"For god's sake, stop complying. Start rebelling. They are out to get you if you do not resist."
German MEP, Christine Anderson: The so-called "pandemic" was a beta test—conducted by unelected globalists—to see how easy it would be to seize totalitarian control, under the pretext of a global "emergency".
"The goal, ultimately, is to transform our free and democratic societies into totalitarian societies. Their goal is to strip each and every one of us of our fundamental rights, of freedom, democracy, the rule of law. They want to get rid of all of this."
"In the entire history of mankind, there has never been a political elite concerned about the well being of regular people, and it isn't any different now."
Credit: @AndersonAfDMdEP
Source: https://t.co/6sAkUkXC3F
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US should adopt the Europe standard to avoid the out of control culture in the US: Servers are generally paid a living wage by their employer, so tips are a small bonus for good service rather than expected income. Tipping is optional, modest (often 0–10%), and more about rounding up or leaving coins. Over-tipping can sometimes confuse staff or set unrealistic expectations for locals.
Yale study finds nearly half of older adults improved with age | Yale University, ScienceDaily
Summary: A long-term Yale study is challenging one of the biggest myths about aging. Nearly half of adults over 65 improved physically, mentally, or both over time, despite the common belief that aging means constant decline. Researchers found that people with more positive attitudes about getting older were significantly more likely to show these gains.
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The research was supported by funding from the National Institute on Aging.
Drawing on more than a decade of data from a large, nationally representative study of older Americans, researchers discovered that nearly half of adults age 65 and older experienced measurable improvements in cognitive function, physical function, or both.
The findings suggest that improvement in later life is far more common than many people realize.
“Many people equate aging with an inevitable and continuous loss of physical and cognitive abilities,” said Becca R. Levy, lead author of the study and professor of social and behavioral sciences at the Yale School of Public Health (YSPH). “What we found is that improvement in later life is not rare, it’s common, and it should be included in our understanding of the aging process.”
The study was published in the journal Geriatrics.
Aging and Improvement Over Time
The research team analyzed data from more than 11,000 participants in the Health and Retirement Study, a federally funded long-term survey of older Americans.
To measure changes in mental abilities, the researchers used a global cognitive assessment. Physical function was evaluated through walking speed, a measure often considered by geriatricians to be a key indicator of overall health because it is closely linked to disability, hospitalization, and mortality.
Participants were followed for as long as 12 years. During that period, 45% showed improvement in at least one of the two areas examined.
Approximately 32% improved cognitively, while 28% improved physically. Many participants experienced gains large enough to be considered clinically meaningful. When researchers also counted individuals whose cognitive abilities remained stable rather than declining, more than half of participants avoided the commonly held expectation of cognitive deterioration.
“What’s striking is that these gains disappear when you only look at averages,” said Levy, author of the book Breaking the Age Code: How Your Beliefs About Aging Determine How Long & How Well You Live. “If you average everyone together, you see decline. But when you look at individual trajectories, you uncover a very different story. A meaningful percentage of the older participants that we studied got better.”
The Role of Positive Age Beliefs
The researchers also explored why some older adults improved while others did not.
One possibility, they proposed, was the influence of age beliefs held at the beginning of the study. Specifically, they examined whether participants had adopted more positive or more negative views about aging.
Their analysis supported that idea. Older adults with more positive beliefs about aging were significantly more likely to improve in both cognitive performance and walking speed. The relationship remained strong even after adjusting for factors including age, sex, education, chronic disease, depression, and length of follow-up.
The findings build on Levy’s stereotype embodiment theory. The theory proposes that age-related stereotypes absorbed from society through sources such as social media and advertising can eventually become personally meaningful and have measurable biological effects.
Previous studies led by Levy found that negative beliefs about aging are associated with poorer memory, slower walking speed, increased cardiovascular risk, and biomarkers linked to Alzheimer’s disease.
According to Levy, the new findings show the opposite pattern can also occur.
The current study shows that those who have assimilated more positive age beliefs often show improvement, Levy said.
