‘Plague was sweeping the city of London in the summer of 1665, and the Lord Mayor was desperate to do something. … The plague germs were carried by fleas that lived as parasites on rats. But that was not known. By mid-July fear gripped the city, as the plague was killing over 1,000 Londoners per week. …’
What do Barry Marshall’s ulcer, the Lord Mayor of London’s plague solution, and the death of Lorenzo de’ Medici teach us about how to educate (or not) kids? Episode 48 in my Open College with Dr. Stephen Hicks podcast series.
All audio versions of the podcast are available free at my website, YouTube, Bitchute, Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud. To cover additional production costs, the transcriptions are available only to my subscribers via my media page at thinkspot.