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NavyChief

AB Super Mod
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Posts posted by NavyChief

  1. The health care for all is bullshit. While in theory it is possible, in reality it is not plausible. Not the way the socialist weenies want it to be.

     

    If every fucking person here had to go to the VA for medical, you sure as hell would not be asking for government run healthcare.

  2. Watch the news. Satellites just located a huge methane leak. We have never been able to detect these before like we can now using satellite. Taking care of this is equivalent to taking one million cars off the roads.

     

    Yes global warming is real. It was real eons ago when the ice age was around. It helped turn the icy South America into a tropical jungle.

     

    If man is destroyed now, the planet will continue to cycle for its lifetime, cooling and heating, shifting climate locations and times. It's part of what the planet does.

     

    Btw, GMS, do you want to know how I know you're gay?

  3. $5 million reward offered for arrest of accused steroid traffickers

    By: Crystal Haynes

     

    $5 million reward offered for arrest of accused steroid traffickers

    Video

     

    BOSTON - A Slovenian drug family is on the run from federal authorities and now a $5 million reward is being offered for each of their captures.

     

    Authorities say the investigation started more than 10 years ago before the Dark Web and still, this family had more than 200 sites advertising and selling illegal steroids.

     

    "What we quickly found out when we took on the case was that literally millions of dosages of anabolic steroids were being shipped into the United States, including Massachusetts," said Andrew Lelling, U.S. Attorney for Mass.

     

    After a yearslong investigation and undercover operations, DEA agents have a case against Mihael Karner, his wife Alenka, and his brother Matevz.

     

    — DEANewEngland

    The Karners allegedly used a series of manufacturers, wholesalers, and re-packagers/shippers based in multiple foreign countries to control the manufacture and distribution of the steroids.

     

    "What we realized was that he was probably one of the largest steroid traffickers in the world and was making tens of millions of dollars from this trade," said Lelling.

     

    Lelling says the Karner organization controls more than 200 websites that advertise and sell the illegal steroids and their clientele ran the gamut.

     

    "We had local housewives. We had local amateur athletes. A competitive Judo practitioner who had been injured and wanted to heal faster. Weightlifters, athletes, people who were recreational tennis players, old, young. You hit a whole cross-section of the community," he said.

     

    Lelling says these fugitives were caught but evaded European law enforcement officials and are believed to be in Slovenia.

     

    "People need to, one, be careful what they're buying online. Two, be careful what your kids are buying on the internet. So we shut this guy down, right now he's a fugitive but we don't think he's active. But there's ten people to replace him," said Lelling.

     

    The Karners allegedly hid all the cash they have earned using corporate shell accounts and payment methods, including Western Union/MoneyGram.

     

     

    https://www.boston25news.com/amp/news/-5-million-reward-offered-for-arrest-of-accused-steroid-traffickers/965735944

  4. Just so there is no mistaking the above.

     

    It was first private and kept that way as should be until I found several others in the community be discussing it. Knowing geo and his involvement/ history with PM, I gave him that to repost for all to see openly wth is going on.

     

    If you members can't get the message from all this then you are not paying attention. Protect yourselves, change passwords and ensure they are strong enough to be difficult to hack. Quit acting like security is only for other people and start using your heads again.

  5. Steroid-stuffed Funko Pop toys seized at Queenston-Lewiston Bridge

    NEWS Nov 12, 2019 The Niagara Falls Review

    catwoman

    U.S. customs officers at the Queenston-Lewiston Bridge found Funko Pop figures with testosterone powder and steroid liquid. - U.S. Customs and Border Protection

     

     

    catwoman1

    U.S. customs officers at the Queenston-Lewiston Bridge found Funko Pop figures with testosterone powder and steroid liquid. - Customs and Border Protection

     

    1 / 2

    Almost 80 kilograms of steroids hidden inside vinyl toys have been seized at the Queenson-Lewiston Bridge.

     

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers on Saturday examined six shipments of toys, including Funko Pop figures, and discovered testosterone powder and steroid liquid hidden inside the packaging.

     

    Originating in Canada, according to the CBP, the shipments were headed for various destinations throughout the United States.

     

    "Our CBP officers continue to intercept illegal substances within cargo shipments," said CBP acting port director Sharon Swiatek.

  6. It helps postings some text for others to read.

    1) I'm lazy and dont want to click a link to read. That one more click than needed.

