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KaNiBaL

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    Albania

Everything posted by KaNiBaL

  1. Congr Dude 

  2. The best DJ in CSBD :25r30wi::emot-golfclap::emot-golfclap::emot-golfclap: 

    UuRfbKM.jpg

    1. #Mr.SekA

      #Mr.SekA

      HaMsIk is the Best DJ ;)

  3. Congra dude

    1. #SMOKE

      #SMOKE

      thanks dude :) 

  4. Look like Speciality Of Rodrigues
  5. One Thing 

    Fuc************** my netttttttttt!!!!!!!!:mad0054::mad0054::mad0054:

  6. 46 Min 52 S :D more until DJ Competition! :yuhu:

    Don't miss it 

    Join Music Channel and enjoy with us! :)

  7. Fallow this steps Duble click song is soundboard done.... -- -- -- Go to settings Make all like this Or try this and
  8. This is where to download The link:https://frie.se/ts3sb/ and This is how to install see this video
  9. 999

    1. BUNX

      BUNX

      Hahaha your like not 999 

      I am give you like to 1000

      Completed

  10. A painting of Christ by the Renaissance master Leonardo da Vinci has sold for a record $450 million (380 million euros) at auction in New York, breaking previous records. The 500-year-old oil painting, "Salvator Mundi" or Latin for Savior of the World, depicts Christ holding a crystal orb and is one of fewer than 20 paintings by da Vinci known to exist. ''It ... sparks all sorts of great conversations around the art and adds a greater richness I think to the sale season,'' Conor Jordan, deputy chairman of impressionist and modern art for New York Christie's, the auction house that conducted the sale, told Al Jazeera. The 66cm-tall painting dates from around 1500 and shows Christ dressed in Renaissance-style robes, his right hand raised in blessing as his left hand holds a crystal sphere. It disappeared from view until 1900, when it resurfaced and was acquired by a British collector. At that time, it was attributed to a da Vinci disciple, rather than to the master himself. The painting was sold again in 1958 and then was acquired in 2005, badly damaged and partly painted over, by a consortium of art dealers who paid less than $10,000 (8,445 euros). In New York, art lovers lined up outside Christie's headquarters on Tuesday to view Salvator Mundi.
  11. The conspiracists are at it again. This time they think Jupiter and Venus are set to collide on Monday, plunging the Earth into 15 days of darkness. To be fair, the two planets will appear in conjunction over the UK on Monday morning, according to the BBC, but no credible news site is reporting the two of them smashing into one another. An online conspiracy theory claims that the whole world will be going completely dark for more than two weeks this month. Their evidence for this is that NASA have apparently 'confirmed' it. A statement purported to be written by NASA official Charles Boden - who I imagine will be pissed off if he's been reading David Icke's forum recently - says that world will be plunged into darkness from 15 November to 29 November. The fake statement reads: "NASA has confirmed that the Earth will experience 15 days of total darkness between November 15 and November 29, 2017. The event, according to NASA, hasn't occurred in over 1 Million years. "Astronomers from NASA have indicated that the world will remain in complete darkness starting on Sunday, November 15, 2017 at 3am, and will end on Monday, November 30, 2017 at 4:15 p.m. "According to officials, the 'November Black Out' event will be caused by another astronomical event between Venus and Jupiter." It's not just the conspiracists who are seeing a grim future for humanity either. Craig Hamilton-Parker, a psychic renowned for seemingly being able to predict events before they happen, including Brexit and Donald Trump's victory, reckons we're in for some dark times in the coming months. Among the other world crises he sees on the horizon are: US forces striking North Korea by blowing up a key trade route, Kim Jong-un being overthrown by his own people, and the sinking of a US warship.
  12. Before sunup on November 16, 2017, find an unobstructed horizon in the direction of sunrise to get the best view of the waning crescent moon, plus the sky’s two brightest planets, Venus and Jupiter. They’ll be extremely low in the east at sunup, and an unobstructed horizon – and clear sky to the horizon – will definitely be needed. And even if you have those two prerequisites – clear sky, open horizon – whether you see them or not depends on your latitude on Earth’s globe. Keep binoculars handy. A telephoto lens will also pick them up, and, in fact, this is a wonderful photo opportunity. From around the world on November 16, the slender waning crescent moon rises in the east first, followed by Jupiter and then Venus. At mid-northern latitudes – like those in the U.S. and Europe – Venus rises better than an hour before the sun. At the equator, Venus comes up about 50 minutes before sunrise; and at temperate latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere, Venus rises only about 35 minutes before sunrise. The lit side of the moon points in the direction of Jupiter and Venus, giving you a good idea of where to look for them. If you are at a very southerly latitude on Earth, you can always use binoculars to seek for these worlds beneath the moon in the murky glow of morning twilight. Fortunately, Venus and Jupiter rank as the brightest and second-brightest planets in Earth’s sky, respectively, so you may well see these worlds with the unaided eye, even though they’re sitting low in the twilight. Think photo opportunity! Day by day, Venus will sink closer to the glare of sunrise, while Jupiter will climb upward, away from sunrise. Expect Venus to disappear from view in the morning sky after a few more weeks, while Jupiter will remain a fine morning object for months to come and a wonderful evening object in 2018. In fact, if you get up before dawn on these November and December mornings, you can also view the the star Spica and the planet Mars above Jupiter. Day by day, Jupiter and Spica will climb upward to Mars in the predawn/dawn sky. Spica will catch up with Mars on November 29, 2017, and Jupiter will meet up with Mars on January 7, 2018. Bottom line: On November 16, 2017, look for Jupiter and Venus beneath the waning crescent moon. They’ll be low in the east, shortly before sunup.
  13. Earth is always half illuminated by sunlight. Notice the crescent of illumination on one edge in this composite image, which is from the Suomi NPP satellite. If you were on the other side of Earth when the images used in this composite were acquired, you’d see Earth shining brightly in reflected sunlight, aka daylight. Image via NASA.. We at EarthSky are receiving questions about the so-called days of darkness supposedly announced by NASA and supposedly coming up November 15-30, 2017. Did NASA announce it? No. Will ihappet n? No. YouTube videos are suggesting the event will be caused by “another astronomical event, between Venus and Jupiter.” Yes, Jupiter and Venus – the sky’s two brightest planets – had a conjunction low in the east before dawn on November 13. See photos here. It was beautiful! It’s just so wrong to use this conjunction – which has happened countless times in Earth history, to the wonderment of all privileged to observe it – to perpetuate a hoax. As for the idea that NASA has issued a “1,000-page document” on the event for the White House. Well. That’s just entirely fake. Think about it. What would have to happen for Earth to experience 15 days of darkness? Our day-night cycle stems from Earth’s rotation on its axis around our local star, the sun. The sun shines on half of Earth for part of its 24-hour period; that’s daytime. Nighttime is simultaneously occurring on the opposite side of Earth. For the whole Earth to undergo 15 days of darkness … what would have to happen? The sun would have to go out for 15 days? Or something would have to shroud the sun? Or pass between us and the sun? All of those scenarios are unlikely to the point of ridiculousness, when you consider the vast size of our sun. That’s why zero days of all-Earth darkness have occurred in human history so far. Let me say it again. It’s never happened. It’s not going to happen. This same hoax has been rearing its head every few years, since at least 2011, when the erstwhile Comet Elenin was supposed to pass between us and the sun and cause three days of darkness. In 2014, the number of supposed “dark days” increased to six in this article from Hutzlers.com. In 2015, an article at Newswatch33 suggested NASA comfirmation for 15 days of darkness between November 15 and November 29 of that year. The article said that – according to NASA – such an event hadn’t occurred in over 1 million years. I couldn’t find Newswatch33 online anymore; maybe it’s gone. There were zero days of all-Earth darkness in November, 2015. So. It didn’t go dark in 2011, 2014, or 2015, and it’s not going to go dark for 15 days in November this year. I think it’s interesting that these “days of darkness” rumors all spring up around November and December, when the northern half of Earth is edging toward its winter solstice and shortest day of the year. Let’s face it, there are more hours of darkness out there now, for us on this half of the globe. Just remember … it’s a natural kind of darkness, a resting kind of darkness. In fact, for the Northern Hemisphere, the earliest sunsets of the year come in early December. After the solstice, for sure by early January, the longer days will be returning very noticeably as we move toward spring and rebirth. That’s nature’s cycle, and we can depend on it! Bottom line: NASA did not issue a “blackout warning” for November 15 to 30, 2017. There will be zero days of total darkness for Earth this month. Day and night will continue as usual. Sigh.
  14. Happy B-Day dude :)

