General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Last year, this man specifically warned Disney about alligators after his son [View all]Corporate666
(587 posts)You're taking the word of a lawyer who claims the conversation went the way he said and suggesting you would want to "make the corporation pay" including *criminal* charges.
Who broke the law, exactly? And what law?
It's the first time this has happened in the 45 years the park has been in existence. The have over 50 million visitors annually, and I'm sure it's billions since they opened.
So we're literally talking about a one in a few billion event. To what extent do we need to "protect" from such things? People are talking about hiring a team of people to relocate alligators, reconfiguring protected wetlands, installing ecosystem-changing fencing and more - because ONE incident occurred in billions of visitors.
The kid was in the water, unsupervised at that moment. What percentage of the blame is the parents compared to Disney World? And what percentage is "shit happens".
Based on some of the ridiculous overreactions in this thread, if a kid falls and scrapes their knee on the sidewalk, we need an immediate army of sidewalk monitors throughout the country, and we need to issue jeans to every kid and hand protectors, and pass a law that they must be worn 24/7, and tear up all sidewalks and install that rubber stuff they put in playgrounds, and make mandatory training for kids a requirement throughout the country, and on and on.
Let's not even talk about alcohol being legal or cigarettes or cars being able to go more than 30mph or not having every train surrounded by advanced crowd control and surveillance electronics, etc.