|
O.M.G.
Oct 21, 2011 1:23:53 GMT -5
Post by lilsissy on Oct 21, 2011 1:23:53 GMT -5
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 21, 2011 4:03:36 GMT -5
Post by skyship on Oct 21, 2011 4:03:36 GMT -5
Lil sis,
Yeah, it has an adhesive quality to it. We'd be sucked into the matrix of the plastic. So this is what they are using the mycobacteria for:..."polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from petroleum. Sphingomonas species used in the experiment comprise S. alakensis, S. composta, S. herbocidovorans, S. yanoikuyae, S. cloacae, and S. Adhaesiva. These bacteria managed to eliminate up to 79% from the environment in fourteen days. However, when combined with Mycobacteria, they decomposed all of the aromatic hydrocarbons in one week. " ===================== Hey, the breath of Jesus, "the holy spirit" Oh yeah, oh yeah! do you think these fluorophores are replacing hydrogen now?
He breathed on disciples and said, "Receive the Holy Spirit ". Oh yeah, oh yeah. So, leave the fluoride out............................
Oh yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah! Sawweeeeeeeeeet!
Then talk of fluorine, the modern element................... really a poison............. More talk of how fluorine will replace hydrogen???in 21st Century:
Flurocarbon chemistry. would that be ahhhhhhhhhh fluorophores...........
As ADam and Eve found out, to increase knowledge, might have its cost. "So it is with fluorine"............ Fluorines reactive nature can make it a double edged sword, that can be used for good or evil... So, we found their "achilles heel".............Oh yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah!
Chlorofluorocarbons............what a PAH.......... I like the POP better, PRINCE OF PEACE!
We know the evil that is being breathed upon us. So, we breathe the hydrogen, spin water molecules the other way. Use Baking soda for toothpaste, cloves, that will wake up your mouth. Kill the bacteria too. Toms toothpaste is fluoride free. Might have shiny pearly teeth, from fluoride, but, it will kick the "holy spirit'' out.............Where does fluoride come from? Wonders of fluoride:www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=s03222006From Hydrogen to tin:books.google.com/books?id=kgVAlzGXx6oC&pg=PA19&dq=bonds+hydrogen+Jesus&hl=en&ei=JyuhTsL6McTr0gHn57CUBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CDsQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=bonds%20hydrogen%20Jesus&f=false One tin soldier rode away!
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 21, 2011 4:35:29 GMT -5
Post by skyship on Oct 21, 2011 4:35:29 GMT -5
..."Un natural cell biology with caged proteins", sounds like a buckyball to me! That was Schultz's trick, heh? His unpublished paper?
There is potassium fluoride, carbon fluoride, fullerene fluoride? Fluorescent molecules and ground states: Principles of Fluorescence To begin, let us first distinguish fluorescence from luminescence. Luminescence is the production of light through excitation by means other than increasing temperature. These include chemical means (chemiluminescence), electrical discharges (electro- luminescence), or crushing (triboluminescence). Fluorescence is a short-lived type of luminescence created by electromagnetic excitation. That is, fluorescence is generated when a substance absorbs light energy at a short (higher energy) wavelength and then emits light energy at a longer (lower energy) wavelength. The length of time between absorption and emission is usually relatively brief, often on the order of 10-9 to 10-8 seconds. The history of a single fluorescence event can be shown by means of a Jablonski Diagram, named for the Ukranian born physicist Aleksander Jablonski (Fig.1). As shown, in Stage 1 a photon of given energy hνex is supplied from an outside source such as a laser or a lamp. The fluorescent molecule, lying in its ground energy state So, absorbs the energy creating an excited electronic singlet state S1’. This excited state will last for a finite time, usually one to ten nanoseconds (sec-9), during which time the fluorescent molecule (aka, fluorophore) undergoes conformational changes and can be subject to myriad potential interactions with its molecular environment. The first phase of Stage 2 is characterized by the fluorophore partially dissipating some of the absorbed energy creating a relaxed singlet state S1. It is from this state that the fluorophore will enter the second phase, the emission of energy, hνem. Finally, in Stage 3, the fluorophore will return to its ground state, So. The