Human Rights Video #6: You Have Rights No Matter Where You Go

What I am doing to contribute to the motion to keep our fundamental rights is every day I promote one of the Youth for Human Rights videos. If you would like to see us maintain (or recover) our human rights, get on board! Promote human rights! Share the videos. Talk it up! People need to know they have human rights then some of them will work towards keeping (restoring) them!

Here is today’s. Enjoy!

Human Rights Video #6: You Have Rights No Matter Where You Go

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-yOlLEV55Q

The Human Touch

Old Man On Park Bench

I had spent an hour in the bank with my dad, as he had to transfer some money. I couldn’t resist myself, I asked…

“Dad, why don’t we activate your internet banking?”

“Why would I do that?” He asked…

“Well, then you wont have to spend an hour here for things like transfer.

You can even do your shopping online. Everything will be so easy!”

I was so excited about initiating him into the world of Net banking.

He asked “If I do that, I wont have to step out of the house?

“Yes, yes”! I said. I told him how even grocery can be delivered at door now and how amazon delivers everything!

His answer left me tongue-tied.

He said “Since I entered this bank today, I have met four of my friends, I have chatted a while with the staff who know me very well by now.

You know I am alone… …this is the company that I need. I like to get ready and come to the bank. I have enough time, it is the physical touch that I crave.

Two years back I got sick, The store owner from whom I buy fruits, came to see me and sat by my bedside and cried.

When your Mom fell down few days back while on her morning walk, our local grocer saw her and immediately got his car to rush her home as he knows where I live.

Would I have that ‘human’ touch if everything became online?

Why would I want everything delivered to me and force me to interact with just my computer?

I like to know the person that I’m dealing with and not just the ‘seller’. It creates bonds of Relationships.

Does Amazon deliver all this as well?”

Technology isn’t life. Spend more time with people… …less with devices.

Writer: Unknown

Remembering Ned Kelly

Ned KellyNed Kelly

A friend posted this:

(Original Post:)

At 10am on this day 138 years ago. Edward “Ned” Kelly was hung as an outlaw. Whilst he was “officially” considered an outlaw, Ned and the Kelly Gang’s very public stand against police brutality and social injustice was directly responsible for changing the laws of the land and making the Govt and police more accountable for their action at the time.

I wonder if much has really changed today or if the official deception has returned? It appears that everyday we are seeing video clips and reports of police brutality on the news and internet. The police then “investigate themselves” and mostly always found “innocent” of any wrongdoing. The politicians and the rich have not changed much either. The politicians do as they want regardless of the public’s wishes and best interests and if the law stands in their way they just re-write the laws to suit their needs and to hell with the common man.

So has anything really changed since Ned’s day or has the corruption slowly returned in new ways as the unscrupulous leaders of our country continue to steal from the workers so that they can get rich at our expense, whilst using the police as their private army to do so?

Maybe Australia needs a new outlaw?

RIP Edward Ned Kelly.

SUCH IS LIFE

anon.

(Reply from Tom:)

Unfortunately Ned’s stand did little good for him and did not, as you so eloquently stated, change the system for the better. So, despite his best intentions and courage, he did not achieve his goals.

No, we do not need another martyr, we need to work very diligently at creating a new breed of ethical, aware, honest productive citizens who are not fooled by the biggest liar at election time.

Believe me, I have looked long at hard at the present system and how the inequities, injustices and corruption (and they are many) can be addressed.

Each component of the present “system” (parliament, the political parties, the government departments, the judiciary, the medical mafia, the “education” system, the police, the armed forces, the presstitute media, the drug companies, bi ag, the censoring tech giants) are so interlocked that any attempt by one element to step outside the existing paradigm is met with strong opposition from the other pieces of the jigsaw until they are back in lock step.

Look at how the present NSW government are brazenly cutting the funding of the only body capable of addressing their corruption, ICAC.

And we do not even have a federal equivalent. (Federal ICAC Now)

No, what we need are more aware, more intelligent, more informed and courageous citizens as the basic building blocks of a better society.

That’s where we need to put our attention!

The Emporer Has No Clothes!

Australian doctor on the FLU vaccine:
“Are GPs wasting their time with the flu vaccination program?

Professor Chris Del Mar — GP, Cochrane reviewer and one of Australia’s best known public health academics — believes Australia’s flu vaccination program, a key component of GP care, is ineffectual and a waste of GPs’ time.

In this edited extract from a speech delivered to the GPDU conference on the Gold Coast last week, he explains his reasoning.

I was actually asked to give a rant, so I’ve been working up some froth in my mouth.

But it’s also an opportunity for me to put up this idea: that public health is overselling the influenza vaccine.

