Close X
Friday, November 8, 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

    Christy Clark Touts Strong Economy While Saying She's Humbled By Tough Issues

    Christy Clark Touts Strong Economy While Saying She's Humbled By Tough Issues
    British Columbians can expect financial benefits in the coming year thanks to the strongest performing economy in Canada, Premier Christy Clark said Wednesday.

    Christy Clark Touts Strong Economy While Saying She's Humbled By Tough Issues

    Grocery And Restaurant Costs To Gobble Up Your Budget Next Year, Study Says

    GUELPH, Ont. — A new report says the average household in Canada will spend $8,631 on groceries and restaurant meals next year, up by $345 because of food inflation.

    Grocery And Restaurant Costs To Gobble Up Your Budget Next Year, Study Says

    Avalanche Safety, Prevention Focus Of Simon Fraser University Research In B.C.

    VANCOUVER — A university in Burnaby, B.C., is expanding research into avalanche safety in an effort to determine how the deadly slides could be prevented.

    Avalanche Safety, Prevention Focus Of Simon Fraser University Research In B.C.

    Judge Rules B.c. Man Accused Of Child Porn In Massachusetts Can Be ExtraditeC

    Judge Rules B.c. Man Accused Of Child Porn In Massachusetts Can Be ExtraditeC
    A B.C. Supreme Court judge says a man accused of convincing two Massachusetts girls to send him naked photos of themselves can be extradited to the United States.

    Judge Rules B.c. Man Accused Of Child Porn In Massachusetts Can Be ExtraditeC

    Funeral Today For Ontario Boy, 7, Whose Town Gave Him An Early Christmas Parade

    Funeral Today For Ontario Boy, 7, Whose Town Gave Him An Early Christmas Parade
    Seven-year-old Evan died at a Brantford, Ont., hospice on Sunday in the arms of his mother — Nicole Wellwood.

    Funeral Today For Ontario Boy, 7, Whose Town Gave Him An Early Christmas Parade

    One Boater Still Missing Off B.C.'s North Coast; Search Called Off

    Lt.-Cmdr. Desmond James of Victoria's Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre says officials received a call of an overdue four-metre boat with two people aboard on Monday evening.

    One Boater Still Missing Off B.C.'s North Coast; Search Called Off