Quote:
Originally Posted by MMARSH
Jeff, I'm not sure where you get I'm defending their actions, that said, I wouldn't say that rehearsing for an upcoming scene was exactly dicking around either. But to say it's completely not on her it's on them, come on......if she had done her job, no one would have gotten killed...There shouldn't have been live rounds anywhere near the set, the weapon should of been secured. Job one of the armorer. Halls and Baldwin, even though they violated the rules, would have zero expectation that live rounds were even a consideration. It is not the same environment as your gun club where the expectation is there are live rounds and hot guns present.
We are going in circles, gonna have to just disagree on this one. The one thing we all agree on is this was a horrible tragedy and should never have happened
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I couldn't agree more, Michael. We are just going around in circles at this point or, as Zeke said, "beating a dead horse".
I think we all do actually agree on most of this. How could we not? We are all reasonable, responsible adults, used to being held accountable for our actions. There is plenty of that - accountability - to go around. I think our only disagreement is with regard to the matter of degrees. Who is "most" responsible? More and more so, I am starting to think that doesn't even matter that much anymore.
Our opinions on that are shaped by our backgrounds and experiences. None of us are "right", none of us are "wrong". Shades of gray. You touch on the most important point - "this was a horrible tragedy and should never have happened". On that, we all agree. We should just leave it at that, out of respect for the deceased and her family. Agree to disagree, respectfully, and just drop it. Let's talk about something else. Like motorcycles or something.