We as GPs are at the front line tasked with promoting the vaccine to our patients. I want to discuss some data that makes me question this approach.

Influenza is a threat, and we should worry about it. A hundred years ago, roughly 50 million people died worldwide from this virus. It was the first modern pandemic.

I am not antivax in general, but the influenza vaccine has got intrinsic disadvantages compared to other vaccines: it is needed every year; it’s not a life-long vaccine as with most other viruses because of the way the virus itself changes, because it changes its protein structure every year – we have to guess what the next seasonal virus will look like to produce each year’s vaccine.

That is obviously going to be hopeless for a pandemic, which by definition is a virus that changed so much we’ve got no immunological defence to it. When we’ll need the vaccine most, it’s going to be least effective.

But more than that, the influenza vaccine simply is not very effective.

Data from a recently updated trio of Cochrane reviews (references provided below) shows the effect of influenza vaccine in randomised trials.

It reduced the risk ratio of getting influenza confirmed by the laboratory quite optimistically, down to 0.4.

That means less than half the number of people vaccinated ended up getting laboratory-confirmed influenza.

But if you look at the difference in absolute rate differences, you see that 23 cases per thousand gets reduced by nine cases per thousand.

That’s around a 1% difference. This is because true influenza is actually quite rare a disease for us individually, roughly once every decade.

Influenza is swamped by “influenza-like” illness.

Beyond that, the vaccine’s efficacy has not been tested well enough for serious effects – like hospitalisations, and pneumonia. There are too few randomised controlled trials with this outcome. People keep relying on observational studies, and increasingly, on surrogate outcomes.

For us as GPs who care for people with influenza-like illness, the flu, there is a very, very small difference in terms of the protection offered from the influenza vaccine.

You then have to think about the real interest in the flu vaccine from a public health perspective.

It is not simply whether or not people get the flu; it’s whether they get really sick from it.

And if you look at the Cochrane data for time off work and school there is no statistical difference in all the trials that have been done.

For hospital admission, there is a tiny difference – and it is not significant.

So it can’t be demonstrated from randomised trials that you keep people out of hospitals by vaccinating. Similarly for other serious consequences such as pneumonia – which is what killed so many people 100 years ago – you don’t see any difference there either.

And death as an outcome? Ditto. You can’t show any difference.

On the other side of the coin, that is the harms from the vaccine; well, it can give you a fever. In children, we’ve estimated informally, with an infectious diseases colleague of mine, Professor Peter Collignon, that about one in 100 children who are vaccinated probably have a febrile convulsion by extrapolating the data, as well as other more mild adverse effects as well.

There have even been the occasional deaths following the influenza vaccine, most particularly in children – one in WA and one in Queensland.

So there is some definite adverse effect from using the vaccine.

But mostly the problem with influenza vaccination is the huge amount of effort involved.

Our practice spends a lot of time sending out reminders, queuing people up, getting the vaccines ready, figuring out who’s eligible and who has to pay.

It’s quite a lot of churn to get people vaccinated.

There’s other issues as well.

Based on purely observational data, the best protection from serious illness, particularly in a pandemic situation, may be having had wild flu before.

That could explain why in the two little pandemics we have had recently – Swine flu and Bird flu – the people who we thought were going to get creamed by this, such as the elderly in nursing homes, were actually fine.

Similarly, it also looks as if the efficacy of the vaccine wears off in just a few months, from other observational data.

Instead, unexpectedly odd groups in society were affected – people who were obese, women who were pregnant, people with asthma.

The next question is, well if we’re not going to promote the flu vaccine, is there anything else we should do instead?

Neuraminidase Inhibitors?

We know it may or may not help individuals with symptoms, but from a public health response, they were hopeless.
So what about hygiene and handwashing?

There’s very good data to show at reducing acute respiratory infections by washing your hands and wearing a mask. Maybe we should be promoting much more of that.

I feel obliged to explain to my patients the controversy around influenza vaccines and let them know that I haven’t had it myself, thus saving myself 20 bucks.

What’s going to change this?

I think it’s people like us GPs who are likely to challenge [the attitudes towards the vaccine]. It’s not the people who do the systematic reviews. If we GPs say, ‘it looks to us that the emperor’s got no clothes on’, then maybe people will take this issue more seriously.”

Human Rights Video #5: Freedom From Torture

One of my principle concerns with the current scene is the rapidly escalating speed with which human rights are being trampled.

The UK just passed a 350+ page bill that gives the government unfettered, tyrannical powers.

The USA and Australia are undertaking similarly ill advised actions.

This trend needs to be reversed. The entrance point is educating people that they do have rights.

Watch the video and if you think so too, please share it!