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Posts by Kuntzschutz
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2019-10-15 at 11:49 PM UTC in France is Eating ItselfMaybe it's a good time to do a jediel heist or bank heist there, or steal some valuable chemicals.
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2019-10-15 at 8:24 PM UTC in Eurasians are the master race
Originally posted by Japan-Is-Eternal what's a tomato nigger?
The kind that prefer watermelons over tomatos I suppose.
While searching the term I discovered this gem:
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/niggerMOVIE INFO
In this silent, a young black boy tries to find his place in a world that shuns him.
Rating: NR
Genre: Drama
Directed By: Edgar Lewis
In Theaters: Mar 29, 1915 Wide -
2019-10-15 at 8:21 PM UTC in Seattle is going to be the center of a major terrorist attack
Originally posted by Japan-Is-Eternal RIP in pieces
I always wanted to visit Seattle :(
I wonder why they chose that place of all places for such an event, they should have nuked tel aviv or san francisco.
High rate of depression due to the weather, along with a lot of sex offenders. Possibly a larger than average amount of serial killers, too.
Can't seem to recall anything good about the place. -
2019-10-15 at 8:17 PM UTC in Eurasians are the master racewhat about tomato niggers? what category do they fall into?
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2019-10-15 at 7:59 PM UTC in Damnit , infinityshock Bill Krozby spamsgfdhjgkhlojpk'[
dfaoyrfatdpys8ou;vihsdljdfd
!!!!!!!!!!! -
2019-10-15 at 5:52 PM UTC in How many scars do you have?In certain Islamic countries, they'll inspect your asshole for scars if they suspect you've had gay sex. And any time you do, there are scars from it, no matter how much lube you use.
When I was in a maximum security facility, they would make you strip naked and take a good look at your asshole when you spread your ass cheeks to make sure you weren't hiding anything. Of course, looking at a person's asshole can also tell you if they're likely to hide anything in it, such as weapons or other contraband, because any insertions usually result in scarring. Most people can't see it, but a trained asshole inspector with 20/20 vision will definitely notice. -
2019-10-15 at 5:41 PM UTC in "Jeff Hunter did 9/11" T shirts for saleThanks in advance
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2019-10-15 at 5:39 PM UTC in The biggest attention whores here are Hikki and me...
Originally posted by the man who put it in my hood I basically have no reason to be alive except to make as much noise and chaos as possible before i die at a young age.
But you can't do that, because you've become a huge pussy. Back in the day sure, you could've got it done, but not anymore. You're washed up.
It's a shame someone with your skills can't stop being an emo meme posting queer long enough to get anything significant done. -
2019-10-15 at 5:37 PM UTC in Call the fucking fonaphone, faggots...Anyone remember Perestroika? He used to talk shit about large biceps lmao
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2019-10-15 at 5:32 PM UTC in chemistry? questionDMT has a lower boiling point but it's less volatile in solution and in the jungle they have a fuckton of it, it's also often mixed with other things. Not all shamans use a lot of DMT, some use a lot less than others in their brews. I saw this one show where a documentary film maker, I think he was british possibly, went over to the amazon basin area and tried to get a shaman to brew the stuff up so he could get a ayahuasca experience, but he wasn't satisfied that he wasn't quite tripping balls, so he found a younger shaman that put enough DMT in it and he started talking to invisible snakes and such. Even if some of the DMT is boiled off, it'll be a very small amount and the MAOI would make up for it if done correctly.
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2019-10-11 at 8:56 PM UTC in Fake meth aka N-IsopropylbenzylamineIt works, it feels similar to methamphetamine, but way less enjoyable and with way more side effects, especially heart and lung effects.
Best to stay away from it but with so much of the "ice" out there being this fake crap, it's hard to do. I'd point this out to people as a means of harm reduction.
We need more US based labs, large ones, or a shitload of smaller ones. I can't think of anything else that would combat the problem. The media goes on and on about the potency, but they're not testing every sample out there. If they were, they'd know a lot of it is this ISO crap and often times cut with it. Like I said about D isomer, even if you aren't getting the fake stuff, D isomer being more potent doesn't necessarily mean it's more enjoyable.
So people who started doing "ice" or "meth" after the early 80s likely won't know the difference. The p2p stuff was better for sex and just all around more enjoyable. -
2019-10-11 at 7:05 PM UTC in I want to kill myselfI don't want anyone to kill themselves. I want them to continue the circle jerk that is NIS so nobody ever ends up doing anything productive.
