— Bob-a-job-alog-a-roonie

What is more likely, being killed in a car crash, or by a drug prescribed to you by your doctor?

The latter, unfortunately.

“… the most commonly abused prescription drugs like OxyContin, Vicodin, Xanax and Soma now cause more deaths than heroin and cocaine combined. ”

 In fact, seven of the top 10 drugs used by 12th-graders were prescription drugs… More than 40 percent of high school seniors reported that painkillers are “fairly” or “very” easy to get.

Nearly 20 percent of Americans have used prescription drugs for nonmedicinal reasons.

And more deaths that car crashes. And murders.

Doctors make the prescription, even though they know the drugs they prescribe are addictive, and that addiction can kill you.

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Splendid evening last Sunday at the Recital Centre, and I was fortunate to have a seat in the 2nd row of a full hall. And it was interesting to note that they only performed once in Sydney, but had three shows in Melbourne. I guess we are more dark and arty here… or perhaps the Sydney Opera House is a bigger venue 😉

Of all the artists performing, a dozen of which had come here from the UK or USA, I only really knew of Green Gartside (Scritti Politti). I had heard of Robyn Hitchcock, but not heard his music – and based on what I saw tonight was not my cup of tea. These did impress:

  • Kate St John – beautiful, multi-talented, formerly of The Dream Syndicate all those years ago.
  • Joe Boydthe producer of Nick Drake’s albums, who pointed out that almost everyone (back in the day) was introduced to Nick on a 3rd or 4th date back at the date’s home, where they played Nick to you and if you didn’t like him, the relationship might not last. This was true of my introduction as well, early 90s in Edinburgh.
  • Danny Thompson – who played double bass on Nick Drake recordings, and was really a key component – then and now.
  • Krystle Warren – American singer who has a wonderful voice as well as very emotive singing. Similar to Joan Armatrading I guess, and could be very popular, very soon with the right songs.
  • My favourite was Lisa Hannigan, and I will surely be seeking out her music.

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These facts were presented in Parliament, so that makes them more believable than most conspiracy theories… In a nutshell, Qantas is deliberately taking on the costs of their Jetstar subsidiary, because it is something they can sell one day, for a good price if it looks profitable. Qantas itself is required by law to stay in Aussie hands. These are the words of Senator Xenophon last August:

  • In Melbourne, for example, my information from inside the Qantas group is that Jetstar does not pay for any gates, but instead Qantas domestic is charged for the gates.
  •  Why does Qantas lease five check-in counters at Sydney Terminal 2, only to let Jetstar use one for free? 
  •  I am told Qantas’s legal department also does free work for Jetstar.
  • It is extremely rare for a Qantas passenger to be rebooked on a Jetstar flight, but Jetstar passengers are regularly rebooked onto Qantas flights. I am informed that Jetstar never pays Qantas for the cost of those rebooked passengers and yet Jetstar gets to keep the revenue from the original bookings. 
  • Jetstar passengers can and do use the Qantas Club but Jetstar does not pay for the cost of any of this.

More examples detailed at OzHouse.org

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[I wouldn’t be surprised if Australia and other western countries are nearly as bad…]

  • In excess of 1 in 10 Americans older than 12 are now taking antidepressants prescribed by their doctors.
  • More than 60% of patients prescribed antidepressants say they have been taking them for over 2 years, and 14 percent for more than 10 years! Pretty strange for a spectrum of drugs that are intended to only be used in the short-term…
  • Most patients do not receive a second opinion, even if they are on multiple antidepressants
  • 1 in 4 patients are admittedly misdiagnosed with depression by their health care provider

That’s a whole lot of people taking medication for no reason, and that medication can cause a variety of side effects, including suicide.

