41 Genuine Random Facts That Are Hard to Believe | Random List #252

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1Narco cat

Narco cat

In 2019, a Russian cat was used by prisoners to sneak drugs into their penal colony near Moscow. The cat allegedly had 5.79 grams of hashish and 1.56 grams of amphetamine under its collar. Defense/prosecution lawyers each wanted the cat to support their case but it escaped from its kennel before trial.


2. In 2000, Tim Miller founded Nonprofit organization Texas EquuSearch, a search-and-recovery non-profit which has assisted with hundreds of missing-persons cases and located more than 400 living people and 238 bodies. His own daughter was abducted and murdered in 1984.


3. The most skilled sniper in all of World War 1 was a Canadian Indigenous man, Francis Pegahmagabow. He had 378 confirmed kills, captured over 300 enemy soldiers, and spent his post-war life fighting for Indigenous rights. He remains the most decorated Indigenous soldier in Canadian history.


4. In 2002, three geriatric Catholic nuns broke into a US nuclear missile launch facility, vandalized it with hammers, and drew crosses on the silo with their own blood.


5. Aspirin was trademarked by Bayer in 1897. Bayer, a German company, was forced to surrender the trademark in the Treaty of Versailles, causing aspirin to become a generic drug.


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6B.F. Skinner

B.F. Skinner

Psychologist B.F. Skinner tried to train pigeons to serve as guides for bombing runs in World War 2. After canceling the project, he successfully taught the pigeons to play ping pong instead.


7. During World War 2, there was a Nazi sailor who flushed his toilet incorrectly, causing his submarine (U-1206) to flood with seawater. The sub was forced to surface in view of the British who then attacked, resulting in the vessel's destruction, 4 Nazi deaths, and 46 Nazis captured.


8. Ethiopia sent troops to the Korean War as part of the UN Command. It is known as the Kagnew Battalions, 3,158 men served, of which 121 were killed and 538 wounded. They were never defeated in battle and not a single soldier surrendered. They were also respected for never leaving their dead behind.


9. In 1954, there was a windshield pitting epidemic in Seattle, when nearly 3000 residents reported unexplained damage to their windshields, blaming everything from vandals to cosmic rays to sand fleas. However, it was actually just people noticing normal damage that had always been there, causing mass delusion.


10. Ivy League schools all had ties to the Opium trade in the late 19th century with major benefactors using their drug money to fund libraries, societies, and even Princeton itself. Undergraduates even began running opium dens from Boston to New York until a Harvard student overdosed in 1889.


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11Department of Defense

Department of Defense

The US Department of Defense withdrew its financial and logistical support for the TV series “The Lieutenant” (1963–1964) after its creator Gene Roddenberry pressed ahead with a pilot titled "To Set It Right" in which a white and a black man find a common cause in their roles as Marines.


12. Despite being one of the leading artists of the High Renaissance, only fifteen of Leonardo da Vinci's paintings have survived. The small number of surviving paintings is due in part to Leonardo's frequently disastrous experimentation with new techniques and his chronic procrastination.


13. Venice does not have a complete modern sewage system, meaning its canals are also its sewer system.


14. An Indonesian man who claimed to be the world’s oldest person died at the age of 146 in 2017. According to his identity card, Sodimejo was born on December 31, 1870, but Indonesia only started recording births in 1900.


15. The reason one cannot drive straight from North America down to South America is an 100 km stretch of extremely difficult, dangerous, and environmentally sensitive terrain called the Darien Gap in Central America.


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16Mercury

Mercury

Mercury is thought to be the almost-exposed core of a planet that was 4.5 times bigger before a collision with another proto-planet that blew away most of its crust and mantle.


17. A man named Marcos Rodriguez Pantoja grew up in the wild amongst wolves from an early age until 19 years old. In 2018, he expressed he was disappointed with humanity and wished to return to the wild.


18. The feeling you get when a storm is coming is really the barometric pressure dropping around you.


19. The band Heart played in Canada instead of the US for the first part of their career. They couldn't play in the US because their manager was hiding from the Vietnam draft in Canada.


20. In the 1990s, Russian mafia and Italian mafia organizations participated in a literal money-laundering scheme, washing and bleaching the ink out of US$1 bills and reprinting them as $100s, for use in the post-Soviet bloc countries, where the bills might avoid detection as counterfeits.


21Book publishing

Book publishing

In Norway, when a book is published, Arts Council Norway purchases 1,000 copies for distribution to libraries and they purchase 1,500 copies if it’s a children’s book.


22. The 1968 rock song In A Gadda Da Vida was intended to be "In The Garden of Eden". Frontman Doug Ingle, who came up with the song, was hammered on red wine and his bandmates couldn't understand him.


23. In 1971, as part of an experiment to study the causes and effects of landslides, Japanese scientists watered down a hill using fire hoses to simulate the effect of a torrential rainstorm. The soil on the hill gave way and the resulting landslide killed 4 scientists and 11 observers.


24. Congo's Salonga National Park is the world’s second-largest tropical rainforest national park and the largest in Africa. It is considered to be practically virgin, unaffected by human activities, and largely unexplored.


25. French writer Voltaire teamed up with a mathematician to exploit a loophole in the French lottery that set him up financially for life.

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