No Such Thing As A Fish - 258: No Such Thing As A Brutally Honest Yoga Mat
Episode Date: March 1, 2019Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss plumbing detectives, guinea pigs in the freezer, and the Head of Cybersecurity who's never used a computer....
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Hello, and welcome to another episode of Know Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming
to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber, I'm sitting here
next to James Harkin, who is sitting next to Andrew Hunter Murray, and then rounding
off the circle in between Andrew and myself is Anna Chazinski, and once again, we have
gathered around the microphones with our four favourite facts from the last seven days,
and in no particular order, here we go, starting with you, the man sitting next to me, James
Harkin.
And if at home you can work out because there's only one man sat next to Dan, if you remember
the situation of us all around the table. Genius. So who's it? Me.
My fact this week is that animal metabolism was first proven by Antoine Lavoisier in an
experiment where he put a guinea pig in a freezer. Okay, so a couple of caveats to this.
Freezers haven't been invented yet. It's the first one. So it was in an ice calorimeter,
which is a container inside another container, which is full of ice. So it's a way that people
would keep things cool in those days, but it's not a freezer per se, I wouldn't say.
It's kind of like a thermos flask, but it's got ice instead of a vacuum. Yes. Okay. Yeah,
that's fair enough. But it was important that it was ice rather than a vacuum because it
was the amount of ice that melted, which he measured. And that worked out how much heat
was given off by the guinea pig. And it was heat just from living from the guinea pig.
And he realised that this was a kind of metabolism, which is a bit like combustion. So combustion
is where you burn organic material to get energy and metabolism is where you kind of burn sugars
to get energy for the body. And he worked out that these two were kind of the same thing.
And I thought he'd sort of invented the device. Or was it there anyway?
I don't know about that.
The way I heard it described, which is quite good to visualise, is like one of those water coolers
in an office. But so it had the guinea pig in the middle, then it had another water cooler
around it with the ice. And then it had another water cooler around it with snow,
didn't it? Because he had to insulate the ice. I don't know where he was getting huge amounts
of snow. So he stuffed the outside with snow so the ice didn't melt for other reasons.
It's an amazing guy, though. I wouldn't be surprised if he did invent that because
the guy invented so much. I mean, he's a bit new to me, I have to say. But, you know,
he created oxygen. And thank God for him. Before that, it was really hard to breathe.
No, he created carbon dioxide like we all do.
Oh, yeah. He created that. But then he found the word oxygen. He coined.
Because he obviously priestly is the person that most people associate with oxygen because
priestly worked out that this weird thing was happening during combustion. And so he went to
Lavoisier and said, hey, look at this. And it was Lavoisier who kind of explained it.
But I think priestly didn't think it was oxygen that was being generated. He thought it was
deflogisticated air. So the idea was that there was a substance called flogiston,
which was in lots and lots of materials. And it really wanted to burn. So once you burn something,
it was released. So basically, as soon as you burn something, the flogiston was released.
And then you just had, well, oxygen left over, but he just thought it was deflogisticated air.
And I think for the next 30 years of his life, he refused to believe Lavoisier's
rival and correct interpretation of what oxygen was and continued to call it deflogisticated air.
In fairness, they're pretty much the same thing, but just with one of them a way worse name.
The weird thing is he did all this stuff on his day off, which is so cool. So he was a taxman,
really. He had a vast tax organization. It was Paris's chief taxman, basically. And he worked
six hours every week. No, he worked six days a week. For 20 years, he worked six days a week.
He did all his experiments on one day a week. And he did a little bit of work in the mornings.
And that actually led to his death partly, his job as a tax man, because he was guillotined
on trumped up charges of tax fraud. But really, he'd been really unpopular since the time he
suggested a wall around Paris. He suggested a seventh wall around Paris.
I can't imagine why anyone would object to the political suggestion of a wall.
He said it was to make the tax system fairer. And a lot of people said,
it's not that, it's to squeeze the poor. And it got torn down in the revolution.
As a tax collector, he was quite reformist. And I think a lot of people say that he probably
wouldn't have been beheaded during the French Revolution, if it weren't for the fact that
he really pissed off Marat, didn't he, who was notorious, quite bloodthirsty, revolutionary,
but who also fancied himself as a scientist. So Marat wanted to get into the Academy of Sciences,
where Lavoisier was very influential. And Marat believed in stuff like animal magnetism,
which we've talked about before, where, and he said he could see things like magnetism and
mesmerism leaking from objects. He said he saw it leaking from the head of Benjamin Franklin,
for instance. So he applied to the Academy of Sciences with these theories. And Lavoisier said,
no, you can't come in. This sounds like nonsense to me. And he held a grudge against him ever
since. And it was him who said, as soon as the opportunity arose, let's drop that guy's head
off. He insulted me. And he saw a lot of stuff leaking from Lavoisier's head. Actually, what
happened was, in fact, this didn't happen, but there is a myth that Lavoisier asked one of his
assistants, because he was a great scientist, to watch him as he had his head chopped off,
and he was going to keep blinking and to see how long he blinked for after the chop off.
