Yes, that's part of it, and without wishing to bring the whole 'McCann School of Parenting' debate up again you could stare down your nose and ask what were they doing 'playing unsupervised'. That's certainly the current view of childcare. (Whether it's correct or not is another matter).
However if you'd come across the situation would you have tried to help? Or would you have stood on the bank saying "Sorry, squire, not my field. Best call the experts eh?"
Don't think people on here will be happy until those PCSO's are drowned themselves as a punishment.
Well, Officer Buckpass would probably be delighted to see his message hitting home so clearly; job done. Because I'd say that "bloody health and safety" is EXACTLY what this revolting "real" cop is saying, knowing damn well that that's been - rather oddly, all in all - a dead horse that the press have been flogging for a while now. So it's a shoulder-shrugging "not our fault mate" cheap shot, and all that uttered over a dead child's drowned body. It's contemptuous.But you are unfairly blaming the police - they are NOT doing what you say they are doing. They're actually blaming the government and I think it's a fair point. What the f*** is the point of these support officers? And have we got too many of them where police should be. i.e. is it government penny pinching?
Do you know the Met do not advise their officers to administer first aid any more....for fear of being sued by the very people they are trying to help
Here:MoH, seriously, whereabouts do you get this idea that Officer Buckpass is blaming health and safety?
I'd stick up for the idea of some deterrent effect coming from CSOs - I've seen some chavvy little snotters cowed by them in person at train stations etc.
I think it's because he wants to have a sideswipe at the whole concept of PCSO's rather than 'Health and Safety'....
"Both ourselves and the fire brigade regularly warn the public of the dangers of going into unknown stretches of water so it would have been inappropriate for PCSOs, who are not trained in water rescue, to enter the pond. "
Of course, every single person's initial and entirely justifiable reaction to that is likely to be "how stupid, that there are rules and regs about that, about training, when a child is drowning", when in reality, there is nothing there for him to defend - any one of us would have done more to save that kiddy than those plums. Why couldn't he say that, instead of talking shite about "training"?
Why isn't EVERYONE trained in basic rescue techniques?
I know that circumstances will sometimes be beyond the skills of someone with no more than basic training, and it's easy to condemn. But I was taught basic life-saving at school. As was everyone, simply because swimming was part of the curriculum in those days (not that it was called "The Curriculum", of course).
No-one knows what the water was really like - there could have been all sorts of undercurrents going on - and it could have been treacherous conditions. Yes, i realise it would have made a good hero story, and it's sad that the children have died - but come on. It would have been far worse if the PCSO's had died too.
It didn't deter the fishermen who did rescue the child.
It didn't deter the fishermen who did rescue the child.