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>Health Care Rationing Now Hits Pap Smears?

>Friday, November 20, 2009
Health Care Rationing Now Hits Pap Smears?

https://hummersandcigarettes.blogspot.com/2009/11/health-care-rationing-now-hits-pap.html

MSNBC is reporting a change on the frequency of pap smears for 20-year-olds (emphasis added):

20-somethings can go 2 years between Paps

New guidelines say it’s enough to spot slow-growing cervical cancer

The Associated Press
updated 6:23 a.m. CT, Fri., Nov . 20, 2009

WASHINGTON – Most women in their 20s can have a Pap smear every two years instead of annually, say new guidelines that conclude that’s enough to catch slow-growing cervical cancer.

The change by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists comes amid a completely separate debate over when regular mammograms to detect breast cancer should begin. The timing of the Pap guidelines is coincidence, said ACOG, which began reviewing its recommendations in late 2007 and published the update Friday in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology.

The guidelines also say:

– Routine Paps should start at age 21. Previously, ACOG had urged a first Pap either within three years of first sexual intercourse or at age 21. Women 30 and older should wait three years between Paps once they’ve had three consecutive clear tests. Other national guidelines have long recommended the three-year interval; ACOG had previously backed a two- to three-year wait.

– Women 30 and older should wait three years between Paps once they’ve had three consecutive clear tests. Other national guidelines have long recommended the three-year interval; ACOG had previously backed a two- to three-year wait.

– Women with HIV, other immune-weakening conditions or previous cervical abnormalities may need more frequent screening.

Paps can spot pre-cancerous changes in the cervix in time to prevent invasive cancer, and widespread use has halved cervical cancer rates in the U.S. in recent decades. About 11,270 new cases will be diagnosed this year, and about 4,070 women will die from it, according to American Cancer Society estimates. Half of women diagnosed with cervical cancer have never had a Pap, and another 10 percent haven’t had one in five years.

As someone who personally had a “bad” pap smear in her early 20’s and was fortunate enough to get treatment immediately, I worry about the adoption of this decision possibly leading to more incidences of cervical cancer that could have been prevented. Is this another example of health care rationing coming our way, should ObamaCare get shoved down our throats? Less quality health care for more money?
Posted by KMacGinn at 7:28 AM
Labels: health care, ObamaCare

https://hummersandcigarettes.blogspot.com/2009/11/health-care-rationing-now-hits-pap.html
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>Just What We Need : A New Reason for Business to leave NJ

>A new reason for business to leave NJ
November 17, 2009 • 6:55 am
By Bob Ingle

https://blogs.app.com/politicspatrol/2009/11/17/a-new-reason-for-business-to-leave-nj/

Gov.-elect Chris Christie says after meeting with Treasury officials the state’s projected $8 billion budget deficit could be the low end of the range. He said it was too soon to say where the budget will be cut except that to repeat “everything is on the table.” Christie said finances are like they are not only because of the national economy but also due to eight years of Democrats in charge. He singled out former Gov. Jim McGreevey, saying his budget handling was “obscene”.

Christie also said the state’s rules and regulations governing business are driving companies out of New Jersey and that means a loss of jobs. Here’s an example of what he’s talking about: Assembly Democrat leader Bonnie Watson Coleman is proposing a six-bill package dealing with former prison inmates. One of the laws she wants would make it illegal for employers to discriminate against job applicants on the basis of a criminal record.

I have known people who served their time and went on to lead successful lives. I’ve also interviewed cons who were headed back to the Big House, unable or unwilling to change their ways. Employers should be able to decide for themselves who to hire without the State of New Jersey interfering.

Coleman has been an activist for prisoner rights. Her two sons were sentenced to prison for armed robbery. But her activism has done nothing to clean up the prison system that is a disgrace in New Jersey despite reports that prisoners run their illicit businesses from the inside with the help of cell phones. That is something the state could change were Watson Coleman really into prison reform, thinking more of what’s best for the state than her own personal agenda.

