Cannabis connoisseurs, former hippies, and college kids everywhere have long appreciated marijuana for its seemingly magical effects on mind and body. The fact that it is illegal (at least in the United States), has never stopped people from partaking in a little herbal refreshment. But it isn’t just Phish fans who have argued for the legalization of the popular recreational drug. Legalizing marijuana for medicinal purposes, specifically to alleviate the pain of those afflicted with glaucoma, is a contemporary and fairly widespread cause.
My wife has psoriasis and the only thing that has ever helped combat the sores is a hemp lotion that is expensive and hard to find. The stores that used to sell it regularly have over the years stopped carrying the product because it has a pot leaf on the bottle . Stupid huh? I hope that the U.S. legalizes it on a national level so that the stigma of it being something terrible will lessen because the medicinal values of marijuana are proven.
The tripod is a fine and stable construct for photography and navigation, but how well will it work for motorcycles? We're not sure, but one student at California's Art Center Pasadena is challenging singletrack motorcycles and typical three-wheelers with an anthropomorphic, Yamaha-branded three wheeler concept called the Deus Ex Machina. The forward-looking personal conveyance is a mobile exoskeleton propelled by in-wheel electric motors—or, more succinctly, a trike you can wear.
this looks cool, but it looks like you stand up the whole time while you ride it. It probably won't be to bad for a short trip in town, but that has got to be uncomfortable on a distance trip.
You bash the stargate article like you have some inside track, but then you don't back up your claims that the article is wrong. Why don't you enlighten everyone with the truth. That is, if you really know something.
There is a Podcast called Useless Information, and the commentator does a show on the whole bat bomb thing. Supposedly bats will hibernate at a certain temperature and the whole concept was to get there temperature down low enough to send them into hibernation, and once there, strap the bombs on them fly them over the target and dump them out of a plane. As the fall to the earth, they warm up, wake up and and fly down into the city and or town. Come daylight they would all be seeking shelter in cool dark places, out of view, and that's when they would trigger the explosives. I guess the whole concept was not to cause a huge blast all at once, but to start so may fires that it would eventually burn a whole city to the ground. The podcast claims that they actually got as far as the test faze, but thats where it all unravelled. Supposedly the took hibernating bats (with bombs attached to them) to a base that, at the time had just been built in the mojave desert. They go on to say that the cooling unit they where using to keep the bats temperatures down was shut off premature and as they were loading them into the plane to take them into the air, the bats got free and flew into and all over the new base. They tried to get them but there where to many and eventually there bomb timers went off, setting fire to the whole base and burning it to the ground. I know this all seems far fetched, but I guess the government actually declassified the documentation on this and that is why we are just hearing about this now. Again the podcast is called Useless Information if you wnat to check it out.


| regarding | user | just commented |
|---|---|---|
| First Cell Phone With Built-In Projector? | dfollis | Everyone interested in this |
| More Science of Star Trek: Phaser Edition | MEinIRAQ | Phasers! Who would have |
| Salt Water Rising | alxman2021 | Bryanallo, I'm sorry to |
| Can Thinking Make You Fat? | Unintended | become obese by thinking too |
| Intifada Tech | Unintended | I find this interesting but |