a_common_spring
a_common_spring t1_j9yagvd wrote
Reply to comment by MattyKatty in TIL about Janet Parker, the last person to die of smallpox in 1978. She worked above one of the last labs in its last months of permission to study the virus. The day Janet's viral strain was confirmed, Henry Bedson, the doctor in charge of the lab, took his own life. by w0mpum
Well I haven't read any details of the case. It did say a court, but I'm thinking there would have been some kind of inquiry into the case. Perhaps a criminal case against the lab owners and operators too. Idk. I'm thinking of reading that book.
a_common_spring t1_j9y7qum wrote
Reply to comment by londons_explorer in TIL about Janet Parker, the last person to die of smallpox in 1978. She worked above one of the last labs in its last months of permission to study the virus. The day Janet's viral strain was confirmed, Henry Bedson, the doctor in charge of the lab, took his own life. by w0mpum
I don't know anything about it. I'm just sharing a source that says he wasn't at fault cause someone asked.
Also I could envision a case where he was the boss of the lab, but had not been given adequate resources to make the lab safe, and had actively been trying to get them? Idk that's a made up scenario, I'm just saying there could be some way he wouldn't be at fault.
a_common_spring t1_j9xm4je wrote
Reply to comment by Trala_la_la in TIL about Janet Parker, the last person to die of smallpox in 1978. She worked above one of the last labs in its last months of permission to study the virus. The day Janet's viral strain was confirmed, Henry Bedson, the doctor in charge of the lab, took his own life. by w0mpum
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Bedson
Wikipedia lists a biography of Bedson as a source that he was not guilty. Apparently he was found not guilty after his death by a court. No one knows what really happened.
a_common_spring t1_j8q7pf1 wrote
Reply to comment by TimeshipTacoTaco in TIL: The Chamblee Incident. In 1989, Kenneth Lamar Noid, a mentally ill man who believed that the Domino's Pizza "Avoid the Noid" ads were personally directed towards him, antagonizing him. He took 2 Domino's employees hostage at gunpoint. by SilentWalrus92
Floyd?
a_common_spring t1_j61bzg3 wrote
Reply to comment by velvetretard in TIL of Complex PTSD, which arises from prolonged, inescapable trauma (like child abuse/neglect, sex trafficking, or solitary confinement). It's hard to spot & treat, and can last a lifetime. Victims have a diminished sense of self, and issues with trust, boundaries, cognition, motor skills, & more. by Pfeffer_Prinz
Thanks
a_common_spring t1_j5zy13s wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL of Complex PTSD, which arises from prolonged, inescapable trauma (like child abuse/neglect, sex trafficking, or solitary confinement). It's hard to spot & treat, and can last a lifetime. Victims have a diminished sense of self, and issues with trust, boundaries, cognition, motor skills, & more. by Pfeffer_Prinz
Doesn't matter if it was major or minor in some kind of empirical sense (which I don't even actually think is measurable). If you have it you have it.
I have cptsd I think, from my childhood. And I have spent years feeling stupid about it because so many other people had childhoods so much worse than mine. Like really. I wasn't even beaten. But I have it.
Maybe some brains are more prone to it? Who knows. But if you have it you have it, and you can get treatment and try to get better.
I'm also exmormon. I think that alone causes CPTSD in some people.
a_common_spring t1_j4g6bxs wrote
Cancer is when cells overgrow due to mutations in genes that affect the cell cycle, so cells start to reproduce and replicate without the controls. Control mechanisms within the cell cycle usually detect and repair bad DNA, and they make sure the cell doesn't reproduce at too high a rate, and they make sure that cells die at the right time.
Sometimes people are born with an inherited mutation that may contribute to cancer, but about 90% of cancers are caused by mutations that arise in the individual during their life. There's nothing from looking at a mutation to say what caused it, unless they look at your family members and decide that it was an inherited mutation.
The way they decide some chemicals are carcinogenic is that exposure to them correlates with higher rates of some kind of cancer. But they can't look at the mutation itself and say what caused it.
If you get a type of cancer that they have already noticed is highly correlated with exposure to a chemical you work with, then they might be able to say that your mutation was probably caused by that chemical.
a_common_spring t1_jdjz65g wrote
Reply to The largest recorded earthquake in Alberta's history was not a natural event, but most likely caused by disposal of oilsands wastewater, new research has concluded. by GeoGeoGeoGeo
That's so wild that human activity can cause EARTHQUAKES. do you know how big the earth's crust is? It's hella large.