Wednesday, March 22, 2023

When pooping goes wrong (horrifying)

Is your lack of pooping making you feel sick... bloated... and annoyed?

Ever wish you could just poop every single day...

Like clockwork...

Fully relieving your bowels instead of feeling like you never finished?

If so you'll be happy to know that scientists have discovered an unusual nutrient which acts like "nature's drano" to...

- Help you poop up to 171% more than you do right now - That's the difference between pooping about 2x per week versus 7 days a week...

- Quickly remove 5-20 pounds of backed up poop that's weighing you down - So you feel lighter, more energetic and less bloated...

- Boost healthy gut bacteria by up to 344% - Establishing a "bulletproof gut" so you can stay regular, be less sensitive to foods, be less gassy, and even enjoy a stronger immune system...

Eat this unusual nutrient for "perfect poops" daily

 


















One of the first civilian witnesses was Allen Feraday, the principal scientific officer at the Royal Armaments Research and Development Establishment. He suggested that a remote detonator could reach from the scenes of the shootings to the car park in which Savage had left the white Renault and beyond. On cross-examination, he stated that the aerial on the Renault was not the type he would expect to be used for receiving a detonation signal and that the IRA had not been known to use a remote-detonated bomb without a line of sight to their target. The following day, "Soldier G" told the coroner that he was not an explosives expert,[76] and that his assessment of Savage's car was based on his belief that the vehicle's aerial looked "too new". McGrory called Dr Michael Scott, an expert in radio-controlled detonation, who disagreed with government witnesses that a bomb at the assembly area could have been detonated from the petrol station, having conducted tests prior to testifying. The government responded by commissioning its own tests, which showed that radio communication between the petrol station and the car park was possible, but not guaranteed.[77] Professor Alan Watson, a British forensic pathologist, carried out a post-mortem examination of the bodies. Watson arrived in Gibraltar the day after the shootings, by which time the bodies had been taken to the Royal Navy Hospital; he found that the bodies had been stripped of their clothing (causing difficulties in distinguishing entry and exit wounds), that the mortuary had no X-ray machine (which would have allowed Watson to track the paths of the bullets through the bodies), and that he was refused access to any other X-ray machine. After the professor returned to his home in Scotland, he was refused access to the results of blood tests and other evidence which had been sent for analysis and was dissatisfied with the photographs taken by the Gibraltar Police photographer who had ass




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