the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

166433766_10159544347519365_8991261701865307400_o.jpg
 

Men Are Dipping Their Balls Into Soy Sauce After Learning Testicles Have Taste Receptors​




People are putting soy sauce on their testicles to see if they can 'taste' it after a study resurfaced online — but doctors insist that any sensation of flavor that they claim to detect is all in their heads.
The bizarre science experiments started after a woman named Regan came across an article about a 2013 study that determined mice have a form of taste receptors in their testes.

Men Are Dipping Their Balls Into Soy Sauce After Learning Testicles Have Taste Receptors
 

Men Are Dipping Their Balls Into Soy Sauce After Learning Testicles Have Taste Receptors​




People are putting soy sauce on their testicles to see if they can 'taste' it after a study resurfaced online — but doctors insist that any sensation of flavor that they claim to detect is all in their heads.
The bizarre science experiments started after a woman named Regan came across an article about a 2013 study that determined mice have a form of taste receptors in their testes.

Men Are Dipping Their Balls Into Soy Sauce After Learning Testicles Have Taste Receptors
Well after the experiment maybe somebody else will lick the soy off..
 
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LOL, no matter how much hoopla there is in the US, I doubt that proper "football" will ever take hold here. It's more of a "Chess Match" than the "Gladiatorial Spectacle" of American Football, which probably limits the fan base opportunity, AND the adverti$er$, who will not shell out big bucks only for pre-game, intermission and post-game opportunities. Couple that with the fact that the domestic professional game is of "Keystone Kops" quality, few younger athletes consider soccer as a potential career. Entire towns turn out for "Friday Night HS Football Lights", but only team parents sit at the Saturday Afternoon match.

At least US Women's Soccer is of international quality, and they're finally making enough noise to at least get pay parity with the Men's national team. If pay was performance related, the women should be making at least 2X of their male counterparts.


U.S. Men Fail to Qualify for Olympic Soccer Tournament​

Honduras dashes the Americans’ hopes of a trip to Tokyo, the latest in a string of qualifying failures for U.S. Soccer.

The United States will miss its third straight Olympic men’s soccer tournament. Honduras is going to its fourth in a row.

The United States will miss its third straight Olympic men’s soccer tournament. Honduras is going to its fourth in a row. Credit...Refugio Ruiz/Getty Images

By Andrew Das

The United States failed in its latest bid to qualify for the Olympic men’s soccer tournament on Sunday, falling to Honduras, 2-1, in a regional qualifying tournament in Mexico. A goalkeeping blunder proved to be the difference this time, but the feeling — and the frustration — was all too familiar.

The defeat was a humbling end to yet another Olympic qualifying campaign for the United States men, and it means the Americans will miss their third straight Summer Games. A United States men’s team last appeared in the Olympics in 2008, and now has failed to qualify for the Games in four of the past five cycles.

Goals by Honduras on either side of halftime — a bundled finish by the Brooklyn-born striker Juan Carlos Obregón Jr. in first-half stopped time and a deflected goal as a disastrous mistake by goalkeeper David Ochoa minutes into the second half — proved decisive, and sent the Hondurans to their fourth straight Olympics. Honduras finished fourth in Rio de Janeiro in 2016, losing to the eventual champion, Brazil, in the semifinals.

“The goal was to qualify for the Olympics, and we didn’t get the job done today,” defender Henry Kessler said.

U.S. Soccer will still have a representative in Tokyo: Its world champion women’s team qualified last year and will be a favorite to claim its fifth gold medal in the sport when the Olympics open in July. American men’s teams have played in the Olympics four times but have never won a medal.
 
The Biden Administration looks to curtail digital services taxes against U.S. companies.

The United Kingdom and other countries imposing new digital service taxes (DSTs), also called "tech taxes", has caught the attention of the United States. This taxation serves to tax multinational tech conglomerates which, the countries believe, should be taxed based on the value they generate from online activity within a specific country, not the physical location of the headquarters. This taxation would target U.S. digital service companies disproportionately, as they facilitate most of the world's online activity.

