Mike Rowe: “We’ve been telling kids for 15 years to learn to code.”
“Well, AI is coming for the coders.”
“It’s not coming for the welders, the plumbers, the steamfitters, the pipefitters, the HVAC, or the electricians.”
“In Aspen, I sat and listened to Larry Fink say we need 500,000 electricians in the next couple of years—not hyperbole.”
“The BlueForge Alliance, who oversees our maritime industrial base—that’s 15,000 individual companies who are collectively charged with building and delivering nuclear-powered subs to the Navy … calls and says, we’re having a hell of a time finding tradespeople. Can you help?”
“I said, I don’t know, man … how many do you need? He says, 140,000.”
“These are our submarines. Things go hypersonic, a little sideways with China, Taiwan, our aircraft carriers are no longer the point of the spear. They’re vulnerable.”
“Our submarines matter, and these guys have a pinch point because they can’t find welders and electricians to get them built.”
“The automotive industry needs 80,000 collision repair and technicians.”
“Energy, I don’t even know what the number is, I hear 300,000, I hear 500,000.”
“There is a clear and present freakout going on right now. I’ve heard from six governors in the last six months. I’ve heard from the heads of major companies.”
@mikeroweworks
Waaaa. A public on-record authoritative statement like this is extremely rare, exceptionally principled, and, well, a historic landmark regarding defining the true state of the so-called country of Canada. Corruption is pervasive in Canada.
“Civil rights used to be about treating everyone the same. But today some people are so used to special treatment that equal treatment is considered to be discrimination.”
— Thomas Sowell
Can Fenbendazole Cure Cancer?
According to a case series published in an oncology journal, the answer could be a resounding yes.
The case report highlights three cancer patients who were in pretty bad shape. But after taking fenbendazole, they all experienced a complete remission.
What Is Fenbendazole, and How Does it Work?
Fenbendazole (FBZ) is a medicine originally designed to treat worms and parasites in animals. Its sister drugs, Mebendazole and Albendazole, have had remarkable success treating similar ailments in humans with few side effects.
Recently, anecdotal reports have praised fenbendazole as a potentially miraculous anti-cancer drug. It works by destabilizing microtubules, the structures that help cancer cells divide and grow. By disrupting this process, fenbendazole effectively halts cancer cell division and slows or stops tumor growth.
Miraculous Recoveries After Taking Fenbendazole
Case series #1 features a 63-year-old man with advanced kidney cancer (clear cell renal carcinoma) who experienced tumor recurrence and severe side effects from multiple cancer therapies, including surgery and two different medications.
With no effective options left, he turned to fenbendazole (FBZ), taking 1 gram three times a week at a friend’s suggestion. Over the next 10 months, his tumors—including those in his pancreas and spine—showed near-complete resolution on imaging. Remarkably, he experienced no side effects from FBZ, and follow-up scans have shown no signs of recurrence.
Case series #2 follows a 72-year-old man with metastatic urethral cancer that had spread to his lungs, lymph nodes, and brain. Despite undergoing multiple rounds of chemotherapy and radiation, one lymph node continued to grow, resisting all treatments.
Seeking alternatives, he decided to try fenbendazole (FBZ), taking 1 gram three times a week, along with vitamin E, curcumin, and CBD oil, while postponing further conventional therapies. Over the next nine months, imaging revealed a dramatic response, with the lymph node shrinking significantly until it completely resolved. Remarkably, he reported no side effects during this period.
Case series #3 focuses on a 63-year-old woman diagnosed with a large, invasive bladder tumor. Facing a challenging prognosis, she underwent chemotherapy while also taking fenbendazole (FBZ) at 1 gram three times a week.
After completing six cycles of treatment, follow-up scans showed a complete resolution of the tumor, with only minimal thickening remaining in the bladder wall. Confident in her recovery, she chose to decline further surgery and remains disease-free under regular surveillance.
The abstract concluded, “FBZ appears to be a potentially safe and effective antineoplastic agent that can be repurposed for human use in treating genitourinary malignancies.”
Reflecting on these remarkable case reports, Dr. John Campbell (@Johnincarlisle) urged drug regulators to “start looking at this as a matter of some urgency because people are dying from cancer now.”
“So if something is safe and effective, surely it can be accredited for human use by our national authorizing agencies pretty quickly if they want to,” Dr. Campbell added with a hint of sarcasm.
Of course, the key words here are “if they want to.”
“Three patients, basically… cured of their cancers. Read the paper for yourself. That’s what they seem to be saying to me.”
Can you imagine 14 years and $795 million to fix a submarine after colliding with the seabed.
Mediocrity may have become Canada's true national identity and culture.
https://t.co/p3NXeVL8HM
The party that introduced this crippling carbon tax is now praising the removal of it. We lost 10 years of economic prosperity due to this scam.
The industrial base carbon pricing is still in place.
I’m sick of this
A lost decade in Canada. I don’t care which party was in power, if you put your partisanship aside these results should not be rewarded with another 4 years.
OMG this is not AI, it's real. It's a must watch.
2011. Obama announces a DOGE department and puts Joe Biden in charge of it! 😂
"Nobody messes with Joe." 🤣
It's being called the largest research fraud in medical history.
Dr. Scott Reuben, a former member of Pfizer's speakers' bureau, has agreed to plead guilty to faking dozens of research studies that were published in medical journals.
Now being reported across the mainstream media is the fact that Dr. Reuben accepted a $75,000 grant from Pfizer to study Celebrex in 2005. His research, which was published in a medical journal, has since been quoted by hundreds of other doctors and researchers as "proof" that Celebrex helped reduce pain during post-surgical recovery. There's only one problem with all this: No patients were ever enrolled in the study!
Dr. Scott Reuben, it turns out, faked the entire study and got it published anyway.
It wasn't the first study faked by Dr. Reuben: He also faked study data onBextra and Vioxx drugs, reports the Wall Street Journal.
As a result of Dr. Reuben's faked studies, the peer-reviewed medical journal Anesthesia & Analgesia was forced to retract 10 "scientific" papers authored by Reuben. The Day of London reports that 21 articles written by Dr. Reuben that appear in medical journals have apparently been fabricated, too, and must be retracted.
After being caught fabricating research for Big Pharma, Dr. Reuben has reportedly signed a plea agreement that will require him to return $420,000 that he received from drug companies. He also faces up to a 10-year prison sentence and a $250,000 fine.
He was also fired from his job at the Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, Mass. after an internal audit there found that Dr. Reuben had been faking research data for 13 years.
No worries, they don't fake research studies when it's concerning vaccines. 😳
BREAKING
The government of Canada announces $272 million to Bangladesh to fill in USAID gap, for:
-Intersectional Democratic Spaces in Bangladesh
-Gender-Responsive and Inclusive Education
-Community Resilience through Locally-led Inclusive Adaptation