“Our findings suggest there is often a reserve capacity for improvement in later life,” she said. “And because age beliefs are modifiable, this opens the door to interventions at both the individual and societal level.”
Challenging Assumptions About Aging
The improvements were not limited to people who began the study with physical or cognitive impairments.
Researchers found that even participants who started with normal levels of cognitive and physical function frequently improved over time. This finding challenges the idea that later-life gains simply reflect recovery from illness or a return to previous levels after a setback.
The authors hope the results will help shift public perceptions about aging and reduce the belief that continuous decline is inevitable. They also suggest the findings support greater investment in preventive care, rehabilitation programs, and other health-promoting services that help older adults build on their capacity for resilience and improvement.
Read more:
https://t.co/9L5Ej61uWU
Here are 7 foods that contain the cochineal PARASITE for it's color:
-Starbuck's Raspberry Swirl Cake, Birthday Cake Pop, Mini Donut, and Red Velvet Whoopie Pie
-Kellogg's Fruit Loops cereal and Fruit Snacks.
-Tropicana
-Betty Crocker's red velvet cake mix
-Nesquik Chocolate Cookie Sandwich (Strawberry) and Nestle
Wonka Nerds
-Skittles
-Dannon yogurt strawberry, blueberry, and raspberry flavors
Side-note: It takes 40,000 of these bugs to create 1lb of carmine dye!
@ShannonJoyRadio Get over it... NO ONE ever was going to see the inside of a prison cell for C19.. The prison is not big enough to hold them all. Swamp creatures do not eat their own.
Sent to us from an officer who told us this was filmed last Wednesday afternoon at Riverside Veterinary Clinic in Indianapolis, Indiana. Made us stop in our tracks and left us in TEARS. Here it is, in it's entirety:
"The officer is Sergeant Paul Greer. He's 41 years old. Fourteen-year veteran of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department.
The dog is Bruno. A ten-year-old German Shepherd who served eight years as Paul's K9 partner before a joint condition ended his working career two years ago.
When Bruno retired from active duty, Paul adopted him immediately. Brought him home. Bruno spent his retirement on Paul's couch, on Paul's bed, in the passenger seat of Paul's personal truck.
The transition from working partner to household companion was seamless. Bruno had always been Paul's dog. The badge and the vest were just part of the job.
Over the past several months, Bruno's condition had declined steadily. The joint condition spread. He had difficulty getting up. Stopped eating regularly.
Paul had been managing Bruno's comfort with guidance from Dr. Angela Reese at Riverside for months. Last Tuesday evening, Bruno stopped getting up entirely. Paul called Dr. Reese that night. Wednesday afternoon, Paul drove Bruno to Riverside.
He carried Bruno in from the truck himself. Wouldn't let the techs take him. Paul's partner, Officer Dana Choi, came with him. She filmed quietly on her phone from the corner of the room.
She told us afterward that she asked Paul's permission before she started recording. He nodded.
Paul sat on the exam table with Bruno cradled across his lap and chest. Bruno's head rested against Paul's shoulder. His eyes were half-open. His breathing was slow and easy. Paul bowed his head and pressed his face into Bruno's fur. Bruno lay still for a long moment.
Then slowly — carefully — he raised both front paws. One at a time. And wrapped them around Paul's shoulders. And held on.
Paul made a sound that Dana said she will never forget. Dr. Reese, who was standing nearby preparing, went completely still. Her assistant took a step back. Nobody moved.
Dana told us: 'Bruno could barely lift his head that morning. But he lifted his paws and he held Paul. In that moment, with everything he had left, he held him. I think he was saying thank you. I think he was saying goodbye on his own terms.'
Paul stayed in that position for a long time. The room stayed quiet. Bruno passed away peacefully a short time later, held in Paul's arms.
Paul sent a message to his precinct group chat that evening. It said: 'Bruno is at rest. He was the best partner I ever had. Eight years on the force and two years at home. He worked hard and he loved hard and he went out the same way. Holding on.'
The precinct held a small informal memorial the following morning. Bruno's vest and badge number were framed and hung in the K9 unit hallway.
