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Saturday, April 7, 2012

Forced Evictions in China and a Bucket of Scorpions


Straight out of a Grade B horror flick, residents of an apartment complex in Shenzen, China, which borders Hong Kong, woke to find hundreds of scorpions invading their homes and covering their floors.
scorpion1 Forced Evictions in China and a Bucket of Scorpions picture
In the case of one frightened tenant, a scorpion crawling over his body awakened him. When he turned on the light, he found many more, creeping and crawling all over his bedroom.
It is believed that a real estate developer, in an attempt to force evictions, is behind the horrible horde of 110 pounds of living, stinging scorpions!
scorpion Forced Evictions in China and a Bucket of Scorpions picture
Residents told the press that a man carrying a large bucket was seen walking from the apartment’s development office and dumping the contents into open windows. Currently, the company is trying to evict the residents in favor of a more profitable construction project.
The company denies these allegations on the grounds that their deal was sealed with the construction company and that there would be no need to force evictions.
The apartments in question are slated for demolition, but homeowners have not yet signed anything as they are awaiting compensation settlements.
Police and residents spent 24 hours hunting down the scorpions and removing them from homes.
Forced evictions and the denial of full compensation by greedy developers happen often in China, and it is a major source of social discontent.
Check out this video below depicting the dynamic nature of this terrible trend…and watch where you walk! You never know what might be underfoot.
http://www.weirdasianews.com
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Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Top 10 Horniest Countries


Think you get it on as much as a porn star? It may depend on where you live. According to a 2008 Durex sex survey, only 53% of Americans have sex once a week, while 55% of British and 59% of Canadians admit the same. Ouch. So, who is rocking the most beds in the world? Check out our top 10 list of the horniest countries to find out.
NUMBER 10: MEXICO
NUMBER 9: SWITZERLAND
NUMBER 8: SPAIN
NUMBER 7: MALAYSIA
NUMBER 6: ITALY
NUMBER 5: POLAND
NUMBER 4: CHINA
NUMBER 3: RUSSIA
NUMBER 2: BRAZIL
NUMBER 1: GREECE
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Sunday, April 1, 2012

Naked Man Claims to Have a Nuke


William Bliss Mug Shot

People say a lot of crazy things when they're drunk. And they often take off their clothes.
Sometimes, you get both at the same time -- like when a naked man in Iowa City told police he had been messing around with nukes.
No nukes were found, but police say 41-year-old William T. Bliss did have a .111 blood alcohol level, which answers a lot of questions of him.
They say Bliss admitted to having had nine beers and vodka, and said he might have a drinking problem.
Ya think?
I'd be remiss if I didn't point out that this all took place in Johnson County, Iowa.
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Homer Simpson And This Stargazer Fish: Are They Related?



Old King Neptune must be a big fan of "The Simpsons" because he keeps creating sea creatures that resemble show characters.
First, there was the three-eyed Argentinean fish that, like "Blinky," popped up near a nuclear power plant, and now a British photographer has snapped a picture of an elusive stargazer fish that looks amazingly like Homer Simpson.
Mark Webster took the photo of the Homer fish while on an expedition in Indonesia and immediately saw the resemblance to the animation icon right down to the bulging eyes and that slightly vacant look with its mouth open, according to The FW.
There isn't quite a perfect match. The stargazer tends to hide from potential victims in the volcanic soil found in the Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi, Indonesia, whereas Simpson prefers hiding from Montgomery Burns behind his console at the Springfield Power Plant.
ANIMALS IN THE NEWS (Story continues below)

Webster, 56, who has been a professional photographer for more than 20 years, came to the Lembeh Strait specifically looking for weird marine wildlife when he saw the strange-looking stargazer fish looking up at him.
"I had seen stargazers before at other locations in Indonesia but the desire to find one here was that the color of the fish would contrast well with the dark volcanic sand,"Webster told Metro.co.uk. "I knew this would make the strange features stand out more. I'd asked my guide to help me find a stargazer and eventually we succeeded."

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Syrian Golden Hamsters: The Drunken Uncles of the Rodent World


Image credit: Michael Clinard
Syrian golden hamsters are—to put it mildly—the drunken uncles of the rodent world. In the wild, these hard-partying hamsters spend their summers gathering and storing fruit as a survival measure. By winter, when they need to break into the stash, the fruit has fermented. Over time, the Syrian hamsters’ appetite for alcohol only increases. Today, when given the choice between booze and water, these cuddly alcoholics choose the hard stuff every time.

