Social Security Scam Alert

Social Security Scam AlertThe Social Security Administration (SSA) is reporting scammers are impersonating SSA employees and calling citizens. The scammers use threatening language to warn unknown victims that they’ll face arrest or other legal action if they fail to call a phone number the scammer provides or press the number indicated in the message to address the issue.In some instances, the scammers switch tactics and communicate they want to help the individual with activating their suspended Social Security Number. SSA is not making these calls – these calls are a scam. If you or someone you know should should get such a call, do not provide any information and just hang up. Report the call to SSA’s Inspector General at 1-800-269-0271 or https://oig.ssa.gov/report.  For more information on how to report this type of activity, read the Social Security Matters blog (blog.ssa.gov).
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Washington could become the first state to legalize human composting

Washington residents “are very excited about the prospect of becoming a tree or having a different alternative,” state Sen. Jamie Pedersen said.

The finished product in "human recomposition" is soil that can then nourish new life.

A process known as “recomposition” reduces human remains to compost. CAHNRS Communications / Washington State UniversityDec. 29, 2018, 10:06 AM PST / Updated Dec. 30, 2018, 6:45 PM PSTBy Tafline Laylin

When Americans die, most are buried or cremated. Washington could soon become the first state to allow another option: human composting.

The novel approach, known as “recomposition,” involves placing bodies in a vessel and hastening their decomposition into a nutrient-dense soil that can then be returned to families. The aim is a less expensive way of dealing with human remains that is better for the environment than burial, which can leach chemicals into the ground, or cremation, which releases earth-warming carbon dioxide.

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The Cause of Alzheimer’s Could Be Coming From Inside Your Mouth, Study Claims

In recent years, a growing number of scientific studies have backed an alarming hypothesis: Alzheimer’s disease isn’t just a disease, it’s an infection.

While the exact mechanisms of this infection are something researchers are still trying to isolate, a litany of papers argue the deadly spread of Alzheimer’s goes way beyond what we used to think.

Now, scientists are saying they’ve got one of the most definitive leads yet for a bacterial culprit behind Alzheimer’s, and it comes from a somewhat unexpected quarter: gum disease.

In a new paper led by senior author Jan Potempa, a microbiologist from the University of Louisville, researchers report the discovery of Porphyromonas gingivalis – the pathogen behind chronic periodontitis (aka gum disease) – in the brains of deceased Alzheimer’s patients.

530 alzheimers gum disease bacteria 1

P. gingivalis’ gingipains (red) among neurons in the brain of a patient with Alzheimer’s (Cortexyme)

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Moontalking

Andertoons Comic Strip for November 02, 2012
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Four Simple Words to Help You Live Well

By Tara Parker-Pope in the New York Times

“During nearly 20 years writing about health, I’ve had the opportunity to speak with hundreds of top medical experts about how to live well. What I’ve learned from all of them can be summed up in four simple words.

Move. Nourish. Refresh. Connect.

The science is clear. If you move your body a little each day, you will be far better off than if you are sedentary. If you nourish your body with real food (the kind that doesn’t come in packages loaded with sugar or via a drive-through window) you will be healthier than if you eat junk food. If you allow your mind to take a break and refresh from time to time, you will feel better. And if you regularly connect with loved ones and friends, old and new, you will be both happier and healthier.

These four words — move, nourish, refresh, connect — are the guiding principles behind the 30-Day Well Challenge, a first-of-its-kind program from The New York Times to help you build healthy habits for your body, mind and spirit, one daily challenge at a time. Each task is based on science, and over time, each new habit can add up to meaningful changes in your life.

Each challenge takes just minutes to complete. We’ve created new six-minute move workout videos to show you that you really do have time to exercise. We’ve included refresh challenges to give your mind the rest it needs. You’ll find delicious nourish challenges to nourish your body with more food, not less. And because the health of your relationships affects the health of your body, we’ve included connect challenges to help you get closer to those you love. Here are a few examples of what to expect:

[Ready to get started now? Sign up for the 30-Day Well Challenge.]

A Mindful Chocolate Challenge: Nourish both your body and your mind with this task. Pick a piece of quality, delicious chocolate (yes, I said chocolate!). If you don’t like chocolate pick a piece of fruit or a bite-size savory treat. Then do this mindful meditation from Dr. Michelle May, founder of AmIHungry, which teaches mindful eating. Sit down where you won’t be distracted.

