And Call the White House
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I realize most of you come here not for the money or the politics (or
the recipes) but for the fashion. Click here.
And if you like the clothes, click through to SAKS to order on line. And/or come to SAKS Fifth Avenue New York – 4th
floor – for a drink and a fashion show Thursday, September 15 at six
o’clock. NTMD BiDil has now been
added to Public Citizen’s worstpills.org website. Their main beef seems to be that it is
overpriced. They recommend taking BiDil’s generic components instead. Prescriptions for the week ended August 26 came in at 315, up from 257
the week before. If 100% of those
prescriptions are filled with full-price BiDil, then
the company would appear by now to have around 1,500 customers at $1800 or so a
year each. Part of our bet in owning puts on Nitromed is
that 100% of the prescriptions won’t be filled
at full price, because (we think) a lot of insurers will decline to cover this
pill, steering people to its generic components instead. And part of our bet is that, even if insurers all do cover it, the
eventual sales volume will not be enough to cover the $125 million or so that
the company has budgeted to spend next year.
(Not to mention the $115 million it expects to have spent in 2005.) To THE END OF THE NEOCONS? Thanks to Andrew Sullivan for
pointing out this lengthy
conservative blog entry, which concludes: The collapsed levees of New Orleans will have
consequences for neoconservatism just as long and
deep as the collapse of the Wall in East Berlin had on Soviet Communism; for
when hacks and fulminators like John Podhoretz are
openly criticizing the president, the Great Leader, the ideology is on the way
out. And hopefully all of those who urged the ideology on, myself
included, will have a long time to consider the error of our ways. TWO QUESTIONS FOR YOU Read the passage below. 1. Do you think the 2. Do you think our government was wise to ignore it? If so, why? If not, why not? “Discuss.” Castro, addressing 1,586 doctors assembled to
offer assistance to victims of Katrina. Hardly 48 hours ago I .
. . once again explicitly
offered the United States to send a medical force with the necessary means to
offer emergency assistance to the tens of thousands of Americans trapped in the
flooded areas and the ruins Katrina left behind after lashing
Louisiana and other southern states. It was clear to us
that those who faced the greatest danger were these huge numbers of poor,
desperate people, many elderly citizens with health situations, pregnant women,
mothers and children among them, all in urgent need of medical care. In such a
situation, regardless of how rich a country may be, the number of scientists it
has or how great its technical breakthroughs have been, what it needs are
young, well-trained and experienced professionals, who have done medical work
in anomalous circumstances, and that, with a minimum of resources, can be
immediately transported by air or any other available means to specific
facilities or sites where the lives of human beings are in danger. Knowing that I could rely
on men and women like you, I took the liberty of reiterating our offer three
days later, promising that in less than 12 hours the
first 100 doctors, carrying the necessary medical resources in their backpacks,
could be in Houston; that an additional 500 could be there 10 hours later
and that, within the next 36 hours, 500 more, for a total of 1100, could join
them to save at least one of the many lives at risk from such dramatic events. Perhaps those
unaware of our people’s sense of honor and spirit of solidarity thought this
was some kind of bluff or a ridiculous
exaggeration. But our country never toys with matters as serious as this, and
it has never dishonored itself with demagogy or deceit. That is why we proudly
gather in this hall, at Here we are, and not
1100 but 1586 doctors, including 300 additional doctors, in response to the
increasingly alarming news that keep coming in. In fact, another 300 doctors,
approximately, have joined this group at the last minute. They were called in
and we’ve already announced that we are willing to send thousands more if it
were necessary. But these 300 doctors are in other halls of the Convention
Center, taking part in this function. In just 24 hours, all of
the doctors summoned to carry out this mission, coming from all parts of the
country, met in the capital. We have shown the utmost punctuality
and precision. . . . Our doctors’
backpacks contain precisely those resources needed to address in the field
problems relating to dehydration, high blood pressure, diabetes Mellitus and
infections in all parts of the body —lungs, bones, skin, ears, urinary tract,