Christie needs to clean house in the Corrections Department. Bring in someone with national experience running prisons to head ours and let him put a competent staff in place. He needn’t bother asking Watson Coleman’s advice.

https://blogs.app.com/politicspatrol/2009/11/17/a-new-reason-for-business-to-leave-nj/

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>Downtown for the Holidays Sponsored by Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce

>Downtown for the Holidays Tree Lighting Celebration, Friday, December 4th No Parking on the street after 4pm…. Streets closed after 5:30pm…. Bus route will be Maple to Franklin to Chestnut across E. Ridgewood Ave. to Prospect and down Spring Ave or vies/versa. FREE PARKING…at all meters YM-YW Oak Street offering parking in there lot after 5:30pm Coldwell Banker – 44 Franklin Ave. – 5:00-8:00pm. Offering pictures with Santa *Ben & Jerry’s – 104 Franklin Ave. – 7:00-10:00pm. Bring your camera; take pictures with Santa, listen to a jazz trio and after the tree lighting have euphoric scoopers. – View Biltmore Tuxedo’s winter wonderland train Village. Kids love to watch. – Backyard Living shows the most beautiful Christmas trees decorated. – Stores will remain open till 9pm. 5:30-6:45pm – ON E. RIDGEWOOD AVENUE…New for 2009/Come early/stay late. -Chestnut St. to Walnut – enjoy seven different (7) musical acts performing holiday songs, along with two stage productions. -Stroll the E. Ridgewood Ave. while shopping and try some hot cider and sweet treats being served free to all by Care One helpers. – Visit old friends and meet new ones while enjoying Ridgewood. 6:50pm-9:00pm Enter Memorial Park at Van Neste Square – – The festivities will now turn toward the stage in the Park o right next to the Holiday tree. – To start the Tree Lighting count down… The Ridgewood Singers will be on stage with Holiday songs Color Guard with Flag Salute Arthur Murray Holiday Dance Porch Light Production From the Top Studio Art of Motion Official Greeting from President of Chamber of Commerce Tom Hillmann will light the Christmas tree Entertainers back on stage for audience participation with Holiday singing Music will continue on the stage and E. Ridgewood Avenue. *Visit the restaurants for dinner, dessert and spirit of the Holiday. For information Chamber website: www.experienceridgewood.com or Call 201-445-2600; visit new Chamber office 27 Chestnut Street, 1st Fl

FREE PARKING IN RIDGEWOOD
All Friday’s and Saturday’s in December
the Village Council has agreed to provide FREE PARKING* in Ridgewood for ALL Friday’s and Saturday’s in December! Come Shop and Dine in Ridgewood this Holiday Season! * Does NOT include the Park and Ride Lot on Rt. 17)

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>Hackers Claim Collusion in "Climate Change " data

>Climate sceptics claim leaked emails are evidence of collusion among scientists Hundreds of emails and documents exchanged between world’s leading climate scientists stolen by hackers and leaked online.

https://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/nov/20/climate-sceptics-hackers-leaked-emails

Hundreds of private emails and documents allegedly exchanged between some of the world’s leading climate scientists during the past 13 years have been stolen by hackers and leaked online, it emerged today.

The computer files were apparently accessed earlier this week from servers at the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit, a world-renowned centre focused on the study of natural and anthropogenic climate change.

Climate change sceptics who have studied the emails allege they provide “smoking gun” evidence that some of the climatologists colluded in manipulating data to support the widely held view that climate change is real, and is being largely caused by the actions of mankind.

The veracity of the emails has not been confirmed and the scientists involved have declined to comment on the story, which broke on a blog called The Air Vent.

The files, which in total amount to 160MbB of data, were first uploaded on to a Russian server, before being widely mirrored across the internet. The emails were accompanied by the anonymous statement: “We feel that climate science is, in the current situation, too important to be kept under wraps. We hereby release a random selection of correspondence, code and documents. Hopefully it will give some insight into the science and the people behind it.”

A spokesperson for the University of East Anglia said: “We are aware that information from a server used for research information in one area of the university has been made available on public websites. Because of the volume of this information we cannot currently confirm that all this material is genuine. This information has been obtained and published without our permission and we took immediate action to remove the server in question from operation. We are undertaking a thorough internal investigation and have involved the police in this inquiry.”