That is so cool. Wait, but that didn't happen? It didn't. It's a later myth.
That's a famous myth, isn't it? I didn't know that was to do with him. That's so cool.
Just on his head, a century after he died, there was a statue that was erected of him
up in Paris. But no one quite noticed at the time that it wasn't his head on the statue.
They'd used the wrong head. Basically, the guy who was sculpting it didn't have enough money.
So he found a spare head, and it was the secretary of the Academy of Sciences who was there during
Lavoisier's last years, and they used his head instead on the thing. I think the idea was he
was going to sculpt Lavoisier's head over it. When you said they used it, they obviously didn't
plant his head on top of a statue. I mean, they used him as a model to sculpt.
They used like an old statue head of it. Obviously, it wasn't like the basket on
Guillotine's head. But not an actual head. No, this is a century after he died.
How many statues have actual heads on top of them?
You can tell with a statue, if the horse has got one leg off the ground, they died in battle.
If it has the person's actual head, they died in a Guillotine accident.
They did some weird shit back then. A Guillotine accident. How could you find a Guillotine accident?
I keep dropping this. I wasn't even meant to be used for that.
It's really sad though, because he was exonerated a year and a half after his death.
That's only 18 months for a rapid turnaround in his reputation, and he had a massive funeral.
3,000 people came. There was a hundred strong choir singing, and there was a bust of him,
which was crowned with a wreath and this huge tomb, all despite the fact that his body was
headless and buried in a mass grave somewhere because of the revolution.
Yeah. When he was 28, he married this 13-year-old, and he put this girl to work translating
scientific papers from different countries. And then basically, once he got all this stuff
translated, he then magically discovered things. She was awesome though.
She was so cool. Yeah, Marianne Pierrette-Paul's. She was 13, but I think she liked him a lot,
and she married him to get away from marrying a 50-year-old to this kind of happy story.
It was her father who effectively got them married to this 50-year-old count.
And apparently, he used to come round their house, and they'd play board games together.
So it's a beautiful romance if you discount the 13-year-old thing, but she was scientifically
very adept at thought, and a lot of the stuff that he did may have involved her,
but she wouldn't have been credited. She did amazing scientific drawings and stuff.
Yeah. You know, there was one experiment he did where he kept a pelican full of water
at boiling point for 101 days. What? 101 consecutive days.
Well, it must have been dead after the first 20 minutes.
Well, the thing you need to know about this is that a pelican is a kind of specialist water
container. How'd you guys going, though? I quite like the fact that he was able to sort of
do the foundations of metabolism off this one experiment, because people have been toying
with it for a very long time, and it must have really annoyed one guy in particular
called Santorio Santorio. You read about him? He spent 30 years using a chair device to weigh
himself and everything that he ate and drank, as well as his urine and feces. And the idea was
he was comparing the weight of what he'd eaten and that was coming out, the waste products.
So the whole point was to work out the foundations of metabolism, but 30 years,
and he didn't really get to a final point, and then all mate puts a guinea pig in a freezer.
I don't think he would have been that pastel, because he'd been dead for at least 150 years.
Oh yeah, I didn't look at the birth and death date, that's true. Cool. Actually, I feel better
about that now. If you were doing that experiment, you really wouldn't want to mix up the tray on
which you weigh all your food, and then the tray on which you weigh all your feces with you.
You'd probably label them. Yeah. But the logic, presumably, behind what he did was that he was
trying to prove that what he ate weighed much more than what was coming out of it, right?
And so, obviously, Levoisier's theory proven to be correct, and the overarching
theory of kind of existence as we have it now is that whatever goes in has to come out in some
form, like whatever matter goes in, that amount of matter has to come out. So if it's not being
pooed out, it's coming out somewhere else. Exactly. He worked out that for every eight
pounds of food he ate, he excreted only three pounds of feces, and he worked out that about half
a pound of air was coming out of his mouth and various stuff coming out of different parts of
his body. And this was all in his 1614 book, arse de statica medicina. Arse? Arse. It's obviously
art. That's Latin for art, right? Arse. Or work, I guess. Was it consistent for him? Would he be
out to dinner? Suddenly feel the need to poo and sort of have to dash off to the lab? So what makes
me think, oh, you mean did he do it every single day? Yeah. I don't think people went out to restaurants
in the same way. They haven't been invented at that stage. Not really. Dinner party maybe then.
