What's up with all this RFK Jr business these days?

16,030 Views | 236 Replies | Last: 2 days ago by bearister
dajo9
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calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

The Democratic Party have standards when it comes to the highest offices in the land. See Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Don't forget, these two were originally anti-vaxxers and then they flip flopped.
Only when Trump was pushing it as a counter to a permanent shutdown. But then the far right strangely took over the mantle when Biden became president. And the Democrats then took the mantle of mocking the shutdown when implemented by China and zero-COVID policy.

Of course, Biden is going to now say he did not trust Trump and not that he did not trust the COVID vaccines whose development accelerated under Trump. So, are the Republicans now entitled to distrust vaccines because Biden is pushing it? Biden was the first one to make the COVID vaccine a political and not a scientific matter. For me, I was not going to trust any political hack on medical advice. I trusted scientists and my doctors who told me to get the vaccine, and so I did, And I am glad I did just like I am glad I am vaccinated against whole gamut of diseases we have overcome through progress.

The Overton window has been shifting to the left for some time, there is no major representation of the far right in DC.

The political and media hacks you say you distrust are sometimes the very ones who quote the scientists and doctors you trust. This pandemic was never about trusting the science, it was about trusting the scientists that the media and ruling class favored.

The far right seems too much like the nationalistic, immigration hating left from when I became a conservative.




A sentence like this is perplexing to me. I don't think we are very much different in age. Yet I would say the nationalistic, immigrant hating right is part of why I became a liberal.
Unions and fear of immigrants taking jobs from middle class or lowering wages for Americans. Bernie Sanders was the typical, union-protecting liberal as opposed to open competition, global economy and trade treaties and bringing the smartest to innovate that was more common to fiscal conservatives who wanted more favorable conditions for corporations to compete globally. His position was more closely aligned with social conservatives who didn't want the social impact from immigration. However, the general republican position was similar to what Reagan, Bush, etc. supported, which was robust LEGAL immigration to stimulate economy, generate innovation, and reduce cost of living.

Look up Bernie Sanders' immigration position and how it has evolved only recently when he ran for president. The far left position was anti-immigration and protecting manufacturing and farm jobs in the US. Bernie's position was that having an open border will make us poor and put Americans out of employment.


I don't care about Bernie Sanders positions back then. He was on an island unto himself. Senate Democrats voted 34-8 in favor of the 1986 Immigration legislation.

Well, you could not be for unions and still be for broad immigrations back in the 80s. Also, a majority of the Republicans voted the same 1986 immigration reform and control act that provided amnesty but also required verification by employers. And Reagan pushed for the passage and signed it. The fiscal conservatives, like the Koch brothers, have always been for robust immigration. The social conservatives and labor friendly liberals who wanted higher wages and protection of jobs were against immigration. Sanders was not the only one.




Maybe you are a little older than me because I've never related to a Democratic Party controlled by labor unions. Guys like Gephardt and Daschle were fossils who needed to go, in my view.

My support for immigration is fairly limited for wage reasons, though I'm no union guy. I support the diversity our country has. What repulsed me about the Republican Party was their hate of the immigrant. They loved the cheap labor. They didn't like the immigrant. Growing up, Republican kids were the ones full of racist comments. Democratic kids had more diverse friendships. That was my experience.
I am probably older than you. I am turning 52 this year, so past my midpoint. If I had to guess, you are probably in your 40s. While I was generally liberal in my youth, I still remember the crappy economy from the Carter years when I was in early elementary school years and the inspirational character of the Reagan years. Didn't become a fiscal conservative until much later in life after I started understanding finances and human nature, but I think I believed the logic of it even before Berkeley.


No, we are pretty close in age. My family did well in the Carter years but never recovered financially from the early 80s recession. My Dad got wiped out. I never related to the Reagan years. The 80s were the poorest time for my family. My family was basically broke until the Clinton years. Also, the reduction in crime of the Clinton years made daily life extremely improved regardless of the size of your wallet.

To me, Republicans didn't respect my gay family member, my Hispanic friends or girlfriends, or my women's advocate mother. They really only seemed to respect white men, which I couldn't relate to. Plus, their economics seemed like obvious bs to get the rich richer. Again, just my experience.
American Vermin
okaydo
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BearHunter said:

okaydo said:

BearHunter said:

bearister said:

This thread brings me back to the spring of 1968 when I was in 8th grade and Bobby was campaigning. I think everyone under 30 thought he was super cool. He had a surfer haircut, was young and had that accent…..and then they killed him.

*As Arlo Guthrie would say, the Kennedy boys were freaks in the early 70's.

Freaks. Joe Biden was stealing classified documents and showering with Ashely since 1974.

Ewwww. Biden was showering with Ashley years before she was born?



What year(s) was he showering with her, approximately?

I don't know. You're the person who said he was showering with her before she was born.
calbear93
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dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

The Democratic Party have standards when it comes to the highest offices in the land. See Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Don't forget, these two were originally anti-vaxxers and then they flip flopped.
Only when Trump was pushing it as a counter to a permanent shutdown. But then the far right strangely took over the mantle when Biden became president. And the Democrats then took the mantle of mocking the shutdown when implemented by China and zero-COVID policy.

Of course, Biden is going to now say he did not trust Trump and not that he did not trust the COVID vaccines whose development accelerated under Trump. So, are the Republicans now entitled to distrust vaccines because Biden is pushing it? Biden was the first one to make the COVID vaccine a political and not a scientific matter. For me, I was not going to trust any political hack on medical advice. I trusted scientists and my doctors who told me to get the vaccine, and so I did, And I am glad I did just like I am glad I am vaccinated against whole gamut of diseases we have overcome through progress.

The Overton window has been shifting to the left for some time, there is no major representation of the far right in DC.

The political and media hacks you say you distrust are sometimes the very ones who quote the scientists and doctors you trust. This pandemic was never about trusting the science, it was about trusting the scientists that the media and ruling class favored.

The far right seems too much like the nationalistic, immigration hating left from when I became a conservative.