term fluorescence comes from the mineral fluorspar (calcium fluoride) when Sir George G. Stokes observed in 1852 that fluorspar would give off visible light (fluoresce) biophysics.idtdna.com/pdf/Fluorescence_and_Fluorescence_Applications.pdf======================= Fluorophores: Chloroflurocarbon.......Chlorofluorocarbon - a fluorocarbon with chlorine; formerly used as a refrigerant and as a propellant in aerosol cans; "the chlorine in CFCs causes depletion of atmospheric ozone" CFC HCFC, hydrochlorofluorocarbon - a fluorocarbon that is replacing chlorofluorocarbon as a refrigerant and propellant in aerosol cans; considered to be somewhat less destructive to the atmosphere pollutant - waste matter that contaminates the water or air or soil [ b]fluorocarbon - a halocarbon in which some hydrogen atoms have been replaced by fluorine; [/b][/color]used in refrigerators and aerosols Freon - any one or more chlorofluorocarbons (or related compounds) that are used as an aerosol propellant, organic solvent, or refrigerant greenhouse emission, greenhouse gas - a gas that contributes to the greenhouse effect by absorbing infrared radiation www.thefreedictionary.com/chlorofluorocarbon==================== So,,,,,,,,fluoride comes from fluorspar:
fluorspar CRYSTAL MINERAL>>>>>>>>>>>> mmmmmmmmmmwww.shutterstock.com/pic-1268359/stock-photo-fluorspar-crystal-mineral-on-coloured-background.htmlskyship
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 21, 2011 11:21:10 GMT -5
Post by rafael25 on Oct 21, 2011 11:21:10 GMT -5
Dear Lil Sissy, I woke up today thinking about this article. Different ethnicities have different innate understandings of God, in my opinion. I heard once before about this ethnic group from Nam. I think that they are the ones portrayed in the movie "Gran Torino'' produced and directed by Clint Eastwood. From the outside it looks like a terrible way to get killed. Perhaps God sees them as dignified martyrs, and as innocent children. We are all probably questioning the ethical principles behind the role of pastors. It looked like everything went from pastor to pastor. I have read some news articles on this American Pastor and his predictions. He never came across as a 'bundle of love'. He does not give me that warm fuzzy feeling in the heart that lifts me up and makes me truly and humbly curled up at the feet of Jesus. Yes- at the feet of My Savior, not at the service of men. This is my point. We ought to obey God, more than we are open to men. One may question how people give pastors a very important place in their lives- maybe it might even take over that personal relationship between the saved soul and the Savior. If Jesus is my light, why do I need a Pastor in the flesh? Why do I need a sinful regular man to tell me what to do? Hmmmmmmm. The Holy Spirit came through the Christ and It blows wherever it chooses. The Holy Spirit is not harnessed by pastors. The Holy Spirit is an individual gift, a personal gift. Every person is unique, every person shows a different dimension of Christ in their innate being. Two people can't occupy the same place in the Universe. Jesus loves each one of us as 'He loves His own Body'. I am surprised that NO ONE has been able to give a healing word to Camping, and no one has been able to give him a sweet word of PROPHESY. It's too much. No one knows the brokenness of that man. Love, Pax, Mar.
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 21, 2011 23:12:38 GMT -5
Post by lilsissy on Oct 21, 2011 23:12:38 GMT -5
Yes Rafael obeying God will be a major challange in the near future.
Demand for this electronic system I expect will come from our Supercongress egaged to make emegency decisions about our spending,
I.B.M.
IBM CEO also wants to resequence the health-care system
October 6, 2009 by Chris Seper
CLEVELAND, Ohio — IBM’s chief executive officer says electronic medical records need to go open source.
Sam Palmisano told the attendees of the Cleveland Clinic Medical Innovation Summit that health care can barely be called a “system.” “If the health system was a patient we wouldn’t be able to read its vital signs,” he told an audience of about 400 physicians, researchers, medical investors and business leaders.
To become a true system, improve results, cut medical errors and trim costs, Palmisano said the medical industry must agree to universal, open and non-proprietary standards for electronic health records. In essence, he said, electronic records have to be like generic drugs and the data must flow throughout the system in which no provider owns the process.
