Jump_Like_A_Willys

Jump_Like_A_Willys t1_iwltm4c wrote

New kids? Spice Girls? They both deserve to be in some sort of music hall of fame because there was/is a large population of people who enjoyed them.

I never got into their music (and the same with Nickelback), but it is clear they made their marks in the music industry and were an important part of that industry.

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Jump_Like_A_Willys t1_irvrqzv wrote

We are actually pretty much at the half-way point (maybe just a little more than halfway) along the Orion Spur -- which itself is halfway along the Sagittarius spiral arm. That puts us generally half way (again, maybe a little more than half way) between the galactic center and the outer edge.

An illustrated galactic map here: https://www.nasa.gov/jpl/charting-the-milky-way-from-the-inside-out

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Jump_Like_A_Willys t1_iream84 wrote

Why not? Were there not a couple of hundred people on the field and sidelines who this man, a man with highly erratic behavior and unknown intent, could have potentially hurt?

What if he then ran towards the stands and jumped into a section full of fans -- again, without it being known what the erratic man's full intentions were?

It's perfectly reasonable for any person (including Bobby Wagner) to feel this man, considering the man's behavior, posed a potential physical threat to others, and reasonable for a person to do something about it.

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Jump_Like_A_Willys t1_ire8vuf wrote

So let's say there's a crowded street fair, and some guy is acting highly erratically by running and carrying a smoke bomb. This kind of behavior, without knowing the extent of his intentions, would reasonably signal to most people that the man is potentially a danger to others (again, not knowing what else the man will do next, but knowing that he is acting highly erratically).

Should the people at the fair let him just run freely and wait for security to get him, or should they do something to actively stop him even though they are not insured?

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