In one email, dated November 1999, one scientist wrote: “I’ve just completed Mike’s Nature [the science journal] trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (ie, from 1981 onwards) and from 1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline.”

This sentence, in particular, has been leapt upon by sceptics as evidence of manipulating data, but the credibility of the email has not been verified. The scientists who allegedly sent it declined to comment on the email.

“It does look incriminating on the surface, but there are lots of single sentences that taken out of context can appear incriminating,” said Bob Ward, director of policy and communications at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics. “You can’t tell what they are talking about. Scientists say ‘trick’ not just to mean deception. They mean it as a clever way of doing something – a short cut can be a trick.”

In another alleged email, one of the scientists apparently refers to the death of a prominent climate change sceptic by saying “in an odd way this is cheering news”.

Ward said that if the emails are correct, they “might highlight behaviour that those individuals might not like to have made public.” But he added, “Let’s separate out [the climate scientists] reacting badly to the personal attacks [from sceptics] to the idea that their work has been carried out in an inappropriate way.”

The revelations did not alter the huge body of evidence from a variety of scientific fields that supports the conclusion that modern climate change is caused largely by human activity, Ward said. The emails refer largely to work on so-called paleoclimate data – reconstructing past climate scenarios using data such as ice cores and tree rings. “Climate change is based on several lines of evidence, not just paleoclimate data,” he said. “At the heart of this is basic physics.”

Ward pointed out that the individuals named in the alleged emails had numerous publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals. “It would be very surprising if after all this time, suddenly they were found out doing something as wrong as that.”

Professor Michael Mann, director of Pennsylvania State University’s Earth System Science Centre and a regular contributor to the popular climate science blog Real Climate, features in many of the email exchanges. He said: “I’m not going to comment on the content of illegally obtained emails. However, I will say this: both their theft and, I believe, any reproduction of the emails that were obtained on public websites, etc, constitutes serious criminal activity. I’m hoping the perpetrators and their facilitators will be tracked down and prosecuted to the fullest extent the law allows.”

When the Guardian asked Prof Phil Jones at UEA, who features in the correspondence, to verify whether the emails were genuine, he refused to comment.

The alleged emails illustrate the persistent pressure some climatologists have been under from sceptics in recent years. There have been repeated calls, including Freedom of Information requests, for the Climate Research Unit to make public a confidential dataset of land and sea temperature recordings that is “value added” by the unit before being used by the Met Office. The emails show the frustration some climatologists have had at having to operate under such intense, often politically motivated, scrutiny.

Prof Bob Watson, the chief scientific advisor at the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said, “Evidence for climate change is irrefutable. The world’s leading scientists overwhelmingly agree what we’re experiencing is not down to natural variation.”

“With this overwhelming scientific body of evidence failing to take action to tackle climate change would be the wrong thing to do – the impacts here in Britain and across the world will worsen and the economic consequences will be catastrophic.”

A spokesman for Greenpeace said: “If you looked through any organisation’s emails from the last 10 years you’d find something that would raise a few eyebrows. Contrary to what the sceptics claim, the Royal Society, the US National Academy of Sciences, Nasa and the world’s leading atmospheric scientists are not the agents of a clandestine global movement against the truth. This stuff might drive some web traffic, but so does David Icke.”

https://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/nov/20/climate-sceptics-hackers-leaked-emails

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>Will Valley Hospital Also Cleanup its Board of Trustees?

>Hackensack University Medical Center’s board recently adopted policies designed to clean up conflicts of interest amongst its Board members. The new policies are designed to prevent contractors and businesspeople that could potentially do business with the hospital from sitting on the HUMC Board.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/Hospital_tightens_its_ethics_rules.html

A reader asks, “Will Valley Hospital’s Board of Trustees do the same?” Especially when it is realized that the current President of the Valley Hospital Board of Trustees is also the President of Becton, Dickinson & Company; a medical supplies and devices company that could stand to benefit substantially if the “Renewal” goes ahead.

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>$48 million dollar Referendum : The teachers have enjoyed an unjustified cost of living increase during that time.

>Agree about the fields. Maybe a solution for the fields is to finance over 10 years, instead of 25, even if it means a slightly higher rate.

