Randeep

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Randeep

@randeep_93

I'll have something interesting to say any minute now

Katılım Aralık 2020
3.2K Takip Edilen300 Takipçiler
Randeep retweetledi
Snowleopardess 💚
Snowleopardess 💚@snowleopardess·
To make the jump from a mentally ill man attacking 3 people, two Jews and a Muslim, to saying peaceful Pro-Palestinian marches must be banned as a consequence, is totally irrational, bizarre and downright Orwellian. This lunacy from our politicians must be challenged.
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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@amiandlife I've heard on the Mast Cell Action Facebook group that you can slightly increase your chances of getting accepted by immunology if you report the condition as 'chronic urticaria', and indeed Xolair is licensed for that. So that *might* help you.
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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@wwr015 @Shanice_OM A simple misread on my part, but it’s a lot more consequential that apparently the Jewish men were stabbeds “for the crime of being Jewish” in your mind but not the Muslim man? I was mistaken to you assume were more sensible than you have turned out to be, yes.
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rww015
rww015@wwr015·
@randeep_93 @Shanice_OM Yes I did which is why I framed my sentence that way you fucking knitwit. “Multiple people, two for being Jewish”. Learn how to read.
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Shanice 😈 🇯🇲 🇵🇸
Not an expert. Have had a knife pulled on me and my colleagues - just once - when I worked in high needs men's supported accommodation. Its not uncommon. We would have lost our jobs if we kicked him repeatedly in the head. We had to talk him down.
Owen Jones@owenjonesjourno

I'd like an expert to explain this to me. This is a dangerous would-be murderer with a knife who needed to be apprehended. He's been tasered, but still has the knife. He's repeatedly kicked in the head. I'd just like that explained.

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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@wwr015 @Shanice_OM He also stabbed a Muslim man, which I suspect you have not read. You should probably be more discerning in the media you consume. It appears he was a psychiatric patient inappropriately discharged, not racist. It doesn’t help matters introducing head trauma.
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rww015
rww015@wwr015·
@Shanice_OM He just stabbed multiple people two of them for the crime of being Jewish. Who gives a fuck what happens to him after. Are you serious!!!!!!
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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@Boudicca_uk_ua He was tased and on the ground, moron (hence his head being as kickable as it was). Do not respond to me unless you answer the question, yes or no: you are near a man on the ground who has been tased and cops are in the process of arresting. UR not in arms reach. Are you scared?
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boadicea
boadicea@Boudicca_uk_ua·
@randeep_93 He had a knife moron, he could have stabbed himself and them.
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boadicea
boadicea@Boudicca_uk_ua·
Armed police would shoot the terrorist dead. These police officers put their own lives on the line, saving the man from harming himself, them, and other people. If they had been armed special forces, the guy would be in a morgue now.
Owen Jones@owenjonesjourno

Hold on - what? If police officers think someone might be carrying explosives, protocol is to kick them in the head repeatedly like this? Is that actual police protocol? If so, how is it a wise police protocol? Can someone explain the reasoning?

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Pamela Paresky 🟦 (Habits of a Free Mind)
Yarden Bibas apparently wasn’t available to write “I Miss My Old Life” for New York Magazine.
New York Magazine@NYMag

“Last March, a fog took hold in my head and never left. It settled there somewhere between the moment a DHS agent asked me, ‘Are you Mahmoud Khalil?’ and the moment I realized that I would miss the birth of my first child,” writes Khalil. A year ago, the Trump administration unlawfully arrested Khalil at his home and detained him for 104 days. “I walk free now, only after an army of lawyers sued the administration for targeting me because of my pro-Palestine speech. But the government is relentless in targeting me,” he writes. “So when I walk, I watch my back.” “When strangers approach me and ask, ‘Are you Mahmoud Khalil?’ — the same words in the same expectant tone the DHS agent used before the handcuffs — I do not know if they want to shake my hand or spit in my face. I do not know whether they will say, ‘Thank you for what you're doing,’ or follow me through midtown aggressively shouting, ‘Am Yisrael Chai.’ Both have happened. At first glance, I can never tell them apart.” In a new essay, Khalil writes about grappling with these two truths: “That I walk through the city afraid and that the city, in small and persistent ways, tells me I am welcome. That I am watched and that I am seen.” Read it in full: nymag.visitlink.me/tM03B5

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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@slooterman I would think that on the whole, autism is more often that not beneficial for a job like this, especially investigative journalism. The detail-orientation a lot of us have is often a valuable. Can be particularly helpful in adequate sourcing, and detecting holes in narratives.
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Sara Luterman
Sara Luterman@slooterman·
It is possible to be a good journalist and also be autistic. I think it actually makes me even better at my job in some specific ways. Not in a cringey “autism is my superpower” way, though. I’ve talked about it in a couple interviews.
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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@MrsSoose I dread to think what The Picture of Morgan McSweeny - which is certainly out there somewhere - looks like by now. 🫣
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Randeep retweetledi
Tuki
Tuki@TukiFromKL·
the CATO Institute.. a libertarian think tank funded by the Koch brothers.. just published a study showing immigrants paid more in taxes than they received in benefits every single year from 1994 to 2023.. not a left-wing university.. not a Democratic PAC.. the Koch brothers' own research institute.. they reduced the deficit by $14.5 trillion over 30 years.. they earn less per hour but work at higher rates.. which means higher per capita income.. which means higher taxes paid.. the country spent 30 years being told immigrants were draining the system.. turns out they were funding it.. and the people who told you that knew the numbers the whole time
Leading Report@LeadingReport

Immigrants generate more income and taxes than the average person, per CATO Institute.