reproductive system— as they arise. They also carry medicine to suppress
vomiting; painkillers and drugs to lower fever; medication for the immediate
treatment of heart conditions, for allergies of any kind; for treating
bronchial asthma and other similar complications, about forty products of
proven efficiency in emergencies such as this one. These
professionals carry two backpacks containing these products; each backpack weighs
12 kilograms. Actually, this was determined when all of the backpacks were
procured, since although they are quite large, only half of the supplies would
fit in; it was then necessary to give each doctor two backpacks, and the small
briefcase which carries diagnostic kits. These doctors have much clinical
experience, this is one of their most outstanding characteristic, as they are
used to offering their services in places where there isn’t even one X-ray
machine, ultrasound equipment or instruments for analyzing fecal samples,
blood, etc. With the increase in the number of
doctors, the medications weigh a total of 36 tons. The initial figure was
smaller. Of over 130 thousand
healthcare professionals with a university education, 25,845 today
serve in international missions in 66 different countries. They
offer medical services to 85,154,748 people; 34,700,000 in Latin America and
the Caribbean and 50,400,000 in Africa and Today, more than 12
thousand young people from around the world, chiefly from Latin America and the
Caribbean, are studying medicine in . . . When our
first war of independence broke out in 1868, a group of Americans joined the
ranks of Henry Reeve, almost
crippled by the wounds sustained in the course of 7 years of war, fell in
combat on August 4, 1876, near Yaguaramas, today the I propose
that this force of Cuban doctors who have volunteered to help save the lives of
Americans bear the glorious name of “Henry Reeve”. These doctors, I mean
you, could already be there, offering their services. 48 hours
have passed and we have not received any response to our reiterated offer.
We shall patiently await a reply, for as many days
as necessary. In the meantime, our doctors shall use the time to take intensive
epidemiology courses and improving their English. If, ultimately, we do not
receive any reply or our cooperation —your cooperation— is not needed, we shall
not be demoralized, not you, not us, not any Cuban. On the contrary, we shall
feel satisfied for having complied with our duty and extremely happy
knowing that no other American, of the many that suffered the painful and
perfidious scourge of hurricane Katrina, shall perish from lack of medical
care, if that were the reason our
doctors were not there. The “Henry
Reeve” Brigade has been created, and whatever tasks you undertake in any part
of the world or our own homeland, you shall always bear the glorious
distinction of having responded to the call to assistance our brothers and
sisters in the United States, and that nation’s humblest children especially,
with courage and dignity . . . AND SPEAKING OF COMMIE PLOTS TO HELP THE NEEDIEST . . . Click here to read a transcript of the latest
Jeffrey Sachs telephone press briefing, the gist of which is that John Bolton
has ridden in to blow up the United Nations at a pivotal time. A small sampling of the phone call: The UN Summit,
which will take place in a couple of weeks,
is not really on the American radar screen yet, but it will be the
largest gathering of world leaders in history. There are more than
180 world leaders signed on to come here. They’re taking this very seriously.
There has been a tremendous amount of work, for many years in fact, leading up
to this meeting and that’s why virtually every leader in the world will be
coming for the UN session. It is a make-or-break
session in a lot of ways for global poverty. Five years ago the world agreed to the
Millennium Development Goals and five years later we know that we are suffering
from pandemic diseases, a hunger crisis all over Africa, continuing massive
loss of life, eight million people a year dying of their poverty. And
the world, and particularly the Now the world
had worked on a document — up until a few days ago — that was winning virtually
global consensus and I have met with probably 50 or 60
heads of state in the last few months to discuss this global consensus, which
is very widespread. The I believe that the Finally, the I want to end
by saying that I believe that the global consensus for the Millennium
Development Goals will hold. I
actually believe that the F To help correct it, click here.
You are asked to call, fax or email the White House before five today.
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Andrew Tobias