barracuda wrote:Do you have any kids? I wouldn't hang up from that conversation without asking a few questions and giving some reassurance. I doubt seriously that many parents would. LOL yourself.
I'm a parent. I would.
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barracuda wrote:Do you have any kids? I wouldn't hang up from that conversation without asking a few questions and giving some reassurance. I doubt seriously that many parents would. LOL yourself.
Dradin Kastell wrote:stickdog99 wrote:How is it that the first ambulance arrived on at the opposite shore, 600 meters across the water from Utoya, a full 53 minutes before the police managed to get to Utoya?
Meanwhile, dozens of kids and young adults are being murdered during this time period. Don't you find the difference between the response of the ambulances and campers and that of the cops in the least bit striking?
Well, yes, the local police first arrived at the lakefront 19 minutes after the first ambulance was "in place" according to the emergency centre timeline, even though presumably both the ambulance and the police would come from Honefoss. There is a big difference, but was it deliberate? I don't have enough information yet to say for sure.
barracuda wrote:My point is that we don't know. Any conjecture regarding the events of the phone calls involves a series of assumptions about the behavior of the people involved. One assumption seems about as valid as the next in this setting.
Canadian_watcher wrote:barracuda wrote:Do you have any kids? I wouldn't hang up from that conversation without asking a few questions and giving some reassurance. I doubt seriously that many parents would. LOL yourself.
I'm a parent. I would.
barracuda wrote:I wouldn't, but my point is that we don't know. Any conjecture regarding the events of the phone calls involves a series of assumptions about the behavior of the people involved. One assumption seems about as valid as the next in this setting.
waugs wrote:Canadian_watcher wrote:barracuda wrote:Do you have any kids? I wouldn't hang up from that conversation without asking a few questions and giving some reassurance. I doubt seriously that many parents would. LOL yourself.
I'm a parent. I would.
you'd hang up on your kid? why?
barracuda wrote:I don't find it unreasonable or a waste of time to get some information from my child about the situation or their welfare before I hang up. Seems completely natural. I would definitely try and say a reassuring remark, and give the child my love. People do that, even in, perhaps especially in, emergencies. The only time wasting going on here is your insistence that your assumptions about the event are the only ones worth considering.
stickdog99 wrote:waugs wrote:Canadian_watcher wrote:barracuda wrote:Do you have any kids? I wouldn't hang up from that conversation without asking a few questions and giving some reassurance. I doubt seriously that many parents would. LOL yourself.
I'm a parent. I would.
you'd hang up on your kid? why?
Look, even the kid tried to call the cops right before he called his dad. Why do you think he was calling his dad anyway? "I love you, son. Be careful. Please text me with updates." Click
Now look at your watch and tell us how long it takes to say that, even in a Nordic drawl.
DevilYouKnow wrote:I'm Norwegian. Nordic and VK hit the nail on the head about the culture difference. Despite superficial similarities, our culture, society and history is extremely different from America/Britain, so please keep that in mind.
Our police force is very small, and so is our military force. Probably shockingly small, to an American or Britain. Norwegian police has one helicopter, which is for obervation only and has no capacity for troop transportation. Besides, this helicopter is often not operational, either due to lack of funding (Oslo police district, which operates the helicopter, is chronically on a budget deficit) or, as in this case, due to the crew being on vacation. This sounds strange to you probably, but is completely normal to us.
Delta does not not have any helicopters, but can use Air force helicopters (Bell 416) stationed at Rygge for missions further away from Oslo. These helicopters are not on "stand-by" (to say the least).
When Delta was asked to respond to the shooting at Utøya, they were already sitting in their armed MB Gälendewagens at "Ground Zero" of the bombing in the center of Oslo (a video confirms this). Given this, driving was a no-brainer compared to scrambling helicopters from Rygge, and this has really been a non-issue here. The question of boats has not been raised at all.
Almost all the criticism of the police response has been in foreign media. Police here has received more praise than criticism, including by Utøya survivors. There is certainly no anger at the police whatsoever, that I've detected. Spontaneous applause has occurred, as was reported. People believe (as do I) that they did what they could with the resources they have.
Someone upthread asked how we can be proud of a police force that, in his view, did not respond nearly quickly enough. It is perhaps hard to understand, but we pride ourselves on not being a police state, on not having a paramilitary-style police, or an armed police. There are of course those, primarily on the right, who would like to see more "law and order" and to have a police more like those in other European countries, but they have not used this incident to further that view, so far.
Please understand that we have never had a real "shooting spree" in our national history ever before. What happened was something no one among us, except the perpetrator(s?), could ever have imagined.
It is slightly surreal to see page after page here of people discussing this issue which they're so far removed from and so ill equipped to have an informed opinion on. This is a small country - I know one person who was responsible in the chain of command in the police response, whose name has been mentioned in this thread or in the other one. I know several who were involved in the reponse in various functions. To suggest that anything was done to willfully delay the response is, from my perspective, insane. Maybe from your perspectives it makes sense. Good night.
It is slightly surreal to see page after page here of people discussing this issue which they're so far removed from and so ill equipped to have an informed opinion on. This is a small country - I know one person who was responsible in the chain of command in the police response, whose name has been mentioned in this thread or in the other one. I know several who were involved in the reponse in various functions. To suggest that anything was done to willfully delay the response is, from my perspective, insane. Maybe from your perspectives it makes sense. Good night.

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