poop

The Assange Poop Smear Was Concocted to Cover Ecuador’s $4.2 B IMF Loan

Now that journalist Julian Assange is in the hands of Western authorities thanks to Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno, their media lapdogs are scraping from the bottom of the barrel to smear the WikiLeaks editor with increasingly absurd claims.
While Assange is no stranger to smears, this set is particularly distasteful. It started with Ecuadorian Interior Minister Maria Paula Romo, who told reporters on the day of Assange’s arrest that he was “putting feces on the walls of the embassy and other behaviors of that nature.”

Trump, Cohen, Facebook Collusion, Russia “Hack” (Leak) – Boiler Room Live Stream – Jay Dyer

Alternate Current Radio Presents: Boiler Room – Uninterruptible Talk Radio on ACR
Hesher, Spore, Jay Dyer, Fvnk$oul, Infidel Pharaoh and Max bring the media maniac round table discussion to the increasingly volatile internet conversation on political correctness, social media, censorship, la resistance, Trump, Fake News, Russia, the petro-dollar paradigm, sanctions, Cohen vs. Trump, Bennan decredentialed from clearance and the woes of San Francisco’s Brown Town life.

Diarrhea-Inducing Parasite in Public Pools: How to Protect Yourself

People pee in swimming pools – that probably doesn’t come as a shock to you. You tuck it in the back of your mind when you go swimming; but you when you accidentally swallow a mouthful of pool water, you know you’re getting more than H2O and chlorine. Well, there’s another threat lurking in public swimming pools. It’s a diarrhea-inducing parasite called cryptosporidium, and federal officials said back in May that cases of the bug are on the rise.
Source: CDC

Dutch “Poop Bank” Will Offer Treatment, Research of C. diff

Going to the bathroom has deep meaning in the Netherlands – now that its first “poop bank” has opened.
The Dutch Donor Feces Bank (NDFB) is open for business at the Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), bringing new reason and meaning to relieving oneself. The bank was set up in an effort to reduce the prevalence of infection by Clostridium difficile, or C. diff, bacteria in the human digestive tract.