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Experts Warn Vehicle Pollution is Causing Heart Attacks
The Daily Fetched ^ | 25 February 2023 | Mary Aultman

Posted on 02/25/2023 9:28:51 AM PST by Sam77

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To: Sam77

Of course! I think that we can all expect to see many different “professional/expert medical opinions” on why there is a “mysterious” increase in heart related illness/death among the worlds population. The one thing that the “experts” will never point to is Vax related. Imagine that... /s


41 posted on 02/25/2023 10:16:29 AM PST by know.your.why (Be not eager to be offended. The narcissism of small differences leads to THE most boring conformity)
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To: Sam77

“Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts.” Richard Feynman


42 posted on 02/25/2023 10:18:00 AM PST by devere
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To: Sam77

All I can say is I’m glad I decided to be an engineer and not a “scientist.”


43 posted on 02/25/2023 10:19:01 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo
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To: Sam77

Hack scientists being paid to push the narrative. Its always the same story.


44 posted on 02/25/2023 10:20:19 AM PST by Revel
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To: Sam77

1960s, Green House Effect caused by...pollution!
1970s, Coming Ice Age brought on by...Pollution!
1990s, Global Warming caused by...Pollution!
And how bad was it in the past as compared to now?

Before 1970, rivers caught on fire from oil slicks.
Lead was in everything from paint to gasoline. Mercury was in everything. Cities had excessive smog days.
Cancer causing food colors were in everything.
Autos belched lead laden exhaust fumes. No Catalytic converters back then.
Nothing had emission controls, power plants belched black smoke 24 hours a day.
Oil refineries belched yellow sulfur fumes from the stacks.
DDT, Dioxin, PCBs were in everything.
Every city had it’s private trash dump where you could dump anything. ANYTHING.
Flush your toilet and the waste went straight into the local streams and rivers.
You fed cattle grain, then ran hogs behind to eat the cow waste, the ran chickens behind to eat the waste grain in hog waste. Cut the meat up with the same saw and sell it to the public.
Change your oil in your car and you just pour the old oil on the ground. Same for diesel fuel.
The Mississippi River at St Louis was clogged with animal fats from the slaughter houses.
And people think it is bad now. It is nothing like the past.


45 posted on 02/25/2023 10:20:27 AM PST by Ruy Dias de Bivar (“No man’s life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session.”)
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To: mikelets456

Caveman News:

Breaking: Campfires causing heart attacks.


46 posted on 02/25/2023 10:21:32 AM PST by Revel
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To: Sam77

“ Heart attacks have been on the increase worldwide, and the media has been scrambling to find different causes for the epidemic ranging from everything to not wearing masks, the weather, and now car pollution.”

LOL


47 posted on 02/25/2023 10:22:13 AM PST by Allegra
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To: Sam77
Experts = Paid Spokespersons (essentially Actors with some meaningless degree).

48 posted on 02/25/2023 10:27:11 AM PST by BitWielder1 (I'd rather have Unequal Wealth than Equal Poverty.)
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To: Sam77

This explains it all. The reason young people are dying of heart attacks is because they drove their cars to get their COVID vaccines.


49 posted on 02/25/2023 10:29:07 AM PST by norwaypinesavage (Did Norfolk Southern ESG and Equity policies cause the train derailment in East Palestine?)
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To: Sam77
rqfu655
50 posted on 02/25/2023 10:43:24 AM PST by cuz1961 (USCGR Veteran )
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To: Sam77

” the media has been scrambling to find different causes for the epidemic ranging from everything to not wearing masks, the weather, and now car pollution.”

But let’s ignore the elephant in the room, the Covid mRNA EXPERIMENTAL “vaccine”.


51 posted on 02/25/2023 10:47:49 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants (Blacks have placed stronger chains on themselves than the slave masters of old ever forged.)
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To: Sam77; ransomnote; metmom; grey_whiskers; bagster; Enlightened1; cgbg; SecAmndmt; ...
Laughable!!

ABT$s


52 posted on 02/25/2023 10:49:46 AM PST by Jane Long (What we were told was a “conspiracy theory” in 2020 is now fact. 🙏🏻 Ps 33:12 )
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To: Sam77

Far fetched.

Maybe these people are not eating enough bugs.


53 posted on 02/25/2023 10:57:09 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: Sam77
It's all part of the plan.

*****

Goodbye car ownership, hello clean air: welcome to the future of transport

Thomas Birr | Senior Vice-President, Innovation & Business Transformation, innogy SE

Dec 16, 2016

In many ways, the motor vehicle has shaped modern society and the urban areas in which more than half of us live. But as global incomes rise, cars and trucks are choking these cities with deadly pollution and productivity-sapping traffic jams. More than a million people are killed in motor vehicle accidents each year, and many more are threatened by transportation’s contribution to global warming.

Imagine instead a world where fleets of autonomous vehicles that are electric and shared (FAVES) slash the number of vehicles on the road by as much as 90%. Hailing and paying for a ride or delivery is as easy as tapping a smart phone app. Car loans and insurance payments shrink or disappear because renting a vehicle when it would otherwise sit idle (or feeding electricity back to the electric grid) more than pays for it.

Perhaps best of all, imagine wider, less congested streets with more room for pedestrians and bicycles, clean air, much less global warming, shorter commutes, and even “crowd-funded” fleets of vehicles whose routing and pricing software is tuned to minimize energy use or provide low-cost transportation to underserved regions.

Welcome to the future

All these benefits are enabled by two emerging technologies that are rapidly becoming mainstream. The first is the self-driving vehicle, guided to the quickest route by real-time traffic updates and to the next customer by real-time passenger requests.