Yeah. If you invited him over to dinner, maybe he brought his contraption with him.
Just left his feces tray by the door. No dietary requirements, but I will need to weigh.
So one of the things that's crucial to metabolism, which we all learned in GCSE
biology is enzymes, huge deal, right? So enzymes are the thing that speeds up all
metabolic processes. But I just always find it so amazing that these things would happen
if enzymes didn't exist. So the enzymes are the proteins that sit there and they tell
processes to happen and they tell like different molecules to pair up with each other and process
things. And if they didn't exist, then things would happen much more slowly. So for instance,
there's an enzyme called phosphatase, which is used for things like signalling between
ourselves and like transmitting hormone impulses between us. Totally necessary for life. And one
little reaction involving phosphatase takes 10 milliseconds. Without that enzyme, it would take
one trillion years. So you would still be able to eat and still poo it out. Yeah. You'd be
pooing it out a trillion years in the future. Yeah, I mean more. Yeah. So it's like a hundred
times longer than the universe has been around. It's a long way. If you took all the enzymes
out of someone, you fed them a snack. What would happen? So all the stuff would go into your body
and your body would still try to excrete it. So yeah, you just wouldn't digest it. So you wouldn't
get any of the energy or anything like that. So you'd just be reusable. You wouldn't need different
trays. So I read a really cool thing about metabolism, which is about the difference
between a shrew and an elephant's metabolism. So shrews have very, very fast metabolisms.
Their hearts got 1500 beats per minute, and they have to eat twice their body weight every day.
Twice their body weight every single day. But every gram of its body uses 67 times more oxygen
than a single gram of a human body. So they have incredibly fast metabolisms. They digest.
Does that mean they have to breathe in lots of oxygen? It does. Yeah, they need way more oxygen
proportional to their body than elephants do. Whereas elephants, there was this essay online
about why elephants don't explode. So elephants have trillions more cells on the inside. So they're
much hotter on the inside, right? Because the insides are proportionally bigger than their
skins. An elephant is 250,000 times larger than a mouse, but it's only got 5,000 times the surface
area. So then the big problem is how to let all that heat out. And elephants, as a result,
have a much slower metabolism. So they don't burn food or fuel at the same rate. They run
much, much cooler than a mouse or a shrew, which has little heaters turned up really,
really high and so gets through a lot of fuel really, really fast. So it's just that they
slow their metabolism. But doesn't that mean, because a shrew is still covered in fur. So
they must be hot all the time. Yeah, they're always running around. They're just always running around.
Yeah, they're probably even hot. Yeah, yeah. That guinea pig, when he got in the freezer,
must have been like, oh, thank f***ing nice. I was reading a tiny bit about guinea pigs
and about guinea pig shows. So they're quite a big thing and they've been a big thing.
Not TV shows. Not TV shows. They're like dog shows. They've been around since Victorian times.
And now people take them really seriously. So there are over 400 guinea pig shows in Britain
every year. What? I was reading an article about a guinea pig show winner, who's a person who owns
lots of winning guinea pigs. He's called Tony Tancock. Tony Tancock. Tony Tancock, yeah.
That is one of them. He's also the nude sunbathing champion of Britain.
So he's got more than 50 guinea pigs, but he had six show guinea pigs stolen before a show
recently, outrageous. And he thinks it's just for rivalry, because actually even the best
show guinea pigs, the most valuable, the ones who've won the most competitions,
chain stands for about 30 pounds each.
Okay, it's time for fact number two, and that is Andy. My fact is that Britain has a special
team of leak detectives who listen to the sound of water using a special stick.
I've seen it. I've seen it happen near my house. Have you? Yeah. I was walking with my son and there
were these two guys standing in the middle of the road, and one was leaning into a stick.
It looks like a very long upside down plunger. So he had his head sort of in this rubbery thing,
and he said no. And then he lifted the stick up and he moved about a meter down. He went,
there it is. And I didn't know what the hell they were doing. So I just took my son away from it.
I thought he was just plunging his ear, trying to get some wet hair out of his brain.
They were, they were using a Victorian device, which is still used today to spot leaks in
underground pipes. It's obviously very hard to spot leaks because they're in underground pipes.
So, but they do, the pipes do, the sticks vibrate when a leak is detected. And they're often used
at night because it means that there's less traffic around. So it's easier to detect a stick.
And is it, is it like acoustic vibrations from the sound of the leak coming out of the
thing? Okay. So that vibrates the stick. And do they introduce themselves at sort of parties?
Do they just say I'm a detective and leave it at that? And then it really rebounds. Oh, thank
God, my husband's missing. Let me fetch my stick. Apparently it's like all these pipes make some
kind of noise. But the gurgle of water going through a pipe is slightly different if there's a hole
with it. I can believe that. So they, yeah, they, they just must know the sound really well, I guess.
