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Everything posted by Thestarider
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I don't know about a death spiral but if you look at the numbers lets say that 1 person out of 5,000 hits buys a 45.00 membership that equals $118,800 income monthly income US, wages for RLCam show participants is around 35,000 a month. Rent and utilities another 35,000 a month. IT and server and expense 10,000 a month. Another way to look at it would be gross income versus gross expense, 28% profit margin. Honestly, I believe that their income is actually much higher and I don't see them going away anytime soon, as it is a 2.25 million dollar business.
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Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #21 2020 April
Thestarider replied to happyone's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
This thread has been locked, please use the new thread for Leora and Malia Thanks -
Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #21 2020 April
Thestarider replied to happyone's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
Leora and Malia. You have been weighed perfectly You have been measured masterfully You have been found most definitely wanting. and so have we the voyeurs -
Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #21 2020 April
Thestarider replied to happyone's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
No Question about that 😁 -
Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #21 2020 April
Thestarider replied to happyone's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
Yes they are so funny when they get drunk 😁 JACK DANIEALS in the da house, got to love woman who drinks her bourbon !!! -
4 promising coronavirus cures are now part of a massive drug megatrial The World Health Organization is spearheading a massive COVID-19 drug trial that will include thousands of patients in participating countries. The Solidarity megatrial will focus on four distinct therapies that include drugs that are already approved for other ailments, but have shown promise in treating some COVID-19 cases. The purpose of the study is to obtain more evidence about the efficacy and safety of these therapies, and hopefully device a standardized treatment protocol for those infected with the novel coronavirus. The object of this widespread testing is to allow physicians to offer patients the best possible care with the resources that are already available to them. Drugs that have been previously approved for use in treating other diseases could be used to improve the condition of the hundreds of thousands of patients who have been admitted to hospitals around the world, increase the recovery speed, and reduce the number of fatalities. Comparatively, developing a brand new drug specifically for the COVID-19 illness might take years, which is why WHO and participating countries are fast-tracking this worldwide trial of drugs that are already widely available. The study is called “Solidarity” and it was announced a few days ago. It’s meant to determine which of the four most popular therapies being used to treat COVID-19 are the most effective and safest for patients. The Solidarity trial will include thousands of patients in several countries including Argentina, Bahrain, Canada, France, Iran, Norway, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, and Thailand. ScienceMag also reports that the French National Research Institute for Medical Research (INSERM) is coordinating an add-on trial in Europe called Discovery that will include 3,200 patients from seven countries (Benelux countries, Germany, France, Spain, and the UK). Solidarity and Discovery will be similar when it comes to the drugs that are being tested, except for chloroquine, which will not be included in the European-only trial. Unlike regular clinical trials that are double-blind so that patients won’t know if they’re getting the drug that’s tested or a placebo, the new studies will test the new therapies on all patients. Participating hospitals can enroll subjects with ease. The doctor will enter the patient’s data in a WHO site, including preexisting conditions that could alter the course of the COVID-19 disease, and the participant will have to sign an informed consent form. The physician will also list the available drugs in the hospital, and the WHO will randomly assign the patient to one of the therapies available. After that, physicians will only have to record the day the patient leaves the hospital or dies, and whether he or she required oxygen or ventilation. Remdesivir, a drug developed to combat the Ebola epidemic, appears to be the most promising of the four therapies, as the experimental drug has already proved to be effective against the SARS and MERS viruses. Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine may sound familiar, and that’s because President Trump touted them on the news, saying they’re “game-changers” and that he felt “good” about them. The significant attention the two drugs received recently may be the main reason the WHO is including these two drugs in Solidarity. Researchers in France also said the drugs showed promise treating COVID-19 but more extensive testing was needed. Some scientists worry that the doses needed to fight the novel coronavirus might be too high to warrant consideration. “Researchers have tried this drug on virus after virus, and it never works out in humans. The dose needed is just too high,” University of Giessen pulmonary infections expert Dr. Susanne Herold told Science Mag. New reports reveal that the first cases of chloroquine poisoning appeared in Nigeria immediately following Trump’s remarks. Solidarity will also test a ritonavir/lopinavir anti-viral compound sold as Kaletra, which is included in HIV treatment. The combo was used in China with little success, but the study only included very-ill subjects, with more than a fifth of the 199 patients included in the double-blind test having died. The drug may have been given too late to make a difference. Finally, the fourth therapy that will be tested by countries taking part in Solidarity and Discovery will mix ritonavir/lopinavir with interferon beta. This combo was used for MERS patients in Saudi-Arabia. The treatment may have unwanted side-effects if given too late though, and according to Herold, it could lead to “worse tissue damage instead of helping patients.”
