Patton187
Gawd
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2012
- Messages
- 672
But you are the asshole that managed to bring politics into it.That is what the website does. This forum is an alt-right circlejerk.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
But you are the asshole that managed to bring politics into it.That is what the website does. This forum is an alt-right circlejerk.
That is what the website does. This forum is an alt-right circlejerk.
TB was extremely political and constantly discussed his positions and feelings.But you are the asshole that managed to bring politics into it.
Warframe developers really appreciated the reviews and streams that he did criticizing and endorsing the game as they all led to changes that made the game more popular in the end.
Live stream clip from when they learned he passed. R.I.P Totalbiscuit.
https://clips.twitch.tv/SparklyInterestingButterBudStar
TB was extremely political and constantly discussed his positions and feelings.
well what he taught us is, if there are signs, get a check up, don't put it off.
that really sucks he was one better people doing video game news and reviews
I appreciate the post but he was completely against almost everything this forum community believes.
http://www.bbc.com/news/health-44338276The life of a woman with terminal breast cancer has been saved by a pioneering new therapy, say US researchers.
It involved pumping 90 billion cancer-killing immune cells into her body.
Judy Perkins had been given three months to live, but two years later there is no sign of cancer in her body.
The team at the US National Cancer Institute says the therapy is still experimental, but could transform the treatment of all cancer.
The technology is a "living drug" made from a patient's own cells at one of the world's leading centres of cancer research.
Dr Steven Rosenberg, chief of surgery at the National Cancer Institute, told the BBC: "We're talking about the most highly personalised treatment imaginable."
It remains experimental and still requires considerably more testing before it can be used more widely, but this is how it works: it starts by getting to know the enemy.
Next researchers go hunting. A patient's immune system will already be attacking the tumour, it's just losing the fight between white blood cells and cancer.
The scientists screen the patient's white blood cells and extract those capable of attacking the cancer.
These are then grown in huge quantities in the laboratory.
Around 90 billion were injected back into the 49-year-old patient, alongside drugs to take the brakes off the immune system.
Dr Rosenberg told me: "The very mutations that cause cancer turn out to be its Achilles heel."
These are the results from a single patient and much larger trials will be needed to confirm the findings.
The challenge so far in cancer immunotherapy is it tends to work spectacularly for some patients, but the majority do not benefit.
Dr Rosenberg added: "This is highly experimental and we're just learning how to do this, but potentially it is applicable to any cancer.