10 Inspiring Stories Of Lifesaving Civilian Heroes

10Bernard Kinvi Since 2013, the Central African Republic has been ravaged by a civil war between the Muslim Seleka movement and the Christian anti-balaka (“anti-machete”) militias. Both sides have committed massacres and other atrocities, killing thousands and driving hundreds of thousands from their homes. So Father Bernard Kinvi was putting himself at great risk when he began sheltering wounded Christians and Muslims alike at his small mission hospital in Bossemptele. The danger became even greater when the Seleka were ousted in January 2014 and the anti-balaka began converging in force on his community as part of their mission to wipe out the country’s Muslims once and for all....

January 11, 2023 · 10 min · 1978 words · Stephen Crosby

10 Interesting Facts About The New York Times

The facts include everything from its humble beginnings to its famous crossword puzzle. Would you believe that The New York Times initially hated the puzzle and even called it a “a familiar form of madness”? Why did they reverse themselves on the puzzle, and why were they once so obsessed with bus plunges? The answers may surprise you. 10 The Founder Of The New York Times Warded Off Violent Protesters With A Gatling Gun On July 13, 1863, violent demonstrators took over the streets of New York to protest the conscription law passed by the US Congress on March 3 of that year....

January 11, 2023 · 11 min · 2256 words · Priscilla Brown

10 Inventors Killed By Their Inventions

Henry Winstanley was the a famous English lighthouse architect and engineer who constructed the first Eddystone lighthouse. Winstanley wished to test the lighthouse’s strength and so demanded to be inside it during a storm. The lighthouse collapsed, killing Winstanley and five other people. Alexander Bogdanov was a noted Russian physician, philosopher, economist, science fiction writer, and revolutionary. One of his many scientific experiments involved ideas of possible rejuvenation through blood transfusion....

January 11, 2023 · 5 min · 910 words · Cindy Starks

10 Jobs From The Early 1900S That Totally Sucked

Kids worked those long hours in the mines or the mills alongside one of their parents. Adults worked jobs that barely paid enough to put food on the table. There were no health care benefits, and no one looked out for the safety of workers. 10 Horse Urine Collector In the 1930s, the Canadian medical establishment needed pregnant horse urine to make its estrogen. At that time, estrogen was used to relieve menopause symptoms....

January 11, 2023 · 10 min · 1951 words · Preston Moon

10 Legends Of Ancient Megaliths And Stones From The British Isles

10 Nine Stane RigScotland The Nine Stane Rig (aka the Nine Stanes Stone Circle or the Ninestane Rig) is nestled among trees in the borderlands between Scotland and England. The prehistoric stones are thought to have been erected as a calendar for local farmers, telling them when to plant their crops by measuring the movement of the Moon against the circle. Later, it became a cairn, and that’s where the creepy part comes in....

January 11, 2023 · 15 min · 3185 words · Wesley Day

10 Lesser Known Cases Of Kidnapping

10Dail Dinwiddie On the night of September 23, 1992, in Columbia, South Carolina, a 23-year-old woman named Dail Dinwiddie went out to a bar to drink with some of her friends after a U2 concert. The bouncer at the bar noticed her leave around 1:30 AM, and she was never seen again. Law enforcement immediately believed it was a kidnapping because everyone that knew Dail said she was an extremely responsible young woman....

January 11, 2023 · 10 min · 2077 words · Margaret Green

10 Lies Taught To Us In School

Except, of course, for all the ridiculously irresponsible lies we’re being fed. Here are ten of the biggest lies taught to us in school. If you look closely at the inside of your wrist, you’ll probably see a small network of blue veins running up into your hand. Despite what they might teach you in elementary school, that’s not blue blood running through there. The myth is that deoxygenated blood is blue, while blood leaving the heart is red because it’s been filled with fresh oxygen....

January 11, 2023 · 10 min · 1923 words · David Horner

10 Locations Around The World Where The Dead Roam At Night

There are many social media platforms, such as Reddit, where people can relate their ghostly, unexplained, and supernatural experiences. On this list are more ghostly incidents experienced by people around the world. 10 Odeon Cinema In 1946, 2,000 people were seated in the Odeon Cinema in Bristol to watch The Light That Failed. Early on in the film, the main character was blinded after being shot. What people didn’t know at the time was that that cinema manager Robert Parrington Jackson was being murdered in his office right then....

January 11, 2023 · 8 min · 1600 words · Jason Trevino

10 Map Mistakes With Momentous Consequences

10 French And Indian War Before and during the American Revolutionary War, not many maps of the American continent existed. Consequently, many military maps were made in the field, often under fire, and battles might be won or lost based on their accuracy. According to authors Richard Brown and Paul Cohen, maps sometimes even caused war. Countries involved in land disputes have backed up their claims to the disputed land with maps that didn’t clearly represent the owner of the land in question....

January 11, 2023 · 9 min · 1891 words · John Nipper

10 Mind Blowing Things That Happened This Week 5 4 18

While much of the world was enjoying the May Day holiday, the gigantic story spinning wheel that is modern-day Washington, DC, was in full overdrive once again. Leaks and gaffes dominated the headlines, all with the potential to become truly huge stories. But it wasn’t just on Capitol Hill where madness was underway. Across the globe, big changes were afoot . . . along with plenty of flat-out strangeness....

