Should women be in leadership positions?
>>509612539 (OP)Kek this was china wasn't it?
>>509612539 (OP)Nope. Also, the story from vidrel is so crazy that Im betting its true.
>>509612672Is this Chinese cope the same way Muslims claim everyone is Jewish?
Is there an actual news source confirming this story as factual?
>>509612771my white instincts say that you are indian
>>509612927You should get your brain checked, chink
>>509613187denounce india
>>509613272I denounce Bharat and their street shitting ways
Denounce China
>>509613342I denounce the chinksect hive and their half indian ways
>>509612715First thought as well
>>509613775I looked it up and sure enough it was china, i'd hope it's just the equivalent of an olds wives tale or urban legend, but i've seen enough of china to know it could very well be true and ultra poor people are notorious for being frugal to the point of absolute retardation.
>>509612539 (OP)You already know the answer is hell no.
Might have been a cover story for military mass murder.
POISON RATS CAUSE SHAN DEATHS
By Aung Zaw FEBRUARY, 1999 - VOLUME 7 NO.2
https://www2.irrawaddy.com/article.php?art_id=1123
In central Shan State of Burma, since May 1998 until the present, over 400 Shan villagers in Parng Long district have died with symptoms of poisoning. According to Shan human rights workers and local Shans, the sudden deaths began after the dumping by the Burmese military of thousands of poisoned rats into the Pawn River, the only source of water for the over 10,000 villagers in Wan Nong Wan Koong village in Pamg Long. Pamg Long is well known for being the town where the Pamg Long Agreement was signed in 1947. The leaders of Shans, Kachins, Burmans and Chins agreed to join a Union of Burma to regain independence from the British. "There is no longer any Pamg Long spirit in the Shans," an angry Shan dissident said. In military ruled Burma, human rights violations and ethnic cleansing are widespread. Ethnic minorities, including Shans, have accused the Rangoon government of human rights violations, extra judicial killings, and forced relocations in their territories. "We are convinced that the massive number of deaths in the Parng Long area is a direct result of the dumping by the army troops of poisoned rats into the Pawn River," said a member of the Shan Human Rights Foundation [SHRF] based near the Thai-Burma border. According to one SHRF member, in April of 1998, the Burmese Army ordered each household in Pamg Long to collect dead rats and deliver them to the authorities. Most of the rats had been killed with Chinese rat poison, which is the cheapest and most available poison in the central Shan State. "It was strange that they had never issued such an order before," said Nahn Ho Kham, a SHRF member. But Kham said rats had always been plentiful in the Parng Long area.
(Part1)
(part2)
They army collected dead rats, kept them in plastic bags and took them away." The order included: "Any household that did not bring the rats would be charged 100 kyats per rat." Later the army dumped the dead rats into the Pawn River, according to Shan farmers who witnessed it. "That happened twice in April and in July of 1998," Kham said. The SHRF employee reported, "The Pawn River is a slow flowing river, local villagers said the rats must have simply sunk to the bottom of the river near the bridge, since the flow is so slow." Wan Nong Wan Koong is directly downstream along the Pawn River, and the river is the only water source for the over 10,000 villagers staying there. Within days after the rats were dumped, villagers began falling sick. "They [villagers] are Tai Loi [Hill Shan] they said they have never seen such diseases," Kham said, adding the, first to begin suffering were children from the houses nearest the river. They often spend each day swimming in the water. The symptoms that people suffered were, first, a severe headache, followed by fever and vomiting. They were then unable to keep down any food or drink, and quickly became weak and dehydrated. Later their vision started failing. This continued for 5 or more days until the patient died. Shortly before dying, the patient would start gasping for breath. After death, the lips and palms of the patient would turn black, and dark blotches would appear on their skin. Kham said the cemetery in Wan Nong Wan Koong is so full that the graves have spilled over into the nearby fields. However, local authorities and health workers did not show up until recently. "They [local health workers] did not come but they knew that people were dying," Kham said. Not long ago, the health workers visited some of the people who were sick, and simply administered 5 white pills per person.
(continued)
>>509614691>>509614851Damn literal well poisoning.