The Biden administration has threatened the United Kingdom with tariffs of up to 25 percent on a host of British imports, including ceramics, make-up products, furniture and more. The United States Trade Representative (USTR) federal agency has also begun an investigation into the United Kingdom, along with Italy, Turkey, India, Spain and Austria, for their digital services taxes.

Digital service taxes go against traditional international tax norms. As of March 2021, 26 nations have DSTs or comparable taxes for digital services.

What happens now? The prospect of tariffs and/or investigations may persuade the United Kingdom and other countries to rework their digital services taxes.
 
As of 4/1/21 all gulp products will be banned from being used in both freshwater and saltwater tournaments, they are also pushing a legislation to ban gulp outright due to its toxic affects on fish
Read more about it here
https://youtu.be/ub82Xb1C8os
May be an image of text
C'mon @movetheboat , you can do better. You're starting to emulate those you like to make fun of...

MLF Bass Pro Tour Bans Berkley PowerBait MaxScent​

By MLF Communications 18h ago




mlf-bans-berkley-maxscent.jpg

Wired2fish
Major League Fishing (MLF) announced today a rule change to Bass Pro Tour Rule No. 7 regarding Tackle and Equipment, which addresses the usage of Berkley PowerBait MaxScent baits on the MLF Bass Pro Tour. Effective immediately, anglers that compete on the Bass Pro Tour are prohibited from using any Berkley PowerBait MaxScent product, both in practice and competition.

"MLF has studied the use of the Berkley PowerBait MaxScent since its launch in 2018, and we've made the decision to no longer permit its usage on the Bass Pro Tour," Aaron Beshears, MLF Bass Pro Tour Director said. "The ban applies only to Berkley PowerBait MaxScent baits. At this time, original Berkley PowerBait and Berkley Gulp! baits are not included in this restriction.

For further clarification on the elimination of Berkley PowerBait MaxScent from Bass Pro Tour competition, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com.

"The bait has simply evolved to a point that it provides an unfair competitive advantage to Bass Pro Tour anglers that cannot use the product - whether through limited availability or competing sponsorship restrictions," Beshears continued. "That said, Berkley PowerBait MaxScent baits will still be permitted in our MLF BIG5 tournament circuits. This decision is consistent with the wishes of the majority of our Bass Pro Tour anglers."

Berkley remains a sponsor of MLF and the Bass Pro Tour, and MLF is currently in discussions with the company and its stakeholders regarding this decision.

"We are proud to be an angler-driven league and to continue to support our anglers and their livelihood with this decision," said Boyd Duckett, MLF co-founder and President of the Professional Bass Tour Anglers' Association (PBTAA). "The Alabama Rig was banned in 2013 for similar reasons and we believe this is the next crucial step to creating a level playing field and ensuring no one angler or group of anglers has an unfair advantage over the rest of the field.

"Since 2012, we have prided ourselves on listening to our anglers, providing them with excellent tournaments on premium fisheries and a game that can be played and won by any competitor. We believe the game must continue to evolve as well in order to preserve the integrity of the sport."
The Berkley PowerBait MaxScent products which are now prohibited from usage on the Bass Pro Tour are:
  • PowerBait MaxScent Creature Hawg
  • PowerBait MaxScent Critter Hawg
  • PowerBait MaxScent D-Worm
  • PowerBait MaxScent Flat Worm
  • PowerBait MaxScent Flatnose Jerk Shad
  • PowerBait MaxScent Flatnose Minnow
  • PowerBait MaxScent Hit Worm
  • PowerBait MaxScent Hit Worm Magnum
  • PowerBait MaxScent Kingtail
  • PowerBait MaxScent Lizard
  • PowerBait MaxScent Lunch Worm
  • PowerBait MaxScent Meaty Chunk
  • PowerBait MaxScent Power Chunk
  • PowerBait MaxScent The General

P.S. APRIL FOOLS!

