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Friday, November 8, 2024

'LeBron James’ biohacking routine reportedly costs $1.5M — will help him ‘live a long time’'

 Body check!

LeBron James, who turns 40 next month, reportedly drops $1.5 million annually to keep his body in tip-top shape.

The Lakers superstar wouldn’t confirm or deny the $1.5 million figure — initially shared by sportswriter Bill Simmons in 2016 — in Netflix’s new docuseries “Starting 5.”

LeBron James, who turns 40 next month, reportedly spends $1.5 million annually to keep his body in tip-top shape.AP
The NBA superstar showed off his biohacking routine in Netflix’s new docuseries “Starting 5.”Netflix
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“I kind of just chuckle,” James said in the series, which premiered last month. “That is a number that I will not disclose, but, more importantly, I think it’s just the time.”

Dave Asprey is an entrepreneur and author known as “the father of biohacking.”

The four-time NBA champion spends hours each day on his biohacking routine, which includes cryotherapyred light therapy, hyperbaric chamber time, a mid-day nap and a high-carb, low-sugar diet.

The Post consulted Dave Asprey, an entrepreneur and author known as “the father of biohacking,” on James’ full-court press regimen — and what, exactly, that supposed $1.5 million is doing.

“LeBron focuses a lot on recovery, which is crucial if you want to perform at your full power and live a long time,” Asprey said.

Cryotherapy

Besides decreasing inflammation, cryotherapy can trigger an endorphin rush, a metabolism and energy boost and a loss of 500 to 800 calories per treatment.Netflix

“Consistency is the key,” James wrote on Instagram in 2020 as he showed off a single-room cryotherapy chamber, which can cost upwards of $90,000.

Nearly a decade ago, Bleacher Report followed James as he stepped into a chamber that drops from -110 degrees Celsius (-166 degrees Fahrenheit) to as low as -150 degrees Celsius (-238 degrees Fahrenheit) over three minutes.

“This tricks the brain into thinking that you’re freezing,” said the person who assisted James with his session. “The brain triggers a systemic reaction in the bloodstream that creates anti-inflammatory proteins. Those proteins are what decreases inflammation.”

Chronic inflammation, when your immune system stays activated long after an injury or threat of illness has passed, can lead to wear and tear on organs and tissues and has been associated with obesity, heart disease, diabetes, liver disease and several types of cancer.

Besides decreasing inflammation, cryotherapy can also trigger an endorphin rush, a metabolism and energy boost, and a loss of 500 to 800 calories per treatment.

“An ice bath, cold shower, or cryotherapy session sends a powerful signal to your body to weed out the weak cells and grow stronger, more resilient ones,” Asprey said.Netflix

James is known to alternate between a cold tub and a hot tub as well, tightening and dilating his blood vessels to reduce inflammation and flush out waste from his muscles.

“Cold therapy has been a part of my longevity strategy for years,” Asprey told The Post. “An ice bath, cold shower, or cryotherapy session sends a powerful signal to your body to weed out the weak cells and grow stronger, more resilient ones. This is definitely something you want if you’re planning on living a long time.”

Red light therapy

Red light “helps your cells work better and reduces inflammation, which is a major cause of aging,” Asprey noted.LeBron James/ Instagram
Low-level wavelengths of red light help repair James’ cells, reducing inflammation and relieving pain.

Red light activates an enzyme called cytochrome c oxidase in your cells, which causes your mitochondria to manufacture more ATP and generate more energy,” explained Asprey, who has a light-based technology company called TrueLight.

“This helps your cells work better and reduces inflammation, which is a major cause of aging,” Asprey added.

CNN reported in 2017 that James’ longtime trainer, Mike Mancias, has also tried to hasten James’ recovery with an electro-stimulation machine, air-pumped compression sleeves and a soft tissue massage by hand.

James is a fan of the Hyperice Normatec 3 air compression boots. The Normatec 3 sells for $799 on Amazon.

Hyperbaric chamber sessions

James climbs into a Vitaeris 320 Portable Hyperbaric Chamber.Netflix

Though his wife Savannah likens it to a coffin, James will get into a 32-inch diametric chamber for 90 minutes.

Pure oxygen is pumped into the pressurized space to enhance blood flow and circulation and reduce swelling, pain and toxins.

