12
After all this time they "finally" found measure 144 to be "constitutional" and are reinstating it in 30 or so days.     (Gunnews)
submitted by s23erdctfvyg to Gunnews 2 months ago (+12/-0)
6 comments last comment...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=10256GLdX40
Needless to say the appeals court, like everyone who has been pushing this shit through, deserves the death penalty for their sedition.

They've also been working on another house bill in case 114 ultimately fails. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ObWia1Gtmg
This is on top of HB2005 which was "passed" a couple years ago.

Any additions for recent gun control in Oregon that I missed out on would be appreciated so I and others can bring it up to our local groups.
12
someone compiled a list on why gotham is the most fucked up city to live in ever     (Comics)
submitted by the_old_ones to Comics 1 month ago (+12/-0)
8 comments last comment...
multiple gangs (Gotham is the third for mundane crime. Hub City and Bludhaven are numbers 1 and 2),

barely legal tax haven laws,

a literal hell gate,

16 sealed greater demons (a demon lord and their court. They are in most canons buried under Arkham and spread a corruption that encourages the seven deadly sins),

first for both police brutality and corruption,

Scarecrow fear toxins in the water (at low enough levels, it only causes paranoia),

an old God's corpse (this old god is leaking forbiden knowledge that causes people to lose their humanity slowly and do ever more depraved acts in pursuit of knowledge),

a living old god who is bat themed and has his own underground Gotham city,

Dracula either moved to Gotham or had his tomb forcibly moved to Gotham,

built on the grave/resting of a warlock (Adam Gotham), who is both alive and dead at the same time (cursing the land to be a place of constant misery),

a very tough and kind of cruel college that creates super villains (a lot of the Batman rogues gallery got their diplomas there),

massive government corruption,

a smog problem so bad that the Flash can't run at full speed without wheezing,

Joker chemicals in the water,

Lazarus pit run off in the water,

Marsh of Madness runoff in the water (this marsh causes delusional homicidal madness),

Slaughter Swamp runoff in the water (this swamp causes violent undead and preserves life in a twisted mockery of all that is holy),

evil floating in from the Jersy Pine Barrens (this evil floating in decreases empathy and encourages devilish behavior. Also, the Jersey Devil may occasionally hunt in Gotham, but his might just be urban legend in Gotham)

pollution due to being in a barely regulated industrial zone (it is legal to dump industrial runoff in Gotham River),

multiple mad scientist labs legally there (Gotham intentionally has very few laws mandating ethics or limits of research),

the location of a crack in the door to the afterlife,

the line between death and life is really fuzzy (this makes it harder to die),

is the second most haunted city in DC USA (they kept New Orleans as most haunted)

a strange aura weakens green lantern power constructs,

built on a Indian burial ground,

A dysfunctional legal system (with no death penalty, so everyone goes to either Blackgate or Arkham),

cursed by an ancient shaman,

run off from an unnamed well that causes increased physical abilities in exchange for homicidal violent impulses (aborted Bane plot thread from before they decided Bane should just use chemicals in his Venom),

trace amounts of Bane Venom in the water,

666 minor demons who just live regular lives with regular jobs while waiting for the apocalypse (Baytor is the most famous and is a bar tender to make ends meet),

cursed by Zeus (this curse is why Gotham has, on average, 320 days of rain or overcast skies each year),

unusually vicious mutant rats,

mutant sewer alligators,

mysterious ruins from a lost civilization that the sewers run into (the sewer alligators breed there),

blessed/cursed by a nature godess to keep the toxic stuff in,

a summer home for the King in Yellow (this is a rumor from the Bat Old God. To my best knowledge, the King in Yellow has never directly appeared),

a door the various old gods came through that is mostly shut (emphasis on mostly),

a massive active fault line,

a magic well,

it is slightly radioactive due to a poorly maintained nuclear power plant (it is still within habitable limits),

a weak dimensional wall allowing influences from the Phantom Zone,

a chaos well,

a bottomless pit under part of Gotham that leads to the abyss (also, the being in the abyss occasionally like to watch Gotham),

Gotham River and Bay water is so polluted that Aquaman can't swim in it,

the tap water barely is considered water by Aquaman's hydrokinesis (and Aquaman can manipulate soda, which is 90% to 95% water. Gotham tapwater is more or less sludge),

