7
C H A P T E R 1
Nordic thugs, British traitors (females only, please), homo-
sexuals, and anyone else whose fl esh is not fl ame-retardant,
burning at the stake is the straightforward but reliable, the
Toyota Corolla of capital punishment.
Its advantages are ob-
vious: It’s easy to do—all you
need is a stake and some
burning—and it makes for a
fl
ashy public-service mes-
sage. Th
e upside of death by
fi re: You may die of carbon
dioxide
poisoning before
you’re engulfed by fl ame. Th
e
downside: You might not.
Given the choice, we’d rather
go like ’30s movie star Lupe Vélez, who committed suicide in
1944 by overdosing on sleeping pills and then reportedly
drowning in her toilet. . . .
03
Toilet Facts
Toilets are like oxygen or boyfriends: You tend not to think
much about them until the moment you can’t fi nd any. Maybe
it’s time to give your W.C. a little R-E-S-P-E-C-T. After all, you
probably don’t notice but you pay respect
to the porcelain god
six to eight times per day, on average—or thirty to forty
times per day, if you’re a six-year-old on a road trip (just josh-
ing, kids). Th
at makes for 2,500 trips to Flushville per year,
comprising an average of three full years of your life. Th
at’s
enough time to get a law degree . . . if only you hadn’t spent it
reading
mental
_fl oss.
If death by fi
re were 40,000
shares of
stock and we were your
broker, we’d probably advise you
to “sell.” Most places either abol-
ished it (like England, in 1790),
redesigned it (America’s electric
chair), or never used it in the fi rst
place (Islamic law forbids it).
8
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
✖ ✖ ✖
Nazi war criminal and Gestapo
founder Hermann Göring de-
spised toilet paper (seriously).
He refused to use it and in-
stead bought handkerchiefs in
bulk.
✖ ✖ ✖
In 1993, an Argentinian
prankster switched the “Wom-
en’s” and “Men’s” signs in a se-
ries of public toilets. We don’t
see why this is particularly
clever—the gender divide is
the same whether you all go to
Room A or Room B (except
that women
will get to peek at
some urinals). Apparently, the
Argentine government wasn’t
impressed by it either: Th
ey
sentenced the bathroom ban-
dit to three years in the clink
(which supposedly left him
fl ushed).
✖ ✖ ✖
Th
e separate stall, a welcome
innovation if ever there was
one, is a relatively modern
concept. Th
e
Romans and
Greeks, for instance, saw toilet time as a social occasion and
sat down in groups at their open-air toilets. Th
at brings us
back to the Greeks, which brings us to . . .
Lies Your Toilet
Told You
One of the best-known bits of
trivia
regarding the loo is that
fl
ushing one in the United
States produces a clockwise
swirl, whereas Australia’s toi-
lets fl ush counterclockwise—a
phenomenon said to be driven
by the contrasting effects of
the earth’s rotation upon the
Northern versus the Southern
Hemispheres. What’s particu-
larly fascinating about this oft-
mentioned factoid, though, is
that it’s entirely false. Although
grounded in a true natural
phenomenon known as the
Coriolis effect, this nugget of
misinformation
fudges the fact
that over an area as small as
a toilet—or, for that matter, an
Olympic swimming pool—the
Coriolis effect’s effect is negli-
gible. Whether in New Zea-
land or New Hampshire, your
toilet will only fl ush in the di-
rection its water jets tell it to.