Ir para conteúdo

Juniaum

Usuário Growroom
  • Total de itens

    1312
  • Registro em

  • Última visita

  • Days Won

    6

Tudo que Juniaum postou

  1. Thrive levanta o véu sobre o que está realmente acontecendo no nosso mundo, seguindo o fluxo superior do dinheiro -- revelando a consolidação de poder global em quase todos os aspectos de nossas vidas. Conectando avanços científicos, consciência e ativismo, Thrive oferece soluções reais, nos fortalecendo com estratégias inovadoras e ousadas para reivindicar nossas vidas e nosso futuro. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMHG4HgopcY
  2. ENERGIA DA TERRA - DESCOBERTA CIENTÍFICA - DESCOBRIMOS UMA NOVA FONTE DE ENERGIA ELÉTRICA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRSP7h73u-Q&app=desktop http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsPeceaPTUo&app=desktop
  3. Se não for problema físico então isso é passageiro e não tem nada haver com maconha! O do verde, de verdade, aumenta a líbido. Já fumei prensado que fazia isso. Não esquece que se tá fazendo academia e tomando algum bagulho ae a a coisa é diferente. Fora isso, Tebonim 120mg (Gincobiloba) e desencana! Abs
  4. Para mim esse cara deve ter feito uma degola peniana. Agora deu nisso!!! Camisa de força nele!!!!
  5. Feliz Natal à todos e que 2014 seja um ano cheio de flores sem criminalização!

    1. X.Louco

      X.Louco

      Feliza natal ai tb brow ! tudo de bom !

    2. Tchumin

      Tchumin

      Ho Ho Ho, pow pow pow!

    3. Coldgold

      Coldgold

      que em 2014 Legalizem a nosa ganja

  6. Eu li tudo e digo Muito bom!!! O Dartiu Xavier é foda. Quando assisti a entrevista dele, o ano passado, falando sobre os mitos da maconha e que "Maconha não mata neurônios" para o Jairo Bouer na UOL virei fã dele. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=251GE_RKhZw Abs
  7. Juniaum

