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<strong><center><a href="http://www.xyloylmotewf.us/2870/172/376/1393/2923.10tt62883642AAF1.php"><H3>Brain Doctors Hate Him...</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">in first place. State media reported that Berdymukhamedov
won the race.The horse also fell, but quickly got up, showing a
slight limp. Berdymukhamedov, however, lay motionless. Within seconds, several
dozen men in dark suits and one in traditional garb including a
high white sheepskin hat rushed onto the track, and an ambulance soon
arrived.The man who shot the video spoke on condition of anonymity for
fear that divulging his name could have negative repercussions on his livelihood.
He said the president reappeared about half an hour later to accept
the winner's prize about $11 million.State TV showed the president
accepting the award, which he said would be used to improve Turkmenistan's
horse breeding.The choreographed winning of the race the nearest
challenger was obviously throttling back his mount in the home stretch
the media censorship and the reported tough security response at
the airport all reflect Turkmenistan's two decades of stifling authoritarianism.Since
becoming independent in the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, Turkmenistan
has been an extreme example of a one-party state.Its first leader, Saparmurat
Niyazov, developed a pervasive personality cult that included renaming months
of the year after his family members. He also mandated that all
schoolchildren study his rambling spiritual guide and once claimed that
reading it three times would guarantee the reader a berth in heaven.Some
of his measures verged on
e. It
discusses concerns like erectile dysfunction and painful intercourse. It
addresses Orthodox-specific issues, like the time during and after a woman's
monthly period when the man is not permitted to touch his wife.Ribner,
an Orthodox Jew, called the writing "clear" avoiding euphemisms. The book
itself has no pictures, but a sealed envelope attached to the back
cover contains simple sketches showing three sexual positions and genitalia.
A warning on the envelope declares the illustrations explicit, and says
"each person should take this into account before viewing the drawings."
Ribner said anyone opposed to their graphic nature "can just throw them
away."The English book has received positive reviews, but it is being sold
mostly online because religious bookstores have been reluctant to carry
such a sensitive book. The publisher, Gefen Publishing House, said "several
thousand" copies have been sold.Ribner said he is unsure how stores in
Israel, or the Hebrew book's Orthodox Jewish target audience, will receive
it. The authors have not sought any rabbinic approval because they wanted
it to reach as wide an audience as possible and not limit
its teachings to the followers of one rabbi or another.Jonathan Rosenblum,
an Orthodox Jewish commentator in Jerusalem, said the book is not likely
to find its way to the strictest Jewish communities in Israel, though
more modern Orthodox Jews might be accepting."In some of the more conservative
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