And it seems to work really well. Because in a 12 month period from an article I read,
they've managed to find 18,000 leaks using this stick. Wow. Yeah. And it's extremely necessary.
So leaks are a massive water problem in this country. We have more than three billion litres
of water leaks per year. Thames water, which is the biggest water provider has 20,500 litres
escaping every day per kilometre. Escaping. So yeah, getting out. They want to be free.
But it's, and it's treated water, isn't it? Is water that should be good enough to come out of
the tap? Absolutely. So one fifth of the water that's been treated that we're supposed to be
drinking or using in our homes, one fifth of it leaks away every year. I mean, it's terrible.
It's so wasteful. It's a lot. There is one way of finding leaks that's not the acoustic sticks,
but it's sniffer dogs. So they've recently been employed. And I think Scotland is the first place
to employ them. There are two Cocker Spaniels named Snipe and Denzel, who again, I think,
is really strong. They feel like they've been seconded over from the murder squad.
I don't think the water dog should be called Snipe and Denzel. I know. I feel sorry for them.
They should be called Puddle and Splash or something.
No, they are. And what's also sad about Snipe and Denzel is that they've been trained by these two
soldiers who used to serve in Afghanistan and Iraq and did train Sniper dogs there.
And these two people now decided, quite sweetly, came back from Afghanistan and Iraq
and decided to start training dogs to sniff out bedbugs and then to sniff out leaks. And so this
is what they do. And the way they do it is they are trained to detect tiny, tiny amounts of chlorine
because obviously our water is chlorinated. And so they can tell. Yeah, it's impressive, isn't it?
So for companies, leakages in say even bathrooms, if you're a big company and you have huge buildings,
results in huge amounts of money being lost. So Pepsi, the article I was reading, PepsiCo,
they worked out that the money that the person was being paid in that one building to be the
leak detective was the same amount of money, roughly, that they were saving in what they
would have lost through bills. Does that mean they might as well just fire him? It does. Yeah.
Well, I can't. Yeah, it doesn't cancel itself out. So you might as well just fire him. He's
redundant. Well done, Den. Thanks very much. That guy is going to look into this as he walks out of
the building. It must be that they saved way more than his money. Yeah, it must be right.
And you presented that as though it was going to be a positive thing. I thought weirdly, it was
like hire me, but it will be like, you're not wasting any money. You're just, you're at a zero
because you're not losing the money. I mean, you're bringing nothing to this company. That's
like having someone, it's like Pepsi hiring someone to make a can of Pepsi, but it costs them like
70p to hire this guy and then sell it for 70p. What's the point of that? This is the
actual sentence in the article that employee there had convinced his boss that saving water
would also save enough money to pay for the employee's time spent tracking and repairing leaks.
He must do some other stuff. Yeah. Or maybe he also works in IT. That's possible. Maybe the leak
is bad enough that there's water leaking and gushing all the way through the building. And so
actually you're, you're preventing that as well as saving the cost of the water.
Broom's not being used. So at least it cancels out just on them. See, it did make sense.
Well, I think by enough, I think that might have been a miscreant. He means you'll save,
you know, more than that. Yeah, more than enough. More than enough. He's missed out on more than that.
He's missed out on more. Yeah. One group of not people, but things that are good at looking for
leaks is Beavers. Because Beavers make dams, as we all know. And they will always plug any leaks
in their dams because it's really important that they have lots of water behind them because they
use the water to hide them. And so if they get a tiny little hole, then they'll immediately
put sticks and stuff in. But humans don't really like dams. And so we'll often put like little
tubes in there to try and let the water go through the dams. And then the Beavers will kind of plug
it up. And so anyway, so they've invented this thing called a Beaver deceiver. And the Beaver
deceiver is like, it's almost like a triangular pipe that goes in. So it means that the flow
happens way away from the dam. And so where the flow goes in, it's not enough of a flow for the
Beaver to recognize it. So you can't tell that there's a hole in there, even though there is a
hole. That's really clever. So that Beaver goes and sees the front of his dam, and it doesn't
look like there's a hole anywhere in it. Yeah, if you go, if you put a hole right in a dam,
then there'll be a flow of water and the Beaver will recognize it. But if you put the Beaver
deceiver in, then the flow of water is coming from quite a long way away from the dam itself.
And it's much wider there. So the flow is much less. It's more subtle. It's been sort of dissipated.
I'll be honest, it's mostly about the name that I brought.