As you unwrap the chocolate, listen to the sounds and notice the aroma. Take a small bite, then pause. Become aware of the textures and flavors on your tongue. As you begin to chew, notice how the flavors, textures and aromas change. Notice pleasure. When you have fully experienced your bite, swallow, then pause to notice how long the flavor lingers. Slowly repeat until your treat is finished.”

Why are you doing this? Because studies show that mindfulness encourages more healthful eating.

The One-Minute Task Challenge: Declutter your mind and your home with this simple refresh challenge, which can be completed any time of day. Your goal will be to complete as many one-minute or less tasks as you can find over the next five minutes. Use your phone or watch as a timer, and no cheating. You are going for one-minute tasks only. Here are some suggestions:

  • Make the bed.
  • Pick up laundry and put it in a hamper.
  • Throw away junk mail left on a table.
  • Wipe off a counter.
  • Put the remotes next to the TV.
  • Hang up your coat.
  • Make a quick to-do list for later.
  • Tidy the bathroom vanity.

Gretchen Rubin, author of “The Happiness Project,” calls this her one-minute rule. “Keeping all those small nagging tasks under control makes me more serene, less overwhelmed.”

The How Are We Doing Challenge? It’s easy to let our closest relationships hum along when there are no obvious problems. Use this Connect challenge from Philip and Carolyn Cowan, two University of California, Berkeley professors who have spent their careers studying children and families. To complete this challenge, take a quiet moment in the morning or evening with your partner, a close friend or anyone who is important to you. Ask each other the simple question, “How are we doing?” Take a moment to think about what in the relationship has made you feel happy recently. Are there special memories you want to talk about together? Were there moments, happy or sad, where you wish you had spoken up, asked for help or shared your feelings? It will provoke a thoughtful exploration of your relationship, what’s working and where you can do better. Try it!

The goal of each challenge is to distill the science of healthful living into one simple task. To discover 30 all-new daily challenges like these, sign up for the Well Challenge now and skip those impossible New Year’s resolutions (“I’m going to lose weight!” “I’m going to exercise an hour a day!”) that you impose on yourself each year. (Research shows that most resolutions don’t work.) Instead, join us on the Well Challenge for 30 days and take a small step every day to live well. (If you missed starting with us this week, you can start any Monday of the year, so don’t fear missing out on a chance to take small strides to a healthier life.)

Sign Up for the 30-Day Well ChallengeBuild healthy habits for your body, mind and spirit, one daily challenge at a time. No special equipment, unusual foods or big time commitment required and each task should take only minutes to complete. The next round starts Jan. 28.

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Not the most effective protest

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Meet the rural WA town privy to outhouse races



From Crosscut: CONCONULLY, Okanogan County —The rural town of Lind has its Combine Demolition Derby, Omak its Stampede and Suicide Race and at one time, Elma cheered on its slug races. In Conconully, a small town in Okanogan, the four-decades-old winter tradition is outhouse racing.

“Conconully is a great place for year-round activities, but we’ve found outhouse racing draws people to the community each year,” says Janet Warner, race organizer and president of the Conconully Chamber of Commerce. “It’s the tradition of it all that keeps everyone coming back.”

The town’s population “hovers around 208 people,” Warner says. Last Saturday, more than 2,000 people packed Conconully to witness the annual weirdness, bond with family and catch up with friends.

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Hospitals Stopped Readmitting So Many Medicare Patients. Did That Cost Lives?

Ed note: These days you have to be pretty darn sick in order to be admitted to a hospital. Then they are anxious to make your stay as short as possible because they are now paid based on your diagnosis. So the worry was that hospitals would discharge you to soon resulting in too many readmissions. So penalties were put in place if a hospital had too many readmissions. The concern now is that they are too reluctant to let you back in when your condition worsens.

From the NYT: “It was a well-intended policy. Almost all parties agree on that much.

A decade ago, when Medicare beneficiaries were discharged from hospitals, one in five returned within a month.

Older people faced the risks of hospitalization all over again: infections, deconditioning, delirium, subsequent nursing home stays. And preventable readmissions were costing Medicare a bundle.

So the Affordable Care Act incorporated something called the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program, which focused on three serious ailments with high readmission rates: heart failure, heart attacks and pneumonia.

The A.C.A. penalized hospitals — withholding up to three percent of Medicare payments — when readmissions within 30 days exceeded national averages.

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Happiness is …….

