REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Do you feel like the winds of change are blowing today too?

POSTED BY: 6IXSTRINGJACK
UPDATED: Sunday, November 9, 2025 16:31
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 97024
PAGE 77 of 77

Friday, November 7, 2025 10:07 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
You are just explaining your own very behavior and trying to convince that everyone else behaves the way that you do.

I am around Trumptards all week long, and all of those Trumptards have irretrievably fucked up their lives while none of them will acknowledge what they did to themselves.



Oh. We know you are and we know they did.



--------------------------------------------------

For all that I've blessed, and all that I've wronged. In dreams until my death, I will wander on.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 6:30 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


How many people from the first Trump administration are working in the second?

https://www.google.com/search?q=how+many+people+from+the+first+Trump+a
dministration+are+working+in+the+second


Summarizing the AI results: only the nuttiest fruitcakes came back for a second Trump administration. Only loyalty to Trump is necessary. Competence is disqualifying.

Trump was careful to be sure that he didn't have a V.P. like Mike Pence, who knew what the words indecent, insane, and unconstitutional mean.

He nominated or appointed 23 former Fox News employees to his administration.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_cabinet_of_Donald_Trump

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 6:38 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Redstopgringo:
“Are Pinky and the Brain still trying to take over the world? Because at this point, I'm willing to hear the Brain's platform.”

the-other-sandy:
“At this point, I'm willing to hear Pinky's platform.”

DownvotesStarWars:
“A sentient turkey sandwich would make better decisions than Trump.”

https://imgur.com/gallery/sentient-turkey-sandwich-would-make-better-d
ecisions-baIgF3J


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 6:49 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Most Unpopular President in History is Losing His Coalition

Morris: I wrote a couple of data driven takeaways—well not a couple, seven of them—on the Substack which I can reference. Then I’ll also mention a couple things from the new data analysis. For the readers, we’re recording this on Thursday. So there’s been about a day to catch up on sleep and digest the findings.

The big thing is unsurprising, but it really bears repeating. This is an electoral repudiation of Donald Trump and an electoral verdict on his unpopularity. I have appeared on your interview show a couple of times now to say essentially that the polls show he’s the most unpopular president ever, save himself in his first term. Trump’s policy agenda is also one of the most unpopular policy agendas in American presidential history, at least since we have surveys, since 1936. In that context, it’s rather unsurprising that Democrats did so well in Tuesday’s elections. They swept all of the statewide races in Virginia, all of the New Jersey races, they picked up two utility offices in Georgia, a red state—or a purple state if you’re very optimistic there as a Democrat—which is surprising. In Pennsylvania, they hold like three partisan justices and they win a lower court race as well as statewide.

In that context, it’s rather unsurprising, but it does affirm what we’ve been seeing in other data, which as good Bayesians, is always important to us. It also gives hard data to members of Congress that might want to fight Trump on things like his tariffs, or immigration, which is very unpopular, either from the right or from the left. It gives them something to point to that’s not just survey data, which is increasingly poo-pooed in Congress, as we might say.

So that’s my big takeaway. There are some smaller things which I’ll mention now. The first is it’s not just that Trump lost, it’s that he lost with voters that he supposedly had a realignment with in 2024. This is Latinos and Generation Z voters in particular. He loses with voters who say the economy is very important to them, which is the single constituency that likely propelled him to victory in 2024 in the first place. So in my article I’m putting out on Friday, I’m going to characterize this as: Trump’s losing his winning coalition; because I think that’s really what’s going on here.

The voters that put him in the White House because they wanted lower prices have said, “he’s not holding up his end of the bargain.” He’s not lowering prices. The supposed Republican ideological gains among Latinos in Generation Z who have tended to lean to the left and who, by the way, still voted for Kamala Harris despite lower margins than they did previously has evidently, evaporated. That’s really worth digesting as well.

Krugman: At one level of dispute we’ve had Trump himself insisting week after week that the polls are fake and that he’s extremely popular. And it’s basically you can argue until you’re blue in the face that “polling, it’s not a perfect science, but it’s meaningful.”

