Police say one man was shot in his side after a bullet was shot through a portable restroom.
SpinnyNuNu
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Police: one shot in portable restroom by parade
SpinnyNuNuTitle gore. So the parade shot the guy?
Muhammad Ali's son asked, 'Are you Muslim?' by border agents
SpinnyNuNuNope. Not a Muslim ban.
The wife and son of the late boxing legend Muhammad Ali may sue immigration officials who questioned their religion
82 percent of men don't believe the wage gap exists, according to poll
SpinnyNuNu82% of the problem
Thirty-four percent of working women believe they don't earn as much as male co-workers, but 82 percent of men don't believe in a wage gap.
Man injured in Olathe shooting said suspect asked if they were 'staying here illegally'
SpinnyNuNuTrump's America.
Witnesses told investigators Adam Purinton yelled at two Indian men to "get out of my country" before opening fire
White House says chief of staff not wrong to talk to FBI
SpinnyNuNu>>>The ranking Democrat on the committee, California Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said if the White House indeed contrived to have intelligence officials contradict unfavorable news reports, it threatens the independence of the intelligence community.
"Intelligence professionals are not there to serve as the president's PR firm," Schiff said, adding, "For its part, the intelligence community must resist improper efforts like these by the administration to politicize its role."
Remember when Trump was challenging Obama's birth certificate? President Obama did not run to the FBI and make them contradict Trump. He acted like a grown-up and tried to ignore the crazy person.
It strikes me that when the Trump administration cannot use facts to defend their actions, they are demanding the FBI do it for them even though Trump has already insulted the entire intelligence community.
The White House says its chief of staff didn't do anything wrong in seeking the FBI's help in rebutting a news report
Milo Yiannopoulos defends pedophilia and pedophiles
SpinnyNuNuWhat. The. Fuck.
Holy fuck... Milo Yiannopoulos paints the abuse highlighted on this blog in a favorable light. What an ass.
Kansas man accused in bomb plot feared social collapse
SpinnyNuNuBut Democrats are the crazy ones
A man accused of plotting to attack Somali refugees in western Kansas believed then-President Barack Obama would declare martial law and not recognize the validity of the election if Donald Trump won — forcing militias to step in, his lawyer said Friday.
Christian Dior| Hostess Gown |c. 1957 (📸 by me) @museumatfit...
SpinnyNuNuOoooo

Christian Dior| Hostess Gown |c. 1957 (📸 by me) @museumatfit #parisrefashioned #fashion #fashionhistory #stylehistory #historicalfashion #periodclothing #costumehistory #costumedesign #costume #embroidery #dress #defunctfashion #vintageclothing #vintagefashion #hostessgown #teagown #dressinggown #christiandior #dior (at Museum at FIT)
SourceSenator Elizabeth Warren: “Back when I was campaigning for...
SpinnyNuNu>>We build a future for all of our children. No exceptions, President Trump.
I love Sen. Warren.

Senator Elizabeth Warren:
“Back when I was campaigning for the Senate, I met a man in his 60s down near the South Shore. His skin looked leathery like someone who had spent years working outside, and he wore a frayed Vietnam vets cap. He asked flatly: “Yeah, you talk about building a future. But what about transgender? What about them?”
I’ll admit: I didn’t expect that question from him. But I replied exactly what I believe: “We build a future for all our children. And that means transgender children. All our children—no exceptions.” He stared at me, and then he said: “Damn right.” He explained that he had a grown son who was transgender. “In a million years you’ll never know the special kind of hell he has gone through.”
I’ve never forgotten that man – and I’ve never forgotten his son.
Yesterday the Trump Administration cruelly said to millions of students, families, parents like that man from the South Shore that it won’t stand up for LGBTQ young people. They used one of the oldest and most pathetic excuses in the book – “let the states decide” – to allow discrimination against trans students. They cowardly made it easier for some of our country’s most vulnerable students to get bullied and beat up in our schools.
The United States Constitution and our laws do not give states a free ride to discriminate or eliminate the rights we guarantee to all Americans. The Trump Administration must protect and defend the basic civil and human rights of all our students, regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity.
We build a future for all of our children. No exceptions, President Trump.”
Montana abortion bill would make doctors try to save fetus
SpinnyNuNuAre you fucking kidding me?
Critics of the bill said it could be among the most extreme anti-abortion laws in the nation, even as other states consider their own proposals that would reduce the window for legal abortions.
Christian Dior |c. 1957 and 1958 (📸 by me) @museumatfit...
SpinnyNuNuLove

Christian Dior |c. 1957 and 1958 (📸 by me) @museumatfit #parisrefashioned #fashion #fashionhistory #stylehistory #historicalfashion #periodclothing #costumehistory #costumedesign #costume #embroidery #dress #defunctfashion #vintageclothing #vintagefashion #christiandior #dior (at Museum at FIT)
South Carolina inmate indicted following threats against president, president-elect
SpinnyNuNuIs he trying to be Harry Potter with the lightning tattoo on his forehead?
Kipper Ken King charged in federal indictment.
Credit only where credit is due
In his chapter on word choice, Harold Evans rightly takes issue with the misuse of the term “credit” in news media. In 2014, Boko Haram was “credited” with the kidnapping of 276 schoolgirls in Chibok, Nigeria. A year later, on the night of the terror attacks in Paris, a TV commentator reported that no one had yet “claimed credit.” This is to ventriloquize the terrorists: to claim credit for an act is to imply its righteousness. Evans proposes a clearer-sighted alternative: “Nobody has yet admitted . . . responsibility.”From an essay about the proper use of the English language in this month's Harper's. I quite agree with the sentiment expressed.
MLB to ditch the intentional walk in 2017
SpinnyNuNuStupid.
Major League Baseball has approved a change to the intentional walk rule, going from the traditional four-pitch walk to a dugout signal, team and union sources told ESPN Tuesday
7 Signs of Tyranny As tyrants take control of democracies, they...
SpinnyNuNuThis is fine.
http://m.imgur.com/gallery/c4jt321
7 Signs of Tyranny
As tyrants take control of democracies, they typically do 7 things:
1. They exaggerate their mandate to govern – claiming, for example, that they won an election by a “landslide” even after losing the popular vote. They criticize any finding that they or co-conspirators stole the election. And they repeatedly claim “massive voter fraud” in the absence of any evidence, in order to have an excuse to restrict voting by opponents in subsequent elections.
2. They turn the public
against journalists or media outlets that criticize them, calling them
“deceitful” and “scum,” and telling the public that the press is a “public enemy.” They hold few, if any, press conferences, and prefer to communicate with the public directly through mass rallies and unfiltered
statements (or what we might now call “tweets”).
3. They repeatedly lie to the public, even when confronted with the facts. Repeated enough, these lies cause some of the public to doubt the truth, and to believe fictions that support the tyrants’ goals.
4. They blame economic stresses on immigrants or racial or religious minorities, and foment public bias or even violence against them. They threaten mass deportations, “registries” of religious minorities, and the banning of refugees.
5. They attack the motives of anyone who opposes them, including judges. They attribute acts of domestic violence to “enemies within,” and use such events as excuses to beef up internal security and limit civil liberties.
6. They appoint family members to high positions of authority. They ppoint their own personal security force rather than a security detail accountable to the public. And they put generals into top civilian posts.
7.They keep their personal finances secret, and draw no distinction between personal property and public property – profiteering from their public office.
Consider yourself warned.
Male Chiropractor Who Invented the Menstrual Product of Our Nightmares Is Stunned By the Backlash
SpinnyNuNu>>Reason being women are focused on and distracted by your period 25% of the time, making them far less productive than they could be.
What the actual fuck!?
Not only are women stupid and uncreative, but we also need to start wandering around with our labia glued shut.
Good to know.
Potential New Pain Drug from Snail Venom
SpinnyNuNuTIL snails have venom
Researchers have published in PNAS promising results from a snail venom analogue used in the treatment of pain. This is exciting for a number of reasons, even if the current compounds under study do not pan out.
Pain is a difficult clinical problem. There are limited options for treating chronic pain and we can quickly run out of options if patients cannot tolerate certain classes of drugs. What we really need are entirely new classes of pain medication, and that is what this new approach promises.
There are essentially two neurological components to pain: there is the physical sensation, and then there is the emotional component. It is interesting to ask the question, why does pain hurt? There is nothing about the sensation itself that is inherently painful. Any sensation is just nerve cells firing and carrying signals to areas of the brain that interpret those signals. Pain hurts because pain pathways specifically connect to the emotional centers in the brain to create a negative experience.
