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Featured

Teen Taking Selfie By Moving Train Gets Kicked In The Head by Conductor – Video

Warning! If you insist on taking a selfie next to an oncoming train, beware! You might get kicked in the head by the conductor!

That’s what happened to this teenager when he had the marvelous idea to stand close enough to the tracks to take his now infamous selfie. The video was rolling as the train approached. The teenager, looking seriously into the camera was smacked in the head when a shoe, apparently still attached to the train’s conductor.

“Wow, that guy just kicked me in the head!” the teen says, the serious look he previously had, gone. “I think I got that on film!”

Yes brains, you got it on film.

Again, stay a safe distance when conductor with shoes are on the trains!

Categories
Featured Healthcare Politics

Yes, They Actually Came Togather and Prayed For God to Kill Obamacare – Video

This happened in 2010. I cannot remember seeing or hearing about it, but these right-wing hate mongers calling themselves “Christians,” were so against their fellow Americans getting the opportunity to buy private health care, that they gathered in Washington and prayed to God for Divine intervention in killing Obamacare.

And it wasn’t just the regular nuts that prayed, no, the irregular ones prayed too. Georgia Republican Congressman Jack Kingston joined in the insanity.

Categories
Celebrities Music

Report – Jay Z and Beyoncé Tour Coming This Summer

Is “The Married Carters’ Holy Grail” tour coming to a city near you? Well, if God so loved the world, then yes. Yes, it is.

According to Page Six, Mr. and Mrs. Carter will be hitting the road together, and baby Blue is coming along for the ride. The hip-hop power couple is reportedly scheduled to embark on a 20-stadium tour in June, before closing out their quick run in July.

Together, Beyonce and Jay Z have more than a half-dozen collaborative songs together, including Beyonce’s smoking hot “Drunk In Love.” Both Jay Z and Beyonce are fresh off their own solo tours. While Jay Z’s “Magna Carter” tour ended in January, Beyonce’s “The Mrs. Carter Show World Tour” recently ended in March

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Education Health

Mental health issues in academia: ‘stories are not cries of the privileged’

‘Stories about mental health issues in academia are not cries of the privileged but vital to the future of research.’ Photograph: Alamy

“There are rather a lot of moaners in educational circles,” comments one Guardian reader on a recent article on mental illness among doctoral researchers and academics.

“There are plenty of skives in academia,” adds another commenter who thinks PhD students and university lecturers really have nothing to complain about, especially not in in comparison to other workers.

And an anonymous doctoral student confesses they experience a constant “internal conflict about the extent to which those of us who are lucky enough to be undertaking research at PhD level should complain about the difficulties on the path we have chosen”.

Not cries of the privileged

Lots of people talk about privilege these days, and it’s part of the conversation about mental health too. They refer to the “privilege” of being able to attend university and complete a degree, the “privilege” of carrying out out doctoral research, and the “privilege” of making your passion your job in the form of an academic career.

If you enjoy one or more of those privileges, the argument goes, then apparently you forfeit your right to draw attention to your struggles as an individual, to those of your wider profession, or to the working conditions that exacerbate – perhaps even cause – these issues.

If you have the privilege of making your voice heard, then don’t. Shut up and put up is the only path to which you are entitled once you are in a position in which people may listen, no matter how hard you’ve worked to gain that voice. A rich irony, of course, particularly for those of us who are educationally privileged but belong to marginalised groups on one or several other levels, be it through colour, class, ability, or gender.

Mental illness is not an issue confined to academia

Speaking about mental illness in academia is not to say that the sector’s workers are subject to worse conditions and expectations than those in other areas of employment (even if, on some levels, this may be the case). It is not a dramatic swoon of a handful of academics, complaining, with a sweaty brow and hand on forehead, of their terrible lot. Rather, these discussions and narratives are a small part in a bigger social and medical puzzle, a beginning to the de-stigmatising of mental illness more broadly, beginning – but not ending – in higher education.

Mental illness is not an issue confined to academia, but this makes it no less important to discuss it within this particular context. Neither are mental health issues confined to one particular group involved in higher education: they afflict administrative staff, management, researchers, and postgraduate and undergraduate students alike. All are caught up in a complex system of relationships defined largely by a combination of issues within and outside of the academy, including the marketisation ofand neo-liberal trends in university education.

Discussions contribute to a wider social issue

If open discussion of mental illness in academia is only a sign of our privilege, what do I tell the student who confides in me when they experience panic attacks, depression, and post-traumatic stress, and when they do so precisely because I discuss mental health issues openly?

What do I tell the doctoral researcher who feels the pressure of part-time contracts and competition so acutely that they regularly and increasingly doubt their own worth, not only as a scholar but also as a human being?

Should I tell them, as one commenter put it, that their lives are “pretty easy going compared to [that of] a miner”?

