Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Ease to Chemo Therapy treatments


Dr. Parker had chemo therapy when she was 24. However, because of the discomfort she experienced, she doesn't really recommend it to anyone ... and yet, she said that today it is much better than when she took it. Dr. Parker is 54 today, and bursting with health.
The good news is ... for those who are taking chemo ... our precious water helps the chemo work! The water's high anti-oxidant properties actually clean the sticky oxidation off of the cell walls and make them more permeable, enabling the chemo to more readily enter the cell.
And, people get through the process without as much discomfort. Check it out and get a FREE DVD at www.KangenWaterMagic.com

Keeping a watchful EYE!* I caught the theif!


Keeping a Watchful EYE!
Happy Wednesday to all, it's sure a good feeling when you pay attention and don't let a thief get away.
As you may or may not know, last week my new car that I just bought about 2 weeks ago, paid cash for, had the windows all nicely tinted to protect my sun damaged skin etc. was burglarized! About 10:30 p.m. I received a call from Gilbert P.D. asking me if I had "Lost" my laptop? Weird as I was walking around from a dead sleep, I walked outside to my car (don't know why I didn't part it in the garage!) and sure enough my rear driver side window had been busted in and my laptop in a black case that was on the floor at the time waiting for me to get it into Staples or Geek squad or someone to get some repairs done, was GONE!
I was Pissed to say the least! No need to steal a ill working Lap Top and bust up my new car!
Anyway,
Seems about 2 streets over a man walked out into his garage and found someone in there and a chase ensued and that thief got away, BUT seems the police found my laptop and 2 back packs in the bushes by our community pool :~) ... Now they didn't get the thief, but I did get my Lap Top back and I was simply amazed as this is totally "Unheard of" to say the least.

2 weeks ago my sons bike was stolen from the garage (that's the 4Th on stolen!) So, I had my window replaced, that took 1 day, and then had the tinting re-done and that was another day, so needless to say I lost 2 days of work etc. do to a punk thief! BUT here is where it gets good.

After I went back to bed the night of the robbery, about 1 hour later my business office phone line rang! It never rings at night so I got up to investigate. No message left, so I hit *69 and got a local phone number, I called it thinking it (might) be on of my merchants with a problem. The line was busy, so I tried calling it from a different phone number that I have. Bingo, he answered. I asked who he was etc. he asked who I was etc. I told him he called me, little silence and then I asked him "So, how's it going tonight busting cars up and stealing" he didn't reply with anything that I dare type here, but he asked me to "Suck his D***" and hung up! You'd have to have heard it because it was so obvious that he was 'BUSTED' big time. AND THEN.... wait it gets better....
He CALLED me BACK on that first business phone line after he hung up on me. I didn't answer it, and this time he left a message! Is this guy too stupid or what! He left a very coded message as if he was talking to one of his accomplices or look out thief friends. Of course I saved the message.
The police came back and while I appreciate local P.D. not the brightest bulbs. I mean really, I had the phone number that the call was made from, I had a voice message too! The police officer did tell me though that the items inside those back packs that were found with my laptop contained Wallie Talkies and various tools used to burglarize homes and autos. WOW....

Ain't blogging great! This is the way I get to enjoy my writing lack of skills but full of passions as they prompt my mind.

Now fast forward to yesterday February 17Th about 5 p.m. afternoon. I sit at my front window all day and a lot of nights working and enjoying my business of Credit Card Processing and KangenWaterMagic.com business, and recently have gotten hooked to twitter and ALL the fabulous things that it encompasses. When I noticed a very thin ugly bearded man walking past very swiftly, and his head glancing quickly at my home etc. His dress was all I needed to know it was one if not the one, Thief that have been working out neighborhood. Baggy stupid pants, Over sized sweater etc. You get the picture.
I struggled to find my car keys, did, and hopped in the car and had to drive 1/2 mile that's how fast he was walking but I spotted him by that community pool. I drove past and got a good look at him. Well he started walking down the same street that was mentioned before and found a stranger in the garage and that's when I had absolutely NO doubt it was him. By this time he realized I was on my cell phone (talking to P.D. trying to explain to the dispatch that this was our guy gurrrrrrr ask me the same question 4 times!) anyway, the thief started walking all over the place, he didn't know what to do, he headed toward one of the artery roads that leads out to a major street and I cautiously followed keeping a very good distance between he and I just in case. He tood off down major street, buy now I finally had the attention of the dispatch guy that I wasn't going to listen to his repeated questions I was on the trail of a criminal! (Nancy Drew at work!)
Then the thief decided he had no idea where he was or going or maybe going to miss his partners connection, but he came BACK! Now he walks almost within 30 ft of me and really gave me "That" Look, and he was talking to himself and now he was pissed. He was walking all over the place, crossing from north side to south side, didn't know what too do it was obvious. By this time he walked back in front of my home and my son (the man child) was outside on his skateboard and I was starting to get worried of the 'possibilities' that a crazed mind might do.
The whole time I was on the phone with police dispatch and was at least 100 yards away and just reporting all the move this jerk was making. Including now he took off his sweater and had a different colored shirt underneath. Dispatch told me that the area had units there, but I sure didn't see them. Then he finally told me they were unmarked detectives! Thank GOD. I went back to the house and shut my garage door. With in about 3 minutes one of the detectives came by and we chatted as I updated him on how this whole thing unfolded from start to finish.
They arrested Jerk Thief on Grand Theft burglary and possession of stolen property! Woo Hoo!