 

Yo-Ho, Yo-Ho, a pirate's life for me...​

Ancient coins found in Rhode Island orchard may solve mystery of murderous 1600s pirate​

pressherald.com/2021/04/01/ancient-coins-found-in-rhode-island-orchard-may-solve-mystery-of-murderous-1600s-pirate/

By WILLIAM J. KOLE April 1, 2021
A 17th century Arabian silver coin, top, that research shows was struck in 1693 in Yemen, rests near an Oak Tree Shilling minted in 1652 by the Massachusetts Bay Colony, below, and a Spanish half real coin from 1727, right, on a table, in Warwick, R.I., Thursday, March 11. The Arabian coin was found at a farm, in Middletown, R.I., in 2014 by metal detectorist Jim Bailey, who contends it was plundered in 1695 by English pirate Henry Every from Muslim pilgrims sailing home to India after a pilgrimage to Mecca.


WARWICK, R.I. — A handful of coins unearthed from a pick-your-own-fruit orchard in rural Rhode Island and other random corners of New England may help solve one of the planet’s oldest cold cases.
The villain in this tale: a murderous English pirate who became the world’s most-wanted criminal after plundering a ship carrying Muslim pilgrims home to India from Mecca, then eluded capture by posing as a slave trader.

“It’s a new history of a nearly perfect crime,” said Jim Bailey, an amateur historian and metal detectorist who found the first intact 17th-century Arabian coin in a meadow in Middletown.

That ancient pocket change — among the oldest ever found in North America — could explain how pirate Capt. Henry Every vanished into the wind.

On Sept. 7, 1695, the pirate ship Fancy, commanded by Every, ambushed and captured the Ganj-i-Sawai, a royal vessel owned by Indian emperor Aurangzeb, then one of the world’s most powerful men. Aboard were not only the worshipers returning from their pilgrimage, but tens of millions of dollars’ worth of gold and silver.

What followed was one of the most lucrative and heinous robberies of all time.

Historical accounts say his band tortured and killed the men aboard the Indian ship and raped the women before escaping to the Bahamas, a haven for pirates. But word quickly spread of their crimes, and English King William III — under enormous pressure from a scandalized India and the East India Company trading giant — put a large bounty on their heads.

“If you Google ‘first worldwide manhunt,’ it comes up as Every,” Bailey said. “Everybody was looking for these guys.”

Pirate_Plunder_18747
Amateur historian Jim Bailey uses a metal detector to scan for Colonial-era artifacts in a field, Thursday, March 11, in Warwick, R.I. AP Photo/Steven Senne

Until now, historians only knew that Every eventually sailed to Ireland in 1696, where the trail went cold. But Bailey says the coins he and others have found are evidence the notorious pirate first made his way to the American colonies, where he and his crew used the plunder for day-to-day expenses while on the run.

The first complete coin surfaced in 2014 at Sweet Berry Farm in Middletown, a spot that had piqued Bailey’s curiosity two years earlier after he found old colonial coins, an 18th-century shoe buckle and some musket balls.

Waving a metal detector over the soil, he got a signal, dug down and hit literal paydirt: a darkened, dime-sized silver coin he initially assumed was either Spanish or money minted by the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Peering closer, the Arabic text on the coin got his pulse racing. “I thought, ‘Oh my God,’” he said.
Research confirmed the exotic coin was minted in 1693 in Yemen. That immediately raised questions, Bailey said, since there’s no evidence that American colonists struggling to eke out a living in the New World traveled to anywhere in the Middle East to trade until decades later.

Since then, other detectorists have unearthed 15 additional Arabian coins from the same era — 10 in Massachusetts, three in Rhode Island and two in Connecticut. Another was found in North Carolina, where records show some of Every’s men first came ashore.

“It seems like some of his crew were able to settle in New England and integrate,” said Sarah Sportman, state archaeologist for Connecticut, where one of the coins was found in 2018 at the ongoing excavation of a 17th-century farm site.

“It was almost like a money laundering scheme,” she said.

Although it sounds unthinkable now, Every was able to hide in plain sight by posing as a slave trader — an emerging profession in 1690s New England. On his way to the Bahamas, he even stopped at the French island of Reunion to get some Black captives so he’d look the part, Bailey said.