A sentence like this is perplexing to me. I don't think we are very much different in age. Yet I would say the nationalistic, immigrant hating right is part of why I became a liberal.
Unions and fear of immigrants taking jobs from middle class or lowering wages for Americans. Bernie Sanders was the typical, union-protecting liberal as opposed to open competition, global economy and trade treaties and bringing the smartest to innovate that was more common to fiscal conservatives who wanted more favorable conditions for corporations to compete globally. His position was more closely aligned with social conservatives who didn't want the social impact from immigration. However, the general republican position was similar to what Reagan, Bush, etc. supported, which was robust LEGAL immigration to stimulate economy, generate innovation, and reduce cost of living.

Look up Bernie Sanders' immigration position and how it has evolved only recently when he ran for president. The far left position was anti-immigration and protecting manufacturing and farm jobs in the US. Bernie's position was that having an open border will make us poor and put Americans out of employment.


I don't care about Bernie Sanders positions back then. He was on an island unto himself. Senate Democrats voted 34-8 in favor of the 1986 Immigration legislation.

Well, you could not be for unions and still be for broad immigrations back in the 80s. Also, a majority of the Republicans voted the same 1986 immigration reform and control act that provided amnesty but also required verification by employers. And Reagan pushed for the passage and signed it. The fiscal conservatives, like the Koch brothers, have always been for robust immigration. The social conservatives and labor friendly liberals who wanted higher wages and protection of jobs were against immigration. Sanders was not the only one.




Maybe you are a little older than me because I've never related to a Democratic Party controlled by labor unions. Guys like Gephardt and Daschle were fossils who needed to go, in my view.

My support for immigration is fairly limited for wage reasons, though I'm no union guy. I support the diversity our country has. What repulsed me about the Republican Party was their hate of the immigrant. They loved the cheap labor. They didn't like the immigrant. Growing up, Republican kids were the ones full of racist comments. Democratic kids had more diverse friendships. That was my experience.
I am probably older than you. I am turning 52 this year, so past my midpoint. If I had to guess, you are probably in your 40s. While I was generally liberal in my youth, I still remember the crappy economy from the Carter years when I was in early elementary school years and the inspirational character of the Reagan years. Didn't become a fiscal conservative until much later in life after I started understanding finances and human nature, but I think I believed the logic of it even before Berkeley.


No, we are pretty close in age. My family did well in the Carter years but never recovered financially from the early 80s recession. My Dad got wiped out. I never related to the Reagan years. The 80s were the poorest time for my family. I was basically broke until the Clinton years. Also, the reduction in crime of the Clinton years made daily life extremely improved regardless of the size of your wallet.

To me, Republicans didn't respect my gay family member, my Hispanic friends or girlfriends, or my women's advocate mother. They really only seemed to respect white men, which I couldn't relate to. Plus, their economics seemed like obvious bs to get the rich richer. Again, just my experience.
I don't think Democrats did either. You must be imagining an 80s that did not really exist. It was a universally racist, elitist, materialistic, big hair, bigoted era, with jokes about gays common on TV, and bigotry expected from Republicans and Democrats. There were not a lot of Democrats pleading for gay marriages or equality for Hispanics. I know because my family was poor during both Carter and Reagan years, and I saw first hand all the crap that my best friends who were not white had to go through. I also know that they are now even wealthier than I am and went to better schools (Berkeley for me and Ivy League for them). One of them lives in Mercer Island with a house that makes even my house on the beach front envious. So, if someone growing up as poor as I was and, with respect to my best friends, faced with all of the racism that seems unreal now could do that well, I don't buy the victim, woe is me, attitude. Doesn't mean racism doesn't exist. It means that people are stronger than that. Wish I had all of the advantages that rich kids had instead of the life of a son of a mechanic but life is tough and no one is really going to give anything up that they already have. You have to earn it like my friends did.

But if you became a Democrat in the 80s because they supported gays, you must not have been living in California.
dajo9
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calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

The Democratic Party have standards when it comes to the highest offices in the land. See Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Don't forget, these two were originally anti-vaxxers and then they flip flopped.
Only when Trump was pushing it as a counter to a permanent shutdown. But then the far right strangely took over the mantle when Biden became president. And the Democrats then took the mantle of mocking the shutdown when implemented by China and zero-COVID policy.

Of course, Biden is going to now say he did not trust Trump and not that he did not trust the COVID vaccines whose development accelerated under Trump. So, are the Republicans now entitled to distrust vaccines because Biden is pushing it? Biden was the first one to make the COVID vaccine a political and not a scientific matter. For me, I was not going to trust any political hack on medical advice. I trusted scientists and my doctors who told me to get the vaccine, and so I did, And I am glad I did just like I am glad I am vaccinated against whole gamut of diseases we have overcome through progress.

The Overton window has been shifting to the left for some time, there is no major representation of the far right in DC.

The political and media hacks you say you distrust are sometimes the very ones who quote the scientists and doctors you trust. This pandemic was never about trusting the science, it was about trusting the scientists that the media and ruling class favored.

The far right seems too much like the nationalistic, immigration hating left from when I became a conservative.




A sentence like this is perplexing to me. I don't think we are very much different in age. Yet I would say the nationalistic, immigrant hating right is part of why I became a liberal.
Unions and fear of immigrants taking jobs from middle class or lowering wages for Americans. Bernie Sanders was the typical, union-protecting liberal as opposed to open competition, global economy and trade treaties and bringing the smartest to innovate that was more common to fiscal conservatives who wanted more favorable conditions for corporations to compete globally. His position was more closely aligned with social conservatives who didn't want the social impact from immigration. However, the general republican position was similar to what Reagan, Bush, etc. supported, which was robust LEGAL immigration to stimulate economy, generate innovation, and reduce cost of living.

Look up Bernie Sanders' immigration position and how it has evolved only recently when he ran for president. The far left position was anti-immigration and protecting manufacturing and farm jobs in the US. Bernie's position was that having an open border will make us poor and put Americans out of employment.


