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abdullahmag
| Rank #7561 on Comments Offline Send mail to abdullahmag Block abdullahmag Invite abdullahmag to be your friend |
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latest user's comments
| #18 - dead [+] (1 new reply) | 02/28/2013 on Straw Hats' Deadly Sins | 0 |
| #47 - play with matches, you get burns. in this case he pok… | 02/28/2013 on Leopard freaks out | -1 |
| #42 - sometimes i feel like Canada is Russia's timid brother. | 02/27/2013 on Oh Canada | 0 |
| #31 - gullible doesn't sound like oranges anyway you pronounce it, b… [+] (6 new replies) | 02/27/2013 on no hope | +19 |
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| #80 - What the flippin flippity flop...! | 02/26/2013 on 14 y.o BDAY Party | 0 |
| #70 - " Small amounts of these elements are common in our en… [+] (9 new replies) | 02/26/2013 on Kintsukuroi | -3 |
| #132
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harleyzone (02/26/2013) [-] no, but more than likely the gold was made into a malleable plaster with the use of mercury (my first guess could be way off) which would make it unhealthy for the person handling the gold paste, death clocks were made that way, also, if you were to do something weird, like spend an hour a day licking the seams of the pot, you may get slight mercury poisoning (maybe) but the pot should be totally fine. #324
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harleyzone (02/27/2013) [-] yes, that's why you use mercury to make the gold into a paste. that is, for a fact, how dentists made gold fillings, and why you can't get one anymore, mix the right proportions and you get gold paste, let the mercury evaporate or burn it off and you get mostly solid gold (with a decent amount or residual mercury) left in whatever shape it was molded into. death clocks were made that way, and that's how they extract gold from gold rich sand in south america. I don't know for sure, but that is more than likely how the pots are done, a mixture of gold and mercury, just enough to make the gold like dough, too much mercury and it will dissolve into liquid and be mostly just mercury, but if the proportions are right you can use the paste as a plaster for the pot, and let it cure/burn it off to solidify the gold, but the mercury fumes from that are very toxic. #340
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harleyzone (02/28/2013) [-] dude, my mother was a dental hygienist way back, she helped give many mercury amalgam fillings, you take a small bit of gold, put it with the correct amount of mercury and it makes an amalgam, this is a fact, there are hundreds of videos on youtube of people doing just this, quit trolling. | ||
| #61 - do you eat jewelry? [+] (11 new replies) | 02/26/2013 on Kintsukuroi | -5 |
| #70
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abdullahmag (02/26/2013) [-] "Small amounts of these elements are common in our environment and diet and are actually necessary for good health, but large amounts of any of them may cause acute or chronic toxicity" #132
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harleyzone (02/26/2013) [-] no, but more than likely the gold was made into a malleable plaster with the use of mercury (my first guess could be way off) which would make it unhealthy for the person handling the gold paste, death clocks were made that way, also, if you were to do something weird, like spend an hour a day licking the seams of the pot, you may get slight mercury poisoning (maybe) but the pot should be totally fine. #324
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harleyzone (02/27/2013) [-] yes, that's why you use mercury to make the gold into a paste. that is, for a fact, how dentists made gold fillings, and why you can't get one anymore, mix the right proportions and you get gold paste, let the mercury evaporate or burn it off and you get mostly solid gold (with a decent amount or residual mercury) left in whatever shape it was molded into. death clocks were made that way, and that's how they extract gold from gold rich sand in south america. I don't know for sure, but that is more than likely how the pots are done, a mixture of gold and mercury, just enough to make the gold like dough, too much mercury and it will dissolve into liquid and be mostly just mercury, but if the proportions are right you can use the paste as a plaster for the pot, and let it cure/burn it off to solidify the gold, but the mercury fumes from that are very toxic. #340
