Thursday, July 26, 2007

"CHINESE MEDICINE"

"CHINESE MEDICINE"
Public awareness about the lack of food safety in China grew in 2004
when more than 13 babies died of malnutrition after they were fed fake
milk powder with no nutritional value.


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Sunday, July 22, 2007

bringing Western darkness to Africa

wonder what has them so transfixed...
The "One Laptop per Child" organization promised to install filters on
future shipments...
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he should do his research in Malchus!

A Finnish researcher will study fish in a 500,000-liter aquarium, home
to salmon, trout, pike, perch and other species common in Finland's
brackish coastal waters while a rock group performs nearby, to
ascertain
the ill-effects and distress the sound causes.


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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Stay Away! Made in China!

The deaths of patients in Panama from mislabeled drug ingredients from
China, deadly toxins in pet food exported to the United States and
food laced with hazardous antibiotics and chemicals are just some of
the horrors of China's surging exports.


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email scam (Nigerian)

Police and federal agents in Bradley County Tennessee arrested four
African men from the New York area, enroute to Pensacola Florida to
scam someone out of thousands of dollars.They were stopped on I-75
near Cleveland by a trooper and had two suitcases full of what looked
like stacks of money covered in a smelly, black gooey substance. The
"black money" is really just pieces of paper cut and stacked to look
like stacks of real cash. The scammers coat it with a black substance,
so that it won't look like they're carrying cash. In between the
coated pieces of paper are a couple real bills, like $20, $50 or $100
notes. The scammers then dip a real bill into a solution, to make it
look like the whole pile is real once it's "washed."
Victims have been loosing hundreds of thousands of dollars in "Black
Money" cash advance fee scams.
It starts with an unsolicited e-mail asking for help. In almost all
cases it's a Nigerian-based scheme promising thousands, or millions of
dollars.
"we would like to think that common sense would kick in at that point."
But common sense is sometimes not that common.
"Request For Urgent Business Relationship"
The sender promises a big chunk of $25-million they have stashed, but
because of snags in their country they need someone to "set up an
account."
The scammers ask to send or exchange money with someone, to pay
"taxes" or "handling fees."
why do so many people fall for these scams, loosing hundreds of
thousands of dollars?
greed, people thinking they can make a fast buck. African scammers
have a name for their victims - "moogoo" - meaning Big Fool.

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Monday, July 9, 2007

A Chinese company is marketing a herbal weight loss patch which its
makers claim helped Bill Clinton's daughter, Chelsea, shed 12 kg (26.5
lb) in under a month.
Customers are instructed to stick the patch to the area of the body
where they want to lose weight and then just watch the fat flow out of
them.
In reality, the oil seeps from the patch itself, which can be seen by
putting it on a warm cup or a television set.
The patch is named after an acupuncture point and translates as
"American Seven-Point Thinness".
Though labeled and sold as an import from the USA -- where it was a
top seller according to
the Chinese advertisements, it is really made by a
local Chinese company.
In the few months it was on the market, the commercials propelled
sales to more than 200 million yuan ($26.32 million)!
The most effective way to lose weight is to exercise and rationally
control what you eat and drink...