YNWA14
Onbreekbaar
- Dec 29, 2010
- 34,543
- 2,560
Nobody said it wasn't tragic; loss of life almost always is. It's certainly not unfair to question whether or not someone inherently deserves respect just because they died, if they endangered and acted recklessly and cost other people their lives as well.
I don't know what happened, maybe one of the people in the car was messing around and caused the driver to lose control so I'm not passing judgment either way, but I can certainly see where if it was solely his fault why someone would decline to respect that given the loss of other lives because of someone else's recklessness, regardless of their choice to be in the car or not (that choice generally assumes safety and puts a level of trust in the driver).
But then this is why I almost never ever let someone else drive me somewhere (and I don't fly, or bus) because I have big trust issues when it comes to having my life in other peoples' hands.
I don't know what happened, maybe one of the people in the car was messing around and caused the driver to lose control so I'm not passing judgment either way, but I can certainly see where if it was solely his fault why someone would decline to respect that given the loss of other lives because of someone else's recklessness, regardless of their choice to be in the car or not (that choice generally assumes safety and puts a level of trust in the driver).
But then this is why I almost never ever let someone else drive me somewhere (and I don't fly, or bus) because I have big trust issues when it comes to having my life in other peoples' hands.