But there’s nothing quite like actual elections to settle that dispute. This sort of says that the polling saying that he’s unpopular and his policies are unpopular is right.

More at https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/after-the-dem-sweep-talking-with

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 7:41 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


He's not even close to the most unpopular President in history.

If you're going to continue saying stupid shit like that, then nobody is going to take you seriously.

--------------------------------------------------

For all that I've blessed, and all that I've wronged. In dreams until my death, I will wander on.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 11:05 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
He's not even close to the most unpopular President in history.

If you're going to continue saying stupid shit like that, then nobody is going to take you seriously.

Trump is very popular with people who are fucked up in the head, but not so much with Americans who have a useful purpose in life and are functioning normally.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 11:05 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


DOJ Had Its First Big Hearing in a “Trump Enemy’’ Prosecution. The Judge Was Not Pleased.

Let’s recall why Comey made it to the top of Trump’s enemies list.

By Austin Sarat | Nov 08, 2025 10:00 AM

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2025/11/doj-comey-hearing-trump-en
emies-list-judge.html


In the world of sports, there is an old maxim that captures the essence of competitive athletics: “Play the ball, not the person.” Play the ball, focus on the competition itself, honor the game, and don’t try to humiliate or hate your opponent.

This is one of the many lessons that our current president appears never to have learned or accepted. President Trump is the classic “play the person” kind of leader. He seems to take pleasure in making everything personal.

His approach does great damage to our culture and politics. It is also deeply destructive of our legal system.

The president doesn’t hide his everything-is-personal approach. In fact, he wants the American public to know who his enemies are and to understand his embrace of an “all’s fair in love and war” political ethos.

That’s why he has been clear about his desire to see people like John Bolton, Letitia James, and James Comey prosecuted. It will now be up to judges handling those cases to push back against the president’s weaponization of the Justice Department.

On Wednesday, Magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick, who is handling the preliminary phases of the Comey case, was the first up, and he gave a master class in judicial pushback. As the New York Times reports, he “repeatedly expressed his frustration—and at times his barely restrained annoyance—with [the federal prosecutor] during an otherwise procedural hearing in which he ordered the Justice Department to produce records from its investigation.”

Before saying more about Fitzpatrick’s pushback, let’s recall why Comey made it to the top of Trump’s enemies list.

Nine years ago, during and after the 2016 presidential campaign, no one would have predicted Trump’s vendetta against the former FBI director. In fact, but for Comey, Trump might not have ever been elected. ABC News notes: Comey announced in October 2016—less than two weeks before the presidential election—that the FBI was going to investigate Clinton’s private email server, months after federal investigators said it would not recommend charges. Trump praised the decision.

At the time, Trump said, “I have respect that the FBI has given it a second chance.”

The tone changed two days before the election, when Comey announced that he was not going to bring charges against Clinton. Never one to be bothered with evidence or the lack of it, Trump insisted, “Hillary Clinton is guilty. She knows it, the FBI knows it, the people know it.”

Things really went south in early 2017 when the president made it clear that he wanted the FBI director to pledge his loyalty, and when Comey demurred.

In March 2017, Comey got in more hot water when he went public with the fact that the FBI had been investigating suspected Russian interference during the 2016 election. Two months later, Trump claimed that “FBI Director Comey was the best thing that ever happened to Hillary Clinton in that he gave her a free pass for many bad deeds!”

In early May of that year, Trump took the unusual step of firing the FBI director.
It turned out that this was after an aggressive campaign by Trump to push Comey into dropping an investigation of his former national security adviser, Michael Flynn. Flynn would eventually be convicted and then pardoned for lying to federal investigators as part of that investigation into Russia’s election interference.

Almost a year later, Comey got a measure of revenge when he told an interviewer that the president was “morally unfit to be president.” He cited in particular his response to a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

“A person who sees moral equivalence in Charlottesville,” Comey explained, “who talks about and treats women like they’re pieces of meat, who lies constantly about matters big and small and insists the American people believe it; that person’s not fit to be president of the United States, on moral grounds.”

