More Sad News From Orlando......
Comments
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daylight is tied to latitude ... it's why northern locations have almost 24 hr sunlight in the summer especially around the solstice ...Gern Blansten said:I'm in Indianapolis which is slightly west of FL....it's light here at 9pm
i would guess sunset in orlando around now is about 8:30 ...0 -
Manitoba, Canada.rustneversleeps said:
in florida? you should watch for alligators.HughFreakingDillon said:
either way. I have taken my kids down to the beach at dusk and after the sun has gone down and they sometimes put their feet in the water. and that's not a resort. that's a natural lake.rustneversleeps said:
it is not light out at 9 pm in florida.HughFreakingDillon said:
that's the thing. "no swimming" does not equte to "danger". there are so swimming signs in ponds, in wishing wells that are 1 foot deep (that people put their feet in all the time without losing their lives), in outdoor fountains that are there for decoration and not homelsss baths, and may I remind everyone, 9pm in the summer is not late. the sun is still up, at least in Winnipeg. we're in the longest days of the year right now. I would assume Florida would have adequate natural light as well.Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
Never, ever heard of anyone in Winnipeg getting attacked by a bear coming out of one of the fountains at the parliament building.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
Funny, I heard a TV lawyer say two things to the contrary:Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
1. That the family will have to accept whatever Disney offers because they were in the water with "no swimming" signs posted. You can't sue someone for damages if you yourself are breaking the law while you are "wronged." Disney will settle, just because it's the best thing to do, but they will have the legal advantage if the parents go for more gold beyond what they're offered.
2. None of the change in signage after the fact can be used as evidence.Post edited by what dreams on0 -
they weren't breaking any law unless the sign posted stated as such. the sign was most likely just a suggestion, not a law.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0
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no gators there, eh....HughFreakingDillon said:
Manitoba, Canada.rustneversleeps said:
in florida? you should watch for alligators.HughFreakingDillon said:
either way. I have taken my kids down to the beach at dusk and after the sun has gone down and they sometimes put their feet in the water. and that's not a resort. that's a natural lake.rustneversleeps said:
it is not light out at 9 pm in florida.HughFreakingDillon said:
that's the thing. "no swimming" does not equte to "danger". there are so swimming signs in ponds, in wishing wells that are 1 foot deep (that people put their feet in all the time without losing their lives), in outdoor fountains that are there for decoration and not homelsss baths, and may I remind everyone, 9pm in the summer is not late. the sun is still up, at least in Winnipeg. we're in the longest days of the year right now. I would assume Florida would have adequate natural light as well.Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
Never, ever heard of anyone in Winnipeg getting attacked by a bear coming out of one of the fountains at the parliament building.0 -
That's a shitty TV lawyer...kid wasn't swimmingwhat dreams said:
Funny, I heard a TV lawyer say two things to the contrary:Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
1. That the family will have to accept whatever Disney offers because they were in the water with "no swimming" signs posted. You can't sue someone for damages if you yourself are breaking the law while you are "wronged."
2. None of the change in signage after the fact can be used as evidence.Remember the Thomas Nine !! (10/02/2018)
The Golden Age is 2 months away. And guess what….. you’re gonna love it! (teskeinc 11.19.24)
1998: Noblesville; 2003: Noblesville; 2009: EV Nashville, Chicago, Chicago
2010: St Louis, Columbus, Noblesville; 2011: EV Chicago, East Troy, East Troy
2013: London ON, Wrigley; 2014: Cincy, St Louis, Moline (NO CODE)
2016: Lexington, Wrigley #1; 2018: Wrigley, Wrigley, Boston, Boston
2020: Oakland, Oakland: 2021: EV Ohana, Ohana, Ohana, Ohana
2022: Oakland, Oakland, Nashville, Louisville; 2023: Chicago, Chicago, Noblesville
2024: Noblesville, Wrigley, Wrigley, Ohana, Ohana; 2025: Pitt1, Pitt20 -
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2016/06/19/disneys-liability-prior-knowledge-questioned/86036062/
“Their exposure is phenomenal,” says Dan Cytryn, a trial lawyer at Cytryn & Velazquez, a law firm in Miami. Hotel operators “have a duty to protect (guests) from unreasonable risk of physical harm.”
