T-shirts being referred to had been expelled in entire from Amazon.fr (France), Amazon.com, and to a limited extent from Amazon.ca (where one adaptation remains). He noticed that the shirts were still accessible on "a couple on the U.K. furthermore, German locales, with sizes accessible for youngsters."

Psychological wellness advocate Mark Henick began an online request calling for Amazon to uproot the shirts and issue a conciliatory sentiment. The appeal came to a little more than 46,000 supporters by Saturday evening.
Henick posted a redesign that the T-shirts being referred to had been expelled in entire from Amazon.fr (France), Amazon.com, and to a limited extent from Amazon.ca (where one adaptation remains). He noticed that the shirts were still accessible on "a couple on the U.K. furthermore, German locales, with sizes accessible for youngsters."

A representative from Shirt Me Up, the organization name the "got suicide?" shirt was recorded on Amazon under, told the Star they run an "enter your content" site to alter T-shirts, and that an outsider seller from China was posting the shirt under their image unlawfully.
A portion of alternate shirts included in the discussion highlight pictures ridiculing suicide, for example, a stick figure situated and eating popcorn as another stands on a seat with a noose around his neck, marked "suicide watch." Another components the message, "SUICIDE makes our lives so much less demanding."

Maggie Harder, 14, of Calgary has likewise been influencing the retail titan. She began a letter-written work battle to Amazon central station in Seattle in late summer, requesting that the site quit offering T-shirts including messages that she said demonize people influenced by psychological wellness issues.
An expected 10 to 20 for each penny of Canadian youth are influenced by a dysfunctional behavior or jumble, as indicated by the Canadian Mental Health Association, and suicide is the second-driving reason for death for Canadians between ages 15 and 24.
[Credited to TheStar]