Revision as of 17:43, 11 September 2006 editSirengarg (talk | contribs)22 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit |
Revision as of 21:46, 11 September 2006 edit undoDposse (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users7,487 edits discuss that in the talk page, not the To Do list!Next edit → |
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*Rumor that previous injury from a crocodile seperated his ribs slightly, making it more likely for the stingray to hit his heart. |
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*Rumor that previous injury from a crocodile seperated his ribs slightly, making it more likely for the stingray to hit his heart. |
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*Remove from other languages that he was a Liberal Party supporter. |
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*Remove from other languages that he was a Liberal Party supporter. |
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* Add a section that discusses the dark side of Steve Irwin, such as: |
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"All the idolatory tributes and commentary about Steve Irwin fail to recognize the basic tragedies in his approach. First, to build his image, he had to create an image of animals being inherently dangerous. Then he needed to harass and provoke them to show their ferocity and make his point. His success was in motivating behaviors in animals that would normally rather run away than attack, but that would not serve his purpose. Second, he routinely broke all the rules of good animal handling technique that most professionals recognize are the safest procedures for both the animal and the handler. How many uninformed individuals (and animals) have been injured imitating his reckless ways, thinking that if Steve Irwin does it this way, it must be right?" |
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* The above is an opinion, not a fact. It doesn't belong in his article at all. There is no evidence people were harmed by wild animals, because they were influenced by Steve Irwin. Besides was DC Comics and Walt Disney Pictures sued when children imitated Superman and Peter Pan and were injured and killed? You can't blame a professional because your children or yourself copied their actions when both he and common sense dictate "Don't do that, its dangerous". Parents are respondsible for their children's actions, not a man on the other side of the world. How about we post articles of the people who's lives were saved because they remembered what the Croc Hunter said when a gator or croc attacked them? Such as the case of a child in Florida this year who's quick thinking and memory of the show saved his life. Truthfully, neither of these types of articles belong in the Misplaced Pages article. Let's stick to facts, not opinions. |
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