"No-swimming” signs are posted on the lagoon’s beach. But if there's a legal case, it could turn on Disney’s prior knowledge about the potential dangers of wild animals at the resort.
“If they have a knowledge of (alligators’ presence), they have to pass it onto customers. If they failed to do so, it’s considered negligence, or failure to conduct yourself in a reasonable manner. What a reasonable person would do,” says Frank Branson, a trial attorney in Dallas.
Disney’s case could even be argued under a higher legal standard, gross negligence, Branson says. “It appears to me that it’s heedless — and actual disregard — of the safety and welfare of this child and family to merely have a sign up that says 'no swim',” Branson says.Remember the Thomas Nine !! (10/02/2018)
The Golden Age is 2 months away. And guess what….. you’re gonna love it! (teskeinc 11.19.24)
1998: Noblesville; 2003: Noblesville; 2009: EV Nashville, Chicago, Chicago
2010: St Louis, Columbus, Noblesville; 2011: EV Chicago, East Troy, East Troy
2013: London ON, Wrigley; 2014: Cincy, St Louis, Moline (NO CODE)
2016: Lexington, Wrigley #1; 2018: Wrigley, Wrigley, Boston, Boston
2020: Oakland, Oakland: 2021: EV Ohana, Ohana, Ohana, Ohana
2022: Oakland, Oakland, Nashville, Louisville; 2023: Chicago, Chicago, Noblesville
2024: Noblesville, Wrigley, Wrigley, Ohana, Ohana; 2025: Pitt1, Pitt20 -
rustneversleeps said:
no gators there, eh....HughFreakingDillon said:
Manitoba, Canada.rustneversleeps said:
in florida? you should watch for alligators.HughFreakingDillon said:
either way. I have taken my kids down to the beach at dusk and after the sun has gone down and they sometimes put their feet in the water. and that's not a resort. that's a natural lake.rustneversleeps said:
it is not light out at 9 pm in florida.HughFreakingDillon said:
that's the thing. "no swimming" does not equte to "danger". there are so swimming signs in ponds, in wishing wells that are 1 foot deep (that people put their feet in all the time without losing their lives), in outdoor fountains that are there for decoration and not homelsss baths, and may I remind everyone, 9pm in the summer is not late. the sun is still up, at least in Winnipeg. we're in the longest days of the year right now. I would assume Florida would have adequate natural light as well.Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
Never, ever heard of anyone in Winnipeg getting attacked by a bear coming out of one of the fountains at the parliament building.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
Well Disney certainly had prior knowledge that gators were present in that lagoon. They had previously removed gators from the lake and that's the part of this case that is key to me.Gern Blansten said:“Their exposure is phenomenal,” says Dan Cytryn, a trial lawyer at Cytryn & Velazquez, a law firm in Miami. Hotel operators “have a duty to protect (guests) from unreasonable risk of physical harm.”
"No-swimming” signs are posted on the lagoon’s beach. But if there's a legal case, it could turn on Disney’s prior knowledge about the potential dangers of wild animals at the resort.
“If they have a knowledge of (alligators’ presence), they have to pass it onto customers. If they failed to do so, it’s considered negligence, or failure to conduct yourself in a reasonable manner. What a reasonable person would do,” says Frank Branson, a trial attorney in Dallas.
Disney’s case could even be argued under a higher legal standard, gross negligence, Branson says. “It appears to me that it’s heedless — and actual disregard — of the safety and welfare of this child and family to merely have a sign up that says 'no swim',” Branson says.
I'm in Palm Beach County which is 4 hours drive tine from Orlando and it's dark at 9pm....it starts getting dark just after 8:30pm.
