Role in Romanticized “Suicide Prevention” Video Taught 13-Year-Old How to Kill Herself

Daily Stormer
February 7, 2014

Jojo Lowe: Rock n' Roll suicide.
Jojo Lowe: Rock n’ Roll suicide.

Ever since I was first exposed to the anti-drug “DARE” program, it struck me that this was a program to teach children how to use drugs, under the guise of prevention.  I don’t know if I would actually assert that this is purposeful, in the sense of some type of planned conspiracy, but it is definitely the way it plays out and I don’t think anyone in the government overseeing this program cares.

Interestingly, it appears that the suicide prevention programs in schools might have the same effect – teaching students how to kill themselves.

The parents of a thirteen year old Mestiza girl, who played the role of a suicide in a school educational video, are launching a series of lawsuits after the girl killed herself just weeks after the school taught her how.

The NY Daily News reports:

Johanna (JoJo) Lowe — an eighth-grader at Tuskawilla Middle School in suburban Orlando — played the production’s lead role, a young girl who dies of a pill overdose, shortly before her body was found hanging in a closet in November 2010, the Orlando Sentinel reported.

And now her parents have filed separate lawsuits against the teen’s teacher, Joseph Fife and the Seminole County School Board — charging them of negligence in the girl’s death, the newspaper reported.

The lawsuit claims that the teacher and the school district did not get permission from Lowe’s parents for the teen to participate in making the video.

“You’re respective conduct in authorizing the video’s production … is outrageous and intolerable in a civilized society,” the parents’ lawyer, Eric Faddis, wrote in a letter to the school board.

Faddis, according to the paper, said the video glamorized and sensationalized suicide and “substantially contributed to (Lowe’s) death.” A circuit court judge listened to the arguments on Wednesday, but made no ruling on whether the lawsuit should be dismissed.

Robert Bonner, an attorney representing Fife and the school board, said the administration shouldn’t be blamed in the tragic death.

“Just because it’s unfortunate and sad doesn’t mean there’s a cause of action,” he told the Orlando Sentinel.

Note that a Mestizo is much less likely to kill theirself, as they have more serotonin in their brains and a lower IQ which makes it less likely that they are able to internally reflect on their own lives.

The educational system of America is a disease, infecting and destroying the souls of children.  The entire thing needs to be taken down and reformulated completely.

Also, electronic media is very powerful, and I absolutely believe that media which purposefully drives individuals to engage in harmful, criminal acts should be illegal.

Though I can’t find the one the girl was in, here is an example of a romanticized “suicide prevention” video for teens which makes it look cool and exciting:

When I was a kid, this video served a similar purpose: