Thats the one.Liko81 wrote:You mean something like this?Wildscar wrote:need a throw up smiley for this one. That just makes my blood boil for that one.
Guess this one will have to do.

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Thats the one.Liko81 wrote:You mean something like this?Wildscar wrote:need a throw up smiley for this one. That just makes my blood boil for that one.
Guess this one will have to do.
jimlongley wrote:The fact that they start their "facts" off with a statement that the coffee was not just hot, but scalding, raises my hackles a little. It makes it sound as though the liquid was super hot, while the fact is, the true fact, that even household temperature tap water can cause scald burns. The rest of the article suffers in that light.
I agree with the original poster - coffee was meant to be served hot, and coffee at 140 degrees soaked into sweat pants would as likely have caused injury to the tender domains on which it was spilled. The genital region is credited as 5% for burns, if I recall my EMT training correctly.
If you read what you're responding to again I think you'll find that he wasn't claiming that the coffee was served at a temperature of 140 degrees F. He was saying that even if the coffee had been served at that temperature (as opposed to the higher one of 180) it would likely have caused serious burns to the area in question. Not necessarily that the burns would have been as bad (they wouldn't have been), but still seriously burned. Whether that's true or not is another matter. But you seem to have misread what you responded to.Liko81 wrote:IT WASN'T 140 DEGREES! IT WAS 180!
Quite probably. But I think most people's objection is to the notion that plaintiff was a hapless victim, when in fact what she did was foolish no matter what temperature McDonald's serves their coffee at.McDonald's brewed their coffee at 195*, held it between 180 and 195, and served it at same; that is quite simply reckless.
True dat.Fallacious references to lack of common sense aside, "zero tolerance" is broken beyond repair. It was broken before it was put in place; if there's anything a law scholar knows it is that there is an exception to EVERYTHING.
In that case the first instance of "murder" in that last sentance is incorrect and misleading to begin with. It really should have read, "Killing isn't murder when it's self-defense." Ditto your other examples.Murder isn't murder when it's self-defense.
There is nothing to read. It's HOT COFFEE. I learned when i was 4 or 5 that hot liquids and skin don't go together well.nitrogen wrote:Here are the facts about the mcdonalds coffee settlement.Common Sense finally gave up the will to live, after a woman failed to
realize that a steaming cup of coffee was hot. She spilled a little in
her lap, and was promptly awarded a huge settlement.
FYI: http://www.lectlaw.com/files/cur78.htm
I would say people discussing things they know nothing about didnt help common sense's condition either.
Wildscar wrote:need a throw up smiley for this one. That just makes my blood boil for that one.
Guess this one will have to do.