• [email protected]
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    2 months ago

    To be fair, aside from approaching a bull shark, she did everything correct. Low heart rate, calm, etc… If prosthetics were only 20 years more advanced, she wouldn’t be permanently crippled by this injury.

    • jago
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      212 months ago

      From what source are you basing the detail “low heart rate, calm”? The OP article mentions nothing about the woman’s state other than her immediate trauma.

  • Drusas
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    122 months ago

    Other beachgoers saved the woman from an even worse fate, with her husband scaring off the shark after the attack and strangers gathering around her and using their clothes to slow the bleeding.

    I dunno, I think I’d rather die than spend the rest of my life with no hands.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      I’m pretty certain you’d get accustomed pretty quickly

      Humans are amazingly adaptive

      • Drusas
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        12 months ago

        I don’t know about that. I have a chronic medical condition which affects my muscles; I’ve adapted, but it took a long time and I still hate it.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    I get a little suspicious of the accuracy of a story from a TV station in Cincinnati, Ohio, whose source is a story from a New Zealand newspaper, about something that happened to a Canadian tourist in the Turks and Caicos islands in the Caribbean. Truly a globe spanning story.

    EDIT: Going to the New Zealand Herald, their story just seems to be a copy of the story in the Daily Telegraph of London, England, written by one of their U.S. correspondents. That is at least a British territory, so it sort of works. Information seems largely the same as in the Turks and Caicos Weekly, so maybe the story is accurate.

  • @[email protected]
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    152 months ago

    Sorry, but I have absolutely no sympathy for anyone who fucks with an animal; wild or otherwise.

  • @[email protected]
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    202 months ago

    For the record, the picture is harmful unrelated BS, the shark in question was about 6 feet long and thought to be a bull shark, certainly not a great white.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        Because people being ignorant and afraid of sharks in general but great whites in particular hampers conservation efforts. Sharks in general but big sharks like the great whites in particular are vital to the ecosystem and great whites are vulnerable globally and critically endangered in Europe.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 months ago

          I think the prevailing message here is more of a “human stupid” than a “sharks evil”.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 months ago

              I don’t think the picture matters tbh. The bull shark looks exactly the same. Maybe a little darker on the grey part.

  • @[email protected]
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    232 months ago

    It has been determined that the tourist had attempted to engage with the animal from the shallows in an attempt to take photographs

    The information is pretty scant but it sounds like maybe she was splashing around trying to get its attention.

    It’s really sad honestly. She’s a double amputee now, and later in life so not likely to get a fancy new prosthetic.

    Bull sharks are no joke. They’re not as huge and scary as great whites but they’re aggressive, and can operate in fresh water as well as salt water. Jeremy Wade did an episode on them in river monsters. Artificial canal estates tend to be infested with them.

    I think the local authorities have some culpability in this. If you have sharks literally prowling around beaches full of clueless tourists then you have to close the beach. That’s what we do at popular beaches in Australia when a shark is spotted.

    • BarqsHasBite
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      42 months ago

      So do they just say you can’t go in the water, or do they close the beach sandy area because people are idiots?

  • @[email protected]
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    152 months ago

    And that, my friends, is why you need a selfie stick. <insert 90’s commercial end sound>

  • dream_weasel
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    2 months ago

    It’s a wonder humans took over the world and not dolphins or some other reasonably smart animal.

    Humans are 20% culture, progress, and innovation, and 80% tasty hands and dead weight.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 months ago

      Those hands aren’t just tasty, they also have opposable thumbs and allow complex tool use, and perhaps most importantly, complex tool creation.

      • dream_weasel
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        42 months ago

        I think the complex use and creation are probably the exception not the rule. I’m beginning to wonder if most people, especially in the US, could fish ants out of a colony with a stick. I am unfortunately doubtful.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 months ago

          Is incompetence and ignorance widespread? Yes.

          Are most things underpinning civilization too complicated for most to understand? Also yes.

          But do they have that innate human spirit of creativity and persistence that will enable them to figure it out if it fell on them and their peers to rebuild? Well, no. Not really, probably not.

          They’ll figure out some of it and make a primitive and misunderstood approximation of civilization. Like a parrot mimicking good poetry, people will not understand the purpose behind the designs that shaped their life. They’ll try to follow the notes and say the words, but they won’t æ understand. They won’t rebuild civilization, they’ll be making a barely functional tribe.

  • @[email protected]
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    32 months ago

    It’s a simple fact of human nature that some of use will never learn to leave shit alone.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    People need to leave wild animals alone. Especially if they have zero knowledge of what kind of animal they are engaging with. Reminds me of that video where this dude picks up a blue ringed octopus. The animal looks cute but is very very dangerous. He was very lucky that he didn’t get stung. The venom would have paralyzed him and stop his ability to breathe. Wouldn’t even be able to close his eyes.