Video captures terrifying fall as girl pushed from 60-foot bridge in Washington state
 
            
                
                    Meltdown99                
                
                    None Of Your Business... Posts: 10,739                
            
                        
            
                    Video captures terrifying fall as girl pushed from 60-foot bridge in Washington state
https://globalnews.ca/news/4379816/video-terrifying-fall-girl-pushed-bridge-washington-state/
With friends like this, who needs enemies...
                https://globalnews.ca/news/4379816/video-terrifying-fall-girl-pushed-bridge-washington-state/
With friends like this, who needs enemies...
Give Peas A Chance…
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            Comments
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            wtf?
 I didnt see it mentioned in the article...maybe I missed it. Are they pressing charges?hippiemom = goodness0
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            I looked for the same info - I haven't seen if there will be charges or not.
 I'd definitely ask for them to press charges if I were that girl though, no matter what their relationship is. Holy shit, what a stupid asshole.
 With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0
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            I didn't see anything about charges? She suffered 5 broken ribs (a buddy of mine had 3 broken ribs and slept in a recliner for 2 weeks) and a collapsed lung...poor young lady, she could have easily died...Give Peas A Chance…0
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            Moronic.
 A bonafide 100% idiot with a latent cruel side displaying itself."My brain's a good brain!"0
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 I know you are ton crime... is this assault. I think it is. That girl could easily have died...Thirty Bills Unpaid said:Moronic.
 A bonafide 100% idiot with a latent cruel side displaying itself.Give Peas A Chance…0
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            Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 "It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
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 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.Give Peas A Chance…0
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            Kids are completly clueless they irk me , specially at that age level you can't talk to them they know it all ...jesus greets me looks just like me ....0
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 True, perhaps, but just putting herself in that position indicates a serious lack of common sense. I've jumped from about 40 feet (about 12.2 meters) into water. Even that was foolish. It was scary, and the impact was hard. Add 50% more distance to that and you asking for trouble.Meltdown99 said:
 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 "It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
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 I think the 'guy' that pushed her was a 'girl'.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 I know why you made the mistake: it typically is some idiot guy doing something stupid like this and she flashed briefly in and out of the video screen with only her burly arm.
 I'm curious to know what the people on the bridge did afterwards? It would take a lot not to do anything. I'd have been really tempted to put her in a headlock and give her a wedgie.
 Dumb. Just dumb."My brain's a good brain!"0
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            Thirty Bills Unpaid said:
 I think the 'guy' that pushed her was a 'girl'.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 I know why you made the mistake: it typically is some idiot guy doing something stupid like this and she flashed briefly in and out of the video screen with only her burly arm.
 I'm curious to know what the people on the bridge did afterwards? It would take a lot not to do anything. I'd have been really tempted to put her in a headlock and give her a wedgie.
 Dumb. Just dumb.I hope the kids reacted strongly. If not, I would find this disturbing the way I found the Marcy Renee Conrad killing in 1981- the killing the disturbing movie River's Edge was based on.There was big concern when this came out that teens were beginning to develop a lack of moral boundaries. One year when I was subbing a high school gym class (not my thing but I needed any job I could get) I was reffing a basketball game and an errant pass caught me in the eye and I went down hard. Not one kid stopped to see if I was OK (I was not, I had a scratched cornea). They just kept playing like I wasn't there."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
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 Wowbrianlux said:Thirty Bills Unpaid said:
 I think the 'guy' that pushed her was a 'girl'.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 I know why you made the mistake: it typically is some idiot guy doing something stupid like this and she flashed briefly in and out of the video screen with only her burly arm.
 I'm curious to know what the people on the bridge did afterwards? It would take a lot not to do anything. I'd have been really tempted to put her in a headlock and give her a wedgie.
 Dumb. Just dumb.I hope the kids reacted strongly. If not, I would find this disturbing the way I found the Marcy Renee Conrad killing in 1981- the killing the disturbing movie River's Edge was based on.There was big concern when this came out that teens were beginning to develop a lack of moral boundaries. One year when I was subbing a high school gym class (not my thing but I needed any job I could get) I was reffing a basketball game and an errant pass caught me in the eye and I went down hard. Not one kid stopped to see if I was OK (I was not, I had a scratched cornea). They just kept playing like I wasn't there."My brain's a good brain!"0
