Archive for May 19th, 2016
Passing away surprised
Posted by: adonis49 on: May 19, 2016
Passing away surprised; (Mar. 7, 2010)
Shadow of death never fluttered in his mind
Shadows are not meant to scare but to cool
Lucky is he
Who passes away surprised.
I have a friend who mocked death grandly.
Many of his dear friends died still young
New friends are friends with no names:
Vivid memory revolves around good old days.
My old friend had a stroke lately.
I learned to pray morning and night.
I pray for his relief the sooner.
Life is not worth living any longer
If he cannot talk no more
I have an old friend.
Proud and generous souls should be graced
To pass away surprisingly stunned.
Obama Disastrously Backed the Saudi Kingdom in Yemen,
Now He’s Deploying US Troops to Deal with the Fallout
Note: The same myths being regurgitate very frequently: The US is being dragged into conflicts! As if it is Not the US dragging other parties into conflicts of its own planning for decades
The Obama administration has said little about its fresh deployment of American troops to Yemen, where the U.S. has spent the past year backing the ruthless Saudi Arabia-led military intervention by shipping weapons, identifying bomb targets and sending its warships to assist the naval blockade. (It has deployed troops in Libya, Iraq, Syria, Turkey, Afghanistan, Africa…)
In fact, when he briefed reporters last week, Pentagon spokesperson Navy Capt. Jeff Davis would not even say how many U.S. troops had been deployed, for what exact length of time and under what legal authority (Obama has not held a congressional vote over the Yemen war).
Davis only said the U.S. is sending a “very small number” of forces to support United Arab Emirate’s ground combat against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
This development goes hand-in-hand with an escalation in U.S. intelligence and aerial refueling to back the UAE, as well as the deployment of U.S. assault ships off the coast of Yemen.
Meanwhile, Central Command announced last week that the American military “has conducted four counterterrorism airstrikes against the [AQAP] terrorist organization in Yemen in recent weeks.”
At least a dozen countries (Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, Pakistan, Sudan, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, the United States and Britain) are participating in or backing the military coalition (many of them in names because the Saudi Kingdom didn’t even ask for their participation)
Amid the Obama administration’s relative silence, brief comments made by state department press spokesperson Elizabeth Trudeau to reporters on Tuesday shed light on the incoherent justifications that underlie the ramping up of America’s role.
Asked by an unidentified reporter whether the U.S. deployments are part of a “grander plan to bring about stability,” Trudeau replied: “So, no, this was limited support. So the Department of Defense has actually spoken to this. U.S. Central Command provided limited support to an anti-al-Qaida of the Arabian Peninsula operation led by Yemeni, Saudi, and Emirati forces in and around Mukalla. We remain concerned about AQAP and we welcome the operations taken by the Yemeni forces with the support of the Emirati and the Saudi forces to address this. It was limited.”
In fact, the Saudi-led campaign has significantly strengthened AQAP, as well as ISIS.
Thanks to the war, AQAP has been able to seize nearly 400 miles of Yemen’s southern coast and significantly boost its ranks.
As Yara Bayoumy, Noah Browning and Mohammed Ghobari put it in a Reuters investigation published last month, “The campaign, backed by the United States, has helped [AQAP] to become stronger than at any time since it first emerged almost 20 years ago.”
The state department does not dispute this fact, as revealed by the following excerpt from Tuesday’s briefing:
QUESTION: Right. As far as the al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula is concerned, it was really one of the showcases of this Administration, because they basically decimated al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. But then this war brought them back, by and large due to, let’s – to the war that is being waged —
MS TRUDEAU: It’s true.
QUESTION: — by Saudi Arabia and others. So it’s like a – it’s kind of…
MS TRUDEAU: Al-Qaida has taken advantage of the instability in Yemen. This was an operation. And again, we thank the Saudis and the Emiratis as well as the Yemenis for moving forward on this operation.
So the U.S. admits that it is ramping up a war that has strengthened the forces it claims to be fighting. However, reality is even more nefarious.
A recently-released PBS Frontline documentary by journalist Safa Al Ahmad reveals that combatants from the Saudi-led coalition are fighting alongside militants affiliated with Al Qaeda in the Yemeni city of Taiz.
The BBC acknowledged that Al Ahmad’s film provides evidence “that troops from a Saudi-led coalition force and Al Qaeda militants are both fighting Houthi rebels in a key battle. On a visit to the frontline near the city of Taiz, a documentary maker filmed jihadists as well as UAE-supported pro-government militiamen.”
This is not the first report of its kind.
Last July, Maria Abi-Habib and Mohammed Al-Kibsi wrote in the Wall Street Journal that “local residents and a senior Western diplomat” all testify that Saudi-backed militias have “turned to Yemen-based al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP, for help.”
The current Yemen war, meanwhile, is not the first time that the U.S. has directly or indirectly cooperated with Al Qaeda affiliates around the world.
So AQAP is not only growing in strength because it is “taking advantage” of the chaos, as Trudeau characterized it. Rather, some of its forces are fighting alongside elements of the coalition.
Whatever the extent of this collaboration, the fact that Al Qaeda affiliates are growing in strength as a result of the coalition’s war is indisputable. What evidence suggests that an escalation of this failed war will somehow yield a different result?