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harleyzone (02/28/2013) [-] dude, my mother was a dental hygienist way back, she helped give many mercury amalgam fillings, you take a small bit of gold, put it with the correct amount of mercury and it makes an amalgam, this is a fact, there are hundreds of videos on youtube of people doing just this, quit trolling. | ||
| #58 - do you eat jewelry? | 02/26/2013 on Kintsukuroi | 0 |
| #54 - "There are 35 metals that concern us because of occupatio… [+] (22 new replies) | 02/26/2013 on Kintsukuroi | -17 |
| 1 - You need iron in your blood, so it has to be extremely vast amounts 2 - Silverware is made out of stainless steel and in some cases, silver. Stainless steel has chromium and nickel in it. So if you can get lead poisoning from lead paint, then theoretically we would have died out a long time ago due to chromium-Nickel and/or silver poisoning. 3 - You would need massive amounts of any of those to have those long lasting symptoms, the reason that mercury is so bad is because it is usually used on it's own, and the initial sickness was less of having actual mercury poisoning and more of having a large amount of any substance that doesn't degrade placed inside your system. #130
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harleyzone (02/26/2013) [-] not really, it's the long term exposure that allows toxic absorption of such materials, lead paint is bad because it flakes, flakes turn into dust, and dust get's inhaled, same with asbestos insulation in attics, it powders and infiltrates air vents. stainless steel silverware/any silverware is fine because it's a short term contact, if you left that spoon in your acidic soup for a week and went to eat it there might be minor problems, but even then only if done regularly. it's like how you can drink out of crystal lead glasses and be totally fine, but you aren't supposed to store liquid in them, especially something acidic like red wine. red wine in a lead crystal decanter left sealed for days and drunk from regularly can pose a health risk due to the dangerous levels of lead that can dissolve into the acidic wine in the decanter. part of why old fillings are bad, they used mercury to make the metal malleable, the mercury could be absorbed through your gums after many years when the ph balance in your mouth is acidic, like after drinking acidic liquids, so gold fillings are unhealthy, but gold itself may not be, and you'd have to take a lot regularly to be an issue, like eating a lot of gold flake daily, or a supplement with excessive heavy metals, or inhaling powder/dust of that metal daily for long periods of time in your home. but like anything else, small amounts in moderation is fine, you can even inhale/ingest cyanide in small enough amounts with no ill-effects, that's why it's well known that cyanide smells like almonds. "Although Gold is a heavy metal, it's also an inert heavy metal. It's very low in the Reactivity Series, and therefore doesn't easily react with other chemicals (more specifically it won't replace the metals above it in the Reactivity Series.) In practicality this means that Gold introduced into the body by ingestion typically passes straight through us without causing any ill effects. Lead on the other hand readily reacts with various acids, making it a far more dangerous prospect when ingested." #70
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abdullahmag (02/26/2013) [-] "Small amounts of these elements are common in our environment and diet and are actually necessary for good health, but large amounts of any of them may cause acute or chronic toxicity" #132
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harleyzone (02/26/2013) [-] no, but more than likely the gold was made into a malleable plaster with the use of mercury (my first guess could be way off) which would make it unhealthy for the person handling the gold paste, death clocks were made that way, also, if you were to do something weird, like spend an hour a day licking the seams of the pot, you may get slight mercury poisoning (maybe) but the pot should be totally fine. #324
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harleyzone (02/27/2013) [-] yes, that's why you use mercury to make the gold into a paste. that is, for a fact, how dentists made gold fillings, and why you can't get one anymore, mix the right proportions and you get gold paste, let the mercury evaporate or burn it off and you get mostly solid gold (with a decent amount or residual mercury) left in whatever shape it was molded into. death clocks were made that way, and that's how they extract gold from gold rich sand in south america. I don't know for sure, but that is more than likely how the pots are done, a mixture of gold and mercury, just enough to make the gold like dough, too much mercury and it will dissolve into liquid and be mostly just mercury, but if the proportions are right you can use the paste as a plaster for the pot, and let it cure/burn it off to solidify the gold, but the mercury fumes from that are very toxic. #340