Peace
*We CAN bomb the World to pieces, but we CAN'T bomb it into PEACE*...Michael Franti
*MUSIC IS the expression of EMOTION.....and that POLITICS IS merely the DECOY of PERCEPTION*
.....song_Music & Politics....Michael Franti
*The scientists of today think deeply instead of clearly. One must be sane to think clearly, but one can think deeply and be quite INSANE*....Nikola Tesla(a man who shaped our world of electricity with his futuristic inventions)0 -
Really, you think they're going into court to argue the definition of swimming? If that's all they've got, it's a laughable case.Gern Blansten said:
That's a shitty TV lawyer...kid wasn't swimmingwhat dreams said:
Funny, I heard a TV lawyer say two things to the contrary:Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
1. That the family will have to accept whatever Disney offers because they were in the water with "no swimming" signs posted. You can't sue someone for damages if you yourself are breaking the law while you are "wronged."
2. None of the change in signage after the fact can be used as evidence.
"Your honor, I put my 2 foot child in 1 foot of water so he could splash. He did not float or kick his feet to propel himself forward. Therefore, he was not swimming."
"When you go to the swimming pool, does your child float and kick his feet to propel himself forward?"
"No."
"But you are aware it's called a swimming pool even though some people don't swim?"
"Yes."
"When you take your child there to splash, do you tell him you're going swimming, or do you tell him you're going splashing?"
"Uh . . . "
What I see here is the typical blame-the-greedy-corporation bandwagon. Such a predictable response. Corporations are evil. They don't care about their people. Disney just recklessly allows alligators to roam the park and eat kids because it's better for business that way. Do you not see how completely illogical that last statement is?
From the reports I've read, Disney did previously remove alligators from various places in the park . . . when they had knowledge of their being in certain places. The problem that all you geniuses don't understand is that you don't know an alligator is in the damned water unless you see him in the water. They are stealth creatures by nature. They get themselves into places without people knowing. The parents didn't see it in the water, and they were standing right fucking there. That's how hard it is *for anybody* to know if an alligator is in the water.0 -
what dreams said:
Really, you think they're going into court to argue the definition of swimming? If that's all they've got, it's a laughable case.Gern Blansten said:
That's a shitty TV lawyer...kid wasn't swimmingwhat dreams said:
Funny, I heard a TV lawyer say two things to the contrary:Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
1. That the family will have to accept whatever Disney offers because they were in the water with "no swimming" signs posted. You can't sue someone for damages if you yourself are breaking the law while you are "wronged."
2. None of the change in signage after the fact can be used as evidence.
"Your honor, I put my 2 foot child in 1 foot of water so he could splash. He did not float or kick his feet to propel himself forward. Therefore, he was not swimming."
"When you go to the swimming pool, does your child float and kick his feet to propel himself forward?"
"No."
"But you are aware it's called a swimming pool even though some people don't swim?"
"Yes."
"When you take your child there to splash, do you tell him you're going swimming, or do you tell him you're going splashing?"
"Uh . . . "
What I see here is the typical blame-the-greedy-corporation bandwagon. Such a predictable response. Corporations are evil. They don't care about their people. Disney just recklessly allows alligators to roam the park and eat kids because it's better for business that way. Do you not see how completely illogical that last statement is?
From the reports I've read, Disney did previously remove alligators from various places in the park . . . when they had knowledge of their being in certain places. The problem that all you geniuses don't understand is that you don't know an alligator is in the damned water unless you see him in the water. They are stealth creatures by nature. They get themselves into places without people knowing. The parents didn't see it in the water, and they were standing right fucking there. That's how hard it is *for anybody* to know if an alligator is in the water.
http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/16/us/airboat-captain-disney-gators/
Yes it known how stealth gators can be that's why I asked if anyone can spot the gator in the link above.
Since Disney removed gators from that lagoon and other waterways why didn't they put up signs at that lagoon to beware of alligators and please do not feed them? Especially since they can get into places where people won't be able to see them.
