Rabbi_Vole
Banned
I blame the parents and most of GenX for raising a generation who believe they can do no wrong and the boundaries don't apply to them.
Hm. Not sure how to respond to this. There are varying degrees of severity when it comes to mistakes. I wouldn't know what else to call it if it's not classified as a mistake.
The perceived danger is the difference. You also can come out just fine by lighting a house on fire and locking the doors, but the chances are slim.
I blame the parents and most of GenX for raising a generation who believe they can do no wrong and the boundaries don't apply to them.
I'm sure it would be absolutely excruciating.
On the positive side, with enough trauma your body goes into shock and your brain shuts down. So you wouldn't be conscious much beyond the initial damage.
Unfortunately not. You only faint when there's a large drop in blood pressure to the brain, which does indeed happen when there's extreme trauma like lost limbs. In this case his "fight-or-flight" would have probably kicked in and his blood pressure would have instead INCREASED. Blood loss would have been non-existent at first, and then minimal later thanks to the water pressure against any exposed internals. I'd say it's very unlikely he passed out before drowning.
I wouldn't say that. It's stupid, but people do exactly what he did (minus slipping in) and end up fine.
Maybe he saw the youtube video of 6 dudes walking around off the path and thought it would be alright. Dude made a dumb mistake, and paid the ultimate price for it.
I think that was the point of the original comment was making or at least how I read it. Both are incredibly stupid, dangerous things that common sense alone should have warned you away from and this guy paid the price as he was not lucky enough to get away from the foolishness unharmed. The situation is terrible but he made a really really bone headed decisions and kept pushing his luck by going out farther and farther and taking his sister with him? We're lucky it wasnt two people sucked in.
Willfully endangerment. He consciously ignored the warning signs, left the safety of the path, and walked a sizable distance away from safe ground.
No, I don't think he deserved to die. But it is hard to feel full empathy for the guy when he choose to do something so stupid. The guy who went in after his dog- yeah I feel bad for him and the dog. That was a split second decision to save a companions life in-spite of the known danger. Not wise, but it was a heroic effort.
Unfortunately not. You only faint when there's a large drop in blood pressure to the brain, which does indeed happen when there's extreme trauma like lost limbs. In this situation however blood loss would have been non-existent at first, and then minimal later thanks to the water pressure against any exposed internals. I'd say it's very unlikely he passed out before drowning.
This thread is rough
I find it hard to believe he was willfully endangering himself. I believe he thought he was somewhat safe until he slipped in.
. . . What do they do to abandoned bison calls!?There are no remains to send. It's in the artlicle.
I find it hard to believe he was willfully endangering himself. I believe he thought he was somewhat safe until he slipped in.
The analogy was to convey that he 1) did something that was obviously dangerous in a life-threatening way, 2) put himself in the kind of danger where once the decision was made to do said dangerous thing, he had basically no ability to control the outcome, and and 3) did so knowingly.
People run through traffic all the time. Just because someone does so doesn't mean it's a good idea for you to do so. He watched other people do something that might have gotten them killed, and then joined in.
This is not to say I don't empathize with his fate - that's a horrific way to die. But it's also an amazingly stupid one. The place is littered with signs that say "don't do this thing, it could kill you" and he goes and does that thing.
What? Are you serious?
He walked off of the safety of the boardwalk, ignored the signage, ignore the very fact that boiling water can burn/kill you if you come in contact with it. How is that not "willfully putting ones self in danger"? The risked are posted all round the park for everyone to see. He choose to ignore the risks. Just because he thought he was immune to the danger doesn't change that he put himself in danger.
What I'm saying is there's a small level of relatable humanity in walking around off path trying to get a better view of an acid pit, but zero in playing frogger in a busy street.
I can't help but scratch my head at the phrase "enough perceived safety" when referring to jumping off a walkway to go check out the scalding hot pit of acid. I've never been to the area myself (I'd like to) but I can only imagine that the warning signs are not limited to the walkway itself, and that there are huge warning signs everywhere imaginable when you arrive at whatever area surrounds it.There're no rails around a lot of those parts. If the ground immediately off of those platforms was extremely dangerous, they would have them. Lending a small feeling of safety to walking on it. To a person that that gives enough perceived safety, it may not seem like a life threatening idea to walk on it to check out the acid pit 2 football fields away. I believe he made a false step, the ground gave away, and he was sucked into the pit. I can empathize with him on that too, not only the fact that he melted to death.