“When you enforce standards then you get scale,” Palmisano said. “If you could force in your industry standards then costs will drop. They will plummet.”
The open-source argument was part of Palmisano’s four-pronged approach to creating a true system in health care, which also included emphasizing wellness, creating a new code of ethics and enhancing broad collaboration between health-care stakeholders.
Many of the concepts Palmisano proposed in his speech aren’t new. But it’s the first time the IBM chief laid out his company’s specific vision for health care.
Palmisano spoke on the same day IBM announced plans to sequence the personal genome and do it for a rock-bottom price of, ultimately, $100. IBM joins nearly 20 other companies pursuing genome sequencing, and success in the field — and for a low cost — would press the fast-forward button on personalized medicine, clinical testing of new products, and determine individuals’ predisposition for specific diseases.
“To bring about an era of personalized medicine, it isn’t enough to know the DNA of an average person,” said Gustavo Stolovitzky, an I.B.M. biophysicist, told The New York Times. “As a community, it became clear we need to make efforts to sequence in a way that is fast and cheap.”
Palmisano barely touched on genome sequencing in his speech in Cleveland, instead focusing on health reform in a room full of people directly responsible for various aspects of the health of medicine.
Along with the open-source approach, Palmisano said health care also needed to:
Emphasize wellness. IBM, for example, pays for its employees’ doctor visits. It also plans to expand an incentive program for employee to leave healthy.
Increase collaboration, which would require sharing of health information and data between patients, health-care providers and insurance companies as well as redistribute the payments and responsibilities in the health system. Palmisano argued that transferring a health system into a cloud computing model — “think of if it worked liked Google” — with per-transaction charges would streamline the system.
Install aggressive ethics and public policies that accommodate the invasive nature of modern medicine. “We’re entering a different world ladies and gentlemen,” he said. “The idea of a computer chip in your body, pills you take to monitor your health, sharing data with an insurance company and your employer — I know not everyone is happy with that. Not everyone wants to be a human petri dish.”
Palmisano highlighted health care’s failings — a lack of electronic-record adoption, constant data re-entry and unnecessary testing — to question its status as a true system. He compared electronic health records as the UPC symbol or ATM machine of the health industry, allowing patients to receive better care by centralizing data and eliminating the opportunities for errors.
“Everyone agrees on its purpose: American health care must be patient-centric,” Palmisano said, but added: “Nothing is connected.”
As a company, IBM is eager to become the system manager. Palmisano noted that IBM manages Malta’s water system and the traffic systems in cities in Australia to Sweden.
But asking an IBM to take over a government’s health system has its downsides. Dan Pelino, IBM’s general manager for healthcare and life sciences, noted after Palmisano’s speech that IBM also manages the entire health system for Denmark.
When asked what would happen if Denmark ever wanted to switch vendors, Pelino said: “They probably couldn’t switch vendors.”
