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NotHardUp1

What? Me? Really?
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As I was looking up a former student (who is now awating Senate confirmation to the rank of Brigadier General), I somehow stumbled across a list of OSHA fatalities from 2014 & 2015.

The list was predictably sad. It's always horrible to hear of a death on the job, but it is a bit depressing to hear how many are the same old causes that have been killing workers since the Industrial Revolution began. There were many who were shot by co-workers as well. Many still fall off ladders, too. And trees still seem to go out of their way to kill those who work on them. Forklifts appear repeatedly as an instrument of death, as do logging skidders. Men working in bucket trucks and aerial lifts recur often. So do those loading granite and stone slabs. More than a few mowers slid into lakes and drowned the operators. Ladders and forklifts contacted power lines a lot.


Some of the more surprising descriptions are below. None of them is intended as jest or jeering, but as oddities. One wonders how some could have happened, whereas others are just unanticipated.

Worker struck and killed by falling tree first day on the job.

Worker in aerial lift fatally crushed between lift basket and roof overhang.

Worker electrocuted while servicing arcade vending machine.

Worker struck and killed by trusses that fell off delivery truck.

Worker installing decking struck and killed by lightning.

Worker fatally crushed between aerial lift bucket and steel beam.

Worker struck and killed by pin on oil and gas well drilling rig.

Worker struck and killed when chop saw kicked back.

Employee drowned after being pinned under water by mower.

Worker electrocuted while plugging in jack hammer.

Scrap yard worker cutting bomb killed when primer exploded.

Worker installing home security system fatally shot.

Worker fatally engulfed when grain bin wall collapsed.

Worker electrocuted while installing plumbing pipe in ceiling.

Worker fatally crushed under 800 pound hay bale.

Worker struck and killed by diesel hammer.

Worker mowing grass choked on low-lying tree.

Worker fatally stung by bees.

Worker killed in fall through skylight.

Worker killed after being pulled through wood chipping machine.

Worker killed when riding mower tipped over and caught fire.

Worker killed when clothes became entangled in shaft of hay bale elevator.

Worker drowned when lawn mower tipped over into retention pond.

Worker fatally crushed between fence and motorized gate.

Worker drowned while power washing pool.

Worker killed after becoming caught in asphalt conveyor.

Worker delivering mail killed when tree fell on vehicle.

Worker killed by bees nesting in air conditioning unit.

Worker killed in explosion while sorting shell castings.

Worker drowned when riding lawn mower slid into lake.

Worker fatally engulfed in sawdust that filled cab of truck.

Worker gate struck and killed by glass table-top blown from balcony by high winds.
 
. . . and they were all replaced by their employers within a day with no more fanfare other than the obligatory insincere memo eulogy. Not surprising that, even though it's more grammatically correct, OSHA refers to them as "workers" and not "men".

Ants_Blog.webp
 
. . . and they were all replaced by their employers within a day with no more fanfare other than the obligatory insincere memo eulogy. Not surprising that, even though it's more grammatically correct, OSHA refers to them as "workers" and not "men".
Not following the two sentenes. Are you suggesting the alleged insincerity would be different if the workers included a significant female constituent?

In my experience, companies and the people who constitute them do grieve for the loss of a co-worker, whether dying from natural causes or from an accident.

Small companies can go out of business if their negligence causes a fatality, and then their insurance becomes unaffordable.

Large companies generally enforce safety and when managers do not, they are fired.

As I read the list, more than 99% of those (not the shooting victims) were in jobs where men are overwhelmingly the workers handling the forklifts, riding the bucket lifts, doing the electrical work, running a mower, etc. There are tons of lawnmowing companies here. I've never seen one of them staffed with women.

Interestingly, ants and bees almost exclusively have female (infertile) workers. For heavy physical work in the US, rarely the case statistically.
 
I meant the "workers" are people (men) first, and workers second. They'd probably consider themselves husbands or fathers before they'd define themselves as replaceable drones. I was going out on my anticapitalist limb by asserting that OSHA 's "worker" label was dehumanizing.

What do people have to do to to stop being dehumanized by big business? Die? Not even that.

Also I disagree that companies grieve for their dead employees. If the batteries in your remote die, do you grieve or just throw them out and replace them?

