Bitcoin, and other tulips

It’s currently about 15-20% of a thing.

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If only someone had predicted that this would happen

Have they tried switching it off and on?

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You should contact them and suggest that.

Ripple utilising XRP


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Bitcoin has cracked $18,000AUD today! Really hope XRP will have a nice pump soon.

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XRP always seems late to the party, massive dump across the sphere not long after you posted that. lol

Some big news coming for XRP soon.

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And now climbing again! ■■■■ is going crazy.

Wish I had some bitcoin to enjoy this rally. Hard not having any money while studying.

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I finally persuaded my colleague at work about XRP, he just dumped his bitcoin and went all in on XRP. Great timing for him!

This little ripper arrived in my email. I was reaching for my barge pole, then decided not to touch it
Dont we all just love this bloke.

SPECIAL REPORT: Andrew Demetriou’s Latest Investment Has Experts in Awe And Big Banks Terrified

Australian former AFL boss Andrew Demetriou has made a name for himself as a brash straight-talker who doesn’t mind being honest about how he makes his money.

Read more ( link removed)

Last week, he appeared on The Project and announced a new “wealth loophole” which he says can transform anyone into a millionaire within 3-4 months. Demetriou urged everyone in Australia to jump on this amazing opportunity before the big banks shut it down for good.

( link removed)

If he is involved there is something decidedly bent about it. Looking for the loophole! I hope the loop strangles his hole.

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Apparently promoted to Chairman of Crown Casino.
Like putting a pair of rats in the silos in Kaniva

I wouldn’t touch anything with Demetrious name on it.

Isn’t that just the same spam that’s had Mel Gibson, Dr Brown the vet guy, I think maybe Chris Hemsworth linked to it?
Didn’t realise he was live, banks are furious sort of thing?
I’m very dubious that Demetr…however you friggin’ spell it was ever on The Project.

Spam innit

Obviously spam. If Vlad found a way to make money, you can be damn sure he’s not telling anyone else!

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Real time utility of XRP, ODL is up to $8,000,000 a day

https://utility-scan.com/#/dashboard

Oh no, not another David Evans golf course.

I’ve seen this one for multiple celebrities, including Mike Baird and Tom Gleeson.

One massive Ponzi scheme.

If your Bitcoins are not going well and you need some extra $$$ then…

Australia’s first public stool bank is paying people to donate their poo for faecal transplants

By Shuba Krishnan

about 2 hours ago

Posted

A close-up photo of a lady with the BiomeBank logo in the background. Photo: Kristy Wildy donates her poo at BiomeBank. (ABC News: Shuba Krishnan)

Kristy Wildy did not know she could get paid for donating her poo, but it was an unexpected bonus for the 55-year-old who has been contributing for the past 12 months.

Key points:

  • A lab in Adelaide is paying people to donate their stool
  • It is used for faecal transplants around Australia
  • The treatment is particularly useful for people with gut infections

Ms Wildy has been a blood donor for years, and she said donating her stool was a no-brainer.

“I wanted to become a donor because I thought I was a fairly healthy person and I would have something to contribute,” she said.

Ms Wildy donates about three or four times a week and said the process was quick and easy.

She said the $25-per-donation payment was a bonus and could be lucrative, depending on donation rates.

“I had no idea that I would get paid — that wasn’t even in my mind, it was just kind of an unexpected bonus,” she said.

“The fact that it works so well, it’s so quick and the effects are so long-lasting, I thought, ‘Well, maybe I can help’.”

Ms Wildy goes to BiomeBank, Australia’s first public stool bank at their newly expanded lab in the inner-western Adelaide suburb of Thebarton to donate her stool.

Two men in suits smiling at the camera with a man and woman working in a science lab in the background. Photo: BiomeBank co-founders and gastroenterologists Sam Costello and Rob Bryant. (Supplied: BiomeBank)

BiomeBank is funded by the Hospital Research Foundation and processes and stores healthy stool so it can be distributed to hospitals around the country and overseas.

The stool is used for patients requiring faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), a breakthrough treatment with a 90 per cent cure rate of chronic bowel disorders.

BiomeBank’s founders, doctors Sam Costello and Rob Byrant, want to increase accessibility to the lifesaving treatment and are encouraging more people to donate their poo.

A poo transplant saved my life

Jo O’Brien’s life was turned upside down in 2018 when she contracted a Clostridioides difficile (C. diff) infection.

It was brought on by a spate of illnesses which required high doses of antibiotics that wiped out her good gut bacteria.

