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2.11.11

假的外星人入侵令到教宗可以行新世界金融秩序?

2011年11月2日 11:25:34
Lots of pieces put together here that make sense don't you agree? The grays (Annunaki devolved version) apparently have been the whispering devils giving power to those who choose the dark side forever. "Some" are are already here. Dan Winter describes they ruined their DNA a long time ago during the Orion war trying to mechanize their biology. Now their DNA will not implode correctly. This also makes sense why the governments have allowed them to extract DNA from people at random because they struck deals in the name of technology and power.
It turns out this has probably been going on since the time of Babylonia and why the Vatican and British Royalty have risen to such power in the world. The truth, more than likely, is that many of us are from some area in Orion and that is VERY IMPORTANT to remember because if we have brothers out there that come to assist at any point against the ones in power we do not need to be faked into believing those that would help us are space terrorists.



http://beforeitsnews.com/story/1313/268/A_Fake_Alien_Invasion_To_Bring_The_Popes_New_World_Financial_Order.html

膠樽的BPA(雙酚A)令產婦生下畸胎


2011年10月31日 23:49:41

Anthony Gucciardi
Activist Post

Bishphenol a (BPA), the headline-topping chemical commonly found in plastics, cans, and food packaging has been tied to yet another negative condition — adversely affecting male genital development and subsequently targeting fertility rates.

If you have been following the latest BPA research, then it should be no surprise to you that BPA has been repeatedly linked to diabetes, breast cancer (with over 130 total studies), hyperactivity and depression, and countless other conditions. 

BPA alters Anogenital distance, heavily tied to fertility in men

The study, which involved the World Health Organization Collaborating Center for Research in Human Reproduction, examined the effect of BPA on Anogenital distance (AGD).

AGD is the distance between the genitalia and the anus, and is biologically very important. AGD has been linked to fertility in males, making the affect of BPA on the male reproductive system quite significant.

Linked to both semen volume and sperm count, men with an abnormally short AGD (lower than the median around 52 mm (2 in) have seven times the chance of being sub-fertile as compared to those with a longer AGD.

This is particularly startling due to the fact that BPA has been found in 90% of babies’ cord blood.

Researchers examined 153 boys, 56 with parental occupational exposure during pregnancy and 97 without. After factoring in the weight and age of the boys using regular linear regression, the study found that parental occupational exposure to BPA during pregnancy was associated with shortened AGD in male offspring. What this means is that those who were exposed to high levels of BPA during pregnancy were found to birth offspring with AGD defects. But what about those who do not deal with BPA exposure through their occupation?

Outside of directly working with BPA-containing items, there are many other venues of BPA exposure that could be affecting your health:
  • 18 out of 20 of the most popular food cans are laced with BPA
As more research comes out on the dangers of BPA, it will become more apparent to the general public how important it is to reduce daily exposure and utilize natural BPA solutions. From causing cancer to fertility, there is simply no reason to keep BPA around.
Explore More:
  1. B Vitamins During Pregnancy & Nursing Protect Against Colon Cancer in Offspring
  2. The BPA Solution | How to Naturally Reverse the Effects
  3. Popular Plastic Chemical BPA Linked to Wheezing in Children
  4. This Common Chemical Linked to Allergies and Asthma
  5. Toxic Hormone-Mimicking BPA Now Linked to Diabetes
Please visit Natural Society for more great health news and vaccine information.
http://beforeitsnews.com/story/1305/115/BPA_Leads_To_Fertility_Defect_In_Offspring.html

