‘We’re Fighting For Our Lives’ — Patients Protest Sky-High Insulin Prices
Angela Lautner knew her thirst was unusual, even for someone directing airplanes, outside in the Memphis summer heat.
“We had coolers of Gatorade and water for people to always have access to,” Lautner remembers of her job as a ground services agent. “But the amount of thirst that I felt was just incredible.”
She had no appetite and she lost an unusual amount of weight. Then after a trip to the emergency room, Lautner, who was 22, was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. The diagnosis was life changing.
To start,it meant for the rest of her life she would require insulin injections every day to keep her alive. Unlike Type 2 diabetes, which can sometimes be controlled by diet, people with Type 1 diabetes need daily insulin injections to regulate their blood sugar.
Lautner’s diagnosis also meant she was no longer allowed to become a commercial airline pilot in the U.S. — a lifelong dream that she was training for in flight school at the time.
“I cried harder over losing my dream to fly than I did at the diagnosis of Type 1 diabetes,” Lautner says.
But after 18 years living with diabetes, Lautner now says the hardest thing about the diagnosis is accessing insulin — the expensive drug she needs to keep her alive. She’s had to borrow money from her parents to pay for insurance; she’s spent hours on the phone with drug companies; she’s switched brands of insulin to save costs; and she even moved to a new state, Kentucky, with a more generous Medicaid plan.
Last year, Lautner noticed other people with Type 1 diabetes tweeting similar stories under the hashtag #Insulin4All. She read the stories of Shane Patrick Boyle and Alec Raeshawn Smith, two men who died because they could not afford their insulin. It was an epiphany.
“I thought, ‘My goodness, there’s more people than me. I’m not the only one out here,’ ” she says.
Since then Lautner has joined a group of consumer activists, people who need insulin to live and are angry about the sky-high prices. They are putting pressure on the three main companies that make insulin: Sanofi of France, Novo Nordisk of Denmark, and Eli Lilly and Company in the U.S.
Taking on the drugmakers
The cost of insulin nearly tripled between 2002 and 2013 and has doubled again since then. The list price is over $300 for a single vial of medicine, and most people with Type 1 diabetes need multiple vials every month to live. That cost is typically lower with insurance or with discount programs. Still, for some people the price is unmanageable.
There’s been some action by lawmakers on the issue. In October Minnesota’s attorney general sued insulin manufacturers alleging price gouging, and a bipartisan caucus in the U.S. Congress issued a report in November urging action to bring insulin prices down.
But prices are still going up, so consumer activists like Lautner are taking things into their own hands.
Nonprofit group T1International, which advocates for Type 1 diabetes around the world, with a particular focus on insulin prices has started holding rallies outside the Indianapolis headquarters of pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly and Company. (Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk have provided financial support to NPR.)
Lautner joined more than 70 people who came together to demonstrate there in September. They were asking for three things: transparency about how much it costs to make a vial of insulin and how much profit comes from each vial, and a commitment from the company to lower the list price of insulin.
There were protesters from at least 12 states, mainly Ohio, Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky, but also from as far away as New York. Lautner, who now lives outside Cincinnati, rented a school bus with a dozen others to make the 112-mile trip.
“Insulin is kind of the face of the drug pricing crisis in America,” says Elizabeth Pfiester, founder of T1International who has Type 1 diabetes herself. “We literally die without it,” she says. “We’re fighting for our lives.”
This was the third time the group had protested at Eli Lilly headquarters. Last fall, when the group held its first protest there, Pfiester says, as it was “the first time where people living with Type 1 were able to physically stand and show that people are angry enough to come out.”
Eli Lilly declined NPR’s request for an interview, but in statement a spokesperson said, “we understand why people are making their voices heard.”
Protesting is one arm of their advocacy efforts; the group is also lobbying at the state and national level, and conducting online awareness-raising campaigns under the hashtag #Insulin4All.
Article via NPR
Guy Who Told Kids Santa Isn’t Real Arrested
A Texas man telling kids Santa Claus isn’t real got his comeuppance Saturday when he got arrested. Aaron Urbanski, 31, and two other men were protesting outside St. Mark United Methodist Church of Cleburne during a Breakfast With Santa event; they were asked “multiple times” to leave church property, law enforcement authorities say. Two of them did, but Urbanski allegedly refused. One attendee tells NBC DFW the men asked her, “Do you let your kids believe in a fake Santa or do they know who Jesus is?” and when she confronted them about not ruining Christmas, “They started to shout out that Santa was not real and that I was wrong for teaching them that.”
