Consejos Clinicos del Abuelo
Revista Clinica
Founded in with the purpose to offer its fans with the tools needed to acquire best quality products and services, to aim friends in the pursue of personal wealth through minimal marketing efforts
ÉTICA Y VERGÜENZA EN LA CARA.
En una carrera, el deportista Abel Mutai representante de Kenia, estaba a solo a unos metros de la línea de meta, pero se confundió con la señalización y se detuvo pensando que ya había completado la carrera.
El deportista español, Iván Fernandez, estaba justo detrás de él y al darse cuenta de lo que estaba sucediendo, comenzó a gritar al keniano para que continuará corriendo; pero Mutai no sabía español y no entendió. Entonces el español lo empujó hacia la victoria.
Un periodista le preguntó a Iván:
"¿Por qué hiciste eso?"
Iván respondió...
"Mi sueño es que algún día podamos tener una especie de vida comunitaria".
- El periodista insistió
¿Pero, Por qué dejaste ganar a Kenia?
Iván le contestó - No lo dejé ganar, él iba a ganar".
- El periodista volvió a insistir ¡Pero podrías haber ganado!"
- Iván lo miró y le respondió..Pero, ¿cuál sería el mérito de mi victoria? ¿Cuál sería el honor de esa medalla? ¿Qué pensaría mi madre de eso?"
Los VALORES se transmiten de generación en generación. Y tú ¿qué valores les estás enseñando a tus hijos? No dejes que los principios se pierdan.
POR UN PAÍS SIN CORRUPCIÓN.…!!!
Animales y Paisajes on TikTok Animales y Paisajes's short video with ♬ Risata
Bill Gates thinks you should hire lazy people. No, seriously. He famously said, "I choose a lazy person to do a hard job. Because a lazy person will find an easy way to do it."
https://www.entrepreneur.com/leadership/bill-gates-says-lazy-people-make-the-best-employees/376746
El actor Andrés García vive sus “últimos días”
De ser el hombre más guapo de México hoy yace hospitalizado el actor de 82 años de edad con una salud muy deteriorada.
Se comienza a despedir Andrés García menciona que está viviendo sus últimos días y pide a los jóvenes se cuiden y no se enfermen de Cirrosis hepática como él lo está viviendo.
"Quizás estemos viviendo los últimos días de Andrés García”, señaló el actor a través de su canal de YouTube, en un video grabado en su casa de Acapulco, Guerrero.
Que en Paz Descanse
Fallece Sandra Zaiter🙏🥹
Fallece Sandra Zaiter a los 79 años, La popular animadora de programas infantiles, cantante, compositora y escritora llevaba hospitalizada hace varios días por una afección respiratoria
Sandra Zaiter fue una de las figuras más queridas de la televisión puertorriqueña y destacó por su labor social y educativa durante toda una vida.
De izquierda a derecha, Otilio Warrington "Bizcocho", Sandra Zaiter, y Pedro Zervigón.
¡AMANDA HACE HISTÓRIA!
Via: Boxeo Puerto Rico
Amanda Serrano (43-2, 30KO) derrotó hoy por decisión unánime a Sarah Mahfoud (11-1, 3KO) en Inglaterra.
Con la victoria, Amanda campeona OMB/CMB añadió el título mundial de la FIB, para estar a solo el de la AMB y convertirse en campeona indiscutible.
Amanda hoy se convirtió en la única/único en el boxeo puertorriqueño en tener tres títulos mundiales al mismo tiempo.
🇵🇷🥊💥
We post some incredible stories of valor on this page but this story of a Navy Seal refusing to leave a man behind has to be in the top three.
Medal of Honor recepient Navy Seal Michael Thorton was born in Greenville, South Carolina and raised on the family farm near Spartanburg. Thornton joined the Navy upon graduating from high school in 1967 and completed the rigorous training to join the SEALs, the Navy’s elite sea-air-land special operations force.
As overall American conventional forces were gradually withdrawn from Vietnam in the early 1970s, the “unconventional warfare” role of Navy SEALs grew. In the spring of 1972, Petty Officer Thornton was assigned to a mission under the command of Lt. Thomas Norris. Michael Thornton’s Medal of Honor citation reads:
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while participating in a daring operation against enemy forces.
