Thứ Bảy, 27 tháng 5, 2017

Waching daily May 27 2017

I think women have more complicated minds,

and have stronger feelings.

I think their organisational capabilities are extraordinary.

Even the most isolated housewife's.

I find men more primitive.

Indeed maybe this primitivity brings happiness with it.

Such a complicated thinking style may bring too much emotional swinging.

But anyway, I love those emotional ups and downs.

First,

there are the bad sides I witness

and thanks to God I haven't experienced most of them.

For example, ten-year-old children are forced to get married.

Even if they are older, some are forced to marry with men they don't want.

Women experience too much violence.

Her physical impotence

seems to be a very serious problem and a handicap.

But when I talk about my own experience;

get as much education as you want,

read as many books as you like,

how intelligent you would be,

unfortunately very often and also in professional life,

I know that I am a "woman" in the men's minds that I encounter.

If you want to use, that might also be a positive thing.

Actually, a woman can use her sexuality.

I have seen ones who do.

But if you decide not to use and play the game without,

then you are always one step behind.

In fact this is not a very easy thing.

For example...

I would suggest that it is up to mothers, they should raise their children, sons in a different way,

but I am also raising a son

and I have no idea if this is about genetics or the general tendency of the society,

but I also witness the same mentality in my son.

A son that a woman like me have raised.

Unfortunately.

Maybe, this is different in Europe or the USA. Maybe.

But the reason must be that the laws are accordingly adjusted.

Not because that men want or agree to be equal.

For more infomation >> You are one step behind - Duration: 2:34.

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The Kooks Be Who You Are Subtitulada Español - Duration: 4:11.

For more infomation >> The Kooks Be Who You Are Subtitulada Español - Duration: 4:11.

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Hydroponics Basics – Family Plot - Duration: 9:07.

- All right Stephan,

let's talk a little bit about hydroponics.

- Well I appreciate you having me on the show.

- Sure, sure.

- Hydroponics is really kind of a new

term that's kinda come up.

But it's a old technology

that's existed for actually centuries.

But it's basically growing fruits and vegetables

in a water-based system.

Whether you have a soilless media,

or you just grow straight in water.

But basically hydroponics is having your roots system

in water, and you're providing those basic nutrients

that the plants actually need to grow.

It's a faster way to grow your items.

It's very controllable, as long as you control the pH.

You control your light.

And you can actually have it in a smaller space.

And you can actually grow those items

that you want a little bit faster, and more manageable.

- That sounds pretty good, are you familiar

with the hydroponic systems, Mr. D?

- I've seen a little bit of it.

I've seen hydroponic tomatoes, I saw some

hydroponic strawberries in the greenhouse one time.

And it's always been very interesting.

I mean, you can grow 'em in the middle of winter.

- Oh, absolutely.

Hydroponics allows you to grow year-round,

as long as you have those conditions.

You can grow outdoors, you could also grow indoors,

as long as you have those conditions

and you can control your conditions.

Most of the high producers grow strawberries,

and what they do is they elevate their strawberries,

so that way they can actually produce more, harvest more,

and then they have a consistent yield

and can produce more during the year.

- That's pretty good, all right, okay.

Now what is aeroponics though?

- Aeroponics is similar to hydroponics,

but instead of actually having a pump system

that continuously runs water, aeroponics has a timer

where it mists the water onto the soil's roots

and then it cuts off.

And so you're actually using a little bit less power,

but you actually have the same growing power.

- Wow.

- Wow.

- I never heard of that.

- Hey, I never heard of that either.

Okay, all right.

- It's less water, too.

- Yes, less water.

- Less water, okay.

Now what's gonna be the pros and cons?

- The pros and cons.

The pros are you can control your water.

You can control your temperatures,

you can control your lights.

You're basically controlling the atmosphere.

You don't have to deal with mother nature.

The cons are you have to have a power source.

And if you do not have power, you do not

have anything growing once the roots get dry.

So you have to have your roots wet at all times.

- Wet, okay, right.

Wow, how about that.

Okay, now let's talk about, you said nutrient solution.

So what are we talking about there?

- Basically it's a nutrient solution that's gonna

give you your basic nutrients.

You know, you need your nitrogen, your phosphorous,

your potassium, but there's also six more basic ones,

and then seven more additionals, 13 that you need.

So basically you have a solution that provides

the key nutrients that the plants need to grow.

So you don't have to worry about if the soil's gonna

provide it for you, because you're providing it for them.

'Cause there is no soil, you're putting it in water solution

and the plants uptake it into its, into its foliage.