In closing the Detective asked me "How did I know? What made me think it was the robber?" Very simple, the fact that this guy didn't belong in my neighborhood, I watch everything that moves outside my window pretty much 7 days a week, and because as a WOMEN, I listen to my intuition and as of 53 years now, I've NEVER been wrong so I assume I would be now. I listen to that still small voice at level 3-4 of consciousness and I am blessed to be able to take it for all it's worth. There used to be a time when I didn't, and still sometimes I may not heed the prompting, just like last week when I said to myself "hum I should park my car in the garage" but I was tired, lazy or whatever or better yet, I "Assumed" that something like that wouldn't happen in my neighborhood or to me.

Have a Waterful day as you "GIVE a GREAT day, I promise you will have a GOOD day in return"
LCD


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Sunday, February 15, 2009

Failure to Rise

I just received this via "someone" I choose not to name, think it's worth sharing for all my twitter followers. And I hate to use the word "ENJOY" here. LCD

The Republicans give new meaning to the words “strategic thinking”, not that the Democrats have any thinking or spine, read on:
February 13, 2009
OP-ED COLUMNIST
Failure to Rise
By PAUL KRUGMAN
By any normal political standards, this week’s Congressional agreement on an economic stimulus package was a great victory for President Obama. He got more or less what he asked for: almost $800 billion to rescue the economy, with most of the money allocated to spending rather than tax cuts. Break out the Champagne!
Or maybe not. These aren’t normal times, so normal political standards don’t apply: Mr. Obama’s victory feels more than a bit like defeat. The stimulus bill looks helpful but inadequate, especially when combined with a disappointing plan for rescuing the banks. And the politics of the stimulus fight have made nonsense of Mr. Obama’s postpartisan dreams.
Let’s start with the politics.
One might have expected Republicans to act at least slightly chastened in these early days of the Obama administration, given both their drubbing in the last two elections and the economic debacle of the past eight years.
But it’s now clear that the party’s commitment to deep voodoo — enforced, in part, by pressure groups that stand ready to run primary challengers against heretics — is as strong as ever. In both the House and the Senate, the vast majority of Republicans rallied behind the idea that the appropriate response to the abject failure of the Bush administration’s tax cuts is more Bush-style tax cuts.
And the rhetorical response of conservatives to the stimulus plan — which will, it’s worth bearing in mind, cost substantially less than either the Bush administration’s $2 trillion in tax cuts or the $1 trillion and counting spent in Iraq — has bordered on the deranged.
It’s “generational theft,” said Senator John McCain, just a few days after voting for tax cuts that would, over the next decade, have cost about four times as much.
It’s “destroying my daughters’ future. It is like sitting there watching my house ransacked by a gang of thugs,” said Arnold Kling of the Cato Institute.
And the ugliness of the political debate matters because it raises doubts about the Obama administration’s ability to come back for more if, as seems likely, the stimulus bill proves inadequate.
For while Mr. Obama got more or less what he asked for, he almost certainly didn’t ask for enough. We’re probably facing the worst slump since the Great Depression. The Congressional Budget Office, not usually given to hyperbole, predicts that over the next three years there will be a $2.9 trillion gap between what the economy could produce and what it will actually produce. And $800 billion, while it sounds like a lot of money, isn’t nearly enough to bridge that chasm.
Officially, the administration insists that the plan is adequate to the economy’s need. But few economists agree. And it’s widely believed that political considerations led to a plan that was weaker and contains more tax cuts than it should have — that Mr. Obama compromised in advance in the hope of gaining broad bipartisan support. We’ve just seen how well that worked.
Now, the chances that the fiscal stimulus will prove adequate would be higher if it were accompanied by an effective financial rescue, one that would unfreeze the credit markets and get money moving again. But the long-awaited announcement of the Obama administration’s plans on that front, which also came this week, landed with a dull thud.
The plan sketched out by Tim Geithner, the Treasury secretary, wasn’t bad, exactly. What it was, instead, was vague. It left everyone trying to figure out where the administration was really going. Will those public-private partnerships end up being a covert way to bail out bankers at taxpayers’ expense? Or will the required “stress test” act as a back-door route to temporary bank nationalization (the solution favored by a growing number of economists, myself included)? Nobody knows.
Over all, the effect was to kick the can down the road. And that’s not good enough. So far the Obama administration’s response to the economic crisis is all too reminiscent of Japan in the 1990s: a fiscal expansion large enough to avert the worst, but not enough to kick-start recovery; support for the banking system, but a reluctance to force banks to face up to their losses. It’s early days yet, but we’re falling behind the curve.
And I don’t know about you, but I’ve got a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach — a feeling that America just isn’t rising to the greatest economic challenge in 70 years. The best may not lack all conviction, but they seem alarmingly willing to settle for half-measures. And the worst are, as ever, full of passionate intensity, oblivious to the grotesque failure of their doctrine in practice.
There’s still time to turn this around. But Mr. Obama has to be stronger looking forward. Otherwise, the verdict on this crisis might be that no, we can’t.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Stimulus Money?

A friend of mine sent this to me in an e-mail today, and while he and I go back and forth on several issues, I realize that much of what he shares with me is worth-wild to post here on TwitterChase for my twitter friends to enjoy. I hope this the first of what will be many from many contributing pieces pleases you. I will NOT disclouse my sources.

If we are going to wildly print money and devalue the dollar anyway, just bite the bullet and allocate five trillion dollars as stimulus money as ~$50,000 to each taxpayer directly (yes, do the math), they will pay off loans, money goes to banks to reloan to younger people, and all are happy; older people don't need to borrow more than we have already. But the banking and auto and other lobbies will not allow that. Only way to fix this, ban all lobbyists everywhere, feds and state, period. I have the answer but sadly I am not in Congress.