Sad.
she was manning reception and answering the phones at the time, she was the receptionist in the context in which i used the term.
Its hardly relevant anyway. She put the call through, that is all she did. I dont believe that 2 australian djs are responsible for her death. We are all responsible for our own actions. The are responsible for being eejits, but thats not a criminal offence as far as i can tell.
How I feel for that poor nurse, her children and family.
But this was a stupid prank and I cannot for the life of me understand how anybody would commit suicide leaving behind a husband and two children because they incorrectly put though a phone call, that doesn't sound normal to me.
No one is saying they can't; but the people in question left out a crucial bit which was to get permission to broadcast a recording made without permission. That's what should be shouted loud & clear and I can't understand why no one is saying that.If this means that nobody ever can do a prank or say anything negative, or have a joke than what kind of world is that.
... left out a crucial bit which was to get permission to broadcast a recording made without permission.
No one is saying they can't; but the people in question left out a crucial bit which was to get permission to broadcast a recording made without permission. That's what should be shouted loud & clear and I can't understand why no one is saying that.
Bit melodramatic. We can all read the full post and see perfectly well that's not what Truthseeker meant.
Absolutely agree. It was a stupid prank that wasn't newsworthy yet the general media propagated it around the world. Now these two clowns are being hounded, say one of them takes their own life, who will be blamed next? We are all responsible for our own actions.I dont believe that 2 Australian DJs are responsible for her death. We are all responsible for our own actions. The are responsible for being eejits, but thats not a criminal offence as far as I can tell.
Got another perspective on this today - my aunt and my nana came home from Australia today for Christmas. They are 40 years in Perth. Their attitude was 'stinking poms, whining as per usual'. I couldn't get it through to them that it was a pointless prank on a girl who was vulnerable and sick, and a nurse who obviously was deeply affected (whether or not she had underlying issues). It just shows though how it is being viewed within Australia.
If permission was not given to broadcast then it should not have been aired; and I'm pretty sure their own broadcasting guidelines say exactly that....would have assumed that no permission was given.
To the best of my knowledge, the legal position is, that whilst you can record your own conversations, you cannot broadcast them without the consent of the other party.
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