Maddy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2003
- Messages
- 1,801
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- 157
Unfortunately this isn't the first and it won't be the last.
Some people really do believe from the bottom of their hearts that "rules are made to be broken".
They scale tall fences and enter the cages of wild beasts, they get caught it avalanches after reading signs that warn them "high avalanche danger... yet the pull to ski the danger is calling their names. How many have died or been hauled out of the Ottaquechee gorge in little VT? Why not a giant waterfall or a not so giant waterfall??? Fireworks blow off how many appendages each year at the family barbecue? Ultimately I don't think we can protect people from themselves. Some do indeed push the envelope to extremes and welcome the risk to their lives to do so. Just one more adrenalin rush PLEEZE!
As long as man walks the earth these things will happen regardless of how many "warnings" are
erected. Someone on the boards wrapped it up in nutshell..."if they live it's experience, if they die it's a tragedy." Of course there are all the ones in between, the quadriplegics, the devastating brain injuries, etc.
Short of posting the national guard yielding sub-machine guns at every "dangerous area" in the national parks, and other "high risk places" that people frequent, IMHO there is precious little or nothing that can be done to stop these people from courting death. They will find a way around it, through it, or into it, and we all know the "rest of the story".
Some people really do believe from the bottom of their hearts that "rules are made to be broken".
They scale tall fences and enter the cages of wild beasts, they get caught it avalanches after reading signs that warn them "high avalanche danger... yet the pull to ski the danger is calling their names. How many have died or been hauled out of the Ottaquechee gorge in little VT? Why not a giant waterfall or a not so giant waterfall??? Fireworks blow off how many appendages each year at the family barbecue? Ultimately I don't think we can protect people from themselves. Some do indeed push the envelope to extremes and welcome the risk to their lives to do so. Just one more adrenalin rush PLEEZE!
As long as man walks the earth these things will happen regardless of how many "warnings" are
erected. Someone on the boards wrapped it up in nutshell..."if they live it's experience, if they die it's a tragedy." Of course there are all the ones in between, the quadriplegics, the devastating brain injuries, etc.
Short of posting the national guard yielding sub-machine guns at every "dangerous area" in the national parks, and other "high risk places" that people frequent, IMHO there is precious little or nothing that can be done to stop these people from courting death. They will find a way around it, through it, or into it, and we all know the "rest of the story".
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