“PO Thornton, as Assistant U.S. Navy Advisor, along with a U.S. Navy lieutenant serving as Senior Advisor, accompanied a three-man Vietnamese Navy SEAL patrol on an intelligence gathering and prisoner capture operation against an enemy-occupied naval river base. Launched from a Vietnamese Navy junk in a rubber boat, the patrol reached land and was continuing on foot toward its objective when it suddenly came under heavy fire from a numerically superior force.
“The patrol called in naval gunfire support and then engaged the enemy in a fierce firefight, accounting for many enemy casualties before moving back to the waterline to prevent encirclement.
“Upon learning that the Senior Advisor had been hit by enemy fire and was believed to be dead, PO Thornton returned through a hail of fire to the lieutenant’s last position; quickly disposed of two enemy soldiers about to overrun the position, and succeeded in removing the seriously wounded and unconscious Senior Naval Advisor to the water’s edge. He then inflated the lieutenant’s lifejacket and towed him seaward for approximately two hours until picked up by support craft.
“By his extraordinary courage and perseverance, PO Thornton was directly responsible for saving the life of his superior officer and enabling the safe extraction of all patrol members, thereby upholding the highest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.”
Collier provides more detail of the engagement and rescue:
“During the five-hour firefight, Thornton was wounded in his back. Norris ordered Thornton and two of the South Vietnamese SEALs to fall back to a sand dune to the north and provide covering fire. Not long after, the Vietnamese SEAL who had stayed behind arrived at Thornton’s position and told him that Norris had been killed. Thornton charged back over 500 yards of open terrain to Norris. When he got there, he killed two enemy soldiers standing over the lieutenant’s body. He lifted Norris, barely alive and with a shattered skull, and began to run back toward the beach, enemy fire kicking up all around him.
“The blast from an incoming round fired by the USS Newport News blew both men into the air. Thornton picked up Norris again and raced for a sand dune and then retreated 300 yards to the water. As he plunged into the surf, Thornton lashed his life vest to the unconscious officer’s body. When another SEAL was hit in the hip and couldn’t swim, Thornton grabbed him and slowly and painfully swam both men out to sea. Despite his wounds, Thornton swam for more than two hours. All three wounded men were rescued by the same junk that had dropped them off 16 hours earlier.
"The Giant Killer" book details the incredible life of the smallest soldier, Green Beret Captain Richard Flaherty along with the harrowing stories from the men of the 101st Airborne in Vietnam. The Giant Killer FB page honors these incredible war heroes making sure their stories of valor and sacrifice are never forgotten. The Book is Available now on Amazon & Walmart. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
This is incredible.
Within just 24 hours, Mykhailo Danilov’s family received over UAH 5 million in donations from across the world.
The goal was to fundraise UAH 500,000 and heal the Azovstal marine’s arm.
Poor Russian solders, using weapons from WWII and Cold War era. Rusia lost in Ukraine since the very first day. It was a bad desition to invade Ukraine
Vietnam War Vet and Medal of Honor Recipient Wesley Lee Fox
As a boy growing up in rural northern Virginia Fox always planned to join the military. He left his family farm near Herndon and enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1950 at the start of the Korean War.
Fox served as a young corporal in Korea and later, as a first lieutenant, led a company in Vietnam that would suffer 75 percent casualties during a three-month operation. The unit, Company A, 9th Marines, was among the troops fighting in Operation Dewey Canyon, the last major Marine offensive during the Vietnam War.
The company came under intense gunfire from the North Vietnamese on Feb. 22, 1969, which Fox remembered as a foggy, rainy day in the jungle of the northern A Shau Valley. Realizing they wouldn't be able to move the injured men and retreat, Fox led an assault against the larger enemy force. Though Fox was wounded, he refused medical attention and successfully directed the responding attack, coordinated air support, and then supervised the medical evacuation of injured and dead Marines.
"His indomitable courage, inspiring initiative and unwavering devotion to duty in the face of grave personal danger inspired his Marines to such aggressive action that they overcame all enemy resistance and destroyed a large bunker complex," read Fox's citation for the Medal
Fox reflected on the attack and recalled one brief moment when he had to motivate his men: "I had the opportunity to look 'em in the eyeballs and say, 'This is what we do.'"
