This statement by the NTSB just a few days after the event is tripping me out:<p><pre><code> “This was 100 percent preventable,” Jennifer L. Homendy, the board’s chairwoman, said at a news conference in Washington. “We call things accidents; there is no accident. Every single event that we investigate is preventable.”
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what? who? how? what? where? why? who are you?<p>are you the NTSB?<p>i thought they took, like, _years_ to say anything, even preliminarily, about anything - but now they're out there talking like a georgia grand jury foreperson. what's going on?<p>i thought it was trippy, too, that the NTSB spokesperson used almost the exact title of this book I just checked out, and happens to be big-ish in the urban planning/transportation community:<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/There-Are-No-Accidents-Disaster_Who/dp/1982129662" rel="nofollow">https://www.amazon.com/There-Are-No-Accidents-Disaster_Who/d...</a><p>i'm guessing this announcement, the follow-up visit by DOT, was because Trump actually visited the disaster area.<p>maybe that's all there really is to it -- another disaster, one political side getting outplayed by the other side, so trying to make up for it as best as possible -- but the NTSB, making a general statement like _that_ -- it seems like it would be devastating for industry generally (meaning, the people who own the industries -- i.e. investors).<p>i dunno - hundreds or thousands of people die, and we have to wait years for a statement, but Trump visits and the machinery of government kicks into high gear.<p>what did i miss?<p>i guess, fortunately for the Democrats, most of their labor and related toxic deaths are outsourced to other countries.