    2) you are new and others may not trust a link from new member(s) without some more explanation of what it is.

    3) other members like to spoof links and you end up clicking a picture of my huge penis and if your lucky it's not covered in enjoy_tren or another penis pumper.

     

    Welcome btw. Enjoy the board.

  7. Stop Crying About Steroids

    Insecure males scream about drugs anytime they see someone stronger, more muscular, or more dedicated than they are. Pathetic.

    by Paul Carter | 04/11/19

     

    Stop-crying-about-steroids

     

    The Sauce Card

    It's unfortunate that I have to preface this whole thing by throwing out some platitudes that read like they come from some mommy blogger's Pinterest board, but it's inescapable: everything begins and ends in the mind.

     

    Whatever it is you believe each day is what ultimately manifests itself in your life. Whatever space it is you're working from is what you're going to project out into the world.

     

    What does that have to do with lifting weights? Well, there's this overarching theme of pettiness from natural guys. Anytime they see a physique that's fairly exceptional, they immediately pull out the sauce card. This even goes for physiques that, for the life of me, I wouldn't ever figure were built off A-Bombs and exogenous test.

     

    You don't have to look very far into the comments of an article about some celebrity that got into amazing shape for a movie before you read, "Wonder what his GH and 'roid cycle was like?"

     

    Steroids used to be a word that meant exogenous hormones. Now it's a word used by insecure males to describe anyone stronger, more muscular, more athletic, or more dedicated than they are.

     

    Go Punch Yourself in the Crotchal Region

    I'm not saying that some actors never hit a few cups of the sauce in preparation for a role. What I'm saying is, I don't care. So why do you?

     

    There's no "cheating" going on. And they don't owe you any honesty about what they did to their body to prepare for a role. So why are you crying harder than a toddler at the Disney store who was told "no" to getting a new Pocahontas outfit?

     

    Let me repeat that. No one owes you honesty about his or her drug use. I'm not sure where that degree of entitlement comes from but it behooves you to punch yourself right in the crotchal region each time you feel like puking it from your mouth or keyboard.

     

    Do you know who doesn't find time to hurl these kinds of accusations and insults at people? Those who have healthy self-esteems and are too busy immersed in getting better – the ones too busy watering their own grass to pay attention to someone else's.

     

    If you were focused on your own goals, your own diet, and your own performance, you'd see a good physique and go, "Wow, impressive!" But when you're working from a fractured mindset, then seeing an impressive physique sets off all sorts of inner voices that bring your self-loathing insecurities right to the forefront.

     

    But how does it benefit you? How does it improve your life? How does it improve your own performance in the gym? Nowhere.

     

    Now let's flip that a bit, and take the mindset of a guy that says he's going to get strong as hell, get big as hell, and that he's going to bleed from his eyeballs each and every time he gets under a bar to make that come to fruition.

     

    Can you honestly picture that guy chastising Chris Hemsworth for getting jacked for Thor? Yeah, me neither. Stop whining. Stop chastising. Stop accusing. Stop projecting.

     

    Weigh your food. Break your own PR's. Be consistent with your training and diet. You'd be amazed how far you'd get if you took your eyes off of the world and put the onus back on yourself

  8. WASHINGTON — Leslie James Pickering noticed something odd in his mail last September: a handwritten card, apparently delivered by mistake, with instructions for postal workers to pay special attention to the letters and packages sent to his home.

     

    “Show all mail to supv” — supervisor — “for copying prior to going out on the street,” read the card. It included Mr. Pickering’s name, address and the type of mail that needed to be monitored. The word “confidential” was highlighted in green.

     

    “It was a bit of a shock to see it,” said Mr. Pickering, who with his wife owns a small bookstore in Buffalo. More than a decade ago, he was a spokesman for the Earth Liberation Front, a radical environmental group labeled eco-terrorists by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Postal officials subsequently confirmed they were indeed tracking Mr. Pickering’s mail but told him nothing else.

     

    As the world focuses on the high-tech spying of the National Security Agency, the misplaced card offers a rare glimpse inside the seemingly low-tech but prevalent snooping of the United States Postal Service.

     

    Mr. Pickering was targeted by a longtime surveillance system called mail covers, a forerunner of a vastly more expansive effort, the Mail Isolation Control and Tracking program, in which Postal Service computers photograph the exterior of every piece of paper mail that is processed in the United States — about 160 billion pieces last year. It is not known how long the government saves the images.