- So, soilless media then.

You said we don't need the soil, right?

- Yeah, absolutely.

A lot of the medias that you use is really

just a placeholder to keep the plants upright.

So that way it has something stable,

while the roots are connected into the water

pulling up those nutrients to grow.

- Well how are these plants supported most of the time?

- Most of the time you can use like a rockwool,

where the roots just grow through it.

And it just absorbs, it's like a sponge.

That's how rockwool is.

Or you can have little beads, that actually just lets

the roots grow through, but it holds the plant in place.

- (Mr. D.) Kinda like soil.

- Mm-hm, kinda like soil.

- How about that, okay.

Now speaking of the seeds, now,

are we doing it from seed, or do they need to be,

you know, transplants, or, how does that work?

- It's better to actually do it from transplants.

- Ah, from transplants.

- Yeah.

You start your plants off moreso in like a rockwool,

little tray, and then you get 'em going.

Once you actually get your plants up to its first true leaf

then you can transplant them into the system.

- They're pretty easy to transplant, too, when you're--

- Oh, absolutely.

Because most times if you have 'em in the rockwool trays,

you can just break the things into the cubes,

and put 'em into the cups.

And then that way the roots are already

going down to the moisture.

- Ah, makes sense.

- Pretty neat.

- That is pretty neat.

Now, you mentioned earlier about pH.

You know, Mr. D. and I talk a lot about pH.

- Oh, absolutely.

- Yeah.

Let's talk about pH balance.

- pH, for your system, you need to have your pH

between a five and a six.

And that way, because when your system's running,

you don't want your pH to be out of balance.

Even if you have those nutrients that your plants need,

if your pH is off then your plants will lock out,

and even if you have those nutrients they need,

they will not grow.

You'll have more issues with your plants.

You have to have that perfect pH for the roots

to actually uptake the nutrients and continue to grow.

- Wow, so between five and six.

- (Stephan) Between five and six.

- Interesting, okay.

Now what about sunlight though,

because we need those plants to grow, right?

- Absolutely.

- We need some sunlight.

- Sunlight.

You basically have to mimic the sunlight,

because if you're actually having

your hydroponic system indoors, just like you guys

teach us in the master gardener class, you know,

you wanna have your sunlight closer so you won't have your

plants tall and strangly, you know, so they won't die off.

So you have to have your certain amount of hours,

depending on what you're growing.

Your lettuces, your strawberries, your tomatoes,

you have to have those same amount of hours

of sunlight that they need outdoors.

So you can actually control that indoors,

with your grow lights.

- Well somebody learned something in

the master gardener class, how about that, Mr. D.?

How about that?

(laughing)

Now what about preventative maintenance?

- Preventative maintenance, for most of your hydroponic kits

you want to actually dump the solutions every week,

so you won't have too much of a salt build up.

Because your plants could be taking one nutrient

more than another, and so that means that you have excess

of that nutrient that's not being used, and if you keep on

putting more nutrient solutions in, then it'll be too much

of one nutrient, and that could kill off your plants.

So it's recommended each week that you actually dump it out

and start over with fresh water with the perfect pH.

Each week.

Aeroponics, it's a continuous loop system

where you won't have to actually worry about that

until after you harvest.

- Wow.

That's pretty good, huh?

So you clean the system out.

- Clean the system out.

- Each week.

- Each week.

And refill it up with fresh water.

- Fresh water, okay.

- Mm-hm.

- Now what do you use to clean the system though, I mean?

- You actually don't.

You just have to dump it out.

- And that's it?

- Absolutely, just flush it real good,

and put fresh water in there.

- Wow, okay.

What about yields, you mentioned a little bit about yields.

- Yields.

You'll have more consistent yields,

because you get to control the temperature.

You get to control the sunlight,

so you can basically speed up the yields,

and also the conditions will be better.

For example, strawberries, you won't have those

outside in the elements, so you're gonna have

perfectly looking strawberries,

'cause there's nothing in there to damage them.

- Now are there certain vegetables that work better

in a hydroponic system than others?

That you would recommend?

- Absolutely.

I would recommend your loose leaf lettuces,

that's something that's gonna be a quick turnaround.

I would not recommend anything that grows underground.

You cannot do your radishes, you can't do your potatoes.

But anything that's gonna grow above ground

you can actually do.

Tomatoes, you can do your peppers.

But your peppers may not taste like peppers,

you probably won't have the heat,

because you're not gonna be able to dry out

and get the heat into the peppers.