I don't care about Bernie Sanders positions back then. He was on an island unto himself. Senate Democrats voted 34-8 in favor of the 1986 Immigration legislation.

Well, you could not be for unions and still be for broad immigrations back in the 80s. Also, a majority of the Republicans voted the same 1986 immigration reform and control act that provided amnesty but also required verification by employers. And Reagan pushed for the passage and signed it. The fiscal conservatives, like the Koch brothers, have always been for robust immigration. The social conservatives and labor friendly liberals who wanted higher wages and protection of jobs were against immigration. Sanders was not the only one.




Maybe you are a little older than me because I've never related to a Democratic Party controlled by labor unions. Guys like Gephardt and Daschle were fossils who needed to go, in my view.

My support for immigration is fairly limited for wage reasons, though I'm no union guy. I support the diversity our country has. What repulsed me about the Republican Party was their hate of the immigrant. They loved the cheap labor. They didn't like the immigrant. Growing up, Republican kids were the ones full of racist comments. Democratic kids had more diverse friendships. That was my experience.
I am probably older than you. I am turning 52 this year, so past my midpoint. If I had to guess, you are probably in your 40s. While I was generally liberal in my youth, I still remember the crappy economy from the Carter years when I was in early elementary school years and the inspirational character of the Reagan years. Didn't become a fiscal conservative until much later in life after I started understanding finances and human nature, but I think I believed the logic of it even before Berkeley.


No, we are pretty close in age. My family did well in the Carter years but never recovered financially from the early 80s recession. My Dad got wiped out. I never related to the Reagan years. The 80s were the poorest time for my family. I was basically broke until the Clinton years. Also, the reduction in crime of the Clinton years made daily life extremely improved regardless of the size of your wallet.

To me, Republicans didn't respect my gay family member, my Hispanic friends or girlfriends, or my women's advocate mother. They really only seemed to respect white men, which I couldn't relate to. Plus, their economics seemed like obvious bs to get the rich richer. Again, just my experience.
I don't think Democrats did either. You must be imagining an 80s that did not really exist. It was a universally racist, elitist, materialistic, big hair, bigoted era, with jokes about gays common on TV, and bigotry expected from Republicans and Democrats. There were not a lot of Democrats pleading for gay marriages or equality for Hispanics. I know because my family was poor during both Carter and Reagan years, and I saw first hand all the crap that my best friends who were not white had to go through. I also know that they are now even wealthier than I am and went to better schools (Berkeley for me and Ivy League for them). One of them lives in Mercer Island with a house that makes even my house on the beach front envious. So, if someone growing up as poor as I was and, with respect to my best friends, faced with all of the racism that seems unreal now could do that well, I don't buy the victim, woe is me, attitude. Doesn't mean racism doesn't exist. It means that people are stronger than that. Wish I had all of the advantages that rich kids had instead of the life of a son of a mechanic but life is tough and no one is really going to give anything up that they already have. You have to earn it like my friends did.

But if you became a Democrat in the 80s because they supported gays, you must not have been living in California.


Yes I imagined my entire California upbringing.
American Vermin
calbear93
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dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

The Democratic Party have standards when it comes to the highest offices in the land. See Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Don't forget, these two were originally anti-vaxxers and then they flip flopped.
Only when Trump was pushing it as a counter to a permanent shutdown. But then the far right strangely took over the mantle when Biden became president. And the Democrats then took the mantle of mocking the shutdown when implemented by China and zero-COVID policy.

Of course, Biden is going to now say he did not trust Trump and not that he did not trust the COVID vaccines whose development accelerated under Trump. So, are the Republicans now entitled to distrust vaccines because Biden is pushing it? Biden was the first one to make the COVID vaccine a political and not a scientific matter. For me, I was not going to trust any political hack on medical advice. I trusted scientists and my doctors who told me to get the vaccine, and so I did, And I am glad I did just like I am glad I am vaccinated against whole gamut of diseases we have overcome through progress.

The Overton window has been shifting to the left for some time, there is no major representation of the far right in DC.

The political and media hacks you say you distrust are sometimes the very ones who quote the scientists and doctors you trust. This pandemic was never about trusting the science, it was about trusting the scientists that the media and ruling class favored.

The far right seems too much like the nationalistic, immigration hating left from when I became a conservative.




A sentence like this is perplexing to me. I don't think we are very much different in age. Yet I would say the nationalistic, immigrant hating right is part of why I became a liberal.
Unions and fear of immigrants taking jobs from middle class or lowering wages for Americans. Bernie Sanders was the typical, union-protecting liberal as opposed to open competition, global economy and trade treaties and bringing the smartest to innovate that was more common to fiscal conservatives who wanted more favorable conditions for corporations to compete globally. His position was more closely aligned with social conservatives who didn't want the social impact from immigration. However, the general republican position was similar to what Reagan, Bush, etc. supported, which was robust LEGAL immigration to stimulate economy, generate innovation, and reduce cost of living.

Look up Bernie Sanders' immigration position and how it has evolved only recently when he ran for president. The far left position was anti-immigration and protecting manufacturing and farm jobs in the US. Bernie's position was that having an open border will make us poor and put Americans out of employment.


I don't care about Bernie Sanders positions back then. He was on an island unto himself. Senate Democrats voted 34-8 in favor of the 1986 Immigration legislation.

Well, you could not be for unions and still be for broad immigrations back in the 80s. Also, a majority of the Republicans voted the same 1986 immigration reform and control act that provided amnesty but also required verification by employers. And Reagan pushed for the passage and signed it. The fiscal conservatives, like the Koch brothers, have always been for robust immigration. The social conservatives and labor friendly liberals who wanted higher wages and protection of jobs were against immigration. Sanders was not the only one.




Maybe you are a little older than me because I've never related to a Democratic Party controlled by labor unions. Guys like Gephardt and Daschle were fossils who needed to go, in my view.