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This is why they are used in conjunction with each other moos. Why don’t antibiotics kill viral infections, and how can overuse of an antibiotic lead to “antibiotic resistance”? Antibiotics cannot kill viruses because viruses have different structures and replicate in a different way than bacteria. Antibiotics work by targeting the growth machinery in bacteria (not viruses) to kill or inhibit those particular bacteria. When you think about it structurally, it makes sense that an antibiotic could not work to kill a virus with a completely different set of replicating “machinery”.
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Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #21 2020 April
Thestarider replied to happyone's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
Malia -
Martina & Alberto General Chat 2020 #1
Thestarider replied to StnCld316's topic in Jade & Alberto (04/15/17)
DAAAMMMMNNNNNN Martina is getting so good at giving a blow job. You can tell she has been working hard on her gag reflux and can swallow deep and I am loving watching her learn this new talent. Every man dreams of a woman that can deep throat a cock. She is becoming a Master !!!! I would love to cover her incredible body from head to toe in cum. -
moos, please name me a leader anywhere in the world that stands out in front of the Media everyday and gives the world an update on what is going on with this virus, not only does he not have a scripted answer by highly educated speech writer for every single question, the problem everyone seems to forget is that President Trump in not a refined politician, didn't take political science in college with hopes of becoming a public leader. He is in fact a person more like most all of the people of the world in which are having a normal conversation between each other. Most people wear their emotions on their sleeves, and say out loud just what ever pops into their heads and what they are thinking. Most all public leaders have an highly educated silver tonged devil that is called a press secretary who deflects every question with a political answer. I actually find it kind of refreshing to see that a man who fully knows that every single word he utters will be highly scrutinized by the Media, knowing that every word will be twisted by the Media to fit their agenda and narrative, so they can make the high lite reels and gain ratings power. Yet day after day, he makes his way to the podium and tries to assure the American people that there is hope in this crisis.
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Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #20 2020 April
Thestarider replied to happyone's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
I have completely given up on Malia, just waiting for so she can go home to her BF or husband whichever the case maybe. Why join this site if you were not ready to give into the voyeurs desires and yours. Just wasting our time and hers. Really sad as I was expecting so much more from the Queens protégée -
Max I vaguely remember polio, but we kicked it's ass by trying. should we just let this virus kick our ass or should we fight like crazy. I am not ready to leave this world yet. I have too much too wisdom to pass along to my children and my grandchildren. I choose to fight to my last breath. No Chinese BS virus is going to kick my ass !!!! You Go Boris Johnson we all have your back. Fight like their is no tomorrow.
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Let me ask you question: do you really care about the side effects if it saves your life ? The side effect can be treated by other drugs just like my father who had congestive heart failure and lived many years beyond what most of the doctors said he would !!! It is about choices Max and whether you wish to die from this silent killer or to fight it. I am 60 and smoke, if I get it I am surely to almost die from this shit. I chose to live for my grandchildren. Age and wisdom Max, we must pass it along to the nest generation.
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Is Hydroxychloroquine the Answer to the Coronavirus Pandemic? Inside the Race to Find A COVID-19 Cure The emergence of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2019, or SARS CoV-2, has made plain our vulnerability to a novel pathogen. An estimated 160 million to 214 million people in the United States could be infected over the course of the epidemic, by some estimates. Fatalities could run from 200,000 to 1.7 million people, according to the CDC, and into the tens of millions worldwide. The lack of treatments is a startling contrast to the sophistication of current medical science, which is in something of a golden age of genomics, machine learning and big data. The coronavirus has caught us flat-footed. Yet, at the same time, it has underscored how far the tools of medicine have evolved in recent years. Just days after local infectious disease experts sent virus samples taken from two patients infected with a suspicious form or pneumonia to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a world-renowned research laboratory, for analysis, scientists had sequenced the newly emergent pathogen's RNA and uploaded its entire 30,000-nucleotide genetic code to the cloud.\ Rapid response In recent years, technologies that allow rapid sequencing of genetic material have become standard equipment in most top research laboratories. Because of these tools, scientists were able to state with relative confidence that the current virus is closely related to the SARS coronavirus that hit in 2003, as well as very closely related to a bat coronavirus found in a cave in Yunnan, China, back in 2017. With this knowledge, scientists dusted off the files from that outbreak and picked up where other scientists left off. To survive, these patients require mechanical ventilators, which can force higher concentrations of oxygen into the parts of the lungs that are still functioning, allowing them to rest, recover and preserve precious energy needed to outlast the viral attack. Antiviral medication could shorten the time patients need to be on ventilators—and perhaps prevent many of them from needing one in the first place. One of the most promising ideas is to develop new drugs that can attenuate the immune response to keep the lungs functioning adequately. "People are dying because they are losing the ability to breathe—because their lungs are filling with inflammation," says George D. Yancopoulos, Regeneron's President and Chief Scientific Officer. "That's what's happening. That's a fact. The question is, what's causing the inflammation? If you shut that off, basically the lungs calm down, the cells leave the lung and they are also not making all this bad stuff."
