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Mar 25th, 2023, 4:26 pm
Plus-size clothing stores called ‘Fat Girls’ and ‘Moo Moo’ in Thailand

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On the plus side, at least the sizes are inclusive.

A dismayed TikToker outed plus-sized clothing stores in Thailand for their outrageous names, such as “Moo Moo” or “Fat Girls.”

In a viral video with a whopping 41 million views, Erika Severini took her nearly 11,000 followers on a tour of local shops in Bangkok, showing off the unusual monikers.

“There was no need to be this savage,” she wrote in the caption to the clip, which blasted the various stores and racked up over 91,000 comments this week.

Among the slew of names that seemed like “bullying” to some viewers: “Beebeefat,” “Fat Girls,” “Fatty Fatgirl,” “Love Calories,” “Moo Moo,” “Thai Fat” and “Fat Cat.”

While some found the humor in the “unhinged” name choice, others weren’t too keen on the “rude” attitude displayed toward these stores’ intended clientele.

“‘Love Calories’ is too funny,” commented one user.

“Love Calories is literal disrespect,” disagreed another.

“Beeebeefat is unironically a good name tho,” wrote someone else.

“‘Beauty isn’t a size’ had me,” quipped one person.

“I’m honestly just impressed there are that many different stores,” wrote another user.

“Yo that’s so funny i can’t even be mad at it,” commented another.

“I would be laughing, crying, embarrassed and triggered all at once,” chimed in someone else.

“The names of these stores is the meaning of passive aggressive,” another commented.

https://nypost.com/2023/03/24/plus-size ... -thailand/
Mar 25th, 2023, 4:26 pm
Mar 25th, 2023, 5:11 pm
Mortified woman alerts train staff to 'unwell man' on platform - but he's just a statue

A concerned train passenger has gone viral online after she reached out to station staff to ask them to check on an "unwell man" she saw at a platform - only to discover he was actually just a statue.

Emma Obank was on a train passing through Woking, Surrey, when she spotted what she thought was a man sitting on a bench covered in snow, who looked "frozen to death".

Worried for his safety, Emma contacted South Western Railway on Twitter to ask them to check on the man, but was left red-faced when she was told he wasn't really a man at all, but rather one of a series of sculptures found throughout Woking.

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In a tweet, Emma said: "Hi, I've just been on the train passing through Woking. It looked like there was a man very unwell on Platform one on a bench. Can station staff check he's ok?"

In response, the train company wrote: "That's ok Emma. He is a permanent fixture on the station - he is one of a series of sculptures in the town."

Thankfully, Emma was able to see the funny side, as she reached out once again and posted: "Oh thank god! It was covered in snow so I thought someone had frozen to death!"
Mar 25th, 2023, 5:11 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Mar 25th, 2023, 5:11 pm
Zebra escapes zoo, wanders Seoul streets for 3 hours



A zoo in South Korea's capital confirmed a zebra escaped from the facility Thursday and spent about 3 hours wandering the streets of the city.

The Seoul Children's Grand Park zoo said the zebra escaped just before 3 p.m. local time Thursday and wandered to a nearby residential neighborhood.

Surprised locals posted photos and videos of the wandering equine to social media.

Zoo officials and firefighters pursued the zebra for about 3 hours before they were able to corner the animal and administer a tranquilizer.

The zebra was safely returned to the zoo just after 6 p.m., officials said.

A zoo representative said an investigation has been opened into the escape.

No injuries or property damage were reported from the zebra's time on the loose.
Mar 25th, 2023, 5:11 pm
Mar 25th, 2023, 6:21 pm
Ontario photographer captures Thursday's northern lights, reveals how best to see them

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An astrophotographer from southern Ontario captured Thursday night’s display of the Aurora Borealis, and has offered some tips and tricks for catching a glimpse of them yourself tonight.

Trevor Jones, of St. Catharines, Ont., told CTV News Toronto Friday that Ontario’s Thursday night light show can be attributed to the sun.

