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What’s a light metal?
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2017-03-21 at 11:38 PM UTCscronny wos right u no
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2017-03-21 at 11:45 PM UTC
Originally posted by infinityshock the medication is a synthesized molecular compound. if sugar…flour…whatever…is mixed in, it is as a filler and not as the active ingredient
if elemental lithium touches skin…it will burn. if it touches mouth moisture…it will catch fire, at best. if someone manages to swallow some, and it reaches the stomach, they will literally explode
So why would they know that in a synthetic form it would somehow calm people if they never experienced it with the real thing? -
2017-03-22 at 12:02 AM UTCits lithium citrate thats used in meds. but they wouldn't use flour or sugar as a binding agent as it would go mouldy you dummies.
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2017-03-22 at 2:18 AM UTC
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2017-03-22 at 3:30 AM UTC
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2017-03-22 at 3:49 AM UTC
Originally posted by Totse 2001 I was told that is what they used and that is the very reason it goes bad. that and half life reduction
there are other binders that can be used in tablets and sugar isnt frequently used because its too expensive...not because it 'goes mouldy'...because it doesnt.
what the shit is half life reduction? this isnt a radiological topic -
2017-03-22 at 4:33 AM UTC
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2017-03-22 at 5:28 AM UTC
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2017-03-22 at 5:29 AM UTC
Originally posted by infinityshock there are other binders that can be used in tablets and sugar isnt frequently used because its too expensive…not because it 'goes mouldy'…because it doesnt.
what the shit is half life reduction? this isnt a radiological topic
every element has a half life, it doesnt have to be radiological -
2017-03-22 at 8:50 AM UTC
Originally posted by infinityshock there are other binders that can be used in tablets and sugar isnt frequently used because its too expensive…not because it 'goes mouldy'…because it doesnt.
what the shit is half life reduction? this isnt a radiological topic
yes flour would be suseptable to mould. but both would be a good breeding ground for bacteria. maybe used in victorian times. -
2017-03-22 at 9:05 AM UTC
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2017-03-22 at 9:08 AM UTC
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2017-03-22 at 9:10 AM UTCto be fair with aluminium in particular, I believe it was original discovered in the US and called aluminum - spelling was officially changed later on to bring it in line with all of the other '-ium' metals
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2017-03-22 at 9:12 AM UTC
Originally posted by Hash Slinging Slasher Our founding fathers were so butthurt at Britain that they wanted nothing to be the same
Hence we end up with a shit system of measurements and a clusterfuck of a language
americans spell the way the word is pronounced. english still have a lot of faggy french influence on their language. the french pronounce nothing like how they spell words. -
2017-03-22 at 2:41 PM UTC
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2017-03-24 at 1:07 AM UTC
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2017-03-24 at 1:09 AM UTC
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2017-03-24 at 1:12 AM UTC
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2017-03-24 at 1:43 AM UTCi believe they called it french pronunciation.