Either that or Simon had the sign tattooed on his ass next to the bar ad. Not that I'd know anything about that, mind youAntiM wrote:I could have been hallucinating. I do that.

Either that or Simon had the sign tattooed on his ass next to the bar ad. Not that I'd know anything about that, mind youAntiM wrote:I could have been hallucinating. I do that.
Theres a right way to ride the cubes down? Garbage can lids worked well.klondike_bar wrote:.....I went down it about 10 times in all manors of position (standing, sitting, and bellyslide), with the only injury taking place when i made the decision to ride on of the "safety cubes" down the slide.......my opinion: Totally worth it.
Before I rode down the slide I contemplated the potential injuries that may arise from it and I concluded it was worth it and if anything did happen to me that it would be my own damn fault. I would never dream of blaming someone else for my stupidity. I fought in Thunderdome on Thursday and concluded the very same thing. I did sustain an injury along with my partner who fought with me. Untop of not blaming Burning Man, we did not blame each other, just ourselves. We made the concious decision to fight. Learn to take responsibility for your actions. I appreciate that at Burning Man I am given the concious ability to make decisions about my safety and well being and proceed with the appropriate action. It is something too often taken away in a law suit happy society.Surely Maybe wrote:I did read my ticket - but just because it says you assume all responsibility doesn't mean that Burning Man doesn't have some responsibility too. I went down the slide and did burn my ass. Was it my fault? I guess I shouldn't have forced the guy in front of me to veer into my path.
I went to the medical tent (they were AWESOME!!!) and heard the same thing about how many injuries there were. I asked why didn't Burning Man shut it down? OK - I'll take my share of responsibility, but if there is a "known" hazard - that is causing over 50% of the injuries at one spot - where is Burning Man's responsibility to ensure that it doesn't continue? Saw a guy break his shoulder right after I burned my ass.
I lost all faith in the "spirit" of BM after I went to the medical tent. BM DOES have a responsibility to fix something if it's hurting people and they have knowledge of it. Too many people were unnecessarily hurt and I do blame BM for those injuries after the first day. YES - they could have burned down / shut down that slide and they should have.
This was "willful negligence" on BM's part; it made me wonder if the dragon was burning people out on the playa if they'd shut it down too. All those responding to defend BM on this - what if you had your face burned off by something that BM knew about, knew was hurting people, knew was a hazard and was something they could have prevented? I think you'd think about it in a different way if you had no eyelids.
The argument that "read your ticket" is the "final answer" is ridiculous.
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If you're ever in St. Louis you really need to check out City Museum. Their spiral slides are even taller than 4 stories. And with two of them side by side it's a blast to race your friends down them. I've never seen so many slides in one place before...and these are not kiddie slides....these are serious slides that you'll have a ball on. I love that place and won't apologize for tossing in a shameless plug...gyre wrote:Maybe most of he people going down the slide had never seen one of the big carnival slides and the big pieces of carpet or jute used to go down those?
And those were slick and waxed.
I used to love the 4 story high spirals.
Cheese... an excellent source of calcium.Surely Maybe wrote:I did read my ticket - but just because it says you assume all responsibility doesn't mean that Burning Man doesn't have some responsibility too. I went down the slide and did burn my ass. Was it my fault? I guess I shouldn't have forced the guy in front of me to veer into my path.
I went to the medical tent (they were AWESOME!!!) and heard the same thing about how many injuries there were. I asked why didn't Burning Man shut it down? OK - I'll take my share of responsibility, but if there is a "known" hazard - that is causing over 50% of the injuries at one spot - where is Burning Man's responsibility to ensure that it doesn't continue? Saw a guy break his shoulder right after I burned my ass.
I lost all faith in the "spirit" of BM after I went to the medical tent. BM DOES have a responsibility to fix something if it's hurting people and they have knowledge of it. Too many people were unnecessarily hurt and I do blame BM for those injuries after the first day. YES - they could have burned down / shut down that slide and they should have.
This was "willful negligence" on BM's part; it made me wonder if the dragon was burning people out on the playa if they'd shut it down too. All those responding to defend BM on this - what if you had your face burned off by something that BM knew about, knew was hurting people, knew was a hazard and was something they could have prevented? I think you'd think about it in a different way if you had no eyelids.
The argument that "read your ticket" is the "final answer" is ridiculous.
