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Who would win a fight, Hulk or Dr. Manhattan?

Let’s see:Doctor ManhattanBiography:Jonathan Osterman was born in 1929. Jon planned to follow in his father's footsteps as a watchmaker, but when the U.S. drops the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, his father declares his profession outdated and instead forces him to work toward a career studying nuclear physics. The incident represents the turning point in Jon's potential future from watchmaker to nuclear physicist and foreshadows Doctor Manhattan's "exterior" perception of time as predetermined and all things within it as so determined, including Manhattan's own reactions and emotions. Jon attends Princeton University and graduates with a Ph.D. in atomic physics. In early 1959, he moves to a research base at Gila Flats, where experiments are being performed on the "intrinsic fields" of physical objects which, if tampered with, result in their disintegration. Here he meets Janey Slater, a fellow researcher; they eventually become lovers. During a visit to an amusement park in New Jersey, Janey's wristwatch is broken, which Jon promises to fix. However, one month later, Jon discovers he has left the repaired watch in his lab coat inside a test chamber. While he is inside, the door to the chamber closes and locks. The researchers are unable to open the door or override the countdown, and Jon's body is torn to pieces from the force of the generator. In the following months, It becomes apparent that Jon is progressively re-forming himself during this time, as indicated by a series of partial bodily reappearances: first a disembodied nervous system including the brain and eyes; then as a circulatory system; and then as a partially muscled skeleton.Powers and Abilities:He is invulnerable to all harm; even when his body is disintegrated, he can reconstruct it in a matter of seconds and remains unharmed. He is capable of altering his size. Jon has complete awareness of and control over atomic and subatomic particles. He is also an Omnikinetic. He does not need air, water, food or sleep, and is immortal. He can teleport himself and others, fly, see his past, present, and future simultaneously. In addition to these powers, Jon is able to phase any part of his body through solid objects without damaging them, produce multiple copies of himself which function independently of each other, project destructive energy, disintegrate people, create force fields, transmute, create and destroy matter, move objects without physically touching them, and create life. He also claims to have walked on the surface of the Sun. He is also capable of manipulating reality as he sees fit through the use of time manipulation, as seen when he erased ten years from the DC Universe when Barry Allen tried to bring his original universe back to normal. The intervention of Jon caused The New 52 timeline to be formed, within which most superheroes are younger and less experienced, and most of them lose their most important relationships before they even begin.Feats:Destroying and recreating the DC Metaverse:Killing Pandora, Metron, and Owlman:Stealing 10 years of DC’s history:The HulkBiography:Following Bruce Banner’s accidental exposure to gamma rays saving the life of Rick Jones during the detonation of an experimental bomb, Banner is physically transformed into the Hulk when subjected to emotional stress, at or against his will, often leading to destructive rampages and conflicts that complicate Banner's civilian life. The Hulk's level of strength is normally conveyed as proportionate to his level of anger. Commonly portrayed as a raging savage, the Hulk has been represented with other personalities based on Banner's fractured psyche, from a mindless, destructive force, to a brilliant warrior, or genius scientist in his own right.Powers and Abilities:The Hulk possesses the potential for seemingly limitless physical strength which is influenced by his emotional state, particularly his anger. This has been reflected in the repeated comment, "The madder Hulk gets, the stronger Hulk gets." The Beyonder once analyzed the Hulk's physiology, and claimed that the Hulk's potential strength had "no finite element inside." Hulk's strength has been depicted as sometimes limited by Banner's subconscious influence; when Jean Grey psionically "shut Banner off", Hulk became strong enough to overpower and destroy the physical form of the villain Onslaught. Writer Greg Pak described the Worldbreaker Hulk shown during World War Hulk as having a level of physical power where "Hulk was stronger than any mortal—and most immortals—who ever walked the Earth", and depicted the character as powerful enough to completely destroy entire planets. His strength allows him to leap into lower Earth orbit or across continents, and he has displayed superhuman speed, durability, stamina and regeneration healing factor. Exposure to radiation has also been shown to make the Hulk stronger.Feats:Lifting a mountain:Denting Adamantium:Destroying Umar’s Dark Dimension:Shaking infinite Dimensions:Result:Doctor Manhattan Wins!Even though Hulk has some impressive strength feats and some matter manipulation immunity he can’t defeat Manhattan, but Manhattan can just throw him into the Sun or a Blackhole.Hope This Helps

Who was the most infamous figure in the history of the Caribbean?