  15. DURBAN - The KZN Department of Co-operative Governance and weather forecasters have warned people in the Midlands and the southern parts of the province to be wary of the heavy storm from Friday afternoon. SA weather forecaster, Victoria Nurse warned that of heavy showers were expected tonight along the South Coast. The showers would be accompanied by moderate north easterly winds. She warned of the severe thunderstorms in the Midlands, Drakensberg, Newcastle, Ladysmith and also on the KZN South Soast. “We expect clearance on Saturday morning but this could not be similar to the previous storm early last month. However, we are concerned with heavy rains along the coast,” she said. Last month, KZN was hit by heavy rains and floods that saw property damaged to the tune of more than R500m and at least 11 people died. More than 42 schools around the province were also damaged. Damaged 42 schools. KZN Cogta spokesperson, Lennox Mabaso, said the department was calling on people to be extra cautionary. In a statement on Friday, he said ferocious storms were set to hit the Midlands and southern parts of the province. “Communities are urged to be on alert and to exercise extra caution as they undertake their activities. The Disaster Management Centres in all areas set to be affected by these inclement weather conditions have been activated and are on high alert to intervene should they be required. However, the first line of defence is the people and their conduct in such life threatening conditions,” said Mabaso. This takes the number of schools damaged by inclement weather to just under 400 schools in the province as more than 350 others have been damaged in the past two months. As the heavy rain swept through the province on Tuesday, killing at least 11 people, it also caused damage to 42 schools around the province. 11 confirmed dead. Durban - Police Search and Rescue teams, EMS and members of private rescue and paramedics services have been working round the clock to try to minimise the human cost of the storm that hit the province on Tuesday. In a statement, police spokesperson Thulani Zwane said SAPS Search and Rescue Team members had been working non-stop since on Tuesday morning when the storm hit. “At least 11 fatalities have been reported from Umlazi, Isipingo, Durban Central and KwaMakhutha. Five people are still being sought since they have been reported missing from yesterday,” said Zwane. Three containers still missing at port He said police had received more than 150 calls related to the storm and had been working tirelessly with other Disaster Management Services to assist the victims. “Due to yesterday’s weather, people died after they drowned, were struck by falling objects and trapped in vehicles. Police are still working, searching for missing victims.” There were also a number of dramatic rescues by fire and rescue, paramedics and rescue services, including on the M7, near Sarnia Road, where several people had to be rescued from high floodwaters. There were rescues in Montclair, Kingsway, Amanzimtoti, and in Umlazi.

WHO WE ARE?

CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

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