Obscure records show a ship called the Sea Flower, used by the pirates after they ditched the Fancy, sailed along the Eastern seaboard. It arrived with nearly four dozen slaves in 1696 in Newport, Rhode Island, which became a major hub of the North American slave trade in the 18th century.

“There’s extensive primary source documentation to show the American colonies were bases of operation for pirates,” said Bailey, 53, who holds a degree in anthropology from the University of Rhode Island and worked as an archaeological assistant on explorations of the Wydah Gally pirate ship wreck off Cape Cod in the late 1980s.

Bailey, whose day job is analyzing security at the state’s prison complex, has published his findings in a research journal of the American Numismatic Society, an organization devoted to the study of coins and medals.

Archaeologists and historians familiar with but not involved in Bailey’s work say they’re intrigued, and believe it’s shedding new light on one of the world’s most enduring criminal mysteries.

“Jim’s research is impeccable,” said Kevin McBride, a professor of archaeology at the University of Connecticut. “It’s cool stuff. It’s really a pretty interesting story.”

Mark Hanna, an associate professor of history at the University of California-San Diego and an expert in piracy in early America, said that when he first saw photos of Bailey’s coin, “I lost my mind.”

“Finding those coins, for me, was a huge thing,” said Hanna, author of the 2015 book, “Pirate Nests and the Rise of the British Empire.” “The story of Capt. Every is one of global significance. This material object — this little thing — can help me explain that.”

Every’s exploits have inspired a 2020 book by Steven Johnson, “Enemy of All Mankind;” PlayStation’s popular “Uncharted” series of video games; and a Sony Pictures movie version of “Uncharted” starring Tom Holland, Mark Wahlberg and Antonio Banderas that’s slated for release early in 2022.

Bailey, who keeps his most valuable finds not at his home but in a safe deposit box, says he’ll keep digging.

“For me, it’s always been about the thrill of the hunt, not about the money,” he said. “The only thing better than finding these objects is the long-lost stories behind them.”
 
Since I live "way above the Toothline" and services like Grub Hub and Uber Eats are things "Cidiots" talk about, I'm just curious what everyone here thinks about this...

Our View: Restaurants, customers hurt by national delivery services’ underhanded tactics​

pressherald.com/2021/04/02/our-view-portland-area-restaurants-customers-hurt-when-food-delivery-services-fall-short/

By The Editorial BoardApril 2, 2021

Imagine you want to try that restaurant across town you’ve been hearing about. So you type its name into Google, find its menu and – this being the year of COVID – order for delivery.

But the food’s a little more expensive than you thought it would be, and when it comes – later than expected – it’s missing an item, and a little on the cold side.

Think you’re ever ordering from there again?

Those are among the problems many people are encountering around the country when it comes to third-party food delivery services, such as DoorDash, Grubhub, Postmates and Uber Eats, who hold the reputations of restaurants in their hands but have a troubling history of unsavory tactics.

The city of Portland, one of the top restaurant cities in the country, is considering new rules governing the delivery services after a number of restaurants complained that the companies were hurting their business, the Press Herald reported this week.

One, a local coffee shop owner, said his place was listed twice on DoorDash, leading to orders his business was not prepared for. Another said a Grubhub ad is now his first listing on Google. Neither owner partners with any of the national delivery services.

Stories like those are common across the country. In most cases, the national food delivery services are allowed to offer delivery from any restaurant; it can be difficult, restaurants say, to be removed from their site.
Often, they grab a menu off the internet and post it, whether it’s accurate or not, leading to customer confusion. Then they not only charge the customer for delivery but also charge the restaurant an often-exorbitant service fee, taking away most if not all of the profits from the order.

When it comes to delivering food, it’s a poor business model that has rarely turned a profit.

But companies like Grubhub are backed by billions in venture capital, which they have used to take control of markets. They can afford to take a loss on deliveries in order to bring in customers. They can put their results on the top of the search engine so that hungry customers are more likely to find a restaurant through the delivery service.