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2019-10-11 at 6:35 PM UTC in Fake meth aka N-IsopropylbenzylamineIt seems lots of so called "ice" out there is actually just the fake stuff.
https://imgur.com/gallery/E12Rb==========Proper Identification of n-isopropylbenzylamine==========
Identifying the product should be the first thing you do before you make a purchase, however not every transaction allows you to test it. Always try to meet your dealer in your house or his and tell him you need to test it out. He should be cool with it unless he knows it's bunk, then he'll usually get defensive, make excuses and attempt to leave. In that case, good. You saved your time because you won't want it anyways. Testing your meth isn't really as hard as everyone thinks. Here are six methods to determine if what you are about to buy or have just bought is ISO:
**Visual Test**
Not the easiest to perfect, but very effective once you do. ISO crystals have a distinct growth to them. They're elongated and have flat straight sides, not jagged like a mountain. Similar to french fries or a rail-road tie or a fence post, rectangular. You get it. They're also cloudy and white with a few see-through clear spots in them. Meth shards as I'm sure you know, are clear and sparkle and have small spots of impurities that appear as cloudy spots. The real meth shards will be jagged and very few straight flat sides. They're all different unique shapes kind of like small ice bergs or shards of glass… Yeah, sometimes they can be longer like the ISO pieces but they're generally not, plus the majority of ISO crystals are long and flat so it's real easy to tell them apart if you know what to look for. If you dump a bag of ISO out on a table or a plate and look at it eye level you can see how they're all pretty much the same height and square. Stay away from that when you're trying to buy some.
**Crush Test**
This is an easy but effective test to determine if you have ISO. Take out a crystal about the size of a kernel of popcorn. Put it on a hard surface then press the flat pad of your index finger onto the crystal with just a little more pressure than it takes to pick it up by having it stick to your finger for a moment. This usually causes it to break if its ISO. But if it doesn't, don't stop and think its real. Go ahead and press harder until it gives. Real meth will take some force to crack, if you're even able to break it like that. The key is to see how it breaks, ISO crystals are more brittle than meth which cause them to crumble by putting a little pressure on it. Some of it will turn into powder, or dust (hence the street name, dust) and other parts turn into pieces about the size of a grain of rice. A meth shard wont do that. It will break in half or maybe thirds depending on where the pressure is focused on the crystal's surface and existing fracture lines. Another easy way is by just pinching it between your thumb and index finger pretty hard. The same rules apply, if it crumbles into pieces it's ISO, if it doesn't break at all or in half then you've most likely found some legit meth. But use other tests to be positive before consuming. You can combine both of these methods together while in your dealers presence for a discreet little test. You can take a crystal out of the bag using your fingers to pinch it pretty hard. Then just place it in your palm or preferably a hard surface and look at the results. To the dealer it'll look like you're just examining or admiring the shard. If it survives, test it again by picking it up using the first crush test method and place back into the bag, observing the end result. Make sure when you pick it up using pressure, you actually try to break it. The resulting pieces really make the determination of the test. This is one of the best and easiest ways, plus it's also pretty discreet. So remember, "If it easily breaks its usually fake, If there is no dust, to buy you must."
**Taste Test**
There are two ways you can taste the crystals to tell if it's fake. The first one is the ideal, safer method. The other is a last resort that we shouldn't ever need to use. It's pretty basic, you just grab a tiny crystal, smaller than the piece you would use for bleach test. Then crush it and put your finger in the powder and place on the front of your tongue. If the powder tastes bitter but takes a couple of seconds to really taste it then its most likely fake. But if it travels through your whole mouth and you taste it real quickly as it mildly numbs your tongue and you feel the urge to spit it out…its real meth. It's super bitter and you'll know it immediately once it hits your tongue.
**Liquefy Test**
Obviously all smokers know about crack back and most of them know how to read it. For those who don't,here is a quick note. You need to pay attention to how long it takes for the shards to melt into a puddle, once they've melted smoke will form. Now take the flame off and pay real close attention to how long it takes fort he puddle to turn into a solid chunk at the bottom of the bubble. That's the difference. See the nice thing about ISO is that it has a different melting point. Obviously a different crack back pattern, but you can just ignore that for now. It's not even needed. ISO melts at 200 degrees Celsius while meth melts at 175 degrees Celsius. Smokers should notice this right away, it takes longer to melt down, in fact it barely does. Then when you remove the flame from the glass, it will crack back within seconds, almost immediately. Decent quality meth will crack back in about 4-8 seconds. Cut up meth takes about 7-15 seconds and beyond that…ugh.
**Drawback Test** (for IV users)
If you prefer to bang your meth, here's a pretty simple test for you. Grab your spoon/cooker, a clean rig in case it's real, clean cottons and sterile water. Weigh out a point (100 mg) of the suspected ISO and put it into the spoon keeping it in crystal form. Now draw up exactly 20 units of water. Add the water to the crystals. The smaller pieces will dissolve pretty easy but you'll need to use the orange cap to crush up and stir the mixture to turn it into a completely liquid solution. Now all the chunks are gone and it looks clear and kind of syrupy or like thin gel. Add the cotton and draw up the solution through it, remembering to squeeze out the cotton to get every last unit. It will draw up eventually, (using 31 g) slower than water but not molasses. Now push all of the air out and look how much solution is now in the syringe. If it's 29-31 units, sorry but go ahead and toss it out, it's isopropylbenzylamine. If this test had totally different results then it's definitely not ISO and maybe either legit meth or some other cut. Meth should double the amount being drawn back.
