Jump to content

DaNGeROuS KiLLeR

Members
  • Posts

    11,623
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    18
  • Country

    Belgium

Everything posted by DaNGeROuS KiLLeR

  1. Welcome To CsBlackDevil Enjoy Your Stay Have Fun
  2. V1: NerO ♔ [2 Votes] V2: DaNGeROuS KiLLeR [15 Votes] [Winner] Good Work NerO ♔ T/C
  3. Welcome To CsBlackDevil Enjoy Your Stay Have Fun
  4. Welcome To CsBlackDevil Enjoy Your Stay Have Fun
  5. Hello, 1. You have to make a request here http://csblackdevil.com/forums/index.php?/forum/67-plugins/. 2. For request you need Manager 1.6 or Afilliat. We can't help you. T/C
  6. When you are on this level then you don't know what is humanity, and you become evil ! If anyone think like this then seriously just go and die i mean it from my heart, there is no place for people like this in this world ! The Israeli police said on Thursday that they were investigating a video that appeared to show young Jewish extremists celebrating the death of a Palestinian toddler in an arson attack last summer. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the video, which was first aired on Israel’s Channel 10 on Wednesday evening. “The shocking pictures that were broadcast this evening show the true face of a group that constitutes a danger to Israeli society and to the security of Israel,” Mr. Netanyahu said. “We are not prepared to accept people who deny the laws of the state and do not view themselves as subject to them.” A 25-second clip, filmed at a wedding that occurred three weeks ago, according to Israeli news media reports, shows a room of jumping, dancing men wearing white skullcaps, many with the long sidelocks of Orthodox Jews. Some of them are brandishing guns and knives. Two of them appear to be stabbing pieces of paper they hold in their hands, which the television station identified as pictures of an 18-month-old child, Ali Dawabsheh, who was burned to death in a July 31 arson attack that also killed his parents in Duma, a West Bank village. The only survivor was Ali’s brother, 4-year-old Ahmad, who is still recovering in an Israeli hospital. Israeli officials called the attack an act of terrorism and blamed Jewish extremists. Luba Samri, an Israeli police spokeswoman, said the police were investigating “the many and serious crimes presented in the wedding clip.” Among them, they said, were underage people holding military weapons. Palestinian anger over the arson attack was one of the triggers for a surge of violence against Israelis that began in October. Palestinians have since killed 19 Israelis, an American student and a Palestinian from the West Bank. Over 130 Palestinians have been killed during the same period, up to two-thirds of them while carrying out, trying to carry out or, according to the police, intending to carry out attacks. Several young Jewish extremists were arrested in early December in connection with the July 31 attack. Supporters of the arrested youths, including high-profile right-wing activists, have accused the domestic security agency, the Shin Bet, of abusing and even torturing the detainees. The agency has not released names or any other details about the detainees, and a court has imposed a gag order on the case. Many of the perpetrators are believed to belong to a violent fringe of extremist religious Jews who live in Jewish settlements deep in the West Bank. Lenny Goldberg, the father of the bride whose wedding was shown in the video, implied that the leaking of the video served the interests of security agencies. “Public opinion was against the G.S.S.,” Mr. Goldberg told Israeli news outlets, referring to the General Security Service, another name for the Shin Bet, “and then the wedding made kosher what they want to do.” The Shin Bet hinted at harsher than usual interrogation methods in a statement it issued on Thursday, but it rejected allegations of abuse and said the investigation was taking place under close judicial supervision. The video, much like the arson attack itself, prompted shock and outrage. “You disgrace your skullcap, your prayer shawl and the name of God,” news reports quoted Isaac Herzog, head of the political opposition in Parliament, as saying on social media. “Whoever dances at a wedding and celebrates the murder of a sleeping baby is not Jewish and not Israeli.” Israeli news media reported that Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon summoned advocates for Jewish settlements in the West Bank to his office to show them the video, apparently to impress upon them the seriousness of the extremists who have emerged at the movement’s fringes. “I look into my past, not just my military past, but my past as a settler, as a teacher, and wonder if I did not do enough so that there would never be such sights,” said Rabbi Avihai Ronsky, the head of a yeshiva in the Jewish West Bank settlement of Itamar. Still, he said, the extremist Jewish fringe consists of “a very small handful of people.” Palestinians and their supporters say the arson attack and the celebratory video were inevitable, complaining that the Israeli authorities have for years dragged their feet on finding and prosecuting extremist Jews who have physically attacked them and their property.
  7. 'Tis the season to be jolly but can also be the season to feel sad. The end of the year brings the end of many relationships, but Christmas also brings an increase in people feeling sad, lonely or depressed. You might have seen the Facebook post doing the rounds at the moment. "Some thoughts as we enter the holiday season. It is important to remember that not everyone is looking forward to Christmas," the post reads. "Some people are not surrounded by large wonderful families. Some of us have problems during the holidays and are overcome with great sadness when we remember the loved ones who are not with us. "For many it is their first Christmas without a particular loved one and many others lost loved ones at Christmas. And, many people have no one to spend these times with and are besieged by loneliness. We all need caring, loving thoughts right now." Indeed. Feeling sad is one thing – uncomfortable as it is, sadness won't kill us. A new study published in The Lancet found that unhappiness does not increase the risk of premature mortality. Rather, the researchers explained it is poor health, which tends to make people feel unhappy, that does increase the risk. Loneliness (as distinct from being alone), on the other hand is something we do need to worry about. Not only can loneliness increase the chances of premature death by up to 14 per cent, a