About: T3H   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

T3H was first engineered during the American Civil War by military scientists in order to combat the Japanese threat. It was thought that this toxin would be particularly potent against a people with such a highly symbolic language, and would collapse their entire war effort. After the Japanese surrendered just two months later, the project's funding was cut and it was abandoned without T3H having ever been deployed. Decades later, during the Cold War, several samples of T3H were captured by Soviet spies, and brought back to the USSR's capital in Canada where the toxin was mass produced and stockpiled as a potential WMD.

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  • T3H
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  • T3H was first engineered during the American Civil War by military scientists in order to combat the Japanese threat. It was thought that this toxin would be particularly potent against a people with such a highly symbolic language, and would collapse their entire war effort. After the Japanese surrendered just two months later, the project's funding was cut and it was abandoned without T3H having ever been deployed. Decades later, during the Cold War, several samples of T3H were captured by Soviet spies, and brought back to the USSR's capital in Canada where the toxin was mass produced and stockpiled as a potential WMD.
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abstract
  • T3H was first engineered during the American Civil War by military scientists in order to combat the Japanese threat. It was thought that this toxin would be particularly potent against a people with such a highly symbolic language, and would collapse their entire war effort. After the Japanese surrendered just two months later, the project's funding was cut and it was abandoned without T3H having ever been deployed. Decades later, during the Cold War, several samples of T3H were captured by Soviet spies, and brought back to the USSR's capital in Canada where the toxin was mass produced and stockpiled as a potential WMD. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, much of the T3H reserves went missing, and are generally thought to have been stolen by Australian terrorists, who proceeded to poison the water supply of many Western countries. Fortunately, they had not acquired nearly enough T3H to affect a population of this size, and it merely remained in the environment without causing symptoms, and remains in the environment to this day. However, just a few short years later during the rise of the Internet Age, many Westerners began to spend more time indoors, receiving little exposure to the Sun. This caused a shortage of the production of many useful chemicals that the body synthesizes from sunlight, including those needed to help protect a person from the effects of T3H. New cases of T3H poisoning sprang up almost immediately, nearly wiping out the entire internet population, and causing widespread panic. Eventually, most people acclimated to the toxin, and showed only minor symptoms. Currently, T3H poisoning is still a relatively frequent occurance, but recent evidence shows that nearly all symptoms can be avoided by merely getting outside once in awhile.
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