My support for immigration is fairly limited for wage reasons, though I'm no union guy. I support the diversity our country has. What repulsed me about the Republican Party was their hate of the immigrant. They loved the cheap labor. They didn't like the immigrant. Growing up, Republican kids were the ones full of racist comments. Democratic kids had more diverse friendships. That was my experience.
I am probably older than you. I am turning 52 this year, so past my midpoint. If I had to guess, you are probably in your 40s. While I was generally liberal in my youth, I still remember the crappy economy from the Carter years when I was in early elementary school years and the inspirational character of the Reagan years. Didn't become a fiscal conservative until much later in life after I started understanding finances and human nature, but I think I believed the logic of it even before Berkeley.


No, we are pretty close in age. My family did well in the Carter years but never recovered financially from the early 80s recession. My Dad got wiped out. I never related to the Reagan years. The 80s were the poorest time for my family. I was basically broke until the Clinton years. Also, the reduction in crime of the Clinton years made daily life extremely improved regardless of the size of your wallet.

To me, Republicans didn't respect my gay family member, my Hispanic friends or girlfriends, or my women's advocate mother. They really only seemed to respect white men, which I couldn't relate to. Plus, their economics seemed like obvious bs to get the rich richer. Again, just my experience.
I don't think Democrats did either. You must be imagining an 80s that did not really exist. It was a universally racist, elitist, materialistic, big hair, bigoted era, with jokes about gays common on TV, and bigotry expected from Republicans and Democrats. There were not a lot of Democrats pleading for gay marriages or equality for Hispanics. I know because my family was poor during both Carter and Reagan years, and I saw first hand all the crap that my best friends who were not white had to go through. I also know that they are now even wealthier than I am and went to better schools (Berkeley for me and Ivy League for them). One of them lives in Mercer Island with a house that makes even my house on the beach front envious. So, if someone growing up as poor as I was and, with respect to my best friends, faced with all of the racism that seems unreal now could do that well, I don't buy the victim, woe is me, attitude. Doesn't mean racism doesn't exist. It means that people are stronger than that. Wish I had all of the advantages that rich kids had instead of the life of a son of a mechanic but life is tough and no one is really going to give anything up that they already have. You have to earn it like my friends did.

But if you became a Democrat in the 80s because they supported gays, you must not have been living in California.


Yes I imagined my entire California upbringing.
That's not what I wrote, is it? I said you are imagining an 80s with one party supporting gays and Hispanics. That era did not exist. Even Clinton did not support gay marriages or the right of gays to serve in the military. It was Newsom who broke from the party to offer gay marriages in SF.
dajo9
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calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

dajo9 said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

calbear93 said:

BearHunter said:

The Democratic Party have standards when it comes to the highest offices in the land. See Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Don't forget, these two were originally anti-vaxxers and then they flip flopped.
Only when Trump was pushing it as a counter to a permanent shutdown. But then the far right strangely took over the mantle when Biden became president. And the Democrats then took the mantle of mocking the shutdown when implemented by China and zero-COVID policy.

Of course, Biden is going to now say he did not trust Trump and not that he did not trust the COVID vaccines whose development accelerated under Trump. So, are the Republicans now entitled to distrust vaccines because Biden is pushing it? Biden was the first one to make the COVID vaccine a political and not a scientific matter. For me, I was not going to trust any political hack on medical advice. I trusted scientists and my doctors who told me to get the vaccine, and so I did, And I am glad I did just like I am glad I am vaccinated against whole gamut of diseases we have overcome through progress.

The Overton window has been shifting to the left for some time, there is no major representation of the far right in DC.

The political and media hacks you say you distrust are sometimes the very ones who quote the scientists and doctors you trust. This pandemic was never about trusting the science, it was about trusting the scientists that the media and ruling class favored.

The far right seems too much like the nationalistic, immigration hating left from when I became a conservative.




A sentence like this is perplexing to me. I don't think we are very much different in age. Yet I would say the nationalistic, immigrant hating right is part of why I became a liberal.
Unions and fear of immigrants taking jobs from middle class or lowering wages for Americans. Bernie Sanders was the typical, union-protecting liberal as opposed to open competition, global economy and trade treaties and bringing the smartest to innovate that was more common to fiscal conservatives who wanted more favorable conditions for corporations to compete globally. His position was more closely aligned with social conservatives who didn't want the social impact from immigration. However, the general republican position was similar to what Reagan, Bush, etc. supported, which was robust LEGAL immigration to stimulate economy, generate innovation, and reduce cost of living.

Look up Bernie Sanders' immigration position and how it has evolved only recently when he ran for president. The far left position was anti-immigration and protecting manufacturing and farm jobs in the US. Bernie's position was that having an open border will make us poor and put Americans out of employment.


I don't care about Bernie Sanders positions back then. He was on an island unto himself. Senate Democrats voted 34-8 in favor of the 1986 Immigration legislation.

Well, you could not be for unions and still be for broad immigrations back in the 80s. Also, a majority of the Republicans voted the same 1986 immigration reform and control act that provided amnesty but also required verification by employers. And Reagan pushed for the passage and signed it. The fiscal conservatives, like the Koch brothers, have always been for robust immigration. The social conservatives and labor friendly liberals who wanted higher wages and protection of jobs were against immigration. Sanders was not the only one.




Maybe you are a little older than me because I've never related to a Democratic Party controlled by labor unions. Guys like Gephardt and Daschle were fossils who needed to go, in my view.

My support for immigration is fairly limited for wage reasons, though I'm no union guy. I support the diversity our country has. What repulsed me about the Republican Party was their hate of the immigrant. They loved the cheap labor. They didn't like the immigrant. Growing up, Republican kids were the ones full of racist comments. Democratic kids had more diverse friendships. That was my experience.
I am probably older than you. I am turning 52 this year, so past my midpoint. If I had to guess, you are probably in your 40s. While I was generally liberal in my youth, I still remember the crappy economy from the Carter years when I was in early elementary school years and the inspirational character of the Reagan years. Didn't become a fiscal conservative until much later in life after I started understanding finances and human nature, but I think I believed the logic of it even before Berkeley.


