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Messages - Draztik

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61
damn... i got too emotional to comment, what a bunch a bullshit. dude first need to understand the culture of hiphop and the language. What part of our clothing isnt westernised, (even what the BLOGGER is wearing), what a useless point of reference. listen the music idiot!!!!!

62
Hot Traxxx / Re: Ama Vuvuzela remix
« on: January 03, 2009, 11:48:14 PM »
Yeah I did, along with most of Imbube's album.

63
Hot Traxxx / Re: Ama Vuvuzela remix
« on: January 03, 2009, 04:38:05 PM »
appreciate it, haveta say its also 1 of my favorites  :), Imbube performed this in Botswana over new years, have to say it was magical.

64
General Discussion / Re: Rare Treatment Cures Aids
« on: November 14, 2008, 07:44:13 PM »
This is meant to show progress and advances in science ,  MAD ^^^^ is it neccessry to say that??  ???

65
General Discussion / Rare Treatment Cures Aids
« on: November 14, 2008, 03:47:10 PM »
Rare Treatment Is Reported to Cure AIDS Patient

This was on NY TIMES This week.


But while the case has novel medical implications, experts say it will be of little immediate use in treating AIDS. Top American researchers called the treatment unthinkable for the millions infected in Africa and impractical even for insured patients in top research hospitals.

“It’s very nice, and it’s not even surprising,” said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “But it’s just off the table of practicality.”

The patient, a 42-year-old American resident in Germany, also has leukemia, which justified the high risk of a stem-cell transplant. Such transplants require wiping out a patient’s immune system, including bone marrow, with radiation and drugs; 10 to 30 percent of those getting them die.

“Frankly, I’d rather take the medicine,” said Dr. Robert C. Gallo, director of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, referring to antiretroviral drugs.

Moreover, the chances of finding a donor who is a good tissue match for the patient and also has the rare genetic mutation that confers resistance to H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS, are extremely small. Nonetheless, the man has been free of the virus for 20 months even though he is not using antiretroviral drugs, and the success in his case is evidence that a long-dreamed-of therapy for AIDS — injecting stem cells that have been genetically re-engineered with the mutation — might work.

The cure was announced Wednesday by Dr. Gero Hütter and Dr. Eckhard Thiel, blood-cancer specialists at Charité Hospital in Berlin. The case was described last week in The Wall Street Journal.

Attempts to use bone-marrow transplants in AIDS treatment have been made since the 1980s. In one case, a patient with both AIDS and lymphoma died of the cancer two months later, but was found to harbor no H.I.V.; it was not known if something in the transplant had protected him.

And in a famous 1995 case, Jeff Getty, a prominent San Francisco advocate for AIDS patients, received bone marrow from a baboon, which is resistant to the human virus. He survived 11 years, but died of AIDS and cancer; the transplant had not protected him but antiretroviral triple therapy had been invented in time to help.

Dr. Hütter said one of the 80 potential donors who matched his patient closely enough for leukemia treatment also happened to have the mutation.

That mutation, discovered in a few gay men in the 1990s and known as Delta 32, must be inherited from both parents. With it, the white blood cells produced in the marrow lack the surface receptors that allow H.I.V. to invade the immune system.

Even if it is prevented from replicating by drugs, the H.I.V. can lie dormant in lymph and nerve cells for years. But without the necessary receptors, any virus coming out of dormancy has no way to infect them.

Doctors say the case gives hope for therapies that artificially induce the Delta 32 mutation.

For example, Dr. Irvin S. Y. Chen, director of the AIDS Institute at U.C.L.A. , is working on using RNA “hairpin scissors” to cut out the bits of genetic material in blood stem cells that code for the receptors. The concept is working in monkeys, he said. Eventually, he hopes, it will be possible to inject them into humans after wiping out only part of the immune system with drugs. “I think that would carry no risk of death,” he said.
But while the case has novel medical implications, experts say it will be of little immediate use in treating AIDS. Top American researchers called the treatment unthinkable for the millions infected in Africa and impractical even for insured patients in top research hospitals.

“It’s very nice, and it’s not even surprising,” said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “But it’s just off the table of practicality.”

The patient, a 42-year-old American resident in Germany, also has leukemia, which justified the high risk of a stem-cell transplant. Such transplants require wiping out a patient’s immune system, including bone marrow, with radiation and drugs; 10 to 30 percent of those getting them die.

“Frankly, I’d rather take the medicine,” said Dr. Robert C. Gallo, director of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, referring to antiretroviral drugs.

Moreover, the chances of finding a donor who is a good tissue match for the patient and also has the rare genetic mutation that confers resistance to H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS, are extremely small. Nonetheless, the man has been free of the virus for 20 months even though he is not using antiretroviral drugs, and the success in his case is evidence that a long-dreamed-of therapy for AIDS — injecting stem cells that have been genetically re-engineered with the mutation — might work.

The cure was announced Wednesday by Dr. Gero Hütter and Dr. Eckhard Thiel, blood-cancer specialists at Charité Hospital in Berlin. The case was described last week in The Wall Street Journal.

Attempts to use bone-marrow transplants in AIDS treatment have been made since the 1980s. In one case, a patient with both AIDS and lymphoma died of the cancer two months later, but was found to harbor no H.I.V.; it was not known if something in the transplant had protected him.

