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I don't think so at all.
Manslaughter implies an act that inadvertently causes a death, for instance, playfully throwing the child in the pool and he drowns.
No it doesn't. Manslaughter, and murder, can involve either the commission or omission of an act. This isn't some new law either, it's been around since Federation in Australia and I'm sure it's been around in the UK since pretty much day dot.
+100%We seem to have evolved into a pathetic society where we cater for the most stupid, the most careless, legislating away the rights of all others, in some sort of facile attempt to remove any semblance of danger from existence. I'm utterly sick of it.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/nat...ised-by-sinkings/story-fn9hm1gu-1226418314936Counselling for navy rescue crew traumatised by sinkings
DEFENCE has mustered military chaplains and psychologists to treat navy patrol boat sailors traumatised by the recovery of drowned asylum-seekers and the rescue of boats in distress.
The move comes amid concern that the navy will have to cope with a spate of new rescues in the months ahead as asylum-seeker boats more frequently send out distress signals to engage Australian patrols.
+100%
Spot on, Julia.
That's been my gripe exactly.
Agree with the rest of your comments as well.
Unlike failing to comply with the law by properly fencing your pool, there is no apparent negligence in your example.
If this gentleman had complied with the law in every way required and a child had still managed to enter his pool it would be along the lines of your example.
cheers
Surly
Ok what if he was doing the speed limit, but his tyres were bald to the point of being defected? Even if it made no difference to stopping time as the child ran out in front of him
It is unknown just as the outcome of the charges regarding the child drowning are not known.
An 18-month-old boy has died after being found in an irrigation channel in south-west New South Wales.
Police says the boy's family was visiting friends at the rural property in the Murray River town of Barham, on the Victorian border.
The boy had been playing with other children, but at around 3:00pm yesterday the family noticed he was missing.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-07-06/toddler-drowns-in-irrgation-channel/4114464
Just out now, another sad story, but should the farmer be charged? Or maybe the parents this time for letting a child wander around a farm without supervision
If the LAW says the parents must have the child on a lease while on the farm the they will charge the parents.
Is it lawful to lease a child?
+1.Yes i agree and have said as much, but the fact that a manslaughter charge can even be laid shows what a litiguos socitey we live in now.
Essentially you can now be charged for just about anything (corssing the road wrong, not wearing a bike helmet, failure to service your car, not wearing safety equipment etc etc), and have to prove yourself innocent, as opposed to being able to do what you want (that wasn't expressely illegal) and using common sense and taking responsibility for your own actions if things go wrong.
+1.
And the natural outcome of this growing culture is that individual expectations of taking responsibility are diminished. Instead of a society consisting of thinking, considerate individuals, we produce robots dependent on governments instructing them how to behave.
Yes, worked with and managed people throughout my working life. Invariably found that the greater trust and responsibility I offered those people, the more they fulfilled that expectation.What world do you live in? Have you actually worked with people to learn how they behave on the whole?
CanOz
While we are at it, lets remove the guards from machinery, the stop signs at intersections, the stop lights, the seat belts, and just trust that everyone will be responsible. What a complete and utter joke.
The majority of the population is irresponsible and needs laws and regulation. Just look at the mess the banker/wankers got us into because they had zero regulation and no responsibility for their actions.
Nothing like a bit of over-dramatisation hey Canoz?
There needs to be basic rules and safety, but there also needs to be responsibility for ones actions. If i get hit by a car when crossing the road, away from a stop light, then that is my fault. Instead they fine people for jaywalking to try and discourage it.
If i chose not to wear a harness when climbing on a roof, providing the harness has been provided and i have been told the benefits, and fall off the roof, then that too is my fault, not my employers.
etc
As far as regulation goes, bring it on. Society had demonstrated time and time again that without it, people suffer far more than with it.
That's my last word..
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