For further background, clinically it is helpful to distinguish different types of pain. There is nociceptive pain, which is the nervous system appropriately sensing damage and generating protective painful sensations. There is also neuropathic pain, which is the nervous system malfunctioning and producing inappropriate pain that is not protective. We further divide pain into acute and chronic. Finally, we consider the context of the patient, such as whether or not they are terminal.
Opioids act mainly on central receptors that naturally block the perception of pain. These receptors block not only the pain but the emotional component of the pain. In fact the opposite emotional response can occur, euphoria. That is a strong component of why opioids are addictive. Opioids also suppress the respiratory centers, which is why overdoses are so deadly.
In addition to being addictive, opioids also display tolerance, meaning that they work less well over time. This is because they downregulate the receptors to which they bind, so there are less of them available. In fact this shifts the balance in the brain, so that at baseline chronic opioid users are dysphoric and hypersensitive to pain and they need to use opiates just to feel somewhat normal. All of this is why chronic opiate use is so problematic in treating chronic pain – it makes the underlying pain worse and harder to treat.
NSAIDS (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) are another class of pain killers. These are the aspirin-like drugs, and are good first line pain treatments (available over the counter). Their advantage is that they are also anti-inflammatory, which is a common component of acute problems that cause pain. They have a ceiling effect, meaning that there is a maximum dose beyond which there is no further pain relief. Opioids by contrast have no ceiling, so you can always get more pain relief with a higher dose. The limiting factor for opioids is that at some point you will stop breathing.
Acetaminophen is another OTC pain reliever, although not anti-inflammatory. There is also tramodol which is centrally acting but non-opiate. It is less addictive and has less tolerance, but still has some of these negative features.
None of these pain drugs are very useful in chronic neuropathic pain. For that condition we need to use other drugs entirely, including anti-seizure drugs and anti-depressants, that suppress neuropathic pain production or conduction. These are variably effective.
At present there is no perfect pain medication. There is no medication that can entirely relieve pain in a sustainable way without serious side effects limiting their use. Many patients cannot tolerate entire classes of pain drugs. Allergies can eliminate many drugs. If a patient has kidney problems or gastric ulcers they may not tolerate NSAIDS. Opiates are not appropriate for many patients. We can therefore quickly run out of good options.
New Drug Development
The action of drugs are primarily determined by their targets. What receptors do they bind to, what enzymes to they inhibit, what channels do they block, etc.? Drug companies love to find new potential targets because this could mean an entirely new class of drugs with novel properties.
There are basically two types of new drug development – developing better drugs that use existing targets, and developing drugs with new targets. The former is highly useful, finding drugs that have fewer side effects, more bioavailability, less toxicity, more of an effect, or a longer half-life. It is good to have options, and having many drugs in a single class with different properties is very useful. Also, if a patient is allergic to one drug in a class they may not be allergic to others.
When a drug company finds a new drug target that is much more exciting, however, as it opens up new possibilities. Researchers have been looking for new pain targets for years in order to create new pain drug classes. This is what is potentially exciting about this new study.
“In this study, the researchers found that a compound isolated from snail’s venom, Rg1A, acts on a pain pathway distinct from that targeted by opioid drugs. Using rodent models, the scientists showed that a9a10 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) functions as a pain pathway receptor and that RgIA4 is an effective compound to block this receptor. The pathway adds to a small number of nonopioid-based pathways that could be further developed to treat chronic pain.”
RgIA4 was previously know from basic research, but this study takes the research further, testing it in animal models. They first developed 20 analogs to the snail venom that targeted the nAChR receptors. The analog that had the most activity was tested in a rodent model of pain. They significantly blocked pain perception in the rodents, and the effect lasted for up to 72 hours, even though the drug was out of the rodent’s system after four hours.
The nAChR receptor is a pain pathway receptor, meaning that it transmits pain signals. RgIA4 binds to and blocks those receptors, therefore blocking pain transmission. It’s interesting that the effect lasts beyond the presence of the RgIA4. Researchers need to figure out the mechanism of this prolonged effect.
This is exciting, but still a long way off from a drug product with FDA approval. There will be further animal testing, then the full course of human testing. At any step of the way a toxicity or harmful side effect can emerge.