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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@HalfThePerson @gymrat_bookworm @ImmunoFever That sounds brilliant! I'm also an MCAS+hyperPOTSer, sounds like this could work well for me. How did it affect the POTS/HR spikes itself? I'm also wondering how you've responded to LDN if you tried it? Since you mention TLR4, and I've found it helpful for agitation.
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The impatient patient
The impatient patient@HalfThePerson·
@gymrat_bookworm @ImmunoFever Also it doesn’t have to involve ME at all, I have debilitating MCAS+HyperPOTS combo and Xolair completely resolved hyperadrenergic character of my dysautonomia (no more adrenaline dumps and spikes in dBP on it) and majorly improved my unrefreshing sleep =>hangover feeling
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Rachel Blick
Rachel Blick@gymrat_bookworm·
Aight. I'm tired of all these ME/CFS people going to infectious disease doctors and getting shitty mast cell care. I scroll this app all day and everyone is in a flare for something. Most doctors don't even believe in MCAS yet, but here's a hack. There's a little something called "Idiopathic chronic urticaria" now often called " Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria (CSU)." Pretty sure all you meet criteria. Depending on your situation, current med list, and tolerance, you may be able to get Xoliar through an allergist. Down regulate your IgE pathway. All your doctors are sadistic psychopaths if they think it's fine you can only tolerate eating 3 foods. Nonstop. On God. Have a lovely day. Your local friendly healthcare administrator.
Rachel Blick tweet media
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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@ella_camo @Ryan_Colaco No, you havent. What you’ve noticed is diagnoses catching up to actual occurrence and people talking about it lots. At a ~5% it’s a common condition. It affects our work and social lives a massive amount hence the prominence It’s also stigmatised hence talk of social contagion.
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bellå
bellå@ella_camo·
@Ryan_Colaco I understand that. However I’ve noticed a pattern of over diagnosis recently
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bellå
bellå@ella_camo·
surely everyone can’t have ADHD?
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Randeep retweetledi
Rachel Zader
Rachel Zader@RachelZader·
Stimulants for ADHD also: - reduce car accident risk ~40% (increased for ADHD) - reduce ER visits by up to 45% (increased for ADHD) - improve self-esteem (usually lower for ADHD) - lower class disruptions by ~50% (higher for ADHD) - increase low GPAs (treatment over 3y = 2.38-POINT increase) - reduces anxiety risk (high likelihood for ADHD) One study identified that ADHD = 13 years shorter life expectancy on average due to more suicides, accidents, and the like. Stimulants ensure futures and save lives.
Morph@doctormorphh

stimulant treatment in children with ADHD leads to 50% decreased risk of developing substance abuse later in life. these things are not as bad as you think they are. this is peak pharmacology.

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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@IainCampbellPhD Will read the paper later(!), but this rings quite true for me, and could help explain the mild hypomania I had when first starting keto. You aware of any good papers on/attempts to explain (hypo-)mania early in keto?
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Iain Campbell, Ph.D.
Iain Campbell, Ph.D.@IainCampbellPhD·
🚨New discovery: Manic brain caught in full “metabolic overdrive” - hypermetabolism lighting it up like an engine on full throttle. sciencedirect.com/science/articl… 🧠"The pronounced frontotemporal hypermetabolism observed in this case, followed by clinical improvement with antimanic therapy, suggests that such alterations may be state-dependent..." "Within this scenario, the “metabolic overdrive” hypothesis of mania proposed by Campbell and Campbell (2024) offers a mechanistic framework, proposing that mania represented a condition of heightened cerebral energy metabolism facilitated by hyperglycolysis and glutaminolysis..." nature.com/articles/s4138… If you've experienced mania, does this resonate with your experience?
Iain Campbell, Ph.D. tweet media
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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@Gmwetz I saw this a while ago and thought the same. I wonder if the more commonly used alpha-2 agonists (specifically, used in POTS and ADHD) - guanfacine and clonidine - may work to some degree to 'replace' dexmedetomidine as those are ones IACC patients might(!) be able to access.
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Marco
Marco@Gmwetz·
„Researchers identified a two‑drug combination (dexmedetomidine + midodrine), called ACX‑02, that boosts the brain’s glymphatic waste‑clearance system“ I am wondering if this could help ME and LC patients ? Especially for those who wake up unrefreshed or with a strong hangover feeling ?!
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Randeep retweetledi
Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@leo_leo_X Replace “left-wing” with “liberal” and the tweet is much more accurate. Sodha has always been pretty reactionary behind the thin veneer, particularly pro-neoliberalism.
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Leo 𝕏
Leo 𝕏@leo_leo_X·
Oh look, another left-wing feminist turned right-wing grifter. No prizes for guessing what she was on GB News to talk about.
Leo 𝕏 tweet media
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Randeep retweetledi
Natasha Crow
Natasha Crow@Socialist_Crow·
🚨 BREAKING: Starmer left trapped inside No. 10 for several hours after no one told him he needs to open the door to leave. "It's staggering. No one told me the operating procedure for the front door. Unforgivable. I've lost confidence in my team and they will have to resign".
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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@narindertweets Narinder, I know you’re capable of exercising a modicum of independent thought so please do so. This “journalist” has said absolutely nothing about who this source is or how credible they may be. Surely you understand there is no reason for us to find that credible?
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Narinder Kaur
Narinder Kaur@narindertweets·
So, Starmer WAS telling the truth. Can we all calm down now..
Alex Wickham@alexwickham