    Cultivo Na Tv Folha

    Noossa que lindo de ver!! Agora esse ex candidato a pres da OAB Ricardo Sayeg. O que é isso!!??? Fala sério meu!! Esse cara só pode tá bricando!!! Parabéns ao Dr Emilio!!! Esse é fera!!
  8. Será que tem gente que acredita nessa ladainha ainda???!!!!! Nem meu avô acredita mais nisso!!
  9. Revista 'The Economist' elege Uruguai o país do ano de 2013 A revista britânica The Economist escolheu o Uruguai como o país de 2013, em grande parte pela pioneira legalização da maconha. "As conquistas mais dignas de menção são, acreditamos, aquelas reformas inovadoras que não se limitam apenas a melhorar um país, mas que, se imitadas, poderiam beneficiar o mundo", afirma a revista. A legalização e regularização da venda e consumo da maconha "é uma mudança tão claramente razoável, que encurrala os criminosos e permite às autoridades concentrar-se em delitos mais graves, que nenhum outro país as executou", completa o editorial. saiba mais Conheça os principais aspectos da regulamentação uruguaia da maconha Senado do Uruguai aprova legalização do comércio de maconha no país "Se outros a seguissem, e se fossem incluídas outras substâncias, o dano que estas drogas causam ao mundo seria drasticamente reduzido", afirma a revista, que há muitos anos defende uma mudança nas políticas de combate às drogas baseadas na repressão, por considerar que fracassaram. A Economist recorda ainda que o Uruguai também legalizou o casamento gay em 2013, uma reforma "que aumentou a quantia mundial de felicidade humana sem custo financeiro". A revista elogia o presidente José Mujica e sua "franqueza incomum para um político", recordando seu estilo de vida austero. "Vive em uma casa modesta, dirige um Fusca antigo e voa na classe econômica". "Modesto, mas corajoso, liberal e amante da diversão, o Uruguai é nosso país do ano. Felicitações!", conclui a revista. Fonte:http://noticias.terra.com.br/mundo/america-latina/revista-the-economist-elege-uruguai-o-pais-do-ano-de-2013,7092cc5a42103410VgnCLD2000000ec6eb0aRCRD.html he Economist’s country of the year Earth’s got talent Resilient Ireland, booming South Sudan, tumultuous Turkey: our country of the year is… Dec 21st 2013 | From the print edition HUMAN life isn’t all bad, but it sometimes feels that way. Good news is no news: the headlines mostly tell of strife and bail-outs, failure and folly. Yet, like every year, 2013 has witnessed glory as well as calamity. When the time comes for year-end accountings, both the accomplishments and the cock-ups tend to be judged the offspring of lone egomaniacs or saints, rather than the joint efforts that characterise most human endeavour. To redress the balance from the individual to the collective, and from gloom to cheer, The Economist has decided, for the first time, to nominate a country of the year. But how to choose it? Readers might expect our materialistic outlook to point us to simple measures of economic performance, but they can be misleading. Focusing on GDP growth would lead us to opt for South Sudan, which will probably notch up a stonking 30% increase in 2013—more the consequence of a 55% drop the previous year, caused by the closure of its only oil pipeline as a result of its divorce from Sudan, than a reason for optimism about a troubled land. Or we might choose a nation that has endured economic trials and lived to tell the tale. Ireland has come through its bail-out and cuts with exemplary fortitude and calm; Estonia has the lowest level of debt in the European Union. But we worry that this econometric method would confirm the worst caricatures of us as flint-hearted number-crunchers; and not every triumph shows up in a country’s balance of payments. Another problem is whether to evaluate governments or their people. In some cases their merits are inversely proportional: consider Ukraine, with its thuggish president, Viktor Yanukovych, and its plucky citizens, freezing for democracy in the streets of Kiev, even though nine years ago they went to the trouble of having a revolution to keep the same man out of office. Or remember Turkey, where tens of thousands protested against the creeping autocracy and Islamism of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister-cum-sultan. Alas, neither movement has yet been all that successful. Definitional questions creep in, too. One possible candidate, Somaliland, has kept both piracy and Islamic extremism at bay, yet on most reckonings it is not a country at all, rather a renegade province of Somalia—which has struggled to contain either. As well as countries yet to be, we might celebrate one that could soon disintegrate: the United Kingdom, which hasn’t fared too badly, all things considered, since coming into being in 1707, but could fracture in 2014 should the Scots be foolhardy enough to vote for secession. And the winner is When other publications conduct this sort of exercise, but for individuals, they generally reward impact rather than virtue. Thus they end up nominating the likes of Vladimir Putin, Ayatollah Khomeini or, in 1938, Adolf Hitler. Adapting that realpolitikal rationale, we might choose Bashar Assad’s Syria, from which millions of benighted refugees have now been scattered to freezing camps across the Levant. If we were swayed by influence per head of population, we might plump for the Senkaku (or Diaoyu) islands, the clutch of barren rocks in the East China Sea that have periodically threatened to incite a third world war—though that might imply their independence, leading both China and Japan to invade us. Alternatively, applying the Hippocratic principle to statecraft, we might suggest a country from which no reports of harm or excitement have emanated. Kiribati seems to have had a quiet year. But the accomplishments that most deserve commendation, we think, are path-breaking reforms that do not merely improve a single nation but, if emulated, might benefit the world. Gay marriage is one such border-crossing policy, which has increased the global sum of human happiness at no financial cost. Several countries have implemented it in 2013—including Uruguay, which also, uniquely, passed a law to legalise and regulate the production, sale and consumption of cannabis. This is a change so obviously sensible, squeezing out the crooks and allowing the authorities to concentrate on graver crimes, that no other country has made it. If others followed suit, and other narcotics were included, the damage such drugs wreak on the world would be drastically reduced. Better yet, the man at the top, President José Mujica, is admirably self-effacing. With unusual frankness for a politician, he referred to the new law as an experiment. He lives in a humble cottage, drives himself to work in a Volkswagen Beetle and flies economy class. Modest yet bold, liberal and fun-loving, Uruguay is our country of the year. ¡Felicitaciones! Fonte: http://www.economist...year-earths-got