Yet, in the name of fighting Al Qaeda, the United States increasing its participation in a coalition that has unleashed extraordinary bloodshed on ordinary people throughout the country.
The coalition has targeted densely populated urban centers, factories, weddings and a center for the blind. American-made cluster bombs have rained down on civilian villages.
More than 3,000 civilians have been killed and, in February alone, two-thirds of the innocent people slain died by coalition air strikes, according to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Relentless bombings and a naval blockade have pushed the entire country to the brink of famine, with the UN estimating that half of Yemen’s population—14.4 million people—“urgently need food security and livelihood assistance.”
But the U.S. military’s war against Al Qaeda affiliates in Yemen goes back further.
Since 2002, the U.S. has launched up to 137 drone strikes on Yemen, killing as many as 101 civilians, among them 9 children, according to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism. This covert bombing campaign has unleashed untold psychological terror on some of the poorest areas of Yemen.
Now U.S. troops appear to be fighting in alliance with forces that are, in fact, associated with Al Qaeda. Meanwhile, the mission continues to creep with little debate within the United States.
While it is not apparent whether the incoherent American role in Yemen is the product of confusion or sinister calculation, one thing is clear: this war comes at the expense of ordinary people in Yemen, who are being robbed of their well-being, food security and lives.
Sarah Lazare is a staff writer for AlterNet. A former staff writer for Common Dreams, she coedited the book About Face: Military Resisters Turn Against War. Follow her on Twitter at @sarahlazare.
Cancer can be detected with a blood sample
Posted by: adonis49 on: May 19, 2016
Cancer can be detected with a blood sample
Years before metastases spread to the body
Cancer : une prise de sang pour détecter la maladie
Patrizia Paterlini-Bréchot. April 12, 2016
La découverte est révolutionnaire. La cancérologue française Patrizia Paterlini-Bréchot de la faculté de médecine Necker-Enfants malades a mis au point un test qui, par une prise de sang, permet de détecter de manière précoce tout type de cancer.
“Grâce à des études sur l’animal, on savait que ces cellules circulent dans le sang des années avant que les métastases apparaissent. Or les patients meurent à cause des métastases, pas de la tumeur primitive. Comme pour le virus du sida, ces cellules mutent, et à force de muter, sont de plus en plus résistantes parce qu’on leur en laisse le temps”, explique la chercheuse.
Les premiers tests commencent à être commercialisés.
La ministre de la Santé Marisol Touraine voit dans ce nouveau test une “promesse de bouleversements considérables dans la prise en charge du cancer parce qu’il est particulièrement simple d’utilisation, et donc facile à généraliser”.
أخبار سعيدة good news shared a link.
Cette prouesse technique, mise au point par Patrizia Paterlini-Bréchot, professeure de biologie cellulaire et d’oncologie à la faculté de médecine Necker-Enfants malades (université Paris-Descartes), consiste à détecter l’invasion tumorale au tout début du stade de la maladie.
“Grâce à des études sur l’animal, on savait que ces cellules circulent dans le sang des années avant que les métastases apparaissent. Or les patients meurent à cause des métastases, pas de la tumeur primitive. Comme pour le virus du sida, ces cellules mutent, et à force de muter, sont de plus en plus résistantes parce qu’on leur en laisse le temps”, explique la chercheuse.
Après 7 ans de recherches, une grande boîte permet de réaliser les tests appelés Iset (“Isolation by size of tumor cells“: isolement par taille des cellules tumorales) capables de révéler la présence de ces fameuses cellules tumorales plus grosses que les cellules sanguines dans dix millilitres de sang parmi cinq milliards de globules rouges et cent millions de globules blancs.
Preuve de l’efficacité du test, les résultats obtenus au CHU de Nice où une cohorte de patients à risques – des gros fumeurs atteints de bronchopathie pulmonaire – a été suivie pendant 6 ans.
Grâce au test, les chercheurs ont détecté des cellules tumorales dans le sang de cinq d’entre eux bien avant que le cancer du poumon soit visible par radiologie. Ces patients ont été opérés et guéris de ce cancer, le plus meurtrier.
Lorsque des cellules tumorales circulantes sont identifiées, des examens d’imagerie médicale ciblés pour dépister la tumeur sont nécessaires, explique la scientifique.
“Selon vos prédispositions et vos antécédents, on commencera par exemple par le sein pour une femme et la prostate pour un homme, jusqu’au scanner du corps entier si l’on ne trouve pas. Mais, demain, on devrait pouvoir dire de quel organe elles proviennent et gagner ainsi du temps.” Des protéines retrouvées dans les cellules cancéreuses signeront l’origine de l’organe touché.
Ce test pourra également être utilisé sur des patients en rémission pour s’assurer que le cancer ne redémarre pas et permettre aux cancérologues de changer et adapter les traitements pour les malades diagnostiqués.
Le test est commercialisé depuis peu.
Facturé 486€, il n’est pas remboursé par la Sécurité sociale. S’il ne répond pas à la demande de tous, et partout, on imagine que cette découverte majeure, développée à grande échelle, augmente l’espérance de vie de l’humanité.
15 millions de cas de cancer sont déclarés dans le monde chaque année.
Pour regarder la conférence TED de Patrizia Paterlini-Bréchot : “Sommes-nous en train de rattraper de vitesse le cancer ?” : https://youtu.be/LNQ5UeWqK9I