Test (7)

12354285492?profile=original

Duffle Bag Ransom returns with yet another new project "Spare the Rod, Spoil the Child."

Available on all streaming platforms.

iTunes/Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/spare-the-rod-spoil-the-child-ep/1703867260

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/53fyaQZoh6R4iElw2Uv1jZ

© 2023 Momentum Entertainment

Featuring 38 Spesh, Che Noir

Production credits: Mayor, Ty Jamz, Prophecy, Nicholas Craven, Sibbs Roc

Tracklist:

01. The Powers That Be (Prod. By Mayor and Ty Jamz)
02. New Test of Men (Prod. By Mayor and Ty Jamz)
03. Scape Goats feat. 38 Spesh & Che Noir (Prod. By Prophecy)
04. The Desolate One (Prod. By Nicholas Craven)
05. Hymns (Prod. By Sibbs Roc)

Follow Ransom @therealransom
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therealransom/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/RansomPLS

Follow PaperChaserDotCom @PaperChaserDotCom
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/paperchaserdotcom/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaperChaserBlog
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Paperchaserdotcom/
Website: https://www.paperchaserdotcom.com/

#Ransom #SpareTheRodSpoilTheChild

Follow Me

Follow Us On TwitterFollow Me On YoutubeLike MY Facebook PageConnect With Me On LinkedinConnect With Me On Google+Join My WebsiteFollow Us On Instagram

Read more…

12353520081?profile=original

Kentucky's Attorney General says his office has finally received the ballistics report he's been waiting for in the Breonna Taylor case ... but he says it's not conclusive and it seems there's still no end in sight.

Daniel Cameron revealed Sunday on CBS's "Face the Nation" that he's now gotten hold of a crucial FBI ballistics report he's been saying for weeks was one of the last things he needed before deciding if he'll bring charges against the cops that shot and killed her. He said the report was not "the end-all, be-all," though he would not elaborate.

Cameron made it seem like he was still a ways away from coming to any sort of conclusion. He says he still needs to meet with the FBI to review the report, on top of going through further witness testimony and other analysis ... with no clear end in sight.

Cameron did say he and his team will be meeting with the FBI this upcoming week but didn't indicate how long it would take to review the ballistics, or anything else that might follow. It's been 5 months now since Breonna was killed, and yet ... the waiting continues.

Her family's attorney, Ben Crump, said Sunday ... word of Cameron receiving the ballistics report was welcome news, but he also made it clear, he's expecting this to come to an end with a final decision sooner than later, adding Cameron's hyped up this report as damn near the last piece of the puzzle.

Cameron says he wants to do a thorough investigation before any announcement on possible charges. Just recently, Breonna's family told us they were reassured to Cameron's commitment to resolving her case and getting justice after finally meeting with him.

Unclear how they might feel now that he's saying he's actually not all that close after all.

Source: TMZ

Follow Me

Follow Us On TwitterFollow Me On YoutubeLike MY Facebook PageConnect With Me On LinkedinConnect With Me On Google+Join My WebsiteFollow Us On Instagram

Read more…

12353429888?profile=original

Video After The Jump

Tyson Foods said Wednesday that 570 workers at its Wilkesboro, North Carolina, poultry facility have tested positive for COVID-19. That’s more than a fourth of the plant’s total workforce.

Tyson’s statement said all 2,244 employees and contractors at the site have been tested.

“We are working closely with local health departments to protect our team members and their families, and to help manage the spread of the virus in our communities,” said Tom Brower, senior vice president of health and safety for Tyson Foods. “We are using the most up-to-date data and resources to support our team members, and we are committed to ensuring they feel safe and secure when they come to work.”

Of the 570, most did not show any symptoms and “would not have been identified” if it weren’t for the facility-wide test, Tyson said. More than 2,000 were tested between May 6 and 9, according to the company.

Earlier this month, Tyson temporarily closed the poultry plant for cleaning and sanitizing in response to an outbreak, The News & Observer reported. The company wouldn’t say at the time how many employees were infected with coronavirus.

Wilkes County officials said that the majority of COVID-19 cases in the county were linked to the Tyson facility, the outlet reported.

Production has since continued and is expected to “ramp up,” the Wednesday statement said, and new safety measures have been put in place -- including temperature screenings, face masks, and physical barriers at workstations and break rooms.

“Our team members are essential to helping to feed the nation, and their health and safety is always our first priority,” said Kevin Taylor, complex manager for the Wilkesboro facility. “Disclosing our testing results will help better protect our team members and help provide the wider Wilkesboro community with the information it needs to stop the spread of the virus.”

Meat production facilities across the country have become hotspots of COVID-19.

