RangerDave wrote:
DFK! wrote:
People follow incentives, RD, whether the incentive is common or not.
True, but there is such a thing as overreacting to incentives due to a combination of excessive risk aversion and falling for media hype and false cultural narratives. Personally, I think failing to intervene in a situation like this out of fear of lawsuits and prosecution is a very clear example of that. (Incidentally, I also think a statement like "we have a society that wants to persecute people like me for being good samaritans" is also a false cultural narrative that's disturbingly common among conservative, white men thanks to media hype from talk radio, Fox News, PJ Media, etc.) And besides, there are incentives going in the other direction too. Last I checked, the driver was on administrative leave pending an investigation, and I can virtually guarantee that the parents of the victim are going to sue and will be much more likely to win and/or get a big settlement than the parents of the attackers would have been.
As to the first part of this paragraph: I'd agree with you if I didn't have several friends who've either lost their jobs or been charged for various situations that, while not perfectly resembling this, hold enough similarities for me to strongly believe in the fact that it happens.
As to the second, that's what parent do: sue. He followed the policy, he'll be fine.
RD wrote:
To be honest, though, I don't think the issue here is really that the driver was afraid of the legal consequences if he did; I think the issue is that he's been conditioned - both formally during his training as a bus driver and informally by our increasing cultural presumption against self-help - to instinctively remain passive and wait for authorities to arrive and handle things.
Probably.
Humans are naturally sheep, and policies enforcing or encouraging sheepiness are rampant. Which, like I mentioned, is where "people follow incentives."
RD wrote:
Of course, it's also possible (probable?) that we're reading too much into this and the dude's just a coward who was so afraid of getting physically hurt that he sat there and let a 13-year old get beaten right in front of him.
I wouldn't call somebody unwilling to undertake 3-1 odds in a confined space while unarmed to be a coward.