The Fascinating History Of Obscene Gestures

Source: Blogspot The (Middle) finger Synonymous with various phrases revolving around a verb that begins with the letter F, the middle finger is one of the most universally recognized and reviled gestures in history. Made particularly popular by late 20th century rock and punk personalities as a sign of rebellion and anti-establishmentarianism, the finger today is used liberally by people of all ages. Source: Acid Cow The finger dates all the way back to ancient Greece when it was meant as an insult, suggesting that the recipient of the gesture would easily submit to anal intercourse....

June 15, 2022 · 2 min · 361 words · Mary Brown

The Hitler Election Of 1932 Photos Of How The Nazis Took Power

During the election of 1932, the Nazis took power not simply with force, but with the votes of the German people. Like this gallery?Share it: Share Flipboard Email And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts: Hermann Göring Was The Second-Most Powerful Man In Nazi Germany — And He Loved To Party Why Anton Drexler Was More Responsible For The Nazi Party Than Adolf Hitler...

June 15, 2022 · 32 min · 6624 words · Wayne Shufelt

The Knights Of The Golden Circle A Secret Pro Slavery Civil War Society

The Knights of the Golden Circle sought to create a confederation that would encompass 2,400 square miles from the southern United States to South America — and run on the labor of slaves. Library of CongressOn the left is George W. L. Bickley, head of the Knights of the Golden Circle. There’s a conspiracy that Lincoln’s assassin was a member of this society. Alexander the Great’s epitaph expressed the sentiment that “the world is not enough....

June 15, 2022 · 11 min · 2162 words · Morgan Shutts

The World S Craziest Weather And The Mythology That Explained It

Source: Fan Pop While higher-order human thinking naturally places humans at the top of the food chain, in the end, nothing can stand in weather’s way. Wind, precipitation, sunshine, temperature and clouds all comprise the term weather, the state of the atmosphere. Over time, scientists have developed a deeper understanding of weather patterns and can predict when certain weather phenomena will occur. Before science shaped our understanding of the weather, however, ancient cultures used stories, folklore and mythology to explain the world’s craziest weather occurrences....

June 15, 2022 · 3 min · 595 words · Philip Abeyta

These Massachusetts 8Th Grades Want To Exonerate Salem S Last Witch

Though Massachusetts pardoned most accused witches in 1957 and 2001, Elizabeth Johnson Jr.’s name was left off the list. Wikimedia CommonsA depiction of a young woman thought to have “witch’s marks.” In 1693, 22-year-old Elizabeth Johnson Jr. of Andover, Massachusetts, was accused of being a witch. For centuries, that accusation stood. Now, a group of 13- and 14-year-olds want to make sure Johnson finally gets justice. “To right a wrong, it’s worth doing,” said Carrie LaPierre, who introduced Johnson’s story to her eighth-grade civics class at North Andover Middle School....

June 15, 2022 · 4 min · 646 words · Sadie Haynes

This Week In History Mar 26 Apr 1

Low WWII awareness in Japan, Egyptian mummy unearthed, JFK diary for sale, FDR’s ghostwriter, 8,000-year-old art vandalized. Many Japanese People Don’t Know That Their Country Fought The U.S. In WWII, Japanese Politician Claims Following Japan’ 1941 attack on the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor, the two countries spent the next four years mired in some of the fiercest combat of World War II. Some seven decades later, one Japanese politician recently claimed, many Japanese people don’t seem to realize that any of that indeed happened....

June 15, 2022 · 3 min · 496 words · William Jones

Weight Loss Pills Containing Wwii Era Stimulant Alarm Scientists

Phenpromethamine was marketed in the 1940s and 1950s as a nasal inhaler, and there is little information on the risks of taking the drug orally. Pieter CohenThe stimulant, phenpromethamine, was sold as a nasal inhaler called Vonedrine in the 1940s and 1950s. People desperate to lose weight often turn to diet pills. But scientists are warning that these pills can pack a real punch: One study has found that some dietary supplements contain a stimulant called phenpromethamine, which was last used during World War II....

June 15, 2022 · 5 min · 884 words · Betty Davis

Why Carl Panzram Was America S Most Cold Blooded Serial Killer

Before he was executed in 1930, Carl Panzram confessed to a litany of crimes that included burglary, arson, rape, and murder — and didn’t express one bit of remorse. Toward the end of his life, American serial killer Carl Panzram admitted to committing 21 murders, more than 1,000 acts of sodomy, and thousands of robberies and arsons. But he was far from repentant. To use his own words: “For all these things I am not in the least bit sorry....

June 15, 2022 · 7 min · 1356 words · Daniel Cochran

4 Scary Diseases That Are Way More Terrifying Than Ebola

These scary diseases prove that, if there is in fact a God, he has one extraordinarily warped sense of humor. Ebola has been in the news for a while, what with all the killing, and for once it appears the media has actually underestimated the severity of the problem. It’s gotten so bad, even the usual gang of shameless opportunists is getting called out for feasting on the human tragedy....

June 14, 2022 · 5 min · 922 words · Migdalia Hollis

5 Extreme Protests You Won T Believe

In a way, every major event in history can be reduced to a tale of power struggle and protest. Successful protests have struck down reprehensible policies like Apartheid, and brought attention to previously unknown issues like the many missing indigenous women in Canada. The extreme protests featured here cover a wide array of issues in different ways. From disturbing public art displays to physical backlashes, these protests shocked the world for a number of reasons....

