Quizzes & Puzzles31 mins ago
women and children first
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do you think this still applies today? I was watching some news coverage and someone was outraged that men got into the cruise ships lifeboats before women and children, and it got me thinking, is it outrageous today? Why are women and children more precious?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No, it's in my opinion only right, given that most children would be unable to look after themselves in such an emergency, and women are generally the physically weaker sex with less stamina- therefore men as long as they are youngish and ablkebodied are the most likely to survive a disaster. Elderly people, the disabled, kids and most women should have been evacuated first imho.
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Personally I think help kids, the elderly and the disabled first but then it's every man or woman for themselves, I don't really see why a man who is a total stranger to me should be put in the position of letting me go first because a) I'm a damn good swimmer, better than a lot of men (a fact I applicable in this situation only) and b) he might be a father, I'm not a mother, so why is my life more important than his? Makes no sense to me.
The full stories is told here http://www.historic-u...nandChildrenFirst.htm
As Steve says the Tradition dates back to the Wreck of the Birkenhead in the 1850's The Birkenhead was a troop ship heading for Africa when it was wrecked as was the custom in those days many of the soldiers had their families with them and when the captain, a Scot if I remember rightly, realized that there were not enough lifeboats go around he issued the order women and children first and if there was any room left they would start with the youngest till the boats were full. The army officers stood the men, many of them raw recruits, at attention on deck as the ship sank beneath them and ordered them not to swim to the boats when they went into the water for fear of overloading them and the soldiers obeyed to a man, luckily some were saved when the women in the boats virtually forced the crews to return for their men folk. An example of courage in a dangerous situation which set the standard of behaviour in many a similar situation
Thi will be commemorate the sinking later in the year, see here http://www.birkenhead.za.net/