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Maggie’s From the Shallow End OF the Gene Pool-Darwin Award

fx77

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
  • Nov 29, 2005
    1,711
    1,382
    ny state
    And now, to the shallow end of the gene pool..

    THE DARWIN AWARDS

    It's that time again. The Darwin Awards are finally out, the annual
    honor given to the persons who did the gene pool the biggest service by
    killing themselves in the most extraordinarily stupid ways.

    Last year's winner was the fellow who was killed by a Coke machine
    which toppled over on top of him as he was attempting to tip a free
    soda out.

    This year's winner was a real rocket scientist -- honest!

    Read on, and remember that each and every one of these is a true story.

    And the nominees:

    Semifinalist #1

    A young Canadian man, searching for a way of getting drunk cheaply,
    because he had no money with which to buy alcohol, mixed gasoline with
    milk. Not surprisingly, this concoction made him ill, and he vomited
    into the fireplace in his house. This resulting explosion and fire
    burned his house down, killing both him and his sister.

    Semifinalist #2

    Three Brazilian men were flying in a light aircraft at low altitude
    when another plane approached. It appears that they decided to moon the
    occupants of the other plane, but lost control of their own aircraft
    and crashed. They were all found dead in the wreckage with their pants
    around their ankles.

    Semifinalist #3

    A 22-year-old Reston ,VA, man was found dead after he tried to use
    octopus straps to bungee jump off a 70-foot rail road trestle. Fairfax
    County police said Eric Barcia, a fast food worker, taped a bunch of
    these straps together, wrapped an end around one foot, anchored the
    other end to the trestle at Lake Accotink Park, jumped and hit the
    pavement. Warren Carmichael, a police spokesman, said investigators
    think Barcia was alone because his car was found nearby. 'The length of
    the cord that he had assembled was greater than the distance between
    the trestle and the ground,' Carmichael said. Police say the apparent
    cause of death was 'Major trauma.'

    Semifinalist #4

    A man in Alabama died from rattlesnake bites. It seems that he and a
    friend were playing a game of catch, using the rattlesnake as a ball.
    The friend. no doubt a future Darwin Awards candidate, was hospitalized.

    Semifinalist #5

    Employees in a medium-sized warehouse in west Texas noticed the smell
    of a gas leak. Sensibly, management evacuated the building
    extinguishing all potential sources of ignition; lights, power, etc.
    After the building had been evacuated, two technicians from the gas
    company were dispatched. Upon entering the building, they found they
    had difficulty navigating in the dark. To their frustration, none of
    the lights worked. Witnesses later described the sight of one of the
    technicians reaching into his pocket and retrieving an object that
    resembled a cigarette lighter. Upon operation of the lighter-like
    object, the gas in the warehouse exploded, sending pieces of it up to
    three miles away. Nothing was found of the technicians, but the lighter
    was virtually untouched by the explosion. The technician suspected of
    causing the blast had never been thought of as ''bright'' by his peers.

    Now, the Winner of this year's Darwin Award (awarded, as always,
    posthumously):

    The Arizona Highway Patrol came upon a pile of smoldering metal
    embedded in the side of a cliff rising above the road at the apex of a
    curve. The wreckage resembled the site of an airplane crash, but it was
    a car.. The type of car was unidentifiable at the scene. Police
    investigators finally pieced together the mystery. An amateur rocket
    scientist had somehow gotten hold of a JATO unit (Jet Assisted Take
    Off, actually a solid fuel rocket) that is used to give heavy military
    transport planes an extra 'push' for taking off from short airfields.
    He had driven his Chevy Impala out into the desert and found a long,
    straight stretch of road. He attached the JATO unit to the car, jumped
    in, got up some speed and fired off the JATO!


    The facts as best as could be determined are that the operator of the
    1967 Impala hit the JATO ignition at a distance of approximately 3.0
    miles from the crash site. This was established by the scorched and
    melted asphalt at that location.