Unfortunately the capital needs fund is tougher. The NJEA has to be reigned in so that our annual operating expenses don’t hit the 4% cap every year before we can ask voters to set aside a few $million every year for such a fund. Of course, that assumes voters would allow such a fund…that is a whole different question. The chronic complainers say we should have one. But, I guarantee if you ask them to approve a budget that sets aside money for future (unspecified) use, the same people with criticize the BOE for wanting a “slush fund”.

The NJEA has secured automatic annual increases for teachers, despite virtually no inflation in the economy for years. In fact, the last 2 years have seen DEFLATION. The teachers have enjoyed an unjustified cost of living increase during that time. Maybe we should have a “clawback” policy, like we are demanding on Wall Street.

How about getting the NJEA to agree to an immediate freeze on ALL salaries and benefits for the first 2 years of thenext contract period? Then, after that, permanently agree to a rolling 5-year average CPI calculation over the preceding 5 years to determine each year’s allowable increase. This would make the cost of living increases fairer and more reasonable to taxpayers

I am no expert. But, my guess is that, in the first 2 years, we could take $7-8mm out of our annual budget. Beyond that the budgets would be approximately $2-3mm less per year, on average. If we wanted to, we could elect to keep that money in the budget and set it aside for a capital fund.

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>Noise. It’s driving me crazy. Really.

>Dear Mayor,
This is just a short letter about something that has bothered me ever since I have moved out of NYC and into Ridgewood. Why are leaf blowers, the companies, the personal ones ( I know about all the rules), allowed to destroy any peace I may achieve by living here, when there is NO Organization regarding this bothersome noise matter. I have to say, it really does bother me. I pay, (I’m divorced, 26k) in taxes all year, and the only thing that I would ask for would be some PEACE AND QUIET. I know it sounds silly, but, I mean it. These awful lawn companies need someone to organize their chaos—-big trucks parked wherever they want, noise and dust, and i go outside to play with my five year old, but, HOLD ON, another leaf blowing co is across the street……It seems so simple, and, I honestly wonder if anyone else is bothered by their brashness regarding uncontrolled parking and their NOISE. I am quite literate Sp! 🙂 and have read all the rules, but, oh, low and behold, if I want to spend some time outside on a Sunday, there go all of my Neighbors with their awful selfish noisy leaf blowers. Please Help Me, I need peace in the period of unsteadiness, Ezra Sesto Ferguson, tax payer and Non complainer and member of the Village of Ridgewood for 15 years.

Please respond to this letter, for it is important to me, Ezra.

Ezra Ferguson

www.ezrasesto.com

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>Local N.J. officials at annual conference focus on spending, not saving, taxpayer money

>By John Reitmeyer/Statehouse Bureau
November 18, 2009, 7:38PM

Much of the focus for New Jersey’s local government leaders at their annual conference in Atlantic City this week is on spending money — despite property tax bills that are at an all-time high.

Attendees are greeted inside the convention center by a sea of booths advertising products and services that are being offered by vendors who feed off taxpayer-funded contracts.

New Jersey Gov. Jon S. Corzine speaks as Herbert Stiles, mayor of Elmer, N.J., and president of the New Jersey League of Municipalities, looks on during the league’s annual conference in Atlantic City in this 2006 photo.

And the agenda for the convention, organized every year by the New Jersey League of Municipalities, is filled with workshops that teach local officials different ways to use their budgets for everything from crime prevention and green energy to transportation infrastructure and “emerging video technologies.”

“You see a lot of ways to spend money,” Senate Majority Leader Steve Sweeney (D-Gloucester) said. “What you don’t see is how to regionalize and save money.”
About 20,000 people are expected to attend this year’s event, which runs through Friday. Many are billing their communities for meals and lodging, and most are in a public pension system that is teetering toward collapse, one that was the subject of a conference session held on Tuesday.

Other seminars are geared toward better collecting tax money. One is scheduled for Thursday afternoon that will offer ways local officials can fight their residents’ property tax assessment appeals in an effort to maintain their current budgets.
Another workshop scheduled for Friday will teach ways to use digital technology to improve tax maps.

