Saturday, February 28, 2015

What Happens When A Stranger Takes A Picture Of Your Private Part In A Public Urinal


You won't feel comfortable knowing that someone you didn't know completely starts to take a picture of your private organ while you're urinating in a public urinal. It is quite creepy and might leave you speechless or it may cause you to lose your cool and confront that stranger.


In this social experiment created by YouTube prankster named Bart Baker, We get to see the initial reaction of people who were targeted by Baker's latest prank. The responses from those guys will either make you laugh or you can relate to it. Let's just say that some guys are not open to the idea of Bart Baker.


Source: http://www.oddityworld.net/2014/05/what-happens-when-stranger-takes.html


Condom maker’s share price rises as South Korea legalizes adultery


PRESS SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA 
A South Korean court on Thursday abolished a 62 year old law that criminalized extramarital affairs, and the stock price of a prominent condom maker immediately shot up 15 percent.

The Constitutional Court’s ruling that the law suppressed personal freedoms could affect many of the more than 5,400 people who have been charged with adultery since 2008, when the court earlier upheld the legislation, according to court law.

Any current charges against those people could be thrown out and those who have received guilty verdicts will be eligible for retrials, according to a court official who declined to be named, citing office rules.

Under the law, having sex with a married person who is not your spouse was punishable by up to two years in prison. Nearly 53,000 South Koreans have been indicted on adultery charges since 1985, but prison terms have been rare.

The stock price of South Korean condom maker Unidus Corp. shot up after the court ruling, surging by the daily limit of 15 percent on South Korea’s Kosdaq market.

Debate over the adultery ban, which has been part of South Korea’s criminal law since 1953, intensified in recent years as fast-changing social trends challenged traditional values.

Supporters of the law said it promoted monogamy and kept families intact, while opponents argued that the government had no right to interfere in people’s private lives and sexual affairs.

The court was acting on 17 complaints submitted from 2009 to 2014 by people who had been charged under the law.

Seven judges in the court, which rules on the constitutionality of laws, supported the ruling, while two dissented, the court said. The support of six judges is needed to abolish a law.

The law “excessively restricts citizens’ basic rights, such as the right to determine sexual affairs,” the court said, explaining that the legislation no longer contributed to overall public interest.

It was the fifth time the court had reviewed the adultery ban since 1990. In October 2008, five of the judges said the law was unconstitutional.

Legal experts say the adultery ban had lost much of its effect because people increasingly settled marriage disputes in civil courts. Adultery could be prosecuted only on a complaint made by a spouse who had filed for divorce. The case immediately ended if the plaintiff dropped the charge, which was common when financial settlements were reached.

“Recently, it was extremely rare for a person to serve a prison term for adultery,” said Lim Ji-bong, a law professor at Sogang University in Seoul. “The number of indictments has decreased as charges are frequently dropped.”

South Korea, along with Taiwan, had been a rare non-Muslim nation to criminalize adultery, according to Park So-hyun, an official at the Korea Legal Aid Center for Family Relations, a government-funded counseling office.

Many legal experts had predicted that the court would abolish the adultery ban, but the decision was still controversial in a country that remains greatly influenced by a conservative Confucian heritage, despite decades of Western influence.

Park Dae Chul, a lawmaker for the conservative ruling party, Saenuri, said it respects the court’s decision but that the country needs to strengthen its efforts to protect marriage and the family system.

Lawmaker Yoo Eun Hye of the liberal opposition New Politics Alliance for Democracy said the decision reflected social changes.

Last year the government banned access to Ashley Madison, a dating website for people who want to cheat on their partners, over concerns that the service could encourage adultery. The Korea Communications Standards Commission, the country’s Internet censorship body, said it has not decided whether to lift the ban on the website.



Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/article11202152.html

First Head Transplant Possible Within Two Years, Says Italian ‘Frankensurgeon’


Controversial Italian neurosurgeon Sergio Canavero claims he could perform the world's first ever human head transplant in 2017, despite ethical and scientific reservations from many of his colleagues. 

"The Wright brothers flew their first plane when every so-called expert in the world thought that this was impossible. So, I don't believe the word 'impossible' - I have been working on this project for 30 years, and the technology is now there," Canavero, who heads the Turin Advanced Neuromodulation Group, told Sky News. 

Canavero's team, which previously touted their plans for a whole-eye transplant, published a paper outlining the procedure two years ago, and say they are now ready to find subjects for the experimental procedure. 

"If society doesn't want it, I won't do it. But if people don't want it in the US or Europe, that doesn't mean it won't be done somewhere else," the neurosurgeon told the New Scientist. 

Prior to the surgery, the two bodies would be cooled, to preserve them better without oxygen, and then their necks would be sliced open and major blood vessels connected between the donor's body and the recipient's head.