There are two types of unwanted effects of a drug to consider. The first is inherent to the target, meaning, in this case, that the nAChR receptor may have other functions, and blocking these could have unwanted effects. Evolution is messy, and receptors are often coopted for different purposes. It would be convenient if every receptor was unique, had one function, and did not cross-react with other receptors. Then we could target just one receptor which would have just one function. But that is not the situation that evolution created.
This creates inherent limits to the specificity of pharmacology. It remains to be seen if other effects will emerge when we test RgIA4 antagonists in humans.
There are also effects that are not related to the primary target. A drug may have unrelated toxicity. These can sometimes be dealt with by making analogs that still activate the primary target, but lack the incidental toxicity.
Conclusion
Many researcher are working on finding new pain targets and then developing viable pharmaceuticals that work through those targets. As a clinician who treats pain as part of my practice, I anxiously await any such developments. We really need more options for pain treatment.
Most people will experience serious pain at some point in their life, and many people suffer from chronic pain. It’s difficult to overstate how useful new pain treatment options can be.
Any potential new pain target is therefore very exciting. My excitement, however, is tempered by the fact that we are early in the arc of research and development. Most compounds at this early stage do not make it all the way through to FDA approval. A new pain reliever can still be many years away, and may not manifest at all.
There are other potential new pain targets being researched as well. We can’t know how any one compound will work out until we do the research, but it seems likely something will emerge from all the research, so I am mostly hopeful.
NH Republican State Rep. Brandon Phinney Refers to Religion as “Archaic Beliefs That Deny Reality”
SpinnyNuNuRefreshing
In Response to Christian Group, Atheists Begin “Young Skeptics” Club at CA Elementary School
SpinnyNuNuI think this is far more productive than the afterschool Satan clubs
Dozens of headstones toppled at Missouri Jewish cemetery
SpinnyNuNuTrump's America
The cemetery opened in 1893.
Starbucks Can't Keep This $150 Mug in Stock
SpinnyNuNuFor people with more money than sense
Introducing ... Ember.
Kasich tentatively slated to meet with Trump
SpinnyNuNuI don't like agreeing with John Kasich
A Kasich adviser said the White House didn't offer an explicit agenda for the meeting.
10 asylum-seekers detained crossing U.S. border into Quebec
SpinnyNuNu>>>prevents most people who've been living in the U.S. from making a refugee claim at an official border crossing on the premise they're already somewhere safe.
I bet they don't feel very safe
Two families were taken into custody by Royal Canadian Mounted Police as they crossed the border in Perry Mills, New York.
White House confirms adviser reassigned after disagreeing with Trump
SpinnyNuNuNo opinion except that of the Glorious Leader
Spokeman says "if you don't support the President's agenda then you shouldn't have a job in the White House."
Instant Pot Chicken Soup
SpinnyNuNuYummy
Continue reading "Instant Pot Chicken Soup" »
Kasich says recent Republican plan about Obamacare 'makes no sense'
SpinnyNuNu>>>He says one-third of the 700,000 Ohioans who have gotten medical coverage under the expanded program have mental health and substance abuse problems and "to turn our backs on them makes no sense."
Well, duh.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich says he supports repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act but disagrees with a recent plan floated by Congressional Republicans.
Saturday is National Drink Wine Day
SpinnyNuNuWine Day
February 18th is National Drink Wine Day!
Cummings: Trump made up a story about me
SpinnyNuNu>>>Trump asked reporter April Ryan if she would set up a meeting between him and the Congressional Black Caucus.
I saw this clip and thought, "Does he think that because she's black she obviously knows the members of the Congressional Black Caucus?"
Nope. Not racist at all. What an idiot.
The dispute began during Thursday's news conference, when Trump asked reporter April Ryan if she would set up a meeting between him and the Congressional Black Caucus.
You decide: Should California dump daylight saving time?
SpinnyNuNuYes please.
Assemblyman renews effort to abolish annual observance
California Lake Berryessa's Glory Hole to spill over for first time in 10 years
SpinnyNuNuThere was video of this on the news this morning and the anchor said exactly what I was thinking.
Can you imagine being near that in a boat? Good lord it looks terrifying.
Morning Glory Hole spillway was last used in 2006





















