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Showing posts with label water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water. Show all posts

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Environmental Terrorism with Maggie Toussaint



Fiona - 
Today, ThrillWriters, we're chatting about environmental terrorism with Maggie Toussaint who is writing her sci-fi novels under the pen name Rigel Carson.



Maggie, I just finished G-1 a Kindle Scout winner that came out with Kindle Press. First, congratulations! Second, you normally don't write science fiction what about this story called you away from your usual plotline?

Maggie - 
Good morning, Fiona. Thanks for having me here. Yes, G-1 is a departure from my normal mystery and suspense novels. I wanted to write a story that reflected my education and work experience, along with my writing ability.


Fiona - 
Would you give us some information about your scientific background?

Maggie - 
I am classically trained as a scientist. I’ve worked in several different science fields at government facilities as a contract scientist. In each situation, I worked for one or more PhDs, so I can’t claim ownership of any of the projects. (Think Worker Bee when you think of me.) I’ll share a bit about these opportunities and you can take it from there.


My expertise is more in the research and development side of science. At first, I was on the lower rungs of the scientific ladder, then as I had more experience and a higher degree, I wrote proposals for projects that my big boss wanted to do, ordered the materials, set the project up, ran it, scheduled additional labor when needed, coordinated with other departments and off site investigators, closed out the project, collected and managed the data, and often wrote the first draft of our findings for my PhD boss. I also went to various research symposia with large posters and fielded questions from my peers.

My first scientist job was at a government facility where I had to have a background check and a security clearance to get in the front door. My job was in the Industrial Hygiene department, which basically meant I was part of a crew that monitored personnel and environmental health and safety at this site. I’d rather not say what the product was or where the facility was on the internet. Any time you want to get together and swap stories over a beer, I can tell you about the “plant.”

Following this job, I married and relocated when my husband, who was a government employee, got promoted to the Washington Headquarters Office. I landed a job at Fort Detrick in Maryland doing chemical extractions on soils. Our job was to identify new products to put through chemical trials for antitumor properties. During the course of my employment, the team I was part of identified several candidate drugs. I’m not sure if those products made it to market, but I decided to work at a job that didn’t involve carcinogens while we started a family. One item of note was that they named one of the new products after me: Maggiemycin. You can google it and see my name on some of the papers. Maggiemycin didn’t make it to market, but it is still something new that we discovered.

After the kids were born, I got my Master’s degree in environmental science and landed another science job, this time in Aquatic Toxicology. I worked at Fort Detrick again in a sister organization to USAMRIID, which you may remember from the Hot Zone book and movie about Ebola. My group had nothing to do with Ebola! We were interested in ways to monitor drinking water safety for soldiers. I worked with this team of PhDs and Army officers for nearly a dozen years, and we made some amazing discoveries.

So, I’ll digress a little bit into “lite” chemistry. Water is a powerful solvent. Many chemicals dissolve wholly in it or in some small measure. With the advent of high tech and copious industries, discharges were not initially monitored and policed as they should have been. Groundwater and surface water around the world is often contaminated with something that shouldn’t be there. For instance, dry cleaning chemicals contain something called trichloroethylene which at certain levels is soluble in water and harmful to people and other living things.

The people at the top would decide how and what chemicals we would study, sometimes based on where the troops would deploy. We mainly studied organic chemicals. The cool part of my job was that I worked in a fishery. Yes, we used teeny tiny fish to help monitor what was in the water. We would often maintain a population of 5,000 to 10,000 fish at any one time and there was a lot of animal husbandry involved to keep the colony going and not genetically isolated. Our testing was for both long term effects (cancers) as well as short term effects.






Anyway, one of the inventions of this group was a mobile biomonitoring trailer outfitted with aquaria just like we had in the lab. One application involved juvenile bluegill fish. We were able to monitor the electronic coughs of fish when certain irritants (chemicals) were present in the water in real time. We deployed these at various sites around the country to test the efficacy and found that we could reproduce the same results as in our lab. The lead scientists presented this information in symposia and in journals.

Then 9/11 happened. Many cities became concerned about their drinking water safety. It is my understanding that two major metropolitan areas installed our technology and used our fish to monitor their drinking water for some time. I’m not certain if this is still ongoing because I retired from my job due to health concerns (my family is riddled with arthritis) and to focus on my oldest daughter’s upcoming wedding.

