Tangerine Dream
Bluelighter
I've been reading random stuff; I thought I'd relay some here... Feel free to do the same! Interesting facts about anything, or articles or anything really. There are a couple of things here to start off...
So I was reading about platypuses, as you do...
Echidna Penis:
Now I can't look at knuckles the same way!
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This sounds like a big load of balls... Anyone aware of this situation? Regardless:
Full press release here: https://wikileaks.org/tpp-investment/press.html
Sounds like some 'continuum' sic-fi future plot stuff: "The Global Corporate Congress (GCC) is the corporate controlled government of the North American Union and consists of the many CEOs of the largest corporations in the future."
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Long reads these next two, but interesting if sad/scary...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_theater_hostage_crisis
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_hostage_crisis_chemical_agent
Fucked up.
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Last thing I had in my head was this story, which could have been so easily avoided if education was sufficient? It shocks me how recent this happened, and how many times it was handed around before finally being identified as radioactive and bloody harmful.
Here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goiânia_accident
So anyone got any fun or interesting facts that are obscure enough to perhaps be new information to most people? Maybe everything here you've already heard in which case I've failed!
So I was reading about platypuses, as you do...
Monotremes are an order of mammals (along with the marsupials & placental mammals) who's defining characteristic is giving birth to eggs, rather than live young. The platypus & 4 species of Echidna, make up the only members of the monotreme order, living today.
Monotremes are the only mammals (apart from at least one species of dolphin) known to have a sense of electroreception: they locate their prey in part by detecting electric fields generated by muscular contractions. The platypus' electroreception is the most sensitive of any monotreme.
Although powerful enough to kill smaller animals such as dogs, male platypus venom is not lethal to humans, but the pain is so excruciating that the victim may be incapacitated. Oedema rapidly develops around the wound and gradually spreads throughout the affected limb. Information obtained from case histories and anecdotal evidence indicates the pain develops into a long-lasting hyperalgesia (a heightened sensitivity to pain) that persists for days or even months.
Echidna Penis:
NSFW:
Now I can't look at knuckles the same way!
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This sounds like a big load of balls... Anyone aware of this situation? Regardless:
WikiLeaks releases today the "Investment Chapter" from the secret negotiations of the TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership) agreement. The document adds to the previous WikiLeaks publications of the chapters for Intellectual Property Rights (November 2013) and the Environment (January 2014).
The TPP Investment Chapter, published today, is dated 20 January 2015. The document is classified and supposed to be kept secret for four years after the entry into force of the TPP agreement or, if no agreement is reached, for four years from the close of the negotiations.
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Julian Assange, WikiLeaks editor said: "The TPP has developed in secret an unaccountable supranational court for multinationals to sue states. This system is a challenge to parliamentary and judicial sovereignty. Similar tribunals have already been shown to chill the adoption of sane environmental protection, public health and public transport policies."
Current TPP negotiation member states are the United States, Japan, Mexico, Canada, Australia, Malaysia, Chile, Singapore, Peru, Vietnam, New Zealand and Brunei. The TPP is the largest economic treaty in history, including countries that represent more than 40 per cent of the world´s GDP.
Full press release here: https://wikileaks.org/tpp-investment/press.html
Sounds like some 'continuum' sic-fi future plot stuff: "The Global Corporate Congress (GCC) is the corporate controlled government of the North American Union and consists of the many CEOs of the largest corporations in the future."
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Long reads these next two, but interesting if sad/scary...
Moscow theater hostage crisis
The Moscow theater hostage crisis, also known as the 2002 Nord-Ost siege, was the seizure of the crowded Dubrovka Theater on 23 October 2002 by 40 to 50 armed Chechens who claimed allegiance to the Islamist militant separatist movement in Chechnya.[1] They took 850 hostages and demanded the withdrawal of Russian forces from Chechnya and an end to the Second Chechen War. The siege was officially led by Movsar Barayev.
Due to the disposition of the theater, special forces would have had to fight through 100 feet of corridor and attack up a well defended staircase, before they could reach the hall in which the hostages were held. The terrorist also had numerous explosives, with the most powerful in the center of the auditorium, that, if detonated, could have brought down the ceiling and caused in excess of 80 percent casualties.[2] After a two-and-a-half day siege and the execution of two female hostages, Spetsnaz operators from Federal Security Service (FSB) Alpha and Vega Groups, supported by Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) SOBR unit, pumped an undisclosed chemical agent into the building's ventilation system and raided it.[1]
All 40 of the attackers were killed, with no casualties among Spetsnaz but about 130 hostages died, including nine foreigners, due to adverse reactions to the gas.[3] All but two of the hostages who died during the siege were killed by the toxic substance pumped into the theater to subdue the militants.[4][5] The use of the gas was widely condemned as heavy-handed, but the American and British governments deemed Russia's actions justifiable.[6] Physicians in Moscow condemned the refusal to disclose the identity of the gas that prevented them from saving more lives. Some reports said the drug naloxone was successfully used to save some hostages
It is thought that the security services pumped an aerosol anaesthetic, later conjectured to be weaponized fentanyl, into the theater through the air conditioning system.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_theater_hostage_crisis
At the time, the gas was surmised to be some sort of surgical anesthetic or chemical weapon. Immediately after the siege, Western media speculated widely as to the identity of the substance that was used to end the siege, and chemicals such as the tranquilizer diazepam (Valium), the anticholinergic BZ, the highly potent oripavine-derived Bentley-series opioid etorphine, another highly potent opioid, such as a fentanyl or an analogue thereof, such as 3-methylfentanil, and the anaesthetic halothane were proposed. Foreign embassies in Moscow issued official requests for more information on the gas to aid in treatment, but were publicly ignored. While still refusing to identify the gas, on October 28, 2002 the Russian government informed the U.S. Embassy of some of the gas's effects. Based on this information and examinations of victims, doctors concluded the gas was a morphine derivative. The Russian media reported the drug was Kolokol-1, either mefentanyl or α-methylfentanil dissolved in a halothane base.
More recently (2012) Riches et. al. found evidence from liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analysis of extracts of clothing from two British survivors, and urine from a third survivor, that the aerosol was a mixture carfentanil and remifentanil the exact proportions of which they could not determine. Assuming that these were the only active constituents (which has not been verified by the Russian military), the primary acute toxic effect to the theatre victims would have been opioid-induced apnea; in this case mechanical ventilation and/or treatment with opioid antagonists would have been life-saving for many or all victims.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_hostage_crisis_chemical_agent
Fucked up.
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Last thing I had in my head was this story, which could have been so easily avoided if education was sufficient? It shocks me how recent this happened, and how many times it was handed around before finally being identified as radioactive and bloody harmful.
The Goiânia accident was a radioactive contamination accident that occurred on September 13, 1987, at Goiânia, in the Brazilian state of Goiás, after an old radiotherapy source was stolen from an abandoned hospital site in the city. It was subsequently handled by many people, resulting in four deaths. About 112,000 people were examined for radioactive contamination and 249 were found to have significant levels of radioactive material in or on their bodies.
Here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goiânia_accident
So anyone got any fun or interesting facts that are obscure enough to perhaps be new information to most people? Maybe everything here you've already heard in which case I've failed!