So.

- Okay.

Something to think about.

All right.

Definitely wanna ask you about this,

so what about any disease problems, or any insect,

pest problems that might occur?

- Hydroponics is just the same.

You can actually have those same diseases

that you have outdoors, but you can control those.

For example, you're not gonna have your moisture

on your plants, because your leaves are not getting wet.

And so a lot of times if it's not, if it's air controlled,

it'll help you out with your hydroponic system.

Circulation of air keeps your plants stronger,

so you wanna have some type of fan system

for circulation inside.

- Okay.

Wow.

Stephan, I appreciate that man, it's good stuff.

- No problem.

- Thank you much.

For more infomation >> Hydroponics Basics – Family Plot - Duration: 9:07.

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Top 15 Facts You Are NOT Supposed To Know - Duration: 19:50.

15.

Grand Central Terminal's Big Secret Though commuters travel through Grand Central

station in NYC every single day, few know that there are secret tunnels that lie below.

Nine stories below, to be exact.

Beneath the floor of Grand Central sits the M-42 bunker.

It's said to have been built during WWII.

Rumor has it that because the station delivered troops to and from New York, there was fear

it would be targeted.

There's also a hidden station below: Track 61.

It's not on any Grand Central train map.

It was built specifically to accommodate the wealthy on private trains.

In fact, an elevator delivers guests from the platform to the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.

FDR was said to use it the most, due to his polio.

The hidden transport helped hide the fact that the president couldn't walk from the

public.

Just goes to show you never know what lies below.

14.

Work Causes More People to Pass Away Than War

Yes, war can be gruesome, and it's definitely not a pretty way to pass away.

But being worked to that point isn't pretty either.

It can be long and painful, especially for those who live in a country where labor laws

aren't enforced or don't exist.

While heart disease and stroke remain the number one cause of passing away, the International

Labor Organization's Director General, Guy Ryder, said that work takes more lives each

year than war.

Drawn from statistics between 1955 to 2002, an average of 378,000 people passed away each

year from war, according to ABC News.

More than six times that number pass away from occupational incidents and diseases.

That's an estimated 2.3 million workers a year.

13.

CIA Scary Stupid Assassination Attempts The CIA wanted Castro gone in the 60's,

and if they had to do it with a seashell – damn it – they were going to try.

During the years between '60 and '65, eight assassination plots against the Cuban

leader were described in a 1967 report on the subject.

This information was only declassified 36 years later.

Maybe they should have left it top secret, because the plots are just plain embarrassing.

Poisoned pills, cigars, fungus, air, and even a syringe were all potential objects suggested

to send Castro to an early grave.

Not only did they want the guy passed away, but they wanted to humiliate him.

One plot outlined an idea to fill his shoes with thallium salt, so that his beard would

fall out.

Um…is this a renowned government agency or a group of naughty school boys, pulling

pranks?

But the plot that was perhaps the strangest and scariest for how stupid it was involved

a booby-trapped seashell.

Castro was known to go diving, so CIA operatives thought they might plant a particularly beautiful

shell in a coral reef he frequented.

Being such an avid diver, Castro would of course be the one to grab hold of the shell

and set off the explosive device, taking his life instantly.

The CIA came to its senses, however, and decided the plot was impractical.

Although, that was not without some investigation into the matter.

Books on Caribbean mollusks were purchased by the CIA's head of Cuban operations, Desmond

Fitzgerald.

They are gathering dust as we speak.

12.

Gandhi Wasn't All Good You know how you think you know a person,

and then you discover something about them that flips everything you thought you knew

on its head?

No one's perfect.

But just what does an icon have to do to lose their broader appeal.

Mother Teresa doubted the existence of God.

Lance Armstrong was doping.

You know what Bill Cosby has been accused of by now.

And, yet, although many know that Gandhi wasn't all good, they really don't know the half

of it.

It's not that Gandhi was a terrible person.

But the idealistic view of this man, whose goodness is often compared to the likes of

Martin Luther King, Jr., may be a bit of a stretch.

Let's get down to the nitty gritty: The British imprisoned Gandhi and his wife, Kasturba,

in Aga Khan Palace in 1942.

Kasturba's poor circulation led to bronchial pneumonia, and one of her sons brought her

penicillin to take, but Gandhi wouldn't allow it.

Instead, she was given river water from the Ganges, which would supposedly restore her.

He believed, "If God wills it, He will pull her through."

With only traditional medicine and God's will to save her, Kasturba passed away three

days later.

Not long after his wife's passing, Gandhi acquired malaria.