“Studies show that hyperbaric oxygen therapy can increase circulating stem cells in your body,” Asprey said. “This is great for longevity because stem cells are responsible for repairing your tissues and keeping them young.”

The Vitaeris 320 Portable Hyperbaric Chamber, which James has used, can retail for $23,000.

Sleep

Sleep is one of James’ priorities — and he has perfected his nap routine.Netflix

James is known to sleep eight or nine hours a night and nap for two or three hours a day.

“That’s the best way for your body to physically and emotionally be able to recover and get back to 100% as possible. Now, will you wake up and feel 100%? There are some days you don’t,” James said on a 2018 episode of “The Tim Ferriss Show” podcast.

“So some days you feel better than others,” he continued. “But the more, and more, and more time that you get those eight — if you can get nine, that’s amazing. Sometimes, I even get 10 hours of sleep.”

James finds it easier to slumber when the room temperature is 68 to 70 degrees, when there’s complete darkness (no television or smartphone light allowed) and when the “rain on leaves” soundscape is playing on his Calm app.

“High-quality sleep is indeed one of the best longevity hacks,” Asprey said. “But unless you’re an athlete, most people don’t need to take mid-day naps if they’re sleeping well at night. Focus on getting quality sleep at night and you won’t need to take naps.”

Low-sugar, high-carb diet

James also told Ferriss that he eats as “clean as possible throughout the [NBA] season.”

He eschews sugary drinksartificial sweeteners and fried foods in favor of gluten-free pancakes with berries at breakfast, an arugula salad with chicken for lunch and chicken parmesan with a rocket salad for dinner.

“So the sugars I kinda cut out, but the carbs I kinda ramp up. Because you’re losing so many calories, you’re burning so many calories, burning all your energy throughout those games,” James said in 2017. “So I kinda go heavy on the carbs because it gives you energy. It’s worked for me.”

Asprey said reducing added sugar promotes longevity because consistently elevated blood sugar levels can contribute to aging and chronic disease.

“The best diet strategy for longevity is to focus on high-quality animal protein (aim for at least 1 gram per pound of ideal body weight per day), healthy saturated fats and low-toxin carbs,” said Asprey, who developed the Bulletproof Diet.

James also likes to finish his dinner off with a glass of cabernet. There’s conflicting research on if any amount of alcohol is good for you.

https://nypost.com/2024/11/08/lifestyle/lebron-james-alleged-1-5m-a-year-biohacking-routine-does-it-work/

Government Employees Dominate US Union Membership

 Today, union membership stands at historic lows of 10%, a stark decline from the 33.5% peak seen in 1954.

Despite a surge in unionizing efforts last year, from Starbucks and Amazon to Trader Joes and Uber, national membership rates fell for the second year in a row. This was due to the rise in non-union jobs, which largely offset the 191,000 new private sector unionized jobs.

This graphic, via Visual Capitalist's Dorothy Neufeld, shows the industries with the highest union membership rates in America, based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The Top 10 Most Unionized Industries

As we can see in the table below, roughly a third of public sector jobs are unionized, led by the local government sector by a wide margin:

When it comes to the private sector, utilities and transportation have the highest union membership rates, both providing essential services in highly-regulated industries.

For instance, the Utility Workers Union of America represents 45,000 members across the country, including employees at major firms such as Exelon, Duke Energy, and Southern Company. While 19.9% of utilities workers are unionized, it has fallen from 28.3% since 2010.

In the transportation and warehousing industry, over one million workers are unionized, at 15.9% of the workforce. However, it too has seen unionization declines, falling from over a quarter of workers in 2000.

As one of the largest unions in the country, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters has 1.3 million members across the U.S. and Canada, and is one of the primary unions for the transportation sector. Often, union members receive regular wage increases, pension plans, job security, and wages that exceed industry standards.

We can see that unionization rates in the film industry also falls above the national average, at 12.1%. Last year, the historic Writers Guild of Americas strike led to key pay negotiations, minimum staffing requirements, and new guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence as technological advancement reshapes the entertainment industry.

Overall, 14.4 million workers in America are unionized, with the country ranking 27th across 31 OECD countries by union density based on the most recent figures. By contrast, five countries have over 50% of workers that are unionized, including Iceland, Denmark, and Sweden.

To learn more about this topic from a geographic perspective, check out this graphic on union membership by state.