Some partners carry you through the hardest years of your life. And in the end, if you're very lucky, they find just enough strength to hold you one last time."
#lawenforcement #K9
Quit trashing Obama's accomplishments. He has done more than any other President before him. Here is a list of his impressive accomplishments:
1. First President to be photographed smoking a joint.
2. First President to apply for college aid as a foreign student, then deny he was a foreigner.
3. First President to have a social security number from a state he has never lived in.
4. First President to preside over a cut to the credit-rating of the United States.
5. First President to violate the War Powers Act.
6. First President to be held in contempt of court for illegally obstructing oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.
7. First President to require all Americans to purchase a product from a third party.
8. First President to spend a trillion dollars on "shovel-ready" jobs when there was no such thing as "shovel-ready" jobs.
9. First President to abrogate bankruptcy law to turn over control of companies to his union supporters.
10. First President to by-pass Congress and implement the Dream Act through executive fiat.
11. First President to order a secret amnesty program that stopped the deportation of illegal immigrants across the U.S., including those with criminal convictions.
12. First President to demand a company hand-over $20 billion to one of his political appointees.
13. First President to tell a CEO of a major corporation (Chrysler) to resign.
14. First President to terminate America’s ability to put a man in space.
15. First President to cancel the National Day of Prayer and to say that America is no longer a Christian nation.
16. First President to have a law signed by an auto-pen without being present.
17. First President to arbitrarily declare an existing law unconstitutional and refuse to enforce it.
18. First President to threaten insurance companies if they publicly spoke out on the reasons for their rate increases.
19. First President to tell a major manufacturing company in which state it is allowed to locate a factory.
20. First President to file lawsuits against the states he swore an oath to protect (AZ, WI, OH, IN).
21. First President to withdraw an existing coal permit that had been properly issued years ago.
22. First President to actively try to bankrupt an American industry (coal).
23. First President to fire an inspector general of AmeriCorps for catching one of his friends in a corruption case.
24. First President to appoint 45 czars to replace elected officials in his office.
25. First President to surround himself with radical left wing anarchists.
26. First President to golf more than 150 separate times in his five years in office.
27. First President to hide his birth, medical, educational and travel records.
28. First President to win a Nobel Peace Prize for doing NOTHING to earn it.
29. First President to go on multiple "global apology tours" and concurrent "insult our friends" tours.
30. First President to go on over 17 lavish vacations, in addition to date nights and Wednesday evening White House parties for his friends paid for by the taxpayers.
31. First President to have personal servants (taxpayer funded) for his wife.
32. First President to keep a dog trainer on retainer for $102,000 a year at taxpayer expense.
33. First President to fly in a personal trainer from Chicago at least once a week at taxpayer expense.
34. First President to repeat the Quran and tell us the early morning call of the Azan (Islamic call to worship) is the most beautiful sound on earth.
35. First President to side with a foreign nation over one of the American 50 states (Mexico vs Arizona).
36. First President to tell the military men and women that they should pay for their own private insurance because they "volunteered to go to war and knew the consequences."
37. Then he was the First President to tell the members of the military that THEY were UNPATRIOTIC for balking at the last suggestion.
I feel much better now. I had been under the impression he hadn't been doing ANYTHING...
Such an accomplished individual... in the eyes of the ignorant maybe!! 😉🤭😂
🎩 Hillbilly Moore ⚡️
🚨COVID COVER UP🚨
The Intel Community did NOT want you seeing this video!!
Here’s former EcoHealth Alliance President Dr. Peter Daszak talking about his “colleagues in China” manipulating spike proteins on Covid!
Someone in the IC flagged this Rumble video in an email.
I wonder why….
@drtaubraun Not new..... NO ONE from the Biden crime family nor the much broader Deep State, which is all of Washington, will be charged let alone get prison time. Some low hanging fruit from time to time gets punished but BOTH sides must agree.. The SWAMP does not eat it's own.
She joined her friends on the lake to see the northern lights. An illegal alien, released by Chicago Democrats, not once, but twice, shot her in the back.
She bled to death on the concrete.
Democrats are a cancer.