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 0:21:54 GMT -5
Post by lilsissy on Oct 22, 2011 0:21:54 GMT -5
check out these two combined, sssddragons.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoid=62827834www.popsci.com/science/article/2011-10/nearly-all-vertebrates-descended-fish-sixth-senseThe vertebrates’ common ancestor lived 500 million years ago and was probably a marine predator with good eyesight and a stripe along its side, which represented a lateral line system for detecting movement in the water. The line system, present in fish and some amphibians, contains sensory hair cells that are identical to the ones in our inner ears, which help the animal sense its environment. Fish use these cells to detect weak electrical signals in water, which helps them seek prey, avoid predators and even to communicate and school. end cut, B.T.W. a dragon like fossil was discovered recently seems krack something was the name will look it up. here Kraken, www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111010075530.htmScience News Blog Cite Save Email Print Share Giant 'Kraken' Lair Discovered: Cunning Sea Monster That Preyed On Ichthyosaurs ScienceDaily (Oct. 10, 2011) — Long before whales, the oceans of Earth were roamed by a very different kind of air-breathing leviathan. Snaggle-toothed ichthyosaurs larger than school buses swam at the top of the Triassic Period ocean food chain, or so it seemed before Mount Holyoke College paleontologist Mark McMenamin took a look at some of their remains in Nevada. Now he thinks there was an even larger and more cunning sea monster that preyed on ichthyosaurs: a 'kraken' of such mythological proportions it would have sent Captain Nemo running for dry land. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See Also: Plants & Animals •Fish •Marine Biology Earth & Climate •Earth Science •Geography Fossils & Ruins •Fossils •Ancient Civilizations Strange Science Reference •Ichthyosaur •Trace fossil •Jurassic •Giant squid McMenamin is presenting the results of his work on Oct. 10 at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Minneapolis. The evidence is at Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park in Nevada, where McMenamin and his daughter spent a few days this summer. It's a site where the remains of nine 45-foot (14-meter) ichthyosaurs, of the species Shonisaurus popularis can be found. These were the Triassic's counterpart to today's predatory giant squid-eating sperm whales. But the fossils at the Nevada site have a long history of perplexing researchers, including the world's expert on the site: the late Charles Lewis Camp of U.C. Berkeley. "Charles Camp puzzled over these fossils in the 1950s," said McMenamin. "In his papers he keeps referring to how peculiar this site is. We agree, it is peculiar." Camp's interpretation was that the fossils probably represented death by an accidental stranding or from a toxic plankton bloom. But no one had ever been able to prove that the beasts died in shallow water. In fact more recent work on the rocks around the fossils suggest it was a deep water environment, which makes neatly arranged carcasses even more mysterious. This question -- shallow or deep ocean death -- is what attracted McMenamin to the site. "I was aware that anytime there is controversy about depth, there is probably something interesting going on," McMenamin said. And when they arrived at the remote state park and started looking at the fossils, McMenamin was struck by their strangeness. "It became very clear that something very odd was going on there," said McMenamin. "It was a very odd configuration of bones." First of all, the different degrees of etching on the bones suggested that the shonisaurs were not all killed and buried at the same time. It also looked like the bones had been purposefully rearranged. That it got him thinking about a particular modern predator that is known for just this sort of intelligent manipulation of bones. "Modern octopus will do this," McMenamin said. What if there was an ancient, very large sort of octopus, like the kraken of mythology. "I think that these things were captured by the kraken and taken to the midden and the cephalopod would take them apart." In the fossil bed, some of the shonisaur vertebral disks are arranged in curious linear patterns with almost geometric regularity, McMenamin explained.The proposed Triassic kraken, which could have been the most intelligent invertebrate ever, arranged the vertebral discs in double line patterns, with individual pieces nesting in a fitted fashion as if they were part of a puzzle. Even more creepy: The arranged vertebrae resemble the pattern of sucker discs on a cephalopod tentacle, with each vertebra strongly resembling a coleoid sucker. In other words, the vertebral disc "pavement" seen at the state park may represent the earliest known self portrait. end cut, Sencil technology? What exactly was the Kraken?
