Comment Re:More from wiki... (Score 1) 256
Here are a couple culled from his Wikipedia page
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/HE...
http://briandeer.com/wakefield...
Frankly I would like to see the psychopathic bastard banged up in jail for the fraud.
Here are a couple culled from his Wikipedia page
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/HE...
http://briandeer.com/wakefield...
Frankly I would like to see the psychopathic bastard banged up in jail for the fraud.
Actually you are an uninformed twit who has never had measles and has no idea what the complications might be.
I had the Measles vaccination as a small child and was unlucky enough to come down with full blown measles the week before my final exams at University.
The disease itself is completely unpleasant and I had it pretty mild due to having at least some protection from the vaccine.
The lifelong medical side effects are frankly something I could do without.
The problem is YOU ARE NOT INFORMED and have no idea or comprehension as to what the REAL risks are and are consequently a selfish moron.
Yes, but in this particular case the some of the strains of whooping cough that are circulating now appear to have mutated away from those that the vaccine in common use protects against. As such the vaccine has work as described it just provides little to no protection against the circulating strains of whooping cough and out breaks have started occurring.
To put it another way vaccine resistant strains of whooping cough have developed/appeared.
The solution is to reformulate the whooping cough vaccine against the strains that are now circulating. Just upping the vaccination rate with the existing vaccine is an exercise in futility and a waste of resources and money.
When a seven year old child in response to the question "What do you want to be when you grow up", answers in all seriousness and without a hit of shame or wrongdoing "a burglar" you will understand that the child is unlikely to make good life choices. I would add that even if you attain great wealth breaking out of the destructive lifestyle formed when growing up is very hard. This is a famous alumni of the primary school in question.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...
In short if your upbringing does not equip you to make good choices you have little chance of actually making the good choices if life presents them.
It is more likely to be down to the input from the parents, or in the case of poverty lack of input. The basics are that poor parents are on average less well educated and don't have either the inclination or knowledge to give their children quality input especially in early years.
The is also a growing problem with the children of wealthy/educated parents who are too busy with their jobs to give their children the quality input they need to thrive.
Diet has very little or nothing to do with it. Any sensible early years teacher could tell you this in an instance. If you arrive at school knowing your letters, being able to count to 10, recognizing your name when written down, being able to hold a pencil properly etc. you have a massive head start in life and this can NEVER EVER be closed by anything the state can do in the educational system.
The reality is that the children of wealthier and/or better educated parents are more likely to turn up on their first day at school being able to do all those things. The cost of getting your child to be able to do these things is minimal and "poverty" in the western world is not a barrier to achieving it either.
Even when we get to school the attitude that the parents hold to the value of an education and behaviour of their children has a huge impact on the how well a child will perform throughout their school career.
Poverty is a symptom of low educational achievement on average and it breads low educational achievement on average. How you break the circle is difficult to know, but throwing money on diet and/or the educational system won't work and does not work.
Insightful but where is your source. Not that I am disputing your version of events, it is just there is little actual evidence to what precipitated the incident. All I have seen is there was no hot food and Jeremy then assaulted the producer both verbally and physically.
In addition to loosing the revenue the BBC would also have to massively beef up the iPlayer service at great expense to cope with the extra demand that would be placed on it. So a double wammy as they say.
I would also point out that selling the content in other territories around the world has been an importance source of revenue for the BBC for many decades. Without it the license fee would have to be much higher to support the content that is produced.
In effect the license fee payers in the United Kingdom only pay for part of the production of a program. As such giving the program away for free to those that did not contribute to it does in fact hurt.
Show me the obese Tour de France cyclist? These guys consume around 10,000 calories a day. The only and I repeat ONLY way these guys are not obese is because they are exercising. Sure this is an extreme example but the point is that even at 10,000 calories a day sufficient exercise will burn it all off, and myths about exercise and weight loss are proved false.
The exercising does nothing for weight loss is an excuse for lazy obese people not to exercise.
For those in the UK,
http://www.channel4.com/progra...
Basically confirmed what I always thought, 99.99% of obese people eat too much. Worse than that when asked to keep an accurate food diary of everything they eat, they don't. Diary typically says 2000 calories, they are actually eating 5000+ calories. The other people eat the same as me and are not over weight is total nonsense.
Think of sugar as "teeth rotting granules", because that is what it is and it should be easier to cut out.
Or you could live in a civilized country where 12 hour working days are prohibited in law. Besides which here in the UK polling stations on a general election are open from 07:00 to 22:00 that is a full 15 hours, and if that is still not enough you can register for a postal vote. There is genuinely very very few excuses to not vote.
You could add back in the day when the web was taking off Postgres did not do SQL. If you wanted SQL your choice was mSQL which has all sorts of licensing issues, or MySQL which was GPL but had issues with ACID and transactions. It was not until sometime later that QUEL was replaced with SQL.
It was that gap, when Postgres didn't do SQL that allowed MySQL to take off.
If you buy quality locks there are many orders of magnitude than 28,000 combinations. There are plenty of quality lock systems on the market with over a billion different key combinations.
The big think at the moment depending whether the thieves in your area have court on is lock snapping. If you have europrofile or similar locks and they are not quality anti-snap, anyone can be in in under 20 seconds.
Maybe in the USA, but in the UK I suspect that Apple are effective locked out as the main TV channels (BBC, ITV, Ch4) all provide very good streaming services. Hell for £10 you can get a NowTV box (a cut down Roku LT) which gives you all those catch up channels, plus a very wide selection of paid for content.
Oh and the big driver in the UK for these things is sport specifically football (aka soccer) and between them Sky and BT have the Premiership all locked up for years to come. Oh and Sky of course are owned by 21st Century Fox so have guaranteed access to a large catalogue of movies.
It's like Apple Pay, not going to work outside north America.
Machines have less problems. I'd like to be a machine. -- Andy Warhol