Redbulldildo
Redbulldildo t1_isprjqc wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL in 1976 , LA Dodgers catcher Steve Yeager was impailed in the throat by San Diego Padre's Bill Russell's broken bat, resulting the the MLB issuing a throat guard rule for catchers. by superfly355
The only photos seem to lack detail. If you don't want to see something similar in another sport you could look up Clint Malarchuck or Richard Zednik, two hockey players that had their throats cut on TV.
Redbulldildo t1_is8ho9g wrote
Reply to comment by Livid_Low9645 in TIL the first confirmed victim of Takata airbags was 18y/o Parham. As she drove around a car park, she lightly bumped another vehicle making the airbag inflate, sending metal pieces at such tremendous force that one hit the teen’s neck slicing open her carotid artery. She bled to death in her seat by ahm713
There were over 33.8 million affected cars, you can't just snap your fingers and fix that.
Redbulldildo t1_is8hfak wrote
Reply to comment by GoodGoodGoody in TIL the first confirmed victim of Takata airbags was 18y/o Parham. As she drove around a car park, she lightly bumped another vehicle making the airbag inflate, sending metal pieces at such tremendous force that one hit the teen’s neck slicing open her carotid artery. She bled to death in her seat by ahm713
Damn near everyone in at least one or two models.
Redbulldildo t1_is8h1w5 wrote
Reply to comment by Iron0ne in TIL the first confirmed victim of Takata airbags was 18y/o Parham. As she drove around a car park, she lightly bumped another vehicle making the airbag inflate, sending metal pieces at such tremendous force that one hit the teen’s neck slicing open her carotid artery. She bled to death in her seat by ahm713
It's one of the largest recalls ever, and they didn't even have a fix at first. The failure is due to degradation so at the start of the recall the procedure was to replace it with another faulty part, so that at least people wouldn't die while they tried to figure out how to fix it right.
Edit: largest automotive recall ever
Redbulldildo t1_iucp3nv wrote
Reply to comment by banana4815162342 in TIL This palliative care paper determined that a stream of air from a bedside fan relieves dying patients of dyspnoea (breathlessness/ shortness of breath) as equally as supplemental O2. by No_Cauliflower_5489
I think that's a lot of it, from what I understand, most of our sensation of suffocation is a buildup of CO2, not a lack of oxygen, so it would make sense that that's what makes people feel short of breath.