SubtleHush(sub female)
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3 years ago •
Sep 2, 2021
3 years ago •
Sep 2, 2021
MissBonnie(dom female){oz}
"IMO and "adding" to good ideas above, Vetting doesn't keep people safe, it makes things a little safe'r'
We all need to keep that in our heads!"
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So very true and well said.
You reminded me of this new person I encountered at a meeting. we were talking about an upcoming large event and she said she couldn't go because the organizers wouldn't assure her of an emergency contingency. In other words, she said, if she took a stranger to her room and that stranger hurt her the organizers of the event wouldn't step in to punish them.
So I looked at her and asked, "So if you took a stranger to your room and he raped, beat, or murdered you, would you be less raped, beaten, or murdered if some event organizer threw them out of the event?"
While such a scenario is more serious than throwing the person out of the event, it's the prevailing attitude that shook me. I deal with over 600 tenants at work and now and then someone rolls up with this attitude of "I'm months behind in my rent because YOU didn't babysit me."
My response is always the same. "I believe in fully functioning adults. If you don't know what you should and should not be doing, then don't engage in that activity or commitment."
I believe in organizers being prudent in order to provide as safe an event as possible. But I don't believe in babysitting adults. Vetting is as much, if not more, about keeping that event credible and respectable as it is aiding your attendees in staying safe.
And you will meet people who always make bad choices, thus getting themselves hurt. So consider that in your vetting formula. They are usually people who will blame you for their mistakes.
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