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[h=2]NIH Spent $464,272 to Find Out Why Gay Men Get Syphilis in Peru[/h]Related studies total over $2 million





Gay dancers perform at a gay bar in Lima, Peru / AP

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BY: Elizabeth Harrington
February 3, 2014 5:20 pm
The National Institutes of Health has spent millions of dollars studying male sex workers in Peru, including more than $400,000 to determine why gay men get syphilis in the South American country.
“Syphilis remains an uncontrolled infectious disease globally, with high prevalence and incidence in certain high risk populations, affecting more than 20 percent of men who have sex with men (MSM) in Peru,” according to the grant, awarded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
“The incidence of syphilis in MSM in Peru is about 9 cases per 100 person-years,” it said. “We are proposing a study to improve our understanding of syphilis epidemiology and molecular biology, particularly among MSM.”
The study will “recruit a cohort of MSM and transgender persons at high risk for syphilis,” to measure incidence rates of syphilis over a two year period. Researchers will look at molecular and immunological factors for why MSM get syphilis and create a system for diagnosing and managing the sexually transmitted disease.
The project, “Syphilis: Translating Technology to Understand a Neglected Epidemic,” has received $464,272 since 2012.
The funding has gone to researchers at Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, a private university in Lima, Peru. The school has two other active studies from the NIH devoted to male sex workers.
A $160,920 study is sending “motivational messages” via “mobile-phone text messaging, email, or instant messaging robots” to encourage gay men to get tested for HIV in Peru.
Messages include information on HIV testing, not “stigmatizing and stereotyping messages or images about ‘being gay.’”
Another HIV prevention intervention study by the university is focusing on “MSM/transwomen,” at a cost of $146,524.
The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) is conducting numerous studies on male sex workers in Peru, as well.
UCLA researchers are examining how community “skills building” can help “Fletes,” a term for bisexual male sex workers who engage in survival sex work for very low wages. The project cost $168,197 in 2013.
The university also received $323,360 to give “partner therapy” to Peruvian male sex workers who have gonorrhea or chlamydia for another study beginning in 2011.
Public health interventions ($272,160) and “partner notification strategies” ($754,901) are also being researched by UCLA to reduce HIV and sexually transmitted infections, specifically targeted at Peruvian male sex workers.
In all, the listed studies have cost U.S. taxpayers $2,122,137.
 

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$2,122,137 - stupid is as stupid does. We stereotype gays? Maybe we should stereotype the idiots in DC who waste our money.
 

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McConnell Plots to Put Dems on the Spot Over EPA Regs

[h=3]Congress[/h][h=1]Congress Took More Free Trips in 2013 Than in Any Year Since the Abramoff Reforms[/h][h=2]The tally: 1,887 trips at a cost of $6 million, new data from LegiStorm shows.[/h]Congress Sets Record for Voting Along Party Lines

(LUIS ACOSTA/AFP/Getty Images)



By Shane Goldmacher

February 3, 2014



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Members of Congress and their aides took more free trips around the world in 2013 than in any year since new restrictions were put in place after the Jack Abramoff influence-peddling scandal.
The website LegiStorm, which compiles congressional travel records, said Monday that lawmakers and their staffs took a combined 1,887 free trips last year for a total cost of almost $6 million.
That amount is more than double the sum private groups spent on congressional trips in 2008, the first full year that the tightened travel rules of 2007 went into effect. The total number of trips has bounded upward by more than 60 percent since 2008 as well.
Last year, lawmakers enjoyed all-expenses-paid journeys to Ireland, Morocco, France, South Africa, Israel, Turkey, and many more destinations, according to House travel records.


