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They called his blood substitute "garage chemistry" that would kill patients faster than their wounds. Military doctors dismissed Captain Samuel Goldstein's alcohol experiments as dangerous amateur science that violated every medical regulation. Fellow physicians mocked his "basement moonshine" as certain death for any soldier desperate enough to receive it. They were all wrong. December 23rd, 1944. The 101st Airborne was surrounded at Bastogne with zero plasma left while German artillery destroyed the last medical supplies. One hundred eighty wounded paratroopers were dying from blood loss with no way to replace what they were losing to shrapnel and bullets. The next medical convoy wouldn't arrive for weeks, assuming it survived German submarine attacks. What Goldstein discovered wasn't about following military medical regulations. It was about creating blood volume expanders from German schnapps using improvised chemistry that no military manual covered. His alcohol-based plasma substitute maintained circulation and saved lives when conventional medical logistics had completely failed. This "insane chemistry" kept an entire garrison alive during the most critical phase of the Battle of the Bulge, enabling treatment of hundreds of wounded soldiers who would have died without blood replacement. Goldstein's innovations influenced military medical procedures and demonstrated that creative chemistry could overcome supply failures when lives depended on innovative treatment solutions. #worldwar2 #ww2history #ww2 #wwii