My thoughts about government scientists: we need smart people to figure stuff out. The more innovations we have, the more opportunities we have to mess up the environment or people. If all the research is done by private companies in a “for profit” mode, we’ve lost something valuable. Speaking from experience, the policy makers and budget people have a lot of power in government agencies. You have to learn how to walk the walk and talk the talk to survive.


Fiona -
And how did this translate into your newest book?

Maggie - I created a scientist main character (science is my background) and gave him an impossible task - to figure out why the world's water supply is not adding up. To make matters worse, I had his mentor go down in flames earlier for a misconstrued remark about global warming.

So my scientist, Dr Zeke Landry, knows the penalty for error. He also knows water can't go away. It's part of the hydrologic cycle. Trouble is, the numbers show a different trend. He is being pressured to say the water's okay, that it is all where it is supposed to be, but it isn't.

That's when his boss decides to get him an unbiased expert to help him comb through the data, a top of the line android.

Fiona -
How plausible is a storyline such as this, given the systems and science that we have in place now?

Maggie - 
I believe this is a very plausible storyline. Now, I've been out of the research world for over 15 years and out of the academic world for longer than that, but I spoke with a number of scientists, engineers, and science fiction authors as I was developing the premise. What was intriguing for me was that this is a mystery set in the future. I love puzzles, and I believe someone (or some huge entity) could siphon off the world's drinking water over a few decades with the long term goal of global domination. Sure we can keep pulling water from the oceans, but that will create other problems. If freshwater is lacking, we also have arid conditions globally, and that's what I made happen in G-1. It becomes a domino effect of no water, no food, global terror. 


You asked about the systems we have in place. Countries have scientists and systems in place to monitor reservoir levels and freshwater impoundment levels. In fact, there are many municipalities and states even that have very detailed rules over water usage. That means each entity or stakeholder may only use so much or they will be in violation of the agreement and incur serious penalties. 

Let's look specifically at Georgia. Water in upstate Georgia flows down to the sea in either the Altamaha River basin or the Savannah River basin. New industries can't just build and use water without all kinds of permissions and monitoring. Plus, old industries that were grandfathered in are dealing with pollution issues and abatement. The point of this is that what comes downstream to us on the coast determines the economy of our fishing industry. Drought upstate can affect our estuaries and make them too salty for marine life. And that's just the in state effect. Water from Altanta also flows out of state and affects other people, places, and things. Industry down where I am located is caught in a stranglehold already because of water usage. We used to have natural artesian water bubbling up on our barrier islands and the coast. No more. It's gone. The levels in the groundwater aquifers are dropping as well as having saltwater intrusion. 

Water availability is a current problem and though it isn't as severe as portrayed in G-1, it won't take long to get to that point, no matter the safeguards or lawsuits. One of the things that was hounded into me in college is that our natural resources are finite. We have to take care of them. 

Fiona -
Environmental terrorism isn't a new concept. In history we see land being destroyed by sewing the ground with salt etc. to make it useless for growing food. There are things that can be done to affect an area over time - and some things which are immediate. Let's look at look at slow quiet destruction first - what could an evil group such as Chameleon do now - invasive species and the like...

Maggie - 
Sure, sowing the land with salt is very detrimental to most plants. Given the ecosystems of the coast, there is a gradient of plant life that can tolerate high salt input, and the diversity of plant life is small, comparatively. 

We already have invasive species problems on the coast. Tallow plants, kudzu, and others quickly outgrow native species and don't provide food for our native insects. Invasive species not only take away space from our plants, but they are very aggressive growers and disrupt our food chain.

The environment works much as our legal system is supposed to work, with checks and balances. When something gets out of whack, then there becomes both an excess and a deficit. Whatever was discriminated against, will have a hard time gaining momentum to find its place in the food chain again. That's general ecology which even kids should recognize. But when we put chemicals on our lawn say in Atlanta, we don't think about them harming fish way downstream.

With regard to the Chameleons in my book G-1, they are up to a lot of dirty tricks. First, they stockpiled water and food. Their intent was never to starve the world, only to get its attention and seem to be the good guys solving the world's problems. 