January 11, 2023 · 9 min · 1814 words · Donald Freeman

10 Modern Explorers Who Pushed The Limits

On May 23, 2012, Gary Connery jumped out of a helicopter 2,400 feet (731.5 meters) above the ground. A minute later, clocking speeds of 80mph (128 kph), he landed. Without a parachute. Wingsuit jumping is the sport of skydiving with specially designed suits that allow the wearer to glide, sometimes for miles, before releasing their parachute and drifting through the final descent. Gary Connery simply decided that the parachute wasn’t necessary anymore, and opted instead for a makeshift landing strip of stacked cardboard boxes....

January 11, 2023 · 7 min · 1294 words · Damien Thomas

10 Modern Witch Hunts You Won T Believe Happened Recently

Across much of sub-Saharan Africa and other places, the hunting and purging of witches and practitioners of the dark arts continues. Not only is it a pervasive problem, but the scale of these operations has only worsened with thousands of people falling victim to accusations of sorcery. Here are 10 examples of modern witch hunts that you won’t believe happened so recently. SEE ALSO: 10 Infamous Witch-Hunters From History...

January 11, 2023 · 9 min · 1807 words · Jason Walker

10 Moments In The History Of The Orgy

Contrary to popular belief and assumption, orgies have actually always been popular; there really hasn’t been a time in human history where people didn’t like sex with a bunch of other people.[1] Did you know that group sex was a big thing in the 16th century? Well, it was. From Xochiquetzal, the Aztec fertility goddess, to Ishtar of ancient Babylon, humans have been sex-crazed and horny since the dawn of time, and there have certainly been orgies going on throughout the ages somewhere....

January 11, 2023 · 10 min · 2033 words · Donald Gonzales

10 Moons Humans Could Colonize

However, there are several moons throughout the solar system that are seemingly well-suited for us to set up colonies, and with signs of liquid water being present on some of them, we may find life is already there, albeit in microbe form. Whether they could host a small permanent base to launch further missions or a full-fledged colonized society, here are ten moons that human beings may very well call home in the future....

January 11, 2023 · 12 min · 2506 words · Lee Neu

10 More Bizarre Videos

10 Begotten – Elias Merhige Merhige is an American avant garde film director. This is the full version of his cult film Begotten. It starts to get really weird around 1 minute 50 in. I warn you – this is pretty hideous. The film opens with God killing himself with a straight-razor. 9 Eraserhead – David Lynch This is a snippet of one of David Lynch’s early films. It was made in 1977 and it is a surrealist horror film which has become a cult classic....

January 11, 2023 · 3 min · 479 words · Laura Montijo

10 More Major Breakthroughs Of Humanity

Although a number of substances were known for a long time to make people insensible to pain, they were not used in surgery until the nineteenth century. Up until this point, surgery was performed by butchers and their ilk, as it was done with the patient fully conscious (although often inebriated to dull the pain) and as quickly as possible. The patient would violently struggle, scream, and frequently bleed to death in a very short amount of time....

January 11, 2023 · 8 min · 1700 words · Anna Cummings

10 Most Nostalgic Mcdonalds Happy Meal Toys

Beyond stuffing ourselves with gloriously greasy chicken nuggets and piping hot fries—without worrying about calories—we looked forward to what cool trinket we’d find inside the cheerful red and yellow box. Are you smiling yet? Come relive those memories with us as we explore 10 of the most nostalgic McDonald’s Happy Meal toys ever. 10 Grimace, Hamburglar, & Birdie (1979) Yes, we know, Ronald McDonald always looked like something from a creepy movie, and that cup on his nose… We were definitely relieved when McDonald’s introduced Grimace, the affable monster, Hamburglar, the burger hoarder, and Birdie, the girly early bird, to take the edge off....

January 11, 2023 · 9 min · 1834 words · Paul Bogle

10 Mysterious Deaths Connected To Conspiracy Theories

10Eugenio Berrios In 1995, Eugenio Berrios’s skeleton was unearthed on a beach in Uruguay. Berrios was a chemist who had become notorious for his work with Chile’s DINA intelligence agency. During the US-backed Pinochet dictatorship, he produced sarin gas and other chemical weapons in the basement of a Santiago villa. After Chile became a democracy, Berrios was ordered to testify about his activities. Instead, Chilean intelligence officers smuggled him to Uruguay....

January 11, 2023 · 8 min · 1551 words · Lorraine Rogers

10 Myths About Famous Explorers

10Robert Peary Was The First Man To Reach The North Pole The Truth: Not even in his own account was Peary the first man to the pole. That was actually the other member of his expedition, Matthew Henson. However, Henson was black, so while Peary was widely celebrated, Henson sank into obscurity and had to get a job in customs to get by. Peary refused to answer Henson’s letters, help him get a job, or return the photos of the expedition that Henson had taken and paid for....

January 11, 2023 · 11 min · 2323 words · Casandra Smith

10 Nazis Who Killed Themselves With Cyanide Suicide Capsules

In an ironic twist of fate, many notable Nazis would later die by the very poison they so heavily utilized, administering the agent themselves as the war unraveled and their lives fell apart. Staring down the barrel of the Allied invasion, these Nazis knew their time was up and opted to take their own lives. Twisted irony? The easy way out? Or did they finally get a rightfully deserved taste of their own medicine?...

January 11, 2023 · 9 min · 1885 words · Robert Hummel