Okay, it is time for fact number three. And that is my fact. My fact this week is that Japan's
cyber security minister has never used a computer. He's unhackable. Yeah, he's unhackable. Yeah,
absolutely true. Yeah, his name is Yoshitaka Sakurada. He's 68 years old, and he was made
the deputy chief of the government's cyber security strategy office. He also is looking over
as the minister for the Olympic and Paralympic Committee for the 2020 Games. And he's never
thrown a javelin either. This guy is so unqualified. But he was in a parliamentary
committee meeting, and it was during there just after he'd been given the post of cyber
security minister that he said that he had never used a computer before. Also seemed
quite confused when the USB was brought up, not quite knowing what that was. So yeah,
pretty astonishing that this guy has been given the post. And it's been a bit embarrassing for
the prime minister, because he was the one who gave him the post. And in fact, two days later,
Sakurada actually tried to contradict that statement and said, of course, I have used a
computer. I just don't use it at home is what I was saying. I use it in the office. But no one
really. But he's known for his gaps as well. He's not someone who's particularly good in these
parliamentary committee meetings. He claimed that the Olympics would cost Japan 1,500 yen
instead of 1,150 billion yen. So 1,500 yen would work out at about $13 for the Olympics.
That's right. Bargain. It would be a bargain, wouldn't it? If you could do it for that much.
Amazing. Yeah. Well, if the Olympics bring in as much money as they cost.
Yeah, a bit like that guy at Pepsi. Yeah. You may as well just not have the Olympics.
Problem solved. When he did say this about not using computers, there was a lot of people
online who were taking the mickey out of him. But someone did say, you don't need to know how to
drive a tractor to be a good agriculture minister, which I think is almost a good point.
As in the ministry, if you're a minister of something, you're tending to oversee things
rather than actually using them. Absolutely. Although that's quite a slightly controversial
thing people sometimes object to anyway, that the person who is most senior in charge of various
ministries like foreign affairs or defense, whatever, never knows what they're doing.
Politicians in general, though, that's democracy for you. If you want to have some kind of
system where clever people are in charge, then fair enough, good luck to you.
But it's always weird. So I was reading, I was looking into unqualified ministers generally,
but then I did think government ministers who are suddenly shifted to transport,
even though they don't even know what a bus looks like, is quite strange.
And I read an interview with Margaret Beckett in 2006, when she was suddenly shifted to be
foreign secretary. And I think she'd been in environment before, well, agriculture before
that. And she openly said, I'm completely flying by the seat of my pants. And she was appointed on
Friday evening. And she had to swap up over the weekend, Monday morning, she's just flown to discuss
Iran negotiations with Condoleezza Rice. Well, that's, that's a baptism of fire. You don't get
that in most jobs. Yeah, this is weird. I'm reading a book kind of about this at the moment by Michael
Lewis. Yeah, it's called The Fifth Risk. And it's all about, you know, project management and how
you fill roles. And he's writing about the Department of Energy. And the guy who got the job had
previously said he wanted to shut the Department of Energy down. Or he said he couldn't even
remember which department he wanted to shut down. Rick Perry. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And then he was given
the job. And you know, it's so it, I think some level of knowledge is probably good.
But there is an argument, isn't there? I mean, this is a bit technical and probably boring,
but there is an argument that you should just have people in charge who know what they're doing.
But the argument against that. What a ridiculous argument. I think it's like what
we found that democracy is better where everyone gets a vote, even though people don't really
understand what they're voting for. And that means that everyone is kind of invested in it. And so
even if you make a bad decision, at least everyone's invested in that bad decision. Whereas if you
promote people who are supposed to be just good at things. Number one, who decides who's good at
stuff. But number two, no one else is invested in that. So if things go wrong, which they always do,
then that's when you chuck people's heads off. That's fine. I'd rather chuck one person's head
off than us all have to go down together taking the blame. I'm not saying one's better than the
other, but you know, I like experts and autocracy. So just gonna flag it up. So on Japanese computing
stuff, the Japanese government is currently engaged. It's just beginning a massive exercise
to hack 200 million objects. And the people, they're quite worried about cybersecurity and
about the internet of things, you know, I think he's meant to be sitting there with a manual
huge hackers manual. This guy is probably he thinks that he's hacking just 20 things.
And so they're doing a five year experiment hacking into the internet of things. They've
just got legal permission to do it. So you're talking about like smart things in houses.
Exactly. Yeah. I thought you'd have a government minister suddenly talking through your fridge
to you or something. It's a test security because they're very worried about, you know,
the chaos that could be caused by hacking into things. And you know, people now have web enabled
yoga mats. So yeah, really? Yeah. Yeah. And they've all got factory settings and the password is
always zero zero zero zero zero or whatever. So what's the yoga mat doing to you that needs a
smart? I thought I mean, it's just a rug, isn't it? It's going to say to you, you're putting too
much pressure on your left wrist. So you need to change your, you know, the way that you're
dogging. Yeah. You're being a bit self righteous and tedious about your
stop boring all your friends.
