“They are evil monsters who attack us night and day.”

Fishermen from a village in Senegal are living in fear as attacks by ‘killer hippos’ have risen dramatically in recent years.

An astounding 25 people from the village of Gouloumbou have been mauled to death by the voracious creatures lurking in a nearby river tributary over the last decade.

Many others have been attacked by the hippos, sometimes on multiple occasions, but managed to survive albeit with gruesome injuries and truly terrifying tales.

The unsettling encounters have grown so frequent that many villagers have stopped fishing altogether for fear of falling victim to the hippos.

“They are evil monsters who attack us night and day,” lamented one Senegalese fisherman to the AFP, “because of them, we haven’t been fishing.”

The situation has had a devastating effect as fishing is one of the few sources of income for the impoverished village.

Their chief has pleaded with authorities to help them cope with the outbreak of angry hippos, but so far has only received the promise of a handful of motorized boats for the fishermen.

However the ostensibly safer fishing vessels may not be enough to quell the bloodthirsty hippos, which have been known to attack boats as well as villagers making use of the waters for drinking and cleaning.

According to the chief, the villagers once had an friendly relationship with the hippos that resided in the river, but clearly something has happened in recent years to disrupt that harmony.

Hopefully some kind of solution to the disruption can be found and the fishermen of Gouloumbou can go back to working on their river without concern for the monstrous creatures ‘fishing’ for them.

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Amazing Historical Photos

(Source: Reddit)   Elvis Presley and His mother Gladys, 1956.

(Source: Reddit)  Young Brigitte Bardot visits Pablo Picasso at his studio near Cannes, 1956.

(Source: Reddit)   Major Charles Young in 1916. He was the third African-American to graduate from West Point, the first black U.S. National Park superintendent, and the first black man to become a Colonel.

(Source: Reddit)   Australian nurses ready to battle the influenza pandemic in Surrey Hills, Sydney in April 1919.

(Source: Reddit)  Charlie Chaplin & Walt Disney at the Santa Anita Race Track – Arcadia, California, U.S. – 1939.

(Source: Reddit)   Tuskegee airmen at Ramitelli, Italy, March 1945.

(Source: Reddit) The United States Capitol in 1846. In 1793, the cornerstone of the building was laid by President Washington

(Source: Reddit)   Billie Holiday and her Boxer named Mister at Downbeat club in New York, 1947.

(Source: Reddit) Union soldiers posing with a cannon – circa 1862.

The Statue of Liberty (an artist’s rendering) – Paris, France, 1886, before it was transported to America.

Street car conductor in Seattle not allowing passengers aboard without a mask, during Spanish Flu Pandemic in 1918.

(Source: Reddit)  General Francisco “Pancho” Villa in 1914, during the Mexican Revolution.

Schoolgirls design posters with women’s equality themes as they compete for a prize in a suffrage poster contest at the Fine Arts Club, October 14, 1915.

Charlie Chaplin selling war bonds on Wall Street, 1918.

(Source: Reddit)   Children in front of moving picture theater, Easter Sunday matinee, Black Belt, Chicago, Illinois. 1941.

(Source: Reddit)  “Watering cattle at Mount Kosciuszko,” at Blue Lake, New South Wales, Australia, circa 1900.

Chaplain Kenny Lynch conducts services north of Hwacheon, Korea, for men of the 31st Regiment. 1951, Korean War.

(Source: Reddit)   A busy market day at Jacques Cartier Square, Montreal, Canada in 1900.

(Source: Reddit)   Listen to what she has to say — British Suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst addressing crowd on Wall Street, New York in 1911.

Rural mailman transfers letters and packages to another postman’s saddlebags — he will ride further up the side road and creek beds where no wagon or car can go. In the mountain section near Morehead, Kentucky, 1940.

(Source: Reddit)   The Schienenzeppelin in Berlin, June 1931. A train on the way to Hamburg passes the newly arrived rail zeppelin at Spandau main station.

The Long Bridge in ‘True Lies’ Arnie Schwarzenegger movie

True lies was one of the Terminator’s better movies. Especially if you are a fighter jet buff. The Marine Corps Harrier jet scenes were really cool. But in the movie what was that awesome bridge? Well it is described below.

Scenes from the movie:

The Harriers moving in to attack the terrorists

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The Harriers evade anti-aircraft missiles fired by the terrorists

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The terrorists are on their way to fornicate with the virgins and drink free wine in Muslim Martyr heaven. Not to mention play some cards with Osama Bin Laden and watch porn movies.

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More on the bridge

The Seven Mile Bridge is an iconic bridge in the Florida Keys of United States, stretching out into the open sea, connecting Knight’s Key in the Middle Keys to Little Duck Key in the Lower Keys. At the time of its completion in 1982, it was the longest continuous concrete segmental bridge in the world, and is currently one of the longest bridges in America.

Seven Mile Bridge actually consist of two bridges in the same location. The older bridge, originally known as the Knights Key-Pigeon Key-Moser Channel-Pacet Channel Bridge, was constructed from 1909-1912 as part of the Overseas Railroad. After the railroad sustained considerable damage during the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935, the bridge was refurbished for automobile use only. Dismantled tracks was recycled, painted white, and used as guardrails. It had a swing span that opened to allow passage of boat traffic, near where the bridge crosses Pigeon Key – a small island that once served as the work camp for the Florida East Coast Railway. When Hurricane Donna in 1960 inflicted further damage, decision to construct a new bridge was made.

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A new, wider and sturdier Seven Mile Bridge was built right next to it from 1978 to 1982. When that happened, the original Seven Mile Bridge was nudged out of Florida’s transportation system. The vast majority of the original bridge still exists, used as fishing piers and access to Pigeon Key, but the swing span over the Moser Channel of the Intracoastal Waterway has been removed.

The total length of the new bridge is just under seven miles at 6.79 miles (10.93 km), and is shorter than the original. Each April the bridge is closed for approximately 2.5 hours on a Saturday and a “fun run,” known as the Seven Mile Bridge Run, of 1,500 runners is held commemorating the Florida Keys bridge rebuilding project. The event began in 1982 to commemorate the completion of a federally funded bridge building program that replaced spans that oil tycoon Henry Flagler constructed in the early 1900s to serve as a foundation for his Overseas Railroad.

The old bridge is still a popular spot with both locals and tourists, but it’s slowly falling apart. Salt water and storms are eroding the bridge faster than the state can afford to repair it. Much of the bridge is now closed – only a 2.2 mile section of the Old Seven Bridge is still open to pedestrians and cyclists.

Two years ago, a nonprofit community group called “Friends of Old Seven” was formed to try to preserve, and if possible, repair the bridge. The Florida Department of Transportation, which owns the bridge, cannot afford to sink a lot of money into the bridge’s upkeep, but is still willing to donate half of the $18 to $20 million required to repair the bridge. The community is now working hard to put up the other half.

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