.

 

Why?

 

Is it that we simply could not be bothered to care anymore?

 

The failure of successive administrations does not frree us from the guilt or make us any less complicit in the carnage and the useless loss of life, yet we fail to see that the final act is always our own, that only what we collectively allow can occur.

 

The drug trade has moved up the ladder from the dark corners it once inhabited to the Boardrooms and the Parliament through both of our major political Parties who, in their struggle to the death for power, rationalizes sleeping with the devil foolishly ignoring that once consummated, the devil is a lover that will not be spurned.

 

It is clear that both the PNM and the UNC are compromised from within, and I dare say neither holds the key to this country's best interest or, at least not as currently compromised as they have become 'too' political in nature and seem to have no clue as to people management and governance; somehow they seem to have overlooked the notion that plans require substance, timelines and the means to track deliverables; instead, we are treated to inane proposals that should never have left the Cabinet propped up by spin and more spin

 

Democracy places a huge responsibility on the citizen to get involved, to be part of the collective voice and even to sacrifice self comfort for the greater good; instead and in exchange we put personal needs first, viewing the world through a prism of self wants and self needs, leaving the 'pesky politics' to the politicians and crying to the heavens when the wolf reaches our door.

 

Again, WE are the system; the system can only fail us if we first fail it, how are we missing this?

 

Us being a nation of whiners and complainers waiting for the next 'daddy' to come along and save us needs to change.

 

We need to realize that we are 'it.'

 

We need to, for the most part where practical, ignore the Government and organize ourselves into proactive people bent on solving problems, making things better, changing lives.

 

The funding will be there long after we vote this or whichever Government out of Office, and building in lean times is good for long term success in any case.

 

People involvement is the most critical thing in every equation and no amount of money is going to make us better to each other and we need to learn that fact and learn it fast if we are really going to succeed as a nation.

 

We need to become a people of excellence in everything we do.

 

Start now, start today, make every decision, every action based on personal best.

 

Practice asking yourself always - is this really the best that I can be?

 

The future of our nation is in the answer to that question.



.

176
General Discussion / Cancer Cells May Be Able to Urge Their Own Death
« on: December 25, 2010, 04:45:43 PM »
Cancer Cells May Be Able to Urge Their Own Death
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EmailPrint.. Play Video Cancer Video:Former Marine Receives Christmas Like No Other CBS 2 New York .
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– Wed Dec 22, 11:47 pm ET
WEDNESDAY, Dec. 22 (HealthDay News) -- New research suggests that many cancer cells are equipped with a kind of suicide pill: a protein on their surfaces that gives them the ability to send an "eat me" signal to immune cells.

The challenge now, the researchers say, is to figure out how to coax cancer cells into emitting the signal rather than a dangerous "don't eat me" signal.

A study published online Dec. 22 in Science Translational Medicine reports that the cells send out the enticing "eat me" signal by displaying the protein calreticulin. But another molecule, called CD47, allows most cancer cells to avoid destruction by sending the opposite signal: "Don't eat me."

In earlier research, Stanford University School of Medicine scientists found that an antibody that blocks CD47 -- turning off the signal -- could help fight cancer, but mysteries remained.

"Many normal cells in the body have CD47, and yet those cells are not affected by the anti-CD47 antibody," Mark Chao, a Stanford graduate student and the study's lead author, said in a university news release. "At that time, we knew that anti-CD47 antibody treatment selectively killed only cancer cells without being toxic to most normal cells, although we didn't know why."

Now, the new research has shown that calreticulin exists in a variety of cancers, including some types of leukemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and bladder, brain and ovarian cancers. "This research demonstrates that the reason that blocking the CD47 'don't eat me' signal works to kill cancer is that leukemias, lymphomas and many solid tumors also display a calreticulin 'eat me' signal," Dr. Irving Weissman, director of the Stanford Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine and a co-principal investigator of the study, said in the release. "The research also shows that most normal cell populations don't display calreticulin and are, therefore, not depleted when we expose them to a blocking anti-CD47 antibody."

The next step is to understand how calreticulin works. "We want to know how it contributes to the disease process and what is happening in the cell that causes the protein to move to the cell surface," Dr. Ravindra Majeti, an assistant professor of hematology and study co-principal investigator, said in the release.

