Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Secrets of the Universe

"Always Improving Higher" This Group is dedicated to learning about Life , Spirituality , Science , philosophy , meditation , religion and all of the right tools that come along with seeking enlightenment and purpose. Our aim is to gain physical , intellectual and spiritual knowledge to the fullest and to better understand ourselves, become free from harmful outer states like anger, pride, and fear, and develop into people with more inner peace, wisdom, and understanding. It is about empowerment, sharing your knowledge and gifts. “The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well.” ― Ralph Waldo Emerson No level of experience is required, but any is welcome. All that you need to bring is an open mind. In order to further understand the knowledge of physical and spiritual nature of man we decided to open our other groups to everyone. Group that is dedicated in Study, Meditation and the most important of all, the Application of the Great Laws of Impersonal Life. ▶Impersonal Life Philippines- http://ow.ly/TeSQq Group for living healthy and a disease free life forever. ▶Healthy Forever - http://ow.ly/nPFkZ Group that aims to make the Philippines a first world country and give value and enrich the lives of every member by sharing creative ideas with each other. ▶ Project Pilipinas - http://ow.ly/TeT4M Godbless! Namaste! Salaam Alaikum! Alla Abho! Jai Jinendra! Shalom Alechum! Sat Sri Akaal! Hamazor Hama Asho Bed! IAM! Members · 1,294

Description The Vision of this group is to share creative and passionate ideas dedicated to help the average Filipino Networker surpass its current state and rise beyond it by educating them the right way of doing the business that is just perfect for all. Warm welcome to you. Enjoy your stay! *No Spam *No Profanity *No Selling *No Recruiting *No Ads

Other Groups: The Myth https://www.facebook.com/TheMythNow/ Project Pilipinas https://www.facebook.com/groups/projectpilipinas/ Think Positive Philippines https://www.facebook.com/groups/312343258928108/ Secrets of the Universe https://www.facebook.com/groups/thesecretsoftheuniverse/ Healthy Forever https://www.facebook.com/groups/358070317629309/ Group Type Club

ANG BAYAN KO

ANG BAYAN KO about 9 months ago · Follow WATCH: Matagal nang naglipana ang mga sex workers sa Cubao, Quezon City at pati na rin ang mga bars na dinadayo ng mga uhaw sa laman! Bakit walang aksyon ang LGU ng Kyusi? Ms. Joy Belmonte, akala ko ba ay concern ka sa mga kababaihan, bakit pinababayaan mong malunod sa kamunduhan ang iyong mga kababayan? Ano bang ginagawa mo diyan sa opisina mo? Magtrabaho ka naman! Video credits to GMA7's I-Witness

a President

One of the most intelligent President of the Philippines

Friday, January 5, 2018

Healthy Food Choices January 2 at 11:00am · NO MORE LIES AND DECEPTION, THE TRUTH IS FINALLY OUT! THE CHICKEN MEAT IS FULL OF ARSENIC! Read More: https://goo.gl/8J8DRw

Supriya's Kitchen http://healthyfoodchoices365.com/no-lies-deception-truth-finally-chicken-meat-full-arsenic/ HEALTHY FOOD CHOICES HOME HEALTH AND BEAUTY DIET AND WEIGHT LOSS RECIPES GENERAL CONTACT US NO MORE LIES AND DECEPTION, THE TRUTH IS FINALLY OUT! THE CHICKEN MEAT IS FULL OF ARSENIC! Admin | December 6, 2017 | General | No Comments The FDA has issued its newest report stating what we all knew for so long and finally admitting that the chicken meat sold on the market is loaded with arsenic. Arsenic is one of the most toxic chemicals and it has been associated with many serious diseases like cancer. It`s been a long time that people speculate about this, but now it`s official. To make the matter even worse, the new report, issued by the IATP, claims that this toxin is actually deliberately injected in the meat. According to this report 70% of the chickens in America contain high amounts of arsenic. Arsenic is injected in the chickens to make them bigger. According to the FDA, half of the tested chickens were found positive on arsenic and the toxin was found mostly in the liver. The type of arsenic used for the chickens is known as Roxarsone. This drug is produced by the company Pfizer and the FDA asked the company to stop the production of this drug. The FDA, even after this shocking discovery, continues claiming that the amount of arsenic injected in the meat is not harmful and within the limits that are allowed and that the chicken meat is safe for consumption. On the other hand, a lot of studies show that arsenic is very harmful neurotoxin and carcinogen chemical. A study also shows that arsenic is as harmful as lead and mercury and it can impair the normal development of the fetus in pregnant women. The study also shows that arsenic is even 4 times more harmful and poisonous than mercury and much more dangerous than any other heavy metal. According to another study arsenic is associated with respiratory problems, bladder and liver damage, basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma. Even though the FDA claims that small amount of this toxin in the meat is nothing to worry about since is not dangerous, it`s always better to consume organic meat. This way you will be sure that the meat you consume is safe and you will protect the health. RELATED POSTS WE SHOULD ALL KNOW THESE 9 THINGS ABOUT OUR BLOOD TYPE! No Comments | Sep 22, 2017 12 ITEMS IN YOUR HOME THAT CAUSE CANCER No Comments | Oct 21, 2017 ADD BAKING SODA WHEN YOU COOK EGGS – THE REASON IS GENIUS! No Comments | Sep 25, 2017 USE THIS SIMPLE TRICK TO CLEAN YOUR BATHROOM! IT’S 10 TIMES MORE POWERFUL AND MORE EFFECTIVE THAN CHLORINE! No Comments | Oct 9, 2017 ABOUT THE AUTHOR Admin https://www.youtube.com/c/supriyaskitchen?sub_confirmation=1