Peanuts Comic Strip for February 18, 1964


Peanuts Comic Strip for November 19, 1965
Peanuts Comic Strip for March 07, 1962
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Katelyn Ohashi’s perfect 10 reminded America life could be fun again

From The Guardian: ‘The gymnast’s unbridled exuberance and joy set off a floor routine that captivated millions around the world as a message of hope to all in the face of adversity

There’s a reasonably good chance you’ve already seen the video of the American gymnast Katelyn Ohashi’s floor exercise from a quad meet in Anaheim last weekend. The two-minute clip of the UCLA senior tumbling and swaying and launching her 4ft 10in form into the air to a frenetic mashup of 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s hits became a viral smash almost immediately after it was posted to the team’s Twitter feed and has since racked up more than 40m views and counting.

Virality is an unpredictable cocktail and the widespread appeal of the 21-year-old’s routine, which earned the sixth perfect score of her collegiate career and helped the Bruins to a first-place finish over California, Michigan State and UC Davis, is not down to any one ingredient. Her technical skill and extraordinary athleticism are obvious – the double layout with a split is a kicker rarely seen on the college level – but hardly unparalleled. Her charisma and showmanship are palpable but not without precedent, nor are the nostalgia-drizzled musical choices of Ike & Tina Turner and Earth, Wind & Fire along with the Jackson 5 and Michael and Janet Jackson.”

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A Mariner’s hat wouldn’t work any better

Image result for new yorker cartoon
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Neo-imperialist ventures abroad, followed by the rolling calamity of Brexit at home

Today’s NYT has a biting critique of Britain’s chummy elite. There have been decades of misguided and mismanaged decisions by elite but incompetent imperialists. Events now appear to be heading to England’s final chapter -the fiasco called Brexit.


From left seated at the table, Jawarharlal Nehru, vice president of India’s interim government; Earl Mountbatten, viceroy of India; and Muhammad Ali Jinnah, president of the Muslim League discuss Britain’s plan for India, June 2, 1947.CreditMax Desfor/Associated Press

Forster blamed Britain’s political fiascoes on its privately educated men, callow beneficiaries of the country’s elitist public school system. These eternal schoolboys whose “weight is out of all proportion” to their numbers are certainly over represented among Tories. They have today plunged Britain into its worst crisis, exposing its incestuous and self-serving ruling class like never before.

From David Cameron, who recklessly gambled his country’s future on a referendum in order to isolate some whingers in his Conservative party, to the opportunistic Boris Johnson, who jumped on the Brexit bandwagon to secure the prime ministerial chair once warmed by his role model Winston Churchill, and the top-hatted, theatrically retro Jacob Rees-Mogg, whose fund management company has set up an office within the European Union even as he vehemently scorns it, the British political class has offered to the world an astounding spectacle of mendacious, intellectually limited hustlers.

Posted in History, Politics | Comments Off on Neo-imperialist ventures abroad, followed by the rolling calamity of Brexit at home

Laughter therapy

Remember laughter therapy promoted by Norman Cousins? I think these days we may have to remind ourselves, that it is indeed good for us to enjoy simple pleasures like Johnny Carson trying not to laugh!

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The information age

Wizard of Id Comic Strip for January 09, 2019
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The adventures of Mark Twain in Seattle

Knute Berger talks about Mark Twain’s visit to Seattle: “It was a trying time for Seattleites in the summer of 1895. The city was still reeling from the Panic of 1893, which threw the national economy into a tailspin, and the skies were hazy with wildfire smoke. Into this scene strolled Samuel Clemens, better known as Mark Twain. Reeling from his own financial misfortune, America’s most celebrated author made his only visit to the Pacific Northwest as a part of a worldwide speaking tour intended to raise money to help pay off his debts. In this episode, Knute Berger recalls that memorable trip.”

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What if philosophers went on strike?

Image result for new yorker cartoon
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Senate Democrats introduce bill to deny tax loophole for Big Pharma ads

Ed note: Thanks to Dick D for sending this along. I’ve been puzzled when watching TV that so many commercials are for very expensive drugs for conditions that aren’t all that common. The hype benefits then discuss side effects (even death) while showing happy people in sylvan scenes. I had no idea that I was paying for these ads with my tax dollars!

