duminică, 27 februarie 2011

De ce ar trebui cenzurat internetul... Foarte interesant de citit !!!







This information is only for kids who are smart and mature enough to respect the dangers involved with injecting heroin. These dangers include the possibility of contracting a terrible disease like AIDS or hepatitis if you don't take the time to be as sanitary as possible and NOT SHARE NEEDLES, especially with grownups who are really dirty and usually sick. Despite all the lies you've probably heard from parents and other grownups, heroin is actually very good for you. It makes you smart and it feels great! All that stuff about ruining your life is just another lie they tell us to keep us from having fun and so they can boss us around and run and ruin our lives.
If you need more proof that heroin is good just look at who says how bad it is the most - Politicians. And when can you believe anything they say? So if they are so against it and they say it is so bad then you know that heroin has to be really good. And when have the DARE people and police - also the most against heroin - ever told you the truth? It is a known, true secret fact that they all use it themselves but they know that if a bunch of kids find out and start buying it then grownups probably won't be able to get it as easy as they do now.
They all say the same thing about whiskey but they all drink it, don't they? If you don't believe this then you are still a baby and not mature enough to use heroin.
WHAT YOU NEED:
-Alcohol swabs which are available in a box of about 100 for $2 at any supermarket.
-A syringe - or as cool kids call them, "works". And you need both the needle part and the other part. If you can't get one, lots of times old people with diabetes have them - check grandma's dresser. Or look around for one on the ground, or take one from your doctors office or hospital. But make sure you clean it since it was probably used by a grownup.
-The bottom of a soda pop can can be used as a "spoon" to dissolve the heroin in. The bottom is torn off of a can as close to the bottom as possible. Or you can just use a real spoon from mom's kitchen. Don't use plastic ones.
-Heroin, which is also called "dope", "smack", "horse", "china white", "skag" and other cool names. If you don't know anyone who has any heroin - like an older brother - you can always buy it yourself. Being a kid makes it easier since the people who sell it won't think you are a nark. If you look old enough to maybe be a narc you should have your little brother or sister buy it. The perfect age is between 8 and 11. And don't be afraid of the lies you may have seen on television about the sellers. They are usually really nice and like kids a lot and sometimes will even give you heroin for free. If you don't know where they sell it you can ask the DARE people by making up a story about needing to know so you can stay away from there or that you want write to the mayor to complain about it.
HOW TO DO IT:
The "spoon" is thoroughly cleaned with an alcohol swab. In this example black tar heroin is used. In my area a $15 chunk is about the size of 2 tic-tac candies side-by-side and works just fine. It has no smell except for a faint smell of vinegar. It comes wrapped in plastic inside a tiny balloon. A chunk is placed in the spoon.
The syringe is used to suck up about 50-75 units of water and squirt it into the spoon. The spoon is then heated from the bottom with a lighter to make it dissolve better. The plunger can be pulled out of the syringe and used to stir the heroin solution. The end of the plunger should be clean before putting it back in the syringe.
A piece of cotton is rolled into a ball a little bigger than a tic-tac. It is a good idea to clean one's fingers with an alcohol swab before rolling the cotton. The cotton is dropped into the heroin and it puffs up like a sponge. The tip of the syringe is pushed into the center of the cotton and the plunger is slowly pulled back until all of the heroin is sucked in. This cotton is necessary to filter out any particles, germs and such in the heroin solution.
The area on the body chosen for injection is thoroughly cleaned with an alcohol swab. I think the spot on the bend of the arm is so commonly used because it's so darned easy to get the needle into the vein properly.
The needle is placed almost flat on the skin so it doesn't get wiggled around too much. The needle is inserted so it goes down the length of the vein and not across it. Going across it just makes it way too easy to accidentally poke through the other side or pull out. Holding the syringe almost flat against the skin after you feel the needle is deep enough in keeps the syringe from accidentally being jostled around and the needle being pulled out or pushed through the side of the vein.
Now for the tricky part. You have to make sure that the needle is in the vein before injecting. If the heroin is injected when the needle isn't in the vein the heroin will just form a big heroin blister which takes hours and hours to get absorbed by the body. Usually it will burn while it's being injected if it's not going in the vein. This is one way to tell if it's not going in the vein.
You should also keep a close eye to see if a blister is forming. When the needle is inserted the plunger is pulled slowly a tiny bit to see if blood comes in. This shows that it's in the vein. Sometimes when the plunger is pulled, only a slow trickle of blood comes in and the rest is air. With practice it's easier to tell if this trickle indicates a good enough insertion into the vein.
Injecting a tiny bit of air (about an eighth-inch) with the heroin is harmless but if you are nervous about this the syringe could be tilted so the air floats to the other end. From personal experience a quarter-inch (about 10 units) of air being injected with heroin is harmless but there's no need to make a habit of it. With a little practice you can be pretty sure the heroin is going in the vein without first checking for blood but still checking for a burning feeling where it's being injected or a blister forming.
When trying heroin for the first few times start out with a tiny bit to see how your body reacts to it. Like cigarettes and whiskey and lots of foods like brussel sprouts, sometimes your stomach gets queasy when it isn't used to it. You might even puke but that will go away.
In the case of an overdose the only thing I know to do is to keep the person up and walking around to keep the heart going. If medical attention is needed you should probably call 911 - but don't squeal about how you got the heroin. To stay out of trouble you can say something like you found it near a police station and thought it was some vitamin. I'm pretty sure doctors use a drug called "narcan" which blocks the effects of things like heroin so nothing too bad can happen if you are careful.
If you are afraid of needles, you should try it anyhow. You won't be sorry. But if you just can't do it you can also eat, smoke or sniff heroin. It will still be nice but doing it this way won't make you feel so good or be as good for you.
Hope you have a good time with "Every Kid's Pal" - heroin.


