Attention Wal-Mart Shoppers
Nov. 30th, 2008 10:39 amWhat bothers me most about this story is the section at the end. Where the police talk about pressing charges against Wal-Mart for not hiring more security, and Wal-Mart faults the police for not having more patrols out.
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Shouldn't someone be blaming the people that actually trampled this poor man to death? The ones who tore the doors of the hinges? The ones who stomped on him, ignored him, didn't try to help him up, shoved the people in front of them so that they would have no choice but to rush forward heedlessly as well?
American need to learn how to queue. :(
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Shouldn't someone be blaming the people that actually trampled this poor man to death? The ones who tore the doors of the hinges? The ones who stomped on him, ignored him, didn't try to help him up, shoved the people in front of them so that they would have no choice but to rush forward heedlessly as well?
American need to learn how to queue. :(
no subject
Date: 2008-11-30 04:56 pm (UTC)Not right? Of course. The Wal-Mart should have controlled the crowd better, making them line up and taking them inside in much smaller groups. I was telling someone else that when you have a potential mob like this, you have to take control early and kick out anyone who gives you attitude or breaks the rules. The threat of "follow the rules or lose your place in line" can do wonders.
I'm hoping at the very least that there is a company wide policy that comes out of this for crowd control. My mother has gone when they have the $200 laptops or whatever that draw a crowd, and they control the line and bring them inside in groups of 20 or so. I remember last year during one of those sales a manager didn't think there needed to be any control like that, threw open the doors and another stampede lead to injuries.
In brief, a mob is a crowd with many heads and no brains. Another way to say it, a person is smart, people are stupid.