**Bleach Test**
This is a somewhat controversial method but if you look for one characteristic it's clear wether it's meth or not. First get a shot glass or similar glass container (baby food jar) and fill with bleach, Then take a BB sized crystal from the bag and drop it in the glass. Now the most important part is the oily spot created on the surface when the real meth dissolves. If you see that then you know that you have real meth. If it just sinks to the bottom, doesn't dissolve, breaks apart a little, moves around the glass or most importantly leaves no oily whitish patch on the surface, you know its some fake garbage. Most people have witnessed meth to "dance around" a bit, so don't think it's fake just because of that, the key here is the oily spot on the surface of the bleach.
Too bad there's not more of the p2p stuff. Lots of iso cut with D isomer. For whatever reason, the old p2p stuff, even though technically less "potent" gives a better high. -
2019-10-11 at 6:31 PM UTC in Have any of you had someone pull a knife on you?
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2019-10-11 at 5:06 PM UTC in Have any of you had someone pull a knife on you?People have pulled some weapons on me but I don't think it's ever been a knife.
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2019-10-11 at 4:30 PM UTC in Went to go see the joker last night with my friendMore hoopla to sell a movie. Less people watching the NFL and other lame ass retarded j3w produced shit media, hollywood j3ws and glow in the darks are getting nervous and desperate, they have to come up with new ways to keep the retarded mental disease ridden goyim interested.
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2019-10-11 at 4:05 PM UTC in Eurasians are the master race
Originally posted by GAAAAALM No. We are the master race. That's why the gods gifted us with the universal knowledge and blessed us with the hottest women and best cocaine.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7325459/Inside-cross-dressing-community-southern-state-Oaxaca.html
Some of your universal knowledge, faggot.
Soon all of the US will be brown trannies with low IQs that have a poop fetish. They'll be a mindless consumer race, they'll all automatically vote democrat and easily be controlled by Gods chosen people. -
2019-10-10 at 11:49 PM UTC in Is remote neural monitoring real and in use?https://www.popularmechanics.com/military/weapons/a19855256/muckrock-foia-psycho-electric-weapons/
Not sure why people want to bait me into responding to this. These same people have read me post more detailed information on this in the past.
EDIT: Almost every effect described in that diagram has been used on me at some point. -
2019-10-10 at 11:47 PM UTC in Electrician shortage creates potential for six-figure jobshttps://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/electrician-shortage-six-figure-salary-job
America's skills gap is creating challenges in the electricians' industry, which is expected to have a labor shortage of about 60,000 workers by 2026, according to one CEO of one tool manufacturing company.
In order to fill the surplus of jobs, he started a program four years ago to convince students that becoming an electrician is the way to go. It has become so successful that it brought the entire industry together.
“What started out as more of a marketing tool for ideal industries, is actually transformed into an industry-wide marketing tool,” said Ideal Industries CEO Jim James to FOX Business’ Ashley Webster on Friday. “The first year we started this competition, it started with about 2,500 participants. We’re up to over 100,000 this year and next year we're expecting to be over 150,000 competitors.”
Convincing young people and parents to skip out on student debt accumulated from acquiring a four-year college degree is key, he said. There are about 44,000,000 families with over a half trillion of college debt right now.
“Through this process we have actually had a lot of the children of a lot of these electricians have now decided to go down that career path,” he said, adding that there are plans to expand the program into high schools.
“What we're trying to do is also get to the parents. We're trying to help them, convince them and show them that becoming a professional trade is a really good career move.”
According to James, a starting salary for an electrician is around $40,000 per year, while owning a business has the potential to deliver a six-figure salary. -
2019-10-10 at 11:43 PM UTC in “Very Dynamic Acoustic Environments” – Making Us Sick to the Bonehttps://sorendreier.com/very-dynamic-acoustic-environments-makes-us-sick-to-the-bone/
The tech industry is producing a rising din. Our bodies can’t adapt.
Karthic Thallikar first noticed the noise sometime in late 2014, back when he still enjoyed taking walks around his neighborhood.
He’d been living with his wife and two kids in the Brittany Heights subdivision in Chandler, Arizona, for two years by then, in a taupe two-story house that Thallikar had fallen in love with on his first visit. The double-height ceilings made it seem airy and expansive; there was a playground around the corner; and the neighbors were friendly, educated people who worked in auto finance or at Intel or at the local high school.