“When we're seeing the northern lights, it means that the solar wind from the sun is sending these charged solar particles towards Earth and we see them at the poles,” Jones said. “It's called a geomagnetic storm.”

“When the storm is strong enough and far enough south in latitude, you can see them here in Ontario,” he said. “But it’s quite a rare sight.”

Jones, who has been photographing space for more than a decade, caught the lights “dancing overhead” in St. Catharines Thursday night and was among a number of photographers who captured Thursday's recent solar event.

In Bowmanville, Ont., resident Brian Connelly also managed to lens the light show, getting a number of shots between 10:45 p.m. and midnight.

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Jones said, while slightly weaker, Aurora Borealis should be visible Friday night in Ontario as well.

“The biggest thing you need is clear skies, so if it's completely cloudy, you'll miss them altogether,” Jones said. “Last night, it was partially cloudy, so it was enough where we could actually still see them.”

He also recommends getting away from the light pollution of the city and allowing your eyes to adjust to the dark for at least 25 minutes for optimal viewing.

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If possible, travelling to a dark-sky preserve, areas where light pollution has been nearly eliminated and residents can enjoy “celestial landscapes,” will give viewers the best shot at a vivid show.

Canada has 13 federally-designated dark-sky preserves, areas where light pollution is kept to a minimum or eliminated completely. Three provincial parks in Ontario have an official dark-sky designation as well. Some of the nearest to Toronto include Binbrook Conservation Area in Niagara, Ont. and Torrance Barrens in Gravenhurst, Ont.

But you don't necessarily need to travel to a designated dark-sky preserve to see the phenomenon. On Thursday night, residents reported seeing the northern lights in downtown Toronto.

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Jones also captured what he called his “ first ‘galaxy season' image” of the year on Thursday night in St. Catharines.

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“From March to June, [...] there's just so many galaxies available to observe and photograph, so it's a fun time for astrophotographers,” he said.
Mar 25th, 2023, 6:21 pm

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Mar 25th, 2023, 11:39 pm
A 90-Year-old Tortoise Becomes a Father For the First Time With his Wife of 29 Years

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Mr. Pickles, a 90-year-old radiated tortoise and the oldest animal at the Houston Zoo, became a father for the first time last week.

Mr. Pickles and his 53-year-old partner, Mrs. Pickles, welcomed three hatchlings that could live for up to 150 years if well taken care of.

Native to southern Madagascar, radiated tortoises are Critically Endangered and rarely produce offspring, Houston Zoo officials said.

“The new hatchlings came as a surprise when a herpetology keeper happened upon Mrs. Pickles as the tortoise was laying her eggs at closing time,” the Houston Zoo blog reported.

“The animal care team quickly went to work uncovering the eggs and getting them to the safety of the Reptile & Amphibian House. The soil in Houston isn’t hospitable to the Madagascar native tortoises, and it’s unlikely the eggs would have hatched on their own if the keeper hadn’t been in the right place at the right time.”

Arriving in 1996, Mrs. Pickles has lived at the Houston Zoo alongside Mr. Pickles ever since. The kids have been named Dill, Gherkin, and Jalapeño.

The new parents have been key to the Association of Zoos and Aquariums Species Survival Plan for this exquisite reptile that has unfortunately fallen afoul of the illegal animal trade.

In 2018 10,000 radiated tortoises were found in a private home in Toliara, Madagascar. Rescuers transported them to Le Village Des Tortues (“Turtle Village”), a private wildlife rehabilitation facility in Ifaty, 18 miles north of Toliara.

Preventative measures for insuring against the extinction of the reptile has been the establishment of breeding colonies on the Reunion Islands and Mauritius where the conditions are similar to its home in Madagascar.

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Mar 25th, 2023, 11:39 pm

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Mar 26th, 2023, 1:45 am
Police officers who raided Afroman's home sue him for emotional distress
By Adam Schrader

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Afroman is facing a lawsuit filed by seven Ohio police officers who raided his home last year after the rapper used the footage from the botched raid in his music videos. Photo courtesy of Afroman/Instagram


March 24 (UPI) -- Afroman is facing a lawsuit filed by seven Ohio police officers who raided his home last year after the rapper used the footage from the botched raid in his music videos.

