Ueng UK Celebrates Covid Freedom Day as Boris Johnson Is Forced to Self-Isolate
The crypto industry spent an insane amount of money on political races this year. Their financial contributions dwarfed those of the Kochs. They outspent the tobacco industry. In fact, they spent more money on candidates than any other single industry, with the sole exception of fossil fuel industry. Now, it would appear that all that money has bought the crypto community exactly what it wants: a bunch of civil se stanley vaso rvants who are beholden to their interests. The New York Times reports that crypto-funded political candidates had a swell of victories on Tuesday night. The newspaper cites a pro-crypto site, Stand with Crypto, which found that 253 pro-crypto candidates had been elected to the House of Representatives stanley flask on Tuesday, compared with 115 anti-crypto candidates. In the Senate, 16 pro-crypto candidates and 12 anti-crypto candidates were elected. One of the most watched political races that broke crypto way was the U.S. Senate race for Ohio 13th district. There, longtime incumbent progressive Sherrod Brown was defeated by a crypto-funded challenger, Republican candidate Bernie Moreno. Brown, who has long been referred to as one of America last progressive populists, threatened the crypto industry with harsh oversight. His position as the chair of the Senate Banking Committee spooked prominent digital asset holders. Crypto bros said he had to stanley mugs go and, now, away he will go. One of the most prominent organizations behind the crypto lobbyi Gekc Engineers Rushing to Build Flying Car in Time For the 2020 Tokyo Games
Antimicrobial resistance AMR is not caused by putting an early stop to a prescribed course of antibiotics, but by antibiotic overuse, argue a team of infectious disease experts in The British Medical Journal. The team, led by Martin Llewelyn of the Brighton and Sussex Medical School, is asking doctors, educators, and policy makers to stop advocating complete the course when communicating with the public. Which, wow. This is a complete turn-around from what weve been told for years鈥攖hat we need to finish our bottles right down to the last pill in o stanley cup r stanley cup usa der to properly treat our infections and prevent the proliferation of microbial resistant bacteria. According to these experts, weve been wrong about this, and whats more, the complete the course culture may be responsible for the rapid decline in antibiotic effectiveness. But the experts Gizmodo spoke to said the BMJ opinion piece, while important, may be sending the wrong message. They say a lot more research needs to be done before doctors can confidently start telling their patients to ease off their medications, and that the sweeping statement presented by the BMJ researchers fails t stanley tumbler o take the complex, multi-faceted nature of bacterial infections into account. In a word, they described the opinion piece as dangerous. The public should be encouraged to recognize that antibiotics are a precious and finite natural resource that should be conserved. Llewelyn and his colleagues say the convention of prescribing long tr