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harleyzone (02/28/2013) [-] dude, my mother was a dental hygienist way back, she helped give many mercury amalgam fillings, you take a small bit of gold, put it with the correct amount of mercury and it makes an amalgam, this is a fact, there are hundreds of videos on youtube of people doing just this, quit trolling. | ||
| #39 - it was art until they all got heavy metal poisoning. [+] (27 new replies) | 02/26/2013 on Kintsukuroi | -8 |
| #54
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abdullahmag (02/26/2013) [-] "There are 35 metals that concern us because of occupational or residential exposure; 23 of these are the heavy elements or "heavy metals": antimony, arsenic, bismuth, cadmium, cerium, chromium, cobalt, copper, gallium, gold, iron, lead, manganese, mercury, nickel, platinum, silver, tellurium, thallium, tin, uranium, vanadium, and zinc (Glanze 1996). Small amounts of these elements are common in our environment and diet and are actually necessary for good health, but large amounts of any of them may cause acute or chronic toxicity (poisoning). Heavy metal toxicity can result in damaged or reduced mental and central nervous function, lower energy levels, and damage to blood composition, lungs, kidneys, liver, and other vital organs. Long-term exposure may result in slowly progressing physical, muscular, and neurological degenerative processes that mimic Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, muscular dystrophy, and multiple sclerosis. " 1 - You need iron in your blood, so it has to be extremely vast amounts 2 - Silverware is made out of stainless steel and in some cases, silver. Stainless steel has chromium and nickel in it. So if you can get lead poisoning from lead paint, then theoretically we would have died out a long time ago due to chromium-Nickel and/or silver poisoning. 3 - You would need massive amounts of any of those to have those long lasting symptoms, the reason that mercury is so bad is because it is usually used on it's own, and the initial sickness was less of having actual mercury poisoning and more of having a large amount of any substance that doesn't degrade placed inside your system. #130
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harleyzone (02/26/2013) [-] not really, it's the long term exposure that allows toxic absorption of such materials, lead paint is bad because it flakes, flakes turn into dust, and dust get's inhaled, same with asbestos insulation in attics, it powders and infiltrates air vents. stainless steel silverware/any silverware is fine because it's a short term contact, if you left that spoon in your acidic soup for a week and went to eat it there might be minor problems, but even then only if done regularly. it's like how you can drink out of crystal lead glasses and be totally fine, but you aren't supposed to store liquid in them, especially something acidic like red wine. red wine in a lead crystal decanter left sealed for days and drunk from regularly can pose a health risk due to the dangerous levels of lead that can dissolve into the acidic wine in the decanter. part of why old fillings are bad, they used mercury to make the metal malleable, the mercury could be absorbed through your gums after many years when the ph balance in your mouth is acidic, like after drinking acidic liquids, so gold fillings are unhealthy, but gold itself may not be, and you'd have to take a lot regularly to be an issue, like eating a lot of gold flake daily, or a supplement with excessive heavy metals, or inhaling powder/dust of that metal daily for long periods of time in your home. but like anything else, small amounts in moderation is fine, you can even inhale/ingest cyanide in small enough amounts with no ill-effects, that's why it's well known that cyanide smells like almonds. "Although Gold is a heavy metal, it's also an inert heavy metal. It's very low in the Reactivity Series, and therefore doesn't easily react with other chemicals (more specifically it won't replace the metals above it in the Reactivity Series.) In practicality this means that Gold introduced into the body by ingestion typically passes straight through us without causing any ill effects. Lead on the other hand readily reacts with various acids, making it a far more dangerous prospect when ingested." #70