The officers raided the home of Afroman, whose legal name is Joseph Edgar Foreman, last August after obtaining a warrant as part of an investigation into drug possession and trafficking, as well as kidnapping.

A copy of the warrant, obtained by WXIX-TV, shows that the officers believed they had probable cause to search the home for an "unknown quantity of marijuana" and "other drugs of abuse."

The search, which was conducted while Afroman was not home, failed to turn up any evidence and the suspicions that led to the warrant turned out to be unfounded.

Afroman's wife, who was home at the time of the raid, filmed the officers as they conducted their search, according to the lawsuit. The home was also equipped with security cameras which recorded the actions of the officers.

The rapper later shared the videos online and had merchandise made with the faces of the officers, according to the lawsuit.

The police officers allege that Afroman's "unauthorized use" of their likeness subjected them to death threats and humiliation as well as "mental distress, embarrassment and loss of reputation."

Each officer is seeking damages of $25,000 -- the amount they allege Afroman has made from the proceeds of his sales.

Afroman has since pushed back against the lawsuit in a post shared on Instagram, while blasting the "racist judge" who signed the "fictitious false warrant."

The rapper said the police officers "burglarize" his home and "became thieves and stole my money" and thus "lost their right of privacy."

"My video footage is my property," Afroman wrote in the post. "I used it to identify criminals, who broke into my house, stole my money and disconnected my home security system."

Anna Castellini, Afroman's lawyer, said in a statement that his team has filed a public records request from the county that they still have not received.

"We are planning to counter sue for the unlawful raid, money being stolen, and for the undeniable damage this had on my clients family, career and property," Castellini said.

The U.S. Constitution allows for Americans to film interactions with police officers. Further, Ohio's wiretapping laws allow a party to a conversation to record communication without the consent of the other party.

"Additionally, consent is not required for oral communications (e.g., in-person conversations) where the speakers does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the communication," according to the Digital Media Law Project.

"This means that you are free to record a conversation happening between two people in a public place such as a street or a restaurant, so long as you are not using sensitive recording equipment to pick up what you otherwise would not hear."

However, Ohio's right of publicity laws make it unlawful to commercially profit from the likeness of another without written permission. Exceptions are made for the use in news and political campaigns.
Mar 26th, 2023, 1:45 am
Mar 26th, 2023, 3:18 am
German Brewery Claims Its Beer in Powder Form Could Change Industry Forever
March 22nd, 2023*

Neuzeller Klosterbräu, a brewery in eastern Germany, claims to have devised a way to create a powdered beer that, when mixed with water, tasted almost exactly like the original liquid beverage.

The global beer industry is massive, but it’s also one of the least efficient in the world. Transporting large quantities of beer bottled in heavy glass bottles all over the world is expensive, but what if you didn’t have to? What if some of the world’s most famous breweries could just ship their products overseas in powdered form, and the company on the receiving end would just have to add water to it? German brewery Neuzeller Klosterbräu claims to have come up with a process to create any type of beer in powdered form, alcohol and carbonation included. All anyone has to do is add water and they are left with a regular beer.

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Photo: Bence Boros/Unsplash

“It’s the world’s first complete beer in powdered form and it could change the world,” Stefan Fritsche, the brewery’s managing director, told The Times. “Add water and you’ll get a beer with the complete beer taste including alcohol and carbon dioxide and a head of foam. In principle, we can produce any beer in the world using the method — dark beer, light beer, India pale ale, whatever.”

Fritsche acknowledged that beer drinkers will most likely be skeptical of their powdered beer in the beginning, but emphasized that the innovative product is not meant to replace classic beer. It is mainly designed as an alternative for overseas shipping, as “it makes no sense to import glass bottles, fill them with German water and then send the beer to Africa or China or wherever”. Meanwhile, German breweries will most likely continue to produce traditional beer for the European market.