No, Singapore did a very similar thing, I think, which is, I think this was a couple of years ago,
hundreds of hackers were invited by the government to try and hack into its defense ministry.
And so and they offered the reward. So they basically said everyone tried to crack into our
security systems. And they distributed $15,000 price money between all these hackers who
successfully said, yeah, I've just hacked in here and found out that you're planning to bomb
Russia tomorrow. Singapore. Yeah, I know. Very surprising.
Do you know that if you connect to someone else's Wi-Fi hotspot in Singapore without the
permission, you can get three years in prison. Whoa. Did not know that. I think the whole hacking
thing though, I mean, in Japan, particularly, I guess it is a bit of a worrying problem because
let's say Tokyo that is really implementing the idea of robots running a lot of things.
That's got to be a huge problem. So for example, a robot last year ran for election
in Japan and it got 4,000 votes. It came third in the election.
I think these things are never as far along as the makers claim.
No, robots still rubbish. It came third, came third.
Japan actually, that says more about the people voting for it than the robot.
That's true. I mean, America just elected a puppet. Whoa.
Yeah, sort of. Japan is actually not that advanced in computers. Well,
I think we must have mentioned before, but in Japan, computers aren't the norm for a lot of
people in the same way that they are in the Western world. So fax is still a very big thing in
Japan. It's really, really common. You wouldn't send an email naturally if you were sort of
booking a restaurant or something or there was a journalist who went and she wanted an interview
with, I think, a government minister and they said, you can't email us to book an interview
or use any computers. You have to do it by fax. If you RSVPing, it's all by fax machine.
I don't think it's maybe as big a deal for this guy to have said he's never used a computer
because it's maybe not as much the norm in your day-to-day life.
Desktop's and it's all smartphones, basically. Do you think there's like a Japanese podcast
saying that the head of digital security in the UK has never used a fax machine?
Actually, speaking of that, there's only one MP. This is in 2016. There's been an election since,
but I think it's still true. There's only one MP who doesn't accept emails from constituents
and you have to send them a fax instead or a letter and that is Dr. Julian Lewis.
He's one of the big Brexiteer guys. And they found this out. There was someone called Mathamwe
Nixon who worked for a company called Right to Them and this is a website that lets you get in
touch with your MP and they found out that their fax machine had broken and they tried to work out
whether they had to buy a new one or not and they realized that there was only one MP in the whole
country that they needed a fax machine for and it was this Julian Lewis guy.
Wow. That's amazing.
The FBI is very into faxing still. In fact, the FBI in 2017 said it will no longer accept
freedom of information requests by email. It's only accepting them by fax again.
Wow.
So that you can either fax or use snail mail.
Is that just so that people go, I can't be bothered and they really will see?
I think it's to make it a bit more difficult.
This is a big thing in America as in technological illiteracy by senators or congresspeople.
So when Mark Zuckerberg appeared in front of senators to answer all these questions about
Facebook, he was asked questions including, is Twitter the same as what you do?
If I'm emailing within WhatsApp, does that inform your advertisers?
What was face mash? Is it still up and running?
I don't know what face mash is.
Face mash was his very first site where it was grading.
I know.
Yeah, I remember that.
Oh, I thought it was the thing where you combined your face with someone else's.
That's what I thought when you said it.
It would be like a baby.
No.
What?
What are you talking about?
Like if you had a kid and you combined your heads and told you what you're...
Kid would look like, okay.
Yeah.
Maybe.
Maybe I'm wrong about face mash.
See, I don't know.
No, maybe I'm wrong.
Maybe I thought that was his first thing.
Well, I think we've established it's a totally justified question.
And well done for asking.
That's so good though.
It's like he's basically been called around to his grandparents' place,
but there are a thousand grandparents there.
Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is Chazinsky.
My fact this week is that a Mumbai businessman is trying to sue his parents for giving birth to him.
And his mother has responded by saying,
if she'd met him before he was born, she definitely wouldn't have done it.
So this is this guy from Mumbai.
And he said his parents gave birth to him without his consent.
And you shouldn't be allowed to do that.
It's wrong to bring children into the world without their consent,
they're destined to a life of constant suffering that they didn't choose.
And so he's suing his parents.
And the thing that's going to make it a bit harder for him
is that both his parents are lawyers.
I read one other thing his mother said,
which is, if he could come up with a rational explanation
as to how we could have sought his consent to be born,
I will accept my fault.
Yeah.
That's fair enough.
So this is anti-natalism, which I had never heard of up until this.
Well, it's quite a new concept.
Yeah.
It's an amazing concept though, isn't it?
It's just the idea that why are we alive at all?
We should just stop having babies.
But we shouldn't be upset about that.
