Razor Blades

September 14th, 2007

Creepy! I’m glad I can read enough kanji to catch the public notices on the ferries. I am probably typical in that my eyes wander over random signs and things and I read them all just to see if I am capable of doing so. It means I read a lot of requests from bus companies to their patrons – that they’d not leave food, drink, or garbage behind in their seats and whatnot. Today, however, I read a completely different sign that freaked me out.

It said (and I’m paraphrasing) “Attention Passengers: Lately we’ve discovered several instances where someone has left razor blades in the seat cushions on this ferry. We are doing everything in our power to stop this. We immediately contacted the police and are cooperating with them, but for your own safety, please check the seats before you sit down. Thank you for your understanding and cooperation. -Management.” After reading that you can bet your bottom dollar that I’ll be watching where I sit. For crying out loud.

It reminds me of the scares people had back when extremist AIDS activists were said to leave hypodermic needles in movie theaters and in the change returns of vending machines, hoping to infect more people and thereby increase awareness. That’s pretty sick, and I have no idea if it’s true or not, but I remember being uber-careful around vending machines and the movies when those stories were circulating. All it takes is one wacko out there, I swear.

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  • Chris - yeah...I remember having similar thoughts after West Nile Virus and some other mosquito spread illnesses became news stories. Still makes my skin crawl. Ha ha.
  • When I was in med school I asked a visiting lecturer "If I was at a BBQ and a mosquito landed on an infected person and then on me (see malaria) why would I not become infected since a mosquito essentialy pukes an anestetic containing blood from its last victim inside?

    He dodged the question and then took me aside and said he is not sure it could not happen but was not aware of any particular case.And that without a controled enviro and dna testing it could not be proved one way or the other..

    Kinda freaked me out. His answer and the way he delivered it.
  • The LSD one is a bit trippy...hahaha..that hurt. I decided to get educated. Looked it up. Definitely urban legend. Hoaxbusters had entries for the theater seats and the payphones. Apparently, so many of those stories circulated that they have been given their own genre! The "Hidden Needles" stories. The Center for Disease Control also references them in an FAQ.

    CDC was informed of one incident in Virginia of a needle stick from a small-gauge needle (believed to be an insulin needle) in a coin return slot of a pay phone. The incident was investigated by the local police department. Several days later, after a report of this police action appeared in the local newspaper, a needle was found in a vending machine but did not cause a needle-stick injury.


    Sheesh. The thing is, I remember thinking that it was outlandish - but being scared of the idea in spite of that, because I wouldn't put it past some loon to imitate it. You never know. Ha ha. I guess you're right, though, that kind of story would catch on like wildfire in the news if it actually happened.

    But yeah, this sign was definitely posted by the ferry company in a prominent location. Methinks it's no hoax.
  • I remember the AID needle scare, but even at the time I thought it was an urban myth. There was another one a few years later about public telephones being coated in LSD or some similarly extremely harmful acidic based drug. Not just to get the user high, but enough to actually kill them on the spot. You'd think it'd be in the news more, though, if it had any validity behind it.
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