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FDA Says Hydroxychloroquine and Chloroquine Can Be Used to Treat Coronavirus (Newsweek Article) Hydroxychloroquine rated 'most effective therapy' by doctors for coronavirus: Global survey Drug known for treating malaria used by U.S. doctors mostly for high-risk COVID-19 patients. An international poll of more than 6,000 doctors released Thursday found that the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine was the most highly rated treatment for the novel coronavirus. The survey conducted by Sermo, a global health care polling company, of 6,227 physicians in 30 countries found that 37% of those treating COVID-19 patients rated hydroxychloroquine as the “most effective therapy” from a list of 15 options. Of the physicians surveyed, 3,308 said they had either ordered a COVID-19 test or been involved in caring for a coronavirus patient, and 2,171 of those responded to the question asking which medications were most effective. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave chloroquine and its next-generation derivative, hydroxychloroquine, emergency-use authorization Monday for treating the novel coronavirus, although the drug was already being used off-label by some doctors and hospitals for COVID-19 patients.
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Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #20 2020 April
Thestarider replied to happyone's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
WATER BATE -
Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #19 2020 April
Thestarider replied to pulo filipe's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
I watched this lovely woman grow from nearly puberty to the fine specimen of womanhood she has become. Intellectual stimulating, artistic, animal loving, clean and organized, excellent cook, woman who I would love to be married too, became a showgirl like the Barcelona bordellos. This is far below the standard of the Matriarch, "The Goddess" the reason I subscribed. So I would say if you are going to play like Barcelona Beauties then let us get after it just like those who were once condemned by the goddess. -
Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #19 2020 April
Thestarider replied to pulo filipe's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
My fair taled white striped furry wonder from the forest , she is scared to death that she may very well like the attention. Attention she will get beyound her wildest fantaies if she would let go of her inhibitions and give in to inner desires to please the voyeurs. The teasing massage shows is somthing I never thought the Matriarch would resort too unless it led to the voyeurs dream come true. -
Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #19 2020 April
Thestarider replied to pulo filipe's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
I guess once a rookie, always a rookie, thank goodness for the Goddess of RLC Lovable Lucius Leora, the matriarch of RLC. I once had the highest hopes for Malia, but she doesn't have the desire to become a shinning star, just another who will become forgotten the day she finally leaves the voyeurs world. Could be a shinning star, but has chosen not be memorable and will become forgettable. TOO BAD -
Leora, Malia General Chat Topic #19 2020 April
Thestarider replied to pulo filipe's topic in Leora & Paul (08/14/19)
Malia after all this time are you not ready to ? -
Gunnison County: non-residents, tourists must stay out, violators receive jail, fine GUNNISON COUNTY, Colo. — Gunnison County residents now have a new reason to stay inside, and officials want to make sure the message is heard: non-residents and tourists must stay out. It requires all non-residents of Gunnison County to leave as soon as they can or request a waiver explaining their reasons to stay. Non-essential businesses such as hotels, day-care centers are required to shut down under the order. It’s the first within the state to impose criminal charges for a violation, and goes well beyond previous state-issued orders. A new public health order enacted on Friday gives up to 18 months in jail and a possible 5,000 dollar fine to people violating the order.
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Key Coronavirus Model Now Predicts Many Fewer U.S. Deaths A Sunday update of a prominent COVID-19 forecasting model suggests that fewer lives will be lost during the first wave of the coronavirus outbreak than previously thought. The University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) now predicts that 81,766 people will die of COVID-19 in the U.S. through early August. When the model was last updated, on April 2, it predicted 11,765 deaths more deaths, for a total of 93,531. he model, which has been cited by the White House, relies on numbers from China, Italy, Spain, and areas around the U.S. The change in prediction is due to “a massive infusion of new data,” IHME director Dr. Christopher Murray said in a press release. According to its website, the IHME model was developed to “provide hospitals, health-care workers, policymakers, and the public with crucial information about what demands COVID-19 may place on hospital capacity and resources, so that they could begin to plan.” The model’s latest update includes several important changes related to that planning. Many fewer hospital beds will be needed at peak than previously anticipated, according to the new projections. The April 5 update predicts the need for 140,823 total hospital beds and 29,210 ICU beds at the peak of the outbreak. Those numbers are down 121,269 and 10,517, respectively. The model also revised downward the prediction for the number of ventilators needed at the height of the outbreak. It now predicts the need for 18,992 ventilators, down from 31,782. One thing that didn’t change between the April 2 and April 5 models is the projected date of the outbreak’s peak. The model still predicts an April 16 apex for the daily COVID-19 death rate. Hospital use is expected to peak on April 15.