No, we are pretty close in age. My family did well in the Carter years but never recovered financially from the early 80s recession. My Dad got wiped out. I never related to the Reagan years. The 80s were the poorest time for my family. I was basically broke until the Clinton years. Also, the reduction in crime of the Clinton years made daily life extremely improved regardless of the size of your wallet.

To me, Republicans didn't respect my gay family member, my Hispanic friends or girlfriends, or my women's advocate mother. They really only seemed to respect white men, which I couldn't relate to. Plus, their economics seemed like obvious bs to get the rich richer. Again, just my experience.
I don't think Democrats did either. You must be imagining an 80s that did not really exist. It was a universally racist, elitist, materialistic, big hair, bigoted era, with jokes about gays common on TV, and bigotry expected from Republicans and Democrats. There were not a lot of Democrats pleading for gay marriages or equality for Hispanics. I know because my family was poor during both Carter and Reagan years, and I saw first hand all the crap that my best friends who were not white had to go through. I also know that they are now even wealthier than I am and went to better schools (Berkeley for me and Ivy League for them). One of them lives in Mercer Island with a house that makes even my house on the beach front envious. So, if someone growing up as poor as I was and, with respect to my best friends, faced with all of the racism that seems unreal now could do that well, I don't buy the victim, woe is me, attitude. Doesn't mean racism doesn't exist. It means that people are stronger than that. Wish I had all of the advantages that rich kids had instead of the life of a son of a mechanic but life is tough and no one is really going to give anything up that they already have. You have to earn it like my friends did.

But if you became a Democrat in the 80s because they supported gays, you must not have been living in California.


Yes I imagined my entire California upbringing.
That's not what I wrote, is it? I said you are imagining an 80s with one party supporting gays and Hispanics. That era did not exist. Even Clinton did not support gay marriages or the right of gays to serve in the military. It was Newsom who broke from the party to offer gay marriages in SF.


Yes, change is generational. All the old people sucked on these issues and they held the offices. But young Democrats were in the right place and young Republicans were in the wrong place. Even then. You can still see it today.
American Vermin
dajo9
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Young people get older.
American Vermin
prospeCt
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Twump Kennedy '24 might even top Kamala Bernie



calbear93
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dajo9 said:

Young people get older.

There isn't any serious candidates now in the Democratic party who do not support gay rights. I am not debating that point with you. Kamala Harris was 16 when 80s came around. I doubt you knew what people that age believed as far as political affiliation, gay rights platform, or whether they were going to be politicians.

I have always been for gay rights and legal gay marriages. I just don't believe they are more entitled just like I don't believe they deserve less or should be made to feel less.

As long as the state continues not to force churches to conduct gay weddings against their religious beliefs, I am supportive of how non-religious people want to love who they love anyone of legal age in the manner they choose.

Always believed that before I became a Christian and before I became a Democrat or Republican, and even now as an Independent.

However, the fact still remains that the 80's was a very hostile decade for gays and Hispanics from both parties, even if the Democrats finally determined that it will not openly discriminate against gays in early 80s. But as late as 1987, 80% of the Americans believed that sexual relations between same genders were always wrong. That cannot be just Republicans or Christians. That high number represents the culture in American from both parties in the 80s.

Nevertheless, we have gone completely off the topic.

Yes, the far left in the 80s who believed in strong union rights and protecting middle class jobs were against immigration.
Big C
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cbbass1 said:

Big C said:

Okay, I knew RFK Jr was some anti-vax nutjob (yes, I recognize that Big Pharma has a profit motive, but still... ) and then I guess I do a Rip Van Winkle and all of a sudden he's running for President? And now somebody on this board (This board, the sanest group of people in the world!) apparently has a pin-up of him in their room or something?

I'm hearing a lot about RFK Jr lately! Better find out more... so I go to Wikipedia and I don't get too far before I read the following:

"...In 1982, Kennedy was sworn in as an assistant district attorney for Manhattan. After failing his bar exam, he resigned in July 1983. That September, he was charged with heroin possession, and pleaded guilty in February 1984, when he received to two years' probation and community service... "

And that was even before he cemented his reputation as a whack job!

Good thing for him he's got the name and the hairline and the square jaw and all, but is that all it takes nowadays?!?

Geez Louise...
There are quite a few long interviews of JFK Jr. that'll give you a good idea of where he stands on quite a few issues. I'm listening to this one as we speak:
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | Club Random with Bill Maher It's about 2 hrs.

If you think he's an "anti-vax nut job," you need to listen to his explanation, in his words. Don't pay any attention to his legacy/corporate media critics. Listen & think for yourself.

I'm suspicious about who's funding his campaign.

But other than that, I support his candidacy, and I think the Dems need to take him seriously IF they want Biden to win in 2024.

On most issues, other than some aspects of vaccines & Covid/Ivermectin, I think his views are aligned with more Democrats -- and Americans -- than Biden or any other corporate Democrat.

Bottom line: I'd rather support someone who gets vaccines wrong than someone who got the Iraq War wrong.

FWIW, I'm more aligned with Marianne Williamson than JFK Jr., but I'm still leery about his right-wing support. Both are far better for most Americans, IMO, than Biden.

Suggestion: Rather than focusing on mistakes from the 1980s, listen to the interviews, and then share your take on him. Where do you disagree? Any agreement? I think that'll be a more effective use of this thread that you started.


Thanks for your honest feedback. I wasn't "focusing" on what he did in the 80's, just that, what with his new fame, I thought I'd take a quick look at his entire body of work, to see how much credibility he might have as a national leader or even a spokesperson for anything important.

What he did and/or didn't do way back then isn't an automatic disqualifier, but everything adds up. You take that, the anti-vax stuff (not just COVID but all of it) and throw in his constant emphasis on conspiracy theories and I'm not going to be wasting my time listening to whatever else he has to say.

If there is a great leader under all that just waiting to be uncovered, it looks like I will never find out. He just seems like too much of a nut. And if his name were Robert Smith, instead of Robert Kennedy, he would currently inhabit Nowheresville... where he belongs.
BearHunter
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okaydo said:

Oh, great, another election denier.