News AFP News Olive branch or booby trap? N. Korea's new tone divides analysts North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un could be laying a trap for the US and the South with his apparent olive branches towards Seoul, analysts say, warning that Pyongyang's ultimate goal is to divide their 70-year alliance. After months of high ten

Olive branch or booby trap? N. Korea's new tone divides analysts AFP News AFP NewsJanuary 5, 2018 View photos Donald Trump and Kim Jong-Un have repeatedly traded threats of war and personal insults during months of high tensions over Pyongyang's weapons ambitions More North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un could be laying a trap for the US and the South with his apparent olive branches towards Seoul, analysts say, warning that Pyongyang's ultimate goal is to divide their 70-year alliance. After months of high tensions over the North's weapons ambitions -- last year it launched missiles capable of reaching the US mainland and carried out its most powerful nuclear test to date, proclaiming it a hydrogen bomb -- events have moved quickly in recent days. In his New Year speech, Kim said the country had completed its nuclear deterrent -- Pyongyang says it needs to defend itself against a US invasions -- and he had a "nuclear button on my desk". At the same time he made overtures to Seoul, saying Pyongyang could send athletes to the Winter Olympics the South is hosting next month and expressing a willingness to discuss the issue. It was a 180-degree turnaround for the North, which has long ignored South Korean President Moon Jae-In's efforts to engage it. Since then the two sides have reopened a communications hotline and agreed to talks next week at Panmunjom, in the Demilitarized Zone that divides the peninsula, while Washington has agreed to a request by Seoul to postpone joint military drills that always infuriate Pyongyang until after the Olympics and Paralympics. Unusually, Pyongyang -- whose propaganda can be colourfully aggressive, sometimes threatening to turn Seoul into a "sea of fire" -- has referred to Moon as "president", and asserted Kim's desire for improved North-South relations. Sceptics say Kim is trying to drive a wedge between the allies -- the US has 28,500 troops stationed in the South to defend it from the North -- at a time when the international community should remain united in putting pressure and sanctions on the North over its weapons programmes. Moon has long advocated engagement with the North to bring it to the negotiating table, while the US has insisted that it first take concrete steps towards disarmament. "It's quite obvious that Kim's New Year speech is aimed at driving a wedge between the US and the South," Handong University political science professor Park Won-Gon told AFP. "What is important for the South is not to play into the hands of the North." - Bigger than yours - Washington's rhetoric has been in stark contrast to Seoul's in recent months. Kim and Trump have repeatedly traded threats of war and personal insults, and the US president -- the size of whose hands has been an occasional topic of debate -- responded to Kim's New Year speech with a bizarre tweet boasting of the scale and functionality of his own nuclear button. US National Security Advisor H. R. McMaster said that anyone who thought Kim's declarations reassuring had been "drinking too much champagne over the holidays". CIA chiefs reportedly told President Donald Trump last month that he has a "three-month window" in which to act to halt the North's ICBM programme before the North will have the capability to hit US cities, including Washington, with nuclear missiles. The White House has yet to formally announce a new ambassador to Seoul, almost a year after Trump took office, and Jon Wolfsthal, former director of arms control at the National Security Council under Barack Obama, said the US had "all but forced" Moon to "forge his own path". "Easy pickings for KJU to play the charm offensive and divide the alliance," he wrote on Twitter. But other analysts say that Pyongyang has been feeling the pressure of both sanctions and the US administration's stance. "Kim was apparently concerned that there is growing possibility of the US resorting to a military option. He has found an escape in relations with the South," Professor Koh Yu-Hwan of Dongguk University told AFP. The Pyeongchang Games and Kim's initiative were a genuine opportunity, said Kim Dong-Yub at the Institute for Far Eastern Studies at Kyungnam University in Seoul. "By taking advantage of the Pyeongchang Olympics, the North wants to find some breathing space amid crushing sanctions and pressure," he told AFP. Whether any rapprochement would last much beyond the Games is unclear, especially if the military exercises do take place afterwards. Adam Mount of the Federation of American Scientists added: "Symbolic actions like Olympic participation and Panmunjom chats mean little on their own and are not worth paying for. "But if they pause tests or serve as a wedge for broader talks, they're vital."