BREAKING: Sources say Olly Robbins felt bound by the rules of the security vetting process NOT to tell the PM, No10 or the foreign secretary about the concerns raised about Mandelson That means it appears No10 WERE in fact unaware he had issues with his vetting And sources say in fact Mandelson DID NOT simply fail his vetting. Instead issues were raised and the FCDO security team and ultimately Robbins had to make a decision on whether to grant him DV clearance. It was their decision and there was no “overturning,” sources say As @SamCoatesSky reports via former security official Ciaran Martin, Robbins was prohibited from sharing information about what happened with anyone outside the FCDO security team Sources say the point of the vetting process is that it is extremely invasive and people who go through it must be confident they can tell the whole truth and not have highly embarrassing information about their personal lives leak or be spread around colleagues That means the circle of people allowed to know about what happens in each vetting case is very small and the information is highly privileged The decision on whether to approve Mandelson’s clearance, according to the vetting rules, is taken by a small team of FCDO security officials and ultimately Robbins, sources say Under no circumstance is Robbins or that team able to share the details of the vetting case with No10 or anyone else, sources say. Robbins felt he could not share it with any minister or private office, sources say It appears the PM and No10 were unaware of how these rules were perceived by Robbins and FCDO, and think he should have told them. Allies of Robbins think it is unfair he was sacked But crucially it appears right now that Robbins did not tell No10 and they were actually in the dark about all this until Tuesday. What an unbelievable mess

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Randeep
Randeep@randeep_93·
@AndrewJSauer I fractured my heel a few years ago and, like you, received exceptional medical care. Sadly this hasn’t been the case with my chronic conditions - quite the opposite. This is because there are systemic problems generating a lot of the discourse, even putting aside bad doctors.
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Andrew J Sauer MD
Andrew J Sauer MD@AndrewJSauer·
I do not understand all the doctor-hating that seems to fill so much space online. I say that as a physician, yes. And also as someone who has now been on the other side of the bedrail. Of course, there are bad doctors. No profession is exempt from that. But the worst examples often consume all the attention, and in doing so, they can obscure something deeply true: great doctors bring hope, healing, and restoration into people’s lives every single day. I know that differently now. When I was the patient, lying on the ground with a shattered kneecap, staring at imaging that showed my patella in pieces, watching my knee fill with blood, feeling pain that seemed impossible to control, and fearing I might never walk normally again, I was not thinking about abstractions. I was thinking about disability. About loss. About whether life and physical ability, as I knew them, had just changed forever. Then I met the surgeon who reconstructed my knee. I will never forget Archie Heddings. He showed me the images and explained exactly what he would do. Piece by piece, he walked me through how he would reconstruct what had been broken. Screws. Tape. Sutures. Precision. Skill. Calm. He was quietly confident, never overstated. At one point I just bluntly asked, “Doc, can you fix this?” He looked at me, nodded calmly, and said, “Andrew, this is what I do. I fix broken, smashed stuff every day, all day. I will do my job, and you do your job with PT. You will walk, run, ski, and hike again.” That moment brought tears to my eyes. It also brought hope back into my soul. He booked the OR for the next day. Now, just 14 weeks after surgery, I am back seeing patients. During my last week rounding in the hospital, I climbed 160 flights of stairs. I can flex my knee to 130 degrees. I am not all the way back yet, but I am back in motion, back in purpose, and back in my life as a father and giving back to my patients and the world around me as best as I can. My surgeon is not God. But I will say this without hesitation: through his hands, his judgment, his training, and his care, he changed the trajectory of my life. So, when I hear sweeping contempt for doctors, I think now about moments like this. And it is much more personal. Sometimes the people who speak most dismissively about physicians have simply never had their moment yet, the moment when they are scared, hurting, vulnerable, and utterly dependent on someone with the training and courage to do what almost no one else can do. When that moment comes, they may understand. Doctors can do far more than treat disease or repair injury. Sometimes, they give people their lives back. Tell your doctor you appreciate him or her. A simple genuine thank you will really make a difference.
Andrew J Sauer MD tweet media
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