Dumb and dumber

Hydrogen sulfide – is there anything it can’t do? You don’t just have to top yourself with it – you can threaten others with it too.

Being the current suicide aide du jour taking Japan by storm, it seems it’s now being touted as an offensive weapon.

An Osaka robber dropped in on a loan company on Wednesday, threated the staff with what was purportedly the oh-so-fashionable poison, and made off with a (small) pile of cash.

At around 1:10 p.m. on Wednesday, the man entered the Nankai-Nanba-Higashiguchi branch of Aifle Corp. in Chuo-ku, Osaka, showed three employees a transparent plastic bag containing a brown liquid, and demanded money, investigators said.

“This is hydrogen sulfide. Give me your money,” he was quoted as saying. He grabbed 77,000 yen in cash from the office before fleeing. Three employees at the office were unharmed in the incident. There were no customers in the office at the time.

Now, you might argue that I’m contributing to the problem by posting this (but I’d argue that at this late stage, and in this language, it makes little difference), but would this whole palaver not have grown so huge if it hadn’t been reported in such lurid detail? I guess you could argue that they would have happened somehow anyway, but I can’t help but feel that the rash of cases of hydrogen-sulfide-facilitated suicides across Japan recently, and now this, are partly the responsibility of those who are so eagerly printing the headlines.

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fun with hydrogen sulfide

in an apparent chemistry experiment gone awesome, a 14 year old girl managed to not only to give herself considerable trouble breathing, but forced an evacuation of her apartment complex. according to police this is only an isolated incident in a series of similar experimentation through out the nation. driven to recreating this inspiring chemical reaction by educational websites around the world, many japanese both young and old are racing to combine household cleaning products in order to artificially create the chemical responsible for odiferous flattus.

when reached for comment about how and why so many people around japan would be performing their own trails with household cleaning chemicals when the results, in addition to being well known, are also so stinky; the head of a tokyo based group specializing in this field gave this observation…

“It’s easy, and everyone can do it,”

finally a family friendly way to introduce the children to the wonders of science through empirical observation of molecule creation. think of how little taro’s eyes will light up when you tell him you’re going to show him how to create a smell like a bad fart in an enclosed space. that rebellious and angsty girl airi will finally find something she could do when she is alone. your spouse could learn a good prank to pull next time you forget your anniversary. why not just surprise everybody and do it yourself? it just takes one’s breath away when considering all the people that could benefit from testing this home school biochemical reaction.

just remember for the sake of your neighbors, please put up a notice like the one listed in the article. it is always good to let the people living around you know that might not want to partake in your pursuit of knowledge that they may need to keep a wide berth. sort of like a mythbuster’s “science content” warning.

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mmmm…jerky

scattered around buddhist temples in the tohoku region of japan there are mummified bodies enshrined in . practitioners of an ancient set of rituals known as shugendô, these monks actually mummified themselves in a prolonged act of asceticism. believing that they could attain enlightenment in a mere ten thousand days (about 8 years, 2 months, and 19 days) by adhering to a strict diet, keeping a strict schedule of meditation and exercise, and slowly poisoning themselves.

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High Tech Bullying

Ten per cent of high school students said they have been harassed through emails, websites or blogs, a recent survey by the Hyogo Prefectual Board of Education showed, according to Yahoo Xtra News. Schoolyard bullying has long bedeviled Japan and, as the global trend observed also in other countries, has taken a high-tech twist in recent years.

Most cyber bullying in Japan, where 96 per cent of high school students have their own mobile phone, is conducted through mobile phones with Internet and emailing capabilities. Common methods include emailing pictures showing victims’ genitals to classmates and posting insults on class websites.

Experts say high-tech bullying is far harder for parents and teachers to police than physical violence because of the anonymity of cyber space and a lack of technical knowledge. The obscurity of cyber bullying is making the problem of bullying, which schools have long been accused of sweeping under the carpet, even harder to address.

Yahoo Xtra News says the problem drew public attention in July, when an 18-year-old boy leapt to his death at his high school in Kobe, western Japan, after classmates posted a nude photo of him on a website and repeatedly sent him emails demanding money.

The school first denied bullying had occurred but finally and reluctantly admitted that was the case after some of the teen’s classmates were arrested. Schools and other authorities in japan are famous for whitewashing the bullying issue.

Apparently some Japanese schools and parents are already using email filtering software and special settings on mobile phones and computers that protect children from harassment by blocking messages sent through suspect servers or IP addresses. But experts agree that the solution to cyber-bullying requires more than the latest technology.

“In terms of technology, email filtering systems are effective,” said Motohiro Hasegawa, associate professor of Department of Information and Culture at Kinjo Gakuin University. “In the end, the problem is not about technology — it is about humans.”

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The Suicide Club

Rising Sun of Nihon reports that Japan ranks only number 10 among the top 15 countries reporting the highest suicide rates. In terms of suicide deaths per 100,000 population the following countries beat out Japan: Lithuania (42.1), Belarus (36.8), Russia (36.2), Sri Lanka (30.7),  Kazakhstan (30.0), Hungary (28.5), Guyana (26.8), Latvia (25.2), and Ukraine (25.2). Japan stands at 24.2, followed closely by South Korea at 23.8.

North Korea didn’t even appear among the top 15, since suicide is illegal there. Well, suicide is illegal pretty well everywhere, but is strongly discouraged in North Korea. The recent group suicide in Japan is credited with catapulting Japan into the top ten suicide countries, although it still would have made the list. Which brings up the Suicide Club. It’s hard to say what exactly it means, but it’s definitely about suicide in Japan.

Suicide Club (2002) Also known as Suicide Circle, aka Jisatsu Sakuru, aka Jisatsu Club. A wave of unexplainable suicides sweeps across Tokyo after 54 smiling high school girls join hands and throw themselves from a subway platform into an oncoming train. Are the jumpers part of a cult? What is the connection to the website that chronicles suicides…before they happen? And, what is the connection to the Japanese all-girl pop group Desert? Suicide Club is a stylish, bizarre thriller that examines pop culture and disaffected youth. [amazon.com]

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Erk!

Police investigating a report of a severed head in a parking lot have concluded that a man used an innovative method to end his own life.

According to the authorities, the man tied one end of a rope to a tree and then looped the other end around his own neck. Then he drove off in a car, which caused the rope to slice through his neck and cut off his head, which flew out the back of the car. Police found a suicide note inside the car.

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