In both ways, they are able to build a customer base separate from restaurants, making them a power the food industry can’t ignore.

The national delivery services have also reportedly used more underhanded means to the same end, buying up domain names related to tens of thousands of restaurants, and creating websites and phone numbers designed to fool customers into thinking they were dealing with the restaurants themselves. Workers, who are contractors, rather than employees, have cited mistreatment.

Those actions have angered restaurant owners and others, but they’ve also secured them the market. The four services mentioned above account for 98 percent of all food delivery sales.

That sort of dominance gives them far too much control over restaurants at a time when delivery is becoming a bigger part of the business.

It also makes it difficult for any competition to take hold, even if it offers better service for customers and restaurants. Though the Portland area has two local delivery options – CarHop and 2DineIn – the national services are still major players, whether the restaurants want them to be or not.

That’s not the way it should work.

Portland is among the places now considering a requirement that the services have a formal agreement with any restaurant whose food it delivers, as well as capping service fees. So is New Hampshire.

Other jurisdictions, too, should consider regulation that favors good service over venture financing.

Food delivery has been a godsend during the pandemic, and its importance in the food service industry will remain prominent from here on out.

As the industry changes, Maine should make sure that benefits to delivery services don’t overtake those to restaurants and customers.
 

The modernization drive has been so successful that in Pentagon war games, the U.S. consistently loses to China in hypothetical conflicts over Taiwan.

A successfully executed invasion would obliterate the U.S. posture in the Pacific, potentially driving U.S. allies into Beijing’s orbit. All of America’s bases in the region would be highly vulnerable to attack, and the success of the Taiwan invasion would vindicate the CCP’s thesis of a West in decline, emboldening it to seek further gains. A communist takeover could make for the start of a Chinese-led order in East Asia, and perhaps beyond.
 

Yo-Ho, Yo-Ho, a pirate's life for me...​

Ancient coins found in Rhode Island orchard may solve mystery of murderous 1600s pirate​

pressherald.com/2021/04/01/ancient-coins-found-in-rhode-island-orchard-may-solve-mystery-of-murderous-1600s-pirate/

By WILLIAM J. KOLE April 1, 2021
A 17th century Arabian silver coin, top, that research shows was struck in 1693 in Yemen, rests near an Oak Tree Shilling minted in 1652 by the Massachusetts Bay Colony, below, and a Spanish half real coin from 1727, right, on a table, in Warwick, R.I., Thursday, March 11. The Arabian coin was found at a farm, in Middletown, R.I., in 2014 by metal detectorist Jim Bailey, who contends it was plundered in 1695 by English pirate Henry Every from Muslim pilgrims sailing home to India after a pilgrimage to Mecca.


WARWICK, R.I. — A handful of coins unearthed from a pick-your-own-fruit orchard in rural Rhode Island and other random corners of New England may help solve one of the planet’s oldest cold cases.
The villain in this tale: a murderous English pirate who became the world’s most-wanted criminal after plundering a ship carrying Muslim pilgrims home to India from Mecca, then eluded capture by posing as a slave trader.

“It’s a new history of a nearly perfect crime,” said Jim Bailey, an amateur historian and metal detectorist who found the first intact 17th-century Arabian coin in a meadow in Middletown.

That ancient pocket change — among the oldest ever found in North America — could explain how pirate Capt. Henry Every vanished into the wind.

On Sept. 7, 1695, the pirate ship Fancy, commanded by Every, ambushed and captured the Ganj-i-Sawai, a royal vessel owned by Indian emperor Aurangzeb, then one of the world’s most powerful men. Aboard were not only the worshipers returning from their pilgrimage, but tens of millions of dollars’ worth of gold and silver.

What followed was one of the most lucrative and heinous robberies of all time.

Historical accounts say his band tortured and killed the men aboard the Indian ship and raped the women before escaping to the Bahamas, a haven for pirates. But word quickly spread of their crimes, and English King William III — under enormous pressure from a scandalized India and the East India Company trading giant — put a large bounty on their heads.