Wilder still, the critters are impervious to hamster-ball DUIs. Because so much of their natural diet involves alcohol, Syrian hamsters have evolved to sport cartoonishly large livers that are nearly five times normal size (in relation to their other body parts). As a result, these hamsters rarely get sloshed.

While this biological quirk is great news for anyone who’s thinking of marketing cocktails to rodents, it’s even better for scientists. Researchers always need test subjects for alcohol studies, and Syrian golden hamsters are the perfect tipplers for any lab.
This article originally appeared in the March-April issue of mental_floss magazine Get a free issue here!


Read the full text here: http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/121513#ixzz1qkVRYq33
--brought to you by mental_floss! 
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Bear Saves Robert Biggs From Mountain Lion Attack In California

Bearlion


When Robert Biggs finished gazing at a cute, cuddly family of black bears and turned to continue on his day-hike in northern California on Monday, he thought he was safe.
The 69-year-old man from the town of Paradise was anything but.
He'd been watching a mother bear, her yearling and a newborn from about 40 feet away, but he had no idea that he was being stalked by a ferocious mountain lion. As he turned to leave, the cat pounced on his backpack with all four paws.
See the photo below
"He grabbed me from behind and knocked me to the ground," Biggs told The Huffington Post. "I was on my knees. I had my rock pick out because i was on a steep incline, and I smashed the cat in the head with it. He screamed, but he didn't let go."
His backpack and rock pick were the only things standing between him and certain death, Biggs said. He raised his weapon again for another swing at the hulking feline.
"That's when a blur on my left side grabbed the lion by its throat -- turns out it was the momma bear," he said. "I heard a tremendous screeching, some growling noises."
Biggs said that the bear ripped the cat's grip from his backpack, and the two titans clashed for another 15 seconds. The bear won the battle, probably because it "outweighed the cat 400 pounds to 100 pounds." The cat ran away, and the bear went back down on all fours, humbly making eye contact with Biggs before regrouping with her young.
Biggs -- who had been hiking the same two-mile trail in the Bean Soup Flat area for years -- left with a few scratches and bruises on his arm. Being a mountain man, he refused his wife's pleas that he go to the hospital, and instead put some peroxide on his wounds.
He told The Huffington Post that he owes everything to that bear.
"I'm 100-percent sure it did want to save my life," he said. "We made eye contact. I'd seen the bears before and I know she knew who I was."
Mountain lion attacks in California are reportedly rare. There were only 14 verified attacks on humans between 1890 and 2007, according to the California Department of Fish and Game's website.
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Cops Raid Wrong Home: Drug Bust Wasn't Intended For Fred Skinner, 76-Year-Old New York Man



Cops Raid Wrong Home


Drug enforcement officers in upstate New York bashed through an elderly man's front door only to discover that they had the wrong address.
Auburn resident Fred Skinner, 76, says he was eating toast at the breakfast table earlier this month when authorities raided his home in the Finger Lakes region.
"They just broke in," Skinner told The Huffington Post as a handyman fixed his front door today. "They told me not to move so I didn't move."
After turning the residence upside down for approximately five minutes and attempting to handcuff Skinner with guns drawn, authorities realized they busted down the wrong door.
"They looked at my table where I had the mail piled up," Skinner explained. "They said 'whose mail is this?' I said 'it's mine.' They said 'We've got the wrong house.'"
When the misguided authorities realized the error, one officer attempted to calm Skinner and gave him the police department's phone number so they could smooth things over later.
Auburn Police Chief Gary Gionnotta said that he spoke with Skinner's son and offered multiple apologies for the intrusion. He added that the incident is one of only a few he has witnessed in 16 years on the job.
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Evacuated Tube Travel To Replace Trains, Planes And Automobiles? (VIDEO)


