Sike, it's cutting wire. Anyone who falls ends up cubed like that Resident Evil scene.
Mildly Interesting
This is for strictly mildly interesting material. If it's too interesting, it doesn't belong. If it's not interesting, it doesn't belong.
This is obviously an objective criteria, so the mods are always right. Or maybe mildly right? Ahh.. what do we know?
Just post some stuff and don't spam.
In Cube (1997 film).
Great movie
Wow, my brain had a tough time processing that image. Turn it about 20 degrees counter clockwise and it looked like a hallway with several red carts with netting blocking the way. I literally thought the morgue was at the other end.
The other shots I did are even more confusing, I picked the one that seemed to be the most comprehensible...
Unfortunately it's necessary in a place where people regularly receive life changing or ending news.
It's the first hospital where I've seen something like this, though.
I can just guess that there must have been some kind of incident at that place that triggered the installation of the safety nets.
Sure and the incident was a suicide, no question about it.
Former girlfriend of mine had a patient jump out of a window after his late stage cancer diagnose.
Thats why assisted death/suicide should be more legalized and talked about. I mean in such a case, the case is pretty simple. In such a case, they need a second doctor from outside to confirm the diagnosis, get a notary or some kind to confirm that this is the wish of the patient and they got all the necessary information. I guess in a week they should have the clearance.
This way someone can leave the world on their terms, without pain or traumatizing or hurting bystanders.
Speedrunning an established legal precedent for nonvoluntary eugenics in the process
I think building an elevator there is a better option.
This seems awfully not stretchy...
It's not a safety net, it's a sieve
Judging by the size of the holes it’s a filter for newborns.
Spoiler
I’m definitely going to hell for that one.
This means that someone jumped, the family sued, and your local nonprofit hospital had to spend money it didn't have.
Very american point of view. My first thought was "oh dam, someone in a disturbed mental state (tbh I thought suicidal) attempted to jump/jumped and the hospital wants to make sure no one else hurts themselves that way! That's good care!" But we can also look through the extremely negative POV of no one does anything good ever unless there's money on the line, right?
It was either that or putting in a drain, adding a hose connection, and waterproofing the splash zone.