In the story world, the ground is so arid from water shortages that all fresh food is grown in government controlled agridomes. The Chameleons unleash locusts in the agridomes, locusts that are souped up and genetically engineered to eat faster. They chose not to ruin the agridomes because they knew they would need them later, but they made food a pinch point. People with no food are dangerous and desperate. We've seen that over and over again in our history. Given those conditions, a secret society with a global conspiracy end game is a possibility. Maybe its because I'm a mystery author that I see this possibility. I've always believed most of us peons don't have any idea of how the world is run. Who's to say there isn't a group orchestrating things right now?

Fiona - 
So that's long term, probably will never catch the bad guy stuff - what about short term? Setting off a nuke, obviously. But what other "hold the world hostage" environmental terrorist fears are there and what kinds of things are governments doing to prevent them?

Maggie - 
Suffice it to say that a lot of genetic engineering and growth of harmful viruses and lethal agents occurs right now in the name of science. 

When I worked at Fort Detrick, there was a scientist there who was accused of sending anthrax through the mail. Remember that? It was all over the news. Postal workers started wearing gloves to handle the mail. Special air filtration was deemed necessary for post offices. That was just one example, but the mail was bogged down for a very long time. Politicians and other industry leaders rarely open their mail any more. One single thing like this has a huge domino effect. 

Let's look at airport screening after 911. They first screened for metal to keep weapons off the plane. Then liquids were used to create a threat, so now liquids are monitored on planes. Now, with 3-D printers, people can make anything out of plastic. Pretty soon, we won't be able to carry anything with us on a trip. 

I firmly believe basic human nature is to want power, autonomy, and authority. With different philosophies and religions as driving forces, groups will continue to fight each other for domination. Think about the news. We still see suicide bombers. We see smart bombs. There are ways to discharge dangerous substances through the actions of a few. 

It is possible, and it happens today on a small scale. So far, nothing huge has taken down a city or a government. Let's hope it doesn't. That's what I like about science fiction. It gives you an idea of what can happen. And it should be a wake up call for people to take notice of how others are conducting themselves. Again, bioterrorism is a reality that many of us don't like to think about. I'm grateful for the men and women of our country, and others, who work to keep these kind of attacks squashed.

Fiona - 
As a scientist, what piece of advice can you give writers who are developing a plotline around environmental terror?

Maggie -
One of the things I would like to say to writers who write about terrorism is that there are unexpected consequences. Another writer I know who used bombs in her story is now pulled aside for "extra" screening every time she flies. Because of this, that author said to me that she believes there are ways your computer searches for information and even your email subjects can be flagged to put you on a government watch list. This author jokes about it, and she's the nicest person I ever met, but still, that kind of labeling can occur. 

Secondly, and this will fly in the face of the above consequence, be sure you report enough of the facts to sound credible but also don't present enough information that your book becomes a recipe for global evil. Also remember, all actions have consequences. Writers have responsibility for their words.

Fiona - 
It is a tradition on ThrillWriting that we ask you to share your favorite scar story or harrowing experience. Will you indulge us?

Maggie - 
My first trip to the dermatologist as a grown-up was in conjunction with my husband. We had both spent hours outside daily throughout our lives and it was time to see if there was any damage. Each of us had a few minor places that needed to be taken care of, but the dermatologist did a double take at the place on my leg. Because of the color and shape, he predicted that it was a melanoma.

Talk about heart-stopping! I froze emotionally at that cancer word I knew so well from my cancer research. My first thought as I looked down at my leg was that I didn’t want any part of cancer. Get it out was my internal cry. The doctor was of the same mindset, so he excised the spot and sent it to pathology. I went home a changed person. I think my husband bought me my first big-brimmed hat that very day. The pathology report confirmed melanoma and we were told to report back to the office for another surgery.

At this point it felt like a dream that was happening to someone else. The doctor said that there was a protocol of how much and how deep he had to go based on the path report. Bottom line, he cut more out of my thigh, even way beyond the original spot. The next path report showed he’d gotten it all, but now I bear a football shaped scar that’s lily white. It has never seen the sun, and it never will.