A Tyson meat plant in Iowa saw 700, or 58% of the facility’s workforce, test positive for the virus, McClatchy News reported.

In April, Smithfield Foods was forced to close plants in North Carolina, South Dakota, Missouri and Wisconsin due to coronavirus, according to McClatchy News.

Many have blamed the virus for nationwide meat shortages, including Tyson board Chairman John Tyson, who just weeks ago proclaimed “The food supply chain is breaking,” McClatchy reported.

Other industry experts say that while the trend is concerning, it’s doubtful the food supply chain will “break.”

“It’s going to require everyone to just hang on and try to get through this,” Rob Handfield, a professor of operations and supply chain management at N.C. State University, told McClatchy News. “We’re not going to starve to death by any stretch of the imagination, but it’s going to be a rough time for some time to come.”

Source: News Observer

Follow Me

Follow Us On TwitterFollow Me On YoutubeLike MY Facebook PageConnect With Me On LinkedinConnect With Me On Google+Join My WebsiteFollow Us On Instagram

Read more…

12353085084?profile=original

Video After The Jump

UFC flyweight champion Henry Cejudo joins Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show to react to TJ Dillashaw reliquinshing his bantamweight championship due to a failed drug test. Cejudo says he feels sad about this news and he would never fight Dillashaw again. Henry breaks down that before Dillashaw failed this test, the plan for the UFC was to in fact have a rematch with TJ over the summer (4:39). Cejudo reveals the next plan for him is to fight Marlon Moraes for the bantamweight title at UFC 238 in Chicago (5:46). Cejudo delivers a strong message to Moraes stating that he isn’t afraid of him and will shut his “lights out” (8:44). Cejudo adds that it looks like the UFC flyweight division is sticking around and calls himself the ‘flyweight savior of the world” (10:14). Cejudo describes what it meant for him to go back to the NCAA Wrestling championships and what the reception was like for him (15:19).

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Instagram
Read more…


There is an emerging number of unverified claims on excessive consumption of niacin and drug test passing. Essentially, those claims emphasize that too much amount of niacin in the bloodstreams promotes quicker disposal of compounds used in detecting drug abuse.

Fraudulent and unfounded claims

A growing number of testimonials, many being readily available online, illustrate that niacin helps the body easily flush out compounds targeted by drug testing procedures. Drug tests are designed to identify presence of specific compounds taken from use or consumption of prohibited substances.

If one is contemplating about fooling the highly sophisticated laboratory procedures involved in drug tests, it is helpful to give those claims a second thought. Majority of medical literature indicates otherwise.

Briefly about niacin

Niacin belongs to vitamin B complex group. Specifically, it is referred to as vitamin B3 or nicotinic acid. It is an essential organic compound used in many nutritional supplements to combat pellagra, a vitamin B3 deficiency disease.

People diagnosed with cardiovascular diseases are recommended to supplement their niacin intake. Although found in various food sources, many people are not getting enough niacin, resulting to reduced autoimmune system performance.

Cardiovascular disease is just one form of coronary heart disease. In the United States these days, one American dies from any form of coronary heart disease. Most fatal of them is atherosclerosis or the inflammation of the arterial linings.

Atherosclerosis is caused by the gradual accumulation of plaques, mostly comprised of blood clots from excess macrophage white blood cells and LDL or "bad" cholesterol. Niacin has been shown to alleviate arterial inflammation by reducing the amount of LDL cholesterol in the blood. Consequently, it has also been certified as essential in increasing the level of HDL or the so-called HDL cholesterols in the bloodstream.

To date, there is no foolproof clinical evidence showing that niacin is able to allow someone pass a drug test. Most common body fluid sample used in drug testing are urine and blood, although sweat and saliva are also used to detect presence of prohibited substances in the body.

Most common form of drug abuse is the use of marijuana and cocaine. Majority of drug dependents use marijuana because of its relatively cheap price.

Find out the truth now

Police chemists conducting drug tests among marijuana dependents aim to detect the presence of tetrahydracanabinol or THC, which is commonly found in marijuana leaves. Those unfounded claims gear to recommend excessive consumption of niacin per se because this vitamin B variant aids the body if getting rid of THC from the blood and urine very quickly. Well, scientific evidences establish the contrary.

Aside from the increased risk of being detected anyway, those consuming too much niacin are also at the risk of acquiring overdose-related bodily conditions and disorders. Too much amount of niacin in the body has been found to cause chronic irritation of the gastrointestinal tracts. In worst cases, liver damage will be caused due to harmful and powerful reactions of niacin on the liver synthesis.

Nutritional supplements should be properly taken in. They are designed to augment what is lacking or missing from regular diet. Continued decline in the quality of modern food lifestyle led to severe malnutrition and nutrient deficiency. These have serious complications to one's over-all health condition.

