I don’t think replacing Tylenol pills with cyanide to kill people is “pranking” - this isn’t like drug-war moral panic around Halloween, this is more like serial killer territory. My point is that produce is like Tylenol used to be: accessible to be tampered with.
In the literal sense that sounds correct but i feel like the act itself is so bizarre mentally ill that it becomes impossible to know what they where thinking or intended to do.
Would they even reliably know if someone died from it? Would they have had just much “fun” if they never knew about actual victims.
I just cant wrap my head around how someone ends up doing things like this, the trope that criminals come back to the crime is actually well known to often be true, the “kick” is derived from witnessing the damage and feeling powerful to have caused it.
It’s probably a good thing you can’t get inside the head of someone who would do this, but the reasons for it can be more reasonable than you would think - a lot of folks thought it was the Unabomber at first (including the FBI), but he confirmed he didn’t possess any cyanide.
Regardless, people come up with all sorts of reasons for actions like this - it doesn’t just have to be random or for fun, someone upset about lead poisoning in the water of poor and Black communities might justify poisoning random white Americans as a kind of terrorism to reach political goals, etc. - I dunno, maybe I find it easier to imagine justifications for poisoning random people (maybe I should be concerned, but I’m not).
EDIT: can’t wait for Trump’s FBI to use this to frame me as a violent extremist 😅
it goes without saying, poisoning random people is a poor way to reach your political ends; when the PKK started bombing teachers and schools, they lost a lot of support among the people they were supposed to be liberating, and ceded moral high ground. What once was justified violence against police and military targets as Kurdish liberation became a loathed terrorist group - violence is tricky as a political action, and can often bolster your enemies and push them to more extreme action, having the opposite of the desired effect (it can also lead to civil rights, protections like the 40 hour work week, and so on - so it’s not like violence is univalent).
Eh, I touched produce in three different European countries this year, right next to all other shoppers who did the same. Produce is out on the open, just ready and waiting to be you he’d because touching produce isn’t the problem
that’s still how onions and lots of foods are sold - just lying around, anyone can go up and touch them, lace them, etc.
Its a good thing drugs are too expensive to use for such pranks i guess.
I don’t think replacing Tylenol pills with cyanide to kill people is “pranking” - this isn’t like drug-war moral panic around Halloween, this is more like serial killer territory. My point is that produce is like Tylenol used to be: accessible to be tampered with.
Pranking is not a good word for murder but “lacing random things so unexpected strangers get dosed” is such a delusional action its hard to describe.
it’s homicidal, I think that’s a good word for it - dosing random strangers with cyanide so they die is homicidal behavior 😅
In the literal sense that sounds correct but i feel like the act itself is so bizarre mentally ill that it becomes impossible to know what they where thinking or intended to do.
Would they even reliably know if someone died from it? Would they have had just much “fun” if they never knew about actual victims.
I just cant wrap my head around how someone ends up doing things like this, the trope that criminals come back to the crime is actually well known to often be true, the “kick” is derived from witnessing the damage and feeling powerful to have caused it.
It’s probably a good thing you can’t get inside the head of someone who would do this, but the reasons for it can be more reasonable than you would think - a lot of folks thought it was the Unabomber at first (including the FBI), but he confirmed he didn’t possess any cyanide.
Regardless, people come up with all sorts of reasons for actions like this - it doesn’t just have to be random or for fun, someone upset about lead poisoning in the water of poor and Black communities might justify poisoning random white Americans as a kind of terrorism to reach political goals, etc. - I dunno, maybe I find it easier to imagine justifications for poisoning random people (maybe I should be concerned, but I’m not).
EDIT: can’t wait for Trump’s FBI to use this to frame me as a violent extremist 😅
it goes without saying, poisoning random people is a poor way to reach your political ends; when the PKK started bombing teachers and schools, they lost a lot of support among the people they were supposed to be liberating, and ceded moral high ground. What once was justified violence against police and military targets as Kurdish liberation became a loathed terrorist group - violence is tricky as a political action, and can often bolster your enemies and push them to more extreme action, having the opposite of the desired effect (it can also lead to civil rights, protections like the 40 hour work week, and so on - so it’s not like violence is univalent).
In North America. In Europe, no one is allowed to touch produce.
Eh, I touched produce in three different European countries this year, right next to all other shoppers who did the same. Produce is out on the open, just ready and waiting to be you he’d because touching produce isn’t the problem
I just touched produce ~2 hours ago, in Ireland.
For certain values of Europe… I can attest it’s not that way in the Nordics
that’s so weird, is there still a way to determine if the produce is under or over ripe, to verify there isn’t damage, etc. before buying?
Yeah there is, just touch it because I don’t know what op is on, but touching produce being prohibited in Europe is nonsense
You look at it and you trust the seller to sort it.
God knows who touched produce with what fluids in NA grocery stores.
at least I get to add my fluids to the mix 😏