May 21, 2013

Subject: AN OPEN LETTER TO THE RON PAUL CAMPAIGN

This letter was not written by anyone at Exposing The Truth, but was sent to us to be shared.  You may also do the same on any subject you wish, just contact us using the Contact Us button at the top, then send us an email.

Wednesday Feb 8th 2012

To whom it may concern,

I don’t usually write letters, let alone regarding politicians. There has never been a President or candidate that I have believed in as much as Ron Paul before. I think I speak for most of his supporters when I say that I strongly believe that he is our ONLY CHANCE at saving the terrible course that this country is on, and I believe things are far, far worse then most people realize. Ron Paul speaks the truth, speaks on logic and experience, and his supporters know that he is the only candidate that can be trusted. Now that I told you about what a big fan of Ron Paul I am, let me get to my point for writing this letter.

As much as I love and support Ron Paul, we all know “the powers that be” or the ruling class is never going to let him be the President of the Untied States. It’s blatantly obvious that most of the non-independent media has been paid off and silenced about Ron Paul. It’s obvious that there is voter fraud, I mean right in front of peoples faces. Heck, “Clinton Eugene Curtis” even testified under oath and well as physically proved how steeling votes can be done after he wrote the software to do so. Ron Paul has been getting screwed from the from the beginning in this campaign and it’s not going to stop. While I agree that the longer Paul stays in the race he at least raises this major issues to the surface, I believe he still has a chance at the presidential office if the fight was stepped up quite a bit.

In my opinion, I think the Ron Paul campaign needs to put together a very sensible, logical infomercial that will air on many of the major TV networks, the internet and anywhere else, as soon as possible. Something that really gives people a chance to find out what Ron Paul is all about. Something that is un-biased and sort  of a whistle-blower type infomercial. An infomercial that really puts things into perspective for people. Imagine if the guy that prodices the Zeitgeist films were to produce this! Imagine if Ron Paul were to remain calm and scare people with true facts and their options as citizens of the United States!

There are so many young people (including myself) that would vote for Ron Paul if the media would stop selling the idea that he can’t win.

Now is the time for Ron Paul to really sink or swim and I know that a lot of people would vote for him and wake up to what’s really going on if only given the chance.

PLEASE DO SOMETHING EXTRAORDINARY, PLEASE FORCE THE PEOPLE TO WAKE UP AND BELIEVE IN FREEDOM AND LIBERTY AGAIN BEFORE IT’S TOO LATE! SOMETHING DRAMATIC NEEDS TO HAPPEN FROM THE RON PAUL CAMPAIGN RIGHT NOW!

Thank You,

DS – Orange County CA

‘Genius’ computer with an IQ of 150 is ‘more intelligent’ than 96 per cent of humans

By Rob Waugh on February 17, 2012

  • Software uses mixture of logic and ‘human-like’ thinking
  • Score is classified as ‘genius’
  • It could ‘spot patterns’ in financial data

A computer has become the first to be classed as a ‘genius’ after scoring 150 in an IQ test.

The average score for people is 100. A score of 150 ranks the artificial intelligence programme among the top four per cent of humans.

The programme uses a mixture of mathematical logic and ‘human-like’ thinking, enabling it to outperform previous software on IQ tests.

Artificial intelligence? The high-IQ software uses a mix of computer logic and 'human like' thinking to achieve higher scores than previous software

Even advanced maths programmes usually score below 100.

The software was designed by a team led by researcher Claes Strannegård at the University of Gothenburg. His aim was to make a programme that ‘thinks’ like a person.

‘We’re trying to make programmes that can discover the same types of patterns that humans can see,’ he says.

IQ tests are based on two types of problems – seeing visual patterns and guessing number sequences.

The Swedish research group believes that number sequence problems are only partly  mathematics – psychology is important too.

Strannegård says ‘One, two – what comes next? Most people would say 3, but it could also be a repeating sequence like 1, 2, 1 or a doubling sequence like 1, 2, 4. Neither of these alternatives is more mathematically correct than the others. What it comes down to is that most people have learned the 1-2-3 pattern.’

he group is therefore using a psychological model of human patterns in their software.

They have integrated a mathematical model that models human-like The group has improved the programme that specialises in number sequences to the point where its score implies an IQ of at least 150.

‘Our programmes are beating the conventional math programmes because we are combining mathematics and psychology.’

The programme’s ‘human-like’ thinking could have uses outside IQ tests. It can spot ‘patterns’ in any information that has a human component, such as financial data.

‘Our method can potentially be used to identify patterns in any data with a psychological component, such as financial data. But it is not as good at finding patterns in more science-type data, such as weather data, since then the human psyche is not involved,’ says Strannegård.

Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2102577/A-genius-born-New-programme-intelligent-96-cent-humans-IQ-150.html

Nanoparticles in food, vitamins could harm human health

Billions of engineered nanoparticles in foods and pharmaceuticals are ingested by humans daily, and new Cornell University research warns they may be more harmful to health than previously thought.

An intestinal cell monolayer after exposure to nanoparticles, shown in green (credit: Cornell)

The researchers studied how large doses of polystyrene nanoparticles — a common, FDA-approved material found in substances from food additives to vitamins — affected how well chickens absorbed iron, an essential nutrient, into their cells.

According to the study, high-intensity, short-term exposure to the particles initially blocked iron absorption, whereas longer-term exposure caused intestinal cell structures to change, allowing for a compensating uptick in iron absorption.