Needless to say, niacin and saliva detox kit should be taken because it is specifically needed to address various ailments or to prevent them from being acquired, on the first place. Niacin is not a drug test passport.
Read more…
The Guardian Reports The father of a women's world champion athlete today angrily denied accusations that the teenager was secretly born a man, insisting: "She is my little girl." Caster Semenya, 18, is undergoing a gender test to prove she is female after beating her rivals by a huge margin to win the gold medal in the world championship 800 metres in Berlin. Family, friends and teachers at her home in South Africa recalled how Semenya played football with boys, wore trousers instead of skirts and endured teasing by her peers. But all asserted that she is definitely a woman. Jacob Semenya, her father, told the Sowetan newspaper: "She is my little girl. I raised her and I have never doubted her gender. She is a woman and I can repeat that a million times." He attacked his daughter's critics, saying: "For the first time South Africans have someone to be proud of and detractors are already shouting wolf. It is unfair. I wish they would leave my daughter alone." Semenya, who has a muscular build and deep voice, aroused suspicions recently with a dramatic improvement in performance. She went from a virtual unknown to the world's fastest woman over 800m this year when she clocked 1:56.72 at the African junior championships in Mauritius. She sliced more than a second off that with her winning time of 1:55.45 in Berlin on Wednesday.

Athletics' world governing body has asked South African officials to conduct a "gender verification test". The test, which takes weeks to complete, requires a physical medical evaluation, and includes reports from a gynaecologist, endocrinologist, psychologist, an internal medicine specialist and an expert on gender. There is bewilderment and indignation over the controversy in Fairlie, the impoverished village in Limpopo province where Semenya practised her running on dirt roads and poorly kept playing fields. She lived with her grandmother while at secondary school and grew up without electricity or running water. Her grandmother, Maphuthi Sekgala, said: "I know she's a woman – I raised her myself. She called me after [the heats] and told me that they think she's a man. What can I do when they call her a man, when she's really not a man? It is God who made her look that way." The 80-year-old added that Semenya had been teased when growing up because of her boyish looks. "If the teasing hurt her, she kept the hurt to herself and didn't show what she was feeling," she told South Africa's Times newspaper. The athlete's mother said doubts about her daughter's gender were motivated by jealousy. Dorcus Semenya told the Star: "If you go to my home village and ask any of my neighbours, they would tell you that Mokgadi [Caster] is a girl. They know because they helped raise her. People can say whatever they like but the truth will remain, which is that my child is a girl. I am not concerned about such things." A picture emerged of Semenya as a tomboy who transgressed the rigid gender roles of South Africa's traditional rural communities. Her mother said Caster's first love was football. "Often I would ask her why she kept playing soccer, and with boys. All she said was, 'It's because I like it.' With her, everything was about soccer, soccer." Semenya was the only girl in the football team in Fairlie. Her former teachers spoke with pride about her prowess but admitted they had not always been certain of her gender. Eric Modiba, head of the Nthema secondary school, where Semenya was a pupil from 2004 until last year, said: "She was a happy child – I never saw her angry. She had a lot of friends, both boys and girls. She excelled at sport, especially athletics and football, which she played very well. "I have never seen her in a skirt or dress, always trousers. Initially we doubted her gender but eventually we realised she's a girl. We've seen her birth certificate and her file from primary school. At about the age of 16 she started to associate with other girls and try different hairstyles. But she never developed breasts." Morris Gilbert, a spokesman for Pretoria University's sports department, where Semenya is now a sports science student, said the issue of her gender had not been raised. "We are all very proud of her and of what she's achieved," he said. "The university stands behind her all the way." The runner's coach, Michael Seme, laughed off the allegations, saying that Semenya fielded constant questions about whether she was a boy from younger athletes when training. "Then she has to explain that she can't help the fact that her voice is so gruff and that she really is a girl. The remarkable thing is that Caster remains completely calm and never loses her dignity when she is questioned about her gender." Semenya had been "crudely humiliated" a few times and the closest Seme said he had seen her to anger was earlier this year when some people wanted her barred from using a women's toilet. "Then Caster said, 'Do you want me to pull down my pants that you can see?' Those same people came to her later and said they were extremely sorry." Semenya also received the backing of the governing African National Congress, which called on South Africans to rally around "our golden girl". The ANC said: "We condemn the motives of those who have made it their business to question her gender due to her physique and running style. Such comments can only serve to portray women as being weak." The ANC's youth league condemned the "racist agenda" of "imperialist countries", while the Young Communist League argued: "This smacks of racism of the highest order. It represents a mentality of conforming feminine outlook within the white race." Semenya herself is said to be bemused by the speculation. Phiwe Mlangeni-Tsholetsane, the South African team manager in Berlin, said: "She said to me she doesn't see what the big deal is all about. She believes it is a God-given talent and she will exercise it."
Read more…

