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Alzheimer’s Conspiracy Exposed – One Old Trick You Need to Know

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Cognizine)
Fri Nov 1 17:48:45 2013

Date: Fri, 1 Nov 2013 14:48:47 -0700
Reply-To: <bounce-73800431@mdeprestolga.us>
From: "Cognizine" <Cognizine@mdeprestolga.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu

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Brain Doctors Hate Him...

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as good a symbol as any of what they had 
lost: their humanity. They had lost the capacity to feel for others. 
They could not perceive the suffering of Lane during his death, nor 
of his family members after his death. They had lost that singular, 
defining human quality called empathy.My 20 years as a forensic psychiatrist 
tell me that, in all three cases, it will be found that 
traumatic life events, perhaps coupled with head trauma, drug use and disordered 
brain chemistry from birth, left these young men detached from their own 
thoughts and feelings  and those of others. I would venture that 
on August 16, 2013, more than one of Chris Lanes assailants was, 
for all intents and purposes, psychologically dead. Thats why one of the 
three alleged assailants said they killed because they were boredbecause 
his very disordered mind was like an echo chamber that allowed his 
feelings of being annihilated, dehumanized and dead to boomerang back to 
him as an impulse to kill.Dr. Keith Ablow is a psychiatrist and 
member of the Fox News Medical A-Team. Dr. Ablow can be reached 
at info@keithablow.com.
."But 
Trump's attorney accused Schneiderman of trying to extort campaign contributions 
from the real estate mogul through his investigation of Trump. Attorney 
Michael D. Cohen told The Associated Press on Saturday that Schneiderman's 
lawsuit was filled with falsehoods. Cohen said Trump and his university 
never defrauded anyone.He said Trump University provided nearly 11,000 testimonials 
to Schneiderman from students praising the program and said 98 percent of 
students in a survey termed the program "excellent.""The attorney general 
has been angry because he felt that Mr. Trump and his various 
companies should have done much more for him in terms of fundraising," 
Cohen said. "This entire investigation is politically motivated and it is 
a tremendous waste of taxpayers' money."State Board of Elections records 
show Trump has spent more than $136,000 on New York campaigns since 
2010. He contributed $12,500 to Schneiderman in October 2010, when Schneiderman 
was running for attorney general, records show. An outspoken conservative, 
Trump himself flirted with a presidential run last year."Donald Trump will 
not sit back and be extorted by anyone, including the attorney general," 
Cohen said.The lawsuit says many of the wannabe moguls were unable to 
land even one real estate deal and were left far worse off 
than before the lessons, facing thousands of dollars in debt for the 
seminar program once billed as a top quality university with Trump's "han

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.mdeprestolga.us/2853/172/376/1393/2925.10tt73800431AAF1.php"><H3>Brain Doctors Hate Him...</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> James Dean's romantic co-star in 
"East of Eden" (1955), and had rolls in such films as "Requiem 
for a Heavyweight" (1962), "The Haunting" (1963) and "Reflections in a Golden 
Eye" (1967).Yet Harris' biggest successes and most satisfying moments have 
been on stage. "The theater has been my church," the actress once 
said. "I don't hesitate to say that I found God in the 
theater."The 5-foot-4 Harris, blue-eyed with delicate features and reddish-gold 
hair, made her Broadway debut in 1945 in a short-lived play called 
"It's a Gift." Five years later, at the age of 24, Harris 
was cast as Frankie, a lonely 12-year-old tomboy on the brink of 
adolescence, in "The Member of the Wedding," Carson McCullers' stage version 
of her wistful novel.The critics raved about Harris, with Brooks Atkinson 
in The New York Times calling her performance "extraordinary -- vibrant, 
full of anguish and elation.""That play was really the beginning of everything 
big for me," Harris had said.The actress appeared in the 1952 film 
version, too, with her original Broadway co-stars, Ethel Waters and Brandon 
De Wilde, and received an Academy Award nomination.Harris won her first 
Tony Award for playing Sally Bowles, the confirmed hedonist in "I Am 
a Camera," adapted by John van Druten from Christopher Isherwood's "Berlin 
Stories." The play later became the stage and screen musical "Cabaret." 
In her second Tony-winning performance, Harris played a much more spiritual 
charact
  30 to 40 
mph winds expected to push the fire further north into the park 
Sunday, fire crews were focused on attacking its northern edge to keep 
flames from the communities of Tuolumne City, Twain Harte and Long Barne."The 
wind could push it further up north and northeast into Yosemite and 
closer to those communities and that is a big concern for us," 
said Daniel Berlant, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry 
and Fire Protection.The U.S. Forest Service says about 4,500 structures 
are threatened. Berlant said 23 structures were destroyed, though officials 
have not determined whether they were homes or rural outbuildings.Jessica 
Sanderson said one of her relatives gained access to the family's property 
in Groveland, just 26 miles from the park's entrance, on Saturday and 
was able to confirm their vacation cabin had burned to the ground.The 
family saw firefighters defending the cabin on a TV news report just 
a day earlier."It's just mind-blowing the way the fire swept through and 
destroyed it so quickly," said Sanderson, who's been monitoring the fire 
from her home near Tampa Bay, Fla. "The only thing left standing 
is our barbeque pit."The tourist mecca of Yosemite Valley, the part of 
the park known around the world for such sights as the Half 
Dome and El Capitan rock formations and waterfalls, remained open, clear 
of smoke and free from other signs of the fire that remained 
about 20 miles away.More than 2,600 firefighter
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