Saturday, December 31, 2022

Gamecock Beamer Ball Gator Bowl Interview

 




We’ve been following the Gamecocks for 40 years through many QBs and Head coaches. Beamer Ball is exceptional and the absolute best identity we’ve had over all these years. It’s much more than having a winning season it’s about having a winning attitude. You are an absolute gentleman and role model to be admired. You called yourself out on that penalty and that simply proves your impeccable integrity. All the best to you and the Gamecock family for many many years to come.

26

Jim Carlen

1975–1981

82

45

36

1

0.555

0

3

0

0

27

Richard Bell

1982

11

4

7

0

0.364

0

0

0

0

28

Joe Morrison

1983–1988

69

39

28

2

0.580

0

3

0

0

Walter Camp Coach of the Year Award(1984)[10]

29

Sparky Woods

1989–1993

55

25

27

3

0.482

5

11

0

0.313

0

0

0

0

0

0

30

Brad Scott

1994–1998

56

23

32

1

0.420

13

26

1

0.338

1

0

0

0

0

0

31

Lou Holtz

1999–2004

70

33

37

0.471

19

29

0.396

2

0

0

0

0

SEC Coach of the Year(2000)[11]

32

Steve Spurrier

2005–2015

135

86

49

0.637

44

40

0.524

4

4

1

0

0

SEC Coach of the Year(2005, 2010)[11]

AP SEC Coach of the Year(2005)[11]

33

Shawn Elliott

2015

6

1

5

0.167

1

3

0.250

0

0

0

0

0

34

Will Muschamp[12]

2016–2020

58

28

30

0.431

17

22

0.436

1

2

0

0

0

35

Mike Bobo[13]

2020

3

0

3

0.000

0

3

0.000

0

0

0

0

0

36

Shane Beamer

2021–present

13
















Saturday, December 24, 2022

 HEALTH

HOW MANY REPUBLICANS DIED BECAUSE THE GOP TURNED AGAINST VACCINES?

Party leaders are unquestionably complicit in the premature deaths of their own supporters.

DECEMBER 23, 2022

No country has a perfect COVID vaccination rate, even this far into the pandemic, but America’s record is particularly dismal. About a third of Americans—more than a hundred million people—have yet to get their initial shots. You can find anti-vaxxers in every corner of the country. But by far the single group of adults most likely to be unvaccinated is Republicans: 37 percent of Republicans are still unvaccinated or only partially vaccinated, compared with 9 percent of Democrats. Fourteen of the 15 states with the lowest vaccination rates voted for Donald Trump in 2020. (The other is Georgia.)

We know that unvaccinated Americans are more likely to be Republican, that Republicans in positions of power led the movement against COVID vaccination, and that hundreds of thousands of unvaccinated Americans have died preventable deaths from the disease. The Republican Party is unquestionably complicit in the premature deaths of many of its own supporters, a phenomenon that may be without precedent in the history of both American democracy and virology.

Obviously, nothing about being a Republican makes someone inherently anti-vaccine. Many Republicans—in fact, most of them—have gotten their first two shots. But the wildly disproportionate presence of Republicans among the unvaccinated reveals an ugly and counterintuitive aspect of the GOP campaign against vaccination: At every turn, top figures in the party have directly endangered their own constituents. Trump disparaged vaccines while president, even after orchestrating Operation Warp Speed. Other politicians, such as Texas Governor Greg Abbott, made all COVID-vaccine mandates illegal in their state. More recently, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis called for a grand jury to investigate the safety of COVID vaccines. The right-wing media have leaned even harder into vaccine skepticism. On his prime-time Fox News show, Tucker Carlson has regularly questioned the safety of vaccines, inviting guests who have called for the shots to be “withdrawn from the market.”

Breaking down the cost of vaccine hesitancy would be simple if we could draw a causal relationship between Republican leaders’ anti-vaccine messaging and the adoption of those ideas by Americans, and then from those ideas to deaths due to non-vaccination. Unfortunately, we don’t have the data to do so. Individual vaccine skepticism cannot be traced back to a single source, and even if it could, we don’t know exactly who is unvaccinated and what their political affiliations are.