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 0:47:26 GMT -5
Post by lilsissy on Oct 22, 2011 0:47:26 GMT -5
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 0:57:22 GMT -5
Post by skyship on Oct 22, 2011 0:57:22 GMT -5
actinopterygians and sarcopterygians well here we are on the Fish Line Lil Sissy, although that apoloxl looks like the critter taken out of Fulford. Jaillon et al.2 have sequenced the genome of the pufferfish Tetraodon nigroviridis. By comparing this genome sequence with that of humans, the authors deduce that the extinct ancestor of actinopterygians (ray-finned fish, including pufferfish) and sarcopterygians (lobe-finned fish, the lineage that gave rise to humans) had 12 pairs of chromosomes (n = 12). They also show that a whole-genome duplication (WGD) occurred during the evolution of ray-finned fish. www.nature.com/nature/journal/v431/n7011/fig_tab/431916a_F1.html================================ Really? mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Sarcopterygians??? Oh my, the sensors were in the skin.=========================== . .."electrosensors develop in precisely the same pattern from the same embryonic tissue in the developing skin, confirming that this is an ancient sensory system.The researchers also found that the electrosensory organs develop immediately adjacent to the lateral line, providing compelling evidence that these two sensory systems share a common evolutionary heritage. Researchers can now build a picture of what the common ancestor of these two lineages looked like and better link the sensory worlds of living and fossil animals, said Willy Bemis, Cornell professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and a senior author of the paper " This study caps questions in developmental and evolutionary biology, popularly called 'evo-devo,' that I've been interested in for 35 years," added Bemis. Melinda Modrell, a neuroscientist at the University of Cambridge who did the molecular analysis, is the paper's lead author. www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2011/10/humans-among-species-decended-from-common-ancestor-with-a-six-sense.html=========================================== This patent? TT said there was something from fish, from feathers, fowl and other sea animals. xtendmedical.com/uploads/XTNDML1.pdf "fish scales, feather of fowl, and carapaces of tortoises(horny substance)....deformed body surface of skin of birds, mammals, body surfaces of insects mollusca, shellfish and the cuticle of their body surfaces, vertebrata feathers, scales, that contain cuticles, horny layer of crustacea body surface having the function of detecting, memorizing, and transferring a weak information signal (biosignal) of an electro magnetic field generated from biotissues".......... Have known since 1BC, and Galvani, who learned about spark of life from E. Darwin. Galvani's 1791 thesis involved "animal electricity" using terms like: Electrophysiology, Electromagnetics, Electrochemistry. Harmonics generation through frequency signals. Fourier comes in. Fourier series, Fourier Transform: ECG, EEG, EMG and GSR.sure gets into the keratin. a Doc in Belgium thinks Morgellons is "keratin related" would have to do with the electrical magnetic field around body and in body......This membrane layer, keratin, "tight like a violin cord, with melanin in between the layers". xtendmedical.com/uploads/XTNDML1.pdf===================================== So,,,,,,,,,,,we came from fish, and we lost our sensors? Really? So, the keratin is where the electrical signals are, by use of the biosensor, made from dead carcasses. From carcasses! But this is from insects, mollusca, shellfish, fish scales, feathers, and skin of mammals. Who know what diseases they harbor. Insects, would explain the chitin in Morgellons. so, they had to have a model for this biosensor?Skyship
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 1:02:11 GMT -5
Post by lilsissy on Oct 22, 2011 1:02:11 GMT -5
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 2:21:49 GMT -5
Post by skyship on Oct 22, 2011 2:21:49 GMT -5
This electrical biosensor, involves nerves of skin (for the signal)as well as total nerve control. Our hand on the mouse? Or the pad on laptop? Touch of skin would send signal through computer. First interface, plus eye connect to screen of computer? Then once those particular signals from you are collected, then lasers and outside signals would control the entire electric system in the body? Right?
I think we see it now? Lightening, the power of lightening, Tesla knew, Franklin knew, Jefferson knew, Our govt knows, the link about IBM, yup that's it. So, we all have freq, signals from environment, the towers, even street lights?
So, what form of organism inside us provides the signal?
So, did they not realize that there are nerves in skin?
