MG_39
Physically ill suffering couch potato
- Jul 5, 2019
- 211
I think a lot of people who visit this forum and find PPH (The Peaceful Pill Handbook ) should be a little careful and take his words with a pinch of salt.
First we have to understand that Philip Nitschke do this to earn money, not to help people.
I think it's against the rules to share links. But a good example is his regulators. He buy really cheap oxygen regulators replace the inlet connection and put a sticker on them and sell them super expensive. The producer of these regulators also sell suitable nitrogen regulators with the correct fitting, but they are more expensive (less profit)
He spread false information, he give impression that his product for asphyxiation (Rebreather) is a safe and peaceful way to die. I will not discuss why in this thread, I'm sure it's already discussed in other threads on this forum, if not I could start another thread where we discuss it if anyone is interested. And just to be clear, I don't say it wouldn't work, but it's certainly not a safe way.
In recent versions of PPH a supplier for powdered short acting barbiturates is shared, this show that Nitschke is either very stupid or just reckless. I can see how a desperate person could find this reseller by accident and get scammed, but selling a "book" for suicide and sharing something that just screams scammer is a sign of low intelligence.
(I will not share the source) Right now that market is down. There might be a mirror that works, but the regular address is down.
Why is it a scammer?
1. No verified sales of this product.
2. 4-5 (last time I looked) reviews from other sold products and they use the same word and look like they are written by the same person.
3. They say they ship from Europe, but the shipping times doesn't make sense when compared to that couriers shipping options.
4. The description of their products have a very typical scam text.
Does this mean that it's 100% certain it's a scammer? No of course not, but people who understand how these markets work can see that it's very likely, and sharing it to desperate people as a know (reliable?) source and to a lot of people who in many case have barely no idea what darknet markets, pgp encryption, bitcoin is, that's not something that give me a good impression of Nitschke and his little "take advantage of desperate people business"
Sorry for bad grammar and typos. English is not my native language.
First we have to understand that Philip Nitschke do this to earn money, not to help people.
I think it's against the rules to share links. But a good example is his regulators. He buy really cheap oxygen regulators replace the inlet connection and put a sticker on them and sell them super expensive. The producer of these regulators also sell suitable nitrogen regulators with the correct fitting, but they are more expensive (less profit)
He spread false information, he give impression that his product for asphyxiation (Rebreather) is a safe and peaceful way to die. I will not discuss why in this thread, I'm sure it's already discussed in other threads on this forum, if not I could start another thread where we discuss it if anyone is interested. And just to be clear, I don't say it wouldn't work, but it's certainly not a safe way.
In recent versions of PPH a supplier for powdered short acting barbiturates is shared, this show that Nitschke is either very stupid or just reckless. I can see how a desperate person could find this reseller by accident and get scammed, but selling a "book" for suicide and sharing something that just screams scammer is a sign of low intelligence.
(I will not share the source) Right now that market is down. There might be a mirror that works, but the regular address is down.
Why is it a scammer?
1. No verified sales of this product.
2. 4-5 (last time I looked) reviews from other sold products and they use the same word and look like they are written by the same person.
3. They say they ship from Europe, but the shipping times doesn't make sense when compared to that couriers shipping options.
4. The description of their products have a very typical scam text.
Does this mean that it's 100% certain it's a scammer? No of course not, but people who understand how these markets work can see that it's very likely, and sharing it to desperate people as a know (reliable?) source and to a lot of people who in many case have barely no idea what darknet markets, pgp encryption, bitcoin is, that's not something that give me a good impression of Nitschke and his little "take advantage of desperate people business"
Sorry for bad grammar and typos. English is not my native language.
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