This was a wakeup call for me. Growing up in sunny coastal Georgia, we spent all of our summers, weekends, and afternoons outside in the rivers or creating treehouses. I spent endless teenage days reading books on the beach in the years when sunscreen was but a glimmer in someone’s eye. Parents today are lucky to have sunscreens and I hope the kids of today will grow up with less skin cancers
.

 Fiona -
Our best wishes for your continued good health. 

I'm going to give you the final word, Maggie. What would you like to tell us?

Maggie -
My message, indeed my theme for the entire Guardian of the Earth series, is that our planet is special. We should be cognizant of the miracle of life here and we should become stewards of the environment. It isn't enough to give up hair spray to save the ozone layer which in turn is necessary to filter sun rays to a beneficial level. Everything we do has consequences. Sure we're concerned with our everyday lives, who isn't? But we have to look out for the Big Picture, the survival of the human race. 

Science fiction has stimulated this kind of thinking for me. From Star Trek through Star Wars through shows like Firefly and more. We may feel we are alone and unique in the universe, but that may not be the case. Our everyday lives are impacted today by what happens around the world. Just look at manufacturing, for instance, or foods. The labels on products show the countries of origin. We are no longer isolated like pioneers. We need to act accordingly. And now, I'll step off my soap box and thank Fiona for having me here to present my thoughts about environmental terrorism and to mention my new book G-1, which is the first in my Guardian of Earth series, writing as Rigel Carson.

Fiona - 
Thanks Maggie.

You can stay in contact with Maggie/Rigel Carson on -


Fiona Quinn's Newsletter Link, Sign up HERE
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Cheers,


Sunday, December 1, 2013

Unusual Uses for Dental Floss - How to Save Your Character's Life


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Dental floss
 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
At the request of one of my readers, I am working on various blogs that will help you, the writer, develop a great EDC (every day carry) for your character. Since most people don't walk around prepared for the end of the world, it helps if your character has some basics on hand and a little out-of-the-box know how.

In our last EDC tutorial, we learned how to save your character's life with condoms LINK.

This week we're adding in dental floss.

Dental floss is handy dandy and can be used in a pinch in all kinds of situations:


It's fortunate that your character just happens to carry a travel toothbrush and floss in her purse. Even better, since she was a Girl Scout she has some preparedness training, and she sticks a darning needle into the box, just in case. Either way, having a spool of dental floss can save your character's life.


English: Dental floss Deutsch: Zahnseide
(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Heart symbol, with border.
. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

EVERY DAY PROBLEMS:

* Hair tie-back
* Entertain your kids with a
  Cat's Cradle String
* Food in the teeth
* Cleaning between small
   cracks like on the keyboard
* If your heroine is out on a romantic picnic and
   forgot her knife, dental floss will cut her bread, cheeses, cake etc.
* Your heroine has an important meeting tomorrow, but the drip drip dripping in the hotels sink is making her
   buggy! She can run some dental floss around the faucet and let the string hang down into the drain. The
   water will conduct along the string, and it will be quiet.
* If she needs to remove the stuck picture or page from a surface, she can
   work carefully with the dental floss to separate one from the other.
* She can also use the floss to remove cookies stuck to her cookie sheet.
* She can support her office plant by tying it up with the floss
   Video Quick Study (1:48)

Ah, but let's get real here. These uses are pretty benign, and we all know you're just not that nice to your heroine. You throw her from one life-or-death emergency to another. Let's see how dental floss can help her escape with life and limb.

FIRST AID

* Use as a tourniquet if a toe or finger is severed. (put the severed digit in a non-lubricated condom tie it off
   and put it on ice. Send her to the hospital immediately.
* Tie off an umbilical chord when she had to rescue-deliver that baby on the stuck elevator.
* If the hand is injured and swelling, threatening to cut off circulation in the finger because of a now-too-tight
   ring, starting at the far end of the finger by the nail wrap the floss around and around tightly to force fluids
   back up the finger into the hand and slide the ring over this. Release the floss immediately. 

