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This site shares emergency numbers, contact information, and simple tips—just as a helpful guide. It is not official medical, legal, or professional advice. We are not doctors, police, firefighters, or any experts—unless clearly stated. Numbers and information can change at any time—always double-check with your local authorities. If someone is in danger—call emergency services immediately. Do not rely on this site alone. Use at your own risk. We are not responsible for any errors, delays, or outcomes.

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AfroEurAsia continent.
Africa (alphabetical):
Europe (most use 112—universal, works even without SIM):
Asia & Middle East (mix—112 common, some 999/911):
North America (all 911):
South America (mostly 911, some local):
No central number—depends on your station. At U.S. bases (like McMurdo): 911 (connects to on-site comms/fire/medical). Other stations: use your base's internal line or satellite phone. Try 112 or 999 if nothing else works—it might route somewhere.
When You Call Emergency Services - Medical
When You Call Emergency Services – Fire
When You Call Emergency Services – Natural Disaster
When You Call Emergency Services – Accident
When You Call Emergency Services – Hazmat
When You Call Emergency Services – Missing Person

Here’s the straight-up rundown on the nastiest stuff lurking in synthetic wigs, weaves, and extensions. No brand names, just the verified chemicals that pop up in lab tests and safety rep
Worst offenders first:
1. Phthalates – Yeah, the plastic-softener crew. DEHP, DBP, DINP… they make fibers bendy and shiny. Problem? They leach out when heat hits—like flat-ironing or blow-drying. Skin contact + sweat = slow absorption through scalp or neck. Studies show detectable levels in urine after months of daily wear. Not cancer-level for casual use, but hormone-disrupting, especially for kids or pregnant folks.
2. Lead – Not always listed, but it sneaks in from recycled plastics or cheap dyes. Tests on dark weaves have hit 20–50 ppm—way over toy-safety limits. Leaching? Heat + acidic sweat (you know, stress, workouts) pulls it into your skin. Kids’ braids? Extra risky—hair-pulling means more scalp contact.
3. Formaldehyde – The “new-car smell” of wigs. Used to stiffen fibers or kill bacteria during shipping. Off-gasses like crazy when you first unpack—eye-watering, throat-scratchy levels. Heat styling? It volatilizes faster. Chronic low-dose? Headaches, skin rashes, maybe lung irritation if you’re sensitive. EU banned it in cosmetics, but wigs? Still legal in tons of places.
4. Azo dyes (especially Disperse Blue 1, Red 9) – Cheap black or red shades. They break down into aromatic amines—carcinogens like benzidine. Leaching happens when dye rubs off on pillows, scalp, or your hands. Sweat + friction = tiny amounts absorbed. Long-term? Bladder cancer links in textile workers; hair users? Not studied enough, but the risk’s real.
5. PVC / Vinyl chloride – Base material for super-cheap weaves. Releases dioxins and vinyl chloride gas when heated—nasty stuff. Even at room temp, it off-gasses slowly. Scalp burns? That’s the skin saying “nope.”
How it gets into you:
• Direct contact: scalp, neck, ears—porous skin loves chemicals.
• Heat: styling tools crank leaching 10x.
• Inhalation: that plasticky smell? Yeah, you’re breathing it.
• Ingestion: kids chew braids, adults touch-then-eat. Tiny doses add up.
Quick disclaimer: This isn’t “don’t ever wear a wig”—it’s “if you’re rocking synthetic daily, pick mid-to-high-end, ventilate, wash it, skip the heat.” Human hair? Way safer, just pricier. And yeah—always patch-test new stuff. Your body’ll tell you if it hates it.
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NOTICE – DISCLAIMER
This report is provided for informational purposes only. We are not affiliated with any government, military, or official authority—nor do we claim to be. All content is raw, independently gathered intelligence compiled through open-source AI (Grok by xAI—the only model we’ve found so far that handles this input accurately and fairly). Prompt engineering, multilingual cross-checks, and first-source research were used. Additional unbranded open-source models were consulted for validation—none proprietary. All free. We just did our own math.
