httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0eeidrMxPk
Read MoreThomas Schoenberger on Flu, Cocooning, Wireless to Touchless
The Trend Towards Global Hermits. Maybe Howard Hughes Was Right.
It started with cable, I suppose. With the advent of multiple choices in television channels.
Then wireless became the new thing, as people no longer needed to sit behind a contraption thick with wires. Then cell phones,once weighing pounds rather than ounces,got trimmer, sleeker and faster. Soon, a trip to the supermarket did not mean you have to even interact with a checker. When once we traveled in horse and buggy, we now travel in private carriages, with silent lights of green and red directing us over smooth asphalt.
Now, as we watch the news, stern “contributors”, anchormen and women issue dire warnings of super flu’s, germ outbreaks, violent weather,floods, pathogens, etc. Go to any Target or Walmart and there are hand wipes at the entrance, ready to keep people from catching these harmful bugs. But does any hand wipe or even rigorous wishing of the hands eradicate a virus like Norovirus? No. Does the influenza vaccine only work 60% of the time? Yes. So much for modern medicine.s. In total, 1,407 human pathogen species are currently recognized. Of these, 177 (13%) are regarded as emerging or re-emerging,and 25% of these were only recognized in the last 25 years. There have been times in history where the very act of touching another was either toxic, fatal,or even illegal.We cannot wholly depend on any “official channels” being honest with us, because they justify that the consequences of hysteria might just be as damaging or more damaging than any rogue viral pandemic.
Influenza (Flu) Types Vaccines Treatment
Pandemics Outbreaks See also The 1918 flu pandemic (January 1918 – December 1920)[1] was an unusually deadly influenza pandemic which infected 500 million[2] people across the world, including remote Pacific islands and the Arctic, and killed 20 to 50 million of them—1 to 3 percent of the world’s population[3] at the time—making it one of the deadliest natural disasters in human history.[2][4][5][6][7] To maintain morale, wartime censors minimized early reports of illness and mortality in Germany, Britain, France, and the United States;[8][9] but papers were free to report the epidemic’s effects in neutral Spain (such as the grave illness of King Alfonso XIII), creating a false impression of Spain as especially hard hit—[10] thus the pandemic’s nickname Spanish flu.[11]
Most influenza outbreaks disproportionately kill juvenile, elderly, or already weakened patients; in contrast the 1918 pandemic killed predominantly previously healthy young adults. Modern research, using virus taken from the bodies of frozen victims, has concluded that the virus kills through a cytokine storm (overreaction of the body’s immune system). The strong immune reactions of young adults ravaged the body, whereas the weaker immune systems of children and middle-aged adults resulted in fewer deaths among those groups.[12]
Historical and epidemiological data are inadequate to identify the pandemic’s geographic origin.[2] It was implicated in the outbreak of encephalitis lethargica in the 1920s.[13]
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Thomas Schoenberger Releases “brokenhearted.com” Featuring Lenny Williams
Thomas Schoenberger has waited many years to release this single. Produced by Preston Glass, as gifted producer that ever lived. The singer is the extraordinary Lenny Williams, who was the legendary singer of Tower of Power.
[bandcamp album=1649675033 bgcol=272E30 linkcol=4285BB size=venti]
This song was written for you.
The song is being released to a world seeking answers, a world where Facebook friends replace flesh and blood friends, where people seek solace in avatars rather than in themselves. Where a global hermit movement must be challenged and vanquished. Please spread this song far and wide, cast a net of music. This is a new concept. Something unheard of in the music business.The song was written before 9/11, before the economy died, before we lived our lives through the cyber cobweb Thank you for listening and I hope you get some inspiration from this melody.
Thomas Schoenberger
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The Coming Era of Pizza Delivery Drones By Thomas Schoenberger
Drones have been around since WW2 and only in recent years have the technological capabilities been expanded. With recent news that real estate agents have been using drones to map out neighborhoods, we can only conclude that one day, we will have pizza’s delivered via drone. Why stop there? The post office might want to get in on the act. And let’s consider groan drones, unmanned aircraft that can deliver grievances, nasty-grams, Dear John letters, you get the picture,…
How Weather Saved Washington from Utter Destruction. You can’t make this stuff up!
