| Parents are so negligent these days. That's usually the default until evidence is presented otherwise. |
We can assume he drowned but we will not truly know until the proper investigation happens. He could have had a medical emergency while in the pool. |
Honestly, this. Every child be it a good swimmer or not, should have a parent within arms length to assist while in the pool. The lifeguard has 50 people to look after and you can look after just one?!? |
Almost half of all accidental drownings are related to a medical emergency occurring while in water, like seizure or heart attack. |
No just stop. Hershey continually invests a little of money in the park. From your post it seem you have not been there in 20 years. |
What does that have to do with the use of the word “lost”? |
You prefer died? Passed away? Can't make everyone happy. Who cares? |
Losing someone and them dying are different things. |
I found the difference between universal and Disney shocking. Universal has the same problems as six flags. |
Because words matter - it allows people to hide the truth. When the electricity goes out, it’s a power failure but power companies don’t like being held responsible so they started spinning them as power outages - a made up word - and now we all say it. Hershey is being careful to use words and a style of phrasing to acknowledge the event in a way that looks sincere - but of course isn’t because a company cannot have feelings - but also avoids blame. It’s gross. |
Completely common usage. |
Have you ever heard the phrase: "I'm sorry for your loss." |
Common but lazy. |
That refers to the loss in your life created by a loved one’s death. It’s not apologizing for losing a person. |
Especially at an amusement park! |