Wibbs wrote: » Neither I'm afraid. Realist. Show me one shred of evidence that Irish nuns stuffed living infants into septic tanks as you hysterically claimed. Just one will do. Actually never mind, no doubt you'll respond with more waffle. Christ knows what the hell it had to do with an otherwise cool little thread. I suppose there's always one. =>:rolleyes:<=
Skylinehead wrote: » Yes, never mind indeed. This is the best thread in AH and the crap stops here.
Autochange wrote: » I felt that you needed to know what happened.
Omackeral wrote: » You're right. Did you know the little plastic bits at the end of your shoelaces are called aglets? Did you know that the dots on the letters 'i' and 'j' are called a tittles? That's tittles. Did you know that the words bookkeeping/bookkeeper are among the only words to have 3 double letters in a row?Did you know that Mr Owl ate my metal worm spelled backwards is the exact same as it is frontwards?
Omackeral wrote: » Did you know that the dots on the letters 'i' and 'j' are called a tittles? That's tittles.?
Wibbs wrote: » You know when you hear someone joke they're having a drink "for medicinal purposes"?. In the case of gin and tonic that's precisely how it became popular. In the Far East in the 19th century people, particularly European imperial people were dropping like flies from malaria and we couldn't be having that, what what. Someone "discovered" that a powder made from a particular tree helped protect and reduce symptoms of said disease. Well the "natives" had discovered it long before, but you know how that goes... It was called quinine. Now it tasted like crap, so they started adding sugar and limes to it, but it still tasted nasty. The British army types who already had a daily gin ration added that to the sugar and quinine water mixture and that tasted much better and no doubt tasted better and better the more one drank and the gin and tonic was invented.
Dutch courage (see also: potvaliancy)[1] refers to courage gained from intoxication with alcohol. The popular story dates the etymology of the term to English soldiers fighting in the Thirty Years' War. One version states that Dutch gin was used by English soldiers for its believed warming properties on the body in cold weather and its calming effects before battle; another version states that English soldiers noted the bravery-inducing effects of jenever's liquor on Dutch soldiers and dubbed it "Dutch Courage". Gin would go on to become popular in England thanks to King William III, who was also Stadtholder of the Netherlands, better known as William of Orange (1689-1702).
Django99 wrote: » If you can name me a country that hasn't committed human rights atrocities in its history
phill106 wrote: » San marino
Wibbs wrote: » IIRC it's the second smallest state in Europe(the world?) after the Vatican..
cdeb wrote: » Not around for very long? San Marino is the oldest sovereign state in the world. Sounds like you didn't know that.
Wibbs wrote: » To be fair the place is the size of a postage stamp and not a very large one and not around for very long. More a village state than a nation. IIRC it's the second smallest state in Europe(the world?) after the Vatican. The Vatican's fortunes rose and fell. Before the unifatcion of Italy in the 19th century it controlled a fair chunk of the country(and wasn't that often the seat of the various popes). Then when Italy became Italy they took all the church lands leaving them with the Vatican. This did not go down well with the Church. There was little it could do however as it was teetering on the brink of bankruptcy and nearly went over it. They were saved by none other than Mussolini who threw a big wad of cash at them. They invested that and through the Vatican bank made squillions and some have suggested, with good reasons, that much of it was dubious money to say the least.
Wibbs wrote: » More a village state than a nation. IIRC it's the second smallest state in Europe(the world?) after the Vatican.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » Did you know that there is a word for that? Palindrome.
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » Yes, post #1593 told even those who didn't know so 6 weeks ago. Thomas Jefferson invented Macaroni and Cheese.
Omackeral wrote: » Both of them? Wow.
New Home wrote: » Up to a few years ago, the IOR (the Vatican bank) was a majority shareholder in Beretta (the gun company). Talk about conflict of interests...!
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Ignoring makey-up stuff like Sealand there's number 68 Via dei Condotti , Rome. A history going back to 1048, issuing their own stamp, biometric passports, diplomatic relations with 106 nations and permanent observer status with the UN, and their diplomats having diplomatic immunity in some countries, it ticks most of the "state" boxes.