Tytu³: www.dyduch.eu :: pjed Tea Party darling Cruz wins Tex. senate primary

Dodane przez Jeaonenut dnia 08-12-2024 05:38
#1

Kvjb Hillary Clinton, Underdog
Donald Trump on Monday vowed to strengthen the governmentrsquo cybersecurity capabilities and to make it a top priority if hersquo elected president. To truly make America safe, we truly have to make cybersecurity a major priority, the GOP presidential nominee said at an event in Virginia hosted by Retired American Warriors RAWPAC with about 250 retired officers stanley drinking cup in the audience. If elected commander in chief, Trump said he would make cybersecurity an immediate and top priority for my administration. Trump said he would order a thorough review of cyber defenses and weaknesse stanley mug s and he said that cyberattacks from foreign governments including China, Russia and North Korea constitute one of our most critical national security concerns. He then listed hacks into JP Morgan, eBay, Target and the Office of Personnel Management. Attacks like these are happening on a regular basis both in stanley cup the United States and around the world, Trump said. I will make certain that our military is the best in the world -- in cyber offense and defense --and in every other way, by the way, every other way. Trump said he would ask his secretary of defense and joint chiefs for recommendations that would augment the U.S. cyber command. The United States must possess unquestioned capacity to launch crippling counter-cyberattacks, he said. This is the w Zvng Obama promises Democrats no debt limit fight
WAITING TIMES....Business Week finally runs an article stating the obvious: for all the conservative shrieking about wait times for medical care in countries with universal hea stanley quencher lthcare systems, the United States has considerable waiting lists itself:If you find a suspicious-looking mole and want to see a dermatologist, you can expect an average wait of 38 d stanley hrnek ays in the U.S....Got a knee injury ....Nationwide, the average is 17 days. Waiting is definitely a problem in the U.S., especially for basic care, says Karen Davis, president of the nonprofit Commonwealth Fund, which studies health-care policy.All this time spent queuing, as other nations call it, stems from too much demand and too little supply. Only one-third of U.S. doctors are general practitioners, compared with half in most European countries. On top of that, only 40% of U.S. doctors have arrangements for after-hours care, vs. 75% in the rest of the industrialized world. Consequently, some 26% of U stanley mug .S. adults in one survey went to an emergency room in the past two years because they couldn t get in to see their regular doctor, a significantly higher rate than in other countries.There is no systemized collection of data on wait times in the U.S. That makes it difficult to draw comparisons with countries that have national health systems, where wait times are not only tracked but made public. However, a 2005 survey by the Commonwealth Fund of sick adults in six nations found that only 47% of U.S. patients could get a