So my boyfriend has this little sister, she's seven years old, she's out of control, she physically attacks my boyfriend and she's extremely dramatic, screams, more like screeches at the top of her lungs when I'm on the phone with him, I'll hear banging and pounding and then he'll start yelling at her and asking her hey! What was that for??!!?? And she'll be acting out and cussing, I mean full on cussing at him and crying and then she'll start pounding on the windows and she's even broken her door, but the parents don't discipline her, they instead yell at my boyfriend and get him in trouble, there's inconsistent parenting when it comes to her punishment, what can I do to maybe help this situation?? They don't believe my boyfriend and he's trying to get her on video but she acts calm and relaxed totally on video, so is there a way to show the parents how she acts when they aren't home?
No, sorry I don't. But a product called Colon Cleanse works Great, and is not expensive. Walgreens, Sav-On, CVS, as well as the health food places carry it. It is alwalys recommended to do a colon cleanse at least every two months !! Good Luck to you.
I am not too partial to hauling a bright shiny rod around with me when I am hunting. Typically a CM or CMV barrel is much easier to make more uniform and accurate than a stainless barrel.
Yes. Lightning is simply a discharge of electric charge between the ground and the upper atmosphere (clouds). Air is not a good conductive medium however if the electric potential is large enough the discharge between the clouds and ground can pass through air. If you were to put a more conductive medium between the build up of charge (e.g. metal rod) the conductivity becomes more favorable and lightning is likely to pass through the metal rod as it is striking from the ground to the clouds. In a similar scenario that is more likely to occur, lighning strikes are not uncommon between clouds and airplanes for a few reasons. Aircraft passing through thunderstorms and clouds can cause lightning due to the disruption of charge and local atmosphere as well as due to the fuselage's conductive properties. However, since aircraft are not connected to the ground, a lightning strike likely passes around the body of the aircraft to another terminal discharge point (cloud or ground). So as unlikely the scenario of an object thrown in the air to be struck by lightning, it's not impossible, and airplanes would be an example.