Neuzeller has reportedly developed its revolutionary powdered beer over the last two years, with the help of Government funding. Although not the world’s first powdered beer, it defers from all the rest because it can incorporate alcohol and carbonation in the powder.

“We want the complete beer taste. We have the foam, we already have the beer taste. We want to add the carbon dioxide in powder form. We want to add the alcohol in powder form,” Stefan Fritsche said. “We can do all that with powder. And, of course, it is absolutely fascinating that we have succeeded. For the first time worldwide.”



Neuzeller Klosterbräu wants to make its powdered beer commercially available this year.
Mar 26th, 2023, 3:18 am
Mar 26th, 2023, 2:43 pm
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I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
SUNDAY MARCH 26

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
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A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You can post as many stories as you like, but you will only get paid for One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can only earn WRZ$ once a day.
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -6)
3:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them short, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS
Mar 26th, 2023, 2:43 pm

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Mar 26th, 2023, 2:48 pm
Leeds suspected car thieves arrested after police follow snowy footprints

Two alleged car thieves were arrested in Leeds after officers followed their footsteps in the snow from the abandoned vehicle to their homes.

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The two alleged car thieves were arrested after officer followed their footprints in the snow in Leeds

In a social media post, West Yorkshire Police's Dogs unit said the pair should be given the "dumbest criminal award".

The tweet added that despite the snowy weather on Thursday not deterring them, "cold must have numbed their brains".

One comment said the two "should have run backwards so the footsteps went the other way".

(Something very similar happened here a few years back. A couple of bright sparks broke into a ground floor apartment one Saturday evening. It had snowed heavily that day and they were on foot. The Police just followed the deep footprints back to their home)
Mar 26th, 2023, 2:48 pm

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Mar 26th, 2023, 3:00 pm
The Deepest Hole Ever Dug By Humans Had To Be Destroyed
The Kola Superdeep Borehole in Russia was once dubbed "the entrance to hell."

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The Cold War saw all kinds of scientific, militaristic, cultural, and technological peacocking between the US and the Soviet Union, from sending tortoises around the Moon to the development of preposterously powerful bombs. But of all these muscle-flexing exploits, few remain more obscure than the Soviet’s feat of drilling the deepest human-made hole on the planet.

Known as the Kola Superdeep Borehole, the ludicrously deep hole was located on the Kola Peninsula in the frosty depths of northwestern Russia, not far from the Russian border with northern Norway.

The borehole itself was actually made up of numerous holes that branch off from a central hole, the deepest of which – called SG-3 – runs 12,263 meters (40,230 feet) deep into Earth’s crust. Despite these mighty depths, however, the diameter of the hole is no wider than a dinner plate.

For perspective, the hole’s depth is the height of Mount Everest and Mount Fuji placed on top of one another. It’s also deeper than the deepest point of the ocean, the Mariana Trench, which lies at a depth of 11,034 meters (36,201 feet) below sea level.

The Americans started this race to the pits of the Earth. In the early 1960s, the US launched Project Mohole, an attempt to drill through the Earth's crust to obtain samples of the boundary between the crust and the mantle.

It aimed to do this by drilling into the seabed from a ship near a volcanic island in the Mexican Pacific. Unfortunately, the project was a flop and it was eventually canned after becoming wracked with scientific opposition, mismanagement, and money troubles.

Over in Russia, things went more smoothly. Drilling began on May 24, 1970, and continued until 1992, shortly after the collapse of the Soviet Union. It wasn’t just political turmoil and cash shortages that brought the ambitious project to an end. According to BBC Future, drilling reportedly stopped when temperatures at the bottom of the hole reached a sizzling 180°C (or 356°F), drastically higher than their models predicted.

Sadly, the site now lies abandoned, consisting of little more than a dilapidated building and a bolted-shut pipe in the ground. As the site fell into disrepair, Russia announced in 2008 that it planned to destroy the borehole. Some have also speculated that the hole has been partially filled with concrete.