That doesn't really matter though, appreciating beauty shouldn't negate common sense.
Poor guy. Utterly stupid but doesn't mean he deserves such a horrible death.
That doesn't really matter though, appreciating beauty shouldn't negate common sense.
I can't help but scratch my head at the phrase "enough perceived safety" when referring to jumping off a walkway to go check out the scalding hot pit of acid. I've never been to the area myself (I'd like to) but I can only imagine that the warning signs are not limited to the walkway itself, and that there are huge warning signs everywhere imaginable when you arrive at whatever area surrounds it.
I just can't see how someone could mistake just how fucking lethal the place is.
And it's completely selfish to the people who have to go and rescue them or recover the remains.
I don't really agree. If you can't take 5 minute's to read the brochure they hand you or read the damn signs they have everywhere in the park then maybe you do. It's called common sense.
The saddest part was anybody that was a witness to this idocy and had children with them.
How much time you can boil before die?
Read that the process can take 10 minutes, if this is true worse die ever.
Poor guy. Utterly stupid but doesn't mean he deserves such a horrible death.
Because he wasn't planning on going into the part that is boiling? He was planning on walking on the safe parts to look at the boiling part closer, but fell in.
He stepped of the safe path designated for visitors. I don't care what he was planning on doing off of that safe path. The reality of the danger he put himself (and his sister) doesn't change cause they didn't plan on getting hurt. Reality doesn't warp around human intent.
And I wonder if his remains will be ejected back up through a geyserThat must have been a brutal way to die. A singular negative decision leads to your body dropping in fucking BOILING ACID.
Human intent does influence whether you're doing something willfully or not though. He ignorantly put himself in danger.
So I can understand walking off the wooden barriers. When I was there last, the signs never said things like "Do not", or "You Cannot", or "Prohibited" - they just said the word "Danger". This actually lead my friends and I to walk on trails roped off and marked "Danger" because they can't restrict general access in most cases.
"Danger" in addition to the other warnings should be enough for people to know that you shouldn't be there. I mean you essentially did the same thing he did where you knowingly endangered yourself. I don't really understand how people think they know better than the park officials on safety in Yellowstone.
Not with the amount of signage around. One can't claim ignorance when one out ignores the posted rules and safety signs. In this case, he choose to be ignorant. Hence he choose to put himself in danger.
I don't think he deserved the pain and suffering he experienced. It was likely awful beyond imagining. I just don't think it should be called an accident. It was negligence on his part. I've been to Yellowstone. You have to ignore literally hundreds of signs and warnings of all sorts to think it is OK to walk into a field of geothermic activity.
One of the major warnings you get, even though you're meant to stay on the boardwalk, is that ground that appears solid might actually be thin enough to collapse under the weight of a person.
So no, nobody deserves a terrible death like that. But it wasn't an accident. It was his fault.
According to the yellowstone website.
He fell into this thing.
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I dont think I wanna go swimming in that
And I wonder if his remains will be ejected back up through a geyser
There're no rails around a lot of those parts. If the ground immediately off of those platforms was extremely dangerous, they would have them. Lending a small feeling of safety to walking on it. To a person that that gives enough perceived safety, it may not seem like a life threatening idea to walk on it to check out the acid pit 2 football fields away. I believe he made a false step, the ground gave away, and he was sucked into the pit. I can empathize with him on that too, not only the fact that he melted to death.
I can't help but scratch my head at the phrase "enough perceived safety" when referring to jumping off a walkway to go check out the scalding hot pit of acid. I've never been to the area myself (I'd like to) but I can only imagine that the warning signs are not limited to the walkway itself, and that there are huge warning signs everywhere imaginable when you arrive at whatever area surrounds it.
I just can't see how someone could mistake just how fucking lethal the place is.