Every good Democrat is an election denier. But in 2020, they were election fraud deniers.
sycasey
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Big C said:

If there is a great leader under all that just waiting to be uncovered, it looks like I will never find out. He just seems like too much of a nut. And if his name were Robert Smith, instead of Robert Kennedy, he would currently inhabit Nowheresville... where he belongs.

If his name were Robert Smith, at least he would have written some catchy songs.

MinotStateBeav
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sycasey said:

okaydo said:

Big C said:

Okay, I knew RFK Jr was some anti-vax nutjob (yes, I recognize that Big Pharma has a profit motive, but still... ) and then I guess I do a Rip Van Winkle and all of a sudden he's running for President? And now somebody on this board (This board, the sanest group of people in the world!) apparently has a pin-up of him in their room or something?

I'm hearing a lot about RFK Jr lately! Better find out more... so I go to Wikipedia and I don't get too far before I read the following:

"...In 1982, Kennedy was sworn in as an assistant district attorney for Manhattan. After failing his bar exam, he resigned in July 1983. That September, he was charged with heroin possession, and pleaded guilty in February 1984, when he received to two years' probation and community service... "

And that was even before he cemented his reputation as a whack job!

Good thing for him he's got the name and the hairline and the square jaw and all, but is that all it takes nowadays?!?

Geez Louise...


He makes some good points. I'm worried about getting cancer from Wi-Fi.




For me this basically overrides any other beliefs he might hold. The guy is a nut and not worth my attention.
Do you have firm science that it doesn't? Did you read the science he presented? I 100% bet you didn't.
calbear93
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sycasey said:

Big C said:

If there is a great leader under all that just waiting to be uncovered, it looks like I will never find out. He just seems like too much of a nut. And if his name were Robert Smith, instead of Robert Kennedy, he would currently inhabit Nowheresville... where he belongs.

If his name were Robert Smith, at least he would have written some catchy songs.


Some catchy song? Way more than that. One of the true artist from the 80s who sounded even better live than in recordings. Robert Smith is the Cure, and the Cure will withstand the test of time.
sycasey
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MinotStateBeav said:

sycasey said:

okaydo said:

Big C said:

Okay, I knew RFK Jr was some anti-vax nutjob (yes, I recognize that Big Pharma has a profit motive, but still... ) and then I guess I do a Rip Van Winkle and all of a sudden he's running for President? And now somebody on this board (This board, the sanest group of people in the world!) apparently has a pin-up of him in their room or something?

I'm hearing a lot about RFK Jr lately! Better find out more... so I go to Wikipedia and I don't get too far before I read the following:

"...In 1982, Kennedy was sworn in as an assistant district attorney for Manhattan. After failing his bar exam, he resigned in July 1983. That September, he was charged with heroin possession, and pleaded guilty in February 1984, when he received to two years' probation and community service... "

And that was even before he cemented his reputation as a whack job!

Good thing for him he's got the name and the hairline and the square jaw and all, but is that all it takes nowadays?!?

Geez Louise...


He makes some good points. I'm worried about getting cancer from Wi-Fi.




For me this basically overrides any other beliefs he might hold. The guy is a nut and not worth my attention.
Do you have firm science that it doesn't? Did you read the science he presented? I 100% bet you didn't.

Can I prove a negative about a purely speculative claim treated as definitive truth by RFK Jr? No, I can't. You sure got me.
cbbass1
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okaydo said:

Big C said:

Okay, I knew RFK Jr was some anti-vax nutjob (yes, I recognize that Big Pharma has a profit motive, but still... ) and then I guess I do a Rip Van Winkle and all of a sudden he's running for President? And now somebody on this board (This board, the sanest group of people in the world!) apparently has a pin-up of him in their room or something?

I'm hearing a lot about RFK Jr lately! Better find out more... so I go to Wikipedia and I don't get too far before I read the following:

"...In 1982, Kennedy was sworn in as an assistant district attorney for Manhattan. After failing his bar exam, he resigned in July 1983. That September, he was charged with heroin possession, and pleaded guilty in February 1984, when he received to two years' probation and community service... "

And that was even before he cemented his reputation as a whack job!

Good thing for him he's got the name and the hairline and the square jaw and all, but is that all it takes nowadays?!?

Geez Louise...


He makes some good points. I'm worried about getting cancer from Wi-Fi.



I'm NOT worried about getting cancer from WiFi.

But let's play this out. Suppose he gets elected President, and he picks up some belief outta nowhere that most people think is just wacko. What happens?

He would ask Congress to write a bill to propose an investigation of the effects of WiFi on humans. Funds would be allocated, the study would be done, and then we'd have a much better idea.

The reality of WiFi, like vaccines, 5G, etc., is that in the rush to get products out & make $$$ on the technology, in a deregulated environment, some corners might've been cut, and some studies that should've been done might not have been done.

If that's the worst that could happen, then count me in. Better that than another corporate war criminal.
dajo9
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American Vermin
calbear93
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dajo9 said:



I gained 25 pounds during COVID. I am a fairly tall person in general. Lost it quickly once the lockdown ended, and I went back to weight training and MMA, but I was one of those who gained quite a bit and went from six-pack to one-pack. Lock down was brutal for my health.

We make things complex when they are simple. COVID and locking oneself off from the world makes us eat more processed food and reduce exercise. Even at my age without some fad diet or chemical supplement other than protein shakes, I was able to cut body fat and lose 25 pounds I gained during COVID without losing too much muscle by eating clean and eating less, moving more through MMA training, eating more protein and eating small portions more frequently, and lifting weights. No limiting when I could eat or cutting necessary nutrients like complex carbs.
AunBear89
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"There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics." -- (maybe) Benjamin Disraeli, popularized by Mark Twain
calbear93
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AunBear89 said:


Let me guess. You are fat slob with no self-control but plenty of images on your computer that you use for trolling.

I guess you didn't gain weight from COVID because you are a sedentary loser generally whose life didn't change as a result of COVID. Maybe you lost weight because you couldn't make normal visits to Jack in the Box that you brag about having in your neighborhood in Kitsap as if that makes it metropolitan.

