[7342] in linux-announce channel archive
Deep sea mineral LOWERS high blood pressure (see video)
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Marine Essentials)
Wed Jul 31 00:25:20 2013
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Marine Essentials" <MarineEssentials@rfclawkdall.info>
Date: Tue, 30 Jul 2013 21:25:17 -0700
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Top-Secret Ingredient From The Deep-Sea Found To
Naturally Lower Blood Pressure & Cholesterol Without
Expensive Prescriptions!
http://www.rfclawkdall.info/1726/55/127/408/880.11tt71675797AAF15.php
Unsub- http://www.rfclawkdall.info/1726/55/127/408/880.11tt71675797AAF9.html
l on Sunday.Land invasions are nothing new
in Venezuela. What's different now is that people are invading valuable
properties in city centers.All the squatting riles Rosa Contrera, a 57-year-old
housewife who walked past the invaders, shaking her head. The day before,
people from the apartment block adjacent to hers attacked the invaders with
Molotov cocktails."This is what Chavismo has created: people who expect
handouts," said Contrera, a Capriles supporter. "A country doesn't advance
with that mentality."The government says Venezuela's poverty rate dropped
from more than 50 percent to 21 percent under Chavez's leadership, though
there is still plenty of misery.Lake Valencia has been rising few feet
a year and swallowed up Antonio Rojas' home last year."We filled out
all the forms but in the end we didn't get a house,"
said the wiry 67-year-old, who works at a nursery earning the equivalent
of $17 a day at the official exchange rate and $5 on
the black market.At a squatter's settlement outside Tacarigua, a town on
Valencia's southern outskirts built around a sugar cane mill, Rojas and
his wife share a dirt-floor, aluminum shack with their 7-year-old son, Gregorio.
The boy doesn't go to school because there are none nearby.They have
neither water nor sewage service. Dirty dishes are piled on a kitchen
table. Burned garbage litters the yard.When a reporter visited, the family
hadn't had power for a week. They siphon it off a nearby
tr
In the movie "Back to the Future," Doc Brown builds a time
machine into a Delorean.UniversalAn Iranian scientist has registered a time
machine that he says will work with 98 percent accuracy.Ali Razeghi registered
"The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine" with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic
Inventions, The Telegraph reports.He said the machine would use algorithms
to predict the future of any individual, between five and eight years
into their future.Mr Razeghi, 27, reportedly told Fars news agency he had
been working on the project for the past 10 years."My invention easily
fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict
details of the next five-eight years of the life of its users.
It will not take you into the future, it will bring the
future to you," he said.The Telegraph reports Mr Razeghi is the managing
director of Iran's Centre for Strategic Inventions, and that he has another
179 inventions registered in his name.He said the invention could help the
government in predicting military conflict, but he had been criticised for
trying to play God."This project is not against our religious values at
all. The Americans are trying to make this invention by spending millions
of dollars on it where I have already achieved it by a
fraction of the cost," he said."The reason that we are not launching
our prototype at this stage is that the Chinese will steal the
idea and produce it in millions overnight."Get more science an
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<p style="color:#FF0000; font-size:30px" align="center"><b>"How To Lower Blood Pressure<br>
Naturally Once & For All!"</b></p>
<p style="font-size:20px"; align="center"><i>Top-Secret Ingredient From The Deep-Sea Found To<br>
Naturally Lower Blood Pressure & Cholesterol Without<br>
Expensive Prescriptions!</i></p>
<p style="font-size:16px"><b>By Ed O'Keefe<br>
Contributing Anti-Aging Expert</b></p>
<p style="font-size:16px">Watching your numbers go up and down can be a scary ride!</p>
<p style="font-size:16px">One month it's up, so you take more of this and eat less of that. It comes down, but not enough...so here you go again.</p>
<a href="http://www.rfclawkdall.info/1726/55/127/408/880.11tt71675797AAF10.php"><p style="font-size:18px"><b>Video Reveals #1 Secret To Lowering<br>
Blood Pressure…Naturally! Click Here</b></p></a>
<p style="font-size:16px">You don't have to turn your life upside down to<br>
