Anonymous ID: b8cb53 Jan. 11, 2019, 5:43 p.m. No.4718370   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Ivanka Trump is reportedly under consideration to lead The World Bank

 

https://www.businessinsider.com.au/ivanka-trump-world-bank-candidate-president-report-2019-1?r=US&IR=T

Anonymous ID: b8cb53 Jan. 11, 2019, 5:49 p.m. No.4718444   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8464

Guys

 

do you ever come on the board and wear headphones?

 

Yesterday when Q was dropping i heard talking in the headphones saying numbers?

 

like instructions

Anonymous ID: b8cb53 Jan. 11, 2019, 6:06 p.m. No.4718707   🗄️.is 🔗kun

"Something Biblical Is Approaching" - Here Are The Scenarios Of The Collapse

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-01-11/scenarios-collapse-world-utterly-unprepared

Anonymous ID: b8cb53 Jan. 11, 2019, 6:10 p.m. No.4718759   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4718645

 

1717

 

No one knows with certainty how or when the Masonic Fraternity was formed. A widely accepted theory among Masonic scholars is that it arose from the stonemasons’ guilds during the Middle Ages. The language and symbols used in the fraternity’s rituals come from this era. The oldest document that makes reference to Masons is the Regius Poem, printed about 1390, which was a copy of an earlier work. In 1717, four lodges in London formed the first Grand Lodge of England, and records from that point on are more complete.

 

https://www.deltalodge.org/history-of-freemasonry/

Anonymous ID: b8cb53 Jan. 11, 2019, 6:15 p.m. No.4718837   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8867

interesting why they used KJU

 

North Korean leader Kim Jong-il surrounded by children. Young blood reverses some of the effects of ageing in mice. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

 

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2012/oct/17/young-blood-reverse-effects-ageing

Anonymous ID: b8cb53 Jan. 11, 2019, 6:17 p.m. No.4718867   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4718837

It is rumoured that the late Kim Jong-il would inject himself with blood from healthy young virgins in a bid to slow the ageing process. Remarkably, the North Korean dictator might have been onto something. Experiments on mice have shown that it is possible to rejuvenate the brains of old animals by injecting them with blood from the young.

 

Saul Villeda of Stanford University, who led the work, found that blood from young mice reversed some of the effects of ageing in the older mice, improving learning and memory to a level comparable with much younger animals. He said that the technique could one day help people stave off the worst effects of ageing, including conditions such as Alzheimer's.

 

"Do I think that giving young blood could have an effect on a human? I'm thinking more and more that it might," said Villeda. "I did not, for sure, three years ago."

 

A neuroscientist explains: the need for ‘empathetic citizens’ - podcast

He presented his results at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in New Orleans on Wednesday.

 

Villeda connected the circulatory systems of an old and young mouse so that their blood could mingle. This is a well-established technique used by scientists to study the immune system called heterochronic parabiosis. When he examined the old mouse after several days, he found several clear signs that the ageing process had slowed down.

 

The number of stem cells in the brain, for example, had increased. More important, he found a 20% increase in connections between brain cells. "One of the main things that changes with ageing are these connections, there are a lot less of them as we get older," said Villeda. "That is thought to underlie memory impairment – if you have less connections, neurons aren't communicating, all of a sudden you have [problems] in learning and memory."

 

The work builds on a paper published last year in Nature where Villeda and his colleagues at the Stanford University School of Medicine found that the brains of young mice began to age more rapidly when exposed to blood from an older mouse. The number of stem cells in the older mice's brains also increased after receiving blood from the younger mice.

 

In the latest study, which has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal, Villeda also tested the behaviour of the rejuvenated mice. He took blood plasma – the fluid portion of blood that is not cells – from two-month-old mice and injected small amounts, around 5% of the total amount of blood in a mouse by volume, into 18-month-old animals eight times over the course of a month.

 

When he put the animals into a water maze, a test where they have to remember the location of a hidden platform, he found that the older mice did almost as well as mice of 4-6 months old. Untreated older mice would make many errors and swim down blind alleys in their attempts to find the hidden platform, whereas the mice that had received plasma from young mice located the platform first time, in most cases.

 

Villeda said that the young blood most likely reversed ageing by topping up levels of key chemical factors that tend to decline in the blood as animals age. Reintroduce these and "all of a sudden you have all of these plasticity and learning and memory-related genes that are coming back". Which factors in particular are causing the effect is unclear since there are hundreds of thousands in blood.

 

Turning the idea into a therapy for humans will take much more research, but Villeda said there was no reason not to think that, at some point in the future, people in their 40s or 50s could take therapies based on the rejuvenating chemical factors in younger people's blood, as a preventative against the degenerative effects of ageing.