  10. The Economist’s country of the year Earth’s got talent Resilient Ireland, booming South Sudan, tumultuous Turkey: our country of the year is… Dec 21st 2013 | From the print edition HUMAN life isn’t all bad, but it sometimes feels that way. Good news is no news: the headlines mostly tell of strife and bail-outs, failure and folly. Yet, like every year, 2013 has witnessed glory as well as calamity. When the time comes for year-end accountings, both the accomplishments and the cock-ups tend to be judged the offspring of lone egomaniacs or saints, rather than the joint efforts that characterise most human endeavour. To redress the balance from the individual to the collective, and from gloom to cheer, The Economist has decided, for the first time, to nominate a country of the year. But how to choose it? Readers might expect our materialistic outlook to point us to simple measures of economic performance, but they can be misleading. Focusing on GDP growth would lead us to opt for South Sudan, which will probably notch up a stonking 30% increase in 2013—more the consequence of a 55% drop the previous year, caused by the closure of its only oil pipeline as a result of its divorce from Sudan, than a reason for optimism about a troubled land. Or we might choose a nation that has endured economic trials and lived to tell the tale. Ireland has come through its bail-out and cuts with exemplary fortitude and calm; Estonia has the lowest level of debt in the European Union. But we worry that this econometric method would confirm the worst caricatures of us as flint-hearted number-crunchers; and not every triumph shows up in a country’s balance of payments. Another problem is whether to evaluate governments or their people. In some cases their merits are inversely proportional: consider Ukraine, with its thuggish president, Viktor Yanukovych, and its plucky citizens, freezing for democracy in the streets of Kiev, even though nine years ago they went to the trouble of having a revolution to keep the same man out of office. Or remember Turkey, where tens of thousands protested against the creeping autocracy and Islamism of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister-cum-sultan. Alas, neither movement has yet been all that successful. Definitional questions creep in, too. One possible candidate, Somaliland, has kept both piracy and Islamic extremism at bay, yet on most reckonings it is not a country at all, rather a renegade province of Somalia—which has struggled to contain either. As well as countries yet to be, we might celebrate one that could soon disintegrate: the United Kingdom, which hasn’t fared too badly, all things considered, since coming into being in 1707, but could fracture in 2014 should the Scots be foolhardy enough to vote for secession. And the winner is When other publications conduct this sort of exercise, but for individuals, they generally reward impact rather than virtue. Thus they end up nominating the likes of Vladimir Putin, Ayatollah Khomeini or, in 1938, Adolf Hitler. Adapting that realpolitikal rationale, we might choose Bashar Assad’s Syria, from which millions of benighted refugees have now been scattered to freezing camps across the Levant. If we were swayed by influence per head of population, we might plump for the Senkaku (or Diaoyu) islands, the clutch of barren rocks in the East China Sea that have periodically threatened to incite a third world war—though that might imply their independence, leading both China and Japan to invade us. Alternatively, applying the Hippocratic principle to statecraft, we might suggest a country from which no reports of harm or excitement have emanated. Kiribati seems to have had a quiet year. But the accomplishments that most deserve commendation, we think, are path-breaking reforms that do not merely improve a single nation but, if emulated, might benefit the world. Gay marriage is one such border-crossing policy, which has increased the global sum of human happiness at no financial cost. Several countries have implemented it in 2013—including Uruguay, which also, uniquely, passed a law to legalise and regulate the production, sale and consumption of cannabis. This is a change so obviously sensible, squeezing out the crooks and allowing the authorities to concentrate on graver crimes, that no other country has made it. If others followed suit, and other narcotics were included, the damage such drugs wreak on the world would be drastically reduced. Better yet, the man at the top, President José Mujica, is admirably self-effacing. With unusual frankness for a politician, he referred to the new law as an experiment. He lives in a humble cottage, drives himself to work in a Volkswagen Beetle and flies economy class. Modest yet bold, liberal and fun-loving, Uruguay is our country of the year. ¡Felicitaciones! Fonte: http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21591872-resilient-ireland-booming-south-sudan-tumultuous-turkey-our-country-year-earths-got 19 de Dezembro de 2013• 12h22 • atualizado às 12h40 Revista 'The Economist' elege Uruguai o país do ano de 2013 A revista britânica The Economist escolheu o Uruguai como o país de 2013, em grande parte pela pioneira legalização da maconha. "As conquistas mais dignas de menção são, acreditamos, aquelas reformas inovadoras que não se limitam apenas a melhorar um país, mas que, se imitadas, poderiam beneficiar o mundo", afirma a revista. A legalização e regularização da venda e consumo da maconha "é uma mudança tão claramente razoável, que encurrala os criminosos e permite às autoridades concentrar-se em delitos mais graves, que nenhum outro país as executou", completa o editorial. saiba mais Conheça os principais aspectos da regulamentação uruguaia da maconha Senado do Uruguai aprova legalização do comércio de maconha no país "Se outros a seguissem, e se fossem incluídas outras substâncias, o dano que estas drogas causam ao mundo seria drasticamente reduzido", afirma a revista, que há muitos anos defende uma mudança nas políticas de combate às drogas baseadas na repressão, por considerar que fracassaram. A Economist recorda ainda que o Uruguai também legalizou o casamento gay em 2013, uma reforma "que aumentou a quantia mundial de felicidade humana sem custo financeiro". A revista elogia o presidente José Mujica e sua "franqueza incomum para um político", recordando seu estilo de vida austero. "Vive em uma casa modesta, dirige um Fusca antigo e voa na classe econômica". "Modesto, mas corajoso, liberal e amante da diversão, o Uruguai é nosso país do ano. Felicitações!", conclui a revista. Fonte: http://noticias.terra.com.br/mundo/america-latina/revista-the-economist-elege-uruguai-o-pais-do-ano-de-2013,7092cc5a42103410VgnCLD2000000ec6eb0aRCRD.html
  11. E pode esperar que tudo isso vai durar no mínimo mais 4 anos. A aprovação dela que era 20% em julho está hoje em 43%. A família Perrella agradece!
  12. Porque será que brasileiro sempre se fode??!!??
  13. Se legalizar a Saúde vai melhorar!!!! Acho que vale até como slogan!!! Abs
  14. Será que vai abrir um foro para los hermanos Uruguaios no Growroom International??