Lobbyists and those who employ them have not been allowed to directly finance privately funded congressional travel abroad since 2007. But as National Journal documented earlier this year, many of the private interests footing the bill for international congressional travel are tied closely to lobbying operations in Washington.
Some even share staff and office space with lobbying shops. The America Israel Education Foundation, which spent $1.7 million on congressional travel in 2013, more than any other group, shares an address with the influential American Israel Public Affairs Committee, for instance.
Overall, Israel was the most popular destination, accounting for $2 million in travel—more than one-third of the total travel expenses to all destinations.
The total number of congressional trips still hasn't reached the peak of 2003 through 2005, when there were more than 4,000 annual congressional voyages at an average cost of about $10 million.
But the number has been steadily climbing since Congress began tightening its rules close to seven years ago, as the stigma of flying abroad on a private group's dime has dimmed. The previous high, under the current rules, was 1,621 trips that cost $5.88 million in 2011, according to LegiStorm.
Lawmakers are allowed—and often do—bring their spouses along on the trips, adding to the allure. While the itineraries must be approved in advance by the House Ethics Committee, the trips don't always sound too stressful.
In one of the last trips a lawmaker took in 2013, Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., and his wife headed to Puerto Rico in December. They stayed at the El Conquistador Resort, a Waldorf Astoria property "uniquely nestled on a cliff overlooking the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea," according to its website.
The Council of State Governments Eastern Regional Conference picked up the tab. The annual meeting's theme was "Succeeding in a Time of Austerity."
 

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A Super Bowl champion Obamacare campaign: $130,000. The Baltimore Ravens were paid $130,000 in taxpayer money to sponsor the Affordable Care Act.

An overwhelming, bipartisan majority of Americans thinks that Congress can find more ways to cut government spending, and there are numerous programs of questionable value that Congress should eliminate.
America did not end up $17 trillion in debt overnight. Congressional refusal to cut spending and prioritize taxpayer money more appropriately year after year got the nation to this point. Congress will have another opportunity before January 15, when considering the 2014 spending bill, to do better. Fiscal restraint is long overdue.
 

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Government employee trip to luxury hotel in the Caribbean: priceless. Federal employees took a taxpayer-funded trip to the Buccaneer Hotel in St. Croix—the same hotel made famous on TV’s “The Bachelor.” The bill was divided among a number of agencies, making a final tally difficult to come by.
 

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A bus stop with heated pavement for the Washington area: $1 million. A lavish bus stop with heated pavement was built in Arlington, VA, but it has failed to keep commuters warm or dry.
 

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[h=1]These Stunning Examples Of Government Waste Cost Taxpayers $16 Billion[/h] Walter Hickey

Mar. 26, 2013, 10:18 PM 97,304 21






joint-land-attack-cruise-missile-defense-elevated-netted-sensor-jlens.jpg
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Despite appearances, the federal government knows it wastes a ton of money. That's why each agency is equipped with an Inspector General, whose sole job it is to investigate and identify government waste.
This can take the form of calling out questionable or improper use of funds, finding structural problems, or just pointing out opportunities where Uncle Sam could have saved some money.
Twice each year, the IGs report back to Congress with details on what they found.
We went through the most recent edition of these reports to find the most egregious instances of government waste or inefficiencies that the Inspectors General found.
Several of these — especially ones that involve recurring payments or structural inefficiencies — haven't been fixed yet.
What we found in the reports could have saved the government a combined total of more than $15.75 billion.


[h=3]In 2011, the Department of Agriculture made an estimated $28 million in inappropriate farm assistance payments.[/h]
in-2011-the-department-of-agriculture-made-an-estimated-28-million-in-inappropriate-farm-assistance-payments.jpg

Getty/Scott Olson

Source: USDA OIG


[h=3]The Conservation Research Program pays millions annually to farmers who don't farm parts of their land. But the USDA miscalculated the soil rental rate, wasting $114.5 million that could have been put to better use.[/h]
the-conservation-research-program-pays-millions-annually-to-farmers-who-dont-farm-parts-of-their-land-but-the-usda-miscalculated-the-soil-rental-rate-wasting-1145-million-that-could-have-been-put-to-better-use.jpg

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Source: USDA OIG


[h=3]An estimated $208 million worth of single-family direct housing loans went to borrowers who had no history of stable and dependable income, poor credit, or were unexpected to be able to make their payments.[/h]
an-estimated-208-million-worth-of-single-family-direct-housing-loans-went-to-borrowers-who-had-no-history-of-stable-and-dependable-income-poor-credit-or-were-unexpected-to-be-able-to-make-their-payments.jpg

AP

Source: USDA OIG


[h=3]Up to $118 million could have been saved through better oversight of the Department of Labor's troubled Jobs Corps.[/h]
up-to-118-million-could-have-been-saved-through-better-oversight-of-the-department-of-labors-troubled-jobs-corps.jpg

John Moore / Getty Images

Source: DOL OIG


[h=3]Because of an error in calculating performance standards, the Employment and Training Administration failed to track down $148 million in overpaid government checks.[/h]
because-of-an-error-in-calculating-performance-standards-the-employment-and-training-administration-failed-to-track-down-148-million-in-overpaid-government-checks.jpg

bytemarks / Flickr

Source: DOL OIG


[h=3]More than $138 million of federal grant spending by the Philadelphia School District was either not allowed or unjustified.[/h]
more-than-138-million-of-federal-grant-spending-by-the-philadelphia-school-district-was-either-not-allowed-or-unjustified.jpg

AP

Source: Department of Education OIG


[h=3]The Department of Education sent $42.4 million to Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, despite the fact that the school is ineligible to receive any federal funding.[/h]
the-department-of-education-sent-424-million-to-saint-mary-of-the-woods-college-despite-the-fact-that-the-school-is-ineligible-to-receive-any-federal-funding.jpg

Facebook

Source: Department of Education OIG


[h=3]The Small Business Administration underwrites loans but has been ineffective in identifying when lenders are clearly negligent. Improved reviews could save $43 million over two years.[/h]
the-small-business-administration-underwrites-loans-but-has-been-ineffective-in-identifying-when-lenders-are-clearly-negligent-improved-reviews-could-save-43-million-over-two-years.jpg

Noel Celis/AFP

Source: SBA OIG


[h=3]The National Disaster Loan Resolution Center failed to transfer delinquent disaster loans to the Treasury Department in a timely manner, and incurred $171.1 million in questionable costs as a result.[/h]
the-national-disaster-loan-resolution-center-failed-to-transfer-delinquent-disaster-loans-to-the-treasury-department-in-a-timely-manner-and-incurred-1711-million-in-questionable-costs-as-a-result.jpg

Daniel Goodman/Business Insider

Source: SBA OIG


[h=3]The Department of Veterans Affairs does not effectively identify instances in which it doesn't have to pay for care. A report in 2011 found that, as a result, the VA could overspend by an estimated $760 million over five years.[/h]
the-department-of-veterans-affairs-does-not-effectively-identify-instances-in-which-it-doesnt-have-to-pay-for-care-a-report-in-2011-found-that-as-a-result-the-va-could-overspend-by-an-estimated-760-million-over-five-years.jpg

AP

Source: VA OIG


[h=3]The VA will award an estimated $2.5 billion worth of contracts intended for veteran-owned small businesses to ineligible businesses from 2011 to 2015.[/h]
the-va-will-award-an-estimated-25-billion-worth-of-contracts-intended-for-veteran-owned-small-businesses-to-ineligible-businesses-from-2011-to-2015.jpg

Department of Veterans Affairs / Flickr

Source: VA OIG


[h=3]Due to lax cost-controls, the Army wasted $335.9 million on a contract to maintain Stryker vehicles.[/h]
due-to-lax-cost-controls-the-army-wasted-3359-million-on-a-contract-to-maintain-stryker-vehicles.jpg

U.S. Navy photo by Journalist 2nd Class John J. Pistone

Source: DOD OIG


[h=3]More than $437 million worth of costs at Los Alamos National Laboratory were deemed questionable over a two-year period.[/h]
more-than-437-million-worth-of-costs-at-los-alamos-national-laboratory-were-deemed-questionable-over-a-two-year-period.jpg

AP

Source: DOE OIG


[h=3]The FAA could have saved $157 million by simply restructuring contracts on its multi-billion dollar program to upgrade Air Traffic Control hardware.[/h]
the-faa-could-have-saved-157-million-by-simply-restructuring-contracts-on-its-multi-billion-dollar-program-to-upgrade-air-traffic-control-hardware.jpg