"Any of these mechanisms offer potential new ways to treat the disease by interfering with those processes," Majeti said.


177
General Discussion / Discipline, Tolerance, Production & Excellence....
« on: December 24, 2010, 05:35:28 PM »
Discipline, Tolerance, Production & Excellence....
.by Phillip Edward Alexander on Friday, December 24, 2010 at 6:23pm.As 2010 draws to a close and 2011 dawns, we approach our fiftieth year as a nation; let us use this opportunity to reflect on the milestones we have passed along the way, learning from both the good and the bad and taking forward only the fruit of those lessons that can make us succeed as a nation.

 

Fifty years of uninterrupted, independent nationhood is something worth celebrating and we ought to do it in true 'trini' style, but let us temper our celebration with the knowledge that there is till much work to do if we are to live up to the dream that is Trinidad & Tobago.

 

It is said that when Christopher Columbus touched our shores he was convinced he had found Biblical Eden, so lush and hospitable our land appeared; since Columbus it has been an adventurous journey, difficult at times but protected and safe, creating and reinforcing the idea that even if it were not Eden, this is still a very blessed land.

 

Let us not take that blessing for granted, rather let us use it to guide us through whatever storms may come to safe harbors, as we together endeavor to create one nation, one people under one flag.

 

Let us resolve that our nation be the undisputed home of a patriotic people set aglow with a vision of one family of citizens, secure in our love of Country First, where the words of our anthem rings true and resonates in all our peoples as every creed and race find their equal place right here.

 

As we approach our fiftieth year I would like to offer the adoption of an old word anew in the national lexicon - the word excellence.

 

Let us adopt it as one of our nations watchwords - Discipline, Tolerance, Production and Excellence, so that we will all know what to give and what to expect in an from everything we are a part of.

 

When we are one 'Country First' patriotic people driven to excellence, the promise of our collective tomorrows will set all our tomorrows alight, and we together with our children's children will live to see the realization of the dream, the promise of Eden, our home, Trinidad & Tobago.

 

That is something to celebrate....



Happy Holidays to all.

178
General Discussion / Reality
« on: December 20, 2010, 11:02:22 PM »
Reality
There is a Twilight Zone episode called “To Serve Man.”

Aliens come to Earth and bestow upon humankind a swift, easy and free path to plenty. Hunger ends. Peace reigns. No one questions the aliens’ motives, except for one man who is trying to decipher a book entitled “To Serve Man,” which the aliens have given to the world’s leaders.
He too soon gives up and joins the throngs of tourists flying off to visit the aliens’ planet. He’s boarding the spacecraft when his secretary tries to stop him, hollering what it is they’ve decoded: “To Serve Man — it’s a cookbook!” - So, as you see, there is no free lunch, literally or figuratively. But there is lunch — and you may be it.

I almost got all teary eyed at the swearing in yesterday and, having abandoned my concerns and reservations about the coalescence of the mismatched and the perverse, jumped on the bandwagon myself...

Almost.

There are problems with the picture.

My major concern is that the science does not bear out the outpouring of emotion and people have a sort of political amnesia. They literally see what they want to see.

We've been here before.

The reason coalitions are doomed to fail is not because we're a cynical lot, but because the ideologies of the protagonists are so different as to run afoul of each other during the planning stage of any adventure. It's easy for everyone to get along when it's 'us' against 'them'. When it becomes 'us' against 'us' is when the plot really thickens. What will hold it together then, the flag? Patriotism? National Pride?
Trinidad's cup does not really run over with these things, it's not like we're Jamaica or Barbados, Islands where the people retain their identity even when in exile in foreign lands; but I digress.

Those who would justify this experiment (adventure) have compared Trinidad's coalition with what is obtaining now in Great Britain, and even that is at some point bound to fail because if it does not, it will expose the lie that politics has an 'either or' option. Were it not so, why have a Parliament? What would be the point of Opposition if we could all just get along? Add to that the fact that Trinidad is made up of fundamentals that cannot be changed by wishing, and which cannot be erased by the best of intentions and you will not be surprised when the thing collapses.