June 14, 2022 · 2 min · 296 words · Quinn Quade

An Indonesian Teen Survived 49 Days At Sea In A Floating Fishing Hut

“Every time he saw a large ship, he said, he was hopeful, but more than 10 ships had sailed past him, none of them stopped or saw.” Facebook19-year-old Aldi Novel Adilang spent 49 days afloat at sea in his fishing hut before he was rescued by a Panamanian vessel headed for Japan. 19-year-old Aldi Novel Adilang miraculously survived 49 days adrift on the Pacific Ocean with limited food and water....

June 14, 2022 · 3 min · 578 words · Ruth Espinoza

Ancient Mill Back In Business To Meet Flour Demand During Pandemic

Sturminster Newton Mill owner Pete Loosmore has supplied over 300 bags of flour to local grocers thus far. Sturminster Newton MuseumThe earliest record of the Sturminster Newton Mill dates to 1086. The Sturminster Newton Mill in Dorset, England became a museum once operations ceased in 1970, but has remarkably returned to its former flour-making glory to meet increased demand during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Ancient Origins, the mill was first mentioned among 6,000 flour mills in the Doomsday Book of 1086....

June 14, 2022 · 4 min · 683 words · Patricia Ancira

Baby Buffalo Killed After Being Placed In Suv By Tourists

After two tourists at Yellowstone National Park took a baby buffalo into their vehicle, rangers were ultimately forced to kill the animal. American Bison (also known as buffalo) and their calves, forage for food at Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming on June 1, 2011. IMARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images A bison calf picked up by tourists in Yellowstone National Park has just died, officials said. Last week, East Idaho News first reported that a father-son duo placed a bison calf in the trunk of their SUV because they feared it was “freezing and dying,” a witness on the ground said....

June 14, 2022 · 3 min · 512 words · Ronald Marron

Derinkuyu 15 Incredible Images Taken Inside Turkey S Underground City

Step inside Turkey’s underground city of Derinkuyu, which has sat hundreds of feet below the Earth’s surface for centuries. Like this gallery?Share it: Share Flipboard Email And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts: Inside Coober Pedy, Australia’s Awesome Underground City Inside City Hall Station, New York City’s Beautiful And Abandoned Subway Station 27 Bizarre Vintage Photos From The Annals Of New York City History...

June 14, 2022 · 6 min · 1166 words · Andrea Falls

Did Desiree Jennings Fake Dystonia Or Was She Infected By A Flu Shot

Desiree Jennings and her “doctor” claim that small amounts of mercury from a flu vaccine were responsible for her condition. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N45-famr_Zk Desiree Jennings was the picture of health and happiness. She was an avid runner and a cheerleader for the Washington Redskins. She had a job at a marketing company and had been happily married for several months. Then, in 2009, she went in for a routine flu shot and her whole life changed....

June 14, 2022 · 6 min · 1234 words · April Mcpartlin

Dying Indigenous Woman Films Canadian Hospital Staff Taunting Her

The nurses were captured calling the mother of seven “stupid as hell,” and two have since been fired. FacebookJoyce Echaquan was 37 years old. She leaves behind a grieving husband and seven children. While she lay dying in a Canadian hospital, an Indigenous woman from Quebec filmed the nursing staff taunting her and posted it to Facebook where it sparked public outrage and protest. Joyce Echaquan was hospitalized with severe stomach pains on September 26 in the Centre Hospitalier Régional de Launadière in the Quebec city of Joliette....

June 14, 2022 · 4 min · 746 words · Michelle Green

God S Country Life Under Isis

The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria is a walking reductio ad absurdum of Immanuel Kant’s Enlightenment treatise Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason. In that book, Kant argues that mankind is inherently drawn to evil deeds, and that this “radical evil,” as he calls it, inevitably corrupts every aspect of our being. To Kant, religion is the natural result of a reasoning man’s struggle against radical evil, and it illuminates the way to a properly enlightened moral state....

June 14, 2022 · 2 min · 403 words · John Baker

How The Arapaima Fish Has Survived For 23 Million Years

If you’ve played Nintendo’s Animal Crossing: New Horizons video game, you’ll have likely met an impressively large fish with red-and-black coloring called the arapaima. While animals featured in the game are based on real living creatures, the massive size of the arapaima makes it almost unreal. The arapaima, or pirarucu fish, is a giant fish that has existed for 23 million years. Not only is it one of the oldest living species in the world, but it’s also one of the largest freshwater fish....

June 14, 2022 · 5 min · 953 words · Vicki Hays

Mona Lisa Facts The Secret Behind The Infamous Smile

It would be easy to blame author Dan Brown and his blockbuster book and subsequent movie, The Da Vinci Code, for renewed public interest in the mysteries surrounding the world’s most famous portrait. The novel imagines all sorts of keys in the artist’s work that unlock mysteries of the ages. But even before Brown published his fictional tome, Mona Lisa has been an object of scrutiny for 500 years as scholars have tried to find answers to questions raised by the masterpiece....

June 14, 2022 · 2 min · 308 words · Shawn Truax

Most Americans Couldn T Afford An Unexpected 500 Expense

The economy is improving, but most American savings accounts still couldn’t handle surprise expenses, and it’s leaving some in dire situations. Americans have a saving problem when it comes to money, and it’s putting them at risk for financial disaster. Image Source: Flickr If you unexpectedly received an emergency $500 bill that you had to pay–medical operation, home repair, etc.–would you be able to pay it? A recent Bankrate.com survey found that approximately 63 percent of Americans say that they wouldn’t, in fact, be able to deal with an unexpected expense in the $500-1,000 range....

June 14, 2022 · 5 min · 976 words · Roger Slaney