News AFP News Olive branch or booby trap? N. Korea's new tone divides analysts North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un could be laying a trap for the US and the South with his apparent olive branches towards Seoul, analysts say, warning that Pyongyang's ultimate goal is to divide their 70-year alliance. After months of high ten

Olive branch or booby trap? N. Korea's new tone divides analysts AFP News AFP NewsJanuary 5, 2018 View photos Donald Trump and Kim Jong-Un have repeatedly traded threats of war and personal insults during months of high tensions over Pyongyang's weapons ambitions More North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un could be laying a trap for the US and the South with his apparent olive branches towards Seoul, analysts say, warning that Pyongyang's ultimate goal is to divide their 70-year alliance. After months of high tensions over the North's weapons ambitions -- last year it launched missiles capable of reaching the US mainland and carried out its most powerful nuclear test to date, proclaiming it a hydrogen bomb -- events have moved quickly in recent days. In his New Year speech, Kim said the country had completed its nuclear deterrent -- Pyongyang says it needs to defend itself against a US invasions -- and he had a "nuclear button on my desk". At the same time he made overtures to Seoul, saying Pyongyang could send athletes to the Winter Olympics the South is hosting next month and expressing a willingness to discuss the issue. It was a 180-degree turnaround for the North, which has long ignored South Korean President Moon Jae-In's efforts to engage it. Since then the two sides have reopened a communications hotline and agreed to talks next week at Panmunjom, in the Demilitarized Zone that divides the peninsula, while Washington has agreed to a request by Seoul to postpone joint military drills that always infuriate Pyongyang until after the Olympics and Paralympics. Unusually, Pyongyang -- whose propaganda can be colourfully aggressive, sometimes threatening to turn Seoul into a "sea of fire" -- has referred to Moon as "president", and asserted Kim's desire for improved North-South relations. Sceptics say Kim is trying to drive a wedge between the allies -- the US has 28,500 troops stationed in the South to defend it from the North -- at a time when the international community should remain united in putting pressure and sanctions on the North over its weapons programmes. Moon has long advocated engagement with the North to bring it to the negotiating table, while the US has insisted that it first take concrete steps towards disarmament. "It's quite obvious that Kim's New Year speech is aimed at driving a wedge between the US and the South," Handong University political science professor Park Won-Gon told AFP. "What is important for the South is not to play into the hands of the North." - Bigger than yours - Washington's rhetoric has been in stark contrast to Seoul's in recent months. Kim and Trump have repeatedly traded threats of war and personal insults, and the US president -- the size of whose hands has been an occasional topic of debate -- responded to Kim's New Year speech with a bizarre tweet boasting of the scale and functionality of his own nuclear button. US National Security Advisor H. R. McMaster said that anyone who thought Kim's declarations reassuring had been "drinking too much champagne over the holidays". CIA chiefs reportedly told President Donald Trump last month that he has a "three-month window" in which to act to halt the North's ICBM programme before the North will have the capability to hit US cities, including Washington, with nuclear missiles. The White House has yet to formally announce a new ambassador to Seoul, almost a year after Trump took office, and Jon Wolfsthal, former director of arms control at the National Security Council under Barack Obama, said the US had "all but forced" Moon to "forge his own path". "Easy pickings for KJU to play the charm offensive and divide the alliance," he wrote on Twitter. But other analysts say that Pyongyang has been feeling the pressure of both sanctions and the US administration's stance. "Kim was apparently concerned that there is growing possibility of the US resorting to a military option. He has found an escape in relations with the South," Professor Koh Yu-Hwan of Dongguk University told AFP. The Pyeongchang Games and Kim's initiative were a genuine opportunity, said Kim Dong-Yub at the Institute for Far Eastern Studies at Kyungnam University in Seoul. "By taking advantage of the Pyeongchang Olympics, the North wants to find some breathing space amid crushing sanctions and pressure," he told AFP. Whether any rapprochement would last much beyond the Games is unclear, especially if the military exercises do take place afterwards. Adam Mount of the Federation of American Scientists added: "Symbolic actions like Olympic participation and Panmunjom chats mean little on their own and are not worth paying for. "But if they pause tests or serve as a wedge for broader talks, they're vital."

