People pay the price for their ill thought out decisions every day and live and hopefully learn. He paid the ultimate price. Even though what you say is true, I can't get myself to see it the way you do.
Everyone has done something stupid at some point before or after reaching adulthood. A decade or so ago I went hiking once after a freeze and had to hike along an icy ledge above a several hundred foot drop. It was stupid, but I didn't deserve to die (and you will all be happy to discover that I did not in fact die that day).
Its like the mountaineers going up everest. Or the ones missing in india. The ones that turn back cos they see the idiocy that survive and the others... well they roll the dice. This guy rolled the dice. I save my concern for those left behind families who have to deal with it now.
Don't take these replies personally, they are not aimed at you. I used the word deserve in my first post on the subject as part of how I feel about the situation not in relation to anything anyone else has said more as a blanket statement that being foolish shouldn't end someones life.
I just think sympathy is somewhat diminished when knowingly doing something that is dangerous that could hurt or kill you
I totally get that. I can see why someone would have that opinion on it. I just have a different view.
He was taking a chance at 135mph, but his tyre blew out. It may have blow out at the speed limit, 50mph, in which case he might have survived. We have all done daft things in our time, but have been lucky nothing major happened.
More evidence that Milner has class James Milner got Liverpool's open top bus to stop outside the house of a Hillsborough survivor so he could show him the European Cup. The bus was heading back to Melwood just after 8pm when Milner requested that it stopped outside the south Liverpool home of Andrew Devine. The 53-year-old has been confined to a wheelchair since the serious injuries he suffered at Hillsborough in 1989. When the bus pulled up, Andrew was outside and Milner leant over the side of the bus to show him the gleaming trophy. Andrew was a devoted 22-year-old Liverpool fan from Mossley Hill, who was working for the Post Office, when he attended the FA Cup semi-final at Hillsborough back in 1989. After his chest was crushed and his brain deprived of oxygen, he was put on a life support machine and wasn't expected to survive the day. However, 30 years on he lives in the family home in Liverpool with devoted parents Stanley and Hilary with the help of 24-hour professional care. please log in to view this image
Three window sills glued Two window sills siliconed Three shelves put up One utensils rail put up #busyevening