非洲村落附近出土的數百個巨型外星人

Hundreds Of Giant Aliens Unearthed Near African Village
2011年11月1日 22:32:111
DATELINE: Kigali, Rwanda According to a scientific report filed by a team of anthropologists digging in Central Africa, up to 200 gigantic alien bodies entombed for five centuries have been unearthed.
Upon the discovery, village elders urged the people to flee and some women fled screaming clutching their infants.
But the African find is only the latest in a string of alien body discoveries stretching back some seventy years.
This creature is alleged to have two faces
China's strange alien bodies
It seems if anthropologists or archaeologists dig hard enough, deep enough, and long enough, sooner or later alien bodies will surface.
1937 was a banner year for alien corpses in China. That was the year several scrawny alien cadavers were allegedly discovered. All had huge headsand buried in caves nearby were mysterious discs that came to be called the "Dropa stones." [See Before It's News: Alien Base Found At Chinese Pyramid]
Alien figurine from the Han Dynasty
Fast forwarding several decades, archaelogists breaking into a small pyramid in Egypt claimed to have found a giant, alien-like humanoid. Unlike most ancient Egyptians, the cadaver was not mummified, had no ears or nose, a very wide mouth and no discernible tongue.
Such a body may be explained as being an alienor it could have been a giant slave buried alive with his tongue cut out, as Egyptians were known to do when a slave's master or mistress died.
And there the answer might lie, except for the testimony of those that discovered the tomb where the remains were found. They claimed strange artifacts littered the floor of the burial chamber.
Among the relics, the team also found a burnished disc of unknown metal engraved with unknown symbolsnot the expected Egyptian hieroglyphs. They also retrieved small stone tablets depicting pictograms of stars, planets and bizarre machines.
An alleged giant alien skull unearthed by amazed researcher
The corpse was not wrapped, nor dressed, in a traditional Egyptian burial shroud or garb, but was clothed in an odd metallic tunic. It's feet were adorned with shoes or slippers that had a look and feel similar to vinyl.
Amulet: A strange alien being wearing helmet
The tomb itself was odd.
The stones to the entrance had to be smashed apart by the team because the rock was fused and melted. Inside the eerie burial chamber, the interior walls seemed polished and partially covered with thin, hanging sheets of a substance having the consistency of lead.
Spelunkers find remains of alleged alien being
The amazing Turkish spaceman
Years laterfar from EgyptTurkish spelunkers almost tripped over a weird cadaver while exploring a remote mountain cavern: a partially mummified pygmy alien.
Police were notified, but they determined if murder was involved, the foul play took place thousands of years before the cave explorers happened upon the fragile body.
Later, forensic experts in Istanbul dated the remains to the last Ice Age. More curious than the mummified remains of the pygmy Ice Man (the corpse was no taller than three and a half feet during life) was the bizarre resting place where the group of explorers found the body: a heavy, oddly shaped casket said to be composed of some sparkling crystal-like material.
Pathologists that studied the corpse agreed it appeared humanoid and was not a species of ape. All the facial features were similar to a human except for one shocking variation: it's eyes were three times larger than a normal human's eyes. The creature's pupils also resembled a reptile's more than a mammal's eyes. All were amazed that the body showed so little signs of decay.
What technology cut these gigantic stones?
African aliens mass grave discovery called 'stunning'
Back in Africa, as many as forty mass graves were reportedly discovered at the dig. The large clay pits contained hundreds of well-preserved cadavers.
Supposedly, the remains of the unworldly creatures were tallmeasuring as much as seven feet or more in lengthbut despite the size of the creatures' legs, arms and torsos, their heads were described as hugeand distinctly disproportionate—compared to their bodies.
'Valley of the Moon Mountain Dragons' also holds secrets
Alledgedly, the partially mummified remains of the enigmatic creatures showed no evidence of normal human facial features.
One of the scientific team called the discovery momentous and stunning.
Intense exploration of the region around the alien cemetary did not reveal the slightest trace of any anomalous artifacts or the telltale remains of an ancient, damaged spacecraft.
Despite their failure to discover any other hard evidence, the team believes it's possible the humanoids were crewmembers aboard a large alien vessel that crashed or became incapacitated. They speculate that, gradually, the crew succumbed to common Earth-borne diseases.
Who buried the last of the alleged aliens is unknownlike so many other things about this latest alien graves discovery more questions are raised than are answered.
http://beforeitsnews.com/story/1309/837/Hundreds_Of_Giant_Aliens_Unearthed_Near_African_Village.html

NASA開發牽引光束捕獲行星大氣顆粒物

NASA Developing Tractor Beams To Capture Planetary Or Atmospheric Particles


2011年11月2日 11:34:44
Tractor beams -- the ability to trap and move objects using laser light -- are the stuff of science fiction, but a team of NASA scientists has won funding to study the concept for remotely capturing planetary or atmospheric particles and delivering them to a robotic rover or orbiting spacecraft for analysis.

