Transcripts for KFBK 1530 AM [NewsRadio KFBK] KFBK 1530 AM [

KFBK 1530 AM [NewsRadio KFBK] KFBK 1530 AM [NewsRadio KFBK] March 12, 2017 070000

Before and they were going back and experiencing this question you're invited to these audiences it's great fun so that shows I mean these dancing and then there's this guy he's listening to her radio for more from your favorite artists. To several months and you have b.k. F.m. College funds your top stories in 60 seconds but 1st traffic and weather together from the k m b k traffic center overnight road work in Sacramento cap city freeway both directions between Arden way in El Camino left lane will be closed until 8 am for Voyage work team sign work on the right shoulder of I 5 north and southbound at the j. Street under crossing until 9 am j. Street closed as well between 5th and 7th traffic every 10 minutes every week a morning and afternoon from the West Haven solar traffic center News Radio gave b.k. 93 point one f.m. 1530 am. Have another warm day starting off though on a fairly mild no going up or $4050.00 degrees we could see a patch or 2 of fog and then plenty of sunshine with temperatures in the mid to upper seventy's to your Sunday afternoon and even warmer weather with possible eighty's by Monday and Tuesday I'm. Going on News Radio Kate because. I'm Carolyn bird Newsradio b.k. Our story Rancho Cordova woman is facing felony counts of vandalism and destruction of a jail facility after she drove an s.u.v. Through the Sacramento County main jail lobby Saturday morning crash happened around 5 30 am on I Street near 6th and 7th Street Latasha door was immediately detained by deputies without incident there were no injuries reported the sheriff's department said there was no indication of drugs or alcohol playing a role in the crash Sheriff's Sergeant Tony Turmel tells k c r a they are trying to determine what else may have led to that incident obviously this isn't a rational thing but it's not an accident there's there's a. Motivation behind it it's some kind of a mental impairment you need to also. Look at it as well or if there is some other motivation going to that door also told deputies she had hit other buildings in the area but that it is couldn't find any other damage visitation for inmates has been canceled until further notice door is being held on $10000.00 bail and will be arraigned Monday a man died Saturday morning after a hard landing at the Oakdale airport in Stanislaus County reports say the man was trying to land when he crashed into a pickup on the ground around 10 30 am witnesses saw the plane struggling it may have been having engine troubles the victim's name has not been released the man was the only person on board vice president Mike Pence tries to rally support for the White House backed overhaul to Obamacare vice president Mike Pence has taken the trouble ministrations case for health care overhaul to Kentucky the state's g.o.p. Senators has been a leading critic of the White House backed overhaul and the governor's unimpressed with the current proposal to replace the Obama era law the Obamacare night there is about to end in this week's democratic media address Illinois congresswoman Shaariibuu still says the replacement plan is a bad one and Republicans are rushing to get it passed before it's really been studied they're calling it the American Health Care Act The h.c.a. But they should call it the b b b a the big breaks for billionaires Act That's because you pay more you get less while billionaires get all the breaks vice president pence rather also toured an energy services company with Republican Governor Matt Bevin once part of an effort to reassure conservatives who raised objections to the house g.o.p. Health care proposal c.b.s. News update on Sam let's singer California wildlife advocates say they're searching for 7 gray wolves that haven't been spotted in months the San Francisco Chronicle reports that the 1st wolf pack to make the state home in nearly a century hasn't been seen since May of 2016 the family. And as the Shasta pack disappeared from southeastern Siskiyou County California Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist Pete for girls said they could have migrated to a new region with more prey but he points out it's unusual for the canine pack hunters to abandon their breeding grounds I'm Carolyn Byrnes News Radio 93 point one f.m. And 1530 am Every year tens of thousands of youth experience homelessness I didn't know our the way I react I just hung my mom but I was a one in 4 l.t. B.t.u. Who come out to their parents is told to leave home she wanted to go and talk to my doubt about this king reproaching me telling me that he'd embrace someone gay I started going oh my grandma's house to sleep over she kicked me out so run away and homeless youth are often victims of commercial sexual exploitation and the drugs and prostitution for 5 years 1800 run away provides 24 hour access to a nationwide network of housing and support services for homeless and runaway youth I just felt so rejected I felt like I found there if you or someone you know needs help 1800 runaway can provide support and connect you to the right resources you can also taxed 66008 or go to 1800 runaway dot org We can and youth homelessness you may be one of the one in 26 Americans who will develop epilepsy in their lifetime to help the millions of people who experience their 1st seizure each year in the physicians who care for them the American Academy of Neurology and the American epilepsy society have released a new guideline on how to treat a 1st seizure it shows there is strong evidence that for adults who have had a 1st seizure the risk of another seizure is greatest within the 1st 2 years the risk ranges from about a one in 5 chance to nearly a one in 2 chance but the guideline also found that taking epilepsy drugs immediately after a for. A seizure may reduce the risk of having another seizure if you have had a 1st seizure it is important that you talk with your neurologist and have a meaningful conversation so that your individual circumstances balance of risks and benefits in personal preferences are understood and accounted for before starting any treatment to learn more about epilepsy visit a and dot com That's a n. Dot com. From your guest host Richard Sarat. And just a reminder coming up at the a bottom of the hour the reptilian plan to divide and conquer the human race right now a physicist. With the New England Complex Systems Institute is with us telling us how a new model. Amines humans could live 10 times longer and on ear related note scientists are getting ethical permission from health watchdogs to resurrect dead