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What we do have is a patchwork of estimations and correlations that, taken together, paint a blurry but nevertheless grim picture of how Republican leaders spread the vaccine hesitancy that has killed so many people. We know that as of April 2022, about 318,000 people had died from COVID because they were unvaccinated, according to research from Brown University. And the close association between Republican vaccine hesitancy and higher death rates has been documented. One study estimated that by the fall of 2021, vaccine uptake accounted for 10 percent of the total difference between Republican and Democratic deaths. But that estimate has changed—and even likely grown—over time.

Partisanship affected outcomes in the pandemic even before we had vaccines. A recent study found that from October 2020 to February 2021, the death rate in Republican-leaning counties was up to three times higher than that of Democratic-leaning counties, likely because of differences in masking and social distancing. Even when vaccines came around, these differences continued, Mauricio Santillana, an epidemiology expert at Northeastern University and a co-author of the study, told me. Follow-up research published in Lancet Regional Health Americas in October looked at deaths from April 2021 to March 2022 and found a 26 percent higher death rate in areas where voters leaned Republican. “There are subsequent and very serious [partisan] patterns with the Delta and Omicron waves, some of which can be explained by vaccination,” Bill Hanage, a co-author of the paper and an epidemiologist at Harvard, told me in an email.

But to understand why Republicans have died at higher rates, you can’t look at vaccine status alone. Congressional districts controlled by a trifecta of Republican leaders—state governor, Senate, and House—had an 11 percent higher death rate, according to the Lancet study. A likely explanation, the authors write, could be that in the post-vaccine era, those leaders chose policies and conveyed public-health messages that made their constituents more likely to die. Although we still can’t say these decisions led to higher death rates, the association alone is jarring.

One of the most compelling studies comes from researchers at Yale, who published their findings as a working paper in November. They link political party and excess-death rate—the percent increase in deaths above pre-COVID levels—among those registered as either Democrats or Republicans, providing a more granular view. They chose to analyze data from Florida and Ohio from before and after vaccines were available. Looking at the period before the vaccine,  researchers found a 1.6 percentage-point difference in excess death rate among Republicans and Democrats, with a higher rate among Republicans. But after vaccines became available, that gap widened dramatically to 10.4 percentage points, again with a higher Republican excess death rate. “When we compare individuals who are of the same age, who live in the same county in the same month of the pandemic, there are differences correlated with your political-party affiliation that emerge after vaccines are available,” Jacob Wallace, an assistant professor of public health at Yale who co-authored the paper, told me. “That’s a statement we can confidently make based on the study and we couldn’t before.”

Even with this new research, it is difficult to determine just how many people died as a result of their political views. In the “excess death” study, researchers dealt only with rates of excess death, not actual death-toll numbers. Overall, excess deaths represent a small share of deaths. “On the scale of national registration for both parties,” Wallace said, “we’re talking about relatively small numbers and differences in deaths” when you look at excess death rates alone.

The absolute number of Republican deaths is less important than the fact that they happened needlessly. Vaccines could have saved lives. And yet, the party that describes itself as pro-life campaigned against them. Democrats are not without fault, though. The Biden administration’s COVID blunders are no doubt to blame for some of the nation’s deaths. But on the whole, Democratic leaders have mostly not promoted ideas or enforced policies around COVID that actively chip away at life expectancy. It is a tragedy that the Republican push against basic lifesaving science has cut lives short and continues to do so. The partisan divide in COVID deaths, Hanage said, is just “another example of how the partisan politics of the U.S. has poisoned the well of public health.”

What’s most concerning about all of this is that partisan disparities in death rates were also apparent before COVID. People living in Republican jurisdictions have been at a health disadvantage for more than 20 years. From 2001 to 2019, the death rate in Democratic counties decreased by 22 percent, according to a recent study; in Republican counties, it declined by only 11 percent. In the same time period, the political gap in death rates increased sixfold.