In September, Comey was “indicted on charges of making a false statement and obstruction related to his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2020.” It followed a social media post in which the president demanded that Attorney General Pam Bondi bring charges against Comey and others.

To accomplish that goal, the president removed the federal prosecutor with jurisdiction over the Comey matter, but didn’t think there was enough to indict. The administration replaced him with a former Trump defense attorney, Lindsey Halligan, someone who the president said was willing “to get things moving.”

Getting things moving does not require playing by the rules. And Halligan has not been.

She has been dragging her feet when it comes to turning over evidence to the defense as is required under the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. Comey’s defense needs that information, especially emails between Comey and a close friend, Daniel Richman, who will be a key prosecution witness.

That failure constitutes prosecutorial misconduct. It is called a Brady violation, after the Supreme Court case Brady v. Maryland, which requires prosecutors to disclose any evidence that is favorable to the defendant or could undermine the prosecution’s case.

And if that were not bad enough, the prosecution had revealed text exchanges between Comey and Richman without giving the defense a chance to review them and challenge their release.

Fitzgerald took the unusual step of ordering Halligan to turn over to the court grand jury materials that involved Comey and Richman. The New York Times was right to characterize this as “a significant development.”

It will permit Comey’s lawyer, the Times adds, “to scrutinize exactly how Ms. Halligan characterized the evidence against Mr. Comey when she showed up for what was her first-ever appearance in front of a grand jury.”

But even more significant was Fitzpatrick’s characterization of the case against Comey as an example of an “indict first, investigate second” kind of prosecution.

Right from the start, Comey has labeled the decision to indict him as a “vindictive prosecution,” a prosecution brought in retaliation for someone’s exercise of a constitutionally protected right. The prohibition of such behavior, SCOTUSBlog’s Rory Little explains, “is founded in constitutional due process. So too is the idea that a person may not be selected for prosecution purely as a matter of revenge—vindictive prosecution. In this sense, vindictive prosecution is simply a subset of improper selective prosecution.”

As Comey’s lawyers put it in a filing seeking dismissal of the indictment, the prosecution “arises from multiple glaring constitutional violations and an egregious abuse of power by the federal government … President Trump ordered the Department of Justice to prosecute Mr. Comey because of personal spite and because Mr. Comey has frequently criticized the President for his conduct in office.”

“Indict first, investigate second” is virtually a synonym for vindictive and selective prosecution. That is why what Judge Fitzpatrick said is so significant in the Comey case.

But it is more than that. Fitzpatrick is telling the president and the world that he will not let the administration use Comey to stage a “show trial,” the kind familiar in authoritarian regimes where guilt is predetermined and the prosecution is staged for propaganda purposes and to intimidate political opponents.

That is good news, not just for Comey, but for all of us who still cling to the idea that we can criticize the president and the government he leads without being afraid that we will become a target of the president’s personal pique.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 4:31 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
He's not even close to the most unpopular President in history.

If you're going to continue saying stupid shit like that, then nobody is going to take you seriously.

Trump is very popular with people who are fucked up in the head, but not so much with Americans who have a useful purpose in life and are functioning normally.



Throw out all the insults you want, it doesn't change the fact that your article is lying to you.

--------------------------------------------------

For all that I've blessed, and all that I've wronged. In dreams until my death, I will wander on.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 6:38 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

Throw out all the insults you want, it doesn't change the fact that your article is lying to you.

Who are you kidding? Only yourself. You believe Trump isn't unpopular because Trump is validating your life as purposeful rather than wasted.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, November 8, 2025 6:48 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

Throw out all the insults you want, it doesn't change the fact that your article is lying to you.

Who are you kidding? Only yourself. You believe Trump isn't unpopular because Trump is validating your life as purposeful rather than wasted.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two



We have vast records dating back to at least the 90's on most of this stuff now.

Even in that time, Trump is far from the least popular President in history.

You're just saying stupid shit, and that's because you read stupid shit.

--------------------------------------------------

For all that I've blessed, and all that I've wronged. In dreams until my death, I will wander on.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, November 9, 2025 10:27 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

We have vast records dating back to at least the 90's on most of this stuff now.