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 I don't care if someone decides they want to jump into water from a tall height. That is their choice to make, and a lot of people do it for fun. Cliff jumping is an age old form of entertainment for many, and this is no different. I don't think there is any blame whatsoever to be laying on the girl in this case. She was thinking about trying it, but decided against it because it's scary (I'd chicken out too!). Then an idiot came along and shoved her off against her will and when she wasn't expecting it, which caused her to belly flop when she landed because she wasn't prepared, and that is why she got injured. Other people were jumping and were just fine because they were prepared for it and hit the water in the proper position. This is ALL on him, not her. There's no reason to victim shame in this case IMO. (Thirty, you think it was a girl who pushed? The article I read about it actually said it was a guy...)brianlux said:
 True, perhaps, but just putting herself in that position indicates a serious lack of common sense. I've jumped from about 40 feet (about 12.2 meters) into water. Even that was foolish. It was scary, and the impact was hard. Add 50% more distance to that and you asking for trouble.Meltdown99 said:
 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 Post edited by PJ_Soul onWith all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0
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 Again... this was not a 'him'. It was a 'her' that pushed this girl.PJ_Soul said:
 I don't care if someone decides they want to jump from a bridge into water at all. That is their choice to make, and a lot of people do it for fun. Cliff jumping is an age old form of entertainment for many, and this is no different. I don't think there is any blame whatsoever to be laying on the girl in this case. She was thinking about trying it, but decided against it. Then an idiot came along and shoved her off against her will, which caused her to belly flop when she landed, because she wasn't prepared, and that is why she got injured. That is ALL on him, not her.brianlux said:
 True, perhaps, but just putting herself in that position indicates a serious lack of common sense. I've jumped from about 40 feet (about 12.2 meters) into water. Even that was foolish. It was scary, and the impact was hard. Add 50% more distance to that and you asking for trouble.Meltdown99 said:
 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 And I agree with you: all blame for this lies directly in the pusher. It isn't super wise to attempt these jumps and someone might not be able to understand this until they face the moment (finally seeing the situation for what it is).
 Stepping out on to the platform is one thing. Making the decision to jump is another."My brain's a good brain!"0
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 Yeah, I edited my post to ask you about that. I actually read an article yesterday that specifically said it was a guy. That's changed?Thirty Bills Unpaid said:
 Again... this was not a 'him'. It was a 'her' that pushed this girl.PJ_Soul said:
 I don't care if someone decides they want to jump from a bridge into water at all. That is their choice to make, and a lot of people do it for fun. Cliff jumping is an age old form of entertainment for many, and this is no different. I don't think there is any blame whatsoever to be laying on the girl in this case. She was thinking about trying it, but decided against it. Then an idiot came along and shoved her off against her will, which caused her to belly flop when she landed, because she wasn't prepared, and that is why she got injured. That is ALL on him, not her.brianlux said:
 True, perhaps, but just putting herself in that position indicates a serious lack of common sense. I've jumped from about 40 feet (about 12.2 meters) into water. Even that was foolish. It was scary, and the impact was hard. Add 50% more distance to that and you asking for trouble.Meltdown99 said:
 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 And I agree with you: all blame for this lies directly in the pusher. It isn't super wise to attempt these jumps and someone might not be able to understand this until they face the moment (finally seeing the situation for what it is).
 Stepping out on to the platform is one thing. Making the decision to jump is another.
 With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0
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 I'm arguing that she was partially to blame the way a parent would. I've never been a parent but I like kids and I have a soft spot for teens- what a tough time of life! So yeah, I would hit her with some tough love because I dodn't like seeing kids get hurt. I would chew her ass out and then tell her that's because I care, because I want her to learn some good decision making skills and because I don't want her to get hurt.PJ_Soul said:
 I don't care if someone decides they want to jump into water from a tall height. That is their choice to make, and a lot of people do it for fun. Cliff jumping is an age old form of entertainment for many, and this is no different. I don't think there is any blame whatsoever to be laying on the girl in this case. She was thinking about trying it, but decided against it because it's scary (I'd chicken out too!). Then an idiot came along and shoved her off against her will and when she wasn't expecting it, which caused her to belly flop when she landed because she wasn't prepared, and that is why she got injured. Other people were jumping and were just fine because they were prepared for it and hit the water in the proper position. This is ALL on him, not her. There's no reason to victim shame in this case IMO. (Thirty, you think it was a girl who pushed? The article I read about it actually said it was a guy...)brianlux said:
 True, perhaps, but just putting herself in that position indicates a serious lack of common sense. I've jumped from about 40 feet (about 12.2 meters) into water. Even that was foolish. It was scary, and the impact was hard. Add 50% more distance to that and you asking for trouble.Meltdown99 said:
 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 "It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
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 I watched the video and they spoke about a girl who was regretting pushing her.PJ_Soul said:
