Home › Forums › Blue Pill Hell › Chemistry set hysteria depriving men of a science career
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Anonymous 2 years, 5 months ago.
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Anonymous0Watch from minute 3 to minute 11:
A bunch of dumb broads with art history degrees show how “incredibly dangerous” chemistry sets were, and as “proof” they use a couple of newspaper articles where boys got injured, making bombs with ingredients that did not come from a chemistry set. The toxic feminists (well, they found a dyke able to do it) also made fire with ingredients NOT included in chemistry sets (Glycerol). The whole episode scripted like a horror story or murder mystery.
The saddest part is at the end, where a dumb blonde basically implies how delusional and suicidally foolish older male scientists are, saying that “Having a chemistry set as a boy is what made me become a scientist”.
When given the opportunity (voting rights etc.), women truly do destroy civilizations. My own anecdote: As a boy I had spend years building a chemistry lab until one day I’d spilled sulphuric acid on my clothes. My mother threw everything in the garbage, chemicals, glassware and other equipment obtained with much trouble for a boy, representing 6, 7 years of scraped-together money and much effort as well as intellectual investment. Women fear what they do not understand, and they do not understand much. The only thing women do not seem to fear is invader d*ck (posting from Europe here).
Those EVIL intelligent boys, exterminating their own mothers with their genocidal chemistry sets…
I feel your pain bro. I also spilled some HCl on my jeans and got s~~~ from my mom for months.
As for barbarian invader dick, they don’t fear that because it is a simple thing to understand and they seem to love that judging by the sales numbers of that 50 shades of rape book.The answer is NO. “I could but I won’t”. Memini murum!
What a bunch of paranoid hysteria! Reminds me of an article I read in which the author was absolutely freaking out about a 1960s-era “nuclear power” experiment set that included some uranium ore and a spinthariscope. The writer had included this kit in a list of “10 most dangerous toys ever” or some such nonsense. It is incredible how ignorant many people in the general public are about science.
I’ve looked at a number of vintage chemistry sets (I used to own a business that brought me into contact with many old and interesting items). None of them originally included anything outrageously dangerous and none of them included anything that would be particularly dangerous when mixed in any conceivable combination — if you wanted to make a “boom”, you’d need to supplement the ingredients with chemicals purchased elsewhere.
There’s one commonality I’ve noticed among people in technical fields: the people who REALLY have a deep understanding of their field usually started out pursuing it as a hobby in their childhood.

Anonymous11I didn’t need any stinkin’ chemistry sets to make my fire toys.

Anonymous0There’s one commonality I’ve noticed among people in technical fields: the people who REALLY have a deep understanding of their field usually started out pursuing it as a hobby in their childhood.
Yes.. And nowadays they don’t just make purchasing chemicals from the chemist illegal but they also dope down boys (it’s always boys..) with “ADHD” or even Asperger’s. We’re cutting off the future of its supply of STEM people. Fortunately the Internet and Ali Express compensate to a certain extent for that. I used to grow crystals, melt lead into water, scrounge the garbage for discarded electronics I would meticulously desolder and classify and try to build blinkenlichten out of – all stuff boys nowadays are largely prevented from doing.
These stupid c~~~s (together with whining ‘Health & Safety experts’), are only front monkeys.
The real agenda is disarming the populace. ANYTHING that might enable you to resist the state will be taken away.
Here in the UK, chemistry sets were effectively banned decades ago.
I’ve been aware of this trend for a long time. It’s surpising the number of things that have quietly become unavailable.

Anonymous42

Anonymous3Women fear what they do not understand, and they do not understand much.
That’s true. I was making some chemistry fun and later on some electricity experiments and I knew how to be safe. No one in the family understood what I was doing.
making bombs with ingredients
Bulls~~~. Household items and everyday materials with basic chemistry knowledge are enough dangerous for terrorists. Yea, and kitchens and cleaning tools are full of stuff that can hurt one. Chemistry sets are not to blame.
I was making tiny petards with baking soda and vinegar and the inner plastic shell of the Kinder eggs in elementary school (decades ago) and it was a good tool to freak out the girls. It is loud and cannot make a fire and can be washed out of clothes, pretty safe but funny.
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