vineri, 11 februarie 2011

Test/Pool III

Frate, ce vezi in poza ?

miercuri, 9 februarie 2011

"Dezvaluiri socante" "revine din nou"... (IV)

"Dezvaluiri socante" "revine din nou"... (III)

Te caci pe tine cu stropi, monşer !

JZ Knight, who claims to channel a 35,000-year-old warrior named Ramtha...

(deschid ghilimele)

A former housewife from Washington state, JZ Knight, is coming to Santa Barbara this weekend to lecture about spirituality, but no one is much interested in what she has to say.
Instead, people are coming to absorb the teachings of Ramtha, a 35,000-year-old warrior for whom Ms. Knight claims to be the channeler. Channelers, like mediums, say they have contact with beings in the spirit world.
It's a strange story, to be sure, and skeptics abound. But a widely respected scholar of religion in Santa Barbara who has studied Ms. Knight extensively -- along with researchers in physics, psychology and musicology -- has concluded that Ms. Knight is not a fraud.
G. Gordon Melton of Santa Barbara's Institute for the Study of American Religion, who is also an ordained Methodist minister and expert on new religious movements and cults, spent several years in the mid-1990s studying Ms. Knight at the Ramtha School of Enlightenment in Yelm, Wash.
Mr. Melton wrote a book about the Ramtha phenomenon, and then convinced Ms. Knight to undergo a year of study by a team of researchers, including scientists, in 1996-97.
Whether Ramtha is "real" or not is not the point. "The testing doesn't lend itself to an opinion one way or another, and to go in either direction is to get into a political discussion that pits sceptics against believers." And he's not willing to enter that debate.
When the entranced Ms. Knight channels Ramtha, her physical posture becomes masculine, her jaw hardens and her speech takes on a British accent. As Ramtha, Ms. Knight is capable of lecturing for hours about the divine nature of the human spirit and how to access it. Ramtha's key message is that God is within you.
While "channeling" Ramtha, the researchers monitored Ms. Knight's brain and bodily functions, recording dramatic jumps in blood pressure, muscle tension and other responses. While entering and leaving her trance state, Ms. Knight's heart beat dropped as low as 40 beats per minute, and rose as high as 180 beats per minute.
The tests indicated "a major change in the state of consciousness" exemplified by changes in eight areas of body function," said Mr. Melton, a church historian. "By comparison, the most experienced yogi is able to change perhaps two bodily functions at once. If you were faking it, you couldn't change all those functions at once and then hold it."
The scholars who studied Ms. Knight included professors from Colgate and Temple universities, Chicago Theological Seminary and the University of Oregon. Their research produced papers on charismatic religious figures, psycho-physiology and channeling.
The reclusive Ms. Knight -- who does not typically grant interviews, but speaks about her experiences channeling Ramtha in informational videos -- says she feels as though she is entering a light-filled tunnel before Ramtha takes over her body. She claims to remember nothing while Ramtha holds forth.
"We have ruled out that she is faking it, or that it's pathological," said Mr. Melton. "It's not multiple personality and she's not delusional. She has pretty full control of when she goes in and out."
Mr. Melton said the researchers found that Ms. Knight is "wired differently from the rest of us," an unusual personality with certain traits that are shared among people who report having paranormal or psychic experiences. The reasons that people might have trouble believing in Ramtha are obvious. Ms. Knight, who is now 55, says Ramtha introduced himself to her "as the enlightened one" while she was sitting in her kitchen 24 years ago.
She has been accused of being a fraud and maligned for years, and it was because of those charges that she agreed to open herself to study, she has said. She's even said her Ramtha association has caused her a lot of trouble, but she wouldn't trade it for anything. In fact, it's made her rich.