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abdullahmag (02/26/2013) [-] "Small amounts of these elements are common in our environment and diet and are actually necessary for good health, but large amounts of any of them may cause acute or chronic toxicity" #132
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harleyzone (02/26/2013) [-] no, but more than likely the gold was made into a malleable plaster with the use of mercury (my first guess could be way off) which would make it unhealthy for the person handling the gold paste, death clocks were made that way, also, if you were to do something weird, like spend an hour a day licking the seams of the pot, you may get slight mercury poisoning (maybe) but the pot should be totally fine. #324
-
harleyzone (02/27/2013) [-] yes, that's why you use mercury to make the gold into a paste. that is, for a fact, how dentists made gold fillings, and why you can't get one anymore, mix the right proportions and you get gold paste, let the mercury evaporate or burn it off and you get mostly solid gold (with a decent amount or residual mercury) left in whatever shape it was molded into. death clocks were made that way, and that's how they extract gold from gold rich sand in south america. I don't know for sure, but that is more than likely how the pots are done, a mixture of gold and mercury, just enough to make the gold like dough, too much mercury and it will dissolve into liquid and be mostly just mercury, but if the proportions are right you can use the paste as a plaster for the pot, and let it cure/burn it off to solidify the gold, but the mercury fumes from that are very toxic. #340
-
harleyzone (02/28/2013) [-] dude, my mother was a dental hygienist way back, she helped give many mercury amalgam fillings, you take a small bit of gold, put it with the correct amount of mercury and it makes an amalgam, this is a fact, there are hundreds of videos on youtube of people doing just this, quit trolling. With all the people it killed, I guess you could call it... *sunglasses* DEATH METAL. | ||
| #82 - i hate it when people write "Just bla bla bla doing bla b… [+] (8 new replies) | 02/26/2013 on just tom taping his emmy to... | -16 |
| #96
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twilightsparkleftw (02/26/2013) [-] | ||
| #3 - if this quote is true, i'd have the most feely feel moment i'v… | 02/25/2013 on No more little scar | +20 |
| #587 - Katutedotatakari | 02/25/2013 on Japanese Names | 0 |
| #74 - someone invent a device to simulate getting kicked in the balls fast. | 02/25/2013 on Ouch. | +4 |
| #99 - one particular show come to mind >.> , whose fans get ha… [+] (18 new replies) | 02/24/2013 on You look pretty when you smile | +48 |
| #163
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N. Korean citizen (02/24/2013) [-] At least they're quiet and watching the show instead of yapping about it on a website. I see what you did there. ---- ---- / \ / \ l ' l l ' l ------ ------ ------------------- \ / \ / -------------- Well I'm pretty sure abdullahmag was talking about my little pony fans like me. | ||
| #12 - it's not the same D; | 02/23/2013 on Nvr 5get | 0 |
| #28 - you mean anyone with kindergarten level analytical and deducti… | 02/23/2013 on Do you get it? | +3 |
| #25 - tl;dr that's "too long; Did read" … | 02/23/2013 on Jobs. | -1 |
| #80 - i aint even mad. i just watch the show cuz i find it … [+] (1 new reply) | 02/23/2013 on tv shows | +1 |
| #7 - being a GW2 player, i understood this in a somewhat different way. [+] (1 new reply) | 02/23/2013 on Never do a good deed | +2 |
| #38 - i'd use morgan freeman...EVERYWHERE!! | 02/21/2013 on new punctuation marks | 0 |
| #183 - $50 is not cheap, might be reasonable for you, but it is quite… | 02/21/2013 on Shiiiieeeet | 0 |
| #161 - according to this gif. AK's almost never jam, but whe… [+] (2 new replies) | 02/21/2013 on Shiiiieeeet | +3 |
| #183
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abdullahmag (02/21/2013) [-] $50 is not cheap, might be reasonable for you, but it is quite an amount for others. not to mention it's probably much more expensive than that, unless it's in a crappy condition, not that it matters but....still. | ||
| #179 - sauce /watch?v=fqqVcY7KwvQ | 02/21/2013 on Asians once again | 0 |
| #176 - or is it!! | 02/21/2013 on Asians once again | 0 |
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