The agenda includes a number of workshops focused on budget savings, including several discussions on consolidation and shared services, two themes that were often heard during the recent gubernatorial election, which saw voters side with Republican Chris Christie, the candidate who most aggressively called for tax cuts and reduced corruption.
Others seminars talk about ways to find savings through auditing, energy conservation and the use of new technologies.

“I think everyone here is focused on how we’re going to have more efficient government,” said Senate Minority Leader Tom Kean Jr. (R-Union). “They’re the ones people are stopping in the grocery stores.” But only a handful of workshops will directly take on local property tax bills that are at an all-time statewide average high of $7,045.

Kean and Sweeney participated in a well-attended legislative forum this afternoon, where state mandates and other state policies were blamed.
The lawmakers were challenged by Tenafly Mayor Peter Rustin to do a better job of checking state spending.

“The government can’t be all things to everybody,” he said.
But when asked what he would cut, Rustin replied: “My budget isn’t as bad as yours.”
Sweeney said there has to be a focus on sharing services and overcoming a tradition of home rule that is celebrated at the conference.

“It’s not always the answer, but a lot of times it is the answer,” said Sweeney, who also serves on the Freeholder Board in Gloucester County.
The conference agenda, meanwhile, is offering only a few sessions on ethics and pay-to-play — the practice of financing elections with contributions from regular government contractors — despite recent high-profile corruption busts that resulted in the arrests of several officials.

One of those local representatives in trouble, former Secaucus Mayor Dennis Elwell, was indicted on corruption charges earlier this week.
Ingrid Reed, director of Rutgers’ New Jersey project and the chair of the state’s Local Government Ethics Task Force, led a session today she said served as an introduction.

Citizens are demanding more transparency from their local governments when it comes to budgeting, competitive bidding of government work and conflicts of interest, she said.

“I think that’s really what people are concerned about,” Reed said. “It’s not just bribery that they’re dealing with, it’s relationships that are built up over time that are not examined.”

© 2009 NJ.com. All rights reserved.

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>Are there compliance regulations in state laws governing with regard to cost of living adjustments with the active employeed NJ teachers?

>Are there compliance regulations in state laws governing with regard to cost of living adjustments with the active employeed NJ teachers? How is it the teachers continue to receive yearly increases when there is No increase in the Consumer Price Index for 12 months from Aug.2008 to Aug.2009, which other programs must comply to. Their premium health plans insurance benefits (not HMO’s) are also expected to increase by 28% for 2010.

Both programs, Social Security benefits and NJ Division Pensions and Benefits in compliance,face a freeze on benefits for 2010, there will be no COLA for 2010

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>Graydon Pool: Don’t squander a Ridgewood asset

>The Record: Letters, Nov. 17, 2009
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
The Record

Don’t squander a Ridgewood asset

https://www.northjersey.com/news/opinions/70254317.html

For the past many months (seems like years) I have been reading about the possible closing of Graydon Pool and the building of a different complex on the grounds.

I grew up and lived in Ridgewood until the day I married in 1954. Every day of the summers, since 1932, my brothers and I were at Graydon, almost from sunup until sundown.

When I was 15, Police Chief John Orr asked if I would like to become a swimming instructor. He was representing the Red Cross, which was going to start offering classes for the children of both Ridgewood and Glen Rock. I became one of the first of two women lifeguards as well as an instructor at Graydon, joining many others, mostly teenagers like myself. I look back on this period as one of the best times in my life.

At the end of all the swimming classes in July, Chief Orr would have a great “Fun Day” for all the kids. We had races, some clown divers (my brother Walter being one of them) and, at the end, a big treat: watermelon. It was a great show and a fun time for all.

I was a lifeguard for three years and taught swimming and lifesaving classes for nine years, until I was married and moved out of town. During this period of time, half of the pool near Maple Avenue was open for kids and their boating fun. The rest was split for beginner and experienced swimmers. In each area there was a raft for everyone to enjoy. Those summer days at Graydon were much fun for my brothers and me. We have so many good memories.

Ridgewood does not need a new pool. Graydon is the most wonderful place to enjoy all summer and to make wonderful memories to last forever. I suggest that the powers that be think seriously before making any major changes. I am sure that the real estate agents will agree that Graydon Park is a great selling point for Ridgewood.