Evacuated Tube Travel


Some people spend their life watching the tube, but Daryl Oster is spending his trying to get people to travel in one.
With experience that includes farming; marine, aeronautical and mechanical design and certification; and stock-trading, Oster is now trying to engineer the biggest change in transportation since the invention of the car cup holder: Evacuated Tube Travel.
To be fair, Evacuated Tube Travel might be even bigger -- Oster is proposing uisng magnetic levitation to send car-sized capsules through giant long vacuum tubes at speeds of up to 4,000 miles per hour.
The passenger vehicle is pressurized and has plenty of air, but moves through the airless tube on a magnetic track and all movement is controlled by manipulating the magnetic forces that are at play between the track and the capsule, according to Discovery.
That means the approximately 8,000-mile trip from Washington, D.C., to Beijing might take two hours, compared to the 14 hours it currently takes, not counting layovers.
And, he claims, the cost for the trip would only be $100.
Some people look at what Oster is proposing and think of the pneumatic tubes used at banks to transport cash and checks to car customers, but Oster says the real inspiration came from the great beyond.
"I was looking at how the moon moves around the Earth so fast and the perpetual motion that exists with all the planets," Oster told HuffPost Weird News moments before presenting his concept to California state officials in hopes of getting permission to build the first 3-mile track on a state right-of-way.
Oster sees the tubes being routed along current freeway right-of-ways to avoid congestion, but says building above ground will be the most cost-effective solution at first.
"Building across water will be the most expensive part, but even if you go from Washington to Beijing, you only need to build 90 miles of track across the Bering Strait," he said.
The idea of traveling by capsule may sound claustrophobic, but Oster's ET3 consortium claims that the transport would provide more room per passenger than airplanes or cars, and TVs could be provided to "provide distraction from negative thoughts," Gadling reported.
In addition, each tube would be constructed with emergency escape hatches and EMT facilities in case of emergency. Likewise, the braking system would be automatic with multiple backups, unlike, the website points out, the Springfield monorail.
Oster believes ETT is a cheaper alternative to other forms of transportation because it uses lighter, stronger materials. For instance, a 400-pound-capsule can hold up to 800 pounds and says he could get a sample track up in a year that only costs 25 percent of constructing a freeway.
"Also, it will be possible to ship goods and services the size of a single pallet without having to load up a full truck," Oster said.
Oster and his team are selling licenses for the rights to build the tracks and tubes, but says the ultimate network will need both private and public funding. He also plans to start a Kickstarter campaign in hopes of raising more funds.
If the project doesn't go, well, down the tube, it could change transportation forever. However, Oster says car buffs needn't worry too much.
"I see this as being similar to how steam power took over the horse during the Industrial Revolution," he said. "People still ride horses, but mostly for pleasure."
CORRECTION: An earlier version of the story incorrectly identified Daryl Oster as Scott Osler.


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Beyonce, A Dachshund Puppy, May Be The World's Smallest Dog


Beyonce


One of the world's biggest pop stars may now be sharing her name with the world's smallest puppy.
Beyonce, a dachshund mix born at the Grace Foundation animal shelter in El Dorado Hills, California on March 8, now measures less than four inches, according to the Sun.
The pipsqueak pup was so small when she was born that she could fit into a spoon.
Now, the NY Daily News reports that Beyonce is about the size of a business card, and can comfortably fit on top of an iPhone. The animal shelter has submitted an application to Guinness World Records on Beyonce's behalf for the title of smallest dog.
If Beyonce wins the title, it will be the culmination of a lucky streak for the diminutive dachshund. When her mother, Casey, was found pregnant and without an owner, Devore Animal Control scheduled the dog to be euthanized. However, they ultimately contacted the Grace Foundation, which agreed to take Casey in, according to CBS Sacramento.
When Casey finally gave birth, Beyonce, the last of five puppies to be born, had no heartbeat and was not breathing. Veterinarians performed heart compressions and mouth-to-mouth, and soon little Beyonce began breathing, the Telegraph reports.
The shelter states that Casey is now healthy and thriving. The pup and her mother and siblings will be up for adoption within the next few weeks, though none of the puppies will be available to take home prior to May 3. 

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Watch ‘The Hunger Games’ Recreated With Beanie Babies


Given the massive success of ‘The Hunger Games‘ film adaptation — it raked in $155 million over the weekend, making it the third biggest opening of all time — internet parodies are already starting to stack up. But perhaps the funniest of all is a recreation of the film starring adorable Beanie Babies. Remember those?
This isn’t just some low-rent fan parody, mind you. It’s more than 11 minutes long, has professional voice acting, a soundtrack and, of course, plush stuffed animals trying to kill each other.
A blue jay plays the role of “Katniss Everbean,” (get it??) while a yellow duck plays her love interest Peeta. (Fan favorites Rue, Haymitch, Caesar Flickerman and others appear as well.) There’s also a bit of Beanie-on-Beanie violence complete with little plastic beans as gore. Oh, the horror!
This awesome parody was created by Jeff Luppino-Esposito, Jamie T. McCelland and an extensive team of puppeteers and voice actors for the website The Online Musical. Is it the best of the recent crop of ‘Hunger Games’ parodies?

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