    The JATO, if operating properly, would have reached maximum thrust
    within 5 seconds, causing the Chevy to reach speeds well in excess of
    350 mph and continuing at full power for an additional 20-25 seconds.

    The driver, and soon to be pilot, would have experienced G-forces
    usually reserved for dog fighting F-14 jocks under full afterburners,
    causing him to become irrelevant for the remainder of the event.
    However, the automobile remained on the straight highway for about 2.5
    miles (15-20 seconds) before the driver applied and completely melted
    the brakes, blowing the tires and leaving thick rubber marks on the
    road surface, then becoming airborne for an additional 1.4 miles and
    impacting the cliff face at a height of 125 feet leaving a blackened
    crater 3 feet deep in the rock. Most of the driver's remains were not
    recoverable. However, small fragments of bone, teeth and hair were
    extracted from the crater, and fingernail and bone shards were removed
    from a piece of debris believed to be a portion of the steering wheel.

    Epilogue: It has been calculated that this moron attained a ground
    speed of approximately 420mph, though much of his voyage was not
    actually on the ground.

    You couldn't make this stuff up, could you?

    And people just like this are still all around us -- and they breed,
    vote and run for congress

    Scary, isn't it?
    There is usually only a limited
    amount of damage that can be
    done by dull or stupid people.
    For creating a truly monumental
    disaster, you need people with
    high IQs.
    ...economist thomas sowell
     
    Re: From the Shallow End OF the Gene Pool-Darwin Award

    The winning theory has been debunked on Mythbusters, It just won't work.
     
    Re: From the Shallow End OF the Gene Pool-Darwin Award

    <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: bra260</div><div class="ubbcode-body">The winning theory has been debunked on Mythbusters, It just won't work. </div></div>

    What're you talking about? They DID attach a solid fuel rocket on a classic car and it worked successfully. I don't think it was a JATO rocket, but it was still a solid fuel rocket.
     
    Re: From the Shallow End OF the Gene Pool-Darwin Award

    I don't think the rocket worked on MB. The car just blew up on the ramp. Unless they did a follow up show? My kids love that show.
     
    Re: From the Shallow End OF the Gene Pool-Darwin Award

    THe JATO story has been around for over 10 years. It's an urban myth.
     
    Re: From the Shallow End OF the Gene Pool-Darwin Award

    In all of its variations, the JATO story is still one of my favorite urban myths. One thing that makes most versions better than average is the details are given with an explanation of how the alleged facts are known ("burned asphalt" etc.")

    Another good one but with marks of being made up is the story of the driver who encounters a harvester slowly crossing the road from one field to another...the teenage driver having been "harvested" when he hopped off and ran ahead to retrieve his hat blown forward by the wind. Too many amusing details that could NOT be known by anyone but the dead guy or an eyewitness.
     
    Re: From the Shallow End OF the Gene Pool-Darwin Award

    The Mythbusters very first show, the pilot, was centered around the Chevy/JATO myth. They managed to take a Malibu with a solid fuel rocket to a speed of several hundred miles per hour on a flat level stretch of desert plain.

    A few years later, they tried to recreate the situation of the myth, which was that the vehicle actually left the ground at speed. They used a shipping container cut in half on the diagonal for a ramp and left the vehicle in a running condition. The plan was to remotely drive the vehicle to a speed of 50-70 miles per hour at the ramp, then when the vehicle was on the ramp, ignite the solid fuel rocket. The problem was that when the rocket was ingited, the rocket lacked a controlled burn. Instead of burning like a rocket, it burned like a bomb and the vehicle barely made it off the end of the ramp.

    The opinion of the 'rocket expert'? "Some sort of catastrophic failure."

    I normally say it doesn't take a rocket scientist....but in this case, having one on hand would have been useful.
     
    Re: From the Shallow End OF the Gene Pool-Darwin Award

    "then becoming airborne for an additional 1.4 miles and
    impacting the cliff face at a height of 125 feet".

    This is the issue. If you drive off a cliff, gravity begins to act on you, you would have to have a serious ramp to fly 1.4 miles and end up 125 feet higher than the road surface.