Gotham tap water is barely purified river water (mainly because if the water treatment plant gets too Gung Ho and purifies the water too much, they get a black liquid that is extremely dangerous. So Gotham City Counsel decided to only have them clean the water until it was probably reasonably safe-ish)

an evil real estate agent who sells failed amusement parks, theaters, and other buildings to criminals,

so many lead pipes or paint that Superman can't see through most Gotham homes (also note that at one point, the fumes from leaded gasoline blocked Superman, but hopefully that problem has gone away),

an Atlantis Leviathan who is fated to flood the world under the docks (there is apparently seven of them and the Atlantic ocean's is under Gotham),

most of the city is slightly radioactive due to a failed nuclear power plant (Gotham is still within habitable limits. Note that this is a different power plant from the still active but poorly maintained nuclearpower plant),

Gotham, as in the city itself, is aware and has an unhealthy interest in the Bat Family (Tim Drake in particular),

5 different cults,

at least 2 different shadow governments (the line between cult and shadow government is weak in Gotham. I put the Court of Owls and League of Assassins in this group),

and worse of all, it is in New Jersey (try reading a Batman comic and give everyone a Jersey accent).
12
Grok Hates Niggers     (nitter.poast.org)
submitted by Kozel to AI 1 month ago (+12/-0)
2 comments last comment...
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Audit: Cuomo Spent $453M On 247,343 Medical Devices For COVID... State Used Only 3     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Health 1 month ago (+12/-0)
4 comments last comment...
https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/audit-cuomo-spent-453m-247343-medical-devices-covid-state-used-only-3

CONvid was the biggest scam of the 21th century and we are just starting!
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After long suggesting ADHD has biological basis, scientists now make stunning admission. It was just an excuse to poison your children.     (www.theblaze.com)
submitted by MeyerLansky to Health 1 month ago (+12/-0)
13 comments last comment...
https://www.theblaze.com/news/scientists-who-suggested-adhd-has-biological-basis-recants-conclusion

ADHD is apparently an unclassifiable, unmeasurable disorder that requires costly amphetamines to remedy.

The medical establishment has a troubling track record of confidently stating things that just aren't so — as became clear to Americans who suffered injuries from supposedly safe and effective vaccines during the pandemic.

There was a damning admission in New York Times Magazine over the weekend that may inspire new doubts about the credibility of the so-called experts advising the masses on matters of health, namely that attention deficit hyperactivity disorder may not have a basis in biology after all.

That admission was not volunteered from some activist or critic but rather by the Dutch neuroscientist who apparently misled the world into thinking "A.D.H.D. is a disorder of the brain."

'No one knew exactly how the medication worked.'

In a piece titled "Have we been thinking about A.D.H.D. all wrong?" Paul Tough discussed the correlated explosion of ADHD diagnoses and Ritalin prescriptions in the 1990s — a trend, he noted, that was accompanied by criticism from parents and others concerned about the apparent campaign to load kids with methylphenidate and amphetamines.

"You didn't have to be a Scientologist to acknowledge that there were some legitimate questions about A.D.H.D.," wrote Tough. "Despite Ritalin's rapid growth, no one knew exactly how the medication worked or whether it really was the best way to treat children's attention issues."

Parents were right to be concerned.

Ritalin, Adderall, and the other highly addictive stimulants foisted upon hard-to-control American youths have a variety of undesirable side effects, both immediate and long-term.

In the short term, they can cause side effects such as bladder pain, bloody urine, an irregular heartbeat and palpitations, diarrhea, headaches, joint pain, trouble sleeping, confusion, agitation, seizures, and vomiting. In the long term, these drugs can apparently impact growth, dopamine regulation, and memory formation and retention and cause elevated blood pressure, psychosis, and mood disorders.

Over the past decade, prescriptions for stimulants to remedy imagined ADHD have skyrocketed — by 58% between 2012 and 2022. Most of the drugs dished out have been amphetamines, according to a 2023 document prepared for the Drug Enforcement Administration.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated 7.1 million American children (approximately 1 in 9) aged 3-17 had ADHD diagnoses as of 2022. That's up from two million in the mid-1990s. Over half of the children currently diagnosed with ADHD receive at least one ADHD medication.

Tough noted that the medical establishment, already bullish on the ADHD craze, seized upon the initial results of the Multimodal Treatment of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Study. The study, published in 1999, suggested that Ritalin was effective.

After the Ritalin train left the station at full speed, James Swanson — who subsequently went to consult for drug companies, including the manufacturer of Adderall — and his colleagues realized that their study championing stimulant use had aged poorly.