His doctors pushed quinine on him, but of course he didn't take it, because of "God's

will."

Just kidding, he totally took it and recovered just fine.

So while Gandhi remains one of the most quotable world leaders throughout history and, in the

purview of the past, an activist for peace, he certainly had an Achilles' heel.

He was imperfect, and Kasturba probably saw the worst side of him.

11.The US Knowingly Let Its Citizens pass away

The United States allowed African American farmers to pass away from syphilis in order

to study the disease's progression.

It began way back in 1932, during the Great Depression.

A study by the U.S. Public Health Service took place in Macon County, Alabama, where

around 35% of the male population had been found infected with the disease.

With the promise of free medical exams, meals, healthcare, and even burial insurance, the

PHS and the Rosenwald Fund convinced 600 African American farmers to take part in the study.

201 didn't have syphilis, 399 did.

The farmers who were infected with syphilis didn't know they had the disease…and they

weren't told of their infection.

Instead of treating the farmers for syphilis, doctors monitored them and tested out "free

treatments," which included agonizing and unnecessary spinal taps.

Instead of lasting six months, the program lasted around 40 years, despite the fact that

penicillin had been discovered to cure the disease in the 1940s.

130 of the participants passed away during the study, and some also went on to infect

their wives and children, as they weren't told they had the disease.

Thankfully, no bad deed goes unpunished.

In 1972, the government shut down the program, calling it "ethically unjustified."

After filing a lawsuit the following year, the families of the study were awarded a $10

million settlement and lifetime healthcare and burial insurance.

But I'm sure no money could quell their pain and anger in this case.

10.

The Top Secret FISA Decision What is the US government trying to hide?

Well, lots of things, probably.

But in 2011, the government was fighting for its life to keep a key FISA court (Foreign

Intelligence Surveillance Court) decision hidden from the public.

What did this decision entail?

The NSA, of course.

This 86-page opinion from the FISA court was pre-Snowden, so the public had no knowledge

of the scope of NSA surveillance.

In fact, the FISA court declared some of its programs unconstitutional, but the Department

of Justice would not allow the Electronic Frontier Foundation to go public with this

opinion, despite the fact that FISA, itself, ruled that it could be made public, and despite

the fact that the foundation had filed a public records request for its release.

The government still wants to keep this opinion secret, but there's been a breakthrough

in the case.

According to a report by NBC News, a ruling "signed by the court's chief judge, Reggie

Walton, rejected the Justice Department's arguments that the secret national security

court's rules prevented disclosure of the opinion."

Judge Walton's ruling, however, did not require an immediate release of the top secret

opinion, but rather sent the case to a lower court to ensure it met the requirements to

be subject to disclosure.

If the NSA knows everything about us, what does it have to hide?

We'll probably never know.

9.

Telecommunication Companies are at the Mercy of the NSA

Another scary fact about the NSA that the public isn't supposed to know: they've

got big companies in their pocket.

Verizon and other big-name telecommunication companies are made to spy on customers by

the NSA.

The telephone records from millions of Verizon customers were collected by the NSA at a request

from the FBI, and court ordered by FISA.

Whether or not customers were suspected of anything, the order enabled the NSA to gather

metadata, including locations, unique identifiers, the phone numbers of both sides on a call,

time and duration of phone calls, etc.

Only the conversations' content was kept private.

The top-secret court order required these companies to hand over this information on

an "ongoing, daily basis."

The order also disallowed Verizon from disclosing the FBI's request and the order, itself,

to the public.

Congressmen and surveillance experts, alike, have declared this collection of personal

data as an invasion of privacy.

But the fact that the public is now aware of this doesn't seem to change anything.

Big Brother is watching us in plain sight, but most people aren't invested enough to

care.

In fact, though a Pew Research report noted that 57% of Americans think it's wrong of

the government to monitor communication of American citizens, only 17% claimed to be

very concerned about it.

35% were somewhat concerned…but being "somewhat concerned" about anything means you're

not going to do a damn thing to change it.

8.

The CIA Experimented with Behavior-Controlling Drugs

The NSA and FBI aren't the only bad eggs.

The CIA is also hiding some deep dark secrets.

Unless you've really dug deep into the history of the CIA, you probably have no idea that

they've done biological, chemical, and radiological experiments on US and Canadian citizens.

Over the span of twenty years, from '53 to '73, a sinister and illegal CIA program

called Project MKULTRA recruited 185 private researchers and 80 institutions to perform

behavior-controlling experiments on citizens using drugs.