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/government-employees-dominate-us-union-membership

Asked About Dropping Trump Charges, DOJ Says Policy Is To Not Prosecute Presidents

 by Jack Phillips and Sam Dorman via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

WASHINGTON—Special counsel Jack Smith’s office said the Department of Justice (DOJ) has a longstanding policy not to prosecute a sitting president, in response to a query about whether it will drop its criminal cases against President-elect Donald Trump, who won the 2024 election.

(Left) Special counsel Jack Smith in Washington on Aug. 1, 2023. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images); (Right) Former President Donald Trump. David Dee Delgado/Getty Images

Peter Carr, a spokesman for the special counsel’s office, declined to comment on whether the office will drop its cases but directed The Epoch Times to a 2000 memo from the DOJ Office of Legal Counsel. It states that “indictment or criminal prosecution of a sitting President would unconstitutionally undermine the capacity of the executive branch to perform its constitutionally assigned functions.”

Multiple Republicans called on the DOJ and local district attorneys to end their prosecutions of Trump after he won the presidential election on Nov. 5.

“The American people have spoken: the lawfare must end,” House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) wrote in a post on social media platform X. “I call on Attorney General Garland, [Manhattan District Attorney] Alvin Bragg, and [Fulton County District Attorney] Fani Willis to immediately terminate the politically motivated prosecutions of President Donald Trump.”

On Nov. 6, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) wrote on X that special counsel Jack Smith should “look forward to a new chapter” in his legal career.

The Supreme Court substantially rejected what you were trying to do, and after tonight, it’s clear the American people are tired of lawfare. Bring these cases to an end,” Graham wrote.

[ZH: Meanwhile...]

*  *  *

Former Attorney General Bill Barr, who served under Trump, told Fox News that prosecutors should “do the right” thing and end their cases against the president-elect.

“Further maneuvering on these cases in the weeks ahead would serve no legitimate purpose and only distract the country and the incoming administration from the task at hand,” Barr said. “The public interest now demands that the country unite and focus on the challenges we face at home and abroad. Attorney General Garland and all the state prosecutors should do the right thing and help the country move forward by dismissing the cases.”

He said that the U.S. electorate has “rendered their verdict on President Trump and decisively chosen him to lead the country for the next four years.”

“They did that with full knowledge of the claims against him by prosecutors around the country, and I think Attorney General Garland and the state prosecutors should respect the people’s decision and dismiss the cases against President Trump now,” Barr said.

Trump is slated to appear before a New York judge later this month to face sentencing after he was charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records in connection to payments he made during the 2016 election. He was convicted by a jury in May. He had pleaded not guilty and denies the allegations.

However, with the election result, it’s not clear whether Trump will receive any sentencing after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that presidents should have some degree of immunity from prosecution for official acts.

It’s unclear what Judge Juan Merchan will do following the election. Merchan has already pushed back the sentencing date twice.

Trump faces charges in Fulton County, Georgia, for allegedly trying to illegally overturn the 2020 election results, although that case is currently in limbo after the president-elect and several co-defendants appealed a judge’s ruling to allow Willis to remain on the case. The Georgia Appeals Court is currently scheduled to take up a Trump appeal next year, and the case is currently on pause.

Willis, a Democrat, was elected to another term in office as Fulton County’s top prosecutor on Nov. 5, according to projections from The Associated Press.

In two federal cases brought against him, Trump faces criminal charges in Washington, brought by Smith, over his alleged activity following the 2020 election and the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol breach. A separate case that was brought by Smith in Florida over his handling of classified documents was dismissed by a federal judge earlier this year, although Smith had appealed it.

When Trump officially takes office, he could use his presidential authority to dismiss the two cases brought by Smith, who was appointed by Garland. However, he has less latitude in dealing with the cases brought in New York City and Fulton County.

In public events and on social media, Trump often has said that the various criminal cases brought against him were attempts to interfere in the 2024 election.

