Stumbler review: StumbleUpon - edosans web site revi...
edosan joined StumbleUpon on Nov 15, 2005
•201 reviews since Nov 23, 2005
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•edosan.stumbleupon.com
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Reviews of this stumbler

louloubell rated 16 months ago- All i can say is WOW!

M-Nome rated 16 months ago- Wonderfully insightful.

millerfamily rated 16 months ago- going to crawford to protest at bushwort's front door, i'll say 'hey' - a great stumbler is edosan.

anathea rated 16 months ago- edosan has everything I need today.

- parider rated 18 months ago
- Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful!! Well worth taking the time to look over every inch of this blog..

Omiros rated 18 months ago
Great stumbles, clear thinker, immune to religious mumbo jumbo
AND has photos of ... Monica Belucci.
It doesn't get any better in SU land!

ZimZalabim rated 18 months ago- An excellent and beautifully presented site *respectfully doffs cap*

- comcapco rated 19 months ago
- My mom died last summer.
I had been taking care of her for several years as she gradually became more dependent, mostly around mobility, but I was also her advocate dealing with medical conditions. She would have been 99 in August. It was unexpected because she had no medical conditions that would have caused death. I took her to the hospital because she fell and they determined that she had a hair line fracture in her pelvis but wanted to keep her throught he night because it was late and she was dehydrated. During the night, she woke up and did not remember where she was. She got out of bed and pulled out her IVs. I got a phone call around 3AM and the nurse said that she had an anxiety attack. She said she was going to give her some medicine for her anxiety. I didn't much about it. In the morning, when I went in, she was comatose. The doctor said my mother's systems were shutting down and that this is what happens when people die. I did not believe it. I insisted on appropriate tests which they were at first unwilling to do, but I insisted. I found out what medicine they had given her and I was told by another physician that this kind of medicine is never given to people who are very old or very young because it produces unpredictable and catastrophic problems and I was told the name of the antidote, which I asked them to administer. It worked, she revived for a while, but the antidote is short lived and the effect of the toxin outlasted it. It got worse and she died. I just want you to know just how abysmal it is out there. They don't just let people die, they actually kill them and they get away with it with impunity because lawyers will not take on malpractice suits when the victim is very old because the economics don't support it--damages are awarded based on life expectancy. If you are "lucky" you may live to a ripe old age, with all your senses and wits intact, as my mom did, and then you too will be at the mercy of a ruthlessly careless medical system. If you do not care about treatment of the elderly you must be thinking that for you, the clock runs backwards. - My mom died last summer.

Mari-Lou rated 19 months ago
Stimulating, thoughtful and beautifully crafted blog. He doesn't blog much but when he does it's quality everytime. See the poem about the elderly woman above.