This is not legal, medical, or professional advice. Readers must verify facts independently and use this information at their own risk.
In wartime, accuracy matters. If you have emergency or actionable intelligence, contact YOUR local authorities immediately. Do not speculate, exaggerate, or invent—false information kills. These are real soldiers, real battlefields. See something? Say it. But make damn sure it’s true! Again, we stress… life/death. Respect. Facts! Not emotions. Just news, not noise!
We take this gravity seriously and share this as a charitable act, hoping it aids understanding amid chaos. A sincere thank-you to everyone who has supported this effort—whether through encouragement, shares, quiet prayers, or simply reading along.
If errors appear, or if you’d like to collaborate, align, or correct—please reach out directly via the contact page.
Thank you. May peace be upon all of good will.
SAMPLE: March 09, 2026, 14:37 EDT
The war—now in its tenth day—remains intense. U.S. and Israeli forces hit Iranian IRGC command centers, missile sites, and oil depots overnight; Tehran fired back with ballistic missiles and drones, including cluster munitions on central Israel—six injured, one deadly strike reported.
Key developments:
• Mojtaba Khamenei (56, son of late Ayatollah) named new Supreme Leader—military and political leaders pledged allegiance. Speculation he’s wounded from earlier strikes, but he appeared in first public statement vowing “six-month war” if needed.
• Civilian toll rising: Iran claims 1,255 dead, 12,000 wounded—mostly non-combatants. New video suggests U.S. Tomahawk hit elementary girls’ school in Minab (175 killed, mostly kids)—U.S. denies, blames Iranian misfire.
• Gulf front: Drones/missiles targeted UAE, Saudi, Kuwait; Strait of Hormuz open but IRGC threatens any U.S./Israeli ships. Energy war warning issued.
• Nuclear angle: Program degraded but not destroyed—enrichment know-how intact. U.S. intel says no imminent bomb, but Trump could claim “victory” today if strikes wrap.
• Casualties: One U.S. service member died (Pentagon); Hezbollah rockets from Lebanon add pressure.
No ground invasion yet—air/missile exchange dominates. Oil over $100/barrel. Gulf states evacuating staff.
Notes: The outlook is stark.
Historical record: Persia has survived every major invasion.
• 330 BC: Alexander conquers Babylon—Parthian horse-archers kill 20,000 Romans at Carrhae, no surrender.
• 53 BC: Crassus’ legions shattered—eagles lost, no occupation.
• 614 AD: Sassanids seize Jerusalem—Byzantium collapses, Persia endures.
• 1258: Mongols destroy Baghdad—800,000 dead—yet Persia reforms under Ilkhanids.
• 1941: British bomb Tehran—Reza Shah exiled—resistance continues.
• 2003: US topples Saddam—4,500 American troops killed by IRGC proxies by 2011. Attacks persist.
Current status:
• Mosaic Doctrine active—31 IRGC provinces, each autonomous.
• Proxies: Hezbollah (50,000 rockets), Houthis (Red Sea blockade), Iraqi militias (weekly US base strikes).
• Drones: 10,000 Shaheds produced yearly—$20,000 each. Missiles: 3,000+ stockpiled.
• February 28: Ali Khamenei killed.
• March 9: Mojtaba Khamenei named Supreme Leader. No vacuum.
• Strikes: 3,000+ targets—Tehran refineries ablaze, Semnan factories gone, Bushehr navy sunk.
• Iran response: 27 missile waves—cluster bombs on Israel, sirens in Tel Aviv.
• Casualties: Iran 1,332 dead (civilian heavy—168 children in school strike). Israel 13+. US 8. Lebanon 500,000 displaced.
• Oil: $114/barrel. Strait of Hormuz half-blocked. Cyber attacks on European banks daily.
No single target. No quick end. Attrition only.
This is the way it is. Updating.
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