Depression is a natural process for the most part, and attempting to quick fix it with drugs is a tragedy. Tens of millions of people are living their life in a fog 🙁

More at SOTT

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If the Occupy Movement concentrated purely on these ratbags, and not everything plus the kitchen sink, I’d be rooting for them…

I can’t see how this guy Jon Corzine isn’t guilty (but it’s possible, I guess):

  • Was CEO of Goldman Sachs – who, as just one example, were hired to hide Greece’s debts and cause all the financial turmoil of 2011. Such a deal gets the approval of the bosses, and is clearly unethical and morally wrong.
  • Lasted just one term as Governor of New Jersey
  • Then got a job running MF Global. They have just gone bankrupt, primarily due to $700 million of client’s money disappearing.
  • Corzine is reportedly worth $500 million – yet he seems to have not achieved anything good or worthwhile except for helping some rich folk get richer….
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This is rotten to the core. Australians who pay the electricity bills will be paying an extra $60-$220 per year to cover the cost of smart meters. Collectively that is over $1 Billion over 3 years.  Approved by the government, the bill was passed so it would hit the news on Melbourne Cup Day, typical of something being sneaked past us. Installation is not optional. It’s the equivalent of Telstra forcing us to all buy a new phone, and it is wrong, wrong, wrong.

The promise is that the consumer will see savings, eventually. The reality is the power companies will save money. They amount they can increase electricty prices each year is limited, but there’s no requirement for them to pass on savings. Buy some shares in a power company, that’s my advice!

More at the Herald Sun

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This is the first time I’ve thought that a new social network could have a chance:

http://nextdoor.com/

NextDoor will get you hanging out with people on your block that you know already… and then get to know the neighbors you have never met. I could see people using it for things like asking if anyone can babysit, or has a ladder you can borrow.

I had similar plans for StKildaBeach.com but I never completed the site.

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Traditional burials, sea burials, cremation – they’ve been around for a long, long time. But now, with land at a premium, new methods of dealing with the deceased are arising:

Resomation (aka bio-cremation) –  uses heated water and potassium hydroxide to liquefy the body, leaving only bones behind. The bones are then pulverized, much as in regular cremation, and the bone fragments are returned to the family. This reduces the impact of cremation on global warming!

Natural Burial –  bodies are wrapped in a shroud or placed in a biodegradable casket, the idea being that they will decompose naturally. Nothing new about this one, but I like it. Available in over 50 US cemeteries.

Eternal Reefs – …creates artificial reef material out of a mixture of concrete and human cremains (the crushed bone left over from cremations). These heavy concrete orbs are then placed in areas where reefs need restoration, attracting fish and other organisms that turn the remains into an undersea habitat. A bit like being buried by the mob in the foundations of a skyscraper…

Space Burial – choose the most important few grams of the deceased and have them launched into space, starting at $995. Pretty cool. Nice for folk to look up at the stars and thing of you.

Mummification (from $63K, and legal), plastination (free if you don’t mind being looked at in exhibits), cryogenics and freeze-drying (where you can literally end up as compost) round out the eight listed at Live Science

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Al Jazeera has news from Ordos in Inner Mongolia, a wealthy coal-mining town in Inner Mongolia. The city is designed to house one million people, yet almost nobody lives there yet.

This is quite extraordinary, and smells like Dubai – a modern city has been built, mosty by Chinese citizens seeking a safe haven investment (and the banks are letting them) – and virtually nobody is living there. Watch the video:

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The rest of the pool matches should be without upsets… except for:

  • NZ will thrash France by 30 points [thrashed them by 20]
  • Australia will have a low-scoring win over the USA [67-5]
  • USA will defeat Italy by 5 points [lost 27-10]
  • Samoa will beat Fiji, but only just [quite easily 27-7]
  • Samoa will lose to South Africa by 15 points, but could, just maybe, beat South Africa [lost by 8, but nearly, nearly won]

If Samoa beats South Africa, then they should edge out Wales for runner-up in Pool D.

The Quarter-Finals should look like this, with my predicted scores:

  • England 28 / France 13 [France = unpredictable]
  • NZ 35 / Argentina 12 [33-10 :)]
  • South Africa 18 / Australia 15 [9-11, close as predicted]
  • Ireland 22 / Wales 15 [got this one well wrong]

I think the only certainties to make the semis are NZ and England. The other places will go to whoever places best on the day, and Samoa is a remote possibility…

My Semi-Final predictions are:

  • England 24 / Ireland 14 Wales 24 / France 7
  • NZ 25 / South Africa Australia 25 (with NZ winning in extra time)

And the final will be NZ defeating England in another very close match. Wales easily.

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