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In its heyday, however, the project did provide a bunch of new scientific insights. First and foremost, the Kola Superdeep Borehole revealed some invaluable insights into the geology of Earth, traversing some 1.4 billion years of Earth's history.

Most surprisingly, the deep rocks were found to be saturated with water, which was assumed impossible because the rocks were sealed beneath a layer of impermeable rock. They discovered 14 species of fossilized microorganisms down there too, not to mention deposits of gold, copper, and nickel.

There were more than a fair share of fanciful rumors surrounding this site. One widely spread urban legend said that the drill broke through a layer of rock and discovered a superhot cavern. To investigate, scientists supposedly lowered a microphone into the pit, only to hear something that sounded like hellish howls and tormented screams.

Of course, this story is totally unverified and likely to be nonsense – although it's easy to see why the Kola Superdeep Borehole also goes by the name "entrance to hell."

https://www.iflscience.com/the-deepest- ... oyed-68110
Mar 26th, 2023, 3:00 pm

Book request - Exodus A.D.: A Warning to Civilians by Paul Troubetzkoy [20000 WRZ$] Reward!

https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5381636
Mar 26th, 2023, 3:59 pm
Man climbs one of the world's highest mountains in full suit just to prove he can

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An adventurer has gone viral for bringing a new meaning to the phrase 'business as usual' after climbing a mountain in a suit - just to prove he could do it.

All eyes were on Nobutaka Sada, 49, when he reached the summit of Malaysia's tallest peak, on Wednesday.

Unlike other hikers, the Japanese tailor ditched the usual attire you'd expect to see when tackling Mt. Kinabalu. Instead, he scaled the peak wearing one of his brand's custom-made suits, before showing off the design 4,095 meters above sea level.

Understandably, people were shocked to see Sada taking on the challenge, with a messenger bag in tow, and footage from his climb quickly circulated online.

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In one clip shared to TikTok, Sada looks out of place as he makes his way up the route surrounded by fellow hikes, who opted for shorts, trainers and trekking poles.

Similarly, in a series of photos taken at the peak of the mountain, the dapper adventurer looks like he should be midway through his commute, not at the end of an arduous climb.

Sharing his success on Facebook, Sada said: "We climbed an altitude difference of 2,300m in tropical humidity and rain, but SADA's custom-made suits kept us up to the level of being able to attend a business meeting!

"SADA's custom-made suits are safe to climb Mt. Kinabalu."

It's not the first time the brand's founder has gone to extreme lengths to promote his products either. The dedicated tailor has also previously gone skiing, fishing, and scuba diving wearing his brand's creations, as captured on his YouTube channel where he documents his adventures.

It sounds like his approach is working too, as Sada revealed he was recognised from TikTok on his way home when a fan spotted him wearing the famed suit he wore to complete the climb.
Mar 26th, 2023, 3:59 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Mar 26th, 2023, 4:08 pm
Bear who twice escaped at Missouri zoo moving to new home in Texas

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An escape artist bear who twice escaped from his enclosure at a Missouri zoo in a single month is being moved to a new home, officials announced.

The St. Louis Zoo said the 4-year-old Andean bear, named Ben, is being transferred to the Gladys Porter Zoo in Brownsville, Texas.

The move comes after Ben escaped from his enclosure by breaking through the steel mesh twice in February. The zoo said it reinforced the enclosure after the first escape, but Ben still managed to get out a second time.

Officials said the Texas zoo will be a better fit for Ben, as the bear enclosure is surrounded by a moat instead of a steel mesh.

"While we love Ben, and wish he could stay with us, our goal is to do what is best for him," Regina Mossotti, vice president of animal care at the St. Louis Zoo, said in a news release. "I am so grateful for the excellent care provided to Ben by our Animal Care team here and everyone's willingness to seek opportunities for Ben to thrive."
Mar 26th, 2023, 4:08 pm

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Believe me, you are someone's crush. Yes, you are!
Mar 26th, 2023, 4:19 pm
Bat-bombs, mind control and umbrella guns: This over-the-top spy agency was the forerunner of the CIA

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As President Franklin Delano Roosevelt sat in his wheelchair in the Oval Office, dictating a letter to his secretary, in sneaked William Donovan, the head of the Office of Strategic Services, armed with a loaded pistol.

