Daniel Davidson

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Daniel Davidson

Daniel Davidson

@DanielD_DVM

Running with a pack and looking for novel solutions to complex problems.

Jonesville, MI Se unió Haziran 2018
518 Siguiendo120 Seguidores
Remarks
Remarks@remarks·
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 Ninth scientist linked to secret US space and nuclear programs dies with no cause of death listed.
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Robert P. George
Robert P. George@McCormickProf·
I don’t see any way to interpret President Trump's "prediction" that "a whole civilization will die tonight" as other than a threat to order the military to commit crimes against civilians. If he issues such an order, it will be the duty of military leaders to refuse to comply.
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Daniel Davidson
Daniel Davidson@DanielD_DVM·
@BretVDB "And all that's best of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes;"
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Bret van den Brink
Bret van den Brink@BretVDB·
Without naming the poem, tell me a line that its readers will instantly recognize.
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Samuel C. Okanume
Samuel C. Okanume@sammychrise·
Making him lose to a bunch of plumbers and peasants was actually disrespectful 😭
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Cecilia Glennon
Cecilia Glennon@CeciliaGlennon·
@Anc_Aesthetics With all these food chains becoming total crap, there should be a good opportunity for local businesses to fill the quality food void.
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Wesley ✨
Wesley ✨@wesleytypes·
I've never come across this side quest in The Witcher 3 before... Geralt had to save a village that had been turned into pigs for stealing a cursed treasure, and the quest giver was hilarious. This game continues to amuse and amaze me.
Wesley ✨ tweet mediaWesley ✨ tweet mediaWesley ✨ tweet mediaWesley ✨ tweet media
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Kevin Kelly
Kevin Kelly@kevin2kelly·
Being envious is a toxin. Instead take joy in the success of others and treat their success as your gain. Celebrating the success of others costs you nothing, and increases the happiness of everyone, including you. For more advice see my book Excellent Advice for Living amzn.to/3mQL4c4 #excellentadvice
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Andrew Bustamante
Andrew Bustamante@EverydaySpy·
CIA taught me reinvention for deception. Aliases. Covers. Personas built to take. This reinvention is different. It gives back—to my family, my company, and my confidence. 🔔yt.everydayspy.com/3MnblLN
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Wesley ✨
Wesley ✨@wesleytypes·
I HATE THESE UGLY BAGS SO MUCH
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Daniel Davidson
Daniel Davidson@DanielD_DVM·
Thank you sir
Afshine Emrani MD FACC@afshineemrani

In medical school, we are taught a golden rule: "When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras." It is a reminder to look for the common explanation before the exotic one. But after decades in cardiology, I’ve learned that if a patient is still suffering after the "horses" have been ruled out, a doctor must have the courage—and the curiosity—to go hunting for the zebra. Sarah was a thirty-four-year-old marathon runner and a devoted mother who came to me after six months of being told she was "fine." She had been bounced from one specialist to another, each one pointing to her normal EKG and standard blood tests as proof that her crushing fatigue and racing heart were simply the result of "new mom stress." By the time she reached my office, she didn't just look tired; she looked invisible, as if the medical system had stopped seeing the woman and only saw the data. Instead of re-reading the normal test results that had already failed her, I asked Sarah to walk me through her life. We talked about her training and her family, eventually landing on a backpacking trip she took to the Mendoza province of rural Argentina. She described staying in a charming, rustic cottage made of sun-dried mud bricks. She mentioned waking up one morning with a strangely swollen, purple eyelid that she assumed was a simple spider bite. As she spoke, a memory surfaced from a biography I had read years ago about Charles Darwin. Most people know Darwin for his theories on evolution, but medical historians have long puzzled over the mysterious, debilitating illness that plagued him for decades after he returned from his voyage on the HMS Beagle. Darwin had written in his journals about being bitten by the "great black bug of the Pampas" while sleeping in mud-walled huts in South America. He spent the rest of his life suffering from heart palpitations and exhaustion that the Victorian doctors of his time could never explain. I realized then that Sarah wasn't suffering from stress; she was likely hosting the same "silent killer" that may have haunted Darwin: Chagas Disease. The "Kissing Bug" lives in the cracks of those mud-brick walls. It bites its victims—often near the eyes or mouth—while they sleep, passing a parasite called Trypanosoma cruzi into the blood. The danger of Chagas is that the initial symptoms disappear quickly, but the parasite can hide in the body for years, slowly weaving itself into the muscle and electrical "wiring" of the heart. To confirm this, I moved beyond the standard tests. I ordered a specialized "Strain Rate" ultrasound, which doesn't just look at whether the heart is pumping, but at how the individual muscle fibers are stretching. We saw that while her heart looked strong to the naked eye, the fibers were "stuttering," a sign of early parasite-induced scarring. A specific blood test for the parasite's antibodies confirmed the diagnosis. Treatment required a difficult, sixty-day course of anti-parasitic medication to stop the infection, paired with a protective heart regimen to keep her electrical system stable while the inflammation settled. Because we caught it before her heart was physically damaged or enlarged, the recovery was a success. Months later, Sarah returned to my office, her vibrant energy restored. She brought me a leather-bound copy of The Voyage of the Beagle with a note tucked inside. She wrote that while other doctors had looked at her charts, I had looked at her. This case remains a vital reminder for my memoir: in a world of high-tech scans and AI, the most sophisticated diagnostic tool we possess is still the human story. When we truly listen, we don't just find the disease—we find the patient. Good morning.

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Daniel Davidson
Daniel Davidson@DanielD_DVM·
@IGN It's ok that he has that opinion. I still enjoy playing LTTP too.
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IGN
IGN@IGN·
"Go back and play Morrowind and tell me that’s the game you want to play again," said Bruce Nesmith, who worked for Bethesda for over 17 years, adding that playing The Elder Scrolls 3 "would not stand the test of time." bit.ly/4q4GoKh
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Thomas Massie
Thomas Massie@RepThomasMassie·
It was not a hoax, I cannot be bullied, I am not done, and this is why those in power are doing everything in their power to defeat me.
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Mike Cosper
Mike Cosper@MikeCosper·
Here’s the thing. Two things can be true. If this is him, what he does here is stupid and violent and wrong. He should have been arrested, tried, convicted, and served time for it. Saying that does not also mean that the actions of ICE officers who disarmed him and THEN shot him the back were lawful or moral. Kicking out the taillight of a law enforcement vehicle is not an offense deserving the death penalty. If you don’t get that, you are a partisan ghoul. Full stop. Same goes for exercising legal rights, like carrying a weapon. Even the crime of trying to interfere with ICE’s activity — a crime for sure, worthy of detention — is not a capital offense. This is elementary stuff. The fact that so many Christians refuse to acknowledge any of it is mind blowing to me.
Nathan@Nate_T_there

@marctshort @MikeCosper Hahahahaha mike is an idiot once again . And the "protestor " is actually a violent street thug who's hobby is assaulting ICE hahahhahahha

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