Scot Young, multi-millionaire in the middle of a divorce, with debt and depression fell, jumped or was pushed out of upper floor onto railings and died.
Different people would like to take one item out of this list to try, with the butterfly effect, to change the whole course of history with one small change.
Some say the love of money is the root of all evil. Some say, stick to your spouse, for your own sake, that of your spouse, and for the sake or your children, because divorce is one of the major traumas in life. Another is moving house, and one person often has to move house after a divorce, sometimes both.
Others say, don't get into debt. Neither a borrower or a lender be. First you lose the friendship of the lender. Next you borrow from Peter to pay Paul. The debt grows. You create an enemy to save a friendship.
Others say the problem is depression. The cure is self-help. Avoid drugs. Put more government money into cures. Work for mental help charity.
Others say block up high windows and make them non-opening. As is done in skyscrapers in San Francisco. You cannot jump to safety from top floors. Windows are only helpful if you have a fire escape. So New York after a fire made the law that every building must have a fire exit opening out and a fire escape from higher floors.
In times of Troubles, VIPs who may be targets are told to vary their routine so watchers cannot be sure that you always step outside your door at a certain time and take the same route to a known destination.
Looking back at the situation of Scot and the photo of the railings he fell onto, my reaction is to add to the list of cautions, get rid of those spikes on railings.
Get rid of those dangerous spiky railings. They are designed to kill someone and the people living or working in the building are always nearest. Accident waiting to happen.
If you want to be alerted to intruders, get bells, alarms and cameras. Electric shocks which alarm but don't kill. I am safety minded. I liked Habitat, designed in step formation. In a disaster, fire or flood, you are only one floor away from safety.
Different people would like to take one item out of this list to try, with the butterfly effect, to change the whole course of history with one small change.
Some say the love of money is the root of all evil. Some say, stick to your spouse, for your own sake, that of your spouse, and for the sake or your children, because divorce is one of the major traumas in life. Another is moving house, and one person often has to move house after a divorce, sometimes both.
Others say, don't get into debt. Neither a borrower or a lender be. First you lose the friendship of the lender. Next you borrow from Peter to pay Paul. The debt grows. You create an enemy to save a friendship.
Others say the problem is depression. The cure is self-help. Avoid drugs. Put more government money into cures. Work for mental help charity.
Others say block up high windows and make them non-opening. As is done in skyscrapers in San Francisco. You cannot jump to safety from top floors. Windows are only helpful if you have a fire escape. So New York after a fire made the law that every building must have a fire exit opening out and a fire escape from higher floors.
In times of Troubles, VIPs who may be targets are told to vary their routine so watchers cannot be sure that you always step outside your door at a certain time and take the same route to a known destination.
Looking back at the situation of Scot and the photo of the railings he fell onto, my reaction is to add to the list of cautions, get rid of those spikes on railings.
Get rid of those dangerous spiky railings. They are designed to kill someone and the people living or working in the building are always nearest. Accident waiting to happen.
If you want to be alerted to intruders, get bells, alarms and cameras. Electric shocks which alarm but don't kill. I am safety minded. I liked Habitat, designed in step formation. In a disaster, fire or flood, you are only one floor away from safety.
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