From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #13931 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Monday, May 20 2024 Volume 14 : Number 13931 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Dead Simple Trick Brings Any Battery Back To Life ["Battery Back to Life"] Your Experience with State Farm ["Online Surveys" Subject: Dead Simple Trick Brings Any Battery Back To Life Dead Simple Trick Brings Any Battery Back To Life http://paramountostco.sa.com/Pg3DYFSOo2vh80imoVPkd53uhCsDAr-6-GH6ZHowW25rbQ1hdw http://paramountostco.sa.com/_UqDZWAYoi47VQTAH2oUfkgVYO4rQECWe_jvcx5fbwQ5GQxg4w d Mission Birubala which spreads awareness against witch hunting. She was instrumental in the Government of Assam passing the legislation on the prevention of and protection from witch hunting in 2015. The Government of India awarded her the fourth-highest civilian honour of the Padma Shri, in 2021, for her contributions to social work. Background Rabha was born in 1954 in the village of Thakurvila, near the border of Meghalaya in Assam's Goalpara district. Her father died when she was six, forcing her to drop out of school and help her mother run the household. Rabha was fifteen when she was married to her husband, a farmer with whom she had three children. In 1985, her mentally ill eldest son, Dharmeswar, suffered from a bout of typhoid, leading Rabha and her husband to take him to a village quack. They were told that he had been possessed by and had married a fairy, who was pregnant with his child and that as soon as this child was born he would die. According to the quack, Dharmeswar had only three days to live. However, he eventually recovered, living long after his diagnosis. After this incident, Rabha realised that the superstitions that led to the diagnosis of her son were baseless and stopped visiting quacks, who she believed were frauds. Activism Initially, Rabha formed the Thakurvila Mahila Samity, a women's association raising awareness of various social ills, including witch-hunting in her local village, and later in 2006, became involved in the Assam Mahila Samata Society. In 2011, she founded Mission Birubala; a non-profit organisation made up of a network of social activists, survivors and lawyers; which aims to educate and spread awareness against witch-hunting, as well as support and protect survivors and potential victims of witch hunts across the state of Assam. Despite facing ridicule and attacks from those who defend the belief in witches, and being subject ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 19 May 2024 08:32:20 +0200 From: "Online Surveys" Subject: Your Experience with State Farm Your Experience with State Farm http://eraceprimexxxx.ru.com/pD7P579715Y4an5ROLDCuKYC7ZJEg3b99W3QsnC75sCIKx8W http://eraceprimexxxx.ru.com/QB_nF8R8-YeL4_GuSIiQGnlN-dADuefZg2AyWmsZYzhc46Fjeg of the committee were accepted and on 13 April 1912 King George V signed a royal warrant establishing the Royal Flying Corps. The Air Battalion of the Royal Engineers became the Military Wing of the Royal Flying Corps a month later on 13 May. The Flying Corps' initial allowed strength was 133 officers, and by the end of that year it had 12 manned balloons and 36 aeroplanes. The RFC originally came under the responsibility of Brigadier-General Henderson, the Director of Military Training, and had separate branches for the Army and the Navy. Major Sykes commanded the Military Wing and Commander C R Samson commanded the Naval Wing. The Royal Navy, however, with priorities different from those of the Army and wishing to retain greater control over its aircraft, formally separated its branch and renamed it the Royal Naval Air Service on 1 July 1914, although a combined central flying school was retained. The RFC's motto was Per ardua ad astra ("Through adversity to the stars"). This remains the motto of the Royal Air Force (RAF) and other Commonwealth air forces. The RFC's first fatal crash was on 5 July 1912 near Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain; Captain Eustace B. Loraine and his observer, Staff Sergeant R.H.V. Wilson, flying from Larkhill Aerodrome, were killed. An order was issued after the crash stating "Flying will continue this evening as usual", thus beginning a tradition. In August 1912, RFC Lieutenant Wilfred Parke RN became the first aviator to be observed to recover from an accidental spin when the Avro G cabin biplane, with which he had just broken a world endurance record, entered a spin at 700 feet above ground level at Larkhill. Four months later, on 11 December 1912, Parke was killed when the Handley Page monoplane in wh ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 19 May 2024 11:33:04 +0200 From: "Biblical Scholars" Subject: [PULPIT BLACKOUT] Dire Bible Prophecy spells doom for America [PULPIT BLACKOUT] Dire Bible Prophecy spells doom for America http://silencilignite.ru.com/iwgk6U27a5sFOjnd1b3lI7Q7aFebngcCVTKKJPCaHFskiDPHEw http://silencilignite.ru.com/1QsFcjgJAy7eqs2gsF3S0Qwc4Q_rwEzS_9V7f6OuAR3Yibok2w ually ineffective, and sometimes dangerous medicines and treatments have been peddled throughout human history. Theatrical performances were sometimes given to enhance the credibility of purported medicines. Grandiose claims were made for what could be humble materials indeed: for example, in the mid-19th century revalenta arabica was advertised as having extraordinary restorative virtues as an empirical diet for invalids; despite its impressive name and many glowing testimonials it was in truth only ordinary lentil flour, sold to the gullible at many times the true cost. Even where no fraud was intended, quack remedies often contained no effective ingredients whatsoever. Some remedies contained substances such as opium, alcohol and honey, which would have given symptomatic relief but had no curative properties. Some would have addictive qualities to entice the buyer to return. The few effective remedies sold by quacks included emetics, laxatives and diuretics. Some ingredients did have medicinal effects: mercury, silver and arsenic compounds may have helped some infections and infestations; willow bark contains salicylic acid, chemically closely related to aspirin; and the quinine contained in Jesuit's bark was an effective treatment for malaria and other fevers. However, knowledge of appropriate uses and dosages was limited. Criticism of quackery in academia The evidence-based medicine community has criticized the infiltration of alternative medicine into mainstream academic medicine, education, and publications, accusing institutions of "diverting research time, money, and other resources from more fruitful lines of investigation in order to pursue a theory that has no basis in biology." For example, David Gorski cr ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #13931 ***********************************************