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Keyword: stimulation

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  • Anti-Trump CNN Pundit Jeffrey Toobin ‘Masturbated On Zoom Call With Colleagues’

    10/19/2020 11:49:39 PM PDT · by Helicondelta · 68 replies
    thesun.co.uk ^ | 20 Oct 2020
    CNN pundit Jeffrey Toobin has been suspended for "accidentally flashing his penis during a Zoom call with colleagues," and reportedly also masturbating. VICE spoke with two anonymous people who were on the call which was an election simulation featuring the New Yorker’s most prolific journalists, with Toobin reportedly playing the courts. Both sources said they saw Toobin “jerking off.” The simulation included a strategy session with a break of about 10 minutes. Toobin has since apologized and told the news outlet: "I made an embarrassingly stupid mistake, believing I was off-camera.
  • Mnuchin Reveals What the Next Coronavirus Relief Package Will Look Like

    07/27/2020 7:36:41 AM PDT · by rktman · 29 replies
    townhall.com ^ | 7/26/2020 | Beth Baumann
    Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Saturday said the next phase of the Wuhan coronavirus relief package is ready to be rolled out on Monday. Republicans are expected to announce a $1 trillion proposal which would include another round of stimulus checks. According to Mnuchin, Americans can anticipate a $1,200 stimulus check sometime in August. The same stipulations will take place as the first round of stimulus payments. Individuals making $75,000 or less will receive $1,200. Those making more than $75,000 will receive some type of stimulus but it won't be the full amount. Those making $100,000 or more per year...
  • Parkinson's Patients are Mysteriously Losing the Ability to Swim After Treatment

    11/27/2019 6:51:49 PM PST · by BenLurkin · 22 replies
    Discover Magazine ^ | November 27, 2019 1:00 PM | By Jennifer Walter
    For Parkinson’s patients, deep brain stimulation (DBS) can help control a number of neurological symptoms, like muscle spasms and stiffness. But one weird side effect has surfaced in a string of case studies: Some patients, no matter how good their motor skills, lose their ability to swim after the procedure. Researchers from the University of Zürich in Switzerland published a report today in Neurology identifying nine cases where patients couldn’t stay afloat after DBS. And these people weren’t water-shy, first time doggie paddlers — two of the cases involved former competitive swimmers. And, researchers report, the entire cohort had had...
  • Hyper-stimulation is an increasing evil about which we should be aware...

    03/27/2014 1:36:29 AM PDT · by markomalley · 38 replies
    Archdiocese of Washington ^ | 3/26/2014 | Msgr. Charles Pope
    We live in an age of such overstimulation that it would be unimaginable to people even a hundred years ago, let alone to those of more ancient times. In fact, it is probably more accurate to say we are not simply overstimulated, we are hyper-stimulated. The number and kind of diversions available to us and imposed upon us are almost too numerous to mention. Silence and quietude are almost as unknown to us as is real darkness. We are enveloped in a sea of light such that we are no longer able to behold the stars at night.And the artificial...
  • The Folly of “Stimulation”

    10/15/2010 4:02:39 PM PDT · by bigbob · 4 replies
    Rasmussen Reports ^ | 10-15-10 | Howard Rich
    Soros neglects to point out that Obama’s “stimulus” didn’t fund either consumption or investment – it was a handout to public sector unions and foreign “green corporations” coupled with a one-year extension of salaries and benefits to public sector employees. It didn’t build dams, bridges or utilities – it created a mountain of new debt while perpetuating the same culture of entitlement that has Europe poised to plunge off of a fiscal cliff.
  • Skull electrodes give memory a boost

    08/14/2010 8:43:07 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 23 replies
    NewScientist ^ | 8/13/10 | Sujata Gupta
    FINDING it difficult to revise for an exam? Help could be on its way in the form of the first non-invasive way of stimulating the brain that can boost visual memory. The technique uses transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), in which weak electrical currents are applied to the scalp using electrodes. The method can temporarily increase or decrease activity in a specific brain region and has already been shown to boost verbal and motor skills in volunteers. Richard Chi, a PhD student at the Centre for the Mind, University of Sydney, and colleagues wanted to follow up on previous research...
  • Ford's Risky Plan Against Slumpflation

    01/30/2008 8:58:22 PM PST · by logician2u · 20 replies · 58+ views
    Time ^ | Jan. 27, 1975
    It was anything but the standard State of the Union speech. Instead of congratulating himself on the achievements of his young and troubled Administration, Gerald Ford adopted the somber tone of a wartime leader calling for an all-out effort to repel the enemy. Instead of skipping lightly over a broad spectrum of national and foreign policies, the President concentrated almost exclusively on specific means to counter the worst economic slump since the Great Depression, the nation's almost 14% rate of inflation and the U.S.'s dangerous dependence on cartel-controlled foreign oil. Displaying the blunt candor that is his most politically attractive...
  • Magnetic Stimulation May Ease Migraine Pain

    06/22/2006 10:56:52 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 4 replies · 264+ views
    HealthDay on Yahoo ^ | 6/22/06 | Amanda Gardner
    THURSDAY, June 22 (HealthDay News) -- A magnetic device that seems to help depression and seizures may also short-circuit migraine headaches in their earliest stages, a new study finds. The transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) device, about the size of a hair dryer, was able to interrupt the development of migraines, according to data to be presented Thursday at the American Headache Society's annual meeting, in Los Angeles. The study was funded by the device's maker, NeuraLieve, of Sunnyvale, Calif. About 28 million Americans suffer migraine headaches and about 20 percent experience migraine with aura, characterized by changes in vision before...
  • Remote Control Device 'Controls' Humans

    10/25/2005 11:23:39 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 9 replies · 642+ views
    ap on Yahoo ^ | 10/25/05 | YURI KAGEYAMA - ap
    ATSUGI, Japan - We wield remote controls to turn things on and off, make them advance, make them halt. Ground-bound pilots use remotes to fly drone airplanes, soldiers to maneuver battlefield robots. But manipulating humans? Prepare to be remotely controlled. I was. Just imagine being rendered the rough equivalent of a radio-controlled toy car. Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp., Japans top telephone company, says it is developing the technology to perhaps make video games more realistic. But more sinister applications also come to mind. I can envision it being added to militaries' arsenals of so-called "non-lethal" weapons. A special headset...
  • Bartlett: Sausage and Tax Cuts

    05/22/2003 11:44:05 PM PDT · by cgk · 6 replies · 292+ views
    Townhall.com ^ | 5-23-03 | Bruce Bartlett
    Sausage and tax cutsBruce Bartlett (archive) May 23, 2003 | Print | SendIt is often said that the legislation process is like watching sausage being made: disgusting. What is left off this analogy, however, is that sausage can be very tasty. We have just seen a good example of tasty sausage being made in the tax area. Although the process by which it was made was convoluted and painful, at the end of the day Congress will have enacted one of the best tax bills in history. To summarize: President Bush proposed full elimination of the double tax on corporate...