Even in that time, Trump is far from the least popular President in history.

You're just saying stupid shit, and that's because you read stupid shit.

6ix and Trumptards in general need a bullet in the back of their heads to fix what is wrong with them: On constitutional matters of war powers and tariffs, Republican lawmakers have abandoned the field to Trump.

By Rachel Oswald | November 7, 2025, 5:42 PM

https://foreignpolicy.com/2025/11/07/congress-war-powers-tariffs-trump
-republicans-venezuela-boat-strikes
/

As U.S. President Donald Trump pushes the boundaries of executive power in the matters of trade and military action further and further, Congress’s conspicuous absence in pushing back against the president’s bold usurpation of authorities that the U.S. Constitution explicitly delegates to the legislative branch has become all the more glaring.

Recent votes in the Senate have highlighted just how far afield the Republican Party has traveled from its own previous long-standing stances in support of free trade. On other key votes in recent days on the permissibility of the Trump administration’s expanding regional maritime strikes on alleged drug-running vessels and the legality of any military action against the Venezuelan government, Republican lawmakers have overwhelmingly accepted the administration’s assertions that it is targeting “narco-terrorists” and have declined to preemptively put limitations on a potential effort to overthrow the Nicolás Maduro regime.

The Senate held votes last week on three separate measures to end a series of tariffs that Trump imposed this year, including his sweeping global tariffs; tariffs on Canada that the White House controversially justified by claiming a national fentanyl emergency existed on the northern border; and tariffs on Brazil that the president said were a response to the Brazilian Supreme Court’s criminal case against Trump ally and former President Jair Bolsonaro, who was convicted of attempting a coup after his 2022 election loss.

Though each of the resolutions narrowly passed the Senate after a couple of Republicans crossed the aisle to vote with Democrats, the measures face steep procedural hurdles in the House, where Republican leaders have more tools to preemptively block them from being voted on.

“I think we’ve seen probably for the last half-century an ebbing of congressional authority to the executive,” said Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff, a lead sponsor of two recently rejected war powers resolutions related to the military’s maritime attacks on alleged drug smugglers and the growing U.S. naval buildup near Venezuela.

“You could probably add up the sum total of that accretion of executive power in the last several decades, and it will be less than what’s happened in the last several months. Congress needs to reinsert itself, its control over the power of the purse and certainly its war power,” Schiff added.

With Congress under full Republican control and largely absenting itself from imposing any meaningful check on Trump, it will be likely the Supreme Court that acts first on the tariffs question. During oral arguments in a case before the high court this week, a majority of justices sounded skeptical about the administration’s contention that it has essentially unfettered powers to interfere with the U.S. economy through the mercurial imposition of tariffs.

“The legal basis for Trump’s use of tariffs is extremely weak,” said Jordan Tama, a professor at American University who specializes in congressional oversight of U.S. foreign policy. “The International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which the Trump administration has cited as the basis for the tariffs, authorizes the use of sanctions in the event of a national emergency that [constitutes] an unusual and extraordinary threat.”

Tama argued that long-running trade deficits could hardly be viewed as unusual under the definition of the law and that the prosecution of a politician in a foreign country such as Brazil didn’t represent an “extraordinary” emergency to the American people. A group of leading economists made a similar argument in an amicus brief filed on behalf of the plaintiffs in the Supreme Court case.

“Every member of Congress should recognize that Trump’s use of tariffs is inconsistent with laws that have been passed by Congress, and therefore all members of Congress should be opposing Trump on that,” Tama continued. “It is sad and distressing to see the vast majority of Republicans voting against these bills. I would say, though, that the bills are not necessarily insignificant even if they are not going to become enacted into law.”

On war powers, just two Republican senators, Lisa Murkowski and Rand Paul, voted with Democrats this week to forbid the administration from conducting military operations inside Venezuela or against the Maduro regime without explicit congressional authorization. The Nov. 6 procedural motion on the joint resolution failed, 49-51, amid strong opposition from the White House.