     

    Together, the two programs show that postal mail is subject to the same kind of scrutiny that the National Security Agency has given to telephone calls and e-mail.

     

    The mail covers program, used to monitor Mr. Pickering, is more than a century old but is still considered a powerful tool. At the request of law enforcement officials, postal workers record information from the outside of letters and parcels before they are delivered. (Opening the mail would require a warrant.) The information is sent to the law enforcement agency that asked for it. Tens of thousands of pieces of mail each year undergo this scrutiny.

     

    The Mail Isolation Control and Tracking program was created after the anthrax attacks in late 2001 that killed five people, including two postal workers. Highly secret, it seeped into public view last month when the F.B.I. cited it in its investigation of ricin-laced letters sent to President Obama and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. It enables the Postal Service to retrace the path of mail at the request of law enforcement. No one disputes that it is sweeping.

     

    “In the past, mail covers were used when you had a reason to suspect someone of a crime,” said Mark D. Rasch, who started a computer crimes unit in the fraud section of the criminal division of the Justice Department and worked on several fraud cases using mail covers. “Now it seems to be, ‘Let’s record everyone’s mail so in the future we might go back and see who you were communicating with.’ Essentially you’ve added mail covers on millions of Americans.”

     

    Bruce Schneier, a computer security expert and an author, said whether it was a postal worker taking down information or a computer taking images, the program was still an invasion of privacy.

     

    “Basically they are doing the same thing as the other programs, collecting the information on the outside of your mail, the metadata, if you will, of names, addresses, return addresses and postmark locations, which gives the government a pretty good map of your contacts, even if they aren’t reading the contents,” he said.

     

    But law enforcement officials said mail covers and the automatic mail tracking program are invaluable, even in an era of smartphones and e-mail.

     

    In a criminal complaint filed June 7 in Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, the F.B.I. said a postal investigator tracing the ricin letters was able to narrow the search to Shannon Guess Richardson, an actress in New Boston, Tex., by examining information from the front and back images of 60 pieces of mail scanned immediately before and after the tainted letters sent to Mr. Obama and Mr. Bloomberg showing return addresses near her home. Ms. Richardson had originally accused her husband of mailing the letters, but investigators determined that he was at work during the time they were mailed.

     

    In 2007, the F.B.I., the Internal Revenue Service and the local police in Charlotte, N.C., used information gleaned from the mail cover program to arrest Sallie Wamsley-Saxon and her husband, Donald, charging both with running a prostitution ring that took in $3 million over six years. Prosecutors said it was one of the largest and most successful such operations in the country. Investigators also used mail covers to help track banking activity and other businesses the couple operated under different names.

     

    Other agencies, including the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services, have used mail covers to track drug smugglers and Medicare fraud.

     

    “It’s a treasure trove of information,” said James J. Wedick, a former F.B.I. agent who spent 34 years at the agency and who said he used mail covers in a number of investigations, including one that led to the prosecution of several elected officials in California on corruption charges. “Looking at just the outside of letters and other mail, I can see who you bank with, who you communicate with — all kinds of useful information that gives investigators leads that they can then follow up on with a subpoena.”

     

    But, he said: “It can be easily abused because it’s so easy to use and you don’t have to go through a judge to get the information. You just fill out a form.”

     

    For mail cover requests, law enforcement agencies submit a letter to the Postal Service, which can grant or deny a request without judicial review. Law enforcement officials say the Postal Service rarely denies a request. In other government surveillance programs, like wiretaps, a federal judge must sign off on the requests.

     

    The mail cover surveillance requests are granted for about 30 days, and can be extended for up to 120 days. There are two kinds of mail covers: those related to criminal activity and those requested to protect national security. Criminal activity requests average 15,000 to 20,000 per year, said law enforcement officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are prohibited by law from discussing them. The number of requests for antiterrorism mail covers has not been made public.

     

    Law enforcement officials need warrants to open the mail, although President George W. Bush asserted in a signing statement in 2007 that the federal government had the authority to open mail without warrants in emergencies or in foreign intelligence cases.