From Nation of Change: “U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) recently introduced the End Taxpayer Subsidies for Drug Ads Act, legislation that would prohibit pharmaceutical drug manufacturers from claiming tax deductions for direct-to-consumer advertising expenses. Despite the fact that advertising expenses by pharmaceutical drug manufacturers have more than quadrupled in the past 20 years, drug companies continue to deduct the cost of advertising expenses from federal taxes.

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Notice of Annual Meeting of WACCRA – 2/15 at Mirabella

Ed note: If you haven’t already, please consider joining WACCRA! It is our way of having a vital voice in laws affecting CCRCs.

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Take a taxi with no wheels

Ed Note: I’ve often enjoyed driving visitors out to Seacrest Park at Alki where the parking is easy – then taking the passenger ferry to downtown having lunch somewhere. With the traffic now, it may be best to walk or Uber downtown from Skyline and ferry over to Seacrest Park, then walk over to Salty’s for lunch before heading back. A fun way to bypass the traffic!

The Water Taxi just might be your ticket to downtown—offering a 10-minute ride from Seacrest Park to downtown and a traffic-free 22-minute ride from Vashon Island. The Water Taxi will add a second vessel on the West Seattle route during the SR 99 closure during weekday commute times to significantly increase capacity. Read about all of the ways you can connect to the Water Taxi.

  • Vessels on the West Seattle route will depart every twenty minutes during commute periods.
  • Water Taxi shuttles will operate expanded service during the SR 99 closure on the #773 West Seattle Junction and #775 Alki Beach routes.
  • Pick-up and drop-off points at Seacrest Park will be available, as well as extra parking near Seacrest Park at SW Bronson Way and Pier 2, utilizing connector shuttles to Seacrest for West Seattle riders.
  • Bike to the dock and either lock up at a rack or bring your bike aboard (Water Taxis have racks for 26 bikes). Don’t own a bike? Bikeshare discounts are available during the SR 99 closure. See the bikeshare section for more details.
  • Bikeshare makes connecting to the water taxi easy, even if you don’t own a bike. Check back on this page for information about bikeshare discounts during the viaduct closure.
  • Pay with an ORCA card to save money and speed up the boarding process. Other forms of payment include mobile tickets (try Transit Go Tickets app), credit card purchases at our terminal ticket machines and exact cash fare collected onboard.
  • More parking will be available near Seacrest Park at SW Bronson Way and Pier 2, utilizing connector shuttles to Seacrest for West Seattle riders.
  • Ride2 is a brand new service for people who live or work in West Seattle and it’s available by app or phone. Enjoy on-demand rides to and from Metro buses at the Alaska Junction or the Water Taxi at Seacrest Park. Read the details.

Learn more about riding the Water Taxi

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Restoring vital life forces

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UC San Diego opens new senior-focused emergency unit

Ed Note: Focusing on urgent or emergent senior care is finally starting to happen. Only three level one senior emergency rooms exist in the USA, the only one on the west coast featured here. Wouldn’t it be nice if we had such care on First Hill?

There’s no sign notifying patients that they are entering the new Gary and Mary West Senior Emergency Care Unit, but it’s immediately obvious that something has changed.

Moving from the main emergency department at UC San Diego’s Jacobs Medical Center into the corridor that leads to the new unit, there is a noticeable drop in noise level and visitors are soon greeted by a wall-sized, full-color photograph of Torrey Pines State Beach.

Walls are painted in a contrasting two-tone color scheme. The lighting is softer with a variable intensity indexed electronically to the time of day outside.

The unit’s 11 exam rooms continue the design theme with large local beach photos consuming a full wall of each single-occupant suite. In addition to beds, there are thickly-padded chairs that look like medical recliners and are capable of elevating their occupants to standing position or lowering them to take a load off.

Overall, the feel is slightly upscale, like this is the unit around the corner for the VIPs that the regular folks never get to know about.

But admission to this tucked-away wing has nothing to do with who you know.

Age is the main criteria for landing one of these rooms. Beds are reserved for those age 65 and older. Answers to a series of five questions designed to gauge likelihood memory loss, fall risk and other geriatric issues also play into who gets escorted back and who stays in the main emergency department.

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Good luck, Mr. Gorsky!

neil armstrong mr gorsky

Funny!! Thanks to Tom G for sending this along.