Peace
Post edited by g under p on*We CAN bomb the World to pieces, but we CAN'T bomb it into PEACE*...Michael Franti
*MUSIC IS the expression of EMOTION.....and that POLITICS IS merely the DECOY of PERCEPTION*
.....song_Music & Politics....Michael Franti
*The scientists of today think deeply instead of clearly. One must be sane to think clearly, but one can think deeply and be quite INSANE*....Nikola Tesla(a man who shaped our world of electricity with his futuristic inventions)0 -
daylight is tied to latitude ... it's why northern locations have almost 24 hr sunlight in the summer especially around the solstice ...Gern Blansten said:I'm in Indianapolis which is slightly west of FL....it's light here at 9pm
i would guess sunset in orlando around now is about 8:30 ...
timeanddate.com
not that. I mean Google "live twilight map".
thanksPost edited by rollings on0 -
resident "genius" here.......if alligators had previously been removed, you don't think that obligated the resort from warning their patrons about that?? that's called fucking gross negligence. it's pretty simple. when deer have been known to cross the highway at a certain spot, the government posts signs to WATCH FOR FUCKING DEER.what dreams said:
Really, you think they're going into court to argue the definition of swimming? If that's all they've got, it's a laughable case.Gern Blansten said:
That's a shitty TV lawyer...kid wasn't swimmingwhat dreams said:
Funny, I heard a TV lawyer say two things to the contrary:Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
1. That the family will have to accept whatever Disney offers because they were in the water with "no swimming" signs posted. You can't sue someone for damages if you yourself are breaking the law while you are "wronged."
2. None of the change in signage after the fact can be used as evidence.
"Your honor, I put my 2 foot child in 1 foot of water so he could splash. He did not float or kick his feet to propel himself forward. Therefore, he was not swimming."
"When you go to the swimming pool, does your child float and kick his feet to propel himself forward?"
"No."
"But you are aware it's called a swimming pool even though some people don't swim?"
"Yes."
"When you take your child there to splash, do you tell him you're going swimming, or do you tell him you're going splashing?"
"Uh . . . "
What I see here is the typical blame-the-greedy-corporation bandwagon. Such a predictable response. Corporations are evil. They don't care about their people. Disney just recklessly allows alligators to roam the park and eat kids because it's better for business that way. Do you not see how completely illogical that last statement is?
From the reports I've read, Disney did previously remove alligators from various places in the park . . . when they had knowledge of their being in certain places. The problem that all you geniuses don't understand is that you don't know an alligator is in the damned water unless you see him in the water. They are stealth creatures by nature. They get themselves into places without people knowing. The parents didn't see it in the water, and they were standing right fucking there. That's how hard it is *for anybody* to know if an alligator is in the water.
and no, this is not your "predictable hate on the greedy corporation" nonsense. this isn't mcdonald's and hot coffee. A CHILD DIED THROUGH NO FAULT OF THEIR (OR THEIR PARENTS) OWN. there have also been reports that the resort KNEW of their high end patrons feeding the fucking things and allowing it to go on. you don't find that culpable? I sure as fuck do.
and as you said, I'm a goddamn genius.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
Yeah deer are at their worst when they doing just that thing. Actually deer become really wild around roads when it's mating season.HughFreakingDillon said:
resident "genius" here.......if alligators had previously been removed, you don't think that obligated the resort from warning their patrons about that?? that's called fucking gross negligence. it's pretty simple. when deer have been known to cross the highway at a certain spot, the government posts signs to WATCH FOR FUCKING DEER.what dreams said:
Really, you think they're going into court to argue the definition of swimming? If that's all they've got, it's a laughable case.Gern Blansten said:
That's a shitty TV lawyer...kid wasn't swimmingwhat dreams said:
Funny, I heard a TV lawyer say two things to the contrary:Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
1. That the family will have to accept whatever Disney offers because they were in the water with "no swimming" signs posted. You can't sue someone for damages if you yourself are breaking the law while you are "wronged."
2. None of the change in signage after the fact can be used as evidence.
"Your honor, I put my 2 foot child in 1 foot of water so he could splash. He did not float or kick his feet to propel himself forward. Therefore, he was not swimming."
