defstartrooper
Sr Member
The truly stupid part is, is that you don't recognize the difference between inherent risk and willfully gambling with your life.
If I stand on the street corner and wait for the signal to change, there's a small chance that a car will hop the curb and hit me. If I try running across on-coming traffic, my chances of getting hit, go up a hundred-fold. And if I do get hit, it's my fault - not the on-coming traffic's.
If I'm walking down the street, there's a small chance that some loon with a gun may take a shot at me. If I see a loon with a gun and run up and confront him, there's a pretty damn good chance he's going to shoot me. Again, a situation I've created for myself.
Cops know the risk of the job, but they're also trained to prepare for those type of situations. Plus, they wear bullet proof vests, in the off chance that somebody might shoot at them. And with the 70 year old, we don't know a thing about the circumstances. Did the cop know the guy had a gun? Did the guy look harmless and then pull the gun on the cop as he approached?
At what point do you start taking responsibility for your own actions, DST? Or are you always a victim of circumstance and all of your problems are someone else's fault?
-Fred
No you don't seem to recognize that even crossing a busy street when the don't walk symbol is up doesn't equate to willfully taking your own life unless you run into traffic with the expressed objective of getting hit and killed.
If your objective is to get to the other side of the street and you get hit it's still an accident despite the level of risk.
Now if you can show me that Haim took drugs over many years with the expressed objective of killing himself i'll happily accept your verdict of suicide which is what willfully taking your own life is.
Seems like a slow, expensive and inefficient way to commit suicide though.