"Why did my Marines go forward? Cause they knew that's what I wanted of 'em," Fox said. "They knew we were moving to the sounds of the enemy's guns, and until somebody told 'em something clearly, differently, a Marine isn't going to lose his focus. I had some great Marines."
Fox went on to serve 43 years in the Marine Corps and left only when he hit the mandatory retirement age of 62 in 1993. He worked his way up through every enlisted rank from private to colonel.
In an announcement Monday, the Marine Corps called Fox a "legend" and a "true Marine's Marine."
"To tell you how proud I am to wear the Marine uniform, my first four years as a Marine I didn't own one stitch of civilian clothes -- everything I did was in a Marine uniform," Fox said. "I'd go home on leave, working in the hay fields or whatever, I wore my Marine utilities. Go in town to see the movies, I wore Marine dress." - Wesley Fox
Fox was also proud to wear the Medal of Honor, he said.
"I'm pleased and proud to wear it for the Marine Corps and for what my Marines did on that particular fight," Fox told the interviewer. "I feel a little bit of an emptiness in knowing that there were others deserved in that fight that were not awarded."
RIP Hero...
The Giant Killer book details the incredible life of the smallest soldier, Green Beret Captain Richard Flaherty along with the harrowing stories from the men of the 101st Airborne in Vietnam. The Giant Killer FB page honors these incredible war heroes making sure their stories of valor and sacrifice are never forgotten. God Bless our Vets! Available now on Amazon & Walmart.
Story by Nikki Wentling
Mykhailo Dianov, Ukrainian POW from Azovstal, before and after russian captivity. His broken arm in captivity was not treated, as a result of which it is now missing 4 centimeters of bone.
More photos and information: https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2022/09/23/7368807/
IMPORTANTE!
RECUERDEN QUE EN ESTOS MOMENTOS TODOS ESTAMOS ASINTOMÁTICOS✍👈
🚨🚨📣*DELTA- COVID-19*📣🚨🚨
Cuando asista a una actividad, sea en casa o visitando a alguien, todos debemos considerar esta nueva advertencia y tomar precauciones.
*INFORMACIÓN IMPORTANTE*
Con el nuevo virus *Covid Delta, no hay tos, ni fiebre, ni pérdida del olfato y gusto*. Sus síntomas son:
- Fuerte dolor en las articulaciones,
- Dolor muscular,
- Dolor de cabeza, nuca y espalda alta,
- Secreción o bloqueo nasal,
- Garganta irritada,
- Debilidad general,
- Cansancio,
- Pérdida de apetito,
- Vómito,
- Diarrea y
- Neumonía.
Así es Covid-19-Delta! Y por supuesto, más virulento y con un índice de mortandad más alto. Toma menos tiempo llegar a los extremos,
a veces sin síntomas!!
*Tenemos que tener más cuidado!*
Esta cepa no se aloja en la región naso-faríngea!! Afecta directamente los pulmones, lo que quiere decir que las ‘ventanas’, periodos de tiempo son más cortos. Hay pacientes sin fiebre, sin dolor, pero que reportan leve neumonía de pecho en sus rayos X. Los test de hisopo nasal a menudo son negativos al Covid-19 y cada vez son más los resultados de falso negativo de los test naso-faríngeos. *El virus se riega y contagia directamente a los pulmones*, provocando agudos estres respiratorio causado por neumonía viral.
Esto explica el por qué se ha vuelto agudo, más virulento y mortal!!
Por favor, seamos más cuidadosos,
- evitemos sitios aglomerados,
- mantengamos 1,5 m de distancia así sea en sitios abierto,
- usemos doble mascarillas, careta facial y
- lavar frecuentemente las manos,
- Cubrir la boca con el brazo al toser o estornudar.
- No abrazar y besar a sus seres queridos, es muy peligroso en este momento, todos están asintomáticos.
Esta *“ola”* es mucho más mortal que la primera. Así que tenemos que ser MUY cuidadosos y *tomar todo tipo de precauciones*
Por favor, *sea también un comunicador alerta para sus familiares y amigos.*
*Todos debemos conocer esta información!*