    1. 4Queijos

      4Queijos

      Soy uruguayo y me ofrezco pa cuidarlo xD

  15. "Para o plantio até seis pés da planta não será necessário registro. Quem quiser plantar mais do que isso terá que fazer parte de um cadastro nacional" É isso mesmo?!
  16. Agora vem Natal, Ano novo, férias. Depois carnaval, copa eleição. Até quando.....hein!!! ????
  17. Engraçado! Faz bem para o humano pq não para cachorro?
  18. Aqui qdo ligo legenda em ingles não parece estar certo não. Eu até achei que esse era um recurso do YouTube de identificação fonética. Vou checar. Valeu!!!
  19. http://www.growroom.net/board/topic/53276-finalmente-pensaram-nas-criancinhas/
  20. E se eu quiser fazer um Hemp oil. Não posso? Pois 40 g não dá nem para o começo.
  21. Estou na metade da tradução do Stoned Kids. Mais alguns dias e já termino então posso ajudar com esse!!! Se alguém conseguir o transcript fica mais fácil!!! A propósito, alguém se candidata sincronizar a legenda do Stoned kids depois que eu traduzir!?!? É isso ae Urubuz!!! Vlw. Abs
  22. Principalmente crianças!!!!!! Por que ver crianças sofrendo, sabendo que poderia ser diferente se não fossem esses corruptos e seus helicópteros, é Phoda.!!!!!!
  23. Muito bom!!!!!!!!! Vamos legendar!! Obrigado por mais essa!!
×
×
  • Criar Novo...