The key stage would be the severing and re-attachment of the spinal cord, which would have to be cleanly sliced, and would then present two "spaghetti-like" bundles of nerves, which would need to be connected to each other. Canavero foresees this being done with polyethylene glycol, a material that enables fat in different tissues to mesh. 

The neck would then be stitched shut, and the patient placed in an artificial coma for four weeks, allowing the body to heal without movement. 

Canavero previously estimated that the pioneering surgery would cost upwards of €10 million, and that the perfect initial recipient would be a person with a young, healthy brain, suffering from muscular dystrophies or metabolic disorders. He proposes initial experiments where both of the individuals in the surgery would be brain-dead. 

Most of the scientific objections to the procedure focus on the impossibility of restoring body control after the refusing of the spine. Currently, it is commonly impossible to overcome paralysis when a spinal cord is completely severed, even when the rest of the body belongs to the same person. An ambitious procedure performed by Polish doctors last year, managed to restore movement by implanting lab-grown nerve cells into the spine.


But Richard Borgens, director of the Center for Paralysis Research at Purdue University, Indiana, said that Canavero's surgery offers no such guarantees. 

"There is no evidence that the connectivity of cord and brain would lead to useful sentient or motor function following head transplantation," he told the New Scientist. 

"This is such an overwhelming project, the possibility of it happening is very unlikely. I don't believe it will ever work, there are too many problems with the procedure. Trying to keep someone healthy in a coma for four weeks - it's not going to happen," said Harry Goldsmith, a clinical professor of neurological surgery at the University of California, Davis, himself a leading expert on reconnecting spinal tissue that enables paralyzed people to walk again. 

Yet Canavero can reassure himself that his 'Frankensurgery' is not without precedent. The first attempted dog head transplant dates back to more than a century ago, and Soviet scientist Vladimir Demikhov performed multiple such procedures in the 1950s. US surgeon Robert J. White famously performed a head transplant between two monkeys in 1970, with the survivor living for nine days. 

In all of the previous procedures, the recipients remained paralyzed, and all struggled with immune rejection of the new body parts, though with improved techniques, this is not an insurmountable problem. 

Ethical problems - from religious considerations, to the simple ickiness-factor - are also likely to slow down progress. 

"I believe that what is specifically human is held within the higher cortex. If you modify that, then you are not the same human and you should question whether it is ethical. In this case, you're not altering the cortex," said Patricia Scripko, a neurologist and bioethicist at the Salinas Valley Memorial Healthcare System in California, who does not believe the procedure is possible, but insists it is not objectionable. 

"If a head transplant were ever to take place, it would be very rare. It's not going to happen because someone says 'I'm getting older, I'm arthritic, maybe I should get a body that works better and looks better'."


Despite the myriad objections - and even his supporters are skeptical of the two-year timeframe - Canavero will now have the chance to convince his colleagues, when he will present his specific plans for the surgery to the prestigious congress of the American Academy of Neurological and Orthopedic Surgeons in Maryland in June. 

"I first spoke about the idea two years ago, to get people talking about it. I'm trying to go about this the right way, but before going to the moon, you want to make sure people will follow you," he said. 

We don't even know how half of our crippling illnesses come about in the first place but I suspect swapping bodies to escape a degenerative illness will only result in the new body coming down with the same illness...if it lives.

Don't we have more important things to worry about these days?

Source: http://www.thecollectiveint.com/2015/02/first-head-transplant-possible-within.html

Girl Locked Up By Parents In A Filthy Shack For 6 Years Due To Having A Boyfriend They Disapproved


A shocking tale of a girl becomes viral and makes rounds to the social media as her story depicts her living in an unimaginable environment for 6 years already. Pictures of her lying on top of a pile of straws with some food around her went viral as it was obvious that she is malnourished due to her 6 years of being confined in a filthy shack.

Meet Zhang Qi,  24 year old, the woman who has been locked up by her own parents for 6 years as they disapproved of her boyfriend. Zhang Qi had called it quits with her boyfriend in 2009 as an order from her parents. Zhang thought that everything will be fine after it, but she was wrong. Her parents had decided to keep her in a filthy shed that became her home for 6 years. Due to this, she was not able to see the world outside for such a long time.


She tried to escape several times but her parents spread word to their village that she was mentally ill and ‘for her own protection’, it is necessary for her to get locked up. A villager even told news stations that her parents had controlled the situation and stopped any Good Samaritan from helping their poor daughter.

“Her parents are powerful people here and everyone was told not to interfere, Everyone knew about the girl in the house. I moved away and only come back to visit occasionally so I don’t care about their threats, and that’s why I was happy to expose these pictures online after the local authorities refused to do anything,”


“Every time I came back for Chinese New Year I went to visit her secretly. On my latest visit though I saw her lying on a pile of straw with a couple of blankets and some food around her and I just decided enough was enough. Whether what they say about her having mental problems is true or not, she is being treated like an animal here and I’m sick of it so I contacted the police, and then posted the images online,” Chow Jen

As of now, there is still no official report regarding the current status of the young woman since her pictures went viral all over the web.


