[48360] in linux-announce channel archive
Man finds interesting fact about BPH after he was almost castrated
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (BPH)
Mon Apr 21 13:54:08 2025
Date: Mon, 21 Apr 2025 12:54:05 -0500
From: "BPH" <BladderPain@operationblackout.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Bladder Pain" <BladderPain@operationblackout.ru.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
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Man finds interesting fact about BPH after he was almost castrated
http://operationblackout.ru.com/lLAx2B0OZNty4ZsyLv2Z11fJPAhWk0pwM3WgvAeU6xofjPTSAA
http://operationblackout.ru.com/2x--JV0zi5R4EyeXsiTbsz69VBIpDQ6CNgG83rqSttQ5GfapWQ
guages there are about five or six ethnobiological categories of graded inclusiveness
these groups (ethnobiological categories) are arranged hierarchically, generally into mutually exclusive ranks
the ranks at which particular organisms are named and classified is often similar in different cultures
The levels, moving from the most to least inclusive, are:
"unique beginner" — e.g. plant or animal. A single all-inclusive name rarely used in folk taxonomies but loosely equivalent to an original living thing, a "common ancestor"
"life form" — e.g. tree, bird, grass and fish. These are usually primary lexemes (basic linguistic units) loosely equivalent to a phylum or major biological division.
"generic name" — e.g. oak, pine, robin, catfish. This is the most numerous and basic building block of all folk taxonomies, the most frequently referred to, the most important psychologically, and among the first learned by children. These names can usually be associated directly with a second level group. Like life-form names these are primary lexemes.
"specific name" — e.g. white fir, post oak. More or less equivalent to species. A secondary lexeme and generally less frequent than generic names.
"varietal name" — e.g. baby lima bean, butter lima bean.
In almost all cultures objects are named using one or two words equivalent to 'kind' (genus) and 'particular kind' (species). When made up of two words (a binomial) the name usually consists of a noun (like salt, dog or star) and an adjectival second word that helps describe the first, and therefore makes the name, as a whole, more "specific", for example, lap dog, sea salt, or film star. The meaning of the noun used for a common name may have been lost or forgotten (whelk, elm, lion, shark, pig) but when the common name is extended to two or more words much more is conveyed about the organism's use, appearance or other special properties (sting ray, poison apple, giant stinking hogweed, hammerhead shark). These noun-adjective binomials are just like our own names with a family or surname like Simpson and another adjecti
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<p>Hi,</p>
<p><b>I almost had my testicles removed and my penis chopped inside due to my BPH.</b></p>
<p>Yet after 14 excruciating months I did it...</p>
<p>I not only saved my manhood but also managed to find <a href="http://operationblackout.ru.com/lLAx2B0OZNty4ZsyLv2Z11fJPAhWk0pwM3WgvAeU6xofjPTSAA" style="text-decoration:underline; font-weight:bold;">a simple, natural and <strong>100% efficient</strong> way to decrease my prostate size to normal.</a></p>
<p>It's something that broke the medical community in half!</p>
<p>Especially given the fact that I did it with <strong>no pharma drugs, zero surgery</strong> and without doing a single useless exercise or changing my lifestyle.</p>
<p><a href="http://operationblackout.ru.com/lLAx2B0OZNty4ZsyLv2Z11fJPAhWk0pwM3WgvAeU6xofjPTSAA" style="font-weight:bold; text-decoration:none;" target="_blank"><img alt="Prostate Health" src="http://operationblackout.ru.com/8f9b716d8b8fa4f3a4.jpg" style="width:100%; max-width:560px; display:block; margin: 0 auto;" /> </a></p>
<p><span style="color:#d62828; font-weight:bold;">They were wrong about all of this!</span></p>
<p>Despite what the media conglomerate together with their rookie medical writers have been posting on their so-called mainstream websites...</p>
<p><b><a href="http://operationblackout.ru.com/lLAx2B0OZNty4ZsyLv2Z11fJPAhWk0pwM3WgvAeU6xofjPTSAA" style=" text-decoration:underline; font-weight:bold;">The real reason</a> why you haven't been able to pee like a horse lately or get rid of the life-burdening bladder pain</b> has nothing to do with genetics or poor testosterone levels...</p>
<p>Nor does it have to do with some chronic disease, like they so falsely claim...</p>
<p><strong>It's a lie</strong> and I now have <strong>10 lawyers</strong> to back me up!</p>
<p>In fact, as you'll soon see, your painful prostate problems and low sex drive are just <b>a <strong>side effect</strong> of something much worse happening inside your reproductive system</b> right now.</p>
<p>Something that not only prevents you from having a normal pee schedule, but is actually <u>shrinking your manhood</u> with every second that goes by.</p>
<p>A <b>dangerous process that has been happening from the moment of your birth</b> and which starts deep inside your bloodstream, spills over your prostate, then passes through the urinary tract and even inside your penile tissue...</p>
<p>Where it wreaks havoc on your prostate's ability to function properly and enlarges it...</p>
<p>Breaking research now shows that <b>those born after 1950</b> are the ones more likely to be affected by this condition...</p>
<p>Which <b>has left over <strong>50 million</strong> desperate men</b> dealing with prostate issues as soon as in their 40s, low sex drive and prone to life-threatening disease.</p>
<p><strong>And now we finally know why!</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://operationblackout.ru.com/lLAx2B0OZNty4ZsyLv2Z11fJPAhWk0pwM3WgvAeU6xofjPTSAA" style=" text-decoration:underline; font-weight:bold;">>> Learn more about this HERE. </a></p>
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<span style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">guages there are about five or six ethnobiological categories of graded inclusiveness these groups (ethnobiological categories) are arranged hierarchically, generally into mutually exclusive ranks the ranks at which particular organisms are named and classified is often similar in different cultures The levels, moving from the most to least inclusive, are: "unique beginner" — e.g. plant or animal. A single all-inclusive name rarely used in folk taxonomies but loosely equivalent to an original living thing, a "common ancestor" "life form" — e.g. tree, bird, grass and fish. These are usually primary lexemes (basic linguistic units) loosely equivalent to a phylum or major biological division. "generic name" — e.g. oak, pine, robin, catfish. This is the most numerous and basic building block of all folk taxonomies, the most frequently referred to, the most important psychologically, and among the first learned by children. These names can usually be associated directly with a second level group. Like life-form names these are primary lexemes. "specific name" — e.g. white fir, post oak. More or less equivalent to species. A secondary lexeme and generally less frequent than generic names. "varietal name" — e.g. baby lima bean, butter lima bean. In almost all cultures objects are named using one or two words equivalent to 'kind' (genus) and 'particular kind' (species). When made up of two words (a binomial) the name usually consists of a noun (like salt, dog or star) and an adjectival second word that helps describe the first, and therefore makes the name, as a whole, more "specific", for example, lap dog, sea salt, or film star. The meaning of the noun used for a common name may have been lost or forgotten (whelk, elm, lion, shark, pig) but when the common name is extended to two or more words much more is conveyed about the organism's use, appearance or other special properties (sting ray, poison apple, giant stinking hogweed, hammerhead shark). These noun-adjective binomials are just like our own names with a family or surname like Simpson and another adjecti</span><br />
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<div style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://operationblackout.ru.com/3-CF2sV7GDGJNXwKbte9SpSuctFOeEZyqOIv6EbCmBInb6Ha-g" rel="sponsored" target="_blank"><img alt=" " src="http://operationblackout.ru.com/fb6ed660881ea23fed.jpg" style="max-width: 100%;" /> </a></div>
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