people by using a combination of regeneration therapies starting this year a groundbreaking project reanimate. Will primarily use stem cells to stimulate the regrowth of neurons in clinically dead patients bio cork Inc an American biotech company is one of the medical companies given the green light to conduct the trials on 20 brain dead patients from traumatic injuries leading the team is Dr Himanshu Bansal Indian specialist who works with biotech companies reveal the life sciences and by a court the team will use a combination of therapies which include injecting the brain with stem cells and a cocktail of peptides as well as deploying lasers and nerve stimulation techniques the procedure has been shown to bring patients out of comas the resurrection techniques using stem cells will test whether parts of the dead dead patients central nervous system can be brought back to life scientists believe the brain stem cells may be able to erase their history and restart life again based on their surrounding tissue the process is similar to that in creatures like salamanders who can recruit entire limbs All right hey have you become a coast insider yet if not why not. Listen you got a sign up become a coast Insider You can listen to the show live or on demand with your computer or mobile device all audio streams are delivered in high quality crystal clear audio you also as a coast insider and get the last 5 years of audio archives on our website audio streaming or downloadable m p 3 s. Of the show and its archives media access through website or the mobile app you can chat with hosts and special guests if course have the i Tunes podcast you can direct e-mail the show's host all this for $0.15 a day when we come back more of my conversation with Professor Yanira barrio he says extending our lives 10 times is a reasonable conclusion a reasonable conclusion he said that back with more on coast to coast am. We have a great story from someone who's helped themselves they heal by using the botanical known as Carnivora and we have a guest right now her name is Joni Nichols this is quite a story yes it is and it Robert I was a mess I had Nurse infection and my hair was falling out all over the furniture but it's curious things so that my legs were swelling up out of control it came to a head within 24 hours I had gone into a coma and Amole mom and dad decided to give me the worst 6 week program within 2 weeks within of 2 weeks Robert the 1st thing I notice is that I felt better waking up that I noticed that my affair wasn't all over the furniture excited and she credits for all of it to her Carnivora protocol this is Richard Astro or for Carnival or research international call 186-683-6873 extension 5 that's 186-683-6873 extension 5 or visit Carnivora dot com ca r n i v all a dot com Call now. If you think trains will stop if they see a car on the tracks. You're right they were. In 2015 along 230 people were killed at railroad crossings don't become the next fatality stop train to cat run to you by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Building spells is a book that is applied to the art of healing healing is a powerful art that can help everyone each of these spells draw upon a healing reservoir within the soul in the body this book contains n. Jelly killing spells divine healing spells and healing spells from the got there also spells in this book that amplify the healing power of the user go to w w w dot tie bro t y b e r o dot com Look under books and get your copy today. Welcome back to coast to coast am Richard Sarat sitting in on coasts Toronto Canada affiliate talk radio am 640 and Professor Ian Ayre bar yom is with us the head of the New England Complex Systems Institute and the study we are referring to has been published in the Physical Review of letters Journal and Professor Baria again is part of this team that is has discovered a brand new mathematical model that turns the traditional understanding of the aging process upside down and if they have the math right it means we need to be able to reprogram humans to live very long lives indeed before the break Professor you know we were talking about certain organisms that have very short life spans the female octopus the squid the salmon the May fly for example they all die almost immediately after giving birth so this is an example of what you were talking about this evolutionary mechanism correct let's focus on the particular example just think one of them. There is our octopus that me and one for me it. Dies. But if you remove. A particular gland called the off the gland. It continues to live. And that is very hard to explain unless there is a specific mechanism that's built in that obviously depends upon that off the glass and that is causing the organism to have to reproduction. Now. The vast mechanism violate. The understood traditional understanding that's based upon mathematical analysis that we've shown. Is it doesn't hold in a more general case so the idea is that it makes sense according to our analysis that there is a specific mechanism that is responsible for the fact that we age so it's not responsible just for us dying at a particular time it's actually responsible for the aging process which is the mechanism by which we eventually die so the key is to find the switch and turn it off and in the case of the octopus you're actually removing a gland that's right now what is the right mechanism in human beings is not part of our research at this point. The reason why the research that we do is important is because almost all of the attention in biology and medicine. In particular in figuring out how to help people from medical conditions is addressing conditions that are associated with aging so either they are just to the aging or they are. Much more probable as a result of aging that we all stayed 30 years old. For another 1000 years 30 years in terms of how our our physiology was working. We would generally be healthy mush early much healthier than given the way we age. So the idea is that. There are processes of the To or ration that are somehow programmed in to our genetic system that in fact we could intervene and if that's the case then it makes sense that we should spend much more of our time and attention and research funds on figuring out what that mechanism is and then enabling us to extend our lives not just to be clear. As far as we know we do not understand that mechanism and so if someone comes to you and says I have the elixir of life or whatever it is that they're claiming the way to stop aging. That's not what I'm talking about right here not endorsing any claims that people have discovered how to do that but to identify