The second is blockchain-enabled, secure peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions that eliminate or minimize the need for centralized authorities such as banks or ride-sharing services such as Uber and Lyft. The security of blockchain will allow owners to directly rent out their vehicles under terms and conditions they set themselves.

Using blockchain, trip charges will be automatically deducted from the passenger’s blockchain-enabled digital wallets or charged to their credit card, with payment instantly flowing to the vehicle owner. Access and identity tokens and P2P transactions will enable the easy, secure sharing of not only vehicles but infrastructure such as toll roads, recharging stations and parking lots. The blockchain-enabled identity of each user will carry proof of identity, age, insurance coverage and ability to pay, while protecting the anonymity of the passengers and information about their travels, as well as the security of their payment mechanisms. The smart contracts governing such transactions will be based on standard templates that assure accurate, instant collection of taxes and regulatory reporting, wherever the trip takes place.

The warning signs for the old order are already appearing, as are the building blocks for the new world of transportation. Even as producers promise commercial sales of fully autonomous cars by 2020, some analysts predict such self-driving cars could cut US auto sales by 40%. Tesla has announced plans to allow owners to loan their cars to a shared autonomous fleet when not in use, “significantly offsetting and at times potentially exceeding the monthly loan or lease cost”. Other automakers, seeing the threat to their existing business model, are already investing in ride-sharing services.

In the short run, blockchain will allow any vehicle owner to enter the transportation market without barriers to entry such as paying a fee (and agreeing to the terms of) centralized ride sharing services or paying a bank to process payments. With blockchain-enabled mobility, all providers and consumers can equally participate in a transportation system, setting the terms, conditions and pricing they choose.

Eventually, the vehicles themselves may become “economically independent” with their own profit and loss statements, making independent decisions (based on algorithms and real-time information about everything from demand levels to the prices of repairs and recharging) to maximize either the owner’s profit or the good of society.

Over time, ownership models will evolve. By registering vehicles on the blockchain “ownership” and “access” will be tokenized, meaning owners can trade their shares in the vehicles or their rights to use them directly through the blockchain without the involvement of third parties. Some vehicles will continue to be owned by individuals or legal entities.

Others will have multiple owners whose identities and shares in the vehicle can change in real time. Car companies will not necessarily generate sales via car dealers. They will simply deploy cars in areas where their use can generate an economically viable cash flow, and trade ownership to other parties when algorithms show that would maximize cash flows. Secure, immutable information about the ownership and usage of the vehicle will be stored on the decentralized platform.

As P2P marketplaces become more mature and consumers become more comfortable with “ownerless” transportations, some vehicles may “own” themselves as economically autonomous entities.

It’s important to note how different this model is from current ride-sharing services such as Uber and Lyft. Autonomous vehicles eliminate the cost of human drivers, while blockchain eliminates the middleman that matches customers with rides, charges a transaction fee and sets terms and conditions.

Mobility on decentralized platforms may also become one of the most visible and dramatic examples of a zero marginal cost economy in which owners of everything from homes to cars rent them out when not in use, driving the marginal cost of each overnight stay or trip close to zero. In such a post-capitalist economy, knowledge rather than capital or labour is the foundation of wealth, and traditional drivers such as supply and demand and the need for profits are supplemented by more collaborative, communal models that prioritize social good alongside shareholder profits.

Who pays the price?

For all the possible benefits of this new model, there will be potentially devastating impacts on significant portions of society, including many in low-skilled or semi-skilled jobs. These range from taxi and delivery drivers to auto assembly, repair and maintenance workers. In the US alone, governments will face the potential loss of some of the $206 billion a year in taxes associated with motor vehicle manufacturing and use.

Ignoring these negative impacts, or addressing them with reactive and piecemeal strategies, is a recipe for chaos and resistance from those most hurt by the short-term changes.

Now, before the full force of these changes is upon us, is the time for innovative business leaders to join government and civic leaders to reimagine not only our transportation systems, but how to manage the transition to FAVES and blockchain-enabled transportation systems so the benefits and not just the costs are immediately apparent and available to all.

Technologist are already working to leverage open source, blockchain-based standards to allow the most efficient routing, pricing and payment for trips spanning public transit, private ride sharing and peer-to-peer rental of FAVES. Regulators and lawmakers must decide how to replace tax revenue lost through lower vehicle use and to clarify liability and insurance requirements for FAVES, especially those that become their own economic entities. Government and civic groups will need to work together to mitigate the impact on those who lose jobs to FAVES.

Making the leap

The benefits are too immense, and the risks too great, to repeat the mistakes of the past with FAVES and decentral mobility platforms. The time is now to begin thinking, planning and acting together to transform our transportation system, and our cities, in a way that benefits every member of society.


54 posted on 02/25/2023 10:59:57 AM PST by Bratch
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To: Sam77

That must be the cause of all the rampant myocardia and pericardia Sudden Deaths.


55 posted on 02/25/2023 11:03:22 AM PST by arthurus (covfefe H>)
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To: Sam77

Oh my goodness what a relief. Thank you scientists. Yep, that’s what it is air pollution!


56 posted on 02/25/2023 11:12:53 AM PST by Theophilus 7
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To: Sam77

Blaming artificial sweeteners failed so let’s keep throwing spaghetti at the wall and see what sticks.


57 posted on 02/25/2023 11:25:07 AM PST by rfp1234 (E Porcibus Unum )
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To: Sam77

Bwaaaahhh


58 posted on 02/25/2023 11:32:44 AM PST by South Dakota (Patriotism is the new terrorism )
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To: Sam77

Another excuse to discontinue the production of the internal combustion engine.


59 posted on 02/25/2023 11:42:14 AM PST by 353FMG (Secretly practicing my Putin swagger..)
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To: Bratch

Forget the Cities.


60 posted on 02/25/2023 11:42:42 AM PST by Paladin2
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