The NASA Office of the Chief Technologist (OCT) has awarded Principal Investigator Paul Stysley and team members Demetrios Poulios and Barry Coyle at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., $100,000 to study three experimental methods for corralling particles and transporting them via laser light to an instrument -- akin to a vacuum using suction to collect and transport dirt to a canister or bag. Once delivered, an instrument would then characterize their composition.

Goddard laser experts (from left to right) Barry Coyle, Paul Stysley, and Demetrios Poulios have won NASA funding to study advanced technologies for collecting extraterrestrial particle samples.
 (Photo Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Debora McCallum)

"Though a mainstay in science fiction, and Star Trek in particular, laser-based trapping isn't fanciful or beyond current technological know-how," Stysley said. The team has identified three different approaches for transporting particles, as well as single molecules, viruses, ribonucleic acid, and fully functioning cells, using the power of light.

"The original thought was that we could use tractor beams for cleaning up orbital debris," Stysley said. "But to pull something that huge would be almost impossible -- at least now. That's when it bubbled up that perhaps we could use the same approach for sample collection."

With the Phase-1 funding from OCT's recently reestablished NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program designed to spur the development of "revolutionary" space technologies, the team will study the state of the technology to determine which of the three techniques would apply best to sample collection. OCT received hundreds of proposals, ultimately selecting only 30 for initial funding.

This animation shows how a hypothetical future mission might eventually employ 'tractor beam' technology.

Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Conceptual Image Lab

Replace Current Sample-Collection Methods

Currently, NASA uses a variety of techniques to collect extraterrestrial samples. With Stardust, a space probe launched in 1999, the Agency used aerogel to gather samples as it flew through the coma of comet Wild 2. A capsule returned the samples in 2006. NASA's next rover to Mars, Curiosity, will drill and scoop samples from the Martian surface and then carry out detailed analyses of the materials with one of the rover's many onboard instruments, including the Goddard-built Sample Analysis at Mars instrument suite.

Goddard technologists are studying different techniques for corralling particles and transporting them via laser light to instruments on rovers and orbiting spacecraft.

Concept image courtesy Dr. Paul Stysley

These techniques have proven to be largely successful, but they are limited by high costs and limited range and sample rate," Stysley said. "An optical–trapping system, on the other hand, could grab desired molecules from the upper atmosphere on an orbiting spacecraft or trap them from the ground or lower atmosphere from a lander. In other words, they could continuously and remotely capture particles over a longer period of time, which would enhance science goals and reduce mission risk."

Team to Study Three Approaches

One experimental approach the team plans to study -- the optical vortex or "optical tweezers" method -- involves the use of two counter-propagating beams of light. The resulting ring-like geometry confines particles to the dark core of the overlapping beams. By alternately strengthening or weakening the intensity of one of the light beams -- in effect heating the air around the trapped particle -- researchers have shown in laboratory testing that they can move the particle along the ring's center. This technique, however, requires the presence of an atmosphere.

Another technique employs optical solenoid beams -- those whose intensity peaks spiral around the axis of propagation. Testing has shown that the approach can trap and exert a force that drives particles in the opposite direction of the light-beam source. In other words, the particulate matter is pulled back along the entire beam of light. Unlike the optical vortex method, this technique relies solely on electromagnetic effects and could operate in a space vacuum, making it ideal for studying the composition of materials on one of the airless planetary moons, for example.

The third technique exists only on paper and has never been demonstrated in the laboratory, Poulios said. It involves the use of a Bessel beam. Normal laser beams when shined against a wall appear as a small point. With Bessel beams, however, rings of light surround the central dot. In other words, when seen straight on, the Bessel beam looks like the ripples surrounding a pebble dropped in a pond. According to theory, the laser beam could induce electric and magnetic fields in the path of an object. The spray of light scattered forward by these fields could pull the object backward, against the movement of the beam itself.

"We want to make sure we thoroughly understand these methods. We have hope that one of these will work for our purposes," Coyle said. "Once we select a technique, we will be in position to then formulate a possible system" and compete for additional NIAC funding to advance the technology to the next level of development. "We're at the starting gate on this," Coyle added. "This is a new application that no one has claimed yet."

Contacts and sorces:
Lori Keesey
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

› Read the 'CuttingEdge' newsletter for more about technology developed at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center




Read more at Nano Patents and Innovations

美國政府用HAARP影響佔領華爾街的民眾?

