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I also hypothesize that people in water drown at a higher rate than people on land. I can't prove it yet... I'm waiting on my grant application to be approved...
The dangers of dihydrogen monoxide (commonly known as "water") were established in the '70s when Swimmer and Drown published their landmark study in the Journal of Irreproducible Results. I am unable to locate the original paper on line as yet, but their groundbreaking experiments proved that cats dropped from a 50 foot platform into a shallow pan of DHMO had virtually zero chance of survival. For more info on the dangers of DHMO see:
Facts About Dihydrogen Monoxide
Also, this is not widely publicized, but there is a shocking link between DHMO and gun violence:
What is the link between Dihydrogen Monoxide and gun violence?
The incidence of gun violence seems to be rising at an alarming rate. A recent stunning revelation is that in every single instance of violence involving guns, both in the U.S. and internationally, Dihydrogen Monoxide was involved. In fact, DHMO is often very available to those who would do harm to others. Meanwhile, apparently no efforts have been made to limit the availability of this potentially dangerous chemical compound.