Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We were at a water park this weekend. Every kid under a certain height was required to wear a life vest. That’s good but the height was low and wouldn’t catch anyone over 8. Those pools are chaotic and crowded. I’m a decent swimmer and an adult and I can feel overwhelmed in them.
And yet tons of parents toss young mediocre swimmers in there with little to no supervision. And here we are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They just confirmed that the 9yo did not have a medical event that lead to her death. She died of accidental drowning.
Is there confirmation of where the parents were?
Anonymous wrote:They just confirmed that the 9yo did not have a medical event that lead to her death. She died of accidental drowning.
Anonymous wrote:We were at a water park this weekend. Every kid under a certain height was required to wear a life vest. That’s good but the height was low and wouldn’t catch anyone over 8. Those pools are chaotic and crowded. I’m a decent swimmer and an adult and I can feel overwhelmed in them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hershey Park is a dump. I would never take my children there.
Other than Disney it's probably the nicest amusement park out there.
But, yes, most amusement parks are dumps—the whole industry sucks. But Hershey is one of the best of the genre.
You need to get out more! Hershey’s reached peak in 1995.
Anonymous wrote:I remember seeing news stories about kids drowning in wave pools as a kid and so never let my kids go in them. They just seem so dangerous. This is so sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hershey Park is a dump. I would never take my children there.
Other than Disney it's probably the nicest amusement park out there.
But, yes, most amusement parks are dumps—the whole industry sucks. But Hershey is one of the best of the genre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate how Hershey worded their press release. "A child was lost". No, a child died. They did not get lost.
I hated this too.
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.
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?
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you've been to Disney and Universal, it's hard to look at the other places the same again. My kids will sometimes go to KD with a friend's family and if we happen to be in Williamsburg for other reasons we might stop in Busch Gardens but other than that we don't seek out non-Orlando theme parks.
I found the difference between universal and Disney shocking. Universal has the same problems as six flags.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate how Hershey worded their press release. "A child was lost". No, a child died. They did not get lost.
I hated this too.
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.
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?
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.
Have you ever heard the phrase: "I'm sorry for your loss."