new study has found that loneliness affects our health while we're alive too. The researchers, from the University of California, found that loneliness is associated with an increased inflammatory response and impaired immunity. So what do we do when the festive season feels anything but? Apart from soaking sorrow in the only logical way under the circumstances – with wine – breathing slowly and deeply into waves of sadness and trying not to tense around them can help them to wash over us. It also helps us not to hold onto the pain. "The stuff that holds you down periodically rears its head," says author Michael Singer, in his New York Times best-selling book The Untethered Soul. "When it does, let it go. You simply permit the pain to come up into your heart and pass through. If you do that, it will pass." It is also important to understand that sadness and loneliness are natural emotions. "There's a common misunderstanding among all humans beings … that the best way to live is to try and avoid pain and just try to get comfortable," says American buddhist nun and teacher Pema Chodron in The Wisdom of No Escape. "A much more interesting, kind adventurous and joyful approach to life is to begin to develop our curiosity not caring whether the object of our inquisitiveness is bitter or sweet. To lead a more passionate, full, and delightful life than that, we must realise that we can endure a lot of pain and pleasure for the sake of finding out who we are and what this world is, how we tick and how our world ticks, how the whole thing just is." When the pain is the result of loneliness, reframing it can also help. "Loneliness tells us that we crave connection," advises SANE Australia. "Rather than viewing these feelings negatively and being hard on ourselves, we can choose to see loneliness as coming from a healthy part of us that is motivated to connect with others." Reconnecting with ourselves is part of it. "When we're taking good care of ourselves, we are more likely to be positive, and feelings of loneliness may have less power to get us down," they say. "There's no right or wrong way to do this. A great starting point is to try brainstorming some ideas for activities that make us feel good and then start doing them." Making the decision to reach out and reconnect with others is another way to sift through thorny feelings at this time of year (or any time for that matter). Reaching out, of course, involves staying open and soft, even in the face of pain or discomfort. This can be the hardest and most transformative thing we can do. And not a bad gift to give ourselves for Christmas. "Begin by seeing the tendency to protect and defend yourself," Singer says. "There is a very deep, innate tendency to close, especially around your soft spots. But eventually you will notice that closing creates tremendous work. "Once you close, you have to make sure that what you protected doesn't get disturbed. You then carry this task for the rest of your life. The alternative is to become conscious enough to simply watch the part of yourself that is constantly trying to protect itself. You can then give yourself the ultimate gift by deciding not to do that any more."
  8. U.S. plans for nuclear war in 1959 included the "systematic destruction" of major urban centers like East Berlin, Moscow and Beijing -- with the po[CENSORED]tions of those cities among the primary military targets. The National Archives and Records Administration has released a detailed study produced in 1956 that includes a list of the United States' targets were nuclear war to break out between the superpowers in three years. The Strategic Air Command's study offers new insight into the Cold War planning -- and worries that United States warplanes would have to unleash overwhelming destruction in an all-out war with the Soviet Union. The list was made public as a result of a 2006 records request by William Burr, a senior analyst at George Washington University's National Security Archive who directs the group's nuclear history documentation project. It is titled the "SAC (Strategic Air Command) Atomic Weapons Requirements Study for 1959." "Their target priorities and nuclear bombing tactics would expose nearby civilians and 'friendly forces and people' to high levels of deadly radioactive fallout," Burr wrote this week in an analysis of the government's plans. "Moreover," Burr wrote, "the authors developed a plan for the 'systematic destruction' of Soviet bloc urban-industrial targets that specifically and explicitly targeted 'po[CENSORED]tion' in all cities, including Beijing, Moscow, Leningrad, East Berlin, and Warsaw." The primary aim of the U.S. plan was eliminating Soviet Union air power -- which was regarded as key in the event of the Soviets attempting to deploy their own nuclear weapons, since today's long-range missiles and submarine launchers didn't yet exist. There were plans to follow that up with a series of "final blows" delivered by atomic bombs eight times the yield of the "Little Boy" bomb that destroyed Japan's Hiroshima -- much larger than necessary to destroy specific targets, suggesting that collateral damage was an aim. The list includes "po[CENSORED]tion" targets. Though the exact targets still aren't public, that indicates wiping out people, rather than specific industries or military facilities, was one goal. The top priorities were Moscow and Leningrad. The list includes "designated ground zeroes," or sites for bombings -- with 179 in Moscow and 145 in Leningrad. The study also calls for the development of a 60 megaton bomb. That would have produced 70 times the explosive yield of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.
  9. Watch this topic: http://csblackdevil.com/forums/index.php?/topic/183735-help/ And you can cut it or just put a line in the middle now if you make a topic about how to add a line then i guess yiu must start with Photoshop basic tutorial. Be little smart and use your brain you will understand it, don't need to make a topic for little stuff. T/C
  10. Welcome To CsBlackDevil Enjoy Your Stay Have Fun
  11. Welcome To CsBlackDevil Enjoy Your Stay Have Fun
  12. You keep making topic's in Discussion while they are not connected to discussion. This kind of topic's must be posted in Free time not here. Be careful next time T/C
  13. Hello, The problem is from your internet. When you try to open it at that time your internet get weak and doesn't open it. I have sometimes on mobile because my mobile have connection problems. Good Luck & Have Fun
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.