Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto Man Starts Petition Calling On Amazon To Stop Selling Suicide Shirts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 11:59 AM
    TORONTO — A Toronto man who survived "multiple suicide attempts" as a teenager is calling on Amazon to stop selling T-shirts he says mock suicide.
     
    Mark Henick, 28, has launched an online petition on Change.org that has garnered support from hundreds of people.
     
    The $15.99 shirts have a graphic of one stick figure standing on a chair with a noose around its neck and another stick figure sitting on a chair eating popcorn above the words "Suicide Watch."
     
    Henick says he's calling on the online retailer "to do the right thing and remove these products."
     
    Amazon did not respond to a request for comment on Henick's petition.
     
    Henick says the shirts may seem like a joke, but they can trigger bad memories for people who've lost a family member or friend to suicide, or those who may have attempted suicide in the past.
     
    "There's no place for this kind of product in any marketplace," Henick said.
     
    He said the shirt appeared to be encouraging someone to commit suicide.
     
    "Their little joke is doing just that, essentially, sitting back and watching somebody hang themselves," Henick said. "I don't find that funny, and from what I can gather nobody else does either."
     
    Henick said he speaks regularly about his "multiple suicide attempts" as a teenager and added that "when you don't talk about them it increases the risk for it happening again."
     
    Several commenters on the petition site called the shirts "disgusting."
     
    "Selling 'suicide' and mocking mental illness is both cruel & a horrible business decision. You lost my business," Paul Gallant of Vancouver said in a comment.
     
    "I'm signing because there is not a single possible aspect of these shirts that is funny, entertaining or even acceptable," Chad Pendleton of Kansas posted.
     
    Henick said he was inspired to start the petition after reading about a 14-year-old Calgary girl who was urging people to write letters to Amazon asking them to stop selling the shirts.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Rising Estimated Costs For 15 Canadian Warships No Surprise: Naval Expert

    Rising Estimated Costs For 15 Canadian Warships No Surprise: Naval Expert
    Ken Hansen, a research fellow with the Centre for Foreign Policy Studies at Halifax's Dalhousie University, is responding to a media report on the price tag.

    Rising Estimated Costs For 15 Canadian Warships No Surprise: Naval Expert

    New Certified Guide-dog Rules Protect Rights Of Handlers: B.C. Government

    New Certified Guide-dog Rules Protect Rights Of Handlers: B.C. Government
    British Columbia has introduced new rules to increase fines for restaurants, transit and other businesses that violate the rights of people who use certified guide-dogs.

    New Certified Guide-dog Rules Protect Rights Of Handlers: B.C. Government

    B.C. Oyster Growers Take Steps To Shuck Problems With Shellfish Bacterium

    The two groups are organizing a workshop to help oyster farmers develop strategies to reduce chances of a dangerous bacterium in the shellfish.

    B.C. Oyster Growers Take Steps To Shuck Problems With Shellfish Bacterium

    'Ugly Girl' Poll: N.L. High School Student Takes On Online Bullies, Goes Viral

    'Ugly Girl' Poll: N.L. High School Student Takes On Online Bullies, Goes Viral
    Lynelle Cantwell of Torbay says she discovered her name on a poll posted on the website ask.fm called 'Ugliest Girls in Grade 12.'

    'Ugly Girl' Poll: N.L. High School Student Takes On Online Bullies, Goes Viral

    Man With Mental Disabilities Located After Going Missing In Nova Scotia

    Man With Mental Disabilities Located After Going Missing In Nova Scotia
    The parents of 25-year-old Landon Webb held a news conference last month to say they were concerned about his well being

    Man With Mental Disabilities Located After Going Missing In Nova Scotia

    Let Hate Go, Says The Mother Of Montreal Massacre Shooter Marc Lepine

    Let Hate Go, Says The Mother Of Montreal Massacre Shooter Marc Lepine
    WHITEHORSE — Twenty-six years after her son murdered 14 women in Montreal, Monique Lepine still doesn't know why. 

    Let Hate Go, Says The Mother Of Montreal Massacre Shooter Marc Lepine