I wrote a note entitled 'Where Do We As A People Go From Here', which attempted to outline a brief history of the differing elements (tribes) that make up our nation, and the goals and objectives of each and why they differ, and must differ fundamentally (http://plainlytalking.blogspot.com/2010/05/where-do-we-go-from-here_06.html).

In that note I asked three basic questions:

1. Is national unity a hoax?

2. What divides us?

3. Can what divides us be rewoven into something more of a national identity?

As an example of the divide - For all his best intentions, Daaga cannot undo the damage done to the Africans by slavery, nor the mad distribution of wealth of this country called the Cedula of Population (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cedula_of_Population).

A truly afro-centric Government would be more interested in the redistribution of the national treasure and rightly so, because the wrongs done to a people that have kept them socially dependent can only be undone by collective responsibility, collective atonement, and a national attempt to put the wrongs right.
To any Afro-Trini worth his history reading the above, the point is at least valid and worthy of discussion.
To the heirs of the white planters who were given the divided acreage based on the total amount of African slaves they owned, well, let's just say their view would be different. To the people who think history is just that, history; who want to pretend that we aren't where we are because of historical wrongs want to see black people as white people with a groovy tan.

Am I picking a side. No, not yet. I am simply saying that there are very deep divisions that need to be addressed and joining of hands to walk up the magic mountain is not going to solve them.

The above was used as a basic example, and divisions obtain for all the races.

The point I am making is, can you make Beetham Gardens into Goodwood Gardens by a joining of hands?

Is crime the result of wayward black youth who need to be aggressively policed, tried and jailed? Or is crime the result of a failed social system that ignored the plight of the weak and downtrodden even as the wealthy raped the treasury and made off with the national treasure? Can black people be put in their place? Should they? Where exactly is that, the bottom of the social ladder? Perpetual servitude?

I am going to judge this new Government not on pollyanna feelings of butterflies and rainbows, but on the yardstick of its promises as laid out in its manifesto. I will also judge it on what it failed to say.
The concept RISE, that was hijacked and used as a gimmicky party slogan was much, much more than that. It was intended to be a part of a national program of understanding, atonement and restoration. The people of this country are rubbing abrasively against each other because gimmicks are not working. We need time honored truths like respect and 'right of place' to be established for ALL people regardless of race, tribe or religion. We need to forget the 'Douglarisation' and 'Chutneying' of the nation and focus instead on the core issues that affect the differing groups and, in respecting and repairing wrongs on a historical and national level, pass on responsibility for things like law and order and national pride and respect to the true leaders of these communities. The concept of rise was to empower the different communities, respect their individual cultures and get them to work, because when the people feel a sense of belonging, their natural response is to defend and build.
The fist lesson in psychology is the absence of hope brings madness.
Have we learned that from our national experience as yet? Or are we going to distract the natives with gimmicks and hoodwink them so we can enrich ourselves. Are we again going to give the natives platitudes as trinkets instead of real leadership aimed at a cohesive plan of National reconstruction?

Time alone will tell.

The first 120 days were enunciated by this new Government as the timeframe for major programs to be enacted that would form the bedrock of social change that would free our people from the low expectations we REALLY have of those who lead us.

I am going to try to reserve judgement for 120 days (I said try).

I remain a political activist. Political Activists don't get to dress up and clink glasses to herald the changing of the guard. nor do we jockey for position and patronage in any new administration.

We man the wall. We ring the bells and set off the alarm when danger arises.

Nothing has happened thus far to make me believe true change has come.

179
General Discussion / Re: Poor T&T under this government.
« on: December 20, 2010, 05:55:02 PM »
Ok I was wrong it was 6 murders in 6 hours.

90 pecent of Trinis say they are NOT satisfied with the job the security forces are doing in stopping drugs and guns entering our country.


~~~~Woman and her children out shopping ..shot dead.~~~~

180
General Discussion / Re: REDRUM, REDRUM, AND MORE REDRUM!
« on: December 20, 2010, 05:44:35 PM »
Oh yeah, 5 murders in the last 12 hours in sweet T&T.

Where are the crime plans?  Maybe the Israelis destroyed those also?

And the newspapers are giving the government a free pass.

Where are the marches around the savannah, and the Red House? And the growing indignation?

I know, I am unfailry attacking the Kamla regime and it is because I am a die hard PNM.

Yeah, thats the reason!

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