We should be thinking of we're doing the universe a favor.
Why?
Sorry.
They just think we're born into suffering that we're born into,
if you know that you've got certain diseases in your family
that you know might genetically go down.
That's a bit different.
No, but it's just everything.
Yeah.
I mean, there's a lot of reasons as well.
One reason is overpopulation,
which is always a thing that people complain about.
That's fair.
Yeah.
But the other thing is like by bringing in birth,
it means that you're bringing in death.
So it guarantees that whoever is alive,
there is going to be some kind of suffering for them.
Yeah.
I guess so.
And it's not, it's the idea basically that by having someone give birth,
you add something negative.
He says it's wrong to bring children into the world
because even he admits my life is proportionally very good.
It's absolutely fine.
I'm perfectly happy, but I'd rather not be here.
It's like there's a nice room,
but I don't really want to be in that room.
Piss off it.
No, no, you can't say that.
Die involves dying.
And then he says, well, it's really unfair to have me
with the decision of whether or not I kill myself.
And this actually comes from this guy who had a similarly low bar
for what he calls suffering.
So it's this guy called David Benatar
who wrote a book called Better to Have Never Been.
And that was, I think about...
Shouldn't have written the book, shouldn't he?
He really regrets it.
He's never written the book.
It's the best seller by really wishing for the effort.
So he's with this really fun guy.
And he says that we're almost always hungry or thirsty.
When we're not, we always have to go to the bathroom.
We're always experiencing...
I think it's going to be God's God's justice.
I'm capable of going an hour at a time
without eating or drinking or going to the bathroom.
And I don't think I'm special, I should say.
Would you not say you're always a bit hungry or thirsty?
Or if not, he says...
Are you none of those things now?
I'm a bit thirsty, yeah.
Oh no, I should never have been born.
Or if that, he says, and this is something
that you can't deny, Andy, he says,
we're always experiencing thermal discomfort.
We're always a bit too hot or a bit too cold.
You literally just tell me to turn the heating down.
That's true.
Okay, I'm in.
You're too tired?
I'm not tired, but that's only because we're recording
at about 10 to one in the afternoon.
You said it's quite new, but this idea has been around
for quite a long time.
Not the name, anti-natalism, but other stuff.
So the Encritites, which were an old sect,
they said that in order to conquer death,
people should desist from procreation.
The Manichaeans, the Bogermills, the Cathars,
they all thought that kind of thing.
But obviously not any of them really around now.
And that's kind of the problem with this.
If it's your doctrine, then you don't really
send it down to your children or your grandchildren.
It's kind of all or nothing, isn't it?
Unless you can persuade everyone,
your idea is not going to be the one that survives.
So there's a group called the Voluntary Human
Extinction Movement, which set up in 1991.
And that was...
Until 1992.
And that was a guy called Les Knight who founded it.
And it just asks people not to have children, basically.
And he said, I consider it a success.
Every time one more of us decides not to add one more of us.
It needs to be the Enforced Human Extinction Movement,
doesn't it?
It's not going to work with the Voluntary.
Yeah, actually, it's that guy from Avengers, isn't it?
It's the same idea.
What's he called?
From the latest Avengers?
Oh, Thanos.
Yeah, Thanos.
Spoiler alert if you haven't seen it,
but you really should have done.
But at the end of it, he kind of kills
half of all beings in the universe and just disappear.
And the idea is there's overpopulation
and he thinks that that's the best way of doing it.
And it's completely random in the Avengers.
So all at once, you just start to disappear half of the people.
Wow.
I think warn people.
There's no reason not to warn people.
Well, they knew because the Avengers were fighting against it.
So they kind of knew that this guy was going to do something.
But...
You should have time to set your affairs in order
and feed the cat.
And the event that the cat survives...
Is the cat safe?
Yeah, it fits all beings.
Well, if you've got two cats,
you should put out one lot of food, basically.
Well, you don't know because your two might both survive
or they might both die.
And the other thing is if you're the one who disappears,
but your cat doesn't,
then the cat's going to starve to death.
So actually it's going to be more than half of the universe dies.
Some people are reliant on others.
Cats aren't reliant on us.
The dogs will die, sure.
I do find it an amazing concept.
Like, I'm definitely...
The Avengers, yeah.
Yeah, so I'll write down the name of that title.
What was it?
But no, the idea of, you know, should we go on?
I'm on the side that we should.
I've proved that.
You've just had a baby and it'll be awkward if you're...
I've got proof that, I think.
But you do kind of go,
well, why are we going?
What are we going on for?
I can see that their side of it is sort of going,
what if we've actually woken up to the idea
that there's all this suffering going on
and our job is to be clever enough to end it completely?
Life is a mistake.
