Monday, November 16, 2009

In movie Jackal of Bruce Willis, what's supposedly the chemical he spray on car handle kills on skin contact?

Is the chemical just a fiction and only for the movies...or is there really such deadly chemical (probably for the intelligence world) which kills in seconds upon skin contact?





I'm on impression that whatever is it, it's supposedly commercially available because it came in an aerosol can.





Could it be like some aerosol-packaged lubricants in competition with WD40', where there's this label warning of "almost instantaneous death" upon skin contact. If so, it ought to be not sold commercially whatever its benefit maybe.

In movie Jackal of Bruce Willis, what's supposedly the chemical he spray on car handle kills on skin contact?
Nerve gases usually come in the form of liquids - they need to be used in aerosols to spray so it would be easy to get them as liquid (their natural state) or even to turn them in to some sort of gel which you could wipe on sensitive objects. The danger is in having to get it off yourself, though washing it off with ordinary household bleach should render it harmless.





Frighteningly enough it would be easy to kill someone by making them touch nerve toxins because they can be absorbed by the skin and the tiniest drop could kill an adult human in seconds. Sarin could kill with about a miligram, Soman IV (invented later in WW2) is far stronger and VX invented in England much stronger still. They are all organophosphorus molecules.
Reply:anthrax ???
Reply:I think it was called "Made to Make Movie Interesting Spray". lol





There is no such thing that I know of. Nothing chemically kills that fast or can kill just from touching the chemical on your skin. A poison would take some time just to be absorbed through your skin and then it would have to start attacking your bodies systems: muscular, nervous, cardiac, etc.





Sweet movie though, I particularly like the part where Jack Black gets shot up. lol


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