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THC cancer cure

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By *ouple4funnew OP   Couple  over a year ago

liverpool

go to youtube type in "The Rick SImpson Story: RUnning from the cure"

7 part documentary shows you how to extract THC from cannabis plants , includes testimonies fom cured patients and doctors in Canada

also goes into the history of why big business supresses the cure

personally we had success with Essiac - google it

make your own mind up about this stuff - when you learn it, and you've discovered it for yourself, disseminate it

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

I personally think a lot of stuff like that is being held back purely due to economic reasons

IE the water engine possible in theory so probably built in practice along with many more far fetched inventions

A mate of mines dad a professor worked on a way of transmitting electricity without wires his team succeeded but can you imagine how many jobs would be lost through it??

And so rightly it was shelved there must be hundreds of similar examples like this

But i do question strongly the holding back of medical cures for the economic reasons xx

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By *ouple4funnew OP   Couple  over a year ago

liverpool

finding this stuff out is a reality shift, and I agree with the power suppression too (check out Meyers engine and what happend to it - also the Joe cell in Australia)

I did research why hemp was outlawed and it seems to coincide with Rockefellers take over of the big oharma industry

like everything else just follow the money if you want answers

cancer one of the biggest industries on the planet

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

a lot of the politics with the criminalization of cannabis is to do with the paper industry. after slavery was abolished there wasn't a cost effective way to produce hemp products. someone invented a machine that would produce hemp paper in a cost effective that was greater than regular paper. a newspaper owner who owned a lot of paper mills didn't want his businesses to go under, so he put loads of over the top and untrue stories about cannibis in his newspapers to badname it, spinning the name marijuana, which at the time was a name for a mexican tobacco plant. congress outlawed it, not knowing that they were outlawing hemp as well. of course over the years we've come to realise that it doesn't make anyone who smokes it become some bloodthirsty monster, but drug free america is sponsored by alcohol and tobacco companies, along with medical companies. basically, the law is being dictated by those who stand the most to lose. there isn't a fair deal on it because it's being dictated by money and not by factual content and medical use. unfortunately i feel that the dollar will surpass logic for a good while yet

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By *aucy3Couple  over a year ago

glasgow


"I personally think a lot of stuff like that is being held back purely due to economic reasons

IE the water engine possible in theory so probably built in practice along with many more far fetched inventions

A mate of mines dad a professor worked on a way of transmitting electricity without wires his team succeeded but can you imagine how many jobs would be lost through it??

And so rightly it was shelved there must be hundreds of similar examples like this

But i do question strongly the holding back of medical cures for the economic reasons xx "

we believe that if men have the talent to invent machines that put men out of work,they have the talent to put those men back to work.

j f kennedy

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

we believe that if men have the talent to invent machines that put men out of work,they have the talent to put those men back to work.

j f kennedy"

on a cross-thread related topic: the thread with the arguement against self service tills, this is where the arguement falls down. someone has to make the machines. employment issue solved.

ok, back on topic now people

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By *aucy3Couple  over a year ago

glasgow

i always find it hard to understand.a high proportion of funding,for cancer research.comes from charitable contributions,but as soon any advances are made.it costs the nhs a fortune.when we have already pay for that research,?

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By *ouple4funnew OP   Couple  over a year ago

liverpool

its heartening to see alot of clued up people on this thread, I always get a alot of negative feeedback when I post about this stuff on other forums, guess open mindedness comes with the swingers territory

I think it's something like only 17% of the money in cancer charities actually goes on 'research'. the rest goes on the actual running of the bureaucracy

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By *aucy3Couple  over a year ago

glasgow


"its heartening to see alot of clued up people on this thread, I always get a alot of negative feeedback when I post about this stuff on other forums, guess open mindedness comes with the swingers territory

I think it's something like only 17% of the money in cancer charities actually goes on 'research'. the rest goes on the actual running of the bureaucracy "

oh my god,thats scary.

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By *1dKingColeMan  over a year ago

east london


"......A mate of mines dad a professor worked on a way of transmitting electricity without wires his team succeeded but can you imagine how many jobs would be lost through it??

....."

Easily done!

Just don't stand between the the source and the target, you would get fried!!

Its an effin great big spark!

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By *illwill69uMan  over a year ago

moston

I believe that the suppression of hemp for clothing came about because there was much more profit in cotton.

Also, I believe that the banning of cannabis smoking started in Rhodesia and South Africa in the first world war, cannabis was smoked by the native gold miners and it was noticed that production dropped after they had had their smoke breaks. So at the orders of General Smutts it was banned for the duration of the war. This was then picked up on by the rest of the world and adopted but never repealed.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

^^^^^^ especially insulting when you think of all the trouble you see on a friday and saturday night with people who've been drinking.


"its heartening to see alot of clued up people on this thread, I always get a alot of negative feeedback when I post about this stuff on other forums, guess open mindedness comes with the swingers territory

I think it's something like only 17% of the money in cancer charities actually goes on 'research'. the rest goes on the actual running of the bureaucracy "

beurocrats= people who do very little very slowly, and then charge an extortionate rate for doing it

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

big companies will always bury new ideas that threaten them, the oil companies are the worst.

money talks, its a sad fact, who knows what life would be like now if people were allowed to develop new ideas

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By *ouple4funnew OP   Couple  over a year ago

liverpool

well said

I always remember something John Harris said "has anyone today thought to ask, with all the technology now available why does anyone need to pay to live?"

