Can things really grow smaller?jackmott said:grew slightly smaller.
Is you talking to me, butt? Everybody knows there's no beer of decent quality at all in Scotland. And all Scots are "Loopy as Poolers", as the saying is round here.(Brains is a Welsh Brewery. Their S.A. is well known for shrinking grey matter.)
Pontypool Rugby Club are known as the Poolers, and have a reputation for almost insane bravery/recklessness. "Loopy as a Pooler" has the sort of palindromic word-play Celtic culture has always been so fond of.Loopy as a pooler? Explanation?
Soapy Sam said:Phildonnia said-
In my own experience, I've found that electromagnetic radiation seems to be beneficial to basil plants.
Granted. Especially sunlight.![]()
(Yes, I know you're taking the mickey. Not sure everyone here will be though.)
[pyr]Reported for "breaking the law". As I have no idea what law, if any, is being broken, I will take no action on this.[/pyr]CapelDodger said:from Soapy Sam:
Pontypool Rugby Club are known as the Poolers, and have a reputation for almost insane bravery/recklessness. "Loopy as a Pooler" has the sort of palindromic word-play Celtic culture has always been so fond of.
Felinfoel Double Dragon is a very fine beer. Truth is, there's only one Dragon, which is some indication of the beer's strength. Denigrators refer to it as "Feeling Foul" but that's because they don't wear amethysts as part of their drinking rig.
My Gwent sources place this lab next to the Gypsy camp, just by two scrapyards. I hope the scrappies don't use electro-magnetic grabs, given Roger Coghill's concerns.![]()
Would that be your claim that EM waves can be deflected by things not in their path, or that crystals can amplifycogreslab said:*snip* You already have now some idea of the level of capability we have in this field, from my previous posts on the thread started by Cleopatra.
Kind regards,
cogreslab said:The fluoridation issue is not my field, but is another example of cover up. If you want a real shocker, however, just read the latest issue of the Ecologist which exposes the disgraceful way in which polio has been deliberately mislabelled as being of viral origin, when it is clearly related to pesticide toxicity.
Another mighty cover-up is the AIDS scandal perpetrated by NCI (National Cancer Institute) in the early 1980s. NCI pretended to find a virus which later the Pasteur Institute could prove was one they had previously sent as a sample to Robert Gallo at NCI. The first pictures appearing in Nature in Gallo's paper were actually of the Pasteur Institute's virus not any deriving from NCI!