The outcome of this week’s failed vote to ban unauthorized military action against Venezuela was virtually identical to a vote on a similar resolution on Oct. 8 that attempted to order an end to Trump’s unauthorized military strikes in the Caribbean. That measure was rejected, 48-51, with Democrat John Fetterman joining Republicans in the vote and Murkowski and Paul voting with Democrats.

Republican Jim Risch, who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, spoke in opposition to the legislative effort to block unauthorized military strikes against the Venezuelan government. But his floor remarks focused on the attacks against the alleged drug smugglers, and he did not touch on the growing question of whether Trump aims to overthrow Maduro.

“President Trump has taken decisive action to protect thousands of Americans from lethal narcotics. He’s kept drugs off the streets, kept children alive, and eliminated narco-terrorists, who have been profiting off of the deaths of members of our communities,” Risch said on Thursday. “These people have been transmitting drugs into the United States via a lot of different ways. One of them was by shipping vessels in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific Ocean.”

In the weeks between the two war powers votes, as the number of those killed in the boat strikes steadily ticked upward (now estimated at 70 people), concerns have only grown about the legality of Trump’s actions.

Even though the administration and its Republican backers insist the military is attacking narco-terrorists, when there have been survivors of the strikes, they haven’t been treated the way that other captured terrorists are generally treated by the United States: with imprisonment and prosecution. Rather, survivors have been returned to their home countries—and in at least one of those cases, one of the alleged drug smugglers was released by the Ecuadorian government, which said it did not have legal grounds to detain him.

Behind the scenes, there are signs that more Republicans are not wholly convinced of the administration’s assertions of sweeping legal authority to carry out its military attacks in the Caribbean and nearby Pacific. Democrat Mark Kelly, who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he was invited to just one classified briefing on the strikes.

“We got one brief, but to be honest, they [the Trump administration] didn’t share all of the information,” Kelly said. “It was fair to say there was bipartisan frustration on the amount of information they would provide us. They would tell us, ‘We’re not going to give you that,’ and in trying to explain to us the legal rationale for doing this, it was rather hard to follow, confusing. They were tying themselves in knots trying to explain this, and they had a lot of questions that they either couldn’t answer or refused to answer.”

For his part, Risch indicated that he was satisfied with the legal justifications that the administration had provided.

“Myself and many of my colleagues have sat recently through hours of briefings and legal analysis by government legal departments and attorneys who have studied this issue,” Risch said in his floor remarks. “Unanimously, they have concluded that the action taken by President Trump is absolutely lawful.”

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, November 9, 2025 11:26 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


The Trump admin is so much better with internal policy!

Quote:

Brennan, Page, & Strzok Hit Today With Russiagate Grand Jury Subpoenas, Up To 30 More Pending

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/brennan-page-strzok-hit-today-russ
iagate-grand-jury-subpoenas-30-more-pending


So well deserved!

-----------

"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal."- Henry Kissinger

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, November 9, 2025 12:06 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
The Trump admin is so much better with internal policy!

Fuck you to death, Signym:

"A death sentence"

November 9, 2025 9:22 AM EST

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/promising-clinical-trials-in-alzheimers-p
revention
/

Jake Heinrichs is an electrician who carries one of the early-onset genes. The disease claimed his grandmother, uncle, father and brother, all within the same age range. "Symptoms in the 40s and, and dying in 50s," he said.

For Heinrichs growing up, the word Alzheimer's was "a death sentence."

He started getting treatment in Bateman's study in 2013. Though he's definitely getting an antibody called lecanemab now, for the first seven years, he did not know if he was receiving an antibody or placebo. "I was at an age where I should have been showing signs," Heinrichs said, "and I am now at an age that I should probably not even be alive."

His wife, Rachel Chavkin, says over the past three years, he will occasionally repeat a question, but otherwise has shown no cognitive decline since she fell in love with him twenty years ago. "Jake is now 51, which is the age that his father was when he died," she said.

The Trump administration's budget cuts have stopped or delayed millions of dollars in Alzheimer's research. The situation has already had an impact on Bateman's trials. "It's a precarious time," he said. "Research is not like building a building or painting a wall where you can start and then stop for a few years and then go back and resume what you were doing. It's much more like feeding a baby … if you stop doing that for a few weeks, it's irrecoverable."