Unhelpful notions marginalise academic groups

Equally unhelpful, of course, is the notion that mental health issues are just part of the job. That they are psychological battle scars only the strongest and smartest can bear, those chosen few, the elite who are “made” for academic life (a notion which for so long has largely kept, and continues to keep, marginalised groups out of the academy and has reinforced so many other notions of privilege).

The wealth of advice out there on how to cope mentally at varying stages of higher education and in academia is testament to the fact that it is not only a “failing” few who struggle.

It demonstrates that we, whose profession it is to seek knowledge, recognise the problems of our sector and the impact they have on the quality of our work, the future of higher education, and our lives.

It shows that, in the slow process of change we are trying to initiate, we acknowledge our own as well as others’ struggles as worthy of attention and support. And we will not perpetuate the silence in which mental illness has been cloaked for so long both within and outside of the academy.

Nadine Muller is lecturer in English literature cultural history at Liverpool John Moores University – follow her on Twitter@Nadine_Muller.

h/t – The Guardian

Categories
basketball Sports

For Knicks’ Fans, We Get Local Bragging Rights – Yawn!

The New York Knicks had a disappointing season, loosing games they should have won and waiting until the last minute in too many games to mount their impossible comeback. But when it came to playing the Brooklyn Nets, the Knicks were apparently up for the challenge. And there is a reason for that… bragging rights.

After winning the final game against Brooklyn, a game and a win that was meaningless to the fan considering the fact that the Knicks are out of the playoffs, J.R Smith explained that bragging rights do matter.

“Hell yeah! I mean, I’m cool with some of those guys over there, so I can still say something when we’re in the gym this summer. As long as I can say they didn’t beat us that many times, we’re good.”

For the record, national bragging rights are far more important and appealing than local bragging rights. Ask any fan of the game and I’m sure they’ll agree that bringing home the championship title is far more important than saying you beat the Nets in the regular season.

Beating the Nets is not even a consolation prize for crying out loud, but apparently for the Knicks fans, it’s all we have these days.

The Knicks prevented the Nets from clinching the No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs and won their third straight in their too-little, too-late strong finish.

Yay!

Categories
cannabis Health marijuana

Report – Casual Marijuana Use Has Negative Effects on The Brain

Picture: Stuart Aylmer/ Alamy

Casual, as in a one to two times a week for a few months. The researchers at Harvard Medical School found that parts of the brain responsible for emotion, motivation and addiction were negatively affected when cannabis was introduced.

Researchers carried out detailed 3D scans on the brains of students who used cannabis casually and were not addicted and compared them with those who had never used it.

Two major sections of the brain were found to be affected.

The scientists found that the more cannabis the 40 subjects had used, the greater the abnormalities.

Around 10 million people in Britain, almost a third of the population, have used illegal drugs, with cannabis the most popular. The research author, Dr Hans Breiter, professor of psychiatry and behavioural sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, said: “This study raises a strong challenge to the idea that casual marijuana use isn’t associated with bad consequences. Some people only used marijuana to get high once or twice a week.

“People think a little recreational use shouldn’t cause a problem, if someone is doing OK with work or school. Our data directly says this is not the case.

“I’ve developed a severe worry about whether we should be allowing anybody under age 30 to use pot unless they have a terminal illness and need it for pain.”

The team examined sections of the brain involved in emotion, motivation and addiction in 20 students who had used cannabis and 20 who had not. Anne Blood, assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, said: “These are core, fundamental structures of the brain. They form the basis for how you assess positive and negative features about things in the environment and make decisions about them.”

The changes are thought to be the first steps towards addiction as the brain alters the way it perceives reward and pleasure, making ordinary experiences seem less fulfilling compared with drug use.

Categories
News

Suspicious Bags Found Near Boston Marathon Finish Line

Authorities are investigating two suspicious bags left near the finish line of the Boston Marathon amid stepped-up security on the anniversary of the bombings that shook the city a year ago today.

Police say the man they believe dropped the bags has been detained for questioning. There is no indication that the bags were dangerous.

WATCH: Video Shows Suspicious Person Near Boston Marathon Finish Line

The race takes place April 19, but today was a day of remembrance in Boston, a year after bombings at the finish line killed three and injured 264.

Police said the bags were left in the area of Boylston St. and Exeter St., and the road was closed. Both bags were exploded by Boston Police as a precaution.

 

h/t: ABCNEWS

Categories
Featured

Virginia Technician Charged With Raping Hospital Patient In The ER

An Arlington, Virginia technician is behind bars after raping a hospital patient.

According to FOX News, 30-year-old Roy Anthony Jones was arrested and charged with rape after he treated a woman in the ER. Police say the incident occurred in January after the unidentified woman was admitted to the Virginia Hospital Center.

A 37-year-old woman reported the rape happened in the early morning hours of January 13. She says she was being treated in the emergency room, and as part of that treatment, had gone to the hospital’s imaging center.