We haven't seen it anywhere else.
It's just such a big concept.
I think the planet has got resources
to give a town of, say, 20,000 people a really good time.
If you just keep those 20,000 people alive,
we'll just have a vote or we'll have a random ballot
and we'll just say, you, 20,000, you get to survive
and you're going to have a great time.
You would love it if there weren't that many.
You would have loved it in the Stone Age.
In the Stone Age, they've recently done a study
at the start of the Stone Age
that in the whole of Europe, there are about 1,500 people.
Lovely.
We just about the same number as come to one of our shows.
But that's over the whole of Europe.
Yeah, that's crazy.
Travel and parking will be a nightmare for that show, wouldn't it?
If there were only, if everyone from Europe was coming to it.
Yes, but parking in the rest of Europe would be quite good.
Oh, yeah.
If you were the one person that didn't want to go to the show,
it'd be bliss, wouldn't it?
Rows are empty.
It is interesting.
And you having a child doesn't actually prove
that you don't believe in this.
It just means you're a hypocrite.
Just means she's a contraception.
I think it's not me.
Guys, I messed up big time.
Yeah, I mean, a lot of us do things that we wouldn't say are morally what we believe in.
In fact, the guy, Benatar, who's sort of come up with...
He's got 50 kids.
He won't tell journalists.
The New York interviewed him and said,
Do you have children yourself?
And he said, I'd rather not answer that.
I don't see how it's relevant to my argument.
Really?
Wow.
Yeah.
There's only evidence that he hadn't quite believed it at, you know,
nine months before the time of the birth of his child.
So he might have changed his mind now.
He might have changed his mind.
That's a really good point.
After he met the kid.
That was the one thing that changed his mind.
This one by businessman thinks he should never have been born.
It's worse if your parents become anti-natalists after you're born.
I should just say, a lot of these facts we were mentioning
came from this brilliant article in The New Yorker.
It's called The History of Blood and would definitely recommend reading it.
Just on weird lawsuits.
Yeah.
I didn't know about this lawsuit in the 19th century.
So in 1893, where the Supreme Court got involved
in whether tomato was a fruit or a vegetable.
Why did they do this?
So the ruling is actually in.
And it was a lawsuit that was brought by the Knicks family.
So they were big sellers of tomatoes.
And it was against this guy called Edward Headon.
And it was to recover some fees they'd spent.
There's some tax they'd paid on exporting some tomatoes.
Because there was a rule that tax had to be paid on imported vegetables, but not on fruit.
And then they were like, well, tomato is technically a fruit.
So we shouldn't have to pay tax on that.
Went to court.
And they all, everyone got their dictionaries out in court
and brought up different definitions of fruits and vegetables.
And it was ruled that tomato is a vegetable.
According to the Supreme Court, you had to pay tax on it.
Because everyone sort of thinks of it as a vegetable.
I don't think it is though.
Well, it's not botanically, but they said that's not relevant for tax purposes.
Because I remember reading that I think by law in the EU, a carrot is a fruit.
It is a carrot, a cucumber, sweet potato.
It's because in Portugal, they make jam out of it.
Yeah.
And so jam has different fruit.
If you're a fruit jam, then you've got certain tax rules that apply to you.
And so it's got to make sure.
And there's a thing, a directive that says for these purposes,
carrots, cucumbers, sweet potatoes are all fruits.
Wow.
And that's why we're leaving.
So you can make a really.
There was a guy in 2006 called Alan Heckard, who tried to sue Michael Jordan for $416 million
on the grounds that he looked like him.
And this guy said that it was ruining his life.
He couldn't go to church.
He couldn't go to the shops.
He couldn't eat out without being mistaken for Michael Jordan.
People were coming up to him.
And he actually, so he paid the fee.
This is the weird thing.
You pay a fee to file this lawsuit.
So like $200.
And he also sued Nike for the same amount because it was their responsibility as well
for making Jordan famous.
And weirdly though, I've looked at the pictures and basically the similarities are that
he's bald, like Michael Jordan.
He wears an earring in exactly the same ear, which I suppose he could have removed.
Exactly the same ear.
And he wears Air Jordan shoes.
And always a basketball jersey with the name Jordan.
Wow, he lost, right?
No, he won.
Yeah, he did not win.
Okay, that's it.
That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said
during the course of this podcast,
you can find us on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland, James.
At James Harkin, Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M.
And Shazinsky.
You can email podcast.qi.com.
Or you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing, or go to our website.
No such thing as a fish.com.
You can find all of our previous episodes there.
You can find links to our upcoming UK tour and to our European tour.
They are up there now.
We're very excited to be going.
Check them out.
Hopefully see you there.
And hopefully see you all again next week when we do another episode of no such thing as a fish.
Goodbye.