2011年11月2日 8:26:17
by Zen Gardner

I don't have the data on this but I'm sure it's one the first things many of us thought about. What a "coincidence" a record early snowfall hits the northeast US while Occupy Wall Street is gaining such national and international momentum.

New York - A rare October snowstorm blasted across the heavily populated U.S. Northeast on Saturday, knocking out power to about 2.5 million customers, delaying airline flights and threatening some areas with up to a foot of snow.

..In a tweet, NYC officials said that all city parks were closed, citing the risk of falling trees. Source

Hmmm...How Convenient

It's happened before. Weather manipulation is continual in the United States and elsewhere. Check the alternative sites who specialise in this, they're good.

If this is news to you, see the US Military paper Owning the Weather by 2025. Says it all. Like chemtrails, just the patents for all this technology is a total giveaway.

Follow this subject down the rabbit hole...you'll get your mind blown.

Keep wondering, but keep communicating. Things are moving fast, and the big war approaches, sorry to say. They're insatiable.

But love and consciousness rules. So fear not.

Love, Zen

www.zengardner.com

慳電膽會攞你命?


http://beforeitsnews.com/story/1310/596/Energy_Efficient_Light_Bulbs_Are_Killing_Us.html

吸血鬼細菌有成為抗生素的可能

2011年11月1日 19:43:44

A vampire-like bacteria that leeches onto specific other bacteria – including certain human pathogens – has the potential to serve as a living antibiotic for a range of infectious diseases, a new study indicates.

The bacterium, Micavibrio aeruginosavorus, was discovered to inhabit wastewater nearly 30 years ago, but has not been extensively studied because it is difficult to culture and investigate using traditional microbiology techniques. However,biologists in the University of Virginia's College of Arts & Sciences, Martin Wu and graduate student Zhang Wang, have decoded its genome and are learning "how it makes its living," Wu said.

The bacterium Micavibrio aeruginosavorus (yellow), attached to and leeching on a Pseudomonas aeruginosavorus bacterium (purple), surrounded by dead P. aeruginosavorus (gray) cells.


Credit: University of Virginia

The bacterium "makes its living" by seeking out prey – certain other bacteria – and then attaching itself to its victim's cell wall and essentially sucking out nutrients. Unlike most other bacteria, which draw nutrients from their surroundings, M. aeruginosavorus can survive and propagate only by drawing its nutrition from specific prey bacteria. This kills the prey – making it a potentially powerful agent for destroying pathogens.

One bacterium it targets is Pseudomonas aeruginosavorus, which is a chief cause of serious lung infections in cystic fibrosis patients.

"Pathologists may eventually be able to use this bacterium to fight fire with fire, so to speak, as a bacterium that will aggressively hunt for and attack certain other bacteria that are extremely harmful to humans," Wu said.

His study, detailing the DNA sequence of M. aeruginosavorus, is published online in the journal BMC Genomics. It provides new insights to the predatory lifestyle of the bacterium and a better understanding of the evolution of bacterial predation in general.

"We used cutting-edge genomic technology in our lab to decode this bacterium's genome," Wu said. "We are particularly interested in the molecular mechanisms that allow it to hunt for and attack prey. This kind of investigation would have been extremely difficult and expensive to do only a few years ago."

He noted that overuse of traditional antibiotics, which work by either inhibiting bacteria propagation or interfering with cell wall formation, are creating so-called "super bugs" that have developed resistances to treatment strategies. He suggests that new approaches are needed for attacking pathogens without building up their resistance.

Additionally, because M. aeruginosavorus is so selective a feeder, it is harmless to the thousands of beneficial bacteria that dwell in the general environment and in the human body.

"It is possible that a living antibiotic such as M. aeruginosavorus – because it so specifically targets certain pathogens – could potentially reduce our dependence on traditional antibiotics and help mitigate the drug-resistance problem we are now facing," Wu said.

Another benefit of the bacterium is its ability to swim through viscous fluids, such as mucus. P. aeruginosavorus, the bacterium that colonizes the lungs of cystic fibrosis patients, creates a glue-like biofilm, enhancing its resistance to traditional antibiotics. Wu noted that the living cells of M. aeruginosavorus can swim through mucus and biofilm and attack P. aeruginosavorus.

