Think piece from national media on a horrific tragedy that still haunts Kansas City, Kansas. Here's the aftermath and overview from national MSM . . . Read more:
How a Freak Accident Happens
Standing on a platform more than 168 feet high and overlooking the flat entirety of the Kansas plains, Jess Sanford was scared. On vacation from Lincoln, Nebraska, with her friend Melanie Gocke and her friend's family in August 2016, Sanford, then a rising high school junior, didn't know anything about Schlitterbahn Kansas City.
Good look at the issue.
ReplyDeleteIt happens when you put a small kind in a raft with two hambeasts to create a massive weight distribution. Fat people ruin everything
ReplyDeleteHambeast....OMG.
ReplyDeleteReal danger is when a helmet will not help.
ReplyDeleteI knew something terrible would eventually happen when they showed the crash test dummies on the news flying off the slide before they put the nets on. This was before the ride opened. The images of that told me it wasnt worth it.
ReplyDeleteBoy , you sure would have thought those Harbor Freight garden hoops and netting would have done the trick.
ReplyDeleteLol, Harbor Freight
DeleteThat fag rag is still publishing?
ReplyDeleteThat's it, a Harbor Freight helmet.
ReplyDeleteNever should have been built to begin with, it was an accident waiting to happen and regulators should have known and said as much.
ReplyDelete