It is funny - studying Caribbean history is a maddening subject because it is so disjointed. Although there are a lot of common themes across the region, there are very few people who are common to history across the region. So unless you pick someone mega obvious like Christopher Columbus, it is hard to get someone who was infamous in more than just a small area.So, with that having been said, I will tentatively suggest John Eyre.[1][1][1][1]Now, most Australians know John Eyre as a famous explorer and founding figure in that country.[2][2][2][2] But after he left Australia, Eyre held a number of governorships in the Caribbean. And at the time we are particularly concerned with, he was the governor of Jamaica.During his time in office, he regularly butted heads with a mixed race businessman by the name of George William Gordon,[3][3][3][3] who agitated for better treatment of the island’s black residents. At the time Jamaica was riven by racial tensions between the mostly white plantation owners, and the ex-slaves who mostly worked on the plantations. And in 1865 this flared up into violence in the form of the Morant Bay rebellion.[4][4][4][4] 18 militiamen were killed in a confrontation.Things got ugly pretty fast, as things are wont to do, and Eyre sent in the army. And they were brutal in their repression of the rebellion. 439 people were killed by soldiers outright. An estimated 600 were summarily flogged. Over 300 more were arrested, and several of them hanged summarily without trial. There are many stories we could tell about Morant Bay. But none of those events is why Eyres makes the list.Never a man to let a good crisis go to waste, Eyre had his old nemesis, Gordon, arrested on charges of fomenting the rebellion. This was despite the fact that Gordon hadn’t been within 50 miles of Morant Bay. No matter. He was arrested, summarily tried, and hanged - in the space just two days.Afterwards the local legislature passed a law ratifying everything that Eyre had done, and granting him immunity from any and all actions. That led to another famous legal case known as Phillips v Eyre,[5][5][5][5] but that is not part of our story today. Eyre returned to England afterwards and retired to Devon where he died at the age of 86. George Gordon was proclaimed a national hero of Jamaica in 1969.John Eyre:By Henry Hering, 157 Regent Street - The Caribbean Photo Archive [1] [2], Public Domain, File:Edward John Eyre by Henry Hering.jpgGeorge William Gordon:By Unknown author - 150 year ago, London society split in two from a photography album in the Graphic Arts Collection documenting the Morant Bay Rebellion in Jamaica (1865), the Indian Northwest Frontier Hazara Campaign (1867-1870), views of Malta, Ireland, Guernsey, Spain, and elsewhere, compiled [attributed to] by Alexander Dudgeon Gulland. Permanent Link: [Photography album documenting the Morant Bay Rebellion in Jamaica (1865), the Indian Northwest Frontier Hazara Campaign (1867-1870), views of Malta, Ireland, Guernsey, Spain, and elsewhere [graphic] / compiled by Alexander Dudgeon Gulland] - Princeton University Library Catalog, Public Domain, File:George William Gordon - photograph detail.jpgFootnotes[1] Edward John Eyre - Wikipedia[1] Edward John Eyre - Wikipedia[1] Edward John Eyre - Wikipedia[1] Edward John Eyre - Wikipedia[2] Eyre's 1839 expeditions - Wikipedia[2] Eyre's 1839 expeditions - Wikipedia[2] Eyre's 1839 expeditions - Wikipedia[2] Eyre's 1839 expeditions - Wikipedia[3] George William Gordon - Wikipedia[3] George William Gordon - Wikipedia[3] George William Gordon - Wikipedia[3] George William Gordon - Wikipedia[4] Morant Bay rebellion - Wikipedia[4] Morant Bay rebellion - Wikipedia[4] Morant Bay rebellion - Wikipedia[4] Morant Bay rebellion - Wikipedia[5] Phillips v Eyre - Wikipedia[5] Phillips v Eyre - Wikipedia[5] Phillips v Eyre - Wikipedia[5] Phillips v Eyre - Wikipedia

If all animals with rabies were eliminated (bats, raccoons, etc.), would that be the end of rabies, or would it somehow continue? Are there any animals immune to rabies?

First step — you would need to confirm the rabies causation paradigm, which for over a century, has been the “rabies-virus”. This paradigm was established by Pasteur long ago, without modern science technology.Even with modern technology, the related environmental toxicology was apparently not discounted in terms of causation. Therefore the virus paradigm could be moot.Rabies became a public issue in the latter 19th century, at the same time that the mass application of arsenic and lead pesticides became prominent on farms. It would not be unusual to see animals staggering from the effects of pesticides, in an era without EPA regulation or proper labeling. Soon after the appearance of this historical coincidence, Pasteur began his work.Note that the image of a mad “rabid dog” baring its teeth, seems to be a dramatic medical market image. The symptoms of rabies are usually lethargy, as if neurologically poisoned.Michael Geison, PhD, professor of Medical History at Princeton University, wrote a biography of Pasteur, critically reviewing Pasteur’s laboratory notes.Excerpts from Geison’s book[1][1][1][1]:“Every generation gets the Pasteur they deserve.”A review of Geison’s book, from The Independent:Pasteur 'told lies about vaccines'and, from Geison’s obit:Gerald L. Geison, scholar of history of medicine“His biography of Pasteur was viewed as an outstanding work of scholarship which penetrated the secrecy that had surrounded much of the legendary scientist's laboratory work.”Geison is, of course, widely attacked.Footnotes[1] The Private Science of Louis Pasteur: Gerald L. Geison: 9780691034423: Amazon.com: Books[1] The Private Science of Louis Pasteur: Gerald L. Geison: 9780691034423: Amazon.com: Books[1] The Private Science of Louis Pasteur: Gerald L. Geison: 9780691034423: Amazon.com: Books[1] The Private Science of Louis Pasteur: Gerald L. Geison: 9780691034423: Amazon.com: Books

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