Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Dear World IV

Dear World, 
      Ah, the summer, what a great time in the year. When us slackers can finnally walk the Earth and take a break from the idiocracy of school and work. Yes, summer is a great time. Especially for the news. The tale of Anthony Weiner is a tale that you couldn't make up it is so comedically perfect. But enough on that, how are you feeling, and while your at it send me a few questions to my email at supabamman@yahoo.com. If the world has also taught us nothing, its that the world is inhabited by idiots. Just saying. And now I'm done with this Dear World, so I know it has been a while, but um, it's sumer jerks I have a life too.

Write Back Soon,
Benjamin Morgan
Comedic Journalist/Writer

Monday, June 13, 2011

Scientists at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, have demonstrated why certain immune cells chronically exposed to HIV shut down, and how they can be reactivated.

Healthy B cells have a balanced mix of surface proteins that the immune system can use, like the gas pedal and brake of a car, either to activate the cell or to damp down its activity. However, in people with long-term HIV infection who have not begun antiretroviral therapy, their B cells—responsible for producing anti-HIV antibodies—display a surplus of inhibitory receptors, the surface proteins used to apply the brakes on a B cell. Scientists from the NIAID Laboratory of Immunoregulation led by Lela Kardava, Ph.D., Susan Moir, Ph.D., and Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., NIAID Director and Chief of the laboratory, wanted to know if this phenomenon can help explain why B cells become "exhausted" and essentially shut down in people who are HIV-infected but treatment-naive.

To test their hypothesis, the scientists used molecules called small interfering RNAs (siRNAs), which acted at the genetic level to prevent exhausted B cells from replenishing inhibitory receptors. After treatment with siRNAs, the exhausted cells responded more normally to conditions that typically would spur a B cell into action, such as the presence of a virus, demonstrating that the excess of inhibitory receptors may explain why exhausted B cells are so unresponsive.

Because B cells generally are difficult to manipulate, the new siRNA-based approach may hold promise for scientists seeking to develop therapies to improve the human antibody response against HIV and other pathogens by altering the expression of specific B-cell genes.

this is great somthing that can realy help man kind unlike sara palin and her bus i wonder if she is a new species of human missing the cromosome responsible for brain growth

Friday, June 10, 2011

Sarah Palin e-mails released today

JUNEAU, Alaska--The state of Alaska on Friday released more than 13,000 e-mails Friday that shed light on Sarah Palin’s tenure as governor — before she became a vice-presidential candidate, a reality-TV star, and an undeclared heavyweight in the 2012 race for the White House.
At 9 a.m. Alaska time — 1 p.m. in Washington — 24,199 pages of printed-out e-mails that Palin either sent or received on her official account became public. The e-mails cover her first 21 months as governor, from December 2006 to September 2008. The remaining 10 months’ worth could be released later.
News organizations first requested the e-mails after Sen. John S. McCain (R-Ariz.) made Palin his surprise choice for a running mate in the 2008 presidential race.
After about a thousand days of delay, they were distributed in a set of five 55-pound boxes, with sensitive information redacted. The copying fees come to $725.97 for each news outlet. The Washington Post will post the e-mails online.
On Friday morning, the boxes containing the e-mail were stacked chest-high in a state office building in Juneau, marked for news organizations like the Post, MSNBC, and the Associated Press. Some had been pre-loaded on dollies, so they could be rushed away quickly for examination.

“The thousands upon thousands of emails released today show a very engaged Governor Sarah Palin being the CEO of her state,” said Tim Crawford, an official at Palin’s political action committee, Sarah PAC. “The e-mails detail a Governor hard at work. Everyone should read them.”
An early read through one of the boxes--from late August 2008, when Palin was chosen by McCain--shows Palin herself replying to good wishes from members of the public.
(Complete Coverage of the release of Sarah Palin’s emails.)“God has a great plan. God bless you, your family and Senator McCain and his family,” an e-mailer named Tom E. Irwin wrote on Aug. 29, 2008. “This is so needed for our country, great leadership with honesty and integrity.”