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 2:26:04 GMT -5
Post by skyship on Oct 22, 2011 2:26:04 GMT -5
If these scientists did not know that the body has an internal system, how do we know? We feel it being signalled. How could they not know this, if they knew that there is signal between cells, how could they not think that the signal inside each cell has to have an electrical component? to signal each other. Foolishness, seems to be their guide, or drugged dreams? =========================== Kopelman has developed encapsulated voltage-sensitive dyes that aren't hydrophobic and can operate anywhere in the cell, rather than just in membranes. Because it's possible to place his encapsulated dyes in a cell with a greater degree of control, Kopelman likens them to voltmeters. "Nano voltmeters do not perturb [the cellular] environment, and you can control where you put them," he says.The existence of strong electric fields across cellular membranes is accepted as a basic fact of cell biology. The fact that cells have internal electric fields as well, however, is a whole new revelation. Scientists previously did not know of the existence of internal cellular energy fields, and are just in the earliest stages of understand the phenomenon. Kopelman presented his results at the annual meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology this month. "There has been no skepticism as to the measurements," says Kopelman. "But we don't have an interpretation." Daniel Chu of the University of Washington in Seattle agrees that Kopelman's work provides proof of concept that cells have internal electric fields. "It's bound to be important, but nobody has looked at it yet," Chu says.www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2009/06/human-cells-hav.html=========================== Or they are acting stupid, so as not to reveal what has already been done!Skyship
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 2:35:01 GMT -5
Post by skyship on Oct 22, 2011 2:35:01 GMT -5
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 2:39:16 GMT -5
Post by skyship on Oct 22, 2011 2:39:16 GMT -5
I am wondering if the organim used for the evo devo machine, was this novel organism created by whoever to put extra sensory genes in us? What the heck is this? www.glcoherence.org/monitoring-system/about-system.htmlOr could this control "people's emotions" Bet it could! The perfect control system, by feelings and intuitions, everything else can be monitored, so why not feelings? Done in reverse? Seems if you turn everything around or upside down, or inside out, you find the truth! Total group think, group collectivism, The HIVE! skyship
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 3:04:10 GMT -5
Post by rafael25 on Oct 22, 2011 3:04:10 GMT -5
Yes Rafael obeying God will be a major challange in the near future. Demand for this electronic system I expect will come from our Supercongress egaged to make emegency decisions about our spending, I.B.M. IBM CEO also wants to resequence the health-care system October 6, 2009 by Chris Seper CLEVELAND, Ohio — IBM’s chief executive officer says electronic medical records need to go open source. Sam Palmisano told the attendees of the Cleveland Clinic Medical Innovation Summit that health care can barely be called a “system.” “If the health system was a patient we wouldn’t be able to read its vital signs,” he told an audience of about 400 physicians, researchers, medical investors and business leaders. To become a true system, improve results, cut medical errors and trim costs, Palmisano said the medical industry must agree to universal, open and non-proprietary standards for electronic health records. In essence, he said, electronic records have to be like generic drugs and the data must flow throughout the system in which no provider owns the process. “When you enforce standards then you get scale,” Palmisano said. “If you could force in your industry standards then costs will drop. They will plummet.” The open-source argument was part of Palmisano’s four-pronged approach to creating a true system in health care, which also included emphasizing wellness, creating a new code of ethics and enhancing broad collaboration between health-care stakeholders. Many of the concepts Palmisano proposed in his speech aren’t new. But it’s the first time the IBM chief laid out his company’s specific vision for health care. Palmisano spoke on the same day IBM announced plans to sequence the personal genome and do it for a rock-bottom price of, ultimately, $100. IBM joins nearly 20 other companies pursuing genome sequencing, and success in the field — and for a low cost — would press the fast-forward button on personalized medicine, clinical testing of new products, and determine individuals’ predisposition for specific diseases. “To bring about an era of personalized medicine, it isn’t enough to know the DNA of an average person,” said Gustavo Stolovitzky, an I.B.M. biophysicist, told The New York Times. “As a community, it became clear we need to make efforts to sequence in a way that is fast and cheap.” Palmisano barely touched on genome sequencing in his speech in Cleveland, instead focusing on health reform in a room full of people directly responsible for various aspects of the health of medicine. Along with the open-source approach, Palmisano said health care also needed to: Emphasize wellness. IBM, for example, pays for its employees’ doctor visits. It also plans to expand an incentive program for employee to leave healthy. Increase collaboration, which would require sharing of health information and data between patients, health-care providers and insurance companies as well as redistribute the payments and responsibilities in the health system. Palmisano argued that transferring a health system into a cloud computing model — “think of if it worked liked Google” — with per-transaction charges would streamline the system. Install aggressive ethics and public policies that accommodate the invasive nature of modern medicine. “We’re entering a different world ladies and gentlemen,” he said. “The idea of a computer chip in your body, pills you take to monitor your health, sharing data with an insurance company and your employer — I know not everyone is happy with that. Not everyone wants to be a human petri dish.” Palmisano highlighted health care’s failings — a lack of electronic-record adoption, constant data re-entry and unnecessary testing — to question its status as a true system. He compared electronic health records as the UPC symbol or ATM machine of the health industry, allowing patients to receive better care by centralizing data and eliminating the opportunities for errors. “Everyone agrees on its purpose: American health care must be patient-centric,” Palmisano said, but added: “Nothing is connected.” As a company, IBM is eager to become the system manager. Palmisano noted that IBM manages Malta’s water system and the traffic systems in cities in Australia to Sweden. But asking an IBM to take over a government’s health system has its downsides. Dan Pelino, IBM’s general manager for healthcare and life sciences, noted after Palmisano’s speech that IBM also manages the entire health system for Denmark. When asked what would happen if Denmark ever wanted to switch vendors, Pelino said: “They probably couldn’t switch vendors.” OMG! Lil Sis, you bring the news hot and sizzling! Thanks a Million. You and Skyship are truly unique, a real gift. May the Lord always be your pillar, and your cushion! I was lucky to have met Aqt in person a few years ago. She is the arm that embraces the entire family and keeps us together, in the distance. I want to go through all of the posts here. I am reading slowly, but trying to find the depth of all of your comments. Have a wonderful weekend! IBM can kiss my ***. Honey, it's too much. I will eventually accept the changes, if only with the help of God's grace. (wink). Raph.