Health outcomes have been diverging at the state level since the ’90s, Steven Woolf, an epidemiologist at Virginia Commonwealth University, told me. Woolf’s work suggests that over the decades, state policy decisions on health issues such as Medicaid, gun legislation, tobacco taxes, and, indeed, vaccines have likely had a stronger impact on state health trajectories than other factors. COVID’s high Republican death rates are not an isolated phenomenon but a continuation of this trend. As Republican-led states pushed back on lockdowns, the impact on population death rates was observed within weeks, Woolf said.

If the issue is indeed systemic, that doesn’t bode well for the future. Other factors could explain the higher death rate in Republican-leaning places—more poverty, less education, worse socioeconomic conditions—, though Woolf said isn’t convinced that those factors aren’t related to bad state health policy too. In any case, the long-term decline of health in red states indicates that there is an ongoing problem at a high level in Republican-led places, and that something has gone awry. “If you happen to live in certain states, your chances for living a long life are going to be much higher than if you’re an American living in a different state,” Woolf said.

Unfortunately, this trend shows no signs of breaking. The anti-science messaging that fuels such a divide is popular with Republican leaders because it plays so well with their constituents. Far-right crowds cheer for missed vaccine targets and jokes about executing scientific leaders. In an environment where partisanship trumps all—including trying to save people’s lives—such messaging is both politically effective and morally abhorrent. The data, however imperfect, demand a reckoning with the consequences of such a strategy not only during the pandemic but over the past few decades, and in the years to come. But to acknowledge how many Republicans didn’t have to die would mean giving credence to scientific and medical expertise. So long as America remains locked in a poisonous partisan battle in which science is wrongly dismissed as being associated with the left, the death toll will only rise.

Yasmin Tayag is a staff writer at The Atlantic.

FROM THE ATLANTIC

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Thursday, December 22, 2022

Dolly Parton supports Vanderbilt COVID vaccine development


 People like Dolly and Kelly and the good doctor are the people who make America Great. The dedication, hard work, blood, sweat and actual tears of the kind doctor are inspirational and heart rendering. Thank God for people like you who step up to do the real work that needs to be done. Who work without spite or blame to address the problems we face head on and to find a solution, offer us a cure. Thank you, thank you thank you to Kelly for sharing her beautiful voice but going above and beyond to shine a light on good people who care and thank you to Dolly Parton for using your fame and fortune to do the same. I have to use your own words to say what so many of us feel, that we will always Love You.


I cannot imagine the pain of your loss and thankful that you took the time to acknowledge the efforts of Kelly, Dolly and the doctors and nurses who worked so hard to save her. I hope you are able to find peace in knowing that you were there for your wife with all the love that first brought you together. Thank you for sharing your story that I might never take for granted the gift of life and love that I’ve been given.

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

My Grown up Christmas List


 My Grown up Christmas List


Do you remember me

I sat upon your knee

I wrote to you with childhood fantasies

Well I'm all grown up now

And still need help somehow

I'm not a child but my heart still can dream

So here's my lifelong wish

My grown up Christmas list

Not for myself but for a world in need

No more lives torn apart

That wars would never start

And time would heal all hearts

And everyone would have a friend

And right would always win

And love would never end, no

This is my grown up Christmas list

As children we believe

The grandest sight to see

Was something lovely wrapped beneath the tree

But Heaven only knows

That packages and bows

Can never heal a hurting human soul

No more lives torn apart

That wars would never start

And time would heal all hearts

And everyone would have a friend

And right would always win

And love would never end, no

This is my grown up Christmas list

What is this illusion called the innocence of youth

Maybe only in our blind belief can we ever find the truth

No more lives torn apart

That wars would never start

And time would heal all hearts

And everyone would have a friend

And right would always win

And love would never end, no

This is my grown up Christmas list

This is my only lifelong wish

This is my grown up Christmas list

Source: LyricFind

Songwriters: David Foster / Linda Thompson

Friday, December 16, 2022

 All I want for Christmas 

Is to get a good nights sleep

For Trump and Trumpsters and Trumpism to fade into the light of dawn like a bad dream

That as a Christian nation we follow the teachings and the examples set by Jesus Christ

To love thy neighbor as thyself, to love one another and to Do Unto others as we would have them do unto ourselves. 

