Dangers of Hot Cars: Another Child Dies in Georgia

      

     The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported today that a 2 year old child died after being left in a van at a day care center in Atlanta.  The article by  Alexis Stevens and Fran Jeffries also mentions that since 1998, there have been 509 deaths involving this sort of vehicular hyperthermia, also known as heat stroke.  

     Normally we think of the danger associated with vehicle collisions on the roadways, but this sad case is a reminder that there are plenty of dangers other than roadway wrecks involving cars, including backovers, heat strokes, and children being trapped in trunks without trunk release mechanisms.  

    An organization called kidsandcars is doing great work to protect our children from these sorts of dangers.  Their website - kidsandcars.org - is a wonderful site to get information about these dangers and what we can do to protect our children from them.   

    As one example of a way to help remember that a child is in the back seat of a vehicle, one recent article recommends that a parent put a stuffed animal in the front seat as a visual reminder that their child is in the back seat.   There are many, many more things we can do to avoid the needless deaths and injuries from hot cars and other dangers associated with vehicles.  

     Please take a moment to visit these websites and read these articles to learn how to prevent your children from becoming victims of these dangerous conditions in cars.  

John Stossel on Lawsuits: Good for Him, Bad for the Rest of Us?

John Stossel, host of "Stossel" on the Fox Business Network, likes to rant about lawsuits and lawyers.  Seems he hates both, unless he's the one who's doing the suing.  Stossel once interviewed wrestler Dave Schultz, and when Stossel told Schultz he thought it was all fake, Schultz slapped Stossel a couple times.  Stossel's reaction?  Filed a lawsuit.  According to Eric Turkewitz's blog entry about it, Stossel got a rather hefty settlement. 

     According to Turkewitz, Stossel is the same reporter who once said that organic produce was worse than conventional produce, a claim for which he had to apologize when it was revealed that his research was flawed.   

     So why has Stossel, who was once a consumer reporter, now become a shrill hater of lawsuits (except his own) and lawyers?  It's one of oldest reasons:  money.  The Washington Post reported the following about Stossel's switch:  "...back in 1996, when he was giving a speech to the conservative legal group, the Federalist Society, someone asked Stossel why he had abandoned consumer reporting to bash government and trial lawyers. According to the Corporate Crime Reporter, Stossel replied, “I got sick of it. I also now make so much money I just lost interest in saving a buck on a can of peas." 

    Good reporters are wedded to truth and fact; In Stossel's world, both take a backseat to money.  No wonder Stossel hates juries;  juries often hold dangerous corporations accountable for their actions when the truth is revealed in a courtroom.  He'd rather close the courthouse doors, for everyone but himself.  

     

     

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