UcMiami
How it is
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
- 14,196
- Reaction Score
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Fishy - nice post. And I guess I agree with you at a basic level. I do not get enraged when a natural disaster strikes, though I do think we as a society have promoted things that increase the toll and frequency of them by ignoring the obvious - if you build a community on a river's flood plain, why are you surprised when once a decade you get flooded out? Or if you depend on levees that were built 50 years ago and never spend the money to maintain them ... And we create laws and institutions to promote this 'ignorance' often to the benefit of private sector profits. The value of land in those flood plans would be greatly reduced if not for national flood insurance for example and those communities would never have been built or expanded without it.
Many accidents are unpredictable and they do not bother me beyond the obvious sorrow they cause.
But there are other 'accidents' that are predictable and preventable - mining (my grandfathers business) has become much safer over the last century due to laws and regulations and improved conditions in the mines. But there are also mining companies that have a terrible safety record, and are known for skirting regulations and cutting corners in pursuit of profits. And those companies and the people who run them should cause some outrage. It certainly appears that the West Fertilizer Co was run in a similar manor.
An interesting note - my grandmother survived the Johnstown Flood on May 31 (my birthday), 1889. 2209 people died from that manmade natural disaster and the outrage it caused and the inability to recover damages from the private owners of the known to be defective dam caused a change to the US laws in regard to liability. That was certainly an accident but it was one caused by gross negligence and it cost 2209 lives.
I think I come down more on your blogger friends side.
Many accidents are unpredictable and they do not bother me beyond the obvious sorrow they cause.
But there are other 'accidents' that are predictable and preventable - mining (my grandfathers business) has become much safer over the last century due to laws and regulations and improved conditions in the mines. But there are also mining companies that have a terrible safety record, and are known for skirting regulations and cutting corners in pursuit of profits. And those companies and the people who run them should cause some outrage. It certainly appears that the West Fertilizer Co was run in a similar manor.
An interesting note - my grandmother survived the Johnstown Flood on May 31 (my birthday), 1889. 2209 people died from that manmade natural disaster and the outrage it caused and the inability to recover damages from the private owners of the known to be defective dam caused a change to the US laws in regard to liability. That was certainly an accident but it was one caused by gross negligence and it cost 2209 lives.
I think I come down more on your blogger friends side.