More often than not, the drugs were administered on "people who could not fight back,"

as one CIA agent put it.

We're talking mental patients, drug addicts, prostitutes, and prisoners.

That's some pretty shady stuff…even for an organization as shady as the CIA.

LSD was one of the drugs tested, due to its ability to distort reality.

The CIA believed the drug might be used to alter a person's loyalties.

This was during the Cold War, so the potential application for this would be to convert foreign

agents to American operatives.

LSD was provided to men in brothels in San Francisco, after which doctors would secretly

monitor them and the effects of the drug through two-way mirrors.

Even government agents were supplied the drug, in order to test whether or not it would illicit

a confession or draw the mind blank.

Morphine, marijuana, heroin, alcohol, and other drugs were also tested.

One person is known to have passed away in these experiments…but the reality could

be more.

Drug-induced hypnosis was also on MKULTRA's agenda.

They tested whether it would boost intelligence, produce anxiety, or lead to sleep deprivation

in patients.

They also experimented with assassination methods, using aerosols.

If this fact's not scary, I don't know what is.

7.

Facebook Knows…

Will your relationship last?

Don't ask a Magic 8 ball.

Ask Facebook.

According to the social network, the heaps of user data it accrues can help the site

determine whether or not a romantic relationship will last.

The data suggests that, overall, a "facebook official" relationship status of three or

more months means a couple will likely stay together for the long haul.

Bogdan State, a Facebook data scientist, analyzed US users' relationship statuses over three

years, from 2008-2011.

As one might expect, the most important indicator of a lasting relationship was the duration

of their facebook official relationship status.

"About half of all Facebook relationships that have survived three months are likely

to survive to four years or longer," State concluded in his analysis.

The study also found that summer breakups are the most frequent, perhaps due to long-distance

relationships falling apart once the academic calendar year ends.

While not groundbreaking, you might breathe a sigh of relief once your relationship outlasts

the three-month mark.

Apparently, that means you're in it to win it, and your relationship is stable enough

to endure.

While this fact isn't super scary, the public should be aware that social media knows an

excessive amount about us.

And delving into our relationships is a little too close for comfort.

6.

Agent Orange Was Used in Korea While most people know about the US military's

use of Agent Orange in Vietnam during 1961-71, most don't know that it was also used in

the Korean war in 1978.

These are historical facts that we'd like to ignore, as the damages done at the hands

of chemical warfare were detrimental to generations of Vietnamese and Korean people.

Agent Orange is a defoliant and herbicide chemical – a mix of two herbicides – which

was officially used in Operation Ranch Hand in Vietnam to the detriment of the environment

and the health of those exposed.

It wasn't until 2011 that it came out in the local press, KPHO-TV in Phoenix, Arizona,

that the US had used Agent Orange in 1978, burying 250 drums in its Korean army base,

Camp Carroll.

By the time it was made public in America, Korea had known about it for more than a decade.

Around 20,000 South Koreans filed lawsuits in 1999, alleging damages of over $5 billion.

In 2006, they won their appeal, and Dow Chemical and Monsanto were ordered to pay $62 million

to 6,800 people.

Veterans that served in Korea are also able to seek compensation for "presumptive exposure."

5.

The US Government Knows What's Coming In & Going Out

Another NSA not-so-secret secret: the government organization not only collects information

from its own citizens; it also collects all international email and text that crosses

US borders.

Government officials cite the 2008 FISA Amendments Act, approved by Congress, which deemed that

cross-border surveillance (i.e. eavesdropping on our home turf) was allowable, as long as

the warranted "target" was a noncitizen abroad.

Hmmm….sounds like the NSA is digging deep here.

Again, the public isn't supposed to know this.

It was uncovered by the New York Times in 2013, and the extent to which the NSA is surveilling

Americans continues to broaden instead of narrow.

4.

Winston Churchill Believed in a Worldwide Jewish Conspiracy

Like Gandhi, Churchill has aged like a fine wine.

He's viewed kindly by history, as one of the strongest wartime leaders in the world.

But as Prime Minister, Churchill firmly believed there was a team of "international" Jewish

people whose objective was to control the world.

In fact, when he was Secretary of State for War and Air, he wrote an article on his theory

in 1920, entitled, "Zionism Versus Bolshevism: A Struggle for the Soul of the Jewish People."

While Churchill didn't paint all Jewish people with the same brush, he claimed there

were extremes in the race.

He also theorized that Jewish people have three political streams of consciousness:

nationalism, Zionism, and atheistic communism.

