Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:haha, that is a pretty magnolia though
Yuck. Are these supposedly fashionable or is she trying to look like a feeble old lady for the jury (and not the filthy rich entitled Hollywood wacko she is)?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if she's so tiny, wouldn't she be injured if he hit her?
Wouldn't she also be injured if she hit him? A collision is a collision. Weird that one walked away and one didn't, unless you consider he was a very old man and it doesn't take much to break a hip or bone. He supposedly had a list of ailments prior to the accident and is blind in one eye. Maybe he never even saw her.
Quite possibly, but in the many collisions I have seen and heard of, the downhill unsuspecting skier is the one who is more often injured. The injury is often not from the first collision, but being knocked to the ground/having your equipment jab into you. The uphill skier's momentum gets stopped by the collision. The downhill skier gets propelled down the slope and falls awkwardly on their skis/poles. Imagine a child on a swing hits you from behind. Who is more likely injured?
Also, usually the person who is struck from behind doesn't take off down the mountain after the collision. They wait around to get over their shock and to get the skier at fault's info.
Was he wearing a helmet? I would guess not. Seems strange to engage in a dangerous sport at such an age without the proper gear to be safe.
Why would you guess not? Helmets are protective, but they can't completely prevent concussions. In fact, head injury statistics from snowsports haven't changed much since helmets were introduced, perhaps because people have a false sense of protection. And often they aren't fastened correctly and come off in collisions. Keep that strap tight everyone!
I haven't heard anyone say he was wearing a helmet. Have you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if she's so tiny, wouldn't she be injured if he hit her?
Wouldn't she also be injured if she hit him? A collision is a collision. Weird that one walked away and one didn't, unless you consider he was a very old man and it doesn't take much to break a hip or bone. He supposedly had a list of ailments prior to the accident and is blind in one eye. Maybe he never even saw her.
Quite possibly, but in the many collisions I have seen and heard of, the downhill unsuspecting skier is the one who is more often injured. The injury is often not from the first collision, but being knocked to the ground/having your equipment jab into you. The uphill skier's momentum gets stopped by the collision. The downhill skier gets propelled down the slope and falls awkwardly on their skis/poles. Imagine a child on a swing hits you from behind. Who is more likely injured?
Also, usually the person who is struck from behind doesn't take off down the mountain after the collision. They wait around to get over their shock and to get the skier at fault's info.
Was he wearing a helmet? I would guess not. Seems strange to engage in a dangerous sport at such an age without the proper gear to be safe.
Why would you guess not? Helmets are protective, but they can't completely prevent concussions. In fact, head injury statistics from snowsports haven't changed much since helmets were introduced, perhaps because people have a false sense of protection. And often they aren't fastened correctly and come off in collisions. Keep that strap tight everyone!
I haven't heard anyone say he was wearing a helmet. Have you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if she's so tiny, wouldn't she be injured if he hit her?
Wouldn't she also be injured if she hit him? A collision is a collision. Weird that one walked away and one didn't, unless you consider he was a very old man and it doesn't take much to break a hip or bone. He supposedly had a list of ailments prior to the accident and is blind in one eye. Maybe he never even saw her.
Quite possibly, but in the many collisions I have seen and heard of, the downhill unsuspecting skier is the one who is more often injured. The injury is often not from the first collision, but being knocked to the ground/having your equipment jab into you. The uphill skier's momentum gets stopped by the collision. The downhill skier gets propelled down the slope and falls awkwardly on their skis/poles. Imagine a child on a swing hits you from behind. Who is more likely injured?
Also, usually the person who is struck from behind doesn't take off down the mountain after the collision. They wait around to get over their shock and to get the skier at fault's info.
Was he wearing a helmet? I would guess not. Seems strange to engage in a dangerous sport at such an age without the proper gear to be safe.
Why would you guess not? Helmets are protective, but they can't completely prevent concussions. In fact, head injury statistics from snowsports haven't changed much since helmets were introduced, perhaps because people have a false sense of protection. And often they aren't fastened correctly and come off in collisions. Keep that strap tight everyone!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if she's so tiny, wouldn't she be injured if he hit her?
Wouldn't she also be injured if she hit him? A collision is a collision. Weird that one walked away and one didn't, unless you consider he was a very old man and it doesn't take much to break a hip or bone. He supposedly had a list of ailments prior to the accident and is blind in one eye. Maybe he never even saw her.
Quite possibly, but in the many collisions I have seen and heard of, the downhill unsuspecting skier is the one who is more often injured. The injury is often not from the first collision, but being knocked to the ground/having your equipment jab into you. The uphill skier's momentum gets stopped by the collision. The downhill skier gets propelled down the slope and falls awkwardly on their skis/poles. Imagine a child on a swing hits you from behind. Who is more likely injured?
Also, usually the person who is struck from behind doesn't take off down the mountain after the collision. They wait around to get over their shock and to get the skier at fault's info.
Was he wearing a helmet? I would guess not. Seems strange to engage in a dangerous sport at such an age without the proper gear to be safe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if she's so tiny, wouldn't she be injured if he hit her?
Wouldn't she also be injured if she hit him? A collision is a collision. Weird that one walked away and one didn't, unless you consider he was a very old man and it doesn't take much to break a hip or bone. He supposedly had a list of ailments prior to the accident and is blind in one eye. Maybe he never even saw her.
Quite possibly, but in the many collisions I have seen and heard of, the downhill unsuspecting skier is the one who is more often injured. The injury is often not from the first collision, but being knocked to the ground/having your equipment jab into you. The uphill skier's momentum gets stopped by the collision. The downhill skier gets propelled down the slope and falls awkwardly on their skis/poles. Imagine a child on a swing hits you from behind. Who is more likely injured?
Also, usually the person who is struck from behind doesn't take off down the mountain after the collision. They wait around to get over their shock and to get the skier at fault's info.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if she's so tiny, wouldn't she be injured if he hit her?
Wouldn't she also be injured if she hit him? A collision is a collision. Weird that one walked away and one didn't, unless you consider he was a very old man and it doesn't take much to break a hip or bone. He supposedly had a list of ailments prior to the accident and is blind in one eye. Maybe he never even saw her.
Anonymous wrote:But if she's so tiny, wouldn't she be injured if he hit her?
Anonymous wrote:I frequently ski the green runs at deer valley. The reports I've read about this case mention a green run, but don't say which one and I'm very curious. Does anyone know?
Since they had an instructor with them I'm guessing Ontario or Success, plus you can get some speed on those.
Anonymous wrote:I frequently ski the green runs at deer valley. The reports I've read about this case mention a green run, but don't say which one and I'm very curious. Does anyone know?
Since they had an instructor with them I'm guessing Ontario or Success, plus you can get some speed on those.