Source: http://www.thecontroversialfiles.net/2015/02/girl-locked-up-by-parents-in-filthy.html

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Does your chicken need a sweater?

When the temperature drops and chickens lose feathers, many people bundle up their flocks, but others say the garments are more about fashion than function.


Just as our furry friends sometimes need a little extra warmth during the winter months, so do our feathered ones, according to some chicken owners.

While chicken sweaters may seem more of a fashion statement than anything, the people who knit or buy them for their flocks say the knitted garments keep their birds warm during molting season and prevent the chickens from picking at new feathers as they grow in.

"In colder climates like ours it can get quite cold in the fall or the spring when the birds lose their feathers," said Maureen Schmidt, who lives in Kelowna, British Columbia. "Without adequate feathering, they can get quite cold, especially if they drop their old feathers all at once."

Schmidt's mother knitted several warm garments for her daughter's chickens (pictured right).

The sweaters have an opening for the birds' heads and wings, and they button to secure to their bodies.

Schmidt says the sweaters don't restrict her chickens' movements and that the birds adjust to them quickly.

"It usually takes anywhere from a few hours to a day before the chickens adjust completely to the sweater. Once they do they go about their daily scratch and peck as if they grew the sweaters themselves."

Chicken sweaters are also used by many rescue organizations that take in battery hens, which are usually sold for slaughter when they start producing fewer eggs. These birds are often missing a lot of their feathers because of the cramped, stressful conditions they live in.

However, while many people with chickens insist that sweaters keep their flocks healthy and warm, not everyone thinks the knitted garments are necessary.

Other chicken keepers point out that the birds are warm-blooded and able to regulate their own body temperatures by fluffing their feathers, roosting and huddling together for warmth.

They argue that such natural behaviors can be restricted by sweaters. For example, when chickens fluff their feathers, this creates air pockets that keeps warm air close to the bird's body.

"We ought not confuse our comfort level with a chicken's comfort level," writes Kathy Shea Mormino, who maintains the Chicken Chick blog. "In freezing temperatures, the average backyard chicken that is molting furiously would be better served by a retreat to an indoor dog crate in the basement or garage than a sweater."

hen wearing sweaterStill, other keepers say the use of chicken sweaters depends on several factors, including climate, the bird's health and the behavior of the rest of the flock, which sometimes peck at other chickens' exposed skin during molting.

And several animal shelters in cold climates say the tiny sweaters are beneficial to featherless rescued battery hens.

"The hens usually come out of farms quite bald and can be underweight,” said Miranda McPherson, who has knitted sweaters for England’s Little Hen Rescue. "They will soon fatten up and regain their feathers with the right care, but while they are waiting for their feathers to grow back, they can benefit from our knitted jumpers."

You can find knitting patterns and directions to make your own chicken sweater online, or you can purchase them from several Etsy sellers, including Schmidt's Folk and Farm shop.

Not sure if sweaters are right for your flock? Here's more information about how to keep your chickens warm this winter.

Below, check out more photos of fashionable fowl in sweaters.






Source: http://www.mnn.com/family/pets/stories/does-your-chicken-need-a-sweater#ixzz3SBbUQugw

Coffee machine blast kills youth

A 21-year-old man died due to an explosion in a coffee dispensing machine used by a catering house at a function in north-east Delhi’s Sundar Nagari.

He sustained burns in the incident on Sunday and died on Monday, the police said.
The deceased, identified as Rashid, lived with family at Garima Garden in Ghaziabad. According to the police, he was working as a labourer with Golu Tent House in Sundar Nagri.

On Sunday, the tent house was booked for an engagement function at Sundar Nagri F-Block. “Rashid was working on the coffee dispensing machine when the incident occurred at around 8:30 pm,” said a police officer. After initial probe, it was suspected that the machine exploded due to accumulation of pressure.

Three others nearby were also injured. The police were informed, but the injured were taken to Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital before they reached the spot. “Rashid succumbed to burn injuries on Monday morning,” the officer added.

The injured have been identified as Naim, Imran and Guddu, who were invited to the function. The police said Imran’s condition is serious, while Naim and Guddu were discharged after first-aid treatment.

The police have questioned workers of the tent house and found that they were using machines of inferior quality. A case of causing death due to negligence has been filed with Nand Nagri police station. Rashid’s body was handed over to family after post-mortem on Monday. He is survived by his parents, two brothers and four sisters.

The investigating officer of the case told Deccan Herald that the owner of the tent house is likely to be arrested. Rashid had been working with the tent house for the past six months and also worked with other tent houses in north-east Delhi and Ghaziabad.


Source: http://www.deccanherald.com/content/460463/coffee-machine-blast-kills-youth.html