De-googled link here:
https://www.autoblog.com...ar-catalytic-converters/I can imagine the catalytic properties being useful in a whole range of chemical procedures, including but not limited to the synthesis of pharmaceuticals, illicit or otherwise. Gotta admire their creativity!
Also, it's easy to imagine today's journalists being too lazy and uninformed to grasp the above point. The report may or may not be accurate, although it does seem possible that some third-hand knowledge of chemistry has been somewhat misinterpreted in the pursuit of some means of escaping the horrors of grinding poverty.
Quote:Users mix the crushed honeycomb with vitamin pills and typically add sleeping tablets, sedatives or smoke it with tobacco, but nothing is known about how it works, or its long-term effects, said Dandy Yela Y'Olemba, country director of the World Federation against Drugs.
Nothing is know about how it works? The fact that they're snorting sleeping pills (as contrasted with sedatives, hmmm - not that big of a difference) should give at least some indication of how it works. You would think that someone working for "the
World Federation against Drugs" might be able to work this out, or is even knowing anything about druurgz a perilous, slippery slope to the infernal abyss?
https://en.wikipedia.org...Federation_Against_DrugsJust to be clear, I do support the work of people offering help to those who find themselves in such a messed up situation. I'm just not a fan of lazy journalism.
https://wfad.se/activity...he-youth-former-kulunas/Dandy Yela, the Country Representative of the World Federation Against Drugs in the DRC wrote:“This project has enabled us to understand that poverty is the main reason for the ‘Kuluna phenomenon’, alongside other more personal reasons. Many of the young people resort to this life because they feel discriminated and rejected by society. They are normal people who need love,”
Seems to be a good take-home point from all of this.
“There is a way of manipulating matter and energy so as to produce what modern scientists call 'a field of force'. The field acts on the observer and puts him in a privileged position vis-à-vis the universe. From this position he has access to the realities which are ordinarily hidden from us by time and space, matter and energy. This is what we call the Great Work."
― Jacques Bergier, quoting Fulcanelli