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, November 9, 2025 2:43 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Fuck off, Second.

--------------------------------------------------

For all that I've blessed, and all that I've wronged. In dreams until my death, I will wander on.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, November 9, 2025 3:08 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


The first clinical trials were funded by the two pharmas, Eisai and Biogen, that first produced lecanemab, a monoclonal antibody. (Any treatment ending in "mab" is a Monoclonal AntiBody.)

FDA approved lecanemab in 2023.

Heinrichs is no longer in a clinical trial, he's being treated with an FDA-approved medicine.


Don't you like the way CBS news twisted their reporting?

Quote:

We started getting treatment in Bateman's study in 2013. Though he's definitely getting an antibody called lecanemab now, for the first seven years, he did not know if he was receiving an antibody or placebo. "I was at an age where I should have been showing signs," Heinrichs said, "and I am now at an age that I should probably not even be alive."

His wife is Broadway director Rachel Chavkin. She says over the past three years, he will occasionally repeat a question, but otherwise has shown no cognitive decline since she fell in love with him twenty years ago. "Jake is now 51, which is the age that his father was when he died," she said.

The Trump administration's budget cuts have stopped or delayed millions of dollars in Alzheimer's research. The situation has already had an impact on Bateman's trials.

But not on Heinrich's treatment
Quote:

"It's a precarious time," he said. "Research is not like building a building or painting a wall where you can start and then stop for a few years and then go back and resume what you were doing. It's much more like feeding a baby … if you stop doing that for a few weeks, it's irrecoverable."


The NIH IS funding research on leqanemab, but it's on people in different stages and with garden-variety Alzheimer's.

-----------

"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal."- Henry Kissinger

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, November 9, 2025 4:31 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

We have vast records dating back to at least the 90's on most of this stuff now.

Even in that time, Trump is far from the least popular President in history.

You're just saying stupid shit, and that's because you read stupid shit.

6ix and Trumptards in general need a bullet in the back of their heads to fix what is wrong with them:



Any other platform in the world and Second would have been gone a long time ago.

--------------------------------------------------

For all that I've blessed, and all that I've wronged. In dreams until my death, I will wander on.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

YOUR OPTIONS

NEW POSTS TODAY

USERPOST DATE
second 11.09 10:27
SIGNYM 11.09 11:26
second 11.09 12:06
6ixStringJack 11.09 14:43
SIGNYM 11.09 15:08
6ixStringJack 11.09 16:31

OTHER TOPICS

DISCUSSIONS
Trump Is Destroying Everything He Touches
Sun, November 9, 2025 18:05 - 863 posts
Legitimate gripes about Trump
Sun, November 9, 2025 16:38 - 157 posts
Do you feel like the winds of change are blowing today too?
Sun, November 9, 2025 16:31 - 3816 posts
In the garden, and RAIN!!! (2)
Sun, November 9, 2025 14:18 - 6298 posts
Russia Invades Ukraine. Again
Sun, November 9, 2025 13:30 - 9269 posts
Gaslighting about voter turnout by Vox
Sun, November 9, 2025 02:53 - 1 posts
Great Financial Collapse, 2026 version?
Sat, November 8, 2025 19:12 - 13 posts
From CRT to Campus Protest: The Making of a Mamdani Voter
Sat, November 8, 2025 17:21 - 12 posts
The Thread of Court Cases Trump Is Winning
Sat, November 8, 2025 16:51 - 78 posts
Charlie Kirk Shot While Answering Question About Trans Shooters
Fri, November 7, 2025 18:34 - 40 posts
NBC Chicago: 8 hurt when man in Colorado hurls ‘flamethrower' at group supporting Israeli hostages: What we know
Fri, November 7, 2025 15:58 - 14 posts
Ghislaine Maxwell, in prison for sex trafficking, calls meeting Jeffrey Epstein the "greatest mistake of my life"
Fri, November 7, 2025 09:01 - 32 posts

FFF.NET SOCIAL