Maisie Williams Appreciation
“You can see my panties? --- Do you mean these panties?”

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Maisie Williams Appreciation
“You can see my panties? --- Do you mean these panties?”
Alexandra Daddario
Milunka Savić is not a household name, but it should be. Because Milunka is the most decorated woman in the history of warfare. It all began because her brother was called up to fight, and she told him to stay put and took his place.
--On This Day in History Shit Went Down: July 9, 1913--
Born in 1888 in the Kingdom of Serbia, Milunka was 24 when her brother was ordered to serve in the First Balkan War against the Ottoman Empire. She said I got you fam, cut her hair short and dressed in men’s clothing to join the Serbian army in his stead. Why? Who knows? Maybe her brother was a wimp who she knew would die and she knew she was a badass who would make men on the other side die instead. Because holy shit was she a badass.
She saw combat right away, she kicked ass, her side won the war in six months. Go Milunka! But then there was more war. The Second Balkan War broke out a month later because Bulgaria didn’t like its share of the spoils from the first war and attacked its former allies Serbia and Greece. Early on was the 10-day Battle of Bregalnica, during which Milunka received her first medal and was promoted to Corporal Savić. The battle ended on July 9, 1913, with Milunka being wounded, getting hit in the chest with shrapnel. It was then that physicians realized she was a woman.
The commanding officers were all oh fuck we can’t have a woman fighting but also saying well shit she’s so good at fighting though. They offered to transfer her to a nursing unit and Milunka said fuck you I’m a soldier. She stood at attention saying she wanted to continue fighting. Her commanding officer said he’d think about it. She said, “I will wait,” and continued standing at attention. An hour later he said fine get the fuck out of my office and go fight.
Her side also won the Second Balkan War (go Milunka!) and then a year later the kill fest known as World War I began, and that’s when Savić really hit her stride. Serbia was on the winning side in that one (go Milunka!) and in one battle against the Bulgarians in 1916, whose asses she was already familiar with kicking, she single-handedly took 23 Bulgarian soldiers prisoner. The allies weighed her uniform down with all the medals. Not just Serbian medals, but ones from France, Britain, and Russia too.
France offered her a comfortable retirement for her actions, but she chose to stay in Serbia. She married and had a daughter, then divorced. Despite being poor she adopted a number of street children orphaned by the war. Milunka Savić was 52 when World War II broke out and she gave medical aid to resistance fighters, for which she was beaten and thrown in a concentration camp. She survived, but continued to live poor and largely forgotten, dying in 1973 at the age of 85.
Those who cannot remember the past … need a history teacher who says “fuck” a lot. Get both volumes of ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY SH!T WENT DOWN at JamesFell.com/books.
Attenuate. Verb. /əˈten-yə-ˌwāt/ reduce the force, effect, or value of. An attenuated vaccine is one that has weakened the infecting agent enough to not get you sick, but still give your immune system schooling on how to fight it. The first ones were created by the guy whose name appears on your milk. Even that almond bullshit.
--On This Day in History Shit Went Down: July 6, 1885--
Three of Louis Pasteur’s five kids died of typhoid; I expect he wasn’t a fan of infectious diseases. Although the concept of germ theory had been around for centuries, Pasteur’s work with milk gave it strong support and helped nail the coffin shut on the competing “miasma theory” of sickness, which is disease ghosts in the air or some shit.
While working on a cure for chicken cholera in 1878, Pasteur tried injecting fresh bacteria cultures into chickens to give them immunity, but it killed a lot of them; the vaccine was as bad as the disease. Then there was a happy accident. Pasteur said to his assistant, “Be sure to inject those chickens with fresh cultures before you go on vacation.” The assistant said, “Sure thing, boss.” But the assistant forgot and came back a month later and was all “Fucking hell I’m in so much trouble,” and injected the chickens with the now significantly weakened cultures that had been sitting out for a month.
The chickens didn’t die, and were also immune. Eureka.
Then Pasteur killed the wabbit. Many wabbits. Pasteur gave rabies to rabbits, then harvested their spinal cords and dried them out to weaken the virus. Joseph Meister was a nine-year-old boy who’d been badly mauled by a rabid dog and was certain to die. But on July 6, 1885, Pasteur injected him with the attenuated rabies vaccine he’d taken from the bunnies. It wasn’t just a “Fuck it, let’s see what happens.” It had already been successfully tested on dozens of dogs. Over the next eleven days he gave the boy thirteen progressively stronger inoculations (made stronger by drying them for a shorter time). The boy lived. Good thing, too. Because Pasteur was not a doctor and would have been in deep shit if the kid died. Instead, he became a hero.
Later analysis of Pasteur’s notebooks revealed that prior to Joseph, Pasteur had treated two others for rabies. One survived but might not have had rabies. The other died. Of rabies. Anyway, the successful treatment of young Joseph paved the way for the development of many other vaccines.
NOTE: This piece was researched and written by a human, not some bullshit "ai" plagiarism software.
Those who cannot remember the past need a history teacher who says “fuck” a lot. Get both volumes of ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY SH!T WENT DOWN at JamesFell.com/books.
Melissa Joan Hart
Behold the power of a front-close top. MJH has cum undun
this is true.
Sydney Sweeney.