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View Full Version : Megyn Kelly’s pepper spray comments spark backlash




Tina
11-25-2011, 02:33 PM
Hope this hasn't been posted, if so please delete.

Pepper spray, its effects, and its appropriateness continue to be top of mind in the media.

Following the protests at UC Davis, during which Occupy protesters were sprayed with pepper spray by a campus police officer, Fox News commentator Megyn Kelly went on the Bill O'Reilly show.

Kelly appeared to downplay the physical effects of pepper spray. Kelly said pepper spray is "like a derivative of real pepper. It's a food product essentially."

Maybe so, but her comments have sparked a spicy backlash. A petition is circulating on the Internet that suggests Kelly should put her eyeballs where her mouth is by getting sprayed with the substance on live television. Currently, more than 16,000 people have signed the pledge. Kelly herself notes in the interview that the spray is "obviously invasive and obtrusive and several [people] went to the hospital."

Over the past 24 hours, Web searches for "megyn kelly" and "megyn kelly pepper spray" soared more than 1,000%. Additionally, related lookups for "what is pepper spray" and "pepper spray ingredients" also spiked into breakout status.

Numerous blogs have popped up to explain exactly what is in pepper spray. According to a recent entry from KQED, "high doses of some of the chemicals in pepper spray can produce respiratory, cardiac and neurologic problems, and even death."

HowStuffWorks explains that "the active ingredient in pepper spray is oleoresin capsicum (OC), a natural oil found in many types of hot peppers including cayenne peppers and other chili pepper." One milligram of capisicum can cause blisters on the skin.

As the Washington Post points out, this isn't the first time someone has sluffed off the effects of a unpleasant (to say the least) physical experience. In the past, a number of people, including Stephen Colbert and Jesse Ventura, called on Vice President Dick Cheney to try being waterboarded. Cheney was an adamant supporter of waterboarding and the results he contends the process delivered.

The investigation into the attack on the Davis protestors is ongoing. The police officer who used the pepper spray is currently on leave and has been the subject of an Internet meme, placing him (and his can of spray) in various historical locations. Look, there he is with the founding fathers.

AJ187
11-25-2011, 03:29 PM
I'm sure she thinks waterboarding ain't torture too. These people will always try to rationalize the bad behavior of their authoritarian overlords.

Becker
11-25-2011, 03:35 PM
Fructose isn't a poison, nicotine isn't a carcinogen and CO2 isn't a pollution.

Becker
11-25-2011, 03:37 PM
I'm sure she thinks waterboarding ain't torture too. These people will always try to rationalize the bad behavior of their authoritarian overlords.

oh, she'll say waterboarding is torture if TSA is doing it to passengers under Obama administration. Otherwise, yeah.

JohnGalt1225
11-25-2011, 06:26 PM
Well OC, or pepper spray as it's more commonly known is really just a pepper derivative and it is a food grade product. That's not saying that law enforcement should just spray it whenever they want but Megyn's not that far off on this one. It's made from the oils of a pepper. Having been sprayed before I can assure you it sucks.

For the record, I don't believe pepper spray and waterboarding are near the same level. Waterboarding is always wrong as it you have a detained suspect and you torture them. If you use pepper spray in a justified manner it's a valuable tool. It's non-deadly and is good at taking the fight out of someone. But again, that's only if the use is proper, if it's abused that's a whole different story. I haven't kept up with the OWS story/movement but it sounds like there's a lot of un-justified uses of force there.

Athan
11-27-2011, 12:00 AM
I know some Mexican immigrants (now my father and uncle in law) that could easily eat fresh hot Jalapenos with just a corn tortilla when they were younger no prob. Crazy. Of course their liver can't handle that feat anymore now that they are in their 50's; but they used to think just Habaneros were spicy. Dang! Pepper spray must have been like salsa to them back then.

I wouldn't mind trying one of those Naga peppers. Just to see how bad that sucker is with some enchiladas. Sorry, back to the topic.

specsaregood
11-27-2011, 12:02 AM
I don't think the majority of people that are attacking her for this actually watched the segment. She didn't make light of it and she questioned the morality of the police actions.

CaptainAmerica
11-27-2011, 12:16 AM
Megan Kelly is pregnant and Im sure she wouldn't risk being pepper sprayed because it can cause a miscarry.