Unless he received permanent injury (and even then) even 10s of thousands is ridiculous for what this amounts to, which is "Shit Happens". I mean there's a 20 foot high fence all around the impound, and the paintball field (supposedly) has netting all around it to prevent stay balls from leaving the range. It was a one in a million shot (again assuming that there is netting there and the field doesn't bump right up to the edge of the tree line there) that the ball cleared both the netting, the trees and the chainlink fence without breaking on anything along the way and hit him with enough force to break. That's not a failure of the state to adequately protect him anymore than a bird shitting in his eye while he stretches in the morning is a failure of the state to protect him. Pay his medical bills, sure. Require the field owner to put up better netting on the prison side, sure. Give him a little extra jelly with his breakfast, sure. Give him 10k+ for a freak accident with no lasting damage, I don't think so.
7/9/2009 12:38:03 PM
It comes down to whether it was an accident, or someone is actually at fault for being negligent. Assuming his injury is real, and it came from the paintball field, I'd say the city is at fault for allowing a paint-ball field to be built near a prison. It's just common sense. You don't give someone a permit to build:-a strip club next to an elementary school -a factory meat farm next to the county reservoir-an iron smelting facility next to the maternity ward of a hospitalWhen you're in prison, you can't just leave whenever you want. You can't decide "this neighborhood is getting dangerous, time to move".This also isn't the middle ages, where prisoners are restrained in public, subject to the whims of passersby.
7/9/2009 1:28:50 PM
What do these three logical reasonable zoning conflicts listed below have to do with this situation
7/9/2009 2:29:18 PM
No one's being forced to expose themselves to a paintball course except the prisoners.And every paintball course I've been to that wasn't surrounded by 30 foot mesh wire has been outside city limits. It's just common sense.
7/9/2009 5:04:23 PM
7/9/2009 7:02:00 PM
7/10/2009 7:37:28 AM
Paintballs can only travel ~200 feet . Paintball players shouldn't be getting within 200 feet of inmates at a prison.
7/10/2009 10:07:36 AM
7/14/2009 10:34:55 AM
^
7/14/2009 10:48:59 AM
Thank you. I'm glad it wasn't millions. But still, she should have gotten a free meal and that's it.
7/14/2009 11:18:00 AM
SO OMFG COFFEE IS HOT AND I SHOULD NOT HOLD IT BETWEEN MY LEGS WHILE DRIVING.I think even a 12 yr old who has tried to sip his mommy's coffee could tell you that fresh out of the normal home brewing dripper the liquid is scalding hot.What ever happened to personnal responsibility. Maybe I'll go to Best Buy, get a heavy 60" projection TV, and as I attempt to get it in my car drop the box on my foot. I can then sue Best Buy for not sufficiently warning me that a big TV is heavy and may break my foot. Futher I will also sue that they need to replace my TV with a new one for not requiring an employee to assist me to the car.[Edited on July 14, 2009 at 11:28 AM. Reason : a]
7/14/2009 11:26:42 AM
^i haven't bought a big appliance like that at best buy. but i wouldn't be surprised if they require that very thing to avoid the situation you're talking about.
7/14/2009 11:40:20 AM
7/14/2009 12:13:38 PM
An unaddressed element of envy tends to loom over these conversations.I'm unclear how this particular lawsuit affects any of us in any meaningful way. I understand seemingly frivolous lawsuits against doctors can drive up healthcare costs. But in the case of the city or the state, they tend to protect themselves pretty well, and I just can't imagine that taxpayers are actually burdened by these lawsuits. (Any numbers on this?) Sure, even an extra penny in taxes could be viewed as a burden, but there has to be some room for folks to sue just in case they have a legitimate claim. We must be liberal in the distinction between legitimate and frivolous because, otherwise, we risk valuing dominant institutions over individuals--individuals whose only immediate recourse is often a lawsuit. Keep in mind that lawsuits are pitiful compared to the entrenched avenues of power available to corporations and similar organizations. In short, it is better to let some frivolous suits slip through to trial than it is to keep some legitimate suits out...it's better because it helps to ensure that the individual has some kind of power.Anyway, back to the envy...since this doesn't appear to affect us in any way, why do folks get so passionate about it? I wouldn't be surprised if people were motivated more by "Where's-my-million-dollars?" than any notions about personal accountability or the societal cost of frivolous lawsuits.
7/14/2009 12:16:50 PM
7/14/2009 1:22:37 PM
7/14/2009 2:31:16 PM
7/14/2009 3:08:02 PM
7/14/2009 5:26:50 PM
you most certainly can get third degree burns from hot water.
7/14/2009 5:35:48 PM
7/14/2009 6:12:57 PM
^ They must be using teh surgical burn definition instead of the "traditional" burn scale system. Otherwise everyone in a hot tub or walking around the desert of saudi arabia would be getting "3rd degree burns""Hot" Coffee is not going to do this....
7/14/2009 6:22:09 PM
7/14/2009 9:40:09 PM
7/14/2009 10:31:14 PM
7/14/2009 10:42:35 PM
wow, that write-up is entirely too calm and rational and contains too many facts. WE CAN'T BE HAVING THAT!!
7/14/2009 11:08:49 PM