To follow the Golden Rule 

For the  atrocities of the war in Ukraine to end and Putin is exiled humiliated and punished for his war crimes and crimes against humanity

That people seeking refuge in America at our borders find safety and shelter in their homeland and immigration to America be based on desire more than fear

That the people of America unite in a common cause to advance the promise of science and technology in health and energy and that fossil fuels join the history of their ancestors as we transition to solar, wind and other green energies


Thursday, December 15, 2022


 Love your reviews. Smooth and easy to listen to with no big production intros or loud distracting music. I’m on the verge of buying a Bolt. Almost ready to buy without even a test drive because demand is so high. I want to replace my ICE Honda Fit. The Fit has been fine but I just want to go EV to do all my driving around town. I also want to see how it feels compared to our hybrid CRV especially on the highway. Your testimony as well as many others tell me that this is going to be a comfortable, reliable, efficient and Fun car to drive. I want the EUV Premier with a good sound system and adjustable driver seat that I hope will accommodate my 5’ petite (and beautiful) wife but I think we can live without Super Cruise. I do want all safety features including front and rear crash mitigation braking. Many thanks again for doing very helpful videos.


Hello again. Another great video. I’m in line to get a Bolt 2023 Premier. I’m debating leasing vs buying. I’ve been leasing Hondas for years and trading them in for a new Honda every 3 years. I’m thinking of buying the Bolt vs leasing depending on incentives or fees/interest attached. But it sounds like your experience has been very good for over 30k so if the car is dependable and durable it might be well worth a buy.

Hey, thanks again! I think the lease vs. buy decision with a Bolt comes down to whether you think it will still meet your needs in 3-5 years time. The only strikes against the model at this point would be size and fast charging... Obviously it's not getting any bigger, but there will be vastly superior charge capabilities on newer models at this price point by 2025. So where the Bolt charges at 55kW tops, something like the Ultium-based Equinox EV will be 3-4x better, improving trip time and resale value. That said, if you're planning on keeping it for the life of the car and it isn't your main road tripper -- or if your long trips are infrequent/already include long stops for food/breaks --a Bolt will be the best EV deal going in 2023. I have zero qualms about the reliability of the model and would expect it to do at least 150-200K miles with minimal maintenance. Limited fast charging could also help that come to pass, as the battery is rarely stressed and degradation should be minimized as a result.



Sunday, December 11, 2022

Sandy Boynton - Snow Snow Snow

 Sandy is just a fountain of creative energy. You wonder if she’s pretty much done it all and then no, she does it again! This Christmas video was sent us because somehow we were on their mailing list and wow what a beautiful surprise!



https://youtu.be/Co-uk3fvneY

What a wonderful, cute and catchy way to say Merry Christmas! Just makes you feel Happy inside to hear it!😊

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Milly nail clippers - Amazon

 https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B09LHSZPNQ?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details


Quality-Quality-Quality

Much like real estate, the value of a product boils 

down to one or two things. 

The Milly nail clipper is a high quality product. 

This means when I clip my nails I’m going to get 

a sure grip and a clean clip.

 I won’t go into a gnarly description of my toe nails 

but imagine, if you will, 

needing to mow your lawn every week and 

heading out with an 

underpowered mower with a dull blade and having 

to mow an acre of thick weeds… 

well that equates to the chore of nail clipping. 

It’s well worth having a strong mower and, 

in this case a capable clipper. 

The Milly is sharp, strong, durable and reliable.

 I think they are well worth the investment.