Thallikar loved that he could stand in the driveway, look out past a hayfield and the desert scrub of Gila River Indian land, and see the jagged pink outlines of the Estrella Mountains. Until recently, the area around Brittany Heights had been mostly farmland, and there remained a patchwork of alfalfa fields alongside open ranges scruffy with mesquite and coyotes.
In the evenings, after work, Thallikar liked to decompress by taking long walks around Brittany Heights, following Musket Way to Carriage Lane to Marlin Drive almost as far as the San Palacio and Clemente Ranch housing developments. It was during one of these strolls that Thallikar first became aware of a low, monotone hum, like a blender whirring somewhere in the distance. It was irritating, but he wrote it off. Someone’s pool pump, probably.
On another walk a few days later, he heard it again. A carpet-cleaning machine? he wondered. A few nights later, there it was again. It sounded a bit like warped music from some far-off party, but there was no thump or rhythm to the sound. Just one single, persistent note: EHHNNNNNNNN. Evening after evening, he realized, the sound was there—every night, on every street. The whine became a constant, annoying soundtrack to his walks.
And then it spread. In early 2015, Thallikar discovered that the hum had followed him home. This being Arizona, Thallikar and his neighbors rewarded themselves for surviving the punishing summers by spending mild winter evenings outside: grilling, reading, napping around plunge pools, dining under the twinkle of string lights. Thallikar had installed a firepit and Adirondack chairs in his backyard. But whenever he went out to cook or read, there was that damn whine—on the weekends, in the afternoon, late into the night. It was aggravating, and he felt mounting anxiety every day it continued. Where was it coming from? Would it stop? Would it get worse? He started spending more time inside.
Then it was in his bedroom. He had just closed his eyes to go to sleep one night when he heard it: EHHNNNNNNNN. He got up to shut the window, but that made no difference at all. “That was when I started getting concerned,” he observed later. He tried sleeping with earplugs. When that didn’t help, he also tied a towel around his head. When that still wasn’t enough, he moved into the guest room, where the hum seemed slightly fainter.
Each night, he’d will himself to sleep, ears plugged and head bandaged, but he could feel the whine in his bones, feel himself getting panicky as it droned on and on and on and on and on. The noise hummed 24 hours a day, seven days a week, like a mosquito buzzing in his ear, only louder and more persistent. He sensed it coming from everywhere at once. Thallikar began to dread going home. As the months passed, he felt like he was in a war zone. He wrote in a text message that he felt as though someone was launching “an acoustic attack” on his home.
The earliest noise complaint in history also concerns a bad night’s sleep. The 4,000-year-old Epic of Gilgamesh recounts how one of the gods, unable to sleep through humanity’s racket and presumably a little cranky, opts “to exterminate mankind.”
Noise—or what the professionals call a “very dynamic acoustic environment”—can still provoke people to murderous extremes, especially when the emitter disturbs the receiver at home. After repeated attempts to quiet his raucous neighbor, a Fort Worth, Texas, father of two, perturbed by loud music at 2 a.m., called the police, who came, left, and returned less than an hour later, after the man had allegedly shot his neighbor three times—an incident not to be confused with the time a Houston man interrupted his neighbor’s late-night party and, after a showdown over noise, shot and killed the host. In New York City, a former tour-bus driver fed up with noisy parties across the hall allegedly sought help from a hit man.
A man in Pennsylvania, said to have had no more trouble with the law than a traffic ticket, ambushed an upstairs couple with whom he’d had noise disputes, shooting them and then himself, and leaving behind a sticky note that read, “Can only be provoked so long before exploding.” There’s the man accused of threatening his noisy neighbors with a gun, the man who shot a middle-school coach after they quarreled over noise, the man who fired on a mother and daughter after griping about sounds from their apartment, the man who killed his roommate after a futile request that he “quiet down,” and the woman who shot at a neighbor after being asked to turn down her music—all since the beginning of this year.
Noise is never just about sound; it is inseparable from issues of power and powerlessness. It is a violation we can’t control and to which, because of our anatomy, we cannot close ourselves off. “We have all thought of killing our neighbors at some point,” a soft-spoken scientist researching noise abatement told me.
As environmental hazards go, noise gets low billing. There is no Michael Pollan of sound; limiting your noise intake has none of the cachet of going paleo or doing a cleanse. When The New Yorker recently proposed noise pollution as the next public-health crisis, the internet scoffed. “Pollution pollution is the next big (and current) public health crisis,” chided one commenter. Noise is treated less as a health risk than an aesthetic nuisance—a cause for people who, in between rounds of golf and art openings, fuss over the leaf blowers outside their vacation homes. Complaining about noise elicits eye rolls. Nothing will get you labeled a crank faster