Anonymous ID: 3193f0 Aug. 11, 2022, 1:21 p.m. No.17360364   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17352934

 

member the blue whale suicide game

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-11102895/Potentially-hazardous-asteroid-size-BLUE-WHALE-zip-past-Earth-tomorrow.html

 

Potentially hazardous' asteroid the size of a BLUE WHALE will zip past Earth tomorrow at dizzying speeds of 20,512 mph, NASA reveals

Asteroid 2015 FF could come within 2.6 million miles of Earth's surface on Friday

Rock has a diameter between 42 and 92 feet - up to the same size as a blue whale

It will be travelling at 20,512 miles per hour, roughly 30 times the speed of sound

By JONATHAN CHADWICK FOR MAILONLINE

 

PUBLISHED: 12:30 EDT, 11 August 2022 | UPDATED: 12:31 EDT, 11 August 2022

 

 

Blue Whale Challenge

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"Blue Whale" (Russian: Синий кит, romanized: Siniy kit), also known as the "Blue Whale Challenge", is a social network phenomenon dating from 2016 that is claimed to exist in several countries. It is a "game" reportedly consisting of a series of tasks assigned to players by administrators over a 50-day period, initially innocuous before introducing elements of self-harm and the final challenge requiring the player to die by suicide.[1][2]

 

"Blue Whale" first attracted news coverage in May 2016 in an article in Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta that linked many unrelated child suicides to membership of group "F57" on the Russian-based VK social network. A wave of moral panic swept Russia.[3] However, the piece was later criticised for attempting to make a causal link where none existed, and none of the suicides were found to be a result of the group activities.[3][4][5] Claims of suicides connected to the game have been reported worldwide, but none have been confirmed.[6][7][8]

 

blue whale suicide needed to change narrative?