www.joshmettle.com 10 Great news from this morning’s Existing Home Sales Report. Sales in September surge 10% from what has been just horrendous sales numbers from July and August. The Home Buyer Tax Credit sucked up many buyers to beat the June 30th deadline. Based on this morning’s report, buyers look to be returning to the market, which is great news for real estate values nationally. Josh Mettle is a top producing mortgage lender specializing in financing Physicians, Dentists and Medical Professionals in Salt Lake City, Utah. Josh is also a fourth generation real estate investor, and owns a number of rental homes, apartment units and mortgages. If you’re ready to buy or sell residential real estate, get Josh’s latest free tips, tools and newsletter at www.joshmettle.com . Utah Real Estate Professionals can keep informed by visiting Josh’s Mortgage and Real Estate Blog at http
Complete video at: fora.tv Stephen Spielberg, PhD at Children’s Mercy Hospital, discusses the roots for a number of cultural challenges facing personalized health and proposes optimistic approaches to solving them. “Healthcare advances are much more due to what we do as a society with what we’ve got, than the technology that we have,” insists Spielberg. —– Personalized Health Project: An Action Summit for Life Science Leaders. Session I: The Gaps. An overview of eleven “gaps” between discovery and application in personalized health. Presented by Frank Douglas, MD, PhD, co-author of the PHP study; President and CEO, Austen BioInnovation Institute in Akron, Ohio; founder of MIT’s Center for Biomedical Innovation Stephen Spielberg, MD, PhD, is the director of the Center for Personalized Medicine at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City and the former Dean of Dartmouth Medical School.
Video Rating: 4 / 5






15 Responses
LibertyDownUnder @ 10:30 am
@donteatthefishsticks, I totally agree with you on that, but your opinion is the exact opposite of most Democrat legislators and university professors.
donteatthefishsticks @ 11:22 am
@LibertyDownUnder The American experience with the welfare state is certainly a sad one, and there are no utopias to be found. There are many different models however and very quantifiable and measurable differences in outcomes. I completely support a voucher system if there are adequate minimum standards that a voucher is guaranteed to pay for. Choice is a good thing and the responsibility for educating our children must be reclaimed by communities, parents and children themselves.
LibertyDownUnder @ 12:20 pm
@donteatthefishsticks, there are seperate reasons for each item you wrote.
The reason for the decline in maternal wisdom and the whole family unit is explained in detail in the clip I sent you. Here it is again: /watch?v=P1r-r6iLBEI
donteatthefishsticks @ 1:12 pm
@LibertyDownUnder Norway and Canada still have unemployment and social assistance in Canada varies by province, but generally the systems don’t get good results in terms of helping people raise their standard of living. There is still a welfare trap. However, there is also higher child literacy, less unemployment, less personal debt, more home ownership, a higher standard of living for the poor, a healthier population, and better results per tax dollar spent. That’s the difference.
Ramsez @ 1:12 pm
he’s in medicine? i thought he made movies
LibertyDownUnder @ 2:08 pm
@donteatthefishsticks, there’s a difference between a hand up and a hand out. In th eUS & the UK people are encouraged to avoid working and throw themselves to the mercy of the state.
From what I read, Norway & Canada still have quite a few problems.
Black families in America are specifically targeted by welfare agencies, and they keep getting worse every year.
You can see a detailed explanation about this here: /watch?v=P1r-r6iLBEI
donteatthefishsticks @ 2:13 pm
@LibertyDownUnder If welfare is a deterrent to maternal literacy, why are literacy rates and child health highest in countries with developed welfare states like the Nordic countries and Canada, while the US has one of the most meager welfare states in the first world and also some of the worst health outcomes, child mortality rates and literacy rates. The problem might be the American model but the evidence is clear, tax-and-redistribute economies have more equality and better outcomes.
mikebee02 @ 2:14 pm
I get that abstration is necessary for brevity’s sake, but he walks a thin line between profundity and inanity. Too many gaps, and they’re all where the meat should be.
anthonyww713 @ 2:57 pm
What good is creating new science when people cant afford to benefit from it?
Obamacare will only make things worse. Put the cost of HC back in the individuals hands by limiting what insurance can pay for. Let doctors compete for our business and prices will drop
LibertyDownUnder @ 3:27 pm
The problem is not “us”, the problem is WELFARE.
Welfare & state agencies have made maternal literacy redundant. And every time a new problem is created – a new solution is on the table: more welfare!
skeletonmom @ 3:41 pm
Maternal literacy for the win.
VohnKarWarrior @ 4:06 pm
He sounds like a cartoon character…
gooldensilver @ 4:50 pm
I spent the whole vid thinking ” When did SteVen Spielberg ” go bald ?
zassounotsukushi @ 4:52 pm
I don’t quite understand how he says the problem is THEM. If they are on one side of the gap, representing a small number of highly educated people, then it seems that the problem is everywhere BUT them. How can they fix it exactly?
goog2k @ 5:00 pm
Very profound & true.
Unfortunately, this is far too abstract and academic to have any impact on popular understanding.
Of course, girl’s education/opportunities, and women’s equal rights are a MAJOR cause of improvement in every society’s health, welfare, & economic growth. It’s been proven over and over.
But offer REAL examples & data, not just abstract theory.