While the children in their MTA study reported improvements after 14 months of choking down stimulants, after 36 months, their advantage had effectively disappeared such that they were expressing the same supposed symptoms as the comparison group. Years later, the same test subjects turned out to be an inch shorter than their peers.

In other words, the medical establishment was hyping and pushing addictive drugs largely on the basis of perceived short-term gains that, unlike drug dependency, faded in under two years.

"There are things about the way we do this work," Swanson, now in his 80s, told Tough, "that just are definitely wrong."

"I don't agree with people who say that stimulant treatment is good," Swanson said, after spending three decades studying the drugs. "It's not good."

Swanson is apparently not the only supposed ADHD expert now having significant doubts.

Edmund Sonuga-Barke, a researcher in psychiatry and neuroscience at King's College London, told Tough, "I've invested 35 years of my life trying to identify the causes of A.D.H.D., and somehow we seem to be farther away from our goal than we were when we started."

'We're terrified of what will happen to the kids who can't get the meds.'

"We have a clinical definition of A.D.H.D. that is increasingly unanchored from what we're finding in our science," added Sonuga-Barke.

Sonuga-Barke suggested further that ADHD is not a static, easily definable, or objectively measurable condition.

That's not what Martine Hoogman, the chair of the Enigma ADHD working group, and her team suggested in a 2017 paper funded by the National Institutes of Health and published in the Lancet Psychiatry, a peer-reviewed Elsevier journal.

After years of academic chatter about potential physical differences in the brains of people with ADHD diagnoses, Hoogman and her team compared the cortical volumes of ADHD-diagnosed subjects with those of a control group.

While Tough indicated their data showed the opposite to be true, Hoogman and her team originally stated:

We confirm, with high powered analysis, that ADHD patients truly have altered brains, i.e. that ADHD is a disorder of the brain. This is a clear message for clinicians to convey to parents and patients, which can help to reduce the stigma of ADHD and get a better understanding of ADHD. This way, it will become just as apparent as for major depressive disorder, for example, that we label ADHD as a brain disorder. Also, finding the most pronounced effects in childhood provides a relevant model of ADHD as a disorder of brain maturation delay.

Hoogman did a complete about-face when recently pressed about her statement, telling Tough, "Back then, we emphasized the differences that we found (although small), but you can also conclude that the subcortical and cortical volumes of people with A.D.H.D. and those without A.D.H.D. are almost identical."

"The A.D.H.D. neurobiology is so much more complex than that," added Hoogman.

Sonuga-Barke indicated that there is a desperation among some scientists to find evidence pointing to the biological nature of ADHD.

"In the field, we're so frightened that people will say it doesn't exist," said Sonuga-Barke. "That this is just bad parenting, from the right, or this is just a product of our postindustrial society, from the left. We have to double down because we're terrified of what will happen to the kids who can't get the meds. We've seen the impact they can have on people's lives."

'It's infuriating.'

The well-documented overdiagnosis and overtreatment of ADHD in children and adults is troubling on its face but far worse when considered in light of Sonuga-Barke's understanding that ADHD diagnoses are purely subjective and effectively unfalsifiable; Swanson's admission that ADHD treatment doesn't help in the long-run; and Hoogman's admission that there is not a biological signature for the supposed disorder.

Blaze News previously noted that the Trump administration's plan to assess the prevalence and impact of pharmaceuticals on children has some childhood psychiatrists and other prongs of the pharmaceutical industry panicking. After all, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. might cost them a source of revenue by taking a closer look at ADHD.

Kennedy noted during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Finance Committee that "15% of American youth are now on Adderall or some other \[attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder\] medication."

"We are not just overmedicating our children, we are overmedicating our entire population," said Kennedy. "Half the pharmaceutical drugs on earth are now sold here."

Conservative commentator Matt Walsh noted in response to the New York Times Magazine article, "ADHD is one of the greatest scams in modern history. Millions of kids have been given mind-altering drugs on the basis of a lie. Now after decades — and after shouting down and defaming those of us who knew better — they're finally starting to admit it. It's infuriating."

Author and journalist Alex Berenson tweeted, "It's unbelievable that drug companies and shrinks ('telehealth' in particular) have pushed this junk for so long."
12
Neurodiversity Is a Strawman     (brownstone.org)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Health 2 weeks ago (+12/-0)
4 comments last comment...
https://brownstone.org/articles/neurodiversity-is-a-strawman/

A dear friend had a beautiful, healthy, engaged baby boy. After his first round of childhood vaccinations he went blind, non-verbal, started head banging, having seizures, lost all engagement, and fell into the abyss of autism. Today that child is 40. He is incontinent, cannot speak or feed himself, and is totally dependent upon his father to survive.