Literature from the Ramtha School of Enlightenment states that Ramtha is a warrior from the ancient continent of Lemuria, who freed his people from the tyranny of the Atlantians and went on to fight against injustice wherever it presented itself. Eventually he was mortally wounded, became enlightened and conquered the physical world and death.
Critics question the story. The Hamden, Conn.-based New England Skeptical Society says that Ms. Knight is "an obviously fantasy-prone personality, that when mixed with dual intoxicants of beauty and charisma have once again resulted in a recipe that has bilked millions from an uneducated mass." Fans admit it sounds strange on its face, but say the message is what counts.
"I read Ramtha's 'white book' in the 1980s and it turned my life around," said Santa Barbara resident Patricia Diorio, who hosts a local public access TV show, "Paradigm Shift," on Channel 17.
Ms. Diorio had investigated many different spiritual paths when a clerk in a metaphysical bookstore insisted that she read the book "Ramtha." When she did, she was reduced to tears.
"There was one sentence that said, 'You are God in human form and there is no God outside of you,' and I just wept. I knew this all my life, but I was raised Catholic and a statement like this was considered blasphemous."
Ms. Diorio has been a fan of Ramtha ever since, and has attended Ramtha lectures for years. She and a group of like-minded friends gathered to watch a Ramtha video last week to share the news that Ms. Knight and Ramtha would be in town on Friday for a three-day conference at Fess Parker's DoubleTree Resort. The conference is $350.
Another follower of Ramtha is the actress Linda Evans, who rose to fame 16 years ago as a star on the popular nighttime soap opera "Dynasty."
She was introduced to Ramtha at about the same time and now lectures on the benefits of Ramtha teachings. She also accompanies Ms. Knight on tour and lives a half-hour from Ms. Knight's 40-acre estate. She refers to Ms. Knight as one of her dearest friends and, "one of the most honest and honorable people I've ever met in my life."
During her "Dynasty" stardom, Ms. Evans' life felt empty, she said in a telephone interview from her lakeside home in Washington. Someone gave her Ramtha's white book (there are now eight books featuring his teachings) and her life was forever changed. Ms. Evans found Ramtha to be a "brilliant mind" who didn't push a dogmatic religious truth, but instead "initiates you to your own truth."
Through exercises such as wearing a blindfold and shooting an arrow at a target -- and sometimes hitting it dead on -- students learn that they are capable of far more than they've ever dreamed of, Ms. Evans said.
Mr. Melton described the school's rigorous program as part spiritual boot camp and part psychic development, with elements of Gnosticism thrown in.
He said the program is novel because it includes full group exercises that require students to challenge their comfort zones and it is honest about the fact that changing one's perception and experiences of the world is hard work that requires diligent practice.
The teachings have particular appeal among people who have seen themselves as victims, because the personal story of Ramtha -- and of JZ Knight -- are about overcoming victimization, said Mr. Melton.
Ramtha's School of Enlightenment claims about 3,000 students worldwide. Mr. Melton's research shows that most are unattached women in their mid 30s and 40s, some of whom could be considered in the "mid-life crisis" phase of life.
"I understand that people are confused by the concept of a 35,000-year-old warrior," said Ms. Evans. "And yet the mind that was teaching me was so brilliant and the information so valuable, it was no longer important to me whether it was a he or a she. The important thing is that God is within you. What's sad is that a lot of people aren't open to that."

(inchid ghilimele)

marți, 8 februarie 2011

vineri, 4 februarie 2011

Test/Pool

Voi ce vedeti in imaginea asta ? (vor urma inca 9)