The Epoch Times contacted the Fulton County District Attorney’s office for comment but did not receive a reply by publication time.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/asked-about-dropping-trump-charges-doj-says-policy-not-prosecute-presidents

Insulet Reports Third Quarter 2024 Revenue Increase, Ups Revenue and Margin Guidance

 Third Quarter Financial Highlights:

  • Third quarter 2024 revenue of $543.9 million, up 25.7%, or 25.4% in constant currency1, compared to $432.7 million in the prior year, exceeds the high end of the Company’s guidance range of 21% in constant currency
    • Total Omnipod revenue of $533.6 million, an increase of 26.4%, or 26.1% in constant currency
      • U.S. Omnipod revenue of $395.6 million, an increase of 23.4%
      • International Omnipod revenue of $138.0 million, an increase of 36.1%, or 34.8% in constant currency
    • Drug Delivery revenue of $10.3 million, consistent with prior year
  • Gross margin of 69.3%, up 150 basis points, compared to gross margin of 67.8% in the prior year
  • Operating income of $88.1 million, or 16.2% of revenue, up 350 basis points, compared to operating income of $54.8 million, or 12.7% of revenue, in the prior year
  • Net income of $77.5 million, or $1.08 per diluted share, compared to net income of $51.9 million, or $0.74 per diluted share, in the prior year.
  • Adjusted net income1 of $64.2 million, or $0.90 per diluted share, excludes a tax benefit of $14.8 million primarily associated with the release of the Company’s valuation allowance and a $1.5 million loss on an investment. Adjusted net income in the prior year of $50.0 million, or $0.71 per diluted share, excludes income of $1.9 million associated with the voluntary medical device correction notices issued in 2022
  • Adjusted EBITDA1 of $126.1 million, or 23.2% of revenue, up 410 basis points, compared to $82.8 million, or 19.1% of revenue, in the prior year

Recent Strategic Highlights:

  • Received FDA clearance for Omnipod 5 for use by the six million people in the U.S. with type 2 diabetes2, making Omnipod 5 the first and only automated insulin delivery system indicated for both type 1 and type 2 diabetes
  • Launched U.S. full market release of the Omnipod 5 App for iPhone
  • Omnipod named the number one insulin pump for new pump users in Europe3
  • Published results in Diabetes Care demonstrating improved glycemic control and psychosocial outcomes in adults with type 1 diabetes compared to pump therapy with CGM.4

2024 Outlook:

Revenue Guidance (in constant currency):

  • For the year ending December 31, 2024, the Company is raising its expected revenue growth to a range of 20% to 21% (previously 16% to 19%). Revenue growth ranges by product line are:
    • Total Omnipod of 21% to 22% (previously 18% to 21%)
      • U.S. Omnipod of 19% to 21% (previously 18% to 21%)
      • International Omnipod of 25% to 27% (previously 18% to 21%)
    • Drug Delivery of (10)% to (5)% (previously (50)% to (40)%)
  • For the quarter ending December 31, 2024, the Company expects revenue growth of 12% to 15%. Revenue growth ranges by product line are:
    • Total Omnipod of 13% to 16%
      • U.S. Omnipod of 9% to 12%5
      • International Omnipod of 30% to 33%
    • Drug Delivery of (20)% to (15)% (approximately $7 million to $8 million)

Gross Margin and Operating Margin Guidance:

For the year ending December 31, 2024, the Company now expects gross margin to be approximately 69% (previously 68% to 69%, closer to the high end).

For the year ending December 31, 2024, the Company is raising its expected operating margin by 50 basis points to approximately 14.5%.

https://www.biospace.com/press-releases/insulet-reports-third-quarter-2024-revenue-increase-of-26-year-over-year-25-constant-currency1

Oaktree Capital urges UK's Indivior to refresh board

 Investment fund Oaktree Capital Management has urged British drugmaker Indivior to cooperate with the fund in refreshing its board of directors, it said in a letter dated Nov. 6 and published in a filing on Thursday.

The request from the fund, which became the company's second largest shareholder in July, comes weeks after Indivior issued its second profit and revenue warnings in a span of three months, citing lower than expected sales from its opioid addiction treatment.

The company's opioid addiction treatment Sublocade has been losing market share due to the rapid adoption of Brixadi, a competing drug developed by Swedish pharmaceutical firm Camurus.

"The company essentially disregarded Brixadi's entrance into the market by failing to take basic steps to protect Sublocade's competitive position," Oaktree said in the letter.

Shares in the British drugmaker have slumped about 40% so far this year.

Oaktree, which specialises in providing rescue funding to struggling firms, had a 7.37% stake in the drugmaker, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Investment manager Two Seas Capital is the top shareholder with a 10.25% ownership.