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By *he_original_poloWoman  over a year ago

a Primark shoebox in Leicester

Random thought:

Computers... any idea how many 100's of 1000's of jobs have been made redundant because of computers.

We are all using one though.

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By *he_original_poloWoman  over a year ago

a Primark shoebox in Leicester


"big companies will always bury new ideas that threaten them, the oil companies are the worst.

money talks, its a sad fact, who knows what life would be like now if people were allowed to develop new ideas"

Who knows what it would be like if people weren't allowed to develop new ideas.

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By *he_original_poloWoman  over a year ago

a Primark shoebox in Leicester

Did you know a number of drugs using canabis extract have been produced in the UK to treat a number of conditions. Most are waiting for approval from N.I.C.E. and I believe one used to treat MS symptoms has been approved... I didn't have to find some unknown website though... it was on Midlands Today.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Random thought:

Computers... any idea how many 100's of 1000's of jobs have been made redundant because of computers.

We are all using one though.

"

but how many jobs have been created due to computers? it's an equatable thing. you can't say one thing without looking at the reverse. that's like arguing your point and then saying you're right before you hear the other side to it. it's called propaghanda

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By *he_original_poloWoman  over a year ago

a Primark shoebox in Leicester


"Random thought:

Computers... any idea how many 100's of 1000's of jobs have been made redundant because of computers.

We are all using one though.

but how many jobs have been created due to computers? it's an equatable thing. you can't say one thing without looking at the reverse. that's like arguing your point and then saying you're right before you hear the other side to it. it's called propaghanda"

A bit like some of the stuff in this thread you mean?

Sure there are jobs in ITC, someone has to tell the thing what to do and how to do it. BUT... many of those jobs can be done by someone anywhere in the world.

Prior to the computer age:

- Every bank, council, large company (you name it) had pools of typists.

- There were printing press companies all over the UK, less than 10% remain.

- Photographic film manufacturing, processing and printing, all declined in large numbers.

- Manufacturing, just look at the car industry for one example.

Modernisation has come to mean replacing a person with a chip.

Self-scanning at a supermarket checkout is the least of our worries.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

the biggest worry is people saying 'won't do that for that wage'. stuff still needs to be built. problem is, people will get it done as cheap as they can, and with this nation of people who want the best wage they can get but the lowest priced goods they can, work will go elsewhere or foreign employment will be brought into the country.

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By *atisfy janeWoman  over a year ago

Torquay


"the biggest worry is people saying 'won't do that for that wage'. stuff still needs to be built. problem is, people will get it done as cheap as they can, and with this nation of people who want the best wage they can get but the lowest priced goods they can, work will go elsewhere or foreign employment will be brought into the country."

You mean like it has done for the last Twenty years?.....

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"the biggest worry is people saying 'won't do that for that wage'. stuff still needs to be built. problem is, people will get it done as cheap as they can, and with this nation of people who want the best wage they can get but the lowest priced goods they can, work will go elsewhere or foreign employment will be brought into the country.

You mean like it has done for the last Twenty years?..... "

yeah, hence why the textile industry is pretty much screwed now

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By *ouple4funnew OP   Couple  over a year ago

liverpool

people will work for free for the right cause, they just know exploitation when they see it

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

For the past 30 years, unemployment in the UK has remained steady at between 1.5m - 2.5m yet the population has grown steadily in that same period. So where we have more people available to work we are seeing the same number of people out of work across that period. This would dictate that job availability is continually increasing to meet demand. The harbingers of doom that state that replacing an entire industry (such as the combustion engine) would lead to millions more out of work, yet statistics prove that that surplus workforce would soon become swallowed up by the replacement industry, or another sector of commerce that experiences a boom due to another sector's demise.

The mining industry is a perfect example. We use gas and electricity to heat our homes now and coal could not provide adequate ability to do what gas and/or electricity does. It would require enormous quantities of coal per household to do the same job. So the coal industry was permitted to decline, and in some cases, forced to close pits.

Are all those former miners out of work though?

Sure, for a while, but they soon found themselves learning new skills and building up new business sectors - which had a much longer term positive effect on their health too.

Everything is related and the death of one industry nearly always provides the impetus for the birth of another.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

funnily enough was doin some research earlier about my area and what happened to the textile workforce when it all closed . most of the workforce who were predominantely female, went into the care sector which coincided with the closing of the institutions and the introduction of the community care act xx

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"funnily enough was doin some research earlier about my area and what happened to the textile workforce when it all closed . most of the workforce who were predominantely female, went into the care sector which coincided with the closing of the institutions and the introduction of the community care act xx"

There ya go. A perfect example. Jobs are lost but then they are created too. I believe that a specific industry closing in a particular area sometimes prompts businesses and/or governments to invest in that area and create jobs where they didn't exist before.

I tend to think of humanity as a swarm of ants scurrying about the globe day to day doing things that seem to bear no relation to another ant doing something on the other side of the world, yet both are working toward the betterment of the hive.

And those that seek to destroy rather than create soon come up against an immovable force that is us as a collective, who stop them. It's all linked somehow, somewhere.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

not really as they amount that was lost against the amount of new jobs wasnt even a quarter but it is a good example of how things change. same as we as a country changed from industrial to financial x

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