“If you Google ‘first worldwide manhunt,’ it comes up as Every,” Bailey said. “Everybody was looking for these guys.”

Pirate_Plunder_18747
Amateur historian Jim Bailey uses a metal detector to scan for Colonial-era artifacts in a field, Thursday, March 11, in Warwick, R.I. AP Photo/Steven Senne

Until now, historians only knew that Every eventually sailed to Ireland in 1696, where the trail went cold. But Bailey says the coins he and others have found are evidence the notorious pirate first made his way to the American colonies, where he and his crew used the plunder for day-to-day expenses while on the run.

The first complete coin surfaced in 2014 at Sweet Berry Farm in Middletown, a spot that had piqued Bailey’s curiosity two years earlier after he found old colonial coins, an 18th-century shoe buckle and some musket balls.

Waving a metal detector over the soil, he got a signal, dug down and hit literal paydirt: a darkened, dime-sized silver coin he initially assumed was either Spanish or money minted by the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Peering closer, the Arabic text on the coin got his pulse racing. “I thought, ‘Oh my God,’” he said.
Research confirmed the exotic coin was minted in 1693 in Yemen. That immediately raised questions, Bailey said, since there’s no evidence that American colonists struggling to eke out a living in the New World traveled to anywhere in the Middle East to trade until decades later.

Since then, other detectorists have unearthed 15 additional Arabian coins from the same era — 10 in Massachusetts, three in Rhode Island and two in Connecticut. Another was found in North Carolina, where records show some of Every’s men first came ashore.

“It seems like some of his crew were able to settle in New England and integrate,” said Sarah Sportman, state archaeologist for Connecticut, where one of the coins was found in 2018 at the ongoing excavation of a 17th-century farm site.

“It was almost like a money laundering scheme,” she said.

Although it sounds unthinkable now, Every was able to hide in plain sight by posing as a slave trader — an emerging profession in 1690s New England. On his way to the Bahamas, he even stopped at the French island of Reunion to get some Black captives so he’d look the part, Bailey said.

Obscure records show a ship called the Sea Flower, used by the pirates after they ditched the Fancy, sailed along the Eastern seaboard. It arrived with nearly four dozen slaves in 1696 in Newport, Rhode Island, which became a major hub of the North American slave trade in the 18th century.

“There’s extensive primary source documentation to show the American colonies were bases of operation for pirates,” said Bailey, 53, who holds a degree in anthropology from the University of Rhode Island and worked as an archaeological assistant on explorations of the Wydah Gally pirate ship wreck off Cape Cod in the late 1980s.

Bailey, whose day job is analyzing security at the state’s prison complex, has published his findings in a research journal of the American Numismatic Society, an organization devoted to the study of coins and medals.

Archaeologists and historians familiar with but not involved in Bailey’s work say they’re intrigued, and believe it’s shedding new light on one of the world’s most enduring criminal mysteries.

“Jim’s research is impeccable,” said Kevin McBride, a professor of archaeology at the University of Connecticut. “It’s cool stuff. It’s really a pretty interesting story.”

Mark Hanna, an associate professor of history at the University of California-San Diego and an expert in piracy in early America, said that when he first saw photos of Bailey’s coin, “I lost my mind.”

“Finding those coins, for me, was a huge thing,” said Hanna, author of the 2015 book, “Pirate Nests and the Rise of the British Empire.” “The story of Capt. Every is one of global significance. This material object — this little thing — can help me explain that.”

Every’s exploits have inspired a 2020 book by Steven Johnson, “Enemy of All Mankind;” PlayStation’s popular “Uncharted” series of video games; and a Sony Pictures movie version of “Uncharted” starring Tom Holland, Mark Wahlberg and Antonio Banderas that’s slated for release early in 2022.

Bailey, who keeps his most valuable finds not at his home but in a safe deposit box, says he’ll keep digging.

“For me, it’s always been about the thrill of the hunt, not about the money,” he said. “The only thing better than finding these objects is the long-lost stories behind them.”
ARRRRRRRRRRRR ye found er i see.
 
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