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Uncategorized Thursday, October 20th 2011 at 12:56 pm

U.K. Man Sets Fire To Apartment Trying to Turn Feces Into Gold, Receives Jail Time

Despite what you may have assumed, alchemy is not dead. While there’s pretty much no doubt that it will never work, people are still trying it. Recently, Paul Moran from Northern Ireland attempted to put a twist on the old lead-into-gold trick by turning feces into gold. No word on whether this modification to the recipe was out of necessity or a indomitable sense of adventure.

Either way, the process involved leaving feces, along with fertilizer, on top of a heater. While this process did not manage to transmute the feces into gold, it did manage to transmute his entire apartment into a blazing inferno.

Upon his arrest, Moran admitted to arson and endangering the life of fellow residents in the building by starting the fire, which is estimated to have caused £3,000 worth of damage. Judge McFarland who presided over the case commented that Moran’s endeavors were an “interesting experiment” but that they were obviously doomed to fail. He then proceeded to transmute the next three months of Moran’s life into jail time. In what I can only imagine was an extremely sparse defense, Moran’s attorney had insisted that Moran was a man of “considerable intellectual ability,” but also that Moran was battling with drug abuse. Presumably several simultaneous uphill battles.

It’s a toss up as to whether or not Moran is actually a man of considerable intellectual ability, but one thing is for sure: The man does not have a grasp on supply-side economics. Turning lead into gold is already a somewhat useless endeavor considering that the massive influx of gold would destroy its market value, but lead, at least, is still a somewhat finite resource. Human feces on the other hand, are essentially limitless. From a supply and demand standpoint, turning poop into gold is ultimately a value proposition no better than turning gold into poop.

Of course, he could have maintained the recipe as a trade secret and established a cartel, but the man set his house on fire with poop. Let’s be realistic here.

(via Yahoo! News)

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  • Anonymous

    If it ever existed, Ye Olde Alchemiste’s tricke of turning base metals to gold was lost long ago…  That is, if it ever existed in the first place…

  • http://www.facebook.com/williamkglover William Glover

    Alchemy IS real the first time it worked was in japan in the 1920′s. The practice is referred to as nuclear transmutation or noble metal synthesis and it involves irradiating a metal for a prolonged period of time and the end result is gold but the quantities obtained at this time cost way more to make than they’re worth .

  • Redsquirrel

    i successfully do it all the time, the real trick is not telling people about it

  • http://twitter.com/theomniarch Adil Kurji

    To be fair, if one figured out the whole X–>Gold thing and kept it a reasonably small enterprise they could become fairly wealthy without destroying the entire market… Assuming greed doesn’t seize and overproduction results. But you know, shit happens I guess.

  • gina

    You can become double greedy this way –hoard food, eat more, poop more, then more gold.

    So you can become a really rich fat piece of sh*t.

  • Anonymous

    No, if you discover a way to turn excrement into gold, that is not something one would want to share with others.  This is only good if one is the only person who can do it. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/jdunefsky Jeff Dunefsky

    Goofy!

  • http://www.facebook.com/john.lacourrege John Lacourrege

    Were this to work, all present and furture budget shortfalls would be eliminated in our nation’s capital.  After all, there is no shortage of the raw material there.

  • Philster7656

    You’re sure he wasn’t cooking up crystal meth?

  • Luke Greene

    Us Brits want no relations to this stupidity.

  • Velexia Ombra

    Actually the whole turn base metal into gold is feasible, assuming you have a rudimentary understanding of chemistry you know why.  Actually doing it is costly and requires lots of special equipment… but the philosophers stone of alchemy wasn’t turning base metal into gold, it was turning gold into a white powder called mfkzt by the Ancient Egyptians and ingesting it (called Manna by some) which prolonged life and increased intelligence.

  • Anonymous

    You misspelled his name. It is Moron, not Moran.

  • Hammer

    This happens every time I wipe, but people still don’t appreciate my limitless talents

    I mean the gold, not the housefireStill, given the price of fossil fuels these days – he might just be on to a winner there!