M. aeruginosavorus also might have industrial uses, such as reducing bacteria that form biofilms in piping, and for medical devices, such as implants that are susceptible to the formation of biofilms.

Wu said M. aeruginosavorus requires further study for a more thorough understanding of its gene functions. He said genetic engineering would be required to tailor the predatory attributes of the bacterium to specific uses in the treatment of disease.

"We have a map now to work with, and we will see where it leads," he said.

Wu and Wang's co-author is Daniel E. Kadouri, a researcher at the New Jersey Dental School. Kadouri is interested in M. aeruginosavorus as an agent for fighting oral biofilms, such as plaque.

Contacts and sources:
Fariss Samarrai
University of Virginia

避孕針導致失憶

2011年11月1日 23:15:57

The birth control shot Depo Provera offers a convenient alternative for women who don't want to remember to take a daily pill. Ironically, research from Arizona State University has shown the shot actually may impair a person's memory.

The ASU study connects medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA), the hormone active in Depo Provera and many widely used menopausal hormone therapies, to impaired memory in rodents. The study is currently in press in the journal Psychopharmacology. An early on line version of the article is available atwww.springerlink.com/content/53357212117581w6/.

The study was led by Blair Braden, an ASU psychology doctoral student, and Heather Bimonte-Nelson, an ASU associate professor of psychology and director of the Bimonte-Nelson Memory and Aging Lab. The work was done in collaboration with Laszlo Prokai from the University of North Texas Health Sciences Center, Fort Worth, Tex., and Alain Simard from Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix.

The Bimonte-Nelson lab first linked MPA to memory loss in rats while studying it as a component of hormone therapy for menopause. This earlier study showed that MPA impaired memory in menopausal-aged rats, and results were published in the November 2010 issue of Neurobiology of Learning and Memory. The current study specifically looks at the drug in relation to the birth control shot.

Bimonte-Nelson said she and Braden began asking questions about the effects of the drug because Braden was concerned about friends taking MPA as a contraceptive.

"This is an important question, because what we are going to have in our future are women who are menopausal that also have a history of taking MPA as birth control when they were younger," said Bimonte-Nelson.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration originally approved Depo Provera for use in October 1992. It requires an injection every 12 weeks. Its 99 percent effectiveness and the infrequency of doses make the shot an attractive alternative for women seeking to avoid pregnancy.

While other studies have examined Depo Provera's effects on bone density, Bimonte-Nelson's lab is the first to explore its effects on cognition. The researchers note that other forms of hormonal contraception, such as the pill, do not use MPA.

The study lasted approximately one year, using three groups of rats (which received doses at varying ages), plus a control group that did not receive the hormone. To test their memory, rats were placed in water-based mazes to swim and seek out hidden platforms in the water.

"What we found was pretty shocking – animals that had been given the drug at any point in their life were memory impaired at middle age compared to animals that never had the drug," said Braden. "We also confirmed that in the subjects that only received the drug when young, the hormone was no longer circulating during memory testing when older, showing it had cleared from the system yet still had effects on brain function."

The researchers also measured a marker of the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurotransmitter system in the hippocampus of the rats' brains to determine MPA's physiological effects.

"What GABA does is slow the brain down," Braden said. "So if there is too much of it, it can make it more difficult to produce memories. But then if there's too little of it and there's too much excitation, same thing – it makes you not able to produce memories correctly."

The group plans to follow the animal studies with human trials, and the work is leading to results that could have profound implications for women of all ages.

"This research shows that even after this hormone is no longer on board, months and months later, resulting effects are impacting the brain and its function," Bimonte-Nelson said. "This work is an important step forward in our understanding of the potentially long-lasting effects of clinically used hormones on brain function. However, more research is needed to determine whether these effects also occur in women that take this hormone as birth control or part of hormone therapy."


Contacts and sources:
Skip Derra
Arizona State University
Written by Pete Zrioka, OKED

The research was funded by the National Institute on Aging, the State of Arizona, Arizona Department of Health Services and the Arizona Alzheimer's Disease Core Center.
http://beforeitsnews.com/story/1310/033/Birth_Control_Shot_Linked_To_Memory_Loss.html