mondeo
New member
:smash:.
Last edited:
Welcome to AlpineZone, the largest online community of skiers and snowboarders in the Northeast!
You may have to REGISTER before you can post. Registering is FREE, gets rid of the majority of advertisements, and lets you participate in giveaways and other AlpineZone events!
Blaming big business is the single most profitable thing the media can do. There is nothing that sells better. Toyota, ExxonMobil, BP, AIG, GM, Big Pharma, whatever. All of our problems are because of them. Democrats play this fear of big business hard, and it offsets any of their funding deficiencies.
I'm willing to respect the rules of the board and drop the politics if you are, but I'm not just going to let backhanded slaps at the party you love to hate slide.
Only one mod, last I checked.
And I think the engineers have been pretty level headed.
And while I don't like frivolous suits, I'm glad that signing liability statements doesn't prohibit lawsuits...and I'll explain why.
The local school district requires that we sign a liability release statement for our kids to participate in any after school activity, including field trips, sports games, etc. Sure, we could refuse to sign, but it would significantly curtail what our kids could do at/with the school.
I don't care what is in the release statement, if my kids were to get hurt on a school activity and the school were negligent, I'd still take legal action if I felt the need to do so...and my guess is that the release would not be worth the paper it was printed on.
Ah, found it.Yes, you are correct---have 2 threads blending into one in my head...carry on.
Ah, found it.
Pass the popcorn?
Good example. last year a NYC public school took little kids, like 5 year old kindergartners, to the beach and left them there completely unsupervised. one of the kids drowned.
Best thread ever---pissed off, mean mods, and cool headed lawyers going at it. I dig it, please keep up the good work, very entertaining.
Who's pissed off?
so how do "we" determine which cases have merit and deserve to go to trial?
ummmm - those were middle schoolers. And they weren't unsupervised. But there were no lifeguards
I'm not disagreeing with you, but I just want to correct some of how you describe the "no-fault" system.
First of all, "No-Fault" automobile insurance systems were promoted by the insurance industry back in the 1970's as that eras tort reform. They were vehemently opposed by the bar as the "end of the world." It is a basic bargain, in exchange for payment of medical expenses and lost earnings regardless of fault, there is no right to sue for injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident, unless those injuries are deemed "serious" as defined in the statute. The idea was to eliminate smaller cases from court and deal with them administratively.
"No-fault" only applies to medical expenses and lost earnings. It does not apply to property damage. If you have coverage under your policy, your property damages are paid for by your carrier. If you don't agree that they are paying the full amount you have lost, you can bring an action for breach of contract. Whatever, your carrier pays you, is then recouped from the other party's carrier depending on who is at fault. If you don't have collision coverage on your policy, you must seek compensation from the other party based on who is at fault.
The criminal analogy is not really appropriate. If you commit a crime such as intentionally or recklessly hitting someone/something with your vehicle, you can go to jail, just as you would for breaking into a house. Driving a car while intoxicated is another example. The law is based on the fact that we deem merely operating a vehicle under the influence as "reckless" conduct. But if you merely cause a car accident because you were negligent, in other words, you didn't intend to cause the accident, but merely acted carelessly and the accident resulted, then you haven't violated the law and are merely responsible for the damages you have caused.
and also, while a criminal may be ordered to pay restitution, you are not likely to actually get restitution, since criminals generally don't have assets (or at least not those you could find).
Who knows what the truth is. Exactly why we have a court system and laws to resolve disputes. Two sides to every story.
No one is arguing that we shouldn't have a court system or laws, some just think we need a better system. Way to continually miss the point, or is it that you're purposely misstating the other side in an attempt to make your argument stronger???
Snarky, yes, and possibly poorly worded. In essence, it seems to me like a few of the lawyers involved with this thread are blasting insurance companies because, from their point of view, insurance companies are faceless entities that are pushing tort reform to squash personal rights in pursuit of even more massive profits. People typically have a disdain for lawyers because they're percieved as faceless entities bent on distorting the laws governing liability in pursuit of even more wealth. Neither is a realistic point of view, insurance companies work the same way as any other while providing a valuable good. Just like lawyers work - if there wasn't demand for their services, there wouldn't be money to be made their.
Reality check here. The Travellers Companies (essentially pure insurance) made $3.6 billion (operating income) last year on revenue of $25 billion. Other Dow components, operating income where available: Intel, $5.7 billion on $35.1 billion. Boeing $3.9 on $60.9. Home Depot $4.4 on $71.3 Merck $4.8 on $27.4 Walt Disney $5.8 on $36.1. UTC $4.7 on $59.8. Yeah, insurance gives margins on the higher end of the range, but it's not out of whack with the rest of the economy. The whole "just want to increase profits by reducing costs, no benefit to anyone but themselves" theory is completely out of whack with reality anywhere there's competition. As long as there's competition, a reduction in cost will have some impact to what the consumer pays through increasing supply of the good or service.
And if you have a mutual fund of any type, YOU are the insurance company. All that work to increase revenues is going towards your retirement. So thank them for that.
My over riding complaint on the Sundown case, and we have heard many voice the same opinion, is that the pendulum has swung too far away from personal responsibility. We are tired of cases such as this resulting in sympathy verdicts that end up soothing the injured party (OK, not a bad thing) but penalizing the rest of us financially (through higher cost lift tickets) as well as restrict our fun in the future (no more tree skiing, jumps, terrain parks, etc) I know I am tired of being unable to order a medium rare hamburger lest I get poisoned, and unable to go sledding at the local farmer's hill lest I injure myself, and apparently soon unable to go hiking on MDC land.
If I was pissed off I surely would have started editing and deleting post or locking threads, since that's what I always do, right?
They do that at Southington, I think. I think theirs is too nannying, but not an idea entirely without merit. Also a good place to teach some ettiquite, and a way to keep people who have no clue how a park works from skiing through and screwing things up. There was one point last year where I was a split second away from the point of no return on one of the Dreamaker jumps when some non-park skier decided to ski through the landing area. Just forced me to skip the jump, but that could have been bad.While I agree with all of this....
I'd point out that ski resorts have gone out of their way to create attractive nuisances. That terrain park is screaming "come play with me" to testerosterone-ladden low skill 15-year-olds. If you look at what they've done with teen driving laws recently, it's pretty clear that society believes that teens have lousy judgement. The barrier to entry in a terrain park is a lift ticket. Anybody can click into twin tips, put on a tall tee, dangle their suspenders, and claim to be a park rat. I watch the body bags and medivac helicopters coming out of "The Stash" at Killington and shake my head. I think that terrain should be limited to people who can pass a competence test. To get into a novice park, you at least need to watch the safety video so you're not stopping below features or launching off things without a spotter. To get into a more difficult park, you at least need to demonstrate that you can handle the green circle park. That would prevent the Sundown-style injuries. People will still get injured but it should cut down on the worst of it.