3
Sabre2th 3 points ago +3 / -0

Looks like it made Luke safely(?), taxiing speeds.

2
Sabre2th 2 points ago +2 / -0

Approaching Luke AFB low and slow. Bet he has control issues, needs a lot of time to correct.

3
Sabre2th 3 points ago +3 / -0

Flying slow (for an F-35) and staying around 10k/ft.

10
Sabre2th 10 points ago +10 / -0

I have a few close family members in the nursing/care fields and they have been telling me for the last few years that there has been a lot of "I won't go along with this BS" as they head out the door..

4
Sabre2th 4 points ago +5 / -1

Real? I doubt it

3
Sabre2th 3 points ago +3 / -0

Sure looks like it to me. Who better?

45
Sabre2th 45 points ago +45 / -0

If they didn't do anything wrong, what are they afraid of?

6
Sabre2th 6 points ago +6 / -0

When you get right down to it, people have themselves to blame just as much as the medical community.

The only AUTHORITY doctors have is what you GIVE them! Too many folk subscribe to the old "doctors orders" BS and won't stand up to them. The only ones that have to follow their orders are nurses, therapists, and technicians, etc..

I've told every physician that I've had to deal with over the years that i will listen to their diagnosis and recommendations, BUT, I will also do my own research before any drug or treatment and will make ALL decisions for myself.

Don't be afraid to say NO. When they bring you that "permission to treat" sheet to sign, read through it, draw a single line thru anything you disagree with, initial next to the marked out item (every one of them). The marked-thru item must still be able to be read to carry legal weight (so I've been told, but I'm NOT a lawyer).

If they bring you one of those damned electronic signature pads to sign, refuse, and ask for a printed copy only. You'll likely be shocked at what rights they are actually asking you to sign away.

Again, DON'T BE AFRAID TO STAND UP TO THEM. I've told several throughout my wife's cancer and stroke treatments to "Take your inflated ego and god complex down the hall and don't have ANYTHING to do with her again". It's led to some long conversations with hospital admins, but was quite satisfying to give them a piece of my mind.

1
Sabre2th 1 point ago +1 / -0

Nothing shows up on ADS-B, but wouldn't "squawk" if staying covert. A video of his motorcade unloading would be sweet...

by MAGULQ
2
Sabre2th 2 points ago +2 / -0

I tried looking at it mirrored, but brain too smooth to figure it out, lol.

by MAGULQ
2
Sabre2th 2 points ago +2 / -0

Looks to me like a reflection of somebody writing.

3
Sabre2th 3 points ago +3 / -0

As long as they don't come here (Missouri) and vote it into the shithole they came from.

by skytlrh
2
Sabre2th 2 points ago +2 / -0

I've shifted mine to that position under a jacket while I was "working", allows draw (albeit a tad slower..) by either hand whilst the other is occupied.

2
Sabre2th 2 points ago +2 / -0

https://www.fenbendazole.org/fenbendazole-information/fenbendazole-dosage-guide/ https://www.fenbenmed.com/product/fenbendazol-capsules-222mg/

As far as oncologists go, stay away from hospitals. They tend to use outdated therapies as their administration allows. Find yourself a good research facility. They're going to be using the latest treatments (none do CURES) and have the latitude to customize therapies to the individual. Hospitals are a death sentence to cancer patients.

4
Sabre2th 4 points ago +4 / -0

Common around expensive electronics, but should never be used except by those specifically trained (I used to train in industrial situations). Halon RAPIDLY displaces oxygen from the area where used.

6
Sabre2th 6 points ago +6 / -0

If they would put "body count" on their graph, it would show that many of them did exactly what they were intended to do.

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