Bottom line: Chloresterol suppressants (statins, such as Lipitor) do not prevent heart attacks. They lower cholesterol which is ESSENTIAL to your brain and other elements of your body. The root problem seems to be connected to Monsanto and Glyphosate which interferes with the liver's ability to process bile. Listen to these two doctors and decide for yourself.
The blockchain is a cryptographically secured register. A long, long time ago we used to hook a line printer to important systems and they'd print a subset of their logging to it. An intruder taking over a box could erase the contents of /var/log, but that printout was immutable. The blockchain provides something similar, but it's globally distributed, so *everyone* with access can write on it in an immutable fashion.
EXTRACT: Today an Argentinian freelancer who uses their banking system has to wait five days for an international transfer, lose 30% of his income to predatory fee structures, and run the very real risk that one of the parties involved in the clearing will simply misplace their money entirely. A Bitcoin based competitor can do this transaction at 1% of the cost in 0.1% of the time, make a profit while doing so, and there is nothing the government can do to stop it.
Texas Election Lawsuit Uncovers Hart InterCivic Computer Corruption Errors: Plus Official Election Records Missing
Computerized electronic voting machines have been used in elections for over a decade and voters across America don't trust them and now we know why. Dr. Laura Pressley, a Texas candidate, has filed an historic election contest which has uncovered electronic voting machine corruption errors, security breaches, and missing election data. Pressley, who has a Ph.D. in chemistry and a background in semiconductor engineering management, noticed numerous election irregularities in her 2014 Austin City Council race such as more ballots than voter names as reported during early voting, and she identified repetitive mathematical patterns that called her election results into question. Texans certainly know how to stand up, come together and make things happen. Pressley is the first Texas candidate to file a lawsuit contesting election results citing electronic voting machine corruption errors and their inability to retain state mandated election records and she is getting support from all types of political groups across the state. Here is a summary of the legal details and evidence of Pressley’s case that is currently in the Third Court of Appeals in Texas.
Specifically, when Pressley asked Travis County to produce statutorily required “images of ballots cast” from the Hart InterCivic voting machines for a recount, they were unable to produce the ballot images that voters saw in the election booth. Instead, what she received were Cast Vote Records (CVRs), which are computer-generated templates of tabulated votes — not the statutorily required ballot images required for manual recounts of electronic voting machines in Texas. “CVRs do not contain the legal components of an official Texas ballot, such as the election name and date, each candidate’s name, voting squares, and a unique serial number as defined by the Texas Constitution,” Pressley said. “Without these voter-marked ballot records, how can we conduct a statutorily valid recount?” In addition, Court documents revealed numerous irregularities and problems with her election. When the Travis County Elections Division was asked to produce official backup records to validate the outcome of Dr. Pressley's Austin City Council 2014 race in Texas, key election data came up missing. For example, computer audit logs registered systematic “corruption” errors that occurred when batches of votes were electronically counted. Second, deposition testimony revealed election officers were instructed not to retain backup tapes of the number of electronic votes each candidate received on election day. What she found is rather surprising and similar election issues are going on all across the state of Texas.
“What we discovered is that the very pillars of our Constitution – specifically voting rights and our system of checks and balances – were not being followed regarding electronic voting systems. As we attempted to verify the results, some official election records came up missing,” Pressley relayed. “The Texas Legislature put in place specific laws that were intended to help ensure the integrity of the electronic voting process, and Texans deserve to know that their votes are counted correctly,” said Pressley and her historic case is moving forward in the Third Court of Appeals in Texas. Pressley added, “Texans demand transparency in the democratic process, and we must be able to inspect and verify the official records in an election. This case is about ensuring our voting process is accurate, secure and reflects each voter’s intent.”
Which Texas laws are being violated? For over 10 years, Texas' Secretary of State's office and County Clerks appear to be violating numerous election laws since the start of electronic voting in Texas: Article VI, Chapter 128, Chapter 213, Chapter 52, and Chapter 66. Pressley is among a growing list of candidates and counties nationwide that are pressing for legally verifiable election records. While Pressley’s election contest and appeal are the first of such kind in Texas, similar cases have been heard in states including Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania. To date, about 26 states have shifted to voting equipment that uses verifiable paper records. “We must hold our system and officials accountable and correct these issues for the common good and betterment of Texas and our country,” she said.
My critique is that it is VERY old news. 2013. I was just getting into Bitcoins by then, and loosing my ability to walk. Can I counter the piece? No, not really. The writer has the same problem everyone else has. They think Bitcoin is supposed to ACT like money. Then they go on a tirade of comparisons to other Monetary events. Bitcoin is not a Monetary event. No one, I repeat, NO ONE, save for space aliens, has seen anything like this on this planet as far as we know. EVER! Bitcoin is just the first Killer App out of the Blockchain.
The Commons Strategies Group (CSG) is a partnership to help advance the commons in diverse settings — both in theory and practice. Working on four continents, we catalyze and assist commons-based projects, activism, research and public education with a great variety of partners.
ROBERT STEELE: I am interested in hearing from anyone who wishes to share sources and perspectives relevant to the below planned work that has been commissioned for a 2016 publication. I am especially interested in having one or more major information technology companies in this space subsidize several months of research.
Title: “Augmented Human Intelligence with Man-Machine Integrity: Future-Oriented Hybrid Governance Integrating Holistic Analytics, True Cost Economics, and Open Source Everything Engineering”
Chapter in Daniel Araya (ed.), Augmented Intelligence: Smart Systems and the Future of Work and Learning, Bern, CH: Peter Lang Publishing, forthcoming
“From terrorist propaganda distributed by organizations such as ISIS, to political activism, diverse voices now use social media as their major public platform. Organizations deploy bots — virtual, automated posters — as well as enormous paid “armies” of human posters or trolls, and hacking schemes to overwhelmingly infiltrate the public platform with their message. A professor of information science has been awarded a grant to continue his research that will provide an in-depth understanding of the major propagators of viral, insidious content and the methods that make them successful.”