6 Most Ironic Deaths In History

Death is always near to you.

Algen Khetran
2 min readJan 21, 2022
Photo by Jeremy Bezanger on Unsplash

1— The man who died during a protest against the use of protective helmets.
With ideas contrary to the mandatory use of motorcycle helmets, Philip A. Contos decided to be part of a demonstration against the safety accessory, which was nothing more than a parade of several motorcyclists without helmets. Contos, who was riding his powerful Harley, ended up having an accident and, due to a severe blow to the head, died.

2— The organic food advocate who died of a heart attack.
Rodale dedicated his time in life to the study of natural medical treatments and, in addition, he was one of the pioneers who defended the production of organic foods.
At one of his television appearances in June 1971, Rodale stated that he would live to be a hundred years old and that he had never in his life felt so well about his own health. It was at that very moment, while on a couch watching another guest’s interview, that Rodale suffered a heart attack and died, on air, at the age of 72.

3 — The former was sentenced to the electric chair who died electrocuted.
After escaping from the dreaded death row, Lawrence Baker never imagined that, no matter what he did, he would end his days. It was an ordinary day in his life as a convict when…

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