Deleted User wrote: » Interesting so I checked it out. It seems it's an unsubstantiated online story from 2012, denied entirely by Beretta, it seems.
New Home wrote: » I heard it a few years before that, maybe 2008 or 2009, and frankly I'm not be overly surprised that Beretta denied it. I'll see if I can dig out more about it.
Wibbs wrote: » Speaking of malaria and gin and tonics... The name of the disease is an interesting one and survives as an echo of what was once accepted medical thought. Malaria, "bad air" in Italian. The theory went - and it had a long history, all the way back to the greeks - that illnesses and especially epidemics were caused by "miasmas", the smells, the bad air given off by rotting matter. Within such miasmas the theory went that there were tiny particles of infection that when breathed in would cause disease(they were kinda on the right track to be fair). The theory led to some very welcome changes in city planning and water treatment. And again did so from way back. The Romans threw lots of cash and time at clearing and drain swamps near major towns.
Wibbs wrote: » In both Britain and Ireland there was a form of malaria(different to the tropical type) that was around until the 19th century. Marsh Fever was the usual name for it or "ague"(though that could mean fever in general). Oliver Cromwell died from it, or at least it weakened him enough to do him in and one theory has it that he picked said dose up in Ireland. Catholic mosquito no doubt. I seem to recall reading that many neolithic bones found here show widespread anaemia in the population which might have been from the same dose. Speaking of horrible doses... The first recorded case of what looks to be lung cancer is from a Neandertal lad found in France(La Ferrassie One) who died 60,000 years ago. He was only 45. Fairly old for one of them mind you. 60 seemed to be their upper limit. They were also the first people to show similar rates of left handedness to us in their population.
Conchir wrote: » There's a pizzeria in Nome, Alaska, which will deliver for free to extremely remote locations hundreds of miles away from it (such as islands in the Bering Sea which use ice runways in Winter, or isolated coast guard stations). How? It just puts them on Bering Air flights departing Nome Airport.
begbysback wrote: » I'd send it back, would be freezing
FanadMan wrote: Please tell me that you either live in or own a private library. Feck wikipedia, we should all be consulting Wibbs!
Chancer3001 wrote: » The current queen of England was born the same year as Marilyn Monroe.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Chlorine trifluoride is perhaps the closest thing we have to a "universal solvent". It's a liquid but has a low boiling point of 11c so most of the time it's a boiling liquid. But that is the very least of the problems. Almost everything you can think of will spontaneously burst into flames on contact with it releasing corrosive and toxic gases. Including stuff that can't possibly burn like snow or sand or bricks or asbestos or chicken or glass or ashes.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Including stuff that can't possibly burn like snow or sand or bricks or asbestos or chicken or glass or ashes.
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » Had a great chat with a gran uncle of mine last Wednesday, hadn't spoken to him in years. 86 years of age but fresh looking, still has some black left in his hair and believe this is not the type of man who'd use Just for Men. Bright guy too, great head for figures. As a young man in the 50s he left the family homestead in north Offaly to move to Dublin to work with Guinness. Got on a great there, he told me it was a great job, good pay and benefits, they really went out of their way to look after their employees. As we chatted on I asked why he never rose higher in the organisation considering that he was very capable and above average intelligence. He looked at me like I was stupid and "because I'm a Catholic, Michael". Seemed to be a certain level or glass ceiling in the old Guinness that Catholics topped out at.
steddyeddy wrote: » That's not true. Members of my family were fairly high up in Guinness.
Bassfish wrote: » Can't find a link to it but I read once that In 1916 Guinness fired any employee that was known to have any involvement in the rising.
steddyeddy wrote: » The mutation which makes certain African populations resistant to Malaria also makes them prone to sickle cell anemia.
lmimmfn wrote: » I was always told in secondary school that sickle cell anemia was a genetic disorder, I.e. not prone to it but always have it