  If you are under 55, you simply won’t understand.     This one is still around  IN CASE YOU DIDN’T ALREADY KNOW THIS LITTLE TIDBIT OF WONDERFUL TRIVIA……………ON JULY 20, 1969, AS COMMANDER OF THE APOLLO 11 LUNAR MODULE, NEIL ARMSTRONG WAS THE FIRST PERSON TO SET FOOT ON THE MOON.HIS FIRST WORDS AFTER STEPPING ON THE MOON,”THAT’S ONE SMALL STEP FOR MAN, ONE GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND,” WERE TELEVISED TO EARTH AND HEARD BY MILLIONS.BUT, JUST BEFORE HE RE-ENTERED THE LANDER, HE MADE THE ENIGMATIC REMARK “GOOD LUCK, MR. GORSKY.”MANY PEOPLE AT NASA THOUGHT IT WAS A CASUAL REMARK CONCERNING SOME RIVAL SOVIET COSMONAUT.HOWEVER, UPON CHECKING, THERE WAS NO GORSKY IN EITHER THE RUSSIAN OR AMERICAN SPACE PROGRAMS.  OVER THE YEARS, MANY PEOPLE QUESTIONED ARMSTRONG AS TO WHAT THE ‘GOOD LUCK, MR. GORSKY’ STATEMENT MEANT, BUT ARMSTRONG ALWAYS JUST SMILED.  ON JULY 5, 1995, IN TAMPA BAY, FLORIDA, WHILE ANSWERING QUESTIONS FOLLOWING A SPEECH, A REPORTER BROUGHT UP THE 26-YEAR-OLD QUESTION ABOUT MR. GORSKY AND   THIS TIME HE FINALLY RESPONDED BECAUSE HIS MR. GORSKY HAD JUST DIED, SO NEIL ARMSTRONG FELT HE COULD NOW ANSWER THE QUESTION.HERE IS THE ANSWER TO”WHO WAS MR. GORSKY?”:IN 1938, WHEN HE WAS A KID IN A SMALL MID-WESTERN TOWN, HE WAS PLAYING BASEBALL WITH A FRIEND IN THE BACKYARD. HIS FRIEND HIT THE BALL, WHICH LANDED IN HIS NEIGHBOR’S YARD BY THEIR BEDROOM WINDOW. HIS NEIGHBORS WERE MR. AND MRS. GORSKY. AS HE LEANED DOWN TO PICK UP THE BALL, YOUNG ARMSTRONG HEARD MRS. GORSKY SHOUTING AT MR. GORSKY,”SEX! YOU WANT SEX?! YOU’LL GET SEX WHEN THE KID NEXT DOOR WALKS ON THE MOON!” It broke the place up.  NEIL ARMSTRONG’S FAMILY CONFIRMED THAT THIS IS A TRUE STORY.

Great story. But unfortunately a Snopes check finds it false.
This legend, seemingly an obvious joke, began circulating on the Internet in mid-1995 and was picked up by the media a few months later.

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Inferno Observatory

During a fellowship at the Mineral Sciences Laboratory at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC, the UK filmmakers Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt stumbled upon a collection of 16mm films shot by volcanologists in the field. Originally presented as an installation at the Foundation for Art and Creative Technology (FACT) in Liverpool in 2011, this three-channel video combines the found footage with a churning, propulsive soundtrack to explore the human fascination with Earth-rupturing natural phenomena. Across the three channels, erupting volcanoes are at once powerful forces of nature as well as fodder for quantifiable scientific data – and high jinks.

Directors: Ruth Jarman, Joe Gerhardt

Website: Semiconductor Films

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How is your SAD?

Image result for new yorker cartoon
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Is Jay Inslee’s presidential campaign for real?

A determined look from Jay Inslee

From Crosscut: “The last politician to run a serious race for president from this state was the legendary Sen. Henry “Scoop” Jackson in 1976.  His credentials were impeccable.

Widely regarded as smart, effective and informed, Jackson, a Democrat, was respected in both parties. When Jack Kennedy won the Democratic nomination for president in 1960, brother Bobby, his campaign manager, wanted Jackson on the ticket. Alas, JFK opted for Lyndon Johnson from Texas, and Scoop was given the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee as a consolation prize. In 1969, Republican President Richard Nixon asked Jackson to be his secretary of defense, which the senator turned down.  

When he finally stepped up to run in ’76, Jackson had organization, money and the support of organized labor. His stalwart support of the war in Vietnam made him a pariah among the anti-war left, but the war was over, and Jackson had a superb liberal record on civil rights, the environment and labor issues. He had never lost a race.

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