Another friend had a son and a daughter. The daughter, following her first round of childhood shots, experienced almost exactly the same scenario described above, minus the blindness. At the time my friend did not connect the dots and when it came time for his son to be vaccinated, the child began to seize. In the room, my friend put it together and stopped the rest of the shots. Today, his son is only mildly autistic while his daughter, at 26, is non-verbal, incontinent, and often uncontrollable. Since the son is only mildly autistic, I suppose we shouldn’t look into the cause of his issues? It’s a gift, right?

A mother (a client in one of the many tragic cases) had a teenage daughter who, after a round of the Gardasil vaccine, suffered a seizure and went into a coma. The young girl had been captain of her volleyball team, top of her class, poised for a full and happy life. Today, at nearly 20, she lives in total darkness because she has seizures every 30 seconds – cannot have any light. The neurodegeneration is unquantifiable. She cannot read or watch TV, let alone go on her first date, go to prom…experience the life she should have and would have.


Another friend had a perfect, beautiful young daughter who was exceeding all of her milestones. After her second round of jabs, she locked in, stopped talking or making eye contact, developed a severe learning disability, and is still struggling today, at 6. She, too, will never experience the “normal” milestones we all would like to see for our children.

Those stories, anecdotal though they may be, are the tip of the iceberg. I could share thousands, each one worse than the next, that would make most people sit in a room and cry forever.
12
Holy shit just got a 50 lbs weighted vest. This thing is killer.     (PimsGym)
submitted by CoronaHoax to PimsGym 1 week ago (+12/-0)
23 comments last comment...
Cool as hell. Way heavier than it seems for most workouts that aren't squats.

Trying to figure out how best to incorporate it into the current workout. Current workout is -

ab roller 1 min

push ups 1 min

squat + 35 lb dumbbells floor to ceiling 1 min

deadlift two 35 lb dumbbells 1 min

back row two 35 dumbbells 1 min

For the squat / deadlifts the 50 lb vest is fine. For the rest it makes the fail out before 1 min. So possibly just set the weighted vest to whatever weight allows the rest to still be able to function for 1 min.

I got this weighted zipper vest from mir -

https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/91OTu-NggLL._AC_SX679_.jpg

Putting the vest on "vest style" with a zipper at high weights is.. interesting lol. I don't think it's a valid style past a certain weight point. Chaffs your arms putting it on (in this case it rolls back velcro in the shoulder straps and the vecro scratches your arm at 50 lbs lol, so I'll probably have to sow that part closed).
11
How to make Compost - The Simplest Easy Method To Compost Piles!     (www.youtube.com)
submitted by veo to Gardening 4.1 years ago (+11/-0)
2 comments last comment...
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The (((Puppet Master)))     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by Xigbar68 to GlobohomoArt 4.1 years ago (+12/-1)
0 comments...
11
Sometimes a bow is better than a pistol (Kentucky Ballistics)     (www.youtube.com)
submitted by Artificial_Intelligentile to SelfDefenceWithoutGuns 4 years ago (+11/-0)
11 comments last comment...
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TN Governor Inks Permitless Carry Law at Beretta Plant     (www.guns.com)
submitted by QuasiVoat to Gunnews 4.0 years ago (+11/-0)
13 comments last comment...
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White Work Dimensional Embroidery | Exquisite white bouquet     (yewtu.be)
submitted by NeedleStack to Embroidery 3.9 years ago (+11/-0)
1 comments last comment...
https://yewtu.be/watch?v=MvjKRFwpDyI

From the description:

In this video you will learn how to embroider a bouquet of roses
Stitches:
blanket stitch
cast-on stitch
bullion stitch
french knot
couching stitch
stem stitch
pistil stitch
Material:
threads: YarnArt Tulip or Gazzal or DMC pearl for Brazilian Embroidery
needle - 5.5 cm
Thanks everyone for watching!
00:01 - White Rose - blanket stitch & cast-on stitch
3:47 - small leaves - bullion stitch
4:48 - stem - stem stitch
5:18 - leaf - leaf & bullion stitch
6:19 - stamens - bullion stitch or pistil stitch
6:46 - rosebud - padding - bullion stitch & blanket stitch
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Marxist feminism has corrupted the needlework community as well (more below)     (www.atlasobscura.com)
submitted by NeedleStack to Embroidery 3.8 years ago (+11/-0)
10 comments last comment...
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/surprising-complexity-unfinished-american-quilt

Everything in this story makes me sick. Here we had a nice old lady who died before she could complete her beautiful embroidered quilt panels.