At Donovan’s feet was a bag of sand.

As the president continued working, oblivious to Donovan’s presence, the OSS chief quickly fired 10 bullets into the sand — and still Roosevelt knew nothing, only turning round when he could smell burnt gun powder in the air.

“He looked up with wide eyes and saw Donovan standing behind him with a smoking gun in his hand,” writes John Lisle in “The Dirty Tricks Department: Stanley Lovell, the OSS and the Masterminds of World War II Secret Warfare” (St. Martin’s Press).

Donovan wrapped the pistol in a handkerchief and gave it to the president, introducing it as the OSS’s new firearm, silent and flashless.

A forerunner to the Central Intelligence Agency, the OSS was formed in June 1942 to coordinate the espionage activities of the country’s armed forces during World War II.

That summer, “Wild Bill” Donovan had also appointed Dr. Stanley Lovell as the director of research and development at the agency.

A renowned industrial chemist, Lovell was a blue-sky thinker long before the phrase even existed.

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His more left-field ideas were developed by Division 19, a hush-hush branch of R&D tasked with performing “frequently bizarre tasks,” writes Lisle.

Nothing was a bad idea, at least not initially. There were tear gas pencils and booby-trapped exploding chairs, invisible inks and the “En-Pen,” a single-shot pistol that could be disguised as a pen or even a cigarette.

There was also that staple of any spy organization — the umbrella gun.

Developed by 24-year-old scientist Al Polson, it could be placed under the arm and then discharged simply by turning it slightly.

“The way they would kill people was by putting it right up against a guy’s kidney and bam! It was gone,” says Polson.

“If you don’t have a kidney – you’re gone.”

One of Lovell’s favorite inventions, writes Lisle, was the ‘Beano’ grenade.

The same weight and size as a baseball, it was designed so that the average American man would be able to throw it more effectively than the more typical, pineapple-shaped version.

While the Beano got the green light to be used in combat, it wasn’t without its problems — testers didn’t realize it exploded on contact rather than on a timer. During final testing at Maryland’s Aberdeen Proving Ground, an Army civilian engineer tossed one in the air before catching it and blowing himself up in the process.

Lovell also tested a “bat bomb” where they captured bats and attached tiny incendiary devices to them with the intention of releasing them in enemy territory.

And they made “Aunt Jemima” exploding flour that was so similar to the real thing you could even bake cakes with it.

Firearms and explosives weren’t the only speciality at R&D.

They also developed a range of pills for spies to take in any given situation; A-pills alleviated travel sickness, B-pills gave them extra energy in the form of amphetamine and E-pills were a fast-acting anaesthetic.

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Workers created camouflaged message drops for spies and saboteurs.

The H-pills, meanwhile, contained an incendiary device that could be mixed with gasoline to make a Molotov cocktail, while the morphine in a K-pill could knock a person out in moments.

Then there were the lethal pills, or L-pills, that contained a fatal dose of potassium cyanide but also had the pleasant aroma of almond butter.

“If you’re ever in a position that looks hopeless, and you’ve lost the will to fight, take as directed,” read the instructions.

In 1943, meanwhile, the US Army, in conjunction with Lovell, opened Camp Detrick in Frederick, Md., as the country’s main biological warfare installation.

They were very busy.

“In its first two and a half years alone, Camp Derrick went through 598,604 white mice, 32,339 guinea pigs, 16,178 rats, 5,222 rabbits, 4,578 hamsters, 399 cotton rats, 225 frogs, 166 monkeys, 98 brown mice, 75 Wistar rats, 48 canaries, 34 dogs, 30 sheep, 25 ferrets, 11 cats, 5 pigs, and two roosters,” writes Lisle.

