Daphne Heights
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Daphne Heights
@Busung12345
Love wins Ugandan Chelsea fan
Kampala, Uganda Katılım Mayıs 2021
2.8K Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
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【警告】全人類、口の中で「うんちの臭い成分」が作られている可能性があります。
その成分の名前は「スカトール」です。
スカトールは腸内で作られる便臭成分の一種ですが、実は口の中でも、細菌がタンパク質を分解することで発生することがあります。
さらに面白いことに、スカトールは超低濃度ではジャスミンの香りの一部として利用される物質です。
しかし濃度が上がると、人間はそれを「便の臭い」として認識します。
つまり、「花の香り」と「便の臭い」は紙一重なんです。
口臭の原因はスカトールだけではありませんが、
・フロス
・舌磨き
・十分な水分補給
を習慣化するだけでも、臭いの原因となる細菌や汚れの対策になります。
今日フロスしてない人、今すぐやってください。
Yahoo!ニュース@YahooNewsTopics
【口から「ウンチ臭」原因と対策】 news.yahoo.co.jp/pickup/6582863
日本語

Would you take him?
FCBayernNews@MiaSanMiaNews
🚨 According to @MatteMoretto, #FCBayern considers Sergiño Dest as a market option — this has been confirmed. There is nothing advanced between the two parties; for now, it’s just a name on the list while they wait to see other possible departures from the German club as well.
English

In 1965, a 17-year-old girl in Sicily was kidnapped, assaulted, and held captive for over a week.
Then her attacker offered her a deal:
Marry him, and everything would be “forgiven.”
At the time, Italian law allowed rapists to avoid punishment if they married their victims.
It was called “reparatory marriage.”
The logic was horrifying:
A woman’s “honor” mattered more than her consent.
If she married the man who violated her, her reputation could supposedly be restored — and the rapist could walk free.
Most women had no real choice.
Families pressured them.
Communities expected obedience.
The law itself encouraged silence.
But Franca Viola said no.
At 17 years old, traumatized and publicly shamed, she refused to marry the man who assaulted her.
That single word changed Italy forever.
Her decision sparked outrage in her town.
Neighbors turned against her family.
Their vineyards and olive groves were burned in retaliation.
But Franca’s father stood beside her and supported her decision to press charges.
In 1966, Franca testified publicly against her attacker in court.
At a time when most victims were expected to stay silent forever, she spoke openly in front of the entire country.
Italy watched in shock.
Her attacker, Filippo Melodia, was convicted and sentenced to prison.
For the first time in Italian history, a woman had publicly rejected “reparatory marriage” and won.
The case became international news.
But the law itself still remained.
For another 15 years, rapists in Italy could technically still escape punishment by marrying their victims.
Then finally, in 1981, Italy abolished the law completely.
And many activists pointed to Franca Viola as the moment the country first began confronting the cruelty of that system.
Years later, Franca married a childhood friend who had stood beside her through everything.
Not because she needed her “honor restored.”
But because she deserved love, dignity, and a life defined by her own choices.
That’s why her story still matters.
Franca Viola wasn’t just resisting one man.
She was resisting an entire culture that treated women’s suffering as something to hide rather than something to fight.
At 17 years old, she stood against her attacker, her community, and even the law itself.
And eventually, the law changed.
Sometimes history moves because powerful people decide to act.
And sometimes history moves because one terrified teenager quietly refuses to surrender.

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