Some Marxist feminist bought the pieces and had volunteers help stitch them together and add their own anti-white, commie attitudes embroidered into their work.

The completed quilt has the old lady's original pieces forever stitched next to the propaganda.

It's all vile and corrupted.

Look at this shit:

"(Shannon) Downey is intent on upholding Rita’s original vision, but she is glad that the pattern has led to conversations that complicate the ‘wholesome’ narrative. “A lot of people who follow me are white women,” she says, acknowledging that #RitasQuilt largely attracted white stitchers and quilters. “And I feel a great responsibility to gather them and be like, ‘Okay, y’all, let’s talk about white supremacy, let’s talk about intersectionality.’ We have so much work to do.”

Downey is a perfect name for her!
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Bookbinding 101: Japanese Four-Hole Binding      (www.designsponge.com)
submitted by NeedleStack to Bookbinding 3.8 years ago (+11/-0)
1 comments last comment...
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How to Pressure Can Beef Stew     (yewtu.be)
submitted by NeedleStack to Homesteading 3.6 years ago (+11/-0)
3 comments last comment...
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Knight created with one sheet of folded paper (timelapse video below)     (a.pomf.cat)
submitted by NeedleStack to ArtsAndCrafts 3.5 years ago (+11/-0)
2 comments last comment...
https://a.pomf.cat/hesfwr.jpg

Video of the piece being made by the artist Juho Könkkölä:

https://yewtu.be/u2BxYTPQCAc
11
Canning carnitas today. Carnitas means “little meats” in Spanish. This recipe calls for powdered onion and garlic, which I only ever use for rubs, but in the interest of time, rather than chop a bunch of stuff, I followed exactly, however I added a half Serrano pepper to each jar. I     (feedingthecrew.blogspot.com)
submitted by 1Icemonkey to Homesteading 3.5 years ago (+11/-0)
4 comments last comment...
http://feedingthecrew.blogspot.com/2016/02/pork-carnitas-for-canning.html

I used picnic shoulder roast, about ten pounds. It’s leaner than butt roast and cost a tiny bit more due to boneless. I don’t want to debone, I just want to cube and stuff jars. I’m sure this would have been better with fresh onion and garlic, but I have three other irons in the fire.

I’ll report back.
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AK guy made a Luty submachinegun      (youtu.be)
submitted by Boardallday_420_2 to Guns 3.3 years ago (+11/-0)
1 comments last comment...
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I cringed     (worldstarhiphop.com)
submitted by beece to PimsGym 3.2 years ago (+11/-0)
5 comments last comment...
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"Gun Control is Racist, and Why That's a Good Thing"     (Guns)
submitted by Teefinyomouf to Guns 3.1 years ago (+11/-0)
5 comments last comment...
This article should exist but it doesn't.
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Footfags, when will they learn? New Stonetoss     (stonetoss.com)
submitted by big_fat_dangus to Comics 3.0 years ago (+13/-2)
3 comments last comment...
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Twitter ‘Silenced’ Physicians Who Posted Truthful Information About COVID, Lawsuit Alleges     (childrenshealthdefense.org)
submitted by knightwarrior41 to Health 2.9 years ago (+11/-0)
0 comments...
11
Top scientist slams corruption in academia after medical journal retracts his study on COVID shot dangers     (www.lifesitenews.com)
submitted by knightwarrior41 to Health 2.9 years ago (+11/-0)
1 comments last comment...
https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/top-scientist-slams-corruption-in-academia-after-medical-journal-retracts-his-study-on-covid-shot-dangers/

‘We are now witnessing a growing number of excellent scientific papers, written by top experts in the field, being retracted from major medical and scientific journals weeks, months and even years after publication.’
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Anglo-Saxon Queen from the pagan period - 6th century AD     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by NationalSocialism to Art 2.8 years ago (+11/-0)
21 comments last comment...
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do you believe this crap?: "Yale scientists" say testing for COVID-19 at door of events reduces spreading risk by almost half     (www.msn.com)
submitted by knightwarrior41 to Health 2.8 years ago (+11/-0)
12 comments last comment...