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Oct 22, 2011 3:27:19 GMT -5
Post by rafael25 on Oct 22, 2011 3:27:19 GMT -5
I am wondering if the organim used for the evo devo machine, was this novel organism created by whoever to put extra sensory genes in us? What the heck is this? www.glcoherence.org/monitoring-system/about-system.htmlOr could this control "people's emotions" Bet it could! The perfect control system, by feelings and intuitions, everything else can be monitored, so why not feelings? Done in reverse? Seems if you turn everything around or upside down, or inside out, you find the truth! Total group think, group collectivism, The HIVE! skyship OMG, You are tapping into the thing. OMG, I had some conversations with AQT about...cybernetics. I read a whole bunch of articles on transhumanism, cybernetics, futurism, and all of that stuff about the collectivity. Some guy had even changed his name to a name that was a bunch of letters and numbers, like the bin number of a car. I like to be open minded- but I don't plan to live my life based on somebody else's fantasy. Now that you bring 'the hive' into the conversation (OMG), I was just having a conversation on bees with my BF last weekend. What I read is crazy. It makes a wonderful discovery, and it also makes a great sign of the nature of nature (lmao). Basically, it's like the hive is the organism, not the individual bees. Apparently all bees have the same DNA, for what I understood. So how come there is so much specialization? Specialization engineered on the lavae? Specialization that is IRREVERSIBLE? You know, a worker bee can never become queen. A queen can not feed the larvae. The worker bees choose the diet given to the workers. The workers bees only get 3 days of royal honey during the larva stage. The queen to be larvae get unlimited royal honey feeding! The Hive designs the individual and it gives it an indelible signature. This is pretty deep! But every bee seem to have the same DNA. So how can they all look so distinct according to their labor assigned? Science understands that there is a mechanism called DNA Methylation. Basically, a chemical compound is attached to some parts of the DNA sequence. That helps some traits 'be silenced'. Like worker bees with under-develop sexual organs. The sexual organs were silenced. It's funny how the nutrition seem to be some sort of trigger for the DNA methylation. Perhaps this is also a reality in the human race. Some of our treasures have been silenced. I could continue talking about the significance of DNA Methylation. I have to read more about methylation. You probably already know more about it- because it relates to diseases, cancer, etc. I think in our bodies it helps to keep the organs' cells functioning true to their pattern. Methylation would form those special cells in the pancreas- and the body would not forget to recreate them in the same manner when regeneration is needed. This hive thing is fascinating. I think that methylation is a key to something here. Perhaps all of those chemicals in the air are to be like methylation for us. As I said, the unlimited feeding of royal honey is what makes the queen a queen. What are chemtrails? Are they feeding us to be slaves? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_methylationPax, and bunches of Joy, Raph.
|
|
|
O.M.G.
Mar 4, 2020 11:47:05 GMT -5
Post by ztlvqddd on Mar 4, 2020 11:47:05 GMT -5
brand cialis canada <a href=http://usabuyou.com/#>cialis on line</a> cialis brand online australia
|
|