 Yeah, I edited my post to ask you about that. I actually read an article yesterday that specifically said it was a guy. That's changed?Thirty Bills Unpaid said:
 Again... this was not a 'him'. It was a 'her' that pushed this girl.PJ_Soul said:
 I don't care if someone decides they want to jump from a bridge into water at all. That is their choice to make, and a lot of people do it for fun. Cliff jumping is an age old form of entertainment for many, and this is no different. I don't think there is any blame whatsoever to be laying on the girl in this case. She was thinking about trying it, but decided against it. Then an idiot came along and shoved her off against her will, which caused her to belly flop when she landed, because she wasn't prepared, and that is why she got injured. That is ALL on him, not her.brianlux said:
 True, perhaps, but just putting herself in that position indicates a serious lack of common sense. I've jumped from about 40 feet (about 12.2 meters) into water. Even that was foolish. It was scary, and the impact was hard. Add 50% more distance to that and you asking for trouble.Meltdown99 said:
 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 And I agree with you: all blame for this lies directly in the pusher. It isn't super wise to attempt these jumps and someone might not be able to understand this until they face the moment (finally seeing the situation for what it is).
 Stepping out on to the platform is one thing. Making the decision to jump is another.
 Maybe I'm on glue?"My brain's a good brain!"0
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 I saw her interviewed on our local news and it was a female friend of hers. The police are currently investigating it as a crime. I hope they actually do charge the person who pushed her with some sort of assault or reckless endangerment charge.Thirty Bills Unpaid said:
 I watched the video and they spoke about a girl who was regretting pushing her.PJ_Soul said:
 Yeah, I edited my post to ask you about that. I actually read an article yesterday that specifically said it was a guy. That's changed?Thirty Bills Unpaid said:
 Again... this was not a 'him'. It was a 'her' that pushed this girl.PJ_Soul said:
 I don't care if someone decides they want to jump from a bridge into water at all. That is their choice to make, and a lot of people do it for fun. Cliff jumping is an age old form of entertainment for many, and this is no different. I don't think there is any blame whatsoever to be laying on the girl in this case. She was thinking about trying it, but decided against it. Then an idiot came along and shoved her off against her will, which caused her to belly flop when she landed, because she wasn't prepared, and that is why she got injured. That is ALL on him, not her.brianlux said:
 True, perhaps, but just putting herself in that position indicates a serious lack of common sense. I've jumped from about 40 feet (about 12.2 meters) into water. Even that was foolish. It was scary, and the impact was hard. Add 50% more distance to that and you asking for trouble.Meltdown99 said:
 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 And I agree with you: all blame for this lies directly in the pusher. It isn't super wise to attempt these jumps and someone might not be able to understand this until they face the moment (finally seeing the situation for what it is).
 Stepping out on to the platform is one thing. Making the decision to jump is another.
 Maybe I'm on glue?"I'll use the magic word - let's just shut the fuck up, please." EV, 04/13/080
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            Wtf is wrong with people?
 The girl who pushed her off the bridge should be charged.
 0
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 I think she's suffered enough, lol. I seriously doubt being chewed out by her parents would be helpful at all, especially since it wasn't her fault. I mean, it wasn't her decision making that lead to her being injured. Someone pushed her off a bridge.brianlux said:
 I'm arguing that she was partially to blame the way a parent would. I've never been a parent but I like kids and I have a soft spot for teens- what a tough time of life! So yeah, I would hit her with some tough love because I dodn't like seeing kids get hurt. I would chew her ass out and then tell her that's because I care, because I want her to learn some good decision making skills and because I don't want her to get hurt.PJ_Soul said:
 I don't care if someone decides they want to jump into water from a tall height. That is their choice to make, and a lot of people do it for fun. Cliff jumping is an age old form of entertainment for many, and this is no different. I don't think there is any blame whatsoever to be laying on the girl in this case. She was thinking about trying it, but decided against it because it's scary (I'd chicken out too!). Then an idiot came along and shoved her off against her will and when she wasn't expecting it, which caused her to belly flop when she landed because she wasn't prepared, and that is why she got injured. Other people were jumping and were just fine because they were prepared for it and hit the water in the proper position. This is ALL on him, not her. There's no reason to victim shame in this case IMO. (Thirty, you think it was a girl who pushed? The article I read about it actually said it was a guy...)brianlux said:
 True, perhaps, but just putting herself in that position indicates a serious lack of common sense. I've jumped from about 40 feet (about 12.2 meters) into water. Even that was foolish. It was scary, and the impact was hard. Add 50% more distance to that and you asking for trouble.Meltdown99 said:
 I agree ... but at one point the girl said no ... indicating to me common sense was setting in.brianlux said:Stupid all around. Why was the girl standing in the other side of the rail in the first place. The guy who shoved her was definitely wrong and should be charged as an adult, the the girl was also in the wrong. Even a planned jump into water at 60 feet is not safe. That's about twice the height of a high dive board. The kid was chancing getting a Darwin Award.
 With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0
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