I will say this. Since I started slapping you around, you have stopped your trolling with other posters. That just goes to prove that your whole schtick was to get some attention you probably don't get outside of here from anyone, even if it's someone like me who finally gave you some attention because you were so begging for it, even if it is to mock you in a way you so deserve. It was never about principle or beliefs or even politics. It was you trolling for attention and stars.
bearister
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You should read this book:



*Author is a Rhodes Scholar and a Jeet Kune Do fanatic.
*I emailed him about a personal connection I had to the story of Bruce buying a Porsche in Hollywood and Matt Polly sent me a very long email back.
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calbear93
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bearister said:

You should read this book:



*Author is a Rhodes Scholar and a Jeet Kune Do fanatic.
I have read it. Great book. He clearly love Bruce Lee and the book was one of the first look into Bruce Lee's upbringing. Didn't sugarcoat his childhood pranks but also showed his openness to diversity and epiphany on self-discipline. And really emphasize how he wasn't trying to be anyone other than a proud Chinese-American.

Bruce Lee was inspirational. My best friend growing up was Korean, and he viewed Bruce Lee as one of the few public figures that fought against the emasculation of Asian men by American society. He was one of the main reasons my friend and I started taking martial arts at a young age.

Have not practiced Jeet Kune Do or any Chinese martial arts, but mostly Tae Kwon Do, Hapkido, Thai Kickboxing, and now mostly Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. All my kids learned martial arts and still practice because it truly is a great way to get confidence, discipline, and physical health.
DiabloWags
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For those interested in their health and/or want to be proactive about it

1.) Colon Cancer is the #2 cancer killer for those of us over 50.

It is the fourth most common cancer in men and women. It is the 2nd leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. The recommended screening age has dropped recently starting at 50, to age 45 due to the incidence rate in younger individuals. The key is obviously to catch it early in Stage 1 or 2.

I've used the non-invasive Cologuard test 3x (at 3-year recommended intervals ) since it became FDA approved in August of 2014. Great test, easy to use in the privacy of your own home, and was FDA approved by their medical diagnostics panel in a unanimous 10 - 0 vote. The 10,000 patient clinical trial was published in the New England Journal of Medicine (April 3, 2014). Cologuard is a very high performing test with superior sensitivity in Stage 1 and 2 cancers vs the annual FIT test which is nothing more than a stool test that detects blood in your stool. Kaiser uses FIT.

It's a very simple and easy to use stool DNA test that analyzes changes in your DNA that have a high correlation with colon cancer. Super convenient for those that dont want to take an entire day off from work to undergo an invasive procedure like colonoscopy and the required "cleansing" the night before. The test kit is mailed to you. You collect your stool sample and drop it off at UPS. Yes folks, "Brown delivers Brown!" Results are known within 10 days.

If you do wind up testing positive for colon cancer when using Cologuard, studies at the Mayo Clinic have demonstrated that a GI doc will wind up spending 45% more time searching for polyps than had you not used Cologuard. That's the difference between 19 minutes using his scope and 13 minutes. Pretty much covered by all insurance. And no out-of-pocket even if your colonoscopy winds up finding polyps, which in the past lead to a bill. Congress changed this billing practice last year.

2.) I just recently used the Invitae Genetic Screening Test.

Paid $350 out of pocket and it analyzes 167 genes for variants using your saliva. It basically looks at genes that have a high correlation with various cancers, cardiovascular issues, as well as other conditions. My test revealed that I had only 1 clinically significant variant. It was a "carrier" gene (HFE) that has to do with iron absorption.

Disclaimer: I am not a physician. I am simply offering my experience as a healthcare consumer.
And my weight did not go up during Covid.



BearHunter
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DiabloWags said:

For those interested in their health and/or want to be proactive about it

1.) Colon Cancer is the #2 cancer killer for those of us over 50.

It is the fourth most common cancer in men and women. It is the 2nd leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. The recommended screening age has dropped recently starting at 50, to age 45 due to the incidence rate in younger individuals. The key is obviously to catch it early in Stage 1 or 2.

I've used the non-invasive Cologuard test 3x (at 3-year recommended intervals ) since it became FDA approved in August of 2014. Great test, easy to use in the privacy of your own home, and was FDA approved by their medical diagnostics panel in a unanimous 10 - 0 vote. The 10,000 patient clinical trial was published in the New England Journal of Medicine (April 3, 2014). Cologuard is a very high performing test with superior sensitivity in Stage 1 and 2 cancers vs the annual FIT test which is nothing more than a stool test that detects blood in your stool. Kaiser uses FIT.

It's a very simple and easy to use stool DNA test that analyzes changes in your DNA that have a high correlation with colon cancer. Super convenient for those that dont want to take an entire day off from work to undergo an invasive procedure like colonoscopy and the required "cleansing" the night before. The test kit is mailed to you. You collect your stool sample and drop it off at UPS. Yes folks, "Brown delivers Brown!" Results are known within 10 days.

If you do wind up testing positive for colon cancer from taking this diagnostic test, studies at the Mayo Clinic have demonstrated that a GI doc will wind up spending 45% more time searching for polyps than had you not used Cologuard. That's the difference between 19 minutes using his scope and 13 minutes. Pretty much covered by all insurance. And no out-of-pocket even if your colonoscopy winds up finding polyps, which in the past lead to a bill. Congress changed this billing practice last year.

2.) I just recently used the Invitae Genetic Screening Test.

Paid $350 out of pocket and it analyzes 167 genes for variants using your saliva. It basically looks at genes that have a high correlation with various cancers, cardiovascular issues, as well as other conditions. My test revealed that I had only 1 clinically significant variant. It was a "carrier" gene (HFE) that has to do with iron absorption.

Disclaimer: I am not a physician. I am simply offering my experience as a healthcare consumer.


Thanks for the information. I'll just have to remember that this was imbedded in a RFK Jr. thread for next time.
DiabloWags
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BearHunter said:



Thanks for the information. I'll just have to remember that this was imbedded in a RFK Jr. thread for next time.

