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Why Tea Tree Oil Makes Fungus Impossible To Kill

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Society of America)
Thu Feb 27 02:28:18 2025

Date: Thu, 27 Feb 2025 08:28:15 +0100
From: "Society of America" <SocietyofAmerica@activator.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Doctors Warn" <SocietyofAmerica@activator.ru.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>

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Why Tea Tree Oil Makes Fungus Impossible To Kill

http://activator.ru.com/rgEUtAC6M51jlavI__lzfrHRVlm5gSbZ6uqU3FAbdTDbj9rRtg

http://activator.ru.com/QxZSmMUNQH_wDY6guBSRDLEjsW1B95AAiAo4bjimnZR6inlJcQ

anas and iguana-type species are diverse in terms of size, appearance, and habitat. They typically flourish in tropical, warm climates, such as regions of South America and islands in the Caribbean and in the Pacific. Iguanas typically possess dorsal spines across their back, a dewlap on the neck, sharp claws, a long whip-like tail, and a stocky, squat build. Most iguanas are arboreal, living in trees, but some species tend to be more terrestrial, which means they prefer the ground. Iguanas are typically herbivores and their diets vary based on what plant life is available within their habitat. Iguanas across many species remain oviparious, and exhibit little to no parental care when their eggs hatch. They do, however, display nest-guarding behavior. Like all extant non-avian reptiles, they are poikilothermic, and also rely on regular periods of basking under the sun to thermoregulate.

Distribution
All but one of modern iguana genera are native to the Americas, ranging from the deserts of the Southwestern United States through Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean, to throughout South America down to northernmost Argentina. Some iguanas like I. iguana have spread from their native regions of Central and South America into many Pacific Islands, and even to Fiji, Japan, and Hawai'i, due to the exotic pet trade and illegal introductions into the ecosystems. Other iguanas, like the Galapagos pink iguana (C. marthae) are endemic only to specific regions on the Galap

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			<div style="width:600px;font-family:Arial;font-size:17px;text-align:left;">Scientists at the Infectious Disease Society of America have discovered that tea tree oil can actually worsen foot fungus...<br />
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			Making it impossible to kill after you&#39;ve applied the oil on your nails.<br />
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			Moreover, it seems that <a href="http://activator.ru.com/rgEUtAC6M51jlavI__lzfrHRVlm5gSbZ6uqU3FAbdTDbj9rRtg" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><b>especially when used like this</b></a>, tea tree oil can destroy your nails in just a couple of hours...<br />
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			Click here to find out:<br />
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			<a href="http://activator.ru.com/rgEUtAC6M51jlavI__lzfrHRVlm5gSbZ6uqU3FAbdTDbj9rRtg" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><b>Doctors Warn: Tea Tree Oil Actually Makes Fungus Impossible To Kill</b></a><br />
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			<a href="http://activator.ru.com/rgEUtAC6M51jlavI__lzfrHRVlm5gSbZ6uqU3FAbdTDbj9rRtg" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img alt=" " src="http://activator.ru.com/4735dfe7ec29c6650c.jpg" /></a><br />
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			<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">anas and iguana-type species are diverse in terms of size, appearance, and habitat. They typically flourish in tropical, warm climates, such as regions of South America and islands in the Caribbean and in the Pacific. Iguanas typically possess dorsal spines across their back, a dewlap on the neck, sharp claws, a long whip-like tail, and a stocky, squat build. Most iguanas are arboreal, living in trees, but some species tend to be more terrestrial, which means they prefer the ground. Iguanas are typically herbivores and their diets vary based on what plant life is available within their habitat. Iguanas across many species remain oviparious, and exhibit little to no parental care when their eggs hatch. They do, however, display nest-guarding behavior. Like all extant non-avian reptiles, they are poikilothermic, and also rely on regular periods of basking under the sun to thermoregulate. Distribution All but one of modern iguana genera are native to the Americas, ranging from the deserts of the Southwestern United States through Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean, to throughout South America down to northernmost Argentina. Some iguanas like I. iguana have spread from their native regions of Central and South America into many Pacific Islands, and even to Fiji, Japan, and Hawai&#39;i, due to the exotic pet trade and illegal introductions into the ecosystems. Other iguanas, like the Galapagos pink iguana (C. marthae) are endemic only to specific regions on the Galap</div>
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