• Russian chess player poisons rival's board with mercury

    From JAB@21:1/5 to All on Fri Aug 9 07:36:23 2024
    In world first, Russian chess player poisons rival's board with
    mercury

    At least it wasn't novichok.

    Russia is no stranger to unique poisonings. State agents have been
    known to use everything from polonium-laced tea to the deadly nerve
    agent "novichok" when making assassination attempts against both
    defectors in the UK and internal political rivals like Alexei Navalny.
    But a new "first" in the long history of poisonings was opened this
    month in the Russian republic of Dagestan, where a 40-something chess
    player named Amina Abakarova attempted to poison a rival by depositing
    liquid mercury on and around her chess board.

    https://arstechnica.com/culture/2024/08/in-world-first-russian-chess-player-poisons-rivals-board-with-mercury/

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  • From Mike Spencer@21:1/5 to JAB on Fri Aug 9 17:33:49 2024
    JAB <here@is.invalid> writes:

    In world first, Russian chess player poisons rival's board with
    mercury

    At least it wasn't novichok.

    Russia is no stranger to unique poisonings. State agents have been
    known to use everything from polonium-laced tea to the deadly nerve
    agent "novichok" when making assassination attempts against both
    defectors in the UK and internal political rivals like Alexei Navalny.
    But a new "first" in the long history of poisonings was opened this
    month in the Russian republic of Dagestan, where a 40-something chess
    player named Amina Abakarova attempted to poison a rival by depositing
    liquid mercury on and around her chess board.

    https://arstechnica.com/culture/2024/08/in-world-first-russian-chess-player-poisons-rivals-board-with-mercury/

    This a very curious. Many kids of my generation played with elemental
    mercury as a toy substance. Some teachers allowed students to put Hg
    metal on a coin to demonstrate silver/mercury amalgam and allowed the
    students to take the Hg-bearing coin home. None of us has exhibited
    chronic "mad hatter" symptoms, let alone immediate acute poisoning
    effects.

    Yes, elemental Hg is potentially toxic and Hg at room temp does
    evaporate, emiting tiny amounts of Hg vapor. But engendering prompt
    symptoms of illness or cognitive impairment from "depositing" Hg
    (which doesn't stick to much of anything except metals w/ which it
    formas amalgams and rolls away as tiny beads) from a thermometer around
    the chess board puts my bogometer in the red.

    --
    Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada

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  • From JAB@21:1/5 to mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere on Fri Aug 9 20:13:47 2024
    On 09 Aug 2024 17:33:49 -0300, Mike Spencer
    <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:

    This a very curious. Many kids of my generation played with elemental >mercury as a toy substance.

    Yes, yes...in my hands too...

    the chess board puts my bogometer in the red.

    Maybe something else was added....


    "She then approaches her opponent's table, takes what appears to be a
    vial from her bag, and pours the substance on the pieces before
    looking around the room again.

    The victim required medical treatment after experiencing "severe
    dizziness and nausea" during the game, but she was able to continue
    with the tournament.

    It is claimed that Ms Abakarova poisoned Umayganat Osmanova in an act
    of revenge after she insulted her last Friday.

    She is now facing up to three years behind bars for the incident. "

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/russia-chess-poison-mercury-video-b2593186.html

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Auric Hellman on Sat Aug 10 11:26:21 2024
    On Fri, 9 Aug 2024, Auric Hellman wrote:

    On 8/9/2024 8:36 AM, JAB wrote:
    In world first, Russian chess player poisons rival's board with
    mercury

    At least it wasn't novichok.

    Russia is no stranger to unique poisonings. State agents have been
    known to use everything from polonium-laced tea to the deadly nerve
    agent "novichok" when making assassination attempts against both
    defectors in the UK and internal political rivals like Alexei Navalny.
    But a new "first" in the long history of poisonings was opened this
    month in the Russian republic of Dagestan, where a 40-something chess
    player named Amina Abakarova attempted to poison a rival by depositing
    liquid mercury on and around her chess board.

    https://arstechnica.com/culture/2024/08/in-world-first-russian-chess-player-poisons-rivals-board-with-mercury/


    I was fortunate during the mid-60s to have been acquainted with Fr. William Lombardi, who was Bobby Fischer's second in his famous match versus Boris Spassky. He told me these guys are as competitive and will try anything to undermined their opponent.


    I'm not surprised at all. I think all sportsmen on the elite level who
    compete internationally must be enormously competitive.

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  • From Blueshirt@21:1/5 to All on Sat Aug 10 10:54:41 2024
    D wrote:

    On Fri, 9 Aug 2024, Auric Hellman wrote:

    I was fortunate during the mid-60s to have been acquainted
    with Fr. William Lombardi, who was Bobby Fischer's second
    in his famous match versus Boris Spassky. He told me these
    guys are as competitive and will try anything to undermined
    their opponent.

    I'm not surprised at all. I think all sportsmen on the elite
    level who compete internationally must be enormously
    competitive.

    There's competitive and then there's "competitive"... just ask
    Hans Niemann!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Blueshirt on Sat Aug 10 23:36:47 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 10 Aug 2024, Blueshirt wrote:

    D wrote:

    On Fri, 9 Aug 2024, Auric Hellman wrote:

    I was fortunate during the mid-60s to have been acquainted
    with Fr. William Lombardi, who was Bobby Fischer's second
    in his famous match versus Boris Spassky. He told me these
    guys are as competitive and will try anything to undermined
    their opponent.

    I'm not surprised at all. I think all sportsmen on the elite
    level who compete internationally must be enormously
    competitive.

    There's competitive and then there's "competitive"... just ask
    Hans Niemann!


    Touché!

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