And in a famous 1995 case, Jeff Getty, a prominent San Francisco advocate for AIDS patients, received bone marrow from a baboon, which is resistant to the human virus. He survived 11 years, but died of AIDS and cancer; the transplant had not protected him but antiretroviral triple therapy had been invented in time to help.

Dr. Hütter said one of the 80 potential donors who matched his patient closely enough for leukemia treatment also happened to have the mutation.

That mutation, discovered in a few gay men in the 1990s and known as Delta 32, must be inherited from both parents. With it, the white blood cells produced in the marrow lack the surface receptors that allow H.I.V. to invade the immune system.

Even if it is prevented from replicating by drugs, the H.I.V. can lie dormant in lymph and nerve cells for years. But without the necessary receptors, any virus coming out of dormancy has no way to infect them.

Doctors say the case gives hope for therapies that artificially induce the Delta 32 mutation.

For example, Dr. Irvin S. Y. Chen, director of the AIDS Institute at U.C.L.A. , is working on using RNA “hairpin scissors” to cut out the bits of genetic material in blood stem cells that code for the receptors. The concept is working in monkeys, he said. Eventually, he hopes, it will be possible to inject them into humans after wiping out only part of the immune system with drugs. “I think that would carry no risk of death,” he said.

66
Hip Hop Events / Re: The Game in Joburg this Thursday
« on: November 13, 2008, 09:29:42 AM »
Wow this Topic AGAIN!!!.... I'm glad we moving to institute some type of group or a**ociation, and i do think RISA and Department of Arts Culuture should endorse it. I meantioned this before, Just accross the border in Botswana, when i brought DEAD PREZ there years ago, there's is a law that protects local artists.

1. you gotta have them on your bill
2. you gotta show proof of payment,

NOW is that too mcuh to ask for. we need the same act here in South Africa.

I'd really like to push this thing. I got nuff folks in LAW i'm sure we can propose something here.

D

67
General Discussion / Re: Mobile Music Downloads
« on: October 23, 2008, 08:07:21 PM »
Did a little study on mobile download pricing,
The problem with most the music coming from the labels overseas, is that its coming in at recommended wholesale price of R6 from UK pricing, but its true cost is more or less cost of +-R4.50 (64cents) in the US.
so after:

Admin fees recomended at about 10-20%,
DRM licensing ABOUT +- R1,
Marketing 2%,
Publishing 7,5%,
Holdbacks & Exclusions at 10%
u sitting at R9.57 total cost -

possible markup of 20-30% u should be retailing the track at about R11.48 -12.44

Rounding it off R11 - R12 should be the retail price. labels do however give discounts to further drive the price to about R10.00 or so,
Now if you buying local tracks the costs should be down at not more then R 7 to R 8 a track.

another thing mobile company should be offering an full album discount, u should'nt be paying for each track if u getting the whole thing- strange!

D


68
Sports Arena / Re: Wrestling Pre 98
« on: October 04, 2008, 10:17:46 AM »
ok a couple more oldies

Junk Yard Dog
Honky Tonk Man
Ricky Steamboat
Roddy Piper
George the animal steele



69
Hot Traxxx / Re: B Sharpa - Ben Sharpa - The Official Thread
« on: September 16, 2008, 10:37:58 PM »
Nice 1 D, cover looks dope....

70
Battle One on One / Re: Is Snazz D the illest MC in africa???
« on: August 20, 2008, 07:46:14 PM »
Price of Cd's in Nigeria is about 90 USD cents (retail- so we talking about R7 to R8 a CD). Thats where they win big cause they move major quantities, The pirates control the game in Nigeria. Unfortunately there is still quite a big number of units that arent accounted for so they maybe selling more then the cheque they cut you., but like Cash mentioned if u getting 8 Mil who cares, anyone can work with that figure.

71
Sports Arena / Re: US Olympic Basketball team:Squad is here!!
« on: August 09, 2008, 04:54:00 PM »
Ha,!! Dont know Tate but this US team is tough to beat...

72
General Discussion / Re: Rip Bernie Mac
« on: August 09, 2008, 04:48:20 PM »
damn just googled it now... he was a great comedian... wow that sucks ...r.i.p

73
General Discussion / Re: Rip Bernie Mac
« on: August 09, 2008, 04:43:45 PM »
oh damn, dude when did this happen?

74
Media / Re: HYPE AUG/SEP ISSUE - OUT NOW
« on: July 29, 2008, 06:19:58 PM »
You know as a promoter, certain factors need to be taken into. that is if you are promoting, that is business and if you doing gigs that dont pay back any money, ( -R300 - No Disrespect)...but i'm not sure that makes business sense. One of the biggest issues i raised some time last year is what everyones complains about, and that is Big Concerts not respecting local artists and paying them their dues, asking for free sh... i mean..... This is where Mizi makes a lot of sense. The art needs to be accounted for, its enterntainment, its also a job and it should really pay your bills and the artists well being as well as what their worth.

For example, how many artists cant even afford a descent image... clothes etc...they end up on stage looking like part of the audience. Performance is crucial and key too, but we need to LOOK like stars.  This industry needs standards like EVERYWHERE else, no excuses.


75
Hot Traxxx / Re: Hip-Hop History 1979 - 1998
« on: July 13, 2008, 09:47:03 AM »
Yo dope dope dope! nice going C!

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