“The Dirty Tricks Department” also reveals how enemy forces were also developing their own methods.

In Japan, the infamous Unit 731 showered bubonic plague drops over China and conducted experiments on humans involving flamethrowers, water torture, vivisections without anaesthesia and the forced transfer of venereal diseases.

They also infected prisoners with plague, anthrax, smallpox, and cholera.

German forces were no less vicious. When an OSS agent was apprehended on the Belgian-German border in 1944 he had his fingernails pulled off and electrodes attached to his ears, nostrils and testicles.

Later, they attached raw meat to his naked body before setting a pack of hungry dogs on him. Then they shot him dead.

The OSS response was their “Natural Causes” project, designed to assassinate enemy agents with no trace of foul play. Ideas included lethal suppositories that induced a high body temperature for a prolonged period and injecting air embolisms into a vein.

Not all their ideas and inventions were designed to kill.

The OSS’ chemical engineer, Ernest Crocker, could replicate virtually any odor at his Maryland Research Laboratory.

Known as the “Million Dollar Nose,” Crocker had already successfully synthesized the smell of vomit, urine, foot odor, and rancid butter and was instrumental in the development of “Dog Drag,” a device for throwing bloodhounds off the scent of an agent.

Now, though, he had been tasked by Lovell to create a fecal fragrance — codenamed “Who Me?” — that could be distributed to little boys in China so they could “spray it on the backsides of occupying Japanese officers to make it seem as if they had soiled themselves.”

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This particular plan never came to fruition, but it did cause a stink in the laboratory when some of the ‘perfume’ was stolen from a secure cabinet and sprayed around the building.

Lovell wasn’t surprised since everyone at the OSS was fully trained “in the art of picking open all makes of locks and door latches,” writes Lisle.

It wasn’t the only failed attempt at psychological warfare.

There was a plot for US planes to release a giant payload of pornography over Adolf Hitler’s headquarters and another to drop bombs into the craters of Japan’s semi-active volcanoes and, when they erupted, spread the word around the local population that it was because the Gods were angry with the country’s actions.

When the OSS was disbanded at the end of the war, President Harry Truman created the Central Intelligence Group, which soon became the Central Intelligence Agency.

Like the OSS, the CIA had an R&D department, the Technical Services Staff (TSS), and, in 1953, they charged New Yorker Sidney Gottlieb to lead a controversial new project to study mind control — MKULTRA.

“Under Gottlieb’s direction, MKULTRA took the mind control experiments to a new level,” writes Lisle.

“Many of the early MKULTRA experiments involved drugging unwitting subjects with LSD to see how it affected their behavior.

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In one of his experiments, seven volunteers in Kentucky were given LSD for 77 consecutive days.

“Gottlieb even hired renowned magician John Mulholland to teach the TSS personnel how to slip drugs into drinks without getting caught.

“Thereafter, it wasn’t unusual for a prankster to spike the office coffee pot.”

Gottlieb also conducted tests with heroin, morphine, mescaline, psilocybin and temazepam, some of which were administered under hypnosis.

Another experiment involved shooting barbiturate into a person’s arm and as they fell asleep, then injecting amphetamine in the other arm to see if they would wake up.

Over 7,000 veterans would take part in Gottlieb’s illegal human experimentation, all without consent or prior knowledge of exactly what they were doing.

Gottlieb was also engaged in the same kind of activities as Stanley Lovell had been during the war.

His main target, though, was the Cuban leader Fidel Castro, who he planned to attack using the kind of methods usually reserved for Bond villains.

From poisoned wetsuits to exploding conch shells, Gottlieb was never short of ideas.

One plot involved lacing Castro’s shoes with thallium salts, a depilatory that would cause his beard to fall out.

Another involved impregnating Castro’s famous cigars with lethal amounts of botulinum toxin.

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Later, in his role as the head of the CIA’s Technical Services Division (TSD), Gottlieb also oversaw everything from portable key copiers to lasers that could pick up audio just from windowpane vibrations.