Monday, January 1, 2018

A gunman opened fire on a church south of Cairo on Friday, killing at least nine people in the latest apparent jihadist attack on Egypt's Christian minority. The Islamic State group

Gunman kills 9 in Egypt church attack claimed by IS AFP News Samer Al-Atrush AFP News29 December 2017 View photos Egyptian security members and forensic police inspect the site of a shooting outside a church south of the capital Cairo, on December 29, 2017 More A gunman opened fire on a church south of Cairo on Friday, killing at least nine people in the latest apparent jihadist attack on Egypt's Christian minority. The Islamic State group claimed its "soldiers" carried out the attack on the Saint Mina Coptic church in the district of Helwan, just south of Cairo. Health ministry spokesman Khaled Megahed told state television that the gunman was shot dead after killing nine people and wounding others, including a police officer. But the interior ministry said the assailant, a wanted jihadist implicated in attacks on police, had been wounded and arrested. The man had been armed with an assault rifle, 150 rounds of ammunition and a bomb he intended to set off at the church, the ministry said. It added that he had killed two people when he opened fire on a store before heading to the church where he shot dead seven people including the officer. Cellphone footage posted on social media appeared to show the bearded gunman wearing a bulky ammunition vest sprawled on a street, barely conscious, as people restrained his arms and then handcuffed him. Police later cordoned off the crime scene as onlookers crowded around the church, while a team of forensic experts combed the area. Congealing blood could be seen at a guard post in front of the church. IS later claimed responsibility. In a statement released via its propaganda agency Amaq, it said a group of its "soldiers" had carried out the attack, killing 10 "crusaders" and police officers. It added that one of its fighters had been killed. An IS affiliate in Egypt has killed dozens of Christians in church bombings and shootings during the past year, and has threatened further attacks against the minority. Friday's attack came ahead of Christmas for the Copts, who celebrate it on January 7. - Series of attacks on Christians - Egypt's Coptic Christians make up about 10 percent of the country's 93 million people, and are the largest religious minority in the region. IS claimed a suicide bombing of a Cairo church in December 2016 and bombings of two churches north of the capital in April. A month later, IS gunmen shot dead about 30 Christians south of Cairo as they travelled to a monastery. The jihadists are believed to have also carried out a massacre of Muslim worshippers in Sinai last month, killing more than 300 in an attack on a mosque associated with the mystical Sufi strand of Islam which IS views as heretical. Egypt imposed a state of emergency after the church attacks and shootings, and President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi demanded the army confront the jihadists with "brutal force" following the mosque massacre. The presidency said Friday's church attack would increase the "resolve to continue the path of cleansing the country of terrorism and extremism." IS has been waging a deadly insurgency based in the Sinai Peninsula bordering Israel and the Gaza Strip that has killed hundreds of policemen and soldiers. The jihadists have increasingly targeted civilians as attacks on the security forces have become more difficult. The army has poured in thousands of troops backed with armour and jets in a bid to crush the Sinai-based jihadists, but attacks have continued. The attack on the church came a day after six Egyptian soldiers were killed in a roadside bombing in the Sinai. Last week, IS claimed responsibility for firing an anti-tank missile at a helicopter in a North Sinai airport as the defence and interior ministers were visiting. The attack killed an aide to the defence minister and a helicopter pilot, but both ministers returned to Cairo unscathed. Egypt's Gulf allies sent their condolences over Friday's shooting. Saudi Arabia said it would "stand with Egypt against sinful terrorist acts", while the United Arab Emirates called the attack a "cowardly". Qatar, at the centre of a long-running dispute with its Gulf neighbours and Egypt, which accuse it of supporting extremist groups, also sent condolences and emphasised its "firm position in rejecting terrorism".