The men “were upset that the folks there were lying to the children about Santa,” an officer says, per Dallas News. “Don’t Mess With Santa!” wrote the Cleburne mayor in a Facebook post. “While I understand folks right to protest, Cleburne loves Santa and those protestors who were naughty and broke the law when they trespassed were arrested promptly. Guess they wanted coal in their stockings to go with a court appearance.” Urbanski was charged with criminal trespass.
via: http://www.newser.com/story/268335/guy-who-told-kids-santa-isnt-real-arrested.html
Elfen’ s EXTRA! EXTRA! Hip Hop Music Video Tobe Nwigwe RAKIM & Z RO TRIBUTE FREESTYLE
I just added this this brown skined Brother to my Neosoul hip hop collection!! He’s got a quick flow to his rhymes.
Shakira to be ‘formally accused by prosecutors of defrauding Spanish taxman out of nearly 15MILLION euros’
Pop star Shakira will formally be accused by Spanish state prosecutors of a multi-million pound tax fraud in the next few days.
The Colombian, 41, will have to defend herself against claims she defrauded the Spanish taxman out of nearly 15million euros over three years, respected daily El Pais reported.
State prosecutors have spent the past year probing Shakira and have now concluded 14.5million euros is the amount they believe she defrauded between 2012 and 2014.
The publication said the formal criminal complaint against the mother-of-two – accusing her of three counts of tax fraud for each of the three tax years – would be lodged with a judge in the next few days.
Lawyers acting for the singer are expected to seek the closure of the criminal case before deciding whether to try to reach a pre-trial settlement if the request is rejected.
Shakira, previously tax resident in the Bahamas, only registered as a full tax resident in Spain in 2015.
Prosecutors are said to have reached the conclusion that the performer pretended to live in the Bahamas as part of a plan to deliberately avoid meeting her tax obligations after starting a relationship with Barcelona star Gerard Pique in 2011 and moving to the Catalan capital.
Official residents in Spain pay Spanish taxes on their worldwide income, while people who spent more than 183 days in a given calendar year in the country are considered Spanish residents for tax purposes.
Tax inspectors spent more than a year checking up on Shakira, even visiting her favourite hairdressers in Barcelona and checking her social media to try to show she spent most of the three years in dispute in Spain.
Spanish media said the report prosecutors would submit along with their criminal complaint offered no proof Shakira had spent enough time in the country to be considered a tax resident.
But it said the rest of the time she spent out of Spain were ‘sporadic absences’ resulting from work commitments, an argument the singer’s defence lawyers disagree with and are set to fight.
A spokesman for the singer said she did not owe the Spanish taxman any money and insisted she had followed the advice of her financial advisors.
He insisted she was ready to co-operate to ‘resolve the differences in criteria.’
Shakira was named in the recent Paradise Papers scandal after it was revealed late last year she transferred £30million in musical rights to an offshore firm in Malta.
Her lawyer Ezequiel Camerini told Spanish news website El Confidencial the singer lived in Barcelona – but quoted him as justifying her links to a tax haven on the basis that ‘as an international artist, she had lived in several places in the course of her professional life, acting in total accordance with the laws of all the jurisdictions she resides in.’
Shakira, full name Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, separated from former Argentinian president’s son Antonio de la Rua in August 2010 before starting a relationship with Gerard Pique in 2011.
They have two children Milan, five, and Sasha, four.
Article via DailyMail
Central Park duck’s star continues to rise
What the duck?! Central Park’s Mandarin duck has become an even bigger celebrity. Jeanne Moos has this duck redux.
Watch via CNN
Princeton group cuts ‘The Little Mermaid’ song over ‘toxic masculinity’
PRINCETON, N.J. — An all-male a cappella group at Princeton University has pulled a Disney movie song from its act after a student newspaper column that suggested the lyrics helped promote “toxic masculinity.”
The Princeton Tigertones have performed “Kiss the Girl,” a song from “The Little Mermaid,” for years.
During performances at the Ivy League school, a female audience member would be brought onstage to decide whether or not a man from the crowd could kiss her.