Wikimedia Commons

Source: DOT OIG


[h=3]One-fifth of the Department of Transportation's Recovery Act contracts were awarded with only one or two bids. The average price difference between contracts with one or two bids and those with three bids is at least $179 million.[/h]
one-fifth-of-the-department-of-transportations-recovery-act-contracts-were-awarded-with-only-one-or-two-bids-the-average-price-difference-between-contracts-with-one-or-two-bids-and-those-with-three-bids-is-at-least-179-million.jpg











Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/gove...estration-sequester-2013-3?op=1#ixzz2sMbtCOP4
 

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[h=1]Dem Senator: Cut Pay for Veterans, Not Congress[/h]December 17, 2013 by Daniel Greenfield 20 Comments



[URL="http://www.therxforum.com/#"]35[/URL]



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Who can forget the heroic sacrifices made by our congressmen and senators, the hours that they have spent downing drinks, sticking pork into bills and risking their lives in the dank and dangerous corridors of the Capitol Hill subway system.

We can’t ask our brave senators to take cuts. It must be those selfish greedy soldiers who should pay more. What they have they ever done for us?
It’s time for retired veterans to face cuts as the federal government looks for ways to trim expenditures, Sen. Chuck Schumer said Monday.
“Civilian federal employees have been cut, cut, cut. I think there was a feeling, if you’re going to cut them further, which was done, that the military retirees should have about an equal amount. It’s small,” the New York Democrat told MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”
“I think (Rep.) Paul Ryan and (Sen.) Patty Murray looked everywhere they could to try and find compromise. Everybody had to take a little,” Schumer said.
“They’re going to have to pay a tiny, little bit into it, which they never have,” he added.
But Schumer maintained members of Congress should not be forced to take a pay cut. He said they have already sacrificed, since they have not seen a pay raise “in a long time,” and explained most of them are paying more for healthcare insurance.
“We have taken pretty big cuts,” he said.
They’re paying more for their healthcare because of a bill that they voted for. Most Americans are paying a good deal more.

Incidentally Senator Schumer’s worth is estimated at nearly a million dollars. It has gone up %79 since 2004. Few Americans could say the same.
 

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But, but, but...fratfraud says all this is great for economic growth.

:ohno:
 

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But, but, but...fratfraud says all this is great for economic growth.

:ohno:

This is non-partisan stuff also. Stuff like this cannot be justified and should not be tolerated by we the taxpayers. This crosses party lines and has to stop. If the liberals cannot get on board to put a stop to stuff like this then it shows them for what they are. At that point they lose all credibility on any topic. This country needs to attain financial stability, quit printing worthless money, and cut spending including foreign aid etc. One party blames the other party. This administration simply thinks cutting military spending is the answer. What a joke. This is across the board stuff. I am not a tea party member but I see where they are coming from. Wasting taxpayer dollars is like stealing, even worse.
 

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Acebb: it is a never ending spiral, truly a death spiral. This has to stop, Obamacare, global warming, on and on. These are losing issues on the face and in the pocket.
 

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The data is definitely not on your guys side. But it never is, that's why you have to come up with bullshit philosophical concepts that make you look retarded...

fredgraph.png
 

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The retardo Keynesian living off Big Government cheese never disappoints.

The government can only get away with this wild spending binge for as long as other countries are willing to sell us their "stuff" in exchange for dollars.

Fratfraud thinks it's 'free' money, but anyone who understands economics knows that it's phony money backed by phony promises from phony politicians.

US_dollar_purchasing_power_vs_gold_1774-2012.gif
 

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The retardo Keynesian living off Big Government cheese never disappoints.

The government can only get away with this wild spending binge for as long as other countries are willing to sell us their "stuff" in exchange for dollars.

Fratfraud thinks it's 'free' money, but anyone who understands economics knows that it's phony money backed by phony promises from phony politicians.

So in your graph, the only time in the 20th century purchasing power went up was surprise, surprise... during the Great Depression. And you wonder why economists think people like you are idiots.
 

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Who cares, are you afraid of large numbers or something?

CBO said today the debt will be 79% of GDP at the end of 2024 & "such a large debt poses a greater risk of precipitating a fiscal crisis"

Moreover, because federal borrowing generally reduces national saving, the capital stock and wages will be smaller than if debt was lower.

You can stop now.
 

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