you know the way you think about the world facts the decisions you make and if you believe that there isn't a way to extend life span then you're going to spend most of your energy trying to figure out how to treat cancer and heart disease and so on and that makes sense if those are the things that are causing us to suffer or to. Lose years of life let me go back to the octopus if I can for a 2nd right but as in the octopus case we can intervene. In a particular way and extend our healthy lifespan. And that should be something that we would we should figure out absolutely Once you remove the mechanism from the octopus in this case the gland that is responsible for aging and causing the death of the octopus shortly after it gives birth or in the case of the male shortly after it it made sense once you remove that gland that mechanism how long would that octopus then live so I don't know that the research is at this point sufficient to understand what's going on in the case of the octopus there's this information that we have and there's other kinds of information about other organisms we know that there are genetic interventions in in in simple organisms that will extend their lives including tenfold. In certain nematodes or other kinds of simple organisms. And. The the specifics of those mechanisms are are not at this point that well understood and this is part of presumably what we should be spending more attention on if we're going to figure this out but even if we knew what was happening in the octopus or in a nematode or so on that doesn't mean that that's going to be the same mechanism in human beings at some point in evolutionary history there should be. A mechanism to develop that become common to many of the organisms that we are related to but at this point in time that's premature. Our research is really only about the principle of the existence of such a mechanism and just to be clear the issue for us is that that existence of that mechanism is being dismissed. Based upon incorrect mathematics so when biologists talk about the possibility of preventing aging or extending life span the usual response is you can't do that it's been proven that you cannot do that and the reason that they say that it's been proven has to do the mathematical approximation that doesn't hold in nature and in particular shouldn't be thought to apply to human being so our purpose here is to fix the math and therefore to correct the knee jerk reaction that it's not possible to extend life span. In recent years there is more and more interest in figuring. Aging and so there is beginning to be increasing research into the mechanism of telomeres that you mentioned earlier and other potential mechanisms for aging but it's still a tiny part of the overall research effort in biology and medicine so. If the mathematics that was saying that it's not possible is wrong it really doesn't make sense to put more effort into figuring this out because that would have a huge impact on our lives and. On the world and so. Our purpose here is really the point of the opportunity. That exists. If we devote our attention more carefully. In this direction I'm thinking about present efforts at life extension for its take for example the Methuselah Foundation and Aubrey de Grey who's been on this program many times and this is an organization dedicated to extending a healthy human lifespan by advancing things like tissue engineering and regenerative medicine therapy so you're you're saying that this is this is a small part of it but are they are they working are they trying to solve this problem maybe at the under the old model and therefore that would suggest we're going to have limited success Aubrey and I've heard him talk also and. The interesting thing is that in some sense and this is kind of May sound strange he's actually being too conservative in the strategy that he's a really interesting statement and his strategy is that we can extend lifespans by solving all of the medical problems that are associated with aging. In other words rather than saying that we can actually intervene in the aging process and stop the aging his at least articulated view of this is we have to you know solve each of the problems that is causing aging like tissues deteriorating tenser possibilities and so on and if we saw more of those many different problems then we will be able to extend the. Life of a healthy life period but we're saying something in fact much more radical. And and that is that there is a program the mechanism that has to be adjustable. The reason it has to be adjustable is that if in evolution the environmental conditions change like we talked about earlier in different kinds of fish then evolution has to be able to adjust to life span in order to adapt to the different environment so if that's the case then there is an adjustable mechanism in us that should be adjustable by us if we figure out what it is you know the environment that we're in today is very very different from the environment in which whatever our lifespan was set. Whether it's millions or or thousands you know between thousands and millions of years ago I don't have the information but whatever those conditions are those are not necessarily the conditions that we are in now surely. It's a pretty technological evolutionary process right right so. But there's still that mechanism and so if we understand the mechanism we don't have to solve all of the problems that come about when we have aging we just have to find that particular mechanism to turn that switch on easy to find but we just have to turn that switch off and again that's what I mean basically a switch it's it's not going to be a simple switch because it was a simple switch than you know some people might be born with it and some people would be born without it so it has to be a fairly sophisticated contraption so to speak it could be a gland it could be a gene. Yes you could but most likely it's several different genes working together in some. Creating some process that is hard not trivial but but you know a little bit hard to figure out because again if it were simple then a single mutation or something like that would switch it off and then depending on what the mechanism depending on what the mechanism is would then determine the treatment it could be it could be super surgery it could be. Some other type of therapy depending on what then it could be it could be many different things in principle it could be genetic modification but as far as we know it could be taking a particular drug or taking a eating different foods or or or something else we wouldn't know.

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