Anonymous ID: fee240 Feb. 5, 2020, 2:30 p.m. No.8040893   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0959

You know when you hear the telephone ringing from the other room, and no one will fucking answer it?

 

It's because the call was meant only for you.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_chloride

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_salt

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorine

 

SALT.

HASH.

SALT YOUR PASSWORDS

ENCRYPTION

 

They have us chasing gold as most valuable object, but we use/depend on SALT WAY more

 

SALT PRESERVES INTEGRITY

 

Fucking A.

 

SALT EXPORTERS

 

https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/20-top-salt-exporting-countries.html

 

The number 1 salt exporter in the world is the Netherlands. This country exports an estimated value of $277,913,000 in salt on a yearly basis which represents just over 9% of the global salt supply.

 

The remaining countries on the list export less than $100 million of salt annually. These countries are located throughout Europe although some African countries and one Asian nation also make the list. The remaining top salt exporters include: Belgium ($79,767,000), China ($75,523,000), France ($73,443,000), Spain ($65,751,000), Belarus ($59,500,000), United Kingdom ($59,417,000), Austria ($58,059,000), Denmark ($48,330,000), Egypt ($43,153,000), Italy ($42,703,000), Tunisia ($41,215,000), Ukraine ($36,163,000), and Poland ($33,075,000).

 

The Netherlands has been a parliamentary constitutional monarchy with a unitary structure since 1848. The country has a tradition of pillarisation and a long record of social tolerance, having legalised abortion, prostitution and human euthanasia, along with maintaining a liberal drug policy. The Netherlands abolished the death penalty in 1870, allowed women's suffrage in 1917, before becoming the world's first country to legalise same-sex marriage in 2001. Its mixed-market advanced economy had the thirteenth-highest per capita income globally. The Netherlands ranks among the highest in international indexes of press freedom,[23] economic freedom,[24] human development and quality of life, as well as happiness.[25][g]

 

Something tells me we should dig into their press info

>press freedom

 

 

Chlorine is a chemical element with the symbol Cl and

>atomic number 17.

The second-lightest of the halogens, it appears between fluorine and bromine in the periodic table and its properties are mostly intermediate between them.

 

The names of the elements all have the ending -ine. Fluorine's name comes from the Latin word fluere, meaning "to flow", because it was derived from the mineral fluorospar, which was used as a flux in metal working. Chlorine's name comes from the Greek word chloros, meaning "greenish-yellow". Bromine's name comes from the Greek word bromos, meaning "stench". Iodine's name comes from the Greek word iodes, meaning "violet". Astatine's name comes from the Greek word astatos, meaning "unstable".[4] Tennessine is named after the US state of Tennessee.

 

….

 

body odor?

from the Chlorine in your NaCl + Bromine in so much else?

makes you buy deodorant that has Aluminum in it?

to cover up your stench you wouldn't otherwise have if you didn't eat NaCl ?

lol, its like that crazy conspiracy about the nano-archons is kinda true.

tiny itty bitty elemental compounds are assaulting us from the inside out.

are they sentient or what? we've been led to believe no, this whole time.

But I'm highly suspicious of the whole 'halogen' and 'chlorine' and 17 stuff so….

Anonymous ID: fee240 Feb. 5, 2020, 2:40 p.m. No.8041009   🗄️.is 🔗kun

A lesson on how "light" can be bad/hurt/pain/sad/used in evil ways

 

https://www.lenntech.com/periodic/elements/p.htm

Applications

 

Concentrated phosphoric acids are used in fertilizers for agriculture and farm production. Phosphates are used for special glasses, sodium lamps, in steel production, in military applications (incendiary bombs, smoke screenings etc.), and in other applications as: pyrotechnics, pesticides, toothpaste, detergents.

 

Phosphorous in the environment

 

In the natural world phosphorous is never encountered in its pure form, but only as phosphates, which consists of a phosphorous atom bonded to four oxygen atoms. This can exists as the negatively charged phosphate ion (PO43-), which is how it occurs in minerals, or as organophosphates in which there are organic molecules attached to one, two or three of the oxygen atoms.

 

The amount of phosphorous that is naturally present in food varies considerably but can be as high as 370 mg/100 g in liver, or can be low, as in vegetable oils. Foods rich in phosphorous include tuna, salmon, sardines, liver, turkey, chicken, eggs and cheese (200 g/100 g).

 

There are many phosphate minerals, the most abundant being forms of apatite. Fluoroapatite provides the most extensively mined deposits. The chief mining areas are Russia, USA, Morocco, Tunisia, Togo and Nauru. World production is 153 million tones per year. There are concerns over how long these phosphorous deposits will last. In case of depletion there could be a serious problem for the worlds food production since phosphorus is such an essential ingredient in fertilizers.

 

In the oceans, the concentration of phosphates is very low, particularly at the surface. The reason lies partly within the insolubility of aluminum and calcium phosphates, but in any case in the oceans phosphate is quickly used up and falls into the deep as organic debris. There can be more phosphate in rivers and lakes, resulting in excessive algae growth. For further details go to environmental effects of phosphorous.

 

Phosphorus can be found in the environment most commonly as phosphates. Phosphates are important substances in the human body, because they are a part of DNA materials and they take part in energy distribution. Phosphates can also be found commonly in plants.

 

Humans have changed the natural phosphate supply radically by addition of phosphate-rich manures to the soil and by the use of phosphate-containing detergents. Phosphates were also added to a number of foodstuffs, such as cheese, sausages and hams.

 

Too much phosphate can cause health problems, such as kidney damage and osteoporosis. Phosphate shortages can also occur. These are caused by extensive use of medicine. Too little phosphate can cause health problems.

==

 

tell me something anons. This might be very hard for you all to ponder.

If the mere act of making ammunition is killing us and innocents across the world (Mad about FLINT MICHIGAN?)

Should we continue to make it?

 

You know what it means…

Anonymous ID: fee240 Feb. 5, 2020, 2:48 p.m. No.8041096   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1117

>>8041062

https://leakproject.com/compartmentalization-programming-global-control-grid/

check again

 

you all so lucky smarter motherfuckers born thousands of years ago carried your ass to victory.

Anonymous ID: fee240 Feb. 5, 2020, 2:56 p.m. No.8041192   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8041117

stuck in the middle with you

 

believes

beliefs

belies

 

i dont think "beliefs" truly mean what you believe it means

 

learn original meanings & context of words, and what you think words mean "now" and read them for what they meant "then".

 

OT written pre-year-0

NT = after.

 

somewhere about 1400s+ all the languages began altering the meanings of words, which greatly changed the understood concepts/ideas.

 

you'll understand how some of us can be a fan of the bible, without giving two flying shits about the imposter-overpriced-brick-shithouse called a "Church" down the street.