The first two were honorable, according to Churchill.

But as for atheistic communism – these were devastating.

In his essay, he said of these types, "Most, if not all, of them have forsaken the faith

of their forefathers, and divorced from their minds all spiritual hopes of the next world."

He called this movement a "world-wide conspiracy" and claimed that it played a part in forming

Bolshevism and the Russian Revolution.

3.

Barbie's Origins are as an Escort Aside from the impossible physical expectations

the Mattel group places on children, Barbie seems like an innocent enough plaything, right?

Wrong.

Nothing could be less innocent.

Barbie's origins date back to 1940s Germany.

The design was originally that of the Lilli doll – a German gag-gift escort doll for

adults.

You heard that right: your little girls have been playing with escort dolls.

Created by Reinhard Beuthien [beau-thay-en], Lilli was a cartoon character for the tabloid,

Bild-Zeitung [bild zay-tung], which is based in Hamburg, Germany.

The character – full name "Bild Lilli" – was a buxom blonde gold-digger who managed

to attract rich men with her looks and sass.

Lilli's quick wit and appeal made her so popular that the newspaper decided to make

a quick buck from her rising popularity by selling a doll version in bars and at tobacco

kiosks as an adult novelty toy.

They became a popular gag gift at bachelor parties and a common dangler for the rearview

mirror.

During the 1950s, the product began to expand.

Different styles of clothes and accessories were designed to dress Lilli.

This attracted young girls, who of course wanted to dress her up.

This is where Mattel came into the fold and really put Lilli on the map…albeit with

a different name.

A toy designer, Ruth Handler, picked up some Lilli dolls on a trip to Europe and, returning

home, worked on the doll's design, until she became Barbie.

The popular toy made her debut on March 9, 1959, at New York toy fair.

Shortly after, Mattel bought the rights to Bild Lilli, and German companies ceased production.

2.

Yellow #5 and #6 Lots of fast food restaurants use ingredients

that you can't pronounce.

However, although you can pronounce "Yellow dye #5 and #6," the contents aren't any

less mysterious.

These artificial dyes are approved by the FDA and are used to color various food and

drink offerings at places like Burger King, Chick-fil-A, Wendy's, and Dunkin Donuts.

And, yet, they've been nixed by many companies in the UK, due to the fact that they're

linked to behavioral problems and hyperactivity in children.

The UK government also now requires that foods with these two scary "yellows" have warning

labels.

The dyes are also used in soap and nail polish.

It's probably best just to avoid them.

Before we get to number 1, my name is Chills and I hope you're enjoying the video so

far.

If you've ever been curious as to what I look like in real life, then follow me on Instagram

@dylan_is_chillin_yt, with underscores instead of spaces.

I also have Twitter @YT_Chills where I post video updates.

I'd really appreciate it if you followed me and feel free to send me a DM if you have

a questions or suggestions.

If you'd like to see more of these videos in the future, then hit that subscribe button

because we upload new countdowns every Tuesday and Saturday.

1.

You Can Buy Almost Anything on the Darknet The internet has made it easier than ever

to get away with certain activities under the cover of darkness.

When it comes to the web, this darkness is in the form of the Darknet.

If you're an innocent Googler, social networker, or Youtuber, you're probably not using the

internet to access nefarious sites and purchase stuff on black markets.

In fact, you probably have no idea they exist.

But they do.

And it's scary.

The Onion Router enables online anonymity and allows folks to access the Darknet (i.e.

websites that aren't part of the regular internet).

You can do and buy anything in this dark underworld.

Guns, drugs, an assassin.

Hacker services are up for grabs, as are stolen credit cards, fake IDs, and forged documents.

In fact, the Silk Road market was removed in 2013 by the FBI.

It was the internet's largest hidden drug market, and its alleged creator, was charged

with computer hacking, money laundering, and drug trafficking.

150 million worth of Bitcoins were also seized.

The criminal underworld did not disband, however.

It simply found a different marketplace.

Thanks for checking out this video.

Be sure to subscribe because we upload new countdowns every Tuesday and Saturday.

Or if you're still not convinced, here are some of our other videos that I think you'd

like.

Enjoy!

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  1. YoBit allows you to claim FREE COINS from over 100 unique crypto-currencies, you complete a captcha one time and claim as much as coins you want from the available offers.

    After you make about 20-30 claims, you complete the captcha and continue claiming.

    You can click claim as much as 30 times per one captcha.

    The coins will stored in your account, and you can convert them to Bitcoins or any other currency you want.

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