"When you go to the swimming pool, does your child float and kick his feet to propel himself forward?"
"No."
"But you are aware it's called a swimming pool even though some people don't swim?"
"Yes."
"When you take your child there to splash, do you tell him you're going swimming, or do you tell him you're going splashing?"
"Uh . . . "
What I see here is the typical blame-the-greedy-corporation bandwagon. Such a predictable response. Corporations are evil. They don't care about their people. Disney just recklessly allows alligators to roam the park and eat kids because it's better for business that way. Do you not see how completely illogical that last statement is?
From the reports I've read, Disney did previously remove alligators from various places in the park . . . when they had knowledge of their being in certain places. The problem that all you geniuses don't understand is that you don't know an alligator is in the damned water unless you see him in the water. They are stealth creatures by nature. They get themselves into places without people knowing. The parents didn't see it in the water, and they were standing right fucking there. That's how hard it is *for anybody* to know if an alligator is in the water.
and no, this is not your "predictable hate on the greedy corporation" nonsense. this isn't mcdonald's and hot coffee. A CHILD DIED THROUGH NO FAULT OF THEIR (OR THEIR PARENTS) OWN. there have also been reports that the resort KNEW of their high end patrons feeding the fucking things and allowing it to go on. you don't find that culpable? I sure as fuck do.
and as you said, I'm a goddamn genius.
Peace
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with all due respect, the parents had their toddler frolicking in a lagoon, after dusk, in florida. theres fault all around. i dont believe anyone i know would have their toddler frolicking in a lagoon in florida. man made, disney, whatever the case... i get the false sense of security argument, but im not sure i know anyone personally who would have assumed that false sense.HughFreakingDillon said:
resident "genius" here.......if alligators had previously been removed, you don't think that obligated the resort from warning their patrons about that?? that's called fucking gross negligence. it's pretty simple. when deer have been known to cross the highway at a certain spot, the government posts signs to WATCH FOR FUCKING DEER.what dreams said:
Really, you think they're going into court to argue the definition of swimming? If that's all they've got, it's a laughable case.Gern Blansten said:
That's a shitty TV lawyer...kid wasn't swimmingwhat dreams said:
Funny, I heard a TV lawyer say two things to the contrary:Gern Blansten said:
Swimming is not defined as walking in water. There were no obstacles to keep people from the water. Now there are....if I'm an injury attorney I'm going to look for before and after pictures of the site and the case is closed.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
Yep, I agree, and that's why they'll be paying a lot to settle the lawsuit. It did say no swimming though, so the family shouldn't have been in the water, whether it's toes, head, whatever. No means no, it usually doesn't need any explanation as to why. But I feel for the folks, I get it, that's just terrible.PJ_Soul said:
Actually you can. You can put up warning signs.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:I see both sides. i fall on the Disney side though, myself. The Florida mascot is a freaking gator. Everyone knows those things are everywhere in Florida. There's pool toys and stuffed animal gators at the damn airport. Anyone who has ever been to Florida knows that ANY body of water is a possibly dangerous situation. Every hotel is filled with pamphlets for airboat tours and alligator farms and other gator shtuff. Disney should definitely have put better signage near the water, and therefore will have to settle the lawsuit and pay up. Total freak accident as this doesn't happen often or ever for that matter but sheesh man, the parents taking their kid to the edge of water at 9pm to dip his toes in?! Jesus. You just can't plan for stupidity of that level.
Just saying that the dad made a mistake, and whether or not there was adequate signage is a separate legal issue. Movie night or not, amusement park or not, don't even put your fucking kid in a swimming pool in Florida without checking it out first.
1. That the family will have to accept whatever Disney offers because they were in the water with "no swimming" signs posted. You can't sue someone for damages if you yourself are breaking the law while you are "wronged."
2. None of the change in signage after the fact can be used as evidence.
"Your honor, I put my 2 foot child in 1 foot of water so he could splash. He did not float or kick his feet to propel himself forward. Therefore, he was not swimming."
