• 6 Posts
  • 11 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • Good thing it’s harder to get a drivers license in Europe. From watching some US driving tests, it seems all you need to do is drive around the block for ten minutes.

    My boss told me to get my driving license in the US, she said it took 10 minutes and she had to drive in a line and then back around a corner.

    I did it in Sweden, months of training, theory course like a university exam, high speed braking course on artificial ice, with and without ABS… it was nuts and amazing.

    Doing a gun license in Sweden atm, same exact thing. A year minimum of training and a lot of skill tests.






  • Boom! We get that a lot.

    Although in Clockwork Orange they used apomorphine which was the thing in the '50s/60s:

    A fourteen-year-old boy was said by his parents to have started smoking at the age of seven, and to be spending every penny of his pocket money on cigarettes.

    He had at one time regularly smoked 40 cigarettes per day, but was now averaging about half that number because his pocket money had been reduced. He said he wanted to give up smoking because he had a smoker’s cough, was breathless on exertion, and because it was costing so much money.

    On the first occasion he was given an injection of apomorphine 1/20 g, started smoking, he became nauseated and vomited copiously.

    Four days later he came for the second treatment, and said that he still had the craving for cigarettes, but had not in fact smoked since the previous session because he felt nauseated when he tried to light one. He was given an injection of apomorphine 1/20 g, and after seven minutes he lit a cigarette reluctantly, and immediately said he felt ill. He was encouraged to continue smoking, and he collapsed.

    When he next attended he said he no longer had any craving for cigarettes, “Just smoke from my father’s cigarette makes me feel ill”.

    Two months Iater he left school and started working. He said he had “got a bit down” at work and wanted to “keep in with the others”, so he had accepted a proffered cigarette. He immediately felt faint and hot, and was unable to smoke. It is now a year since his treatment, and his parents confirm that he no longer smokes.

    Stern G. (1957). A case of excessive smoking. London Hospital GazeNe, 1957. p. 144–145.