Thursday, December 8, 2022

The craziest tinnitus experiment ever

The craziest tinnitus experiment ever

Has this Minnesotan scientist gone insane, sending electric shocks to his tongue?

That's what the entire medical community thought until something extraordinary happened: his ear ringing stopped!

Next, a group of Irish researchers tested out electrical simulation with 326 people and the results left them in awe: 86% of participants reported an outstanding improvement in tinnitus symptoms!

Thankfully, one of the experts found a way to get the same results without the electric shocks, but just by clicking his tongue like this.

Everything is explained in simple steps here, test it out for yourself!


ed States had undertaken to re-equip French Army units in North Africa under what was known as the Anfa agreement, after the suburb of Casablanca where it had been negotiated.[33] To provide logistical support for the French Army units, Base 901 was formed in North Africa. It moved to Naples on 22 November 1943, where it came under the American Peninsula Base Section (PBS), and operated in support of the French Expeditionary Corps (CEF) in Italy. The French were urged to assume as much responsibility for the support of the CEF as possible in order to take the pressure off the PBS. To that end a list of the required logistical units was drawn up, none of the them had been activated by the end of January 1944.[34] French Foreign Legion troops with US weapons, uniforms and equipment land on a North African beach during amphibious exercises. The Armee d'Afrique, the French Army's North African forces, was significantly drawn from soldiers from French Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia; French West Africa and French Equatorial Africa. None of these territories had seen much industrial development. As a result, sourcing the requisite skilled personnel for service units from this recruit pool proved challenging.[35] When Général d'Armée Henri Giraud met with Wilson and Devers on 9 March to discuss the arrangements for Anvil, he ventured the opinion that it would be "a pity to waste excellent combat troops by converting them into service units in which duty they were poor",[36] and expressed the hope that the US Army could supply logistical support to the French forces. Devers was sympathetic, but NATOUSA was itself short 10,000 logistical personnel, and Devers's requests to the War Department for additional service units to support the French were denied. Giraud therefore attempted to do what he could. By the end of March some service units were ready for deployment to Italy, where they came under the CEF or Base 901, which was now comm








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