get your blood pressure under control!</p>
<p style="font-size:16px"><img border="0" src="http://www.rfclawkdall.info/1726/55/127/71675797/408.880/img05512743.png" width="247" height="165" align="left" style="margin-right:10px">
Big-Pharma and conventional regimens will have you confused, over-medicated, and frustrated because you aren't treating the major triggers of elevated blood pressure. </p>
<p style="font-size:16px">Not only do you lose time and money, you end up losing faith that there are answers.</p>
<p style="font-size:16px">Here's the secret: You lower your blood pressure by reversing and ending the major triggers of <u>elevated blood pressure at the cellular level…</u>and by inhibiting the #1 Blood Pressure enzyme.</p>
<p style="font-size:16px"><b>The simplest blood pressure advice you will ever get...Watch here!</b></p>
<p style="font-size:16px">Enjoy!<b><br>
<a href="http://www.rfclawkdall.info/1726/55/127/408/880.11tt71675797AAF10.php"></b>Marine Essentials</p></a>
<p style="font-size:16px">PS: Last thing: Big-Pharma propaganda wants you to think you can't control your blood pressure or lower your cholesterol and they aren't telling you about the side effects caused by blood pressure medication. It's all a money game to them!</p>
<a href="http://www.rfclawkdall.info/1726/55/127/408/880.11tt71675797AAF10.php"><p style="font-size:16px"><b>Click here To Learn How To Naturally Lower Blood Pressure</b></p></a>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> April 3, 2013: Bitcoin tokens at 35-year-old software engineer Mike Caldwell's
shop in Sandy, Utah. Caldwell mints physical versions of bitcoins, cranking
out homemade tokens with codes protected by tamper-proof holographic seals.AP
Photo/Rick BowmerApril 3, 2013: Mike Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer,
looks over bitcoin tokens at his shop in Sandy, Utah. Caldwell mints
physical versions of bitcoins, cranking out homemade tokens with codes protected
by tamper-proof holographic seals.AP Photo/Rick BowmerApril 3, 2013: Mike
Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer, poses with bitcoin tokens at
his shop in Sandy, Utah.AP Photo/Rick BowmerNEW YORK With $600 stuffed
in one pocket and a smartphone tucked in the other, Patricio Fink
recently struck the kind of deal that's feeding the rise of a
new kind of money -- a virtual currency whose oscillations have pulled
geeks and speculators alike through stomach-churning highs and lows.The
Argentine software developer was dealing in bitcoins -- getting an injection
of the cybercurrency in exchange for a wad of real greenbacks he
handed to a pair of Australian tourists in a Buenos Aires Starbucks.
The visitors wanted spending money at black market rates without the risk
of getting roughed up in one of the Argentine capital's black market
exchanges. Fink wanted to pad his electronic wallet.In the safety of the
coffee shop, the tourists transferred Fink their bitcoins through an app
on their
want a requirement that industry scrub any
data of personal information before giving it to the government -- a
stipulation that Rogers and business groups say would be too onerous and
deter industry participation.Rogers, who co-sponsored the bill with Rep.
Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md., the panel's top Democrat, said they altered
the bill to address other concerns by privacy groups raised last year.
But a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, Michelle Richardson,
said the bill is still objectionable because it could allow the military
to review data on private commercial networks."A couple of cosmetic changes
is not enough to address the concerns of members" in the Senate,
Richardson said.Rogers says the political calculus has changed and that
China's hacking campaign was too brazen for the White House to justify
the status quo."There's a line around the Capitol building of companies
willing to come in and tell us in a classified setting (that)
`my whole intellectual property portfolio is gone,"' Rogers said. "I've
never seen anything like this, where we aren't jazzed and our blood
pressure isn't up."In February, Obama signed an executive order that would
help develop voluntary industry standards for protecting networks. But the
White House and Congress agreed that legislation was still needed to address
the legal liability companies face if they share threat information. Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., promised at the
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