Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for August 11, 2019

  1. B986e866 14d0 4607 bdb4 5d76d7b56ddb
    Templo S.U.D.  over 5 years ago

    I’m a left-hander and, boy, am I lucky to not have any life-threatening accidents by using right-handed items. (Will there EVER be stores that sell and only sell items accommodated for my fellow southpaws? Ned Flanders had such an establishment called The Leftorium.)

     •  Reply
  2. Sammy on gocomics
    Say What Now‽ Premium Member over 5 years ago

    I can beat a computer if you give me one of those heavy marble chess boards.

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    whahoppened  over 5 years ago

    Kinda makes a 2 out of 3 hard to do.

     •  Reply
  4. Missing large
    therese_callahan2002  over 5 years ago

    I hated reading “Out, Out,” by Robert Frost in high school.

     •  Reply
  5. Picture
    Breadboard  over 5 years ago

    What happens with : Computer VS Computer ?

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    tkcoker  over 5 years ago

    Funny that the saw pictured above is more designed for southpaws than for right handed people. Right handed people need to use the worm drive model.

     •  Reply
  7. Marvin
    Smokie  over 5 years ago

    When I went to Catholic school in the 50’s (yes, I know I am old), and the Nuns taught that left handed people were possessed by a devil. We either learned to write right handed or suffer the old metal edged ruler on our left hand. I was grateful my parents switched me to public school in 3rd grade, but I will have the scars forever. By the way, I am no longer Catholic.

     •  Reply
  8. Img 1610
    WCraft Premium Member over 5 years ago

    Wow – a conspiracy against left handlers? Watch out, Mr. Clinton!

     •  Reply
  9. S l640
    joeatwork212  over 5 years ago

    Approx. 10% is left-handed. We’re a smaller minority than most. Why isn’t the entire conforming to us. Other minorities demand (and get) that request.

     •  Reply
  10. Mainz gonsenheim  germany may 1980
    fgerbil46  over 5 years ago

    Not being a video gamer, I had to Google the Silent Hill reference. For those of you who are unfamiliar as I was: Silent Hill is a survival horror video game for the PlayStation published by Konami and developed by Team Silent, a group in Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo. The first installment in the Silent Hill series, the game was released in North America in January 1999, and in Japan and Europe later that year.

     •  Reply
  11. Mmae
    pearlsbs  over 5 years ago

    I don’t know why gocomics doesn’t include the extra panel. I looked at it on the RBION site and the complete comic takes up less space on my screen than the truncated comic above.

    https://www.ripleys.com/weird-news/cartoon-08-11-2019/

     •  Reply
  12. Image gl2xu6o8 1679017467894 raw
    Space_cat  over 5 years ago

    Southpaw here, I’ve learned to be ambidextrous with tools, guns, golf clubs, scissors, for safety’s sake.

     •  Reply
  13. Terror tim   copy
    Petemejia77  over 5 years ago

    Then how about chess game competitions played by computers from around the world. Like robot wars for the A.I. brain?

     •  Reply
  14. Huckandfish
    Huckleberry Hiroshima  over 5 years ago

    So I suppose we left-handers are supposed to form focus groups, make signs, march in the streets, invent some great “phobia” types of words to express how offended we are, etc (southpawphobia? er,).

     •  Reply
  15. Missing large
    petecocker  over 5 years ago

    We are all born right handed. Only a few of us are able to overcome the handicap.

     •  Reply
  16. Missing large
    jonlaw  over 5 years ago

    Some of the earlier chess computers had a checkered past.

     •  Reply
  17. New jaguar anim 200x200
    i_am_the_jam  over 5 years ago

    I once had to pay 10 bucks for a left-handed pencil… I kicked myself when I found them elsewhere at a 20% discount…

     •  Reply
  18. Me kindergarten  2
    finnygirl Premium Member over 5 years ago

    I went to Catholic school as a child, and remember left-handed kids being forced to use their right hands. (I don’t remember anything about “demons”, although if nuns had said that, my parents would have corrected that ridiculous idea.) When my first nephew, a leftie, started school, I was worried that he would be tormented. But my mother assured me that public schools (and by then, maybe even Catholic schools) didn’t do that. And that nephew is wonderfully creative – skilled at drawing, cartooning, and designing all kinds of stuff (including landing patterns and such for airports!) with computers. (Though I don’t know if he plays chess with them, lol!) Perhaps a lifetime of having to compensate in a world designed for righties brings out skills in lefties that the rest of us don’t have!

     •  Reply
  19. Me kindergarten  2
    finnygirl Premium Member over 5 years ago

    For those who might be interested in the doctor in labor who delivered a baby, here’s a link. (As a nurse, I found that very interesting, and very heroic!) https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/kentucky-doctor-delivers-patient-s-baby-right-giving-birth-daughter-n787486

     •  Reply
  20. Buffaloanimatedrunningrightoneofearliestanimatedmovies001
    Running Buffalo Premium Member over 5 years ago

    A webpage I saw had a good point. How many right handers die annually using things meant for right handed people?

     •  Reply
  21. Th 3942895048 gocomics2
    be ware of eve hill  over 5 years ago

    My adoptive father was forced to be right-handed by his parents. Little did he know they were possibly saving his life!

     •  Reply
  22. Spock
    Spock  over 5 years ago

    And 5000 right-handers do.

     •  Reply
  23. Spock
    Spock  over 5 years ago

    I remember the time, when most chess masters believed, that they will never see a chess computer winning against a grandmaster. This was still true in the mid 1990s, and Kasparov, when being defeated by Deep Blue in 1997, claimed that the computer must have had help from human chessplayers. He accused IBM of having manipulated the match, because he believed it was impossible that a machine could perform “typical human moves”.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Ripley's Believe It or Not