Anonymous ID: 7c73bf March 7, 2019, 5:57 p.m. No.5566635   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Been tinke'n about the FB app you can't delete…on a lot of phones you can't remove the battery…wonder if you turn em off there relay not off?

Anonymous ID: 7c73bf March 7, 2019, 6:12 p.m. No.5566877   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7188

Germany does not intend to prevent Chinese tech giant Huawei from developing 5G networks, the country’s economy minister said, adding that the EU stands ready to defend its interests, should a trade war with Washington escalate.

 

Berlin will not pre-emptively ban any specific companies from bidding for contracts to develop the country’s next generation 5G mobile network, despite immense pressure from the United States to ostracize Huawei, Peter Altmaier said on Thursday evening, during a debate on ZDF television.

 

“No, we will not want to exclude any company,” he stressed, explaining that the government is capable of implementing enough safeguards to protect Germany’s future networks.

 

…more…

https://www.rt.com/business/453300-germany-5g-huawei-participation/

Anonymous ID: 7c73bf March 7, 2019, 6:19 p.m. No.5566967   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7188

he US Food and Drug Administration approved a ketamine-based nasal spray, which is the first antidepressant drug in decades to operate in a completely new way, acting within hours not weeks, as with current medications.

 

“This is undeniably a major advance,”said Jeffrey Lieberman, a Columbia University psychiatrist, before noting: “Doctors will have to be very judicious and feel their way along.”

 

Ketamine is known for inducing hallucinations, tunnel vision, and dissociative effects, so the drug will only be administered in limited doses in a certified doctor’s office or clinic, and must be taken with an oral antidepressant. It is expected to cost between US$590 and US$885 per treatment, but will likely be covered under most medical insurance policies.

 

…more…

https://www.rt.com/usa/453246-fda-ketamine-nasal-spray-depression

 

https://kidshealth.org/en/teens/ketamine.html

 

What It Is:

 

Ketamine hydrochloride is a quick-acting anesthetic that is legally used in both humans (as a sedative for minor surgery) and animals (as a tranquilizer). At high doses, it causes intoxication and hallucinations similar to LSD.

Sometimes Called:

 

K, Special K, vitamin K, bump, cat Valium, Kit Kat, Super acid, Purple

How It's Used:

 

In different forms, ketamine can be snorted, swallowed, smoked, or injected. Users often use it along with other drugs such as Ecstasy (called kitty flipping) or cocaine or sprinkle it on marijuana blunts.

What It Does:

 

People who use ketamine can become psychologically dependent on it to feel good, deal with life, or handle stress.

 

Users may become delirious, hallucinate, and lose their sense of time and reality. The trip — or K-hole — that results from ketamine use lasts up to 2 hours. Users may become nauseated or vomit, and have problems with thinking or memory.

 

At higher doses, ketamine causes movement problems, body numbness, and slowed breathing. Overdosing on ketamine can stop breathing and cause death.