     

    Court challenges to mail covers have generally failed because judges have ruled that there is no reasonable expectation of privacy for information contained on the outside of a letter. Officials in both the Bush and Obama administrations, in fact, have used the mail-cover court rulings to justify the N.S.A.’s surveillance programs, saying the electronic monitoring amounts to the same thing as a mail cover. Congress briefly conducted hearings on mail cover programs in 1976, but has not revisited the issue.

     

    The program has led to sporadic reports of abuse. In May 2012, Mary Rose Wilcox, a Maricopa County supervisor in Arizona, was awarded nearly $1 million by a federal judge after winning a lawsuit against Sheriff Joe Arpaio. The sheriff, known for his immigration raids, had obtained mail covers from the Postal Service to track her mail. The judge called the investigation into Ms. Wilcox politically motivated because she had been a frequent critic of Mr. Arpaio’s, objecting to what she considered the targeting of Hispanics in his immigration sweeps. The case is being appealed.

     

    In the mid-1970s the Church Committee, a Senate panel that documented C.I.A. abuses, faulted a program created in the 1950s in New York that used mail covers to trace and sometimes open mail going to the Soviet Union from the United States.

     

    A suit brought in 1973 by a high school student in New Jersey, whose letter to the Socialist Workers Party was traced by the F.B.I. as part of an investigation into the group, led to a rebuke from a federal judge.

     

    Postal officials refused to discuss either mail covers or the Mail Isolation Control and Tracking program.

     

    Mr. Pickering says he suspects that the F.B.I. requested the mail cover to monitor his mail because a former associate said the bureau had called with questions about him. Last month, he filed a lawsuit against the Postal Service, the F.B.I. and other agencies, saying they were improperly withholding information.

     

    A spokeswoman for the F.B.I. in Buffalo declined to comment.

     

    Mr. Pickering said that although he was arrested two dozen times for acts of civil disobedience and convicted of a handful of misdemeanors, he was never involved in the arson attacks the Earth Liberation Front carried out. He said he became tired of focusing only on environmental activism and moved back to Buffalo to finish college, open his bookstore, Burning Books, and start a family.

     

    “I’m no terrorist,” he said. “I’m an activist.”

     

    Mr. Pickering has written books sympathetic to the liberation front, but he said his political views and past association should not make him the target of a federal investigation. “I’m just a guy who runs a bookstore and has a wife and a kid,” he said.

  9. Well said! lol

     

    To hell with low TEST! There no reason now-a-days to suffer. Bit of Test with some GH :D

     

    My insurance allows my script to be whatever (been 300mg wk for yrs now) as long as my level is not above 1600 when tested. So I run 200mg wk, plus HG and enjoy some test ace, mast and tbol, here and there as wanted. It's a beautiful cruise.

  10. Nandrolone injections are licensed to treat osteoporosis in women who have passed menopause.

    In osteoporosis there is loss of bone tissue, resulting in bones that are brittle and liable to fracture. Nandrolone works by influencing the metabolism of calcium and thereby increasing bone mass in women suffering from osteoporosis. This makes the bones stronger and less likely to break.

  11. Ya know I like to leave these threads open and watch how many people post about not posting and the baiting goes on and on. It could use more ghey jokes but hey, no ones perfectly homo.

     

    Staff will discuss how to put together a sticky that lays out an appropriate way to post results of MS or blood ect...

     

    Fact is we do not want to dissuade any legit feedback, good or bad, from VETS to NEWBIES or anyone in between.

     

    So for that reason y'all will need to start another thread if you want to keep this going.

     

     

    Hey Noodles, fuck you, you made me look stupid but I kinda thank you for doing so.

    If this boards staff were anything like you fuck-sticks claim sometimes, then you wouldn't have a mod calling out a source on your behalf to start with and then have it look like you set it up somehow.

  12. Members,

     

    Pharmavol has decided to scale back his business and will not be renewing his sponsorship here at this time.

     

    With that said he assured me he will be taking care of those that have ordered from AB.

     

    Other than that, any issues, let staff know.

     

    @pharmavol, stay safe and let staff know when you have all pending from here finished.

    Thx.

  13. I also need to correct myself after looking at the results again and seeing that it is indeed labeled as 356mg testosterone enanthate. Not just testosterone per ml.

     

    So, as I think twigs was pointing out and correcting me as to over or under dosed, it is underdosed.

     

    Dont be confused though on how its measured, thatis still as I stated and this shows that.

     

    356 mg of test E is not 400mg of test E.

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