"When you go to the swimming pool, does your child float and kick his feet to propel himself forward?"
"No."
"But you are aware it's called a swimming pool even though some people don't swim?"
"Yes."
"When you take your child there to splash, do you tell him you're going swimming, or do you tell him you're going splashing?"
"Uh . . . "
What I see here is the typical blame-the-greedy-corporation bandwagon. Such a predictable response. Corporations are evil. They don't care about their people. Disney just recklessly allows alligators to roam the park and eat kids because it's better for business that way. Do you not see how completely illogical that last statement is?
From the reports I've read, Disney did previously remove alligators from various places in the park . . . when they had knowledge of their being in certain places. The problem that all you geniuses don't understand is that you don't know an alligator is in the damned water unless you see him in the water. They are stealth creatures by nature. They get themselves into places without people knowing. The parents didn't see it in the water, and they were standing right fucking there. That's how hard it is *for anybody* to know if an alligator is in the water.
and no, this is not your "predictable hate on the greedy corporation" nonsense. this isn't mcdonald's and hot coffee. A CHILD DIED THROUGH NO FAULT OF THEIR (OR THEIR PARENTS) OWN. there have also been reports that the resort KNEW of their high end patrons feeding the fucking things and allowing it to go on. you don't find that culpable? I sure as fuck do.
and as you said, I'm a goddamn genius.0 -
This thread is turning into what money hungry lawyers will sound like during trial.0
-
^^^of course it is, individuals are never responsible ...I have certain rules I live by ... My First Rule ... I don't believe anything the government tells me ... George Carlin
"Life Is What Happens To You When Your Busy Making Other Plans" John Lennon0 -
People putting some blame on parents are idiots???pjhawks said:what a horrific thing for that family. i can't imagine living with the vision of seeing that happen, trying to stop it and not being able to. just unbearable to imagine.
people who put any blame on the parents in this care are fucking idiots in my opinion. if i was staying at a Disney resort never in a million year would i think something like what would or could happen. i mean surely other people have been close to that water's edge with babies before. it's a one in a million event.
It's evening. Getting dark. There are signs that say NO SWIMMING. And you let your toddler in the water in Florida. By himself. Sorry know this is heart wrenching and humans worst fear is being prey but the parents fked up and now will become millionaires and your ticket to Disney just went up along with more signs and more fences. Why? Because some jackass didn't read the sign. Thinking even if they had gator sign, it would of been ignored as well. .
Sorry natural section. Cold as it sounds.
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Call it what you want but these parents received information from property owners not to swim.HughFreakingDillon said:they weren't breaking any law unless the sign posted stated as such. the sign was most likely just a suggestion, not a law.
10-18-2000 Houston, 04-06-2003 Houston, 6-25-2003 Toronto, 10-8-2004 Kissimmee, 9-4-2005 Calgary, 12-3-05 Sao Paulo, 7-2-2006 Denver, 7-22-06 Gorge, 7-23-2006 Gorge, 9-13-2006 Bern, 6-22-2008 DC, 6-24-2008 MSG, 6-25-2008 MSG0 -
callen said:
People putting some blame on parents are idiots???pjhawks said:what a horrific thing for that family. i can't imagine living with the vision of seeing that happen, trying to stop it and not being able to. just unbearable to imagine.
people who put any blame on the parents in this care are fucking idiots in my opinion. if i was staying at a Disney resort never in a million year would i think something like what would or could happen. i mean surely other people have been close to that water's edge with babies before. it's a one in a million event.
It's evening. Getting dark. There are signs that say NO SWIMMING. And you let your toddler in the water in Florida. By himself. Sorry know this is heart wrenching and humans worst fear is being prey but the parents fked up and now will become millionaires and your ticket to Disney just went up along with more signs and more fences. Why? Because some jackass didn't read the sign. Thinking even if they had gator sign, it would of been ignored as well. .
Sorry natural section. Cold as it sounds.0
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