Might as well make it embedded in a Rand Paul thread.
Another medical "genius".



82gradDLSdad
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DiabloWags said:

For those interested in their health and/or want to be proactive about it

1.) Colon Cancer is the #2 cancer killer for those of us over 50.

It is the fourth most common cancer in men and women. It is the 2nd leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. The recommended screening age has dropped recently starting at 50, to age 45 due to the incidence rate in younger individuals. The key is obviously to catch it early in Stage 1 or 2.

I've used the non-invasive Cologuard test 3x (at 3-year recommended intervals ) since it became FDA approved in August of 2014. Great test, easy to use in the privacy of your own home, and was FDA approved by their medical diagnostics panel in a unanimous 10 - 0 vote. The 10,000 patient clinical trial was published in the New England Journal of Medicine (April 3, 2014). Cologuard is a very high performing test with superior sensitivity in Stage 1 and 2 cancers vs the annual FIT test which is nothing more than a stool test that detects blood in your stool. Kaiser uses FIT.

It's a very simple and easy to use stool DNA test that analyzes changes in your DNA that have a high correlation with colon cancer. Super convenient for those that dont want to take an entire day off from work to undergo an invasive procedure like colonoscopy and the required "cleansing" the night before. The test kit is mailed to you. You collect your stool sample and drop it off at UPS. Yes folks, "Brown delivers Brown!" Results are known within 10 days.

If you do wind up testing positive for colon cancer when using Cologuard, studies at the Mayo Clinic have demonstrated that a GI doc will wind up spending 45% more time searching for polyps than had you not used Cologuard. That's the difference between 19 minutes using his scope and 13 minutes. Pretty much covered by all insurance. And no out-of-pocket even if your colonoscopy winds up finding polyps, which in the past lead to a bill. Congress changed this billing practice last year.

2.) I just recently used the Invitae Genetic Screening Test.

Paid $350 out of pocket and it analyzes 167 genes for variants using your saliva. It basically looks at genes that have a high correlation with various cancers, cardiovascular issues, as well as other conditions. My test revealed that I had only 1 clinically significant variant. It was a "carrier" gene (HFE) that has to do with iron absorption.

Disclaimer: I am not a physician. I am simply offering my experience as a healthcare consumer.
And my weight did not go up during Covid.






Thanks Wags. I've been using some at home poop test sent by Kaiser every year or so (?). My cousin, who is a gastroenterologist, told me to get a colonoscopy, not because of a bad result from those tests, just because of my age, 63.
BearHunter
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DiabloWags said:

BearHunter said:



Thanks for the information. I'll just have to remember that this was imbedded in a RFK Jr. thread for next time.

Might as well make it embedded in a Rand Paul thread.
Another medical "genius".


He's fighting for you.
GoOskie
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If you're 50 or over, just get the colonoscopy. Sooner if you have a family history. I had mine in 2019 and it was a piece of cake. And I don't like things shoved up my bum. If they find polyps they'll cut them off, then I think it's recommended every 5 years.
This just in: Republicans find another whistleblower who claims Hillary's emails were proven to be on Hunter's laptop while Obama spied on tRump as he sat (shat?) upon his golden toilet. Gym Jordan afraid whistle blower may be in danger of abduction by aliens in cahoots with Democrats.
bearister
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I have had a few. I have drug tolerance and used to be semi awake…a couple back they changed the protocol and put you out (which for me was the first time). Last time the anesthesiologist said, "You are taking a nap now, bye," and the next moment of consciousness I was waking up in recovery. Did they mainline that Michael Jackson sleepy juice into me?
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calbear93
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bearister said:

I have had a few. I have drug tolerance and used to be semi awake…a couple back they changed the protocol and put you out (which for me was the first time). Last time the anesthesiologist said, "You are taking a nap now, bye," and the next moment of consciousness I was waking up in recovery. Did they mainline that Michael Jackson sleepy juice into me?
I just got my first when I turned 50. Exact same experience. I was out before I knew it and then woke up in recovery. Prepping for colonoscopy turned out to be so much worse than the procedure itself which was a non-event.
DiabloWags
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Propofol.

Propofol - Wikipedia

DiabloWags
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82gradDLSdad said:




Thanks Wags. I've been using some at home poop test sent by Kaiser every year or so (?). My cousin, who is a gastroenterologist, told me to get a colonoscopy, not because of a bad result from those tests, just because of my age, 63.

The Fecal Immunochemical Test ( FIT) used by Kaiser is a low cost test that is used Annually and does nothing but detect blood in your stool. Although it has a very low false positive rate, its overall sensitivity isnt that great when it comes to early stage cancer detection. It's only 73% for Stage 1.

Cologuard has 94% sensitivity in detecting colon cancer in Stages 1 to Stage 2.
And 92% sensitivity overall.

Cologuard also detects 69% of high-grade dysplasia which is pre-cancer that is about to turn into full blown cancer. The FIT test is only 46%.

Cologuard 2.0 will be coming out in another year and will command even greater sensitivity with a lower false positive rate.

I've tested negative every 3 years using COLOGUARD at the recommended 3-year screening interval.


Clinical Performance | Cologuard For HCPs (cologuardhcp.com)




DiabloWags
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Even Saturday Night Live did a Cologuard skit with Woody Harrelson.



prospeCt
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https://www.huffpost.com/entry/robert-f-kennedy-jr-praises-trump-debate-skills_n_6462a100e4b03e16f1a4f0bd

https://www.newsweek.com/steve-bannon-robert-f-kennedy-jr-donald-trump-running-mate-2024-1796369

https://www.forbes.com/sites/maryroeloffs/2023/06/14/robert-f-kennedy-jr-tops-biden-trump-in-new-favorability-poll/?sh=5e616df44395

bearister
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My favorite Miles Davis era:



*Cicely Tyson's autobiography is a must read for Miles Davis junkies. She was married to him and thus her perspective unique. She loved him dearly but could not save him from his demons.

From RFK Jr. to martial arts to colonoscopies to Miles Davis. Someone has to let me off this ride.
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