With all the winds blowing out of Washington these days, I thought it might be interesting to give you an account of a hurricane combining with a tornado that appears to have routed the British from completely destroying Washington. This strange chain of events goes down as one of the most curious days in American History. I have taken an excerpt from Washington Weather, and the following story is incredible yet true.
Washington, August 24, 1814
During the summer of 1814, British warships sailed into the Chesapeake Bay and headed towards Washington. The warships sailed up the Patuxent River and anchored at Benedict, Maryland on August 19, 1814. Over 4,500 British soldiers landed and marched towards Washington. The British mission was to capture Washington and seek revenge for the burning of their British Capitol in Canada, for which they held the United States responsible. A force of 7,000 Americans was hastily assembled near the Potomac River to defend Washington. During the afternoon of August 24, in 100°F heat, the two armies clashed. The British Army quickly routed the less disciplined American volunteers, mostly due to a series of American blunders and a new British rocket that did little damage, but unnerved the raw American troops with a very loud, shrill noise. President Madison and Secretary of State Monroe, who had led a group of officials to watch the battle, were almost captured in the confusion. It was noted that the 100°F temperatures added to everyone’s discomfort.
After the battle, the British Army marched quickly into Washington while American soldiers, United States government officials, and residents fled the city. There were no officials left in Washington from whom the British could seek terms of surrender. The British admiral ate dinner in the White House, then gave the order to set fire to Washington. Within hours, the White House, the Capitol, and many other public buildings and residences were burning.
On the morning of August 25, Washington was still burning. Throughout the morning and early afternoon, the British soldiers continued to set fires and destroy ammunition supplies and defenses around the city. As the soldiers spread fire and destruction throughout the city, the early afternoon sky began to darken and lightning and thunder signaled the approach of a thunderstorm. As the storm neared the city, the winds began to increase dramatically and then built into a “frightening roar.” A severe thunderstorm was bearing down on Washington, and with it was a tornado.
The tornado tore through the center of Washington and directly into the British occupation. Buildings were lifted off of their foundations and dashed to bits. Other buildings were blown down or lost their roofs. Feather beds were sucked out of homes and scattered about. Trees were uprooted, fences were blown down, and the heavy chain bridge across the Potomac River was buckled and rendered useless. A few British cannons were picked up by the winds and thrown through the air. The collapsing buildings and flying debris killed several British soldiers. Many of the soldiers did not have time to take cover from the winds and they laid face down in the streets. One account describes how a British officer on horseback did not dismount and the winds slammed both horse and rider violently to the ground.
The winds subsided quickly, but the rain fell in torrents for two hours. (There may have been a second thunderstorm that followed quickly after the first thunderstorm.) Fortunately, the heavy rain quenched most of the flames and preventedWashington from continuing to burn. After the storm, the British Army regrouped on Capitol Hill, still a bit shaken by the harsh weather. They decided to leave the city that evening. As the British troops were preparing to leave, a conversation was noted between the British Admiral and a Washington lady regarding the storm: The admiral exclaimed, “Great God, Madam! Is this the kind of storm to which you are accustomed in this infernal country?” The lady answered, “No, Sir, this is a special interposition of Providence to drive our enemies from our city.” The admiral replied, “Not so Madam. It is rather to aid your enemies in the destruction of your city.”
Hours later, the British forces left Washington and returned to their ships on the Patuxent River. The journey back was made difficult by the numerous downed trees that lay across the roads. The war ships that lay waiting for the British force had also encountered the fierce storm. Wind and waves had lashed at the ships and many had damaged riggings. Two vessels had broken free from their moorings and were blown ashore.
President Madison and other government officials returned to Washington and began the difficult process of setting up government in a city devastated by fire and wind. Never again would the British Army return to the city, and only rarely would Washington suffer damaging tornadoes. Tornadoes are rare in D.C., which makes the 1814 incident even more amazing. Three struck that day in 1814 (they may have all been the same one, though) and only seven others have been reported since. The most recent occurred in 1995; it whipped through the National Arboretum. Damage was limited to uprooted trees. And thus, Washington was saved.
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Da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi Set to Music
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_eETgccvSU&feature=youtube_gdata
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_eETgccvSU&feature=youtube_gdata
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