It's different for small companies, but most small companies want nothing more than to become big companies.
 
At the job that finally left me disabled I almost got crushed twice. Both times involving a forklift. I also almost killed a customer when I was driving a forklift, but I didn't get in trouble as he was a scammer trying to get paid out. It has been years since I worked, but I realize now we all should have got paid a lot more for the danger of the job.
 
Didn't mention pencil pushers and lead poisoning (I know it's graphite). In my lawn business the closest I have come to any harm was nearly tipping a large (750 lb.) unit over while mowing a ditch.
I worked as a machinist for years without a stitch. Nearly got stabbed when working at a coin shop, I caught a thief stealing from another employees car. I decided to let him go when he brought the bowie knife to the wrestling match.
 
At the job that finally left me disabled I almost got crushed twice. Both times involving a forklift. I also almost killed a customer when I was driving a forklift, but I didn't get in trouble as he was a scammer trying to get paid out. It has been years since I worked, but I realize now we all should have got paid a lot more for the danger of the job.
When I drove a forklift as an inventory counter, I always worried that the fork blades might get caught under the pallet on an upper rack on the metal shelving. If lifting it, one might lift the shelf beam from it's slot in the posts. Were that to happen, TONS of materials would fall, and immediately cause the collapse perhaps an entire row of racks.

Indeed, I have seen that exact thing happen on a video online, and I saw a fatality in the OSHA report that sounded like exactly that happened.
 
Didn't mention pencil pushers and lead poisoning (I know it's graphite). In my lawn business the closest I have come to any harm was nearly tipping a large (750 lb.) unit over while mowing a ditch.
I worked as a machinist for years without a stitch. Nearly got stabbed when working at a coin shop, I caught a thief stealing from another employees car. I decided to let him go when he brought the bowie knife to the wrestling match.
Rollovers have always been a killer on tractors, and now, on personal lawn tractors. It's hard to imagine my little 22 horsepower mower could be a problem if it rolled, but I do mow alongside a creek with a bank that is a 6-foot drop.

In an easy scenario, I could be knocked out in the roll, or a leg broken so that I'd be pinned in the creek and drown. It's harder to imagine how men drown in water hazards on golf courses, but any accident is unexpected and freaky things happen. There were several of them on the list.
 
When I drove a forklift as an inventory counter, I always worried that the fork blades might get caught under the pallet on an upper rack on the metal shelving. If lifting it, one might lift the shelf beam from it's slot in the posts. Were that to happen, TONS of materials would fall, and immediately cause the collapse perhaps an entire row of racks.

Indeed, I have seen that exact thing happen on a video online, and I saw a fatality in the OSHA report that sounded like exactly that happened.

I hated when the lift would sway.


At the time I was pretty fearless. Looking back I can't believe the things I use to do. I worry so much these days.
 
I'm on no drugs. The last few years I've become cautious for lack of vocabulary about heights. Once the top step of a 20 foot ladder no problem. Walk around on the roof? Stack a chair on a table, no problem. But now, problem. I can still do these things but I sure start sweating like a pig.

I think it's my ears. The tinnitus that comes and goes, when it's loud I stay off of step stools.

This getting old stuff is interesting.
 
When I drove a forklift as an inventory counter, I always worried that the fork blades might get caught under the pallet on an upper rack on the metal shelving. If lifting it, one might lift the shelf beam from it's slot in the posts. Were that to happen, TONS of materials would fall, and immediately cause the collapse perhaps an entire row of racks.

Indeed, I have seen that exact thing happen on a video online, and I saw a fatality in the OSHA report that sounded like exactly that happened.
I used to climb the racks and stand on the top of them to do whatever. I ran a lot of computer wires over the years holding on to only the roof beams. OSHA would have a heart attack if they saw some of the things we used to do.
 
I used to climb the racks and stand on the top of them to do whatever. I ran a lot of computer wires over the years holding on to only the roof beams. OSHA would have a heart attack if they saw some of the things we used to do.
Yeah, I've done a lot of daring do, usually without heavy equipment.

I like climbing, even now that I'm fat.

It makes me feel like a can-do person, and I am.
 
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