(part3)
The health workers did not give any instructions about how to take the pills, and the condition of those that took the pills did not improve. Kham said most of the villagers except the educated ones did not connect the deaths with the dumping of the rats in the river. The deaths of relocated villagers from poisoning are continuing to be reported this year. Kham said villagers have still been dying, which indicates that there is still poison present in the waters of the Pawn River. In January, a Shan woman visited the Wan Nong Wan Koong. She did not eat anything there, but accepted a cup of tea, made with water from the Pawn River. Later she became ill with symptoms of poisoning, and only recovered after long and expensive treatment at a clinic in the town. SHRF said the carcasses of about 20,000 rats, mostly wrapped in plastic bags, remain in the river upstream of Wan Nong Wan Koong, seeping poison into the water. Poor villagers can not afford to go to the hospital or clinic. A Shan woman, who become sick with symptoms of poisoning, went to a clinic in the nearest Shan town. She recovered after spending 30,000 kyats (approximately US$85). Meanwhile, the SHRF has issued an urgent statement, asking for independent medical experts from international health bodies to demand immediate access to the central Shan State, which is unlikely to be approved by the Rangoon junta.
Analysts in Thailand suggested that there is no solid proof that the dumping of the rats was a deliberate attempt to kill the villagers, but the refusal of local officials to address the health emergency shows that the military authorities are content to let the villagers die in large numbers. Reliable sources said that to this day, the villagers are still using the water from the river for drinking. This article is written by Aung Zaw. He is the editor of the Irrawaddy Magazine.
>>509612539 (OP)Minorities voting was a mistake
There's been "little old ladies" doing mass poisonings, but most were very deliberate or the body counts were only in the dozens.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanyao_poisonings
Arrest
In mid-November 1995, a waiter at a diner in Jinli noticed a woman throwing something into a kettle over breakfast. The waiter then called the police. After analyzing the water in the pot, it was found that it contains large amounts of fluoroacetamide and zinc phosphide.
Damage
As a result of the poisoning, 18 people died, and another 163 were hospitalized. Ten large cattle also died, along with 243 pigs, more than 3,100 chickens, and more than 300 fish. This resulted in direct economic losses of 2.8 million yuan.[1][2]
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Nanjing Tangshan Poisoning Case (translated)
https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%8D%97%E4%BA%AC%E6%B1%A4%E5%B1%B1%E6%8A%95%E6%AF%92%E6%A1%88
Events
While Chen Zhengping was running the "Juhong" noodle shop in Tangshan Town, Jiangning District, Nanjing, he had a dispute with Chen Zongwu, the owner of the "Zhengwu" noodle shop in Tangshan Town, over trivial matters. Seeing that Chen Zongwu's noodle shop was doing a booming business, Chen Zhengping bore a grudge and intended to take revenge, so he poisoned the customers with strychnine . On August 23, 2002, Chen Zhengping bought 12 sticks of "strychnine" rat poison and 50 grams of powder, and conducted experiments in his shop. At about 11 p.m. on September 13, Chen Zhengping sneaked into the operation room outside Chen Zongwu's noodle shop, put "strychnine" into food ingredients such as sugar and pastry, and stirred them. On the morning of September 14, Chen Zongwu's noodle shop used food ingredients mixed with "strychnine" rat poison to make sesame cakes, glutinous rice balls and other breakfasts for sale. After the shops opened in the morning, students, workers, and soldiers began to vomit and spit blood, resulting in more than 300 people being poisoned and 42 deaths.
Honestly the problem is narrowing such things down to a specific country or type of poison.
Rat poison and food security in the People’s Republic of China: focus on tetramethylene disulfotetramine (tetramine)
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7080144/
In a span of only 10 days during 2000, for example, Henan province saw three separate Dushuqiang poisoning incidents involving 340 people, most of these (305) being middle-school students.
On 28 January 2002, in Linxian city, Hunan Province, 120 middle-school students fell ill after consuming cafeteria food that had been deliberately poisoned with tetramine. It was later revealed that a fellow student—who had compiled a long record of truancy—was responsible. The student, angry that the school had informed his father of his unsavory behavior, tried to take revenge on his teacher by scattering tetramine on vegetables in the commissary during after-school hours. Reportedly, the student purchased a pouch of tetramine rodenticide for the equivalent of US$ 0.16. (1 yuan). Although the miscreant intended to poison only the teacher, the tainted ingredients were unwittingly used by the kitchen staff and served throughout the school population (Wang 2002).
>>509612539 (OP)This was probably intentional
>>509612539 (OP)should only be in missionary position