Ive been gone for awhile, so I may as well come back with a bang and hijack of a thread here. I agree with Rain and what seems to be the sentiment of many (mine if a little moreso as noted in my statment next)----you chose to do this, you knew the risks, lets not get crazy because you died (or may) knowing what you signed up for.
Here is my question.....Why is that any different that when we have the grief or out pouring of public anger and sympathy when a policeman, or fireman, or soldier loses their life?
Ive been gone for awhile, so I may as well come back with a bang and hijack of a thread here. I agree with Rain and what seems to be the sentiment of many (mine if a little moreso as noted in my statment next)----you chose to do this, you knew the risks, lets not get crazy because you died (or may) knowing what you signed up for.
Here is my question.....Why is that any different that when we have the grief or out pouring of public anger and sympathy when a policeman, or fireman, or soldier loses their life?
I think a number of us have posted previously that we put these medical folks on the same level as those in uniform and give them a great deal of respect. I don't think any one of us has lost any understanding about what these people do, and the chances they take. They are the ones doing something, and not the ones screaming "someone do something".
Ive been gone for awhile, so I may as well come back with a bang and hijack of a thread here. I agree with Rain and what seems to be the sentiment of many (mine if a little moreso as noted in my statment next)----you chose to do this, you knew the risks, lets not get crazy because you died (or may) knowing what you signed up for.
Here is my question.....Why is that any different that when we have the grief or out pouring of public anger and sympathy when a policeman, or fireman, or soldier loses their life?
I think a number of us have posted previously that we put these medical folks on the same level as those in uniform and give them a great deal of respect. I don't think any one of us has lost any understanding about what these people do, and the chances they take. They are the ones doing something, and not the ones screaming "someone do something".
...and we shouldn't leave a fallen soldier behind, should we?
Ive been gone for awhile, so I may as well come back with a bang and hijack of a thread here. I agree with Rain and what seems to be the sentiment of many (mine if a little moreso as noted in my statment next)----you chose to do this, you knew the risks, lets not get crazy because you died (or may) knowing what you signed up for.
Here is my question.....Why is that any different that when we have the grief or out pouring of public anger and sympathy when a policeman, or fireman, or soldier loses their life?
I think a number of us have posted previously that we put these medical folks on the same level as those in uniform and give them a great deal of respect. I don't think any one of us has lost any understanding about what these people do, and the chances they take. They are the ones doing something, and not the ones screaming "someone do something".
...and we shouldn't leave a fallen soldier behind, should we?
If there's a bomb strapped to his chest, you might consider defusing that before lifting him into your copter.
Ive been gone for awhile, so I may as well come back with a bang and hijack of a thread here. I agree with Rain and what seems to be the sentiment of many (mine if a little moreso as noted in my statment next)----you chose to do this, you knew the risks, lets not get crazy because you died (or may) knowing what you signed up for.
Here is my question.....Why is that any different that when we have the grief or out pouring of public anger and sympathy when a policeman, or fireman, or soldier loses their life?
I think a number of us have posted previously that we put these medical folks on the same level as those in uniform and give them a great deal of respect. I don't think any one of us has lost any understanding about what these people do, and the chances they take. They are the ones doing something, and not the ones screaming "someone do something".
...and we shouldn't leave a fallen soldier behind, should we?
If there's a bomb strapped to his chest, you might consider defusing that before lifting him into your copter.
+1....one vs many, needs of the few vs the greater good....interesting thoughts.
Comments
Here is my question.....Why is that any different that when we have the grief or out pouring of public anger and sympathy when a policeman, or fireman, or soldier loses their life?
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2014/08/07/cdc-issues-highest-level-alert-amid-ebola-outbreak/
I think a number of us have posted previously that we put these medical folks on the same level as those in uniform and give them a great deal of respect. I don't think any one of us has lost any understanding about what these people do, and the chances they take. They are the ones doing something, and not the ones screaming "someone do something".