Indivor, in a statement, said it has actively engaged with Oaktree in recent weeks and remains "open-minded" to all proposals.

In July, the drugmaker had taken a $86 million hit in a settlement over its alleged role in spreading opioid addiction across the United States.


https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/oaktree-capital-urges-uks-indivior-141318780.html

Democrats, Blame Yourselves

 If Democrats want some sage counsel on how to recover from their electoral drubbing on Tuesday, we suggest they recall that classic relationship breakup line from Seinfeld’s George Costanza: “It’s not you; it’s me.”

The temptation after a defeat this humiliating is to hunt for scapegoats—fading Joe Biden, untutored Kamala Harris, Russian disinformation, benighted and racist voters. They’d be wiser to look in the mirror.

The defeat was less a resounding endorsement of Mr. Trump than a repudiation of progressive governance. America rejected the consequences of left-wing policies. Democrats lost ground from 2020 across many demographic groups, according to the exit polls. Even women moved percentage points closer to Mr. Trump. How could Democrats possibly lose like this to a man they think is Hitler? Allow us to offer a list for liberal reflection:

• The failure of Bidenomics. Democrats once understood that private business drives growth and higher incomes. Sometime in the 21st century, they came to believe that government spending creates wealth—via the “Keynesian multiplier” and other nostrums.

Thus they passed, on a party-line vote, a $1.9 trillion pandemic-relief bill that wasn’t really needed, fueling the highest inflation in decades. This robbed millions of workers of real wage gains, which haunted Democrats on Tuesday as two-thirds of voters said they were unhappy with the state of the economy.

• Cultural imperialism. Democrats took their 2020 victory as an invitation to turn identity politics into woke policy. They stood with transgender activists instead of parents who don’t want boys to play girls sports or elementary teachers to pass out pronoun pins. Republicans hammered Democrats with ads that attacked Democratic votes against tying federal funds to transgender school policies.

Democrats also began using the term “Latinx,” which sounds to many Spanish-speakers like illiterate cultural imperialism from elites. Could that and other woke policies have played a role in Mr. Trump winning 46% of the Hispanic vote and 55% of Latino men, according to the exit polls?

• Regulatory coercion. In pursuit of their climate obsessions, Democrats pushed coercive mandates, including an EPA rule effectively saying that by 2032 only 30% of new car sales can be gas-powered models. The EV mandate caused layoffs among auto workers in Michigan that Mr. Trump attacked in TV ads and on the stump.

• Lawfare. Democrats used Mr. Trump’s divisiveness to escalate against him at every turn. After calling him a Russian stooge and impeaching him twice, Mr. Biden labeled him a “fascist” and Democrats tried to bar him from the ballot.

They criminally indicted Mr. Trump—four times—and targeted his family business with a civil suit. They convicted him in New York, under an elected Democratic prosecutor who stretched the law to turn misdemeanors into felonies, in a case that wouldn’t have been brought against another businessman.

The strategy turned Mr. Trump into a martyr to GOP voters and cemented his support in the Republican primaries.

• Breaking democratic norms. Democrats decided to use taxes from plumbers and welders to forgive college loans for lawyers and grad students in grievance studies. When the Supreme Court struck Mr. Biden’s effort down as an abuse of power, he tried again and taunted the Court to stop him.

Democrats tried to override the Senate filibuster to seize control of the nation’s voting laws and impose practices such as ballot harvesting, as Mr. Biden raged that his opponents were creating “Jim Crow 2.0.”

They tried to override the filibuster to pass a national abortion law that would go beyond Roe v. Wade. They promised to override the filibuster in 2025 to bulldoze the High Court. They ran Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema out of the party for disagreeing.

All of this and other progressive preoccupations caused Democrats to lose sight of the larger public interest. They came to believe, backed by the mainstream press, that voters would tolerate it all because Mr. Trump was simply unacceptable.

This opened the door for Mr. Trump to remind voters that they were better off under his policies four years earlier. Mr. Trump won more than 72 million ballots. He improved his standing with minority voters. He gained votes even in Democratic states.

Voters were telling Democrats on Tuesday that the party has wandered into ideological fever swamps where most Americans don’t want to go. Winning those voters again will require more than firing back up the anti-Trump “resistance.”

https://www.wsj.com/opinion/kamala-harris-loses-donald-trump-democrats-2024-election-3b7bd713