Sonette Ehlers, a former medical technician from South Africa, invented Rapex, an anti-rape device, in 2005. The device was created in response to the alarming rates of rape in South Africa. Rapex is tube-shaped with internal barbs, inserted by a woman similar to a tampon. The barbs are intended to latch onto a potential rapist's skin. Once the device is in place, surgical removal is the only option. This need for medical intervention not only incapacitates the attacker but also assists in their identification and apprehension. Nevertheless, the device remains in the prototype stage and has not been introduced to the market or made accessible for purchase.
@Morbidful This image shows how it would cut the pen-is
@Morbidful The man of the year.. Respect 🙏
@Morbidful "Some critics say it's a medieval punishment." They wouldn't be punished if they just didn't rape people.
@Morbidful In 2020, Shane Goldsby (right) got his sister's rapist (left) as a cellmate. Despite repeatedly requesting a transfer, nothing happened. After the man taunted him for days with specific details about his sister's rape, Goldsby snapped and stomped him to death.
@Morbidful All living things need love ...
the Rape-aXe was originally called RapeX but was renamed in 2006 because RAPEX is also a European Union warning system for dangerous goods. Ehlers mentioned that she was inspired to create the device when a patient who had been raped stated, "If only I had teeth down there." It is equipped with teeth, sharp as razor blades, which will grip painfully to the penis of the rapist from the first attempt at penetration.
Thirty years ago, beloved actor John Candy died suddenly at the age of just 43. Candy initially wanted to be a football player, but an injury in his school days forced him to pursue a different career: comedy. Candy got his start at Toronto's sketch collective Second City TV alongside comedians like Eugene Levy and Catherine O'Hara. He then went on to appear in classic comedies like "Uncle Buck," "Planes, Trains, and Automobiles," and "Home Alone." By the early 1990s, Candy was a comedy icon — until his tragic death that left his fans around the world in shock
Woman Feels Violated After DNA From Her Rape Kit Was Used To Charge Her For A Crime "I didn't know that it would be used against me. I feel violated again." A woman identified only as Jane Doe recently filed a lawsuit against the city of San Francisco after police used her rap*e kit from 2016 to connect her to a crime five years later. A crime she knew nothing about. Doe spent several weeks in jail for retail theft before the city's district attorney learned how police had obtained her DNA. The city Board of Supervisors quickly passed a law prohibiting the police department from using rap*e kits to identify suspects in unrelated crimes, but Doe is going forward with her lawsuit, citing an "unconstitutional invasion of privacy." She was arrested because the DNA found in the crime scene matched her DNA which she submitted after her assault(remember the perpetrator’s DNA will be found in her after the incident). It means the person that raped her was the same person that committed the recent crime.
@Morbidful Actually Due to rapid increase of HumanTrafficking and sexual assault, advise people to get the Rapex condom, can be bought at any pharmacy, discherm and shoprite . You insert it before leaving the house and can only be moved at a clinic.