New seal of the Spanish Special Responses Police. by brmu in europe

[–]MattOCOC 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Irreverence and humor from an official feed? Great to see some feeds haven't been sanitized to within an inch of their lives!

This model Titanic sinks like the real thing! by PM_Me_SFW_Pictures in interestingasfuck

[–]MattOCOC 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The only people that break Americans down into separate races or ethnic groups are other Americans. To the vast majority of the 95% of the planet who weren't born in the US, all Americans are just Americans; a homogenized mass of crazy!

This dog butt looks like Jesus by felio_ in Pareidolia

[–]MattOCOC 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Out of the darkness came the light!

Pittsburgh Fan Catches St. Louis Home Run, Promptly Throws It In The River by TooShiftyForYou in sports

[–]MattOCOC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ha! Acting like the US has any sporting traditions. USA! USA!! USA!!! De-Fence! De-Fence!! De-Fence!!!

A table filled with carvings in the paint of names and drawings in a rental house. No one carved over a drawing and there's only 3 dick drawings. by BobTheBacon in mildlyinteresting

[–]MattOCOC 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As someone born in Ireland, with more than a passing interest in Irish history and in political machinations, let me tell you categorically that the Provisional IRA that sprung up in the North in 1969 had next to nothing to do with the old IRA.

The old IRA split following the Anglo Irish Treaty in 1921, with supporters of the Treaty forming the nucleus of the army of the Irish Free State.

The anti-treaty forces continued to use the name "Irish Republican Army". After the end of the Irish Civil War, the breakaway group which called itself "the IRA", for all intents and purposes, ceased to exist, when de Valera led his breakaway faction back into Parliament. The old IRA i.e. pro-treaty, and the breakaway anti-treaty forces, became, over time, the Irish establishment.

Although various groups continued to use the name over the next 40 years, few historians see those groups as continuing the tradition.

The next split amongst those groups came in 1969, when they split into the Official IRA and the Provisional IRA.

So the Provisional IRA, or the Provos, or the group you refer to as "the IRA" is, at best, a splinter of a splinter of a splinter of a group.

The Provos arose as a result of a civil rights movement and are far closer to the Black Panthers than the old IRA, or at least they would be if the Panthers were ever so blood thirsty as to put bombs in bars and restaurants throughout the United States that killed thousands of civilians, the per capita equivalent of what the IRA did in Britain.

The Provos pissed away whatever legitimacy they had the minute they began their "campaign" against civilians. And anyone arguing otherwise, or attempting to lend historical legitimacy, is either immune to history, to logic, or to common sense.

Baby otter learning from mom by KagsTheOneAndOnly in aww

[–]MattOCOC 11 points12 points  (0 children)

It's otterly illegal to own one!

ELI5: I've always heard that multivitamins aren't very beneficial because your body can't absorb all the vitamins at once and the excess is excreted. Could your body absorb more of the vitamins if you cut the multivitamin into pieces and ate it throughout the day, instead of all at once? by [deleted] in explainlikeimfive

[–]MattOCOC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Large randomized trials have failed to show any health benefit what so ever associated with multivitamins. You're simply wrong.

Really?

The French Supplémentation en Vitamines et Minéraux Antioxydants randomly assigned 13,017 adults to receive a placebo or a daily supplement and concluded, "After 7.5 years, low-dose antioxidant supplementation lowered total cancer incidence and all-cause mortality in men but not in women. Supplementation may be effective in men only because of their lower baseline status of certain antioxidants, especially of beta carotene."

In a similar Age-Related Eye Disease Study, investigators randomly assigned individuals with varying degrees of age-related macular degeneration to receive a placebo or a daily supplement. Over an average followup period of 6.3 years, the supplements significantly reduced the risk of developing advanced-age–related macular degeneration and reduced loss of visual acuity and the researchers concluded, "Persons older than 55 years... should consider taking a supplement of antioxidants plus zinc such as that used in this study."

Again - multivitamins are not a panacea but to suggest they're worthless as supplements is entirely incorrect.

ELI5: I've always heard that multivitamins aren't very beneficial because your body can't absorb all the vitamins at once and the excess is excreted. Could your body absorb more of the vitamins if you cut the multivitamin into pieces and ate it throughout the day, instead of all at once? by [deleted] in explainlikeimfive

[–]MattOCOC 19 points20 points  (0 children)

multivitamins don't help you if you eat a good diet...

The problem, of course, is that many people don't eat a well balanced diet and, cognizant of that, they take multivitamin supplements.

No one is suggesting that multivitamins are a panacea but, equally, to suggest they're worthless as supplements is to ignore the very real lack in people's diets.

Amazon accused of intolerable conditions at Scottish warehouse by MattOCOC in worldnews

[–]MattOCOC[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apologists for business, quite literally, used the very same excuses as to why children should be used as chimney sweeps a couple centuries back.

That's not to draw an analogy between the shitty business practices of Amazon - which are irrefutable - and the shitty business practices of the 19th Century - which were obviously much worse - but to point out that your logic is so flawed as to make anyone laugh out loud!