The researchers tested both acute and chronic nanoparticle exposure using human gut cells in petri dishes as well as live chickens and reported matching results. They chose chickens because these animals absorb iron into their bodies similarly to humans, and they are also similarly sensitive to micronutrient deficiencies, explained the paper’s first author Gretchen Mahler.

Intestinal villi remodeling

The researchers used commercially available, 50-nanometer polystyrene carboxylated particles that are generally considered safe for human consumption. They found that following acute exposure, a few minutes to a few hours after consumption, both the absorption of iron in the in vitro cells and the chickens decreased.

But following exposure of 2 milligrams per kilogram for two weeks — a slower, more chronic intake — the structure of the intestinal villi began to change and increase in surface area. This was an effective physiological remodeling that led to increased iron absorption.

“This was a physiological response that was unexpected,” Mahler said.

Research leader Michael  Shuler noted that in some sense this intestinal villi remodeling was positive because it shows the body adapts to challenges. “Nanoparticles are entering our environment in many different ways,” Shuler said. “We have some assurance that at a gross level they are not harmful, but there may be more subtle effects that we need to worry about.”

Ref.: Gretchen J. Mahler, et al., Oral exposure to polystyrene nanoparticles affects iron absorption, Nature Nanotechnology, 2012; [DOI:10.1038/nnano.2012.3]

Source: http://www.kurzweilai.net/nanoparticles-in-food-vitamins-could-harm-human-health

DNA nanorobots deliver ‘suicide’ messages to cancer cells, other diseases

By Kurzweil AI on February 17, 2012

Researchers at Harvard University’s Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering have developed

Gated Nanorobot

Hinged nanorobot opens when target molecules are sensed

a nanorobotic device made from DNA that could potentially seek out specific cell targets within a complex mixture of cell types and deliver important molecular instructions, such as telling cancer cells to self-destruct.

Inspired by the mechanics of the body’s own immune system, the technology might one day be used to program immune responses to treat various diseases.

Using the DNA origami method  (complex 3-D shapes and objects are constructed by folding strands of DNA), the researchers created a nanosize robot in the form of an open barrel whose two halves are connected by a hinge.

Recognition molecules

The nanorobot’s DNA barrel acts as a container that can hold various types of contents, including specific molecules with encoded instructions that can interact with specific signaling receptors on cell surfaces, including disease markers.

The barrel is normally held shut by special DNA latches. But when the latches find their targets, they reconfigure, causing the two halves of the barrel to swing open and expose its contents, or payload.

Programming cancer-cell suicide

The researchers used this system to deliver instructions, encoded in antibody fragments, to two different types of cancer cells — leukemia and lymphoma.

Schematic front orthographic view of DNA barrel of closed nanorobot loaded with a protein payload. Two DNA-aptamer locks fasten the front of the device on the left (boxed) and right.

In each case, the message to the cell was: activate your apoptosis or “suicide switch” — which allows aging or abnormal cells to be eliminated.

This programmable nanotherapeutic approach was modeled on the body’s own immune system, in which white blood cells patrol the bloodstream for any signs of trouble.

These infection fighters are able to home in on specific cells in distress, bind to them, and transmit comprehensible signals to direct them to self-destruct. This programmable power means the system has the potential to one day be used to treat a variety of diseases.

Integrating sensing and logical computing functions

“We can finally integrate sensing and logical computing functions via complex,

Aptamer lock mechanism, consisting of a DNA aptamer (blue) and a partially complementary strand (orange).

yet predictable, nanostructures — some of the first hybrids of structural DNA, antibodies, aptamers, and metal atomic clusters — aimed at useful, very specific targeting of human cancers and T-cells,” said George Church, a Wyss core faculty member and professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School, who is principal investigator on the project.

Because DNA is a natural biocompatible and biodegradable material, DNA nanotechnology is widely recognized for its potential as a delivery mechanism for drugs and molecular signals.

There have been significant challenges to its implementation, such as what type of structure to create; how to open, close,

and reopen that structure to insert, transport, and deliver a payload; and how to program this type of nanoscale robot.

By combining several novel elements for the first time, the new system represents a significant advance in overcoming these implementation obstacles.

For instance, because the barrel-shaped structure has no top or bottom lids, the payloads can be loaded from the side in a single step — without having to open the structure first and then re-close it.

Also, while other systems use release mechanisms that respond to DNA or RNA, the novel mechanism used here responds to proteins, which are more commonly found on cell surfaces and are largely responsible for transmembrane signaling in cells.

This is the first DNA-origami-based system that uses antibody fragments to convey molecular messages

Payloads such as gold nanoparticles (gold) and antibody fragments (magenta) can be loaded inside the nanorobot

— a feature that offers a controlled and programmable way to replicate an immune response or develop new types of targeted therapies.

“This work represents a major breakthrough in the field of nanobiotechnology as it demonstrates the ability to leverage recent advances in the field of DNA origami pioneered by researchers around the world, including the Wyss Institute’s own William Shih, to meet a real-world challenge, namely killing cancer cells with high specificity,” said Wyss Institute Founding Director Donald Ingber.

Ingber is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and the Vascular Biology Program at Children’s Hospital Boston, and professor of bioengineering at Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. “This focus on translating technologies from the laboratory into transformative products and therapies is what the Wyss Institute is all about.”

Ref.: Shawn M. Douglas, Ido Bachelet, George M. Church, A Logic-Gated Nanorobot for Targeted Transport of Molecular Payloads, Science, 2012 [DOI:10.1126/science.1214081]

Credit for images: Shawn M. Douglas et al./Science

Source: http://www.kurzweilai.net/dna-nanorobots-deliver-suicide-messages-to-cancer-cells-other-diseases