“Over the course of two years, I had in between 30 and 40 lots of antibiotics. I had a really bad couple of years, I had pneumonia, chest infections and a tooth abscess,” Ms O’Brien said.

“So, to treat myself, I went to Bali on a yoga retreat … but unfortunately, that’s where I contracted C. diff … I was weak and had no good stomach bacteria left.”

A lady with short purple hair looking at the camera and holding a poo emoji toy Photo: Jo O’Brien says FMT saved her life. (ABC News: Shuba Krishnan)

Leading a normal life became nearly impossible for Ms O’Brien.

“I would go to the bathroom between 12 to 15 times during the day, and at night, maybe five or six times,” she said.

Ms O’Brien said she only ate twice a week to avoid using the bathroom, and she slept in a separate bed to her husband, on a picnic blanket with a rubber back.

“I would sit on a towel in the car and had an emergency pack of clothes in the car, with wet wipes, paper towels, everything,” she said.

What is a faecal transplant?

  • Faecal matter, or stool, is collected from a donor
  • The matter is mixed with a solution, strained, and placed in a patient by colonoscopy, endoscopy or enema
  • The aim is to replace the recipient’s “bad” gut bacteria with the donor’s “good” bacteria
  • The procedure is commonly used to treat complications from antibiotic therapy
  • It is being used experimentally for conditions like IBS, MS, autism and Parkinson’s
  • Its use has been documented in 4th Century China

Ms O’Brien became reclusive and her mental health deteriorated.

“I used to exercise a lot, but I couldn’t even go for a walk, because I had to chart where the toilets were,” she said.

“I became a homebody … my socialisation was down … I didn’t really see many people.”

Ms O’Brien said her life was so unbearable, that when her gastroenterologist, Dr Costello, suggested a poo transplant, she did not think twice.

“I would do anything to get better,” she said.

“People tend to laugh when you say things like, ‘Oh, I’m having a poo transplant’, but for me, it was the very last resort.”

Ms O’Brien said three days after having the FMT she felt normal again.

“I went to the pub for tea … and I didn’t take a change of clothes,” she said.

“Essentially, the bottom line is it saved my life and I’m just extremely grateful to have had it.”

Two people in a lab processing stools. Photo: BiomeBank workers processing a stool in a lab. (ABC News: Shuba Krishnan)

Donating your poo

Dr Costello said prospective donors must undergo a rigorous screening process before they were cleared to donate.

What your poo can tell you

What your poo can tell you
You probably avoid thinking about what happens to food as it passes through your body, but it may have an important message for you.

“Donors typically have to be healthy people, without any active medical problems, then undergo a multistage assessment. That includes a medical history, physical examination, and then they have a blood and a stool test,” he said.

“If they pass all of those screens, then they can become a donor and we encourage people to donate regularly over a period of time, so we can collect an adequate amount of stool from them.”

Once stool was donated, it was then processed by mixing it with saline and glycerine.

This process takes place in conditions which replicate the bowel to ensure the best healthy gut bacteria remain viable.

The processed stool is then stored in a minus 80-degree Celsius freezer until needed by a hospital.

It can then be transported by a dry-ice courier and thawed out and used as required.

Why do people need my poo?

Dr Costello and Dr Bryant said there was a growing need for safe and effective FMTs across Australia.

FMTs are mainly used to treat people suffering from C. diff infections, a condition becoming more common due to the widespread use of antibiotics.

“Antibiotics strip the bugs in your bowels such that it creates a niche where C. diff can proliferate and expand and with that expansion it becomes a pathogen and makes people sick,” Dr Bryant said.

Paper flyers calling for stool donors sit on a table. Photo: BiomeBank is calling on the public to donate poo in order to provide faecal microbiota transplantation. (ABC News: Shuba Krishnan)

Patients with C. diff suffer from bloody diarrhea, abdominal pain and fever.

It is life-threatening for a proportion of patients and can lead to intensive care admissions, as well as colectomy, which is the removal of the large bowel for those who are most severely affected.

Dr Costello and Dr Byrant said with C. diff infections on the rise, they expected to supply about 500 treatments per year Australia-wide.

“We currently treat about 30 patients a year in South Australia alone,” Dr Costello said

While FMT was a relatively new procedure in Western medicine, Dr Costello said it had been practised in ancient cultures for years.

“There reports of faecal transplants being used in Chinese medicine, the Bedouin people in North Africa have a long history of using faecal transplant to treat dysentery,” he said.

“It has really come to prominence in the last 10 years in the in the Western literature.”