BaZmO* wrote: » This post is the 10,000th post
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » If you are amputating someone's leg it's best not to give them something to drink first. It thins the blood or somesuch so they are more likely to bleed out. After you've cauterised the wound or stitched up the stump they could probably do with a wee drop. Oh to live in a world with painkillers , sterile surgery , and antibiotics. I'm always reminded of Tony Robinson's quote about how if you took a peasant from a few hundred years ago and told them they wouldn't have to worry about starving or freezing or working to death and they wouldn't have to bow down before the local lord they'd consider it a New Jerusalem.
Paddy Cow wrote: » Imagine if you told them not only would they not have to worry about starving or freezing but they could get money for nothing for the rest of their lives by filling out a few forms! They wouldn't be able to believe it.
Squall Leonhart wrote: » Give it a rest Paddy... this isn't the thread for it!
Squall Leonhart wrote: Give it a rest Paddy... this isn't the thread for it!
Paddy Cow wrote: Give it a rest yourself. Your not a mod and there's nothing wrong with my post. Someone from hundreds of years ago would find modern life very strange. Very convenient but very strange.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » It would take until 2040 to make that billion.
Squall Leonhart wrote: » Just did the maths. Somebody can correct me.
Part 1 checks out, still wouldn't be a billionaire. Part 2, it'll take until 2040, did the maths, again checks out, but Jeff Bezos surely doesn't make $900,000,000 a week??
Evade wrote: » Since the founding of Amazon Jeff Bezos' average net income is about $12,000,000 per day or $139 per second.
Evade wrote: » The problem with that is how do you tax the valuation of a company? It's not that he has all his wealth in a Scrooge McDuck style money pit.
BaZmO* wrote: » Corporation tax.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » August 3, 1492 , leap years and the calendar change won't change it much. CBA checking part 2, maybe there was One Week when his shares went up that much ?
Squall Leonhart wrote: » Just did the maths. Somebody can correct me. 2019-1492 is 527 years. 527 * 365 is 192, 355 days 192,355 x $5,000 = $961,775,000. Part 1 checks out, still wouldn't be a billionaire. Part 2, it'll take until 2040, did the maths, again checks out, but Jeff Bezos surely doesn't make $900,000,000 a week??
A strange disease called auto-brewery syndrome (ABS), also dubbed “drunkenness disease,” was recently reported in a case study conducted by researchers from Richmond University Medical Center. Auto-brewery syndrome is a bizarre condition that causes someone to become drunk without consuming any alcohol. This happens after patients eat carb-filled foods, which get fermented by bacteria in the gut. Some say it’s extremely rare, but researchers of the new study believe it may simply be under-diagnosed. One reason could be that patients who suffer from the disease are often accused of drinking too much, despite not having consumed alcohol.In the most recently-known case, New Scientist reports that the condition suffered by a 46-year-old man (who was a light social drinker) emerged after he was pulled over one morning for driving under the influence. After he refused to take a breathalyzer test and was hospitalized, the man’s medical tests showed that he had a blood-alcohol level of 200 mg/dL. That’s comparable to someone who’s consumed about 10 alcoholic drinks.
Obviously, it’s more than enough to induce slurred speech, impaired balance, and disorientation. In other words, the man was indeed drunk. But he had not had any alcohol. Bacteria That Causes Auto Brewery Syndrome Wikimedia CommonsSaccharomyces Cerevisiae bacteria, also known as ‘brewer’s yeast.’ “For years, no one believed him,” Fahad Malik, a co-author of the recent study who is now a chief medical resident at University of Alabama at Birmingham, told New Scientist. “The police, doctors, nurses, and even his family told him he wasn’t telling the truth, that he must be a closet-drinker.” It wasn’t until a helpful aunt, who heard of a similar case in Ohio and urged him to pursue treatment there, that the truth finally came out. Laboratory tests of the man’s fecal matter showed traces of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, also known as “brewer’s yeast,” and Saccharomyces boulardii. After his diagnosis of auto-brewery syndrome was confirmed, physicians in Ohio treated the man with anti-fungal medication for about a month. His symptoms improved and with that he was discharged on a strict carb-free diet — to avoid foods that could trigger fermentation by the bacteria. However, the Ohio doctors didn’t prescribe anymore anti-fungal therapy. Within a few weeks, his drunken episodes flared up again. At one point, he got so drunk that he fell, which resulted in intracranial bleeding. Tests at the hospital later showed that his blood alcohol levels had spiked to 400 mg/dL — twice the amount detected in his system compared to the last time he was pulled over for DUI. And, again, hospital staff did not believe that he had not been drinking beforehand. Desperate, the man sought help from all kinds of medical professionals — internists, neurologists, psychiatrists, gastroenterologists — but nobody could help cure his ailment. That’s when he found an online support group and contacted researchers at Richmond University on Staten Island, who agreed to treat him for his condition. According to the study’s researchers, they put him back on anti-fungal therapy treatment, which involved 150 to 200 mg of oral itraconazole every day, along with probiotics to normalize the microbes in his gut. But the man relapsed again after secretly eating pizza and drinking soda during his treatment. Researchers swapped his medicine to 150 mg of intravenous micafungin per day for six weeks.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » The last trial in the UK under the Witchcraft Act of 1735 took place in 1944. the accused was found guilty and sentenced to 9 months in prison.https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofScotland/Helen-Duncan-Scotlands-last-witch/