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4 Comments

  1. A fair description of things but can you imagine the outrage from loud mouth men if we set limits on boating, diving and other water activities? You also neglected the men who died trying to save others, while the situation may have been beyond their skill level I prefer to remember them for their willingness to risk themself for the good of others which is rare in our society where selfishness is the norm.

  2. So many expensive boys’ toys require water, on which to be shown off.
    Add to that, men reaching the age of feeling they haven’t achieved as well as they’d hoped in life and rather than accept that, they try to be compensate in other ways, by showing off their water prowess or driving skill.
    We had Greg Murphy telling us how to drive, years ago. Did that work?
    We have TV fishing programmes where they never go home with wet tails and no fish.
    You can change peoples’ behavior temporarily with ‘education’ but eventually a person’s true nature reasserts itself.
    We do care about drownings and those individual families which lose a loved one unnecessarily. But a sense of personal responsibility will always be more effective than any education or messages from well-known people, however much we might admire them.

  3. I don’t think it’s fair to say we “don’t give a shit” about drownings, any more than we “don’t give a shit” about road deaths. Obviously people are affected by this on a personal level. I’m not into men claiming victim status, but maybe we should look at our education system and give boys some more positive role models. Cause the women are beating us in the education stakes.

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