
703
97.7K posts

703
@UtProsim540
HTTR❤💛 Hokies🦃 Cubs 🎵 Oh won't you do this for me son,if you can? It's a Republic if we can keep it. #NeverForget 9/11/01 4/16/07


This little guy knows he’s basically Neo in the Matrix. He’s just casually dodging death, looking around at the crowd like, "What?" To a cat, a cobra strikes in slow motion. A snake lunges at 50 milliseconds, but a cat's neuro-reflexes are twice as fast. At the end the Cobra leaves annoyed.😏








I can't believe this is real. The Chancellor of UC San Francisco testified under oath that a "vast majority of pregnancies are in women." Implying some pregnancies occur in men. When asked directly whether a non-biological woman has ever had a baby, he refused to answer. This is the head of one of the top medical schools in the country.

In 1880s, an entire town made it illegal to sell ice cream sodas on Sundays. So drugstore owners found a loophole, and accidentally invented one of the most popular desserts in the world. The town of Evanston, Illinois passed a “blue law” banning the sale of sodas on the Sabbath, since church leaders considered them too frivolous for a holy day. Soda fountain owners had a problem: customers still wanted something sweet after church. Their solution was simple. They served the ice cream with syrup poured on top, but left out the soda water entirely, technically staying within the letter of the law while completely ignoring its spirit. A nearly identical story is told 200 miles away in Two Rivers, Wisconsin, where a soda fountain owner named Ed Berners is said to have done the exact same thing that same decade, purely because it was Sunday and sodas weren’t for sale that day. He liked the result so much he kept selling it, first only on Sundays, then every day of the week. Either way, the name followed the same logic. The treat was called a “Sunday” at first, until local church leaders objected to a dessert being named after a holy day. So the spelling was quietly changed to “sundae” instead, close enough to keep the joke, safe enough to keep the peace. Thus, an ice cream Sundae drenched in hot fudge and toppings was born... © Eats History #archaeohistories