Noa Wollstein, who wrote the column, claimed the song’s message is misogynistic and that too many women have been pulled on stage for unwanted encounters.
“I have seen a queer student brought on stage have to uncomfortably push away her forced male companion,” Wollstein, a sophomore from New York, wrote in her column.
“I have heard of unwilling girls being subjected to their first kisses. I have watched mothers, who have come to see their child’s performance, be pulled up to the stage only to have tension generated between them and the kid they came to support.”
In a response published in the newspaper, Tigertones’ President Wesley Brown apologized to anyone made uncomfortable by the tradition.
He said the group won’t perform the song until it can find a way to do so without offending any audience members.
Brown, a senior at Princeton, wrote the group has taken steps to try to make audience participation voluntary and consensual, but did not provide specific examples.
He said the group had tried to bring a lighthearted, youthful energy to its performance of the song but failed to ensure comfort for audience members brought on stage.
“Performances of this song have made participants uncomfortable and offended audience members, an outcome which is antithetical to our group’s mission and one that we deeply regret,” he wrote.
In “The Little Mermaid,” the song’s lyrics are sung by Sebastian the crab as he encourages Prince Eric to kiss Ariel, who can’t talk because she traded her voice in order to become human for him.
“My oh my/ Look like the boy too shy/ Ain’t gonna kiss the girl,” the crab sings with help from other sea creatures. “Ain’t that sad?/ It’s such a shame/ Too bad/ You’re gonna miss the girl.”
Other lyrics include, “Don’t be scared/ You better be prepared/ Go on and kiss the girl.”
Wollstein also criticized “The Little Mermaid” song for “unambiguously encourage men to make physical advances on women without obtaining their clear consent.”
“Removed from its cushioning context of mermaids, magic, and PG ratings, the message comes across as even more jarring,” Wollstein wrote.
Article via KDVR
Neo-Nazi group calls for assassination of ‘race-traitor’ Prince Harry over Meghan Markle marriage
Counter-terrorism police are investigating the British offshoot of a violent American neo-Nazi group which called for Prince Harry‘s assassination and claimed he is a “race traitor” for marrying Meghan Markle.
The group, known as Sonnenkrieg Division, posted a picture of the prince with a gun to his head featuring a swastika and the caption: “See ya later, race traitor!”
A BBC investigation obtained hundreds of messages sent by extremists on an online gaming server over several months, including messages sent by senior members of the Atomwaffen Division, an American neo-Nazi group linked to five murders.
A spokesperson for the North East Counter Terrorism Unit said: “We are aware of the BBC coverage last night around Sonnenkreig Division and enquiries are ongoing.”
Atomwaffen, which means “atomic weapons” in German, celebrates Adolf Hitler and Charles Manson while promoting a dystopian ideology called the “universal order”.
It has called for the overthrow of the US government through the use of terrorism and guerilla warfare in order to establish a national socialist state.
The group is also known to have trained in firearms and hand-to-hand combat.
It is estimated to have between 24 and 80 members.
Messages from the gaming server discuss the creation of the Sonnenkrieg Division, with one user describing it as “full on Universal Order” and “atomwaffen with less guns”.
In another exchange, he said “kill all police officers” and suggested they should be “raped to death”.
Article via Independent
13-Year-Old Student With Autism Dies After Being Restrained at School in NorCal
A 13-year-old autistic student has died after he was restrained by staff during an incident at his school in El Dorado Hills, authorities said Thursday.
The incident occurred Nov. 28 at Guiding Hands School, about 30 miles east of Sacramento. The El Dorado County Sheriff’s Office said the boy turned violent and had to be restrained by school staff to prevent other students and staff members from getting hurt.
While he was restrained, the student became unresponsive, the Sheriff’s Office said. A teacher administered CPR until emergency responders arrived. He was taken to Mercy Hospital of Folsom and later to UC Davis Medical Center.
Two days later, the Sheriff’s Office learned that the boy, who was 6 feet tall and 280 pounds, had died. It’s unclear when the death occurred or what caused it.
The Sheriff’s Office said there appears to be no evidence of foul play or criminal intent.
The Sacramento Bee reported that the California Department of Education had launched an investigation and suspended the private school’s certification.
via: https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-el-dorado-student-death-20181206-story.html