He also signed off a fountain pen that could shoot Mace or nerve gas.

For Gottlieb, as it was for Donovan and Lovell, though, the rationale for these weapons, physical or psychological, was that everybody else was doing it too.

As one retired CIA officer told Lisle: “That period was a wild and woolly time at the CIA. It was the old OSS mentality: Go out and do it. Doesn’t matter if it’s a good or bad idea, go do it.

“We’re at war, so anything is justified.”

https://nypost.com/2023/03/26/bat-bombs ... f-the-cia/
Mar 26th, 2023, 4:19 pm
Mar 26th, 2023, 5:06 pm
North Carolina Church Raises Thousands to Pay Off Cafeteria Lunch Debt For Every County School

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A North Carolina pastor has been helping children in need throughout his county, whether they need clothes, housing, or even a family—with programs like his church’s Foster and Adoption Ministry.

A few years ago his City Church in Gastonia started Hope Closet, a clothing giveaway for kids who may be displaced, or kids in schools who need new shoes.

A few weeks ago he ran across a news article about the growing number of kids whose school lunch accounts remain unpaid.

School lunch debt is a problem for districts across North Carolina, including Gaston County where Pastor Dickie Spargo learned that families owe a total of $13,000.

“We decided that we were going to share it with our church, and then just take up an offering and see what would happen,” Spargo told local media.

In less than two weeks, the congregation raised $23,000.

“What a great opportunity to bless these kids,” the pastor told his congregation after delivering the check.

He learned that the schools are “doing their best” to reach parents, urging them to apply for the ‘free or reduced lunch program’, which the government uses to reimburse costs of meals that would otherwise be charged to the school.

The $23,000 donation from the large Christian church will eliminate student lunch debt for the year, and the rest will help pay off debt for next school year.

“Praise God,” exclaimed Pastor Spargo.
Mar 26th, 2023, 5:06 pm

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Mar 26th, 2023, 7:30 pm
Brampton, Ontario Batman Has Been Patrolling the Streets for Years

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If you're from Brampton, it's likely that you've encountered the Brampton Batman at one point, or at least heard of the Flower City superhero who is known to patrol the streets late at night.

Every now and again, clips of the Brampton Batman will resurface on social media, leading to conversations about the man's identity, as well as praise for his commitment to keeping the streets of the city safe.

When he's not snapping pictures with starstruck children or lending a helping hand to local police, he's seen patrolling the neighbourhood's streets with his Batmobile, which is appropriately adorned with the license plate, DRKKNIGHT.

blogTO asked the superhero to reveal his real identity, but in true Batman fashion, many of his responses were coy and mysterious, leaving lots of room for speculation about who the man behind the mask is.

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"My parents do have a full name for me," Brampton Batman told blogTO. "In regards to comic book lore, it is a secret identity."

Several other news outlets have reported the superhero's real identity as Stephen Lawrence, who, according to his LinkedIn page, has been dressing up as Batman since April 1990.


In 1993, Lawrence lost his own father, leading to another parallel he shares with Batman's secret identity, Bruce Wayne, who watched the murder of his parents Thomas and Martha as a child.

Brampton Batman confirmed that similar to Wayne, he does have a day job despite all the work that goes into protecting the community.

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"I participate in our society equally and fairly, as most other people," he said.

Even in his adolescence, Lawrence's superhero instincts were laser sharp. In July 1993, he managed to run after a person who robbed a store in Markville Mall and kept them under control until police arrived.

While Batman doesn't always get along with Gothan police in the comic books, this incident solidified his transformation into a real-life superhero.

Although 30 years have gone by since the origin of the Brampton Batman, it looks like Lawrence has no plans to stop anytime soon.

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"I have made a promise. Tragic events have ripped family members and loved ones away from me," he told blogTO.

"When the public, and certainly when children are excited to see me, when little legs move as fast as they can with open arms to hug you, this! Is the refuel and affirmation of what I do, and that I am making good in our world."
Mar 26th, 2023, 7:30 pm

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