I am looking for a Dr. who doesn’t put all into a computer system. I do not want to be tracked.
They are out there. Right now, we call them “concierge doctors”.
Bypass the insurance requirements. Doctor suspects X and orders tests that are appropriate. Forget the tests that the insurance company “requires” which are absolute bullshit waste of time, money and resources.
It’s not a matter of bright. It’s the fact that she was young and trusted the white coats. She’s suffered for it and so have her children. Pray to God this doesn’t happen to anyone again. I have my doubts.
The thing I always found fascinating — and terrifying — about the ascent engine is that it HAD to work. If the astronauts couldn’t get it to fire, they were dead. There was no other way off the moon, no backup engine, and no hope of rescue through any other means. The ascent engine was designed to be as simple and reliable as possible. It used hypergolic propellants (a fuel and oxidizer that ignite on contact) so no ignition system was necessary. It didn’t even need pumps — they used pressurized gas to push the propellants into the engine. Thankfully it worked perfectly every time.
So they were using untested systems for the first time ever and it worked perfectly - does that sound feasible to you??
IME everything is tested by NASA before deployment
Remember Werner Braun had a lot to do with the moon stuff. He brought with him a wealth of experience concerning flying apparatus which used weird fuel. The thrusters on the Space Shuttle used hydrazine … which was first used as a propellant on the Me 162.
Not only do people undergo treatments for ailments they do not have, but many (250,000 per year in the USA) DIE from medical errors being made by doctors, nurses, pharmacists…
The Apollo program used the Saturn V rocket, the most powerful rocket made to date.
Saturn V
The Saturn V remains the tallest and most powerful rocket system ever and the only one to have helped carry humans beyond Earth’s orbit. NASA used the platform in the Apollo 11 through 17 missions. The rocket comes in at a staggering 363 feet tall with a liftoff thrust of 7.6 million pounds.Feb 12, 2018
That does not mean I do blindly trust doctors, but I am more inclined to trust in a life and death situation. I have been there and doctors saved my life. However, my younger one had chronic eczema as a baby and I didn’t trust the doctors. I refused to cover her in hydrocortisone, and she never touched the stuff. They said it cannot be cured, only managed. Bullshit, my younger one is living proof that we cured eczema. I have documented how I did it and some may remember I posted it back at FF. Long story, but not only does she not have eczema today and hasn’t had since she was three, she does not have a single allergy either. By design, not luck.
This is A-level physics. The particles in the atmosphere are small and scatter wavelengths that are comparable to their size. The blue light, being of shorter wavelength, is more easily scattered. So during the day when you look up you see the scattered blue light and no stars. This ‘filter’ is the same thing that makes sunsets ‘red’, it is because the sunlight has travelled through more ‘air’ than during the day and has had an amount of the blue light removed.
That has been misrepresented. It should say “If you were standing on the Moon, for instance, where there is no atmosphere, you would be able to see the stars both day and night”.
You would have to turn away from the Sun because your vision system would respond to protect itself thereby preventing you (probably) from seeing anything except the Sun, as it would on Earth.
You research on the internet. You get a second opinion, Then you get a third opinion. I’ve challenged doctors with some knowledge on the subject and they felt threatened that their pat answers might not protect them in a malpractice suit. They thought very seriously what they said after that. So they’ll hate you cause you’re keeping them over the 20 minutes they want to spend with each patient. They took a Hippocratic oath and first rule is: Do No Harm.
Be prepared and be informed. You’re talking about your life.
Whilst standing at the noisy end of the Saturn 5 laid out at the Kennedy Space centre in Houston, I did a little sum (brains were working better then). Fully fuelled the Saturn-5 does not have enough thrust to get off the ground, it has to burn something like 15 tons of fuel before the thrust exceeds the gravity forces. That time does not go to waste, whilst burning the fuel the engines are being run up to full power and the control system is checked to make sure it is functioning before they let the rocket go. That was where I discovered that the ‘wobble’ which is visible on the exhaust skirts is actually deliberate and a part of the system test.
So this week, whilst you might be watching any of the launch footage from the day, the reason that the Saturn-5 takes so long to get above the derrick which was securing it is because it barely has enough thrust to get off the ground. This is a temporary situation. About a minute or two into the flight you can hear the flight engineers call for ‘throttle back’. This is because a large amount of fuel has been burnt and the craft is a lot lighter, the engines are still churning out 7.6 million pounds of thrust and the spacecraft infrastructure cannot handle the apparent weight increase due to the much increased acceleration. So the motors are throttled back, and this is achieved by cutting the central engine and the rocket becomes a Saturn-4 !