Friday, May 22, 2015

7 of 18 things You Didn’t Know About The P*nis

7. “Shaved” guardians in Muslim empires:
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In great Muslim empires, there would be a guardian assigned to each harem’s bed. The guardians had to be “shaved,” which meant having his testicles and p*nis removed.


8. King Fatefehi of Tonga
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Between the years of 1770 and 1784, he apparently deflowered 37,800 women.





9 of 18 things You Didn’t Know About The P*nis

9. Diphallus is a rare condition that affects one in 5-6 million males.
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It’s when a man is born with two p*nises. Unfortunately, it’s rare that both are fully functional, and it often comes in tandem with other deformities that also require surgery.


10. P*nises can actually break:
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Every year, hundreds of men break their erect p*nis, researchers say. Most do so during “violent intercourse.” But there are also cases where men snap their member – indeed, specialists note that such incidents are accompanied by an audible crack – by falling out of bed with an erection. The cure for a broken man-hood? Six weeks of bed rest with a man-hood splint.





15 of 18 things You Didn’t Know About The P*nis

15. Jonah Falcon, a 42-years-old man with a 9-inch man-hood (22.86 cm; 13.5 inches, or over 34 cm when hard).
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He’s the man with the world’s largest p*nis.


16. Animals with the biggest and smallest p*nises:
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the Blue Whale is the animal with the biggest recorded p*nis to date, at 8 feet (over 2 m) long. The adult male elephant has the biggest recorded p*nis for land animals, at 6 feet (1.8288 m, and S-shaped when erect). And coming in with the smallest man-hood is the shrew, at .2 inches (0.5 cm).





13 of 18 things You Didn’t Know About The P*nis

13. A healthy male averages 11 erections per day-nine of them while asleep.
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After ejaculating, it can take him anywhere from two minutes to two weeks to achieve another erection.


14. From shower to grower
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On average, a limp man-hood will increase in volume 300% when it is erect. It will also contain more than eight to ten times its normal amount of blood.





11 of 18 things You Didn’t Know About The P*nis (Smoking)

11) Smoking can shorten your man-hood by as much as a centimeter.
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Erections are all about good bloodflow, and lighting up calcifies blood vessels, stifling erectile circulation.


12) The foreskin has an abundance of Langerhans cells, which are immune cells that are infiltrated by HIV.
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This may explain why circumcised men in Africa have a 60% lower rate of HIV infection from heterosexual intercourse.





16 of 18 things You Didn’t Know About The P*nis

17. Koro, a culture-specific syndrome, where a man (or a woman) is overcome with a debilitating fear that his p*nis (or her nipples) is shrinking and will eventually disappear.
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Interestingly, this fear is borne out of no real proof or evidence. It is also known as “man-hood panic” and has been said to provoke mass hysteria.


18. Semen can cure depression:
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Apparently, semen contains chemicals that elevate mood, increase affection, induce sleep, and contain at least three antidepressants. It also contains cortisol, which is known to increase affection; as well as estrone, which elevates mood; oxytocin, which also elevates mood; thyrotropin-releasing hormone, which is another antidepressant; melatonin, which is a sleep aid; and serotonin, which is a well-known antidepressant neurotransmitter.





18 things You Didn’t Know About The P*nis






Video Of The Week: Reminisce ft. Olamide & Phyno - Local Rappers

local


New music video by Reminisce, aka Babahafusa, performing “Local Rappers” together with Olamide and Phyno. Directed by MEX.


© 2015 Edge Records.

China Jams US Spy Drones over Disputed South China Sea Islands.

China tried to electronically jam US drone flights over the disputed South China Sea in order to prevent surveillance on man-made islands Beijing is constructing as a part of an aggressive land reclamation initiative, US officials said.
us_jammed_drone


Global Hawk long-range surveillance drones were targeted by jamming in at least one incident near the Spratly Islands, where China is building military facilities on Fiery Cross Reef, the Washington Free Beacon reported.

China’s alleged on-going reclamation of Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands.

That statement follows Thursday reports that the Chinese navy warned a US surveillance plane to leave the same area eight times in an apparent effort to establish and enforce a no-fly zone, a demand Washington rejected.


“This is the Chinese navy … This is the Chinese navy … Please go away … to avoid misunderstanding,” a radio call in English from an installation on Fiery Cross said. The warnings were reported by CNN, which had a crew on the aircraft.


Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steve Warren said the United States does not recognize China’s sovereignty claims over the new islands. He added that flights and Navy ships will continue their routine patrols, but will maintain a distance of at least 12 miles from the island.


Details of the drone interference are classified, but last week, David Shear, the assistant defense secretary for Asian and Pacific security affairs, said Global Hawks are deployed in Asia as one element of a buildup of forces near the South China Sea.


“We’re engaged in a long-term effort to bolster our capabilities in the region,” Shear told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “Just a few examples of the increases in our capabilities in the region include the deployment of Global Hawks and F-35s. Soon we will be adding to the stock of V-22s in Japan as well.”


Shear said the Pentagon estimates that China will complete construction of an airfield on Fiery Cross Reef by 2017 or 2018. Meanwhile, rapid militarization has security experts worried about the potential for a conflict.


Rick Fisher, a China military affairs analyst, said China could increase pressure on the United States to halt surveillance flights in Asia by first attacking one of the unmanned aircraft flights.


“Though UAVs like the Global Hawk are rather expensive, they are also regarded as more expendable because they are unmanned,” Fisher, a senior fellow at the International Assessment and Strategy Center, told the Washington Free Beacon.


“But failing to defend these UAVs runs the risk of China viewing them as ‘fair game’ to shoot down whenever they please.”


Beijing also might attempt to capture a Global Hawk by causing one to crash in shallow water, or by attempting to snatch one in flight using a manned aircraft, Fisher said.