CNN Reports Plainclothes investigators sent to test security at federal buildings in four U.S. cities were successful in smuggling bomb components through guard posts at all 10 of the sites they visited, according to a government report. A GAO report cites lax security in federal buildings after investigators got bomb compenents past guards. The investigators then assembled the bombs in restrooms and freely entered numerous government offices while carrying the devices in briefcases, the report said. The buildings contained offices of several federal lawmakers as well as agencies within the departments of State, Justice and Homeland Security, which is responsible for safeguarding federal office buildings. CNN obtained the report late Tuesday, ahead of its expected release Wednesday at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. The Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, conducted the tests to check on the effectiveness of the Federal Protective Service .The FPS protects federal buildings by having about 1,200 federal law enforcement officers oversee an army of 13,000 private security guards. In a videotape obtained by CNN, a covert GAO inspector places a bag containing bomb components on an X-ray machine conveyor belt and then walks through a magnetometer at an unidentified federal building. Unlike some covert tests that use simulated explosives, the GAO used actual bomb components in the test and publicly available information "to identify a type of device that a terrorist could use" to damage a building. Watch undercover agent smuggle bomb » "The (improvised explosive device) was made up of two parts -- a liquid explosive and a low-yield detonator -- and included a variety of materials not typically brought into a federal facility by an employee or the public," the report says. Investigators obtained the components at local stores and over the Internet for less than $150, the report says. After the components were smuggled into the building and assembled, the GAO says, it took steps to ensure the device would not explode. But to demonstrate the device's destructive power, the GAO videotaped the detonation of several devices at a remote site. The GAO also released a photograph of a guard asleep at his post and detailed an instance in which a woman placed an infant in a carrier on an X-ray machine while retrieving identification. Because the guard was not paying attention and the machine's safety features had been disabled, the infant was sent through the X-ray machine, according to the report. The FPS dismissed the guard, who, as a result, sued the agency for failing to provide X-ray training. FPS lost the suit because it could not prove that the guard had been trained, the report says. All of the buildings involved in the test were "Level IV" buildings, meaning they housed more than 450 federal employees and have a high volume of public contact. The GAO has declined to identify the specific buildings "because of the sensitivity of some of the information in our report," the report says. The GAO said that FPS has taken several steps to improve oversight of the guard program in response to the GAO investigation. Specifically, the FPS has authorized overtime to conduct guard post inspections during off-business hours and is conducting its own tests. It has also moved to standardize inspections of guard posts across the country. In prepared testimony, FPS Director Gary Schenkel said, "It was apparent FPS was experiencing some serious challenges" when he arrived at the agency in early 2007. Schenkel says the FPS has been focused on "standardizing its practices." "When GAO presented its findings several weeks ago, we took it very seriously," Schenkel's testimony says. Within three hours of learning of the issued identified by the GAO, he increased the number of inspections of guard posts, he said. He has also established a team to "aggressively attack" the challenge of overseeing the contract guard program, he said. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Connecticut and chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, called the test results "simply unacceptable." "We knew that the FPS was a troubled agency, but that GAO could penetrate security at these buildings and make bombs without detection is truly shocking," he said. The security lapses "show a disturbing pattern by the Federal Protective Service of poor training, lapsed documentation, lax management, inconsistent enforcement of security standards and little rigor," added Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, the committee's ranking member. The GAO report concludes that FPS "does not fully ensure that its guards have the training and certifications required to stand post at federal facilities." The GAO says it visited six of the 11 FPS regions and that in all six regions, FPS did not require some of its guards to complete the mandatory 128 hours of training. In one region, FPS "has not provided the required 8 hours of (X-ray) or magnetometer training to its 1,500 guards since 2004," the report says. The report also says FPS does not have a national guidance on how often FPS inspectors should check on the contract guards. In several instances when inspectors have checked on guards, they found "instances of guards not complying with post orders." In one case, the GAO report says, a guard was caught using government computers to manage a for-profit adult Web site. David Wright, president of a union which represents about 1,000 federal employees, said the study shows the FPS is in a "pretty sad state." "I do not believe that adequate training is provided (for the contract guards)," he said. "I think it is very unequal -- kind of a mish-mash across the country. In some cases we leave training up to the contractor, and (it) clearly is not sufficient." Wright says his immediate goal is to have federal officers -- not contract guards -- protect Level IV buildings, and ultimately to have them protect Level III buildings as well.
Read more…
} Facebook Login JavaScript Example