She says she was alone and that the CT scan technician, identified as Jones, forced himself on her and raped her.

Police say the victim went back down to the emergency room and told staffers she had been sexually assaulted. Someone called police.

Police say the delay in the arrest was due to officials collecting Jones’ DNA to connect him to the crime. Police Chief Daniel Murray told reporters he was shocked by the incident, since it occurred in a place patients are supposed to feel safe and secure in.

The problem is something could happen to anybody almost anywhere, so one always has to exude caution,” says Deputy Police Chief Daniel Murray. “But I’m extremely sympathetic to a patient trying to be in a place where they’re seeking treatment, where they’re seeking care, and then to have something tragically like this happen to them.”

Jones was terminated from his position and is being held in an Arlington, Virginia jail without bond.

SOURCE: FOX News | PHOTO CREDIT: Handout 

Categories
Featured Healthcare ObamaCare Politics

Fox News Outrage – Because of Obamacare, People Must Now Wait to Buy Healthcare

Fox News has something else to complain about. They are now blaming Obamacare for the people who chose to remain uninsured past the enrollment cycle. You know, those same folks Fox News told not to buy healthcare.

On the so-called “news” network’s website, this was written;

There is yet another ObamaCare surprise waiting for consumers: from now until the next open enrollment at the end of this year, most people will simply not be able to buy any health insurance at all, even outside the exchanges.

Apparently, the concept of an enrollment cycle is foreign to the good ole folks over at Fox. Of course, the rest of us already know that enrollment in health insurance happens every year and anyone who missed or failed to enroll because, they listened to Fox for example – would usually wait for the next enrollment cycle. But according to the foxers, Obamacare is now the culprit.

I still cannot figure out why their audience continue buying their bull!

Categories
Healthcare ObamaCare Politics

More Obamacare Good News – More Deficit Reduction, More People Insured Than Expected

Photo: CBO

Did you know? Obamacare, also known as the ACA will reduce the federal budget even more than the CBO initially reported. Also, more people will be covered than initially thought. Also, the Republicans are dead set on repealing the whole thing.

In 2010, it estimated that Obamacare’s costs to the federal budget between 2014 and 2019 would hit $759 billion. That figure has steadily declined with each revision. The new figures project “a net cost of $36 billion for 2014, $5 billion less than the previous projection for the year; and $1,383 billion for the 2015–2024 period.” That last figures is “$104 billion less than the previous projection.”

It also projected an increase to the number of people gaining coverage under Obamacare — though a modest one. Compared to its February estimates, the CBO now assumes that 7 million more people will gain coverage under the Obamacare exchanges. In total, it projects that “12 million more nonelderly people will have health insurance in 2014 than would have had it in the absence of the ACA” — an increase that appears to be independent of the spike in Obamacare enrollments at the end of March.

Categories
Politics

Lamar Odom to Knicks almost a done deal

Earlier I reported that Lamar Odom was being targeted by the Knicks before the season ended. My speculation was to lighten the load for Carmelo Anthony considering his injured shoulder.

This morning I have learned that the deal will not be a 10 day deal like I had originally thought. Looks like Lamar will be a part of next year’s Knick team.

Categories
Featured George Bush

Rush Limbaugh Thinks Hillary Clinton Planned The Shoe Throwing Incident

Photo: Mediaite

You see, I have my own theory on this whole shoe throwing incident last week involving former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

If you ask me, I think that the incident was staged. But unlike Rush Limbaugh who seems to think that the Clintons arranged the whole thing because, they’re the Clintons, I think it was staged by some disgruntled conservatives who can’t get over the fact that George Bush was the only US President to have a shoe thrown at him – a sure sign if disrespect.

My theory is, these conservatives assume that Hillary Clinton, being a Democrat and the next presumptive president of the United States – should join George Bush at the bottom of the ranks by having a shoe thrown at her.

But that’s just my theory. This is Rush Limbaugh.

On his radio show, Limbaugh discusses the incident with a caller.

The caller’s theory was based on Clinton’s “little girl” reaction to something that she said should have made the former secretary of state feel more “fear and anxiety.” Limbaugh admitted to the woman that he hadn’t seen the video — only the still photo on The Drudge Report — but based on that he agreed with his caller’s assessment.

“I can totally relate to those who believe that everything the Clintons do is staged or choreographed,” Limbaugh told is audience. “But I’m sorry, I’m ill-equipped to comment, I haven’t seen it,” he added, saying he hasn’t “cared enough” to seek it out

“Maybe it’s because, in my subconscious, I think it was staged, or set up, or whatever,” he said. “I don’t know why anybody would be throwing a shoe at Hillary unless maybe it’s an attempt to make the Benghazi people look like nuts and lunatics and wackos.”

Ah… Rush, you people already look like nuts and lunatics and wackos!

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