I went through St. Louis on the way back.Kinetic V wrote:If you're ever in St. Louis you really need to check out City Museum. Their spiral slides are even taller than 4 stories. And with two of them side by side it's a blast to race your friends down them. I've never seen so many slides in one place before...and these are not kiddie slides....these are serious slides that you'll have a ball on. I love that place and won't apologize for tossing in a shameless plug...gyre wrote:Maybe most of he people going down the slide had never seen one of the big carnival slides and the big pieces of carpet or jute used to go down those?
And those were slick and waxed.
I used to love the 4 story high spirals.
http://www.citymuseum.org/home.asp
Now go try to sue your school system because they did not warn you about gravity and friction.Surely Maybe wrote:I lost all faith in the "spirit" of BM after I went to the medical tent. BM DOES have a responsibility to fix something if it's hurting people and they have knowledge of it. Too many people were unnecessarily hurt and I do blame BM for those injuries after the first day. YES - they could have burned down / shut down that slide and they should have.
*Thunderous applause*dr.placebo wrote:Now go try to sue your school system because they did not warn you about gravity and friction.Surely Maybe wrote:I lost all faith in the "spirit" of BM after I went to the medical tent. BM DOES have a responsibility to fix something if it's hurting people and they have knowledge of it. Too many people were unnecessarily hurt and I do blame BM for those injuries after the first day. YES - they could have burned down / shut down that slide and they should have.
Surely Maybe, there is no Maybe about it...Surely Burning Man is not the event for you. You just don't get it. I agree with the person that suggested you should try Disney Land next year.Surely Maybe wrote:I did read my ticket - but just because it says you assume all responsibility doesn't mean that Burning Man doesn't have some responsibility too. I went down the slide and did burn my ass. Was it my fault? I guess I shouldn't have forced the guy in front of me to veer into my path.
I went to the medical tent (they were AWESOME!!!) and heard the same thing about how many injuries there were. I asked why didn't Burning Man shut it down? OK - I'll take my share of responsibility, but if there is a "known" hazard - that is causing over 50% of the injuries at one spot - where is Burning Man's responsibility to ensure that it doesn't continue? Saw a guy break his shoulder right after I burned my ass.
I lost all faith in the "spirit" of BM after I went to the medical tent. BM DOES have a responsibility to fix something if it's hurting people and they have knowledge of it. Too many people were unnecessarily hurt and I do blame BM for those injuries after the first day. YES - they could have burned down / shut down that slide and they should have.
This was "willful negligence" on BM's part; it made me wonder if the dragon was burning people out on the playa if they'd shut it down too. All those responding to defend BM on this - what if you had your face burned off by something that BM knew about, knew was hurting people, knew was a hazard and was something they could have prevented? I think you'd think about it in a different way if you had no eyelids.
The argument that "read your ticket" is the "final answer" is ridiculous.
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Side note (or should I say Slide note?)FrankA wrote:he he I think the whole place was an oversized play park.
speaking of which, was the giant teeter totter ever operational?
I also found a merry-go-round that people were graciously spinning up to speed...that was fun too.
Hey S & M, at least the slide did'nt look like this oneSurely Maybe wrote:I did read my ticket - but just because it says you assume all responsibility doesn't mean that Burning Man doesn't have some responsibility too. I went down the slide and did burn my ass. Was it my fault? I guess I shouldn't have forced the guy in front of me to veer into my path.
I went to the medical tent (they were AWESOME!!!) and heard the same thing about how many injuries there were. I asked why didn't Burning Man shut it down? OK - I'll take my share of responsibility, but if there is a "known" hazard - that is causing over 50% of the injuries at one spot - where is Burning Man's responsibility to ensure that it doesn't continue? Saw a guy break his shoulder right after I burned my ass.
I lost all faith in the "spirit" of BM after I went to the medical tent. BM DOES have a responsibility to fix something if it's hurting people and they have knowledge of it. Too many people were unnecessarily hurt and I do blame BM for those injuries after the first day. YES - they could have burned down / shut down that slide and they should have.
This was "willful negligence" on BM's part; it made me wonder if the dragon was burning people out on the playa if they'd shut it down too. All those responding to defend BM on this - what if you had your face burned off by something that BM knew about, knew was hurting people, knew was a hazard and was something they could have prevented? I think you'd think about it in a different way if you had no eyelids.
The argument that "read your ticket" is the "final answer" is ridiculous.
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