Apartment Key
 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

ESCAPE AND SURVIVAL

* What if your heroine's keys fell down a grate?
    Dental floss, a paper clip, and lots of patience.
    (Could also try freshly chewed gum tied to the floss.
     or duct tape made into an inverted loop)
    Video Quick Study (2:00) Fishing for keys
*  Replace shoe laces as she's running from Big
    Foot.
*  Sewing - repairing her clothes or gear or even
    suturing a wound (last ditch effort in the wilds).
*  Repairing a wet suit
    Video Quick Study (1:35)
*  Make a clothes line - if your character fell through the
    ice and is sopping wet, she has to get dry fast!
    Water wicks heat away from the body; she's better
    naked and dry than clothed and wet.
*  A hiding place for small objects. They might search
    your heroine/spy from head to toe and empty her
    purse out but much like the tampon box in her
    bathroom, a dental floss case will get very little attention,
    especially if she has it in a small bag with travel tooth brush, comb, and mirror. It looks so normal. She can
    store memory chips, hand cuff keys, or other get-out-of-jail-free items inside.

Video Quick Study (3:29) Brief demonstrations of some of the uses



English: zombie
English: zombie (Photo credit: Wikipedia)



In a Zombie Apocalyptic Disaster, remember that there are four main components to survival: FOOD, WATER, SHELTER, FIRE.


Fire in Dumpster
(Photo credit: benwatts)

FIRE - 

* Use for fire starter material (waxed works
   particularly well)
* Making a bow drill
   Video Quick Study (5:26)


FOOD

*  Hanging things. If your character has food with her, she should not keep it on her or near her while she
    sleeps. She should walk a short distance and hang the food from a tree limb so as not to attract wild
    animals and keep everything safe. Remember that while dental floss is strong your character might want to
    braid the floss to increase the tensile strength if her food ways more than a couple of pounds.
 * Fishing line coupled with a safety pin or paper clip and a stick she finds in the woods (and a condom or
    tampon wrapper as a bobber).
 * Hunting
   - Bow string
      Video Quick Study (5:02) If this ten-year-old can do it, your heroine can. She remembers a
                                   neighbor kid doing this when she was little.
   - Traps
      Video Quick Study (1:55) catching a bird

English: Image 3 of 5 in Debris Hut Constructi...
English: Image 3 of 5 in Debris Hut Construction.. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

SHELTER



*  Tying sticks for a debris hut.
*  Makeshift shelter such as a poncho tent



CampMor Silnylon Poncho Tent
Poncho Tent (Photo credit: kc7fys)







WATER

* Tying the top of your condom water carrier.





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Thursday, November 14, 2013

A Heroine Should Always Carry a Condom - How to Save Your Character's Life


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English: Unwrapped condom
English: Unwrapped condom (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
One of the things that I enjoy about developing a character is figuring out what she might carry in her EDC (Every Day Carry). What tools could she pull out of her purse to save her life?

One of the smallest and most practical pieces of EDC your character could carry is a non-lubricated condom. Many survivalists pack the condoms into their pocket-sized EDC tins that they have on them at all times. (More about this in an upcoming blog). But why? Do these burly SEALS think they're going to find a heroine in the middle of the jungle who needs stress relief? Not so much. Here are some of the ways your girl can make her day a little smoother with a condom in hand.



English: An example of an EDC or 'Everyday Carry'
 An example of an EDC or 'Everyday Carry' (Photo credit: Wikiped

English: Used condom
 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

1. Perhaps she is a drug mule  Sad but true, she could
    pour her powdered drug into the condom, knot it off,
    and swallow it. This would also work for a
    micro-chip, camera memory card or other tiny object
    with which she needed to escape. Dire straights call
    for dire choices.

2. Retaining DNA samples.

3. FOR FIRST AID
   * Cut the end off and slip over a cast or bandaged
      area so that one could bathe or shower.
      Video Quick Study - wound protection
   *Make shift/last resort rubber glove when
     staunching blood.
   * Make shift tourniquet - while this may sound like a
      stretch (no pun intended), imagine how helpful this
      tool would have been at the Boston Marathon
      bombing.
   * When no tape is available, cut off the end and use it
Front of package for LifeStyles condom
 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
      to slide over a leg or arm to hold a cloth in place.
      Even  without a cloth it will help keep debris and
      bugs out of the wound and apply pressure to the
      area. Helpful for burns, as well.
      (See above video quick study.)
    * If someone had a tooth knocked out, put the tooth
       with some milk (or water if no milk is available) into
       the condom and tie it closed. Go immediately to an
       emergency dentist.
   * If a character has a sucking chest wound from an
      accident or gun shot etc., your heroine would see air
      bubbles and blood. Place the condom (in its
      package) over the wound and tape three sides of it
      in place. It is important to leave the bottom untaped.