Phyllis Andersen Bieger

https://www.northjersey.com/news/opinions/70254317.html

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>New Jersey fiscal crisis : a shortfall of about $8 billion

>
Christie’s budget group says NJ finances worse than believed; making requests of Corzine

By: GEOFF MULVIHILL
Associated Press

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/economy/ap/70275372.html

11/17/09 10:05 AM EST TRENTON, N.J. — New Jersey’s governor-elect said Monday he’ll be taking office of a state with an even worse financial crisis than previously believed, and he wants the current governor to tighten the state’s purse strings in the meantime.

The budget and finance task force leaders on Chris Christie’s transition team met for three hours Monday with the top budget officials in the current administration of Gov. Jon Corzine to learn details of the state’s budget situation.

The state Office of Legislative Services has estimated that if department budgets continue to grow at their current rate, there could be a shortfall of about $8 billion in the state budget that takes effect July 1.

Task force co-chairman Robert Grady, a former aide to President George H.W. Bush and Gov. Tom Kean, said he now believes the gap will be larger than that — even accounting for a start of an economic recovery that results in rising sales and income tax revenue. Grady did not have an estimate of how much he thought the shortfall would grow.

“That’s a big number when you consider a budget of $28.5 billion,” Grady said.

Christie said he was ready to deal with the problem, nevertheless.

“People voted for me because they wanted spending to be less,” Christie said in a briefing at his transition office down the street from the State House. “They wanted government to be smaller.”

Almost immediately after the meeting, the budget group announced that Christie, a Republican, would send a letter to Corzine, the Democrat he defeated the Nov. 3 election, requesting he nix various spending increases until Christie takes office in January.

The governor should not approve hiring or paid appointments, they said.

Corzine’s office says he is keeping a close watch on the budget. Since the election, he’s asked government officials to find cuts of $400 million to help balance the current year’s budget.

“He will take all necessary actions to ensure that the budget he turns over to the governor-elect is balanced,” said Corzine spokesman Robert Corrales. “And he will review the details of the letter and take appropriate action with this fiscal principle in mind.”

Throughout the campaign, Christie said the state budget was in bad shape and that he would fix it for the future by cutting spending and taxes.

But he wouldn’t lay out many specific cuts or timelines, other than to say that most of the tax cuts he wants to make would not come next year.

On Monday, he said his budget task force would roll out recommendations for cuts in coming weeks.

Leaders of the task force also said they would meet with Moody’s Investors Service, which earlier this year lowered the state’s outlook — a step that could lead toward lowering the state’s bond rating, which would make it harder to borrow money.

Christie reiterated that he would not raise taxes to balance the budget.

“I absolutely believe that we can have New Jersey back to fiscal health by the end of our first term,” Christie said. “There’s going to need to be a lot of hard things that are going to need to be done to do that.”

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/economy/ap/70275372.html

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$48 million dollar Referendum : I am currently watching the BoE meeting.

>I am currently watching the BoE meeting. The referendum came up. They discussed it for a total of FIVE minutes. Brogan said to come to the next public forum at GW on 11/30 to talk about the referendum. Goodman wanted to correct the record in TRW that BF would not be turfed. Hutton said if you want to know why there should be turf, just walk across Stevens field. Brogan(?) said (for a half-minute) that the referendum is more than just fields – and then the talk turned to turf again. Vallerini said that there is no way to change the referendum. (Then, what’s the point to discuss anything, as Brogan said at the opening, other than to push for a ‘yes’ vote)

It seems to me that the BoE wants you to come to the forums or BoE meetings so they can regulate/control the message. Some of the detractors of this blog seem afraid that we may develop an opinion without the proper spin applied by the BoE.

At least, I didn’t hear ‘lets do it for the kids’ once…yet!

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>“Don’t let ten years of work get destroyed in ten minutes”

>hotkey
“Don’t let ten years of work get destroyed in ten minutes”
According to Gerter:

“One out of every four computers will suffer data loss”.
“70% of the companies that lost their data went out of business within a year”.

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With the ITSguard Backup Manager you will be able to recover backed up data from any previous point-in-time within a couple of minutes.

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