Palin wrote back: “You’re awesome and we love you!”
When the documents are read in full, what will they show?
They should provide a detailed portrait of Palin as an executive--how Palin herself wielded power, before she became a professional commenter on how others wield it. They could answer questions, for instance, about how involved her husband, Todd Palin, was involved in state decisions.
“The fact that the spouse of the governor was involved is not unusual,” said Mead Thompson (R), Alaska’s current lieutenant governor. “It’s another ear, and sometimes spouses have better radar for what people are talking about, what’s going on in the public.”
Smaller troves of Palin family e-mails have been made public before. Last year, MSNBC obtained and released 1,200 sent and received by Todd Palin. Just this month, former Palin aide Frank Bailey released a tell-all book about his old boss entitled: “Blind Allegiance to Sarah Palin.”
“I think every rock in the Palin household that could ever be kicked over and uncovered anything, it’s already been kicked over,” Palin herself told Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday” last weekend. (Palin’s emails: What to expect)
However, she added some caveats. “A lot of those e-mails obviously weren’t meant for public consumption,” she said, and people who read them will “never truly know what the context of each one of the e-mails was.”
State officials said they had reviewed more than 14,000 e-mails, and held back 953 of them because of state records rules. Another 2,373 will be released with some information redacted.(PHOTOS: Sarah Palin’s bus tour)
Sharon Leighow, a spokeswoman for Alaska’s current governor, said that the state struggled to cope with nearly 600 records requests from various news organizations. She said that the state to contract with a private law firm for help with this batch of e-mails.
“The sheer volume has been overwhelming,” said Leighow, who previously worked the state government under the Palin administration for Palin. “We followed the process, and we followed the law.”
Palin conducted some of her state business on a private Yahoo account, and not all of those e-mails are included in the release. E-mails between that account and state accounts are included, but those between two private accounts are not. (VIDEO: The relase of Palin’s emails.)
The release has brought news reporters swarming to Juneau--a small state capital surrounded by mountain peaks, and often reached by ship or plane.
In the capital city, as in the rest of the country, Palin’s name can elicit strong and contradictory emotions.
Scott Arthur, 62, a driver for Glacier Taxi & Tour, said the criticism of Palin is unnecessary and that the attention being paid to her e-mails is unfair.
“Sarah Palin’s okay. She’s got big ideas. I can’t blame her for wanting to make a name for herself, or more money,” he said.
Sharon Peters, 49, dislikes Palin as a politician. “She did get in over her head,” she said, adding that many longtime Alaskans “are ashamed of her” performance as governor.
But she believes that the focus on her e-mails is intrusive.
“I think they should leave her alone,” said Peters, an insurance agent. “She’s still a person.”
Heather Lende, a writer and columnist who lives in a town north of Juneau, applauded the release of Palin’s e-mails. But she said that many Alaskans marvel at the fact that so many people across the country still care about her.
“It’s phenomenal she’s getting some much attention. It’s strange. She’s a celebrity and we don’t know how that happened,” Lende said. “She wasn’t governor really long enough to have any kind of legacy or make any changes.”
More from Washington Post:
Complete coverage of the release of Sarah Palin’s emails.
Analuze, sort, and search Sarah Palin’s emails.
Where is Sarah Palin’s career headed.

Fahrenthold reported from Washington.


if this is one of the top ten news stories than americans are as stupid as people in different countries say i cant beleve this crap

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

To whom it may concern

any one who may read this blog may think it is not constant in its information jumping from subject to subject well its true and to prove it



see we are some crazy loons

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Dear World III

Dear World,
      I would like to take a moment to talk about video games. Many of you know that there is a lot of controversy over the effects on video games between children and video games, no doubt you already have an opinion (if not a small one) about how video games should be sold and destributed. Also, you may agree that some restrictions are healthy for young children who choose to play the games like Grand Theft Auto, Call of Duty, and others. There is a reason for the M rating. Now on to the point of the convorsation. For those of you who enforce the M rating to either their kids, their neiphews, or even the neighbor, good job, no great job, if there was an award for role models among the community, you would be that winner, but there isnt so how about a pat on the back instead. For those of you who allow there kids to play whatever the F@#k they want without any care or thought to what happens, you have got some problems and the only question i have is, Have you seen the games out today! REALLY! But for you parents that fall inbetween the gap, the parents who allow there kids to make their own desicions but with a little guidence, you are in my opinions the real parents. You know that kids (now when i say kids i mean those like 14 and up, if your laxed about a twelve year old playing something like DeadSpace, you belong in the problem category) need a little down-to-earth parenting, the parents who realize that there kid is old enough to tell right from wrong. Those are the parents I wish were more of, and yes there is that grey area when you need to sort out the difference. I am now seventeen, and i remember when i was fourteen and wondered what could possibly be so bad that i wasnt allowed to play a silly game, now im not so naive! I've played the games today and they are not a happy fun time elmo show. But I guess what im trying to say is that, we need to set boundries, video games dont have them, and if parents dont or have too many, then you will never see the really huge difference maker between reality and video games, and that is just that, IT IS JUST A GAME, FAKE, NOT REAL, and im not saying people shouldn't worry about there affects on children, im just saying that if you think that if you get into a car with a hooker, that you will be cured of all of your diseases, come on.

Write Back Soon,
Benjamin Morgan
Comedic Journalist/Writer


For comments or questions, or even to chat me up, e-mail me at supabamman@yahoo.com