4. Speaking of gunshots, a condom will protect a gun from water, sand, and other debris.


Sex is Dangerous 2
(Photo credit: timtak)

5. Dry Is Good!
   * If your heroine is an actress/singer/PI/Operative, she might know the little trick of putting her microphone
      in a condom and taping it to her skin. This prevents sweat/rain/moisture from messing up the feed.
   * If she breaks down on the side of the road and decides to hike to an area where she has cell reception in
      a rain storm, she might just stick her phone, GPS, matches, and other supplies into the condom she
      keeps in her wallet for just such emergencies. It is surprising how much volume a condom can hold!
      (Think one gallon of water)
   *  If your heroine is a bad-ass, she might use the condoms to keep her detonation fuses dry.

6. Survival  -Okay - now you've put your heroine into a zombie apocalypse survival situation. She may
     be the hottest babe left alive, but she's smart enough to put her condoms to use in keeping her that way.
     There are four basics to survival: shelter, food, water, fire. A condom can help with all of these.
     * Shelter - A condom can be used as cordage to tie limbs together for a debris hut.
English: Used condom Slovenčina: Použitý kondom
 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
     * Water -  You can carry about 2 liters of water
       safely. While condoms are very stretchy they
       are also easy to break. To prevent a loss, make
       sure that you insert the condom into a sock before
       the condom is filled. The sock will help provide the
       needed structure as well as help prevent something
       from piercing the condom. If your heroine is trained,
       she might just have a water purification tablet or two
       with her EDC.
       VIDEO QUICK STUDY (1:07)
     * Fire
       1. Make a fire using a water filled condom like a
           magnifying glass.
           VIDEO QUICK STUDY (0:48)
       2. Store dry kindling - it may be dry now, but your intrepid heroine knows nothing goes well for her.
           Was that a roll of thunder she hears? Or, if she is without dry kindling, the condom itself will serve the
           purpose.
Camp Fire at Yelagiri
 (Photo credit: Sylvianism1)
           VIDEO QUICK STUDY (0:34)
       3. "But wait!" you say. "It's overcast. My heroine doesn't
             smoke and doesn't have her EDC. Her boyfriend is
             passed  out. The only thing in his pockets is a bunch of
             condoms. How could she start a fire?"
             Your heroine can still cook her caught bird and make a
             roaring signal fire if she uses the condoms to make the fire
             drill that she saw someone use on one of those survivor
             shows. Sure it's hard to do - but what else does she have
             to do with her time?
             VIDEO QUICK STUDY (3:08)
      *Food
       1. Condom Slingshot - Yup. She played with slingshots as a kid, and was pretty good! Why not have
           squirrel  for dinner?
            VIDEO QUICK STUDY (1:11)
       2. Blow up the condom a little and tie a knot. Now you have a fishing bob.

* Other ways to save herself and the guy she loves?
   1 Well, "fishermen in certain parts of the Amazon have found a way to protect their privates from one of
      the scariest fishes of all - the candiru. Nope, candirus don’t bite and eat you up like piranhas, but they
      can be scary in the sense that they can enter through your genitals and make their homes in your body.
      Candirus entering the penis can be very painful, as you feel them wriggling inside of you. By putting on a
      condom every time you go fishing or wading in the waters, you are saving yourself and your penis from a 
      lot of hurt and pain."  LINK
   2. If she falls in the water she can blow up a dozen condoms and use them as a flotation device. (Yeah - I
       know. Why would she have a dozen condoms on her? Maybe she stole them from the Amazon
       fishermen?
   3. If push comes to shove, a condom can be used as a garrote to choke the assailant.
   4. And of course - to protect your heroine from STDs and unwanted pregnancies


Photograph of unrolled Durex condom
Photograph of unrolled Durex condom (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Fun Facts:
* The Danish word for condom is Svangerskabsforebyggendemiddel.
* In 1844 Charles Goodyear got a patent on crepe rubber condoms. Yes a VERY good year! LINK



Prezerwatywa, z angielskiej wiki
Prezerwatywa, z angielskiej wiki (Photo credit: Wikipedia)




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