Some have asked me about how the AstraZenica vaccine is different than the mRNA vaccines. @ScientistSwanda does a great job here describing it. The vaccine is still all about the asshole protein, your body just produces it in a different way.
I guess to describe it in the theme of my other threads:
Scientists took a totally different virus that doesn’t hurt humans. They cut out most of the virus DNA until what was left was a mostly empty shell. (The virus is now basically us by the end of this godforsaken year.)
So you take this basically empty shell of a virus and you throw in the code to make the infamous asshole protein. So now you’ve got a toothless virus that can’t do shit to you except make asshole proteins.
It’s not even really a virus any more.
Remember that viruses work by getting into your cells, hijacking them, holding a gun to your cell & telling your cell to make more of it.
Except this ‘virus’ now can’t do that. It gets into your cells and it tries to take ofer. Except it can’t. It’s like Elmer Fudd shooting his gun but all that comes out is the flag with “bang” on it.
It holds its gun to our cells & all that comes out is asshole protein.
So now you’ve got a bunch of asshole protein floating around and you already knows what happens then. It’s the same as the mRNA vaccines. Your body beats the shit out of them, remembers those assholes, & puts up wanted posters in case they come around again.
So does it work? Yes. Though the study that make out showed it “less” effective than the mRNA vaccines. 70% vs about 94%. BUT that’s still very helpful. They’re doing some more studies now to see if how you dose it makes a difference & it’s possible that 70% could be higher.
On the plus side, you don’t have to store it at crazy cold temperatures (because it’s not as fragile as little fragments of mRNA). And AstraZenica says they can produce a ‘ton’ of it. Plus, they’re committed to selling it WAY cheaper.
At the end of the day, all the positives of the mRNA vaccine targeting the asshole protein hold true for the AstraZenica vaccine. COVID needs this protein. The same protection against a lot (but not all) mutations apply.
Also, like the mRNA vaccines, you can’t get COVID from the AstraZenica vaccine. It doesn’t have the COVID in it. Just the code for the asshole protein in a sad, empty shell of a totally different virus.
The empty shell of a virus can’t really replicate itself. Without being able to do that, it can’t spread in your body or cause harm.
Oof. This thread has fewer RNA-DNA mistakes and more run-of-the-mill typos. You’d think I’d be reading these closer before posting them on a platform that doesn’t allow edits.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
The cap hit issue in Edmonton is interesting. Before the McLeod trade, they were ~2.5M over with Holloway & Broberg to sign. Those two at combined $2M, waive Josh Brown at$1M, & you’re ~$3.5M over with a 23 man roster.
Trading McLeod doesn’t quite fix the problem. They’re still ~$1.4M over with a 22 man roster.
So we come to Kane.
If Kane can be LTIRed, you’re fine. But that’s true even without the trade. Kane has to be injured enough for LTIR and agree to remain there for the whole season.
You could try to trade him. He has to agree, but maybe he does if you go & sign players to fill all the spots he would otherwise play. That’s what they did.
But you’ll need to retain. No one’s taking him full value w/out sending $ back.
For one, your future society is only as strong as your kids. Like this shouldn’t really be controversial. Kids doing better means better, more educated, happier, more productive adults in a few years.
The SK government has highlighted investments in kid’s mental health and as a child psychiatrist, I’m all for it. That’s great!
But if you take from kid’s education to give to kid’s mental health… it’s kind of like underfunding bridges to build more rescue boats.
For those unfamiliar with the match system most of those unfilled spots will get filled in a 2nd round of interviews.
However, it does suggest this year there were, broadly, more available spots for training in Family Med & Psychiatry than Canadian Medical Graduate interest.
The Family Medicine issue is a long-standing one and I think we have several reasons decently surrounded
Lack of compensation despite heavy workloads, a lack of support, insufficient team based care, inability to find coverage to take a day off, high & rising overhead costs, etc
As we talk about funding healthcare, it’s important to remember it’s almost always more cost effective to prevent serious illness than to treat it after the fact.
Or deal with things when they’re minor than when they get worse.
That’s why primary care is so cost effective.
It is an easy political win to build, say, an urgent care center or a new tertiary care hospital. And don’t get me wrong, such centers will be used and be valuable. We need those.
But stopping things upstream will often get you more value for your public dollar.
You can sort of see here how all these factors come together for a specific person.
Koekkoek describes having anxiety that makes it hard for him to eat. There’s lots of ways that can show itself. Some people just don’t feel hungry. Others feel nauseous at the sight of food…
Others unintentionally vomit or have a fear they will vomit. Some just can’t bring themselves to eat and just looking at the food gives them irrational fear.
Whatever it is, in Koekkoek’s case, it went along with his anxiety.
Now combine that specific symptom with pro sports…
Maybe Koekkoek would’ve really struggled no matter what he did. But maybe in a job that didn’t emphasize eating and weight so much, he might’ve scraped by.
But pro sports puts tons of emphasis on eating and weight. You can’t escape it.
There are a lot of parts of this that would be great to expand upon but that transition to retirement has always fascinated me.
All big transition stages can be tough. Retirement is a big one for most people but there’s something different about